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The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1925-6-4, Page 2r . o. s �� �,utonnoit�fil RLP T fl ENGIN-V. TO ADJUJ ST ITSELF IN HOT WI A.`i'ITFAR• It makes a difference to the ;motor- solution oat of the system, . At the let whether the thermometer stands same time fresh water run from a at 90 degrees in the shore or at Fero• hose or other source should be fed into. g be- top outand thus fit fast ars it He will soon, Sind out that Burin the /the of thee radiator as sisli the en - heated term the` engine readily is pumped comes overheated, He: should be fa- tire, system before coneeetirig up the Mi.liar with the various • causes of this hose again.. automotive situation. One reason may Where the therroo-syphon system is be because the engine is getting too used; which does not employ a pump, much fuel, If the engine is fed too it is of course, impossible to do this. much gasoi nor it will tend to get tgo But one should remove both upper and hot. The remedy in such an instance obviously lies hi thinning down the mixture. A driver will usually find that the fuel required for summer mo- toring should be leaner than that used in winter. The summer driver finds that the water in the radiator has a greater tendency to boil, which is the result of lower hose connections after evening the engine with the solution and wash it out as well as possih e with fresh water. .A hose inserted in the upper ' connection of the cylinder would force out all the -solution with a collection of sediment, and the same process with , the radiator aught to clean it out. FAN BELT. MAY GIVE TROUBLE. • an overheated engine. However, the Fan belts are more likely to get out Most effective results will be secured of order in summer than in wieter,' throws! Said to' date back to the 18th century, this frame' structure at Sillere, when this water is not too cold. Some This may be because the engine 1 much less than the . of more readily' in hot' Quebec; is described es the "oldest house in' Canada:' Acquired by the Do - engines dove op grease and 11 i minion Historical Society, it will be used for exhibiticu purposes.. maximum- horsepower because they weather. Belts should have oil enough (� are too well cooled. Others seem to: to keep them soft and pliable, but not have other qualifications besides tone call activity during vision:' This con- :for use when their husbands return Per - become overheated in spite of the best enough to cause digging. They should Acting to Unseen Aildiences, 1 and quality of ti,ufee. lie •must learn t elusion hays been reached atter a long home very late -from the office. Per Suc are.' i be wiped free of all oila use the The broadcasting of plays offers a 1 g dramatic values, ' He must be able to r series of experiments since 1917:. The haps they. would break Dr. Buss's' in - various conditions would not obtain es Itis always possible b e to adjust iso boat, wide eco e for the ex reseion .of dee4 v onsparts were. working as e � The belt should tightened w p p dee-lee/wee the - varying degrees of rite- force is apparently ge ated in the ori talent. l emotion f' the cliaaacter he is •brain escapes from In wireless acting the technique is ortraving. By the caress in his voice through the eyes, WIRELESS FROM THE HUMAN BRAIN Have yell O'er becotiie suddenly eeld, lifeless a-ffeir dancesla the.mos•t conscious of sontegno looking .at res. Ile=1.iy uuxzlnet 7 and i;rstii,.ttively turned recon tea see' 'thus the ponez�°of- the. eye is .8,17:tic- t}lal --et Scltoolbo3's, of course, have iviio it ',wee? Kira Biu ,eiei Reit a lone stauc,ted Vit. But science has. pair of sees staring at you? People only jest confirniod their .speoulation 115115lly feel uncomfortable when eft- thea there really is; something. In the ting in a' railway carriage with a bat- hLaaziaster's glare.' More, this eye- flay -meter actually measures the poWar tory of eyes opposite, 'Vixhy? Again, of dile eye, Ordinary. people, even when folk meet for the first time they children; move the needle about fie find it awk.w.'ir'd to hold each other's teen deertios, But Dr, Russ stated that gaze for more than a few seconds. i lie 'has- seen it 'soar to sixty degrees , Bat who would believe that wheat under the smile of a wellknown act - you peer into the eyes of another per- rose, Tris is quite understandable, son a beam cif electrical euerg3:-a hit- but a similar result. happened when a pian wireless ray-actua11v travels hying officer, no doubt an ace of aces; from your eye? A British doctor has focused his eyes upon It, proved this astonishing -statement to � It makes' one wonder; 'how far the be •a feet. Dr. Ruse has invented' an needle would whiz round if a first instrument which is set in motion, class pawnbroker tried his optical when anyone looks at it through a pair•' powers on the instalment. Probably of opera glareee twelve feet away! the indicator would. touch 100 and ring i Measuring the. Eye's Power. the bell. And probably the wily palm- ,. "i >, brokerwould ask for his. penny back! There'ir�•an electrical change wt1 w:. every•lheart-best of a normal person," No experiments have yet been tried Dr. Russ stated recently. "And the with those amiable persons+ who have. retina of the eye: shows minute electi•i- developed a specially penetrating gaze. strument altogether. One' of the possible uses of this in- vention is in. connection with the ding - k' th de- 1 h ld be so that matic maize em o and Y m the body signer Intended they should, During there is sufficient tension to drive the I I d beauty Df -- di t be able to' The peculiar instrument used too noels of disease, far a p;enson in very tags his sigh must Imagine the des- cy finder, about our,• inches of being able to convey by his ges- •; pair that clouds `iris features.. of three inches da • ,Sereice of the Depart. of the Interior • to h the eyes can interfere at Ottawa says. the cold weather the motorist who fan at all engine speeds, drives with n reiarded Wherever the flywheel has spokes. almost entirely vocal, xin his unseen audience mus ehabitually l faced f are unnecessary. On imaginehis d his lover' by demonstrate this force conu-ds�ta of a• poor health has ,little or. no effect � on s ark may observe no serious cause- to forma fan the oil pan and hood an arm i�n sg s arm stun P Y the stage an actor has.. the ad g they" h s long and the eye-ray-meter.Experiments are temper- tight so that the air in h d meter made of alio being carried out to see whether quences because the.outsideP should be Rept t gh f Lieutenant -Commander G. E. Brandt, head of the Naval-Ocednographic He- search party, which will 6perate.in the vicinit\y�of• the Panama Canal, and the Caribbeah Sea in an effort to study" the bottom of the seer as, a food source. Natural Resources Bulletin. The Natural Resources Intelligence ature is in his favor. But in the good will be drawn through the radia x tures, facial play, and deportment the. old summer time be finds that his' rather than through other openings- If 1 We are made. aware of the hero's sense and action of the play; but the engine overheats and gives trouble. the radiator is not kept free from ori , wireless actor must remember that virtue, ,not, as formerly, by hips blue This is because he has not changed his, the outside passages will collect dust,' R it cannot see brill, and that eyes and innocent expression, but by in front The cylinder is free to turn„ method of driving as- should be done., which 'will prevent a free flow of air his audiencethe, quality of his voice. All the euroe drive with a re -!the radiatingsurface. The they rely up his voice to convey every ii tions must be conveyed to the listener for the supporting thread is over a In hot weatherto and reduce movement of the play. 1 foot long and Saes nn through a tall tarried spark is to invite the engine same effect follows if the front radia- The aspiring wireless actor moist by careful vocal expression: chimney fitted to overheat itself. Because the- engine' for is too thickly smeared with paint. strips of mica and metal. This is sus- pended by a thread of. unspun silk in- side •a serail cabinet having a. window the force from ' 1 se' hroadcas�ting.. So -far, Development of natural resources with wiree ., no conclusive results have been obtain- means very considerably more to Can. - ed', but it' is thought that the was es ada than the taking out of raw ma- emitted by tire eyes of human beings terial.. Associated•and necessary in- and animals, are of the same nature as terests are found, in the large. and modernly equipped industries that make up our urban centres. Take our agricultural products for example. In order that the best re- sults may be secured modern machin- ery is necessary, while' to inarket,the crop requires many 'and varied acces- sories. Our flour mills, to. make thele output available to the consumer, are large users of cottotn., and paper bags, which run into many millions �annu- tothetopof the carr- those employed in wireless work, but net. When anyone glances at it this of an exceedingly short wave length. naay knock at little at low speed the I The pump, while it will wear out in driver may have a tendency to leave' time, is one of the last places to look the lever partly retarded all of thefor trouble. The action of the pump time instead of advancing it when a' may be determined usually by remov- higher speed is reached: big the radiator filler cap when the TIMING OF THE SPARS. engine is running and noting whether With the battery type of ignition or not the water is circulating. But system some change in the timing of if a baffle plate is placed in the filler the spark usually needs to be made to opening it cannot be seen. Then a test give the desired result at all points may be made in the same manner by throughout the range of engine which the cleaning solution is washed speeds, Of course, when the engine is outVith the thermo-syphon hon system turning over slowly under a heavy'yF load the spark must be kept retarded very little pressure is generated and a to prevent knocking. However, when, slight obstruction will stop the flow it is running at the higher speeds or, of water. Therefore it is more nec-. at medium speed under light loads theessary to keep the system free from spark must be advanced to secure pro-; sediment and to see that the gaskets per power, efficiency or operation and at the joints are made with circular to prevent overheating i openings of full size in order not to Most battery systems are equipped obstruct the flow of water. Likewise, with a governor which automatically', water must be kept above the pipe advances the spark as the engine speedleading to the top of the radiator hi. is increased, but somey are not and in ' order to have any circulation in this: either case considerable manipulationsystem. ttype of cooling of the hand . spark lever. may be neces- Sometimes the lining of the hose is sat to secure the best results.loosenedand folds back inside, so that Y Overheating may sometimes bet the water floes not flow' freely. This traced to sediment in the radiator,! is due to carelessness in stretching the which cuts off the free radiation of, hose over the pipes at the radiator and heat. The use of a saturated solution' cylinder block -,Also the lining of the of washing soda and water will usu-1 old hose will sometimes loosen up and ally remove this. During the hot' pieces will lodge where they cut off weather each year, it is well to fill the; the circulation. cooling system with a solution of this( In conclusion, keep the engine free. sort and run the engine for several from carbon and keep the valve push hours. Then drain this solution off 1 rods adjusted close and be sure the and refill the system with clean water. pump in the system used, a pu p isi employed, the upper hose should be' exhaust from the muffler is free. leis - comforts and troubles during the warm weather months can be largely disconnected train the radiator and the' eliminated if the motorist remembers engine should be run to pump the how the engine is different in summer. How Heat Travels. one ten -thousandth part of an inch in diameter, • B t the invention though wonderful p A few months ago the man who sug- gested that it might be posible to mea- sure the heat received from a girl's cheek three-quarters of a mile away, or from a candle 4 miles away, would probably have been looked en with some suspicion. But this semingly in- credible thing has now been done by means of an instrument invented by Professor C. V. Bays, of England. This instrument was constructed to measure the heat received from the brighter stars. It is made of a "sus- pension fibre" some thousands of times finer than any made before, and to obtain this fibre certain precious stones were melted down and drawn out into filaments at a high speed and under a high temperature. The metal substance was stretched by being fixed to an arrow, which Pro- fessor Boys shot from a bow through a hot flame down a room about ninety feet long. Most of the melted sub- stance remained behind, but between it and the arrow floated a, fibre as deli- cafe as a spider's web, and less than u has failed in its chief purpose, for the heat from the stars is. too slight for even this delicate instrument to re- gister. The Tree Climbing Fish. "Do you think it's true about this tropicai fish climbing the palms?" a "Sure it is. I've often seen birds find a good perch in the trees." Variety of Industries. . Birmingham, England, is said to pro- duce the largest variety of manufac •lured goods of any city in the world. murr AND JEFF --By Bud Fisher. Seasse. t t $rT, we COTTA FtANb IT TO life ekEKttANS; 1-0014,Pv 'THAT, "DtisoAY" fi, uLe tNI «NO MRN S L/104:7- THAT'S NlcE A l7tdcc ale CAMOU t/' FLiNae pi S x'evert Sethi. Youeze CtZA�y. s eN on JC-FF: CRASS -WORD PUZZLE VAR MU 111111111111- aI® HMV 111111111111111111.' 11 ME 9 20 E®®i_Ali . jII II ditillaill- 1111 1111111111d 1111111111 11 MUM '1111111-- 'NIIIIWIN 11111111i1IIII ME_ 30 0 6 • 'et �� r ,; ti MEOW 11111111111 ala ■ 68 HOR ZONTAL. 1 -Thrive 7 -Tropical. fruit (pl.) 13 -Wander 14 -Kingly 16--Col!ecj:ed 17 -Ardor 18 -Happening 19 -Girl's name 20 -Hat material 21 -Civil Engineer 22 -Negative 23 -Burn 24 --Large plants 26 -Storms 31 -Somber 32 -Hesitate 36 -Rocks 38 -Impede 39 -Toward 40 -To cut off 41-A human being 42 -Father (familiar) 43 --Artists' stands 46 -Avaricious persons 49 -Lees 50 -Head covering 62 -Blaspheme 53 -The whole range of anything 86 --Sensitiveness of feeling 59 -Indefinite article 60-Abbr. for name of a continent 61-A minute particle 64 -Scent 66 -Several things considered as a whole 67 -Mohammedan chief 68 -Nature 69 -Small Spanish horse 70 -An elderly man 71 -Soaked in a liquid 7e -Argued (abbr.). 70 MIN THE INTERNATIONAL sYHO{CA•-E. VERTICAL 1 -Likes better 2 -Part 3 -Egg shaped r 4-b is pached 8 -Build 8 --Wanderers 7 -Prohibited 8 -Female singing voices 9 -One spots 10 -Cognomen 11 -Girl's name 12 -More precocious 16 -You 26 --Consume 27 -Rose oli ' 26 --Water fowl 29 -Printer's. measure 30 -Exchanges for money 32 -Overpowering fear 33 -Part of verb "to be" 34 -The one above 85 -Burns - S7 -Wireless call for aid 38 -Cut of pork • 43• --Newspaper writers 44 -For example (abbr.) 45 -An animal' 47 -Day of the week,(abbr.) 48 -Cut off 50 -Preserved 51 -Kicked, as a football 53 --Determine by measurement 54 -Nice perception 56 -Entrance 57 -Contend' with 58 -Woody plant 61 -Plateau 62 -Overlook 63 -Part of automobile 66 -Within INTENSIFYING TOURIST INFORMATION Canada Shoi,ild. Take Advant- age of Exceptiondly Favor- able Conditions for Tourist Business. "Tourist trafRc is one industry; ripe for .development In Western. Canada at the present time," is the statement of one of the engineers of the Natural Resources Intelligence Service are be- ing directed towardthis end. As ,an :agency for selling interest in our natural 'resources Cenada's tourist traffic' plays. -an. important part. The "American tourist generally has an eye to business as well as pleasure. -Many of them make their trips to `Canada. a tour of investigation,; resulting often in investments, -in this country.. Can- ada's busdness growth' has- •created an interest . among American business 'nen that is simply revolutionary 'as _contrasted with their attitude toward Resources Intelligence Service' of the the Dominion- only ten years ago: Department of the Interior, on return- ing eturning from -an investigation of the na- Alberta tural British Columbia,eurces ofoLThiisnengiineer World's Largest Electric Fan states that our attraw''.ions to tourists, Made for African Gold Mine in this area :constitute one natural re- source ready to "cash in on immedI The largest fan in the world is at ately with` Iittle expenditure and no present being -erected on one of the diminution of the original assets on Rand gold mines. Thirty feet in which it Is 'founded diameter, it will carry eight blades, t across,writes a •Johan- ten fee ns each Canada has the natural attractio to meet any competition for the Atueri- nesburg• correspondent of The Morn - 'Il d can automobile And other tourist traf- ing post,- London. It wi rzv� 9,0U0 fic. • She has the big game and other sporting attractions, thewaterways; scenery, summer climate, and SD on. The service provided by our railways is the best and our -highways are now comparable with many of the ' main highways in the United States, and they are being rapidly extended and improved. cubic feet of air a minute, and it will take a 15,000 horse -power steam en- gine to turn it at 130 revolutions a minute. The fan is to be placed above a circular shaft 3,500 feet deep to draw out the foul air •. from the entire underground, workings. We have the material: to sell and we j have a ready market, creating a aline - p tion of remarkable,It is. possibilities. I a situation which has developed very abruptly --mainly within the last few years. Next door we have a nation, with nearly 110,000,000 peoiileand over 15,000,000 automobiles, bordering us clear•, across the continent. Most of the motor cars are owned by people with the means and inclination to tra- vel. It is doubtful whether -any coun- try ever faced such favorable condi- tions as Canada enjoys to -day with regard to the tourist traffic -a class of business which has long been nuns . ed as a large source of income in such countries as France, Italy and Switz- erland. . ' In 'tate report of the United States Solution of last week's i uZzlo. 00®®® 30131313 ®00© EMILI A 0®®0 0110130111111111011901111121111131!®©: ®- C135101.- ©.`.13111 Q_ B 1311-13. 136E2 6-;1111 SU 191313 •Can 1 ES un- 001111 13 1901 0 U® a 010®®aaU®®C/®®®® 1111338... MO EN ®Ci®® ® -s0® ®M®� . Li "01©0U® ©•. QOUgil Y p O The Origin of Chapels. The word chapel comes from cepa, a chest. The word was originally ap- foreign trade for 1923 the expenditure. plied to the chest in which the relics of tourists abroad is estimated at of a saint were deposited, afterwards $500,000,000. The increasing tourist to the apartment ina church or Bathe - travel in. Canada bids fair to absorb a drill in which the cheat was kept, considerable portion of this annual ex- These chapels were dedicated separ- penditure. ately, but Were known by the name of What, is required more than any- the saint whose relics they contained.'' thing 'else to take full advantage of •. this situation and to create a still Small Part. more thriving and remunerative' Indus the sa;t fisheries. of Canada is absorbed to -operation among. Originally Wordsworth and Cole- -e- Small ole- by her fisheries. ridge -planned to write "The A.ncient Natural resources and their devel- opment may not appear to be of great interest to our people generally; but there is not one Canadian, but who is. directly or. indirect;y interested - either his 'livelihood defends upon his earnings therefrom or his iiivestrnettts'-. are absorbed and his dividend returns are governed by such development;, Women Soldiers. In Turkey all citizens: who '.Have reached their majority add are mental- ly soiled enjoy, equal rights without distinction orsox of religion. 'With this ccifality has come about the emancipation of 'women, avid not Only do they enjoy equal rights iv1tU men. but also have . etaual duties. The Turkish's my. Is open to woman, and Targe numbers Of sttt.rd' daughters of a sturdy race leave betn enrollee in the ranks, Military 'p'roniotlou:, are available til them just as if they were me,ii--•so that the Turkish testy is to -day the :only *amity in tire world that ,can boast of :.:.:.:: -1 - 6i•. •.>i:.1:2G"Y!. . :•-:ln4i;4iA;t...: S \.irHy,: two Wwe nen colonels and about a'bitn•, ally. Fruit growers require millions of containers, such as boxes, baskets, crates and barrels,. to place their pro- duct on the market. Forest development has built up huge manufacturing plants to, provide the necessary machinery, while the • output of our forest's provides the, raw material for many of our large industries, Water -power development, provid- ing the hydro -electric energy which. operates huge pulp and paper mills and other plants, affords employ` ment to armies of mechanics; in the manufacture of . machinery.. A re- cent electrical equipment. and order for this portion of a new paper mill amounting to between $800,000 and $900,000. • eerie Mineral production, due to the wide variety of output, the many purposes served and the almost innumerable products into which minerals in some form enter, requires a varied range of machinery And equipment. From the w manufacture of explosives, with which nearly all mining is carried on, to the containers used in marketing, prac- ticalIy all trades are called- upon for supplies. One iIIustration of the lat- ter is the manufacture of cement. This product reaches the consumer al- most entirely in cotton bags. _Last year the output of cement in Canada was 7,768,552 barrels, equal to. 31,- 074,608 bags: The manufacture of enormous• -numbers of bags absorbs a great amount of cotton and labor. It is `estimated that "these •cement bags average`abont eight trips to and from the mills -.acid that only two or three round tripe are made annually. To • handle the annual output of cement would, therefore, require -about four million new bags each year. • Gold and other precious' metals are shipped in oak kegs, gypsum and plaster are marketed . in paper bags, • salt is packed ,l rgely in cotton bags, while liquid minerals, such as oil, gasolines, etc., are shipped in barrels and tin cans. Marketing of fish also calls for a variety of containers, from the small sardine can to the oak barrel for pickled fish,. while a great portion of the various organizations dealing with Mariam." together, but Wordsworth this traffic. The efforts of the Natural coxtributed only six lines. A'Diiscussion Over an Object in "No Man's I au d." in Mexico •- _... . ._illi ANY54r i, Mitt CYes CAht TELL Tek/XT"TRAT Mt)LG IS A eseseeI i+ AS A cAMoutLROE IT'S 'A ctetiDe Ptecc ot+ tuoizt�:'fl' . nab Poe` ioNS 'Mae ALLWRO4Gt tt'• L.,001<s 1-1K:C- FA 6CA'T- Tb' MC M /et t - eetee G Rt G}i'ii BUT IT LocKs LVA* • A P€5Eec't tMN ITAT1' of A MLLE to MEQ SEhto2 MUTT You ileTTeci G<7\SCE \M OCCULt Sr. t- li BLIND ' N COvLD TGLLMAT WAS a'nuIAw,v'% M vi -E: (sete0;;\ LOISter to • eta n ease trod rvonien offieers of junior ranks. World's Diamonds. '•t'he.diatnonde of the ivories probably represent a value of $5,000,,0e0,000.