West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 11 Aug 1932, p. 6

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* the reorganization of the dairy indusâ€" try of the province with a view to again capturing the British choese markot." As far as this eastern section ',0( Ontario is concerned no more welâ€" gome statement has come out of Torâ€" nto in years, The prosperity of &tern Ontario and Western Qnebec‘ largely been built up around the Ontario is to have its own fiveâ€"year plan. It was announced in Toronto by Mr. T. s Konnedy, Ontario‘s Minister of Agriculture, and is concerned with It is totally erroncous to suppose that if debts and reparations were canâ€" celled, British or French armaments, to name no others, would be virtually subsidized by the American taxpayer,. Nothing of the kind could happen. Absolutely nothing. Germany â€" and for our part we are very far from obâ€" jecting to itâ€"would be the sole finanâ€" cial beneficiary, Britain and France would loso somewhat on balnnce.‘ They would not have more means but less to pay for armaments. In the cirâ€" cumstances, the American taxpayers might possibly find themselves, to their astonishment, subsidizing the reâ€" storation of the Hohenzollerns, but eould not, in any circumstances, pay a céent ~towards â€" British defence _ or French security. If this truth were more widely known across the ocean, the world‘s moral air would be clearâ€" ed.â€"London Observer. Pure Milk Supply Readers of the Montreal Star are so familiar with the long, arduous, and persistont fight for pure milk in the columns of this paper that it will come in the nature of a genuine surprise to them to learn that conditions in the City of London, the world‘s metropâ€" olis, are far less satisfactory than in Montreal, so far as milk is concerned. A report just to hand, presented at the Mansion â€" House by the People‘s League of Health, recommends that with the oxception of "certified" and "grade A" milk, all milk supplied to the public ought to be submitted to y pastourization before being sold. Many firms already do this, but it is not compulsory, and there aro a large number who do not. Canadians have a special interest in the matiter, since | Lord Dawson of Penn advanced at the | mecting as a powerful argument in| favor of compulsory pasteurization the | â€" fact that bovine tuberculosis has beon | gtamped out by this means.â€"Montreal | 1 Star. : primary industries of the country to remain in the doldrums for lack of a market or to permit a crushing blow to be dealt to those secondary indusâ€" tries which can not exist without high protection. It is a difficult choice. For fiflty years under the National Policy, Canada has fostered her secondary inâ€" Custries. But that was in the days when her primary industries had .‘ chance at the world‘s markets. There are no open doors. _ It may be necesâ€" sary, under the circumstances, to make a change. The primary indusâ€" tries, in a country of primary producâ€" tlion like Canada, cannot be allowed to die. If they go, the secondary inâ€" dustries will die too. There will be no market for their goods.â€"Vancouver Province. let suspicion and exaggerated nationâ€" alism and racial arrogance and pride dominate their relations. This Ottaâ€" wa Conference cannot interfere. But is it too much to hope that the exâ€" ample which this Conference is giving of the possibilities and the value of Fight coâ€"operation _ will contribute something to a more reasonable and better feeling between Englishmen and Irishmen"â€"Ottawa Journal Agriculture‘s Prior Claim The problem for the Government to dec.le is whether to allow the great industry of agriculture and the other There isn‘t a battlefield in all of Europe not billowed by English and Irish graves. _ But though they have marched and fought and died together on a thousand fields, and their dust will forever mingle, the Irish and the English at home refuse to be friends. Knowing in their heart of hearts that their common interests lie in coâ€"operaâ€" tion, they continue their bitter, tutllel memories of a dead past, continue to Recapture of Cheese Cdds against winning are a hundred to oneâ€"often much more. For one man who gains a fortune by speculation a thousand reach comfortable affluence by slow but sure methods.â€"Brantford Expositor. . Lure of Unearned Profit Speculation cannot be sharply deâ€" fined. The desire for profit enters into all commerce, and no one may say at what point honestly earned profit elimâ€" inates the implication of gambling. It is the desire for unearned profit that lures the speculator into rashness and makes all gambling demoralizing. The ; ‘The Conference The Empire expects an immense imâ€" provement of conditions to come from this Conference. We shall see, in a few weeks, but more surely still in a few months, how far our hopes are going to be satisfied. For our part, we hope with everybody else that the dawn of a now prosperity is breaking over Canada,. â€" La Tribune, Sherâ€" brooke (Lib.) Debts and Ar nament The Ancient Crudge oly find themselves, to iment, subsidizing the reâ€" the Hohenzollerns, but any circumstances, pay a ate CANADA )0 submitted to eing sold. Many , but it is not e aro a large Canadians have 1e maiter, since Market Protection and Trade ’ Protection carried to the extent of killing trade is not beneficial even to the industries it professes to protect, because their productive scope is limited by the purchasing power, of the people at large and if trade in genâ€" eral is unable to create wealth the protected industries languish. OTHER OPINIONS . Trade With Russia Many Americans have noted with great disappointment the heavy deâ€" cline in our trado with Russia in apite] of its great need of many American products and the diversion of that trade to England and Germany. Moreâ€" over, they are convinced that the preâ€" sent Russian Government is going to last whether recognized or not, and that in persisting in placing obstacles in the way of Russoâ€"American trade it is this country which is losing out, esâ€" pecially at the present critical time. With the continued decline of busi~i ness and the increasing number of | Americans who believe that Russia, dangerous or not, will be more danger-‘ ous by becoming a customer, it is not ‘ unlikely that continued pressure will | finally disclose some path pointing toâ€"‘ ward recognition.â€"Baltimore Sun. : § Adversity e I A general storekeeper and his wife out in a small Iowan community wrote' off $75,000, worth of debts from their , books the other dayâ€"and told. their , debtors to forget it. At about the same time a chauffeur in New York,‘ Bermuda and Canada Vegetable growers of Bermuda and members of the Trade Development Board of that colony are very anxious that _ additlonal shipping â€" facilities should be provided to enable proâ€" ducers to send larger quantities of their tomatoes, potatocs, onions, celâ€" ery, and other articles, to the Mariâ€" time Provinces of the Dominion. Time was, and not so long ago either, when{ Bermuda‘s dapendence for the sale of her vegetables was centred on the United States. Twelve years or so ago, Bermuda, like Jamaica, was very chary about entering into a reciprocal trade agreement with the Dominlon[ Government. But Canada, out of a| spirit of generosity, held out the olive branch to these colonies, by admitting some of their products into her marâ€" ket under preferential rates even when she got nothing in return from Bermuda and Jamaica. The outlook of these colonies, in conjunction with every other unit in the British Caribâ€" bean zone, has changed since that period. Their vision is Canadawards in the marketing of a fair proportion of their crop. â€" Kingston (Jamaica) Gleaner. off than most other countries, and in an excellent position to. take advantâ€" age of any improvement. _ The outâ€" standing economic fact of the present day is the failure of the gold standard system to grapple with the terrible fall in prices. _ Our London financial correspondent mentions toâ€"day that priceos in Great Britain are the same as last September, whereas gold prices have fallen 1 per cent. lower, Thus the sterling system in its effect on prices is more stable than gold.â€"‘ Cape Argus, ®# 1 Britain‘s Progress Thanks to her abandonment of the gold standard, Great Britain‘s comâ€" petitive power has been greatly inâ€" creased, and she is securing a larger percentage of world trade than at any time since the bursting of the postâ€" war boom. But there is now so much less trade for everybody that (Great Britain necessarily suffers. All that: can be said is that things would have{ been fas worse if she had stayed on gold, and that she is immensely better | as to be carried far beyond the reâ€" quirement of the occasion. In our humble opinion the speaker in twenty minutes gets the best hearing and wsually has said something. â€" St. Marys Journalâ€"Argus. l One of the problems of the churches these days is lack of attendance at the Sunday evening service. Often the night congregation is less than half the "full house" of the morning serâ€" vico. Many factors, no doubt, contriâ€" bute to this undesirable lack of inâ€" terest. _ Many ministers apparently have the idea that it is necessary to preach half an hour or even forty minâ€" utes. The result is a good deal of unâ€" interesting and unnecessary repetiâ€" tion.. Anyone who does much public speaking of any kind has a tendency to be led into verbosity. For instance, & minister often suffers from a scarcity of words. Gradually he learns to elaborate a simple idea very skillâ€" fully. In the end he may become so proficient in enlarging upon his theme ‘ dairy industry, with cheese the most important factor, This has been true of the cities and towns just as much as of the farming community, for no urban community can flourish in the midst of impoverished farms. As far as cheese is concerned the apex of our dairy prosperity was reached some 20 years ago, but since then there has been steady decline, until at present the predominant position held formerâ€" ly by Ontario cheese in the British market has disappeared.â€"The Ottawa Journal. Makes a Plea For 20â€"Minute SQrmoMl THE EMPIRE MENNHGEW en csmm W NNq e BSnHNG i rgrvnem nvcom Thera are four eclipse expeditions in the group each choosing a differâ€" ent vantage point for its observaâ€" tions. Quebec â€" Thirtyâ€"nine astronomers travelling 3,000 miles to spend less than two minutes observing _ an eclipse of the sun arrived here July 27 on the Canadian Pacific liner Montcalm _ The _ scientists, headed by Sir Frank Dyson, K.B.E., astronoâ€" merâ€"royal brought with them an asâ€" sortment _ of scientific instruments weighing tons: 39 British Astronomers To Study Eclipse Hon, Viscount Hailsham, secretary of war inâ€"the British cabinet, is snapped with h!s‘lady' at Ottawa, where the yiscount is playing an important role in empire economic discusslon4:"*> .: , Relief From Arms By Hugh S. Gibson, in a speech upon the Geneva Disarmament Conâ€" ’ ference, Up to the present, the world has never known the appeasement which wlil come to it through a general treaty. for the limitation and reducâ€" tion of arms and the relief to every country from the danger of surprise by its neighbor and from the necessity for costly competition in arms and men, Once the world experiences this relief the tension will relax and we. will be enabled with ease to go furâ€" ther than ever has been thought posâ€" sible, The jeoples of the world may not know the technical difficulties of disâ€" armament, but they have the will to surmount them, ; . _is‘ | who owed two brothers $50, was lured ‘by them into a dentist‘s chair, where all his bridgework was taken from 'hlm, and, after he had been robbed of all his clothes except his trousers, was left to shift for himself as best he could. Adversity brings out the best and the worst in human nature. The duty of brother â€" keeping is put to a severe test. The whole country is in the same boat. Those who exact their pound of flesh rock it, Those who live by letting and helping others to live, are casting gread upon the troubled waters that surround it.â€"Deâ€" troit Free Press. Eddie Tolan, crack colored sprinter . team, who defeated Percy Williams and flash, winning the ‘Olympic championsh Driving power of Tolan‘s legs is shown c Attending Ottawa Conference rercy Williams and Bert Pearson, the Hamilton Olympic championship in the 100 metres race. World‘s Champion Sprinter colored sprinter of the United States olymple is shown clearly above Definite advantages bave accrued from the change to the Hotel Bohyâ€" Lafayette. _ For one thing, it is six minutes nearer to the airâ€"port of Le Bourget than are the former preâ€" mises in the Avenue de 1‘Opera; and, for another, it is outside the area of hbeavy traffic congestion. Furtherâ€" more, it is near the Gare du Nord, and provides every convenk:nce for passengers, including baths, halrâ€"‘ dressing saloons and a theatre ticket oflice; while as yet another advanâ€" tage it is extremely easy to locate, the Ruo Lafayette running direct from the centre of Paris to the Gare du. Nord. | Snailâ€""Not for me. 1 way for the 1933 season." Bugâ€""Say, where are you going? The Florida season is over." Great difficulty has been experiâ€" enced, owing to growing pressure, in dealing with large numbers of pasâ€" sengers, and increasing quantities of luggage, in the space at present availâ€" able, while traffic congestion in the Avenue de 1‘Opera has rondered it no easy matter, at busy periods, to deal with the cars and taxicabs of passengers, New Imperial Airways # Terminus in Paris Large’ increases in passenger trafâ€" fic by _ Imperial Airways _ between London and Parisâ€"figures for June show 4,$11 travellers flew between the two capitals in the company‘s airâ€"liners, as compared with 2,206 for a similar period last yearâ€"have led to the transferring the arrival and departure point in Paris from the Avenue de l‘Opera to the Hotel Bohyâ€"Lafayette, in the Square Monâ€" tholon, Rue Lafayette. | 448 TORONTO The Ra‘nbow My heart leaps up when I behold A rainbow in the sky: So was it when my life began, So is it now I am a man, So be it when I shalt grow old Or let me die! R The Child is father of the Man, â€" And I could wish my days to be Bound each to each by natural piety Skyscraper For Bachelors Nears Completion in Vienna Vienna.â€"This city‘s first skyscrapâ€" or, sixteen stories high, which is apâ€" proaching completion in the Herrenâ€" gasse, will be a stronghold of bacheâ€" lordom. The Austrian _ capital is full of huge flats and old aristocratic palaces which are empty because the impoverished population cannot af.| ford the cost of upkeep of roomy! quarters. Unmarried persons are all obliged to live in furnished rooms, The skyscraper attempts to remâ€" edy this With the exception of a few small flats, it consists of slngle-l room dwellings, generally with kitâ€" chenette and bathroom. A b!nding’ clause of the lease is that none of‘ the "bachelors" of either sex inhabitâ€" ing these dwellings may marry. ! Birdsong alone is cool In this hot niace; A fountain and a pool That "thought can trace, Knowing the way it fares Through leaf and bough, Parting the heayy airs Ang curving, now, To fall back upon the ground, Under the treeâ€" Forming thin pools of sound Could we but see. David Morton, in the North Amort can Reviow, .01 grain known as world of int« tional tolerance which eventually be observed in this country, says Slate. Food and drug officials in the United States have agreed that .01 grain of arsenic to a pound of fruit is ‘harmless to the consumer, but for the present a slightly more liberal tolerance (.012 grain) is recognized administratively, Exporters must meet the standard of + A chemical analysis of apples grown ’ in Connecticut in the Summer of 1931 | showed the crop to be free of harmful ,amounts of the arsenate of lead apâ€" | plied in sprays, which confirms the general experience of growers in that | State, according to a recent report by W. L. Slate, director of the Connectiâ€" cut Agricultural Experiment Station. Suspected fruit has been analyzed ln“ several cases in years past, but spray | residue in objectionable quantity was! never found. ’ It has become an established pracâ€" tice in this country to spray fruits and | vegetables in order to control insect | pests and plant diseases. If poisonous : 'materials carry over to the market-! _able product, the health of the con-" sumer may be affected. In the last ten years both growers and food con-‘ trol officials have given increased atâ€"| tention to the problem of spray re-, sidues and all have coâ€"operated in an effort to safeguard the conaumer.‘ Some parts of the United States have had considerable trouble in exporting apples because the fruit had a spray residue as a result of the heavy appliâ€" cations needed to control the codling moth, and the infrequency of rains that might wash off the spray. | _ "It is calculated by some agriculâ€" tural experts that in regions which are subject to drought, the saving of four or five days during the spring plantâ€" ing may mean an increase of 15 or 20 per cent. in the harvest yield. In the case of flax airplane sowing may open up the possibility of gathering two harvests in the same year. «"A main disadvantage of air sowing lies in the fact that it has thus far proved impossible to distribute seedi with requisite evenness. Until tblai can be‘remedied air sowing is recomâ€" mended primarily for crope like rice,‘ where the hand planting is very la-' borious; or like clover, timothy, and' some other feed plants, which require relatively thin seeding." | "A hectare (2% acres) can be sprinkled with seed in less than a minute. The harvest yield in the rice fields increased after the air sowings, and this year the rice area which will be sown in this way will amount to 7,000 hectares. Speed in sowing is very important in the arid regions of Southeastern Russia and Russian Central Asia, which habitually suffer from insufâ€" ficient rainfall. Agriculture by airplane! "We must consider the technique of agriculture from an entirely new standpoint," Professor Tulaikor deâ€" clares to his students of the Soviet Agâ€" ricultural cademy; and without furâ€" ther ado his students set out to sow their seeds by airplane and dirigible. Next year, we read in a Moscow disâ€" patch to the London Sunday Observer, whole fleets of planes will be operatâ€" ing over Russian fields, starting with the southernmost regions of the Soviet territory, and working northâ€" ward as spring advances. â€" Experiâ€" ments have already demonstrated the practicability of this newest of Soviet plans, and it is related: i Soviets Sow Seeds Show Fruit Has Little Arsenic Residue Birdsong â€"Wordsworth. of internaâ€" will Mr. hi ic camvicha dcs S 111512 ‘tor vehicle â€" accidents during _ the month of August, 1931, averaged more than 33 per day. _ Included in Ahis number there were 77 fatalities and 1025 persons injured. . This recâ€" ord, be it understood, is for the Province of Ontariq alone, and not for the whole country as one might imagine from the size of the figure, The causes of the accidents reâ€" corded were various, but it is noteâ€" worthy that more than oneâ€"fourth ot the motoists involved came to griof while driving on the wrong side of themudumu-uym driving too fast for traffic and raad conditions, According to the records Motor Vehicles Branch _ of tario Department of Highwa tor Nehitle " "anniBuins "an ty She is of medium 1 black hair, closeâ€"clippe energetic manner. She magnetologist, interest. tiflic study of the Polar _ When she was only twenty, in 1922, Miss Rusinova passed a winter with only Eskimos as companions, explorâ€" ing the Nova Zembla Islands in the Arctic Ocean north of Archangela, The next year, also on Nova Zembla, she had nine Russian men . as comâ€" panions, One of them was Alexander Zakharevsky, to whom she was marâ€" ried during that Polar night, the cereâ€" mony being performed from â€" Archâ€" angel over the radioâ€"the first radio marriage on record. Later sho diâ€" vorced him. ( I Whent the iceâ€"breaker Siberiakoy leaves Archangel, chief northern port ‘ot Russia, this month, Miss Rusinova will be the only woman among sixtyâ€" five men, thirtyâ€"five of whom will conâ€" stitute the crew and thirty the adminâ€" istrative and scientific personnel, The Archangelâ€"Viadivostok expediâ€" toin hopes to accomplish finally the ifeat which has engaged the attention "ot explorers and adventurers for cenâ€" ‘turies; namely, to find a northeastern passage from the Atlantic to the Pn-! cific. Three times before expedluonl; have made this passage, but always lnj ’two or three years, with hlberluuon; in the ice packs. The last of these exâ€", } peditions was made in 191819 by , ‘Roald Amundsen. ‘The present ven-: ture aims to pass across the top of the world without wintering in the ice, | The route is through the White Sen,, Arctic Ocean, Bering Strait and the Pacific to Viadivostok, ' A score of women applied for places ‘ in this expedition, but Professor | Schmidt â€"chose only Miss Rnslnon,f whose personality and experience, in ‘ his opinion, made her the equal of any | of the men scientists. | According Moscow.â€"Irina Rusinova, a veteran of Arctic exploration at the age of thirty, will be the only woman to parâ€" ticipate in the daring polar expedition headed by Professor Otto Schmidt in search of a northern route from Archâ€" angel to Viadivostok. Woman to Accompany Polar Expedition "I have never lived in a house since I was 13 years of age," said Count von Luckner, "but the fresh water was too choppy and the short, choppy swells got the best of me." The Count at first refused to admit it when Commander Eugene F. Macâ€" Donald‘s yacht Mizpah locked here, but fellowâ€"guests on the yacht gave him away. _ _"Curley" said he ran away from | home because of previous spankings. ' Heat Swells Bank Vault _ Maocomb, Iil.â€"The Macomb Naâ€" tional Bank operated on money borâ€" rowed from other banks and shipped in from Chicago because the door of its vault was stuck. Heat expanded the vault door and nobody could open it. There was ample money in the vault to care for the bank‘s needs and it still was safely in "reserve." Von Luckner Was Seasick | Sault Ste, Marie, Ont.â€"Count Felix von Luckner, former German nnval' commander and veteran of the sea.' suffered his first attack of seasickness on Lake Superior. | Mrs, Harper walked into the police station and asked permission to give him "a good spanking." ‘The police were agreeable and she went to his cell, took his belt and swung it at least fifty times. The son, booked as "Curley," was arrested for stealing cookies from a bakery. Youngstown, Ohio. â€" Mrs. Estelle Harper went to the city jail and adâ€" ministered a spanking to her 18â€"yearâ€" old son. Johnnie Wilson, campus electrician, took an ordinary telegraph ticker and comnected it with the pulsator so it would make and break the current which alternates the suction. By operâ€" ating the ticker at a speed of fortyâ€"five to fortyâ€"eight times a minute, just as though he were sending a message over the wire, he caused the milking machine to do its morning work nicely. dered from New York. Meanwhile, there were thirty cows to be mllko@. ‘Telegraph Milks Cows Gainesville, Fia.â€"Cows were milked by telegraph at the Florida Experiâ€" ment Station here recently. The milkâ€" ing machine broke down. A spring in the pulsator, which causes the suction to alternate from front to rear teats, was broken. The part had to be orâ€" Cause Most Fatalities ‘6 to the records Of the of medium height, with y close-(-lipped, and a hy Mother Spanks Son in Cell imer. She is a lbe;-hllzed , interested in the scienâ€" passed a winter with as companions, explorâ€" Zembla Islands in the north .of Archangela ‘stood, is for the‘ ‘lo alone, and not‘ ntry as one might | size of the figure, | the _ accidents reâ€" us, but it is noteâ€" than oneâ€"fourth ot ch of the Onâ€" Highways, mo. ! men . as comâ€" was Alexander she was marâ€" night, the cereâ€" regions Side a brisk, the jet | wool, otherwise these | spoil the trim look whi | to smartness, Don‘t 1% | un a coat h.nnr to *y' | cane. This should be pi | sleeves, and hung by , | the centre, rvously ,,, 3 ;1 : Pnecuive employer ' nervously, and tried hard to look as if this was not her first attempt to | find a job. "Ang have you a characâ€" | ter? asked the mistress, "Aye, I have | that," replied the girl, fumbling in | her bag, and producing a small printâ€" , ed card, "and it‘s a reight good ‘un, too. I got it from a pennyâ€"inâ€"theâ€"slot | machine at Bridlington last summor " C C °CC vvoel o0 meir cakes, If you soak a fow lumps of sugar in cochineal andâ€"after dryâ€" ingâ€"store them in & tin, all you have todohtomte!hluguroverflu top of the cake just before it goos %¢ the nursery ton anio~ All children love their cakes. If vou . ‘/ _ But when rotating they present ~, their first surfaces to the driver, and Y ; thus each intermittently cuts off the '-f light from the iLead lamps of an apâ€" ‘ proaching automobile. However, they «| rotate so rapidly that they do not maâ€" , terially interfere with the criver‘s ‘, vision of the road directly ahead. l Thus, the driver has alternately and , in rapid successon unimpaired vision ; of the road ahead, and then complete | obscurity â€" of vision, the inventor , claims, and the result will be entire | elimination of the disagreeable effect ’ of the glaring rays of the headlights Of am eneumeekeat t 1P W Before washing cardigan sew up hulp f.(:e nervously, if this w ©ec against the windshié-l'& tends to prevent it from steaming up, 1 0 COToECCCCZ vIGOG of the road ahead, and then complete obscurity â€" of vision, the inventor claims, and the result will be entire elimination of the disagreeable effect of the glaring rays of the headlights of an approaching automobile, This glare eliminator is mounted on the inside of the windshield, and when it operates the rotation of the blades creates an airâ€"current which is Aivaat ‘| "Blondes because of theis natural ‘, lack of pigment are greatly handiâ€" 'qupped. And the nearâ€"sighted perâ€" | «m with ‘a highly dilated puoil, reâ€" ceives so much light on the retina that | it impairs the fanction of the chemical elecents of vision." Describing the device he nas inâ€" vented for overcoming the glaring headlight hazard, Dr.® Eaves claing that its advantages over other deâ€" | vices for the same purpose which he kas seen, are that it doesn‘t affect the ' driver‘s range of visibility in any way ; or his judgm.~1. of distance or colors j of _traffic lights. It consists of blades arranged rco rotate about an axis, together with a means of rotating the blades, which at rest stand with th.ir edges presented tr the driver, thus giving nim a free and unobstructed view, The For the past ten years Dr. Eaves has habitually questioned his patients regarding their reaction to night drivâ€" itg and he has found two types which rank foremost in their potests against headlight glare. They are nearâ€"sightâ€" ed people and blondes. He explains: There is still another serious road Lazard with which we must cope. *hen we are driving against the sun we have a situation to which the huâ€" man eyes can not adapt themselves, This continued process causes a great amount of nervous energy to be expended. We have all noticed that if we drive some distance against heavy traffic at night fatigue is much greater than if we had driven the same distance against similar traffic in the daytime. the high illumination of headlights. And as soon as we have passed the approaching car our eyes have to again adapt themselves to the low ilâ€" lumination inside our own vehicle. The important new feature of the device is an intermittent light interâ€" rupter reducing the amount of light which reaches the driver‘s eyes withâ€" out interferring appreciably with his vision,. Dr. Eaves says: As we meet an lppr(wching car, our eyes have to adapt themselves from an illumination of practically nothing to A working model demonstrated at the annual convention of the New England Council of Optometrists atâ€" tracted favorable comment. Oe Ee O See C ec by the eye adapting itself to conâ€" trasts," declares Dr. Ralph E. Eaves, Boston optometrist. Working on this premise, he has deâ€" veloped a novel mechanical device doâ€" signed to shield the eyes of an autoâ€" mobile operator from the glare of the headlights of an approaching motor vehicle. Says John T. Brady, writing in *"® Boston Post: The chief reason why attempts to solve the problem have failed is beâ€" cause they have been concentrated or. the wrong end of the trouble, or upon the headlights. "They do not cause the glare as is generally supposed. It is really causâ€" & csmm COP 3 C atiss Taking the Glare From Auto Lights wow uJ «PZup TW O RMO O themselves, but by interposing a set of revolving blades between them and thceyedunppmlciiulrim.‘rho blades are on the driver‘s own car and they reduce the glare from the other man‘s lights much as smoked glass would do. But they do not interfere with the driver‘s vision or his judgâ€" ment of distance or color. _ & y t ils to. Wha > applicant for the faced her prosner nursery tea table hantq 3. _ 2*0°° 9nA song This should be put through the , and hung by a string from itra . Not by doing anything to the ligh*s ner prospective and tried hard q " pot "hich is essential , Don‘t hang the jumper heaw 40 3 2 7 urrent which is di;e-c: winds‘hield glass, and a woolen j\lmper or the pockets with pink sugar on Brady, writing in the , but on a long _Wi“_ drop post as daily fogging or summer," S Jeavy have the 1 wil w t point suf fro at must thir sen t} « T find fror t 1« y« q134 t d d t th Bed The plyin: to wi Ofte "But wix t] you c Londo: Hix t} Tl W Ey

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