HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1952-8-27, Page 9Most Errors Made
In Hot Weather
The idea ,Is prevalent that races
in tile tropics are bone idle. This is
untrue, for When removed 10 tem-
perate ,climes they work just as
efficiently.op lite natives of those
parts onets they grow aeclimatiz-
cd Recently Mr. N. H, llfackworth
iitscessed the effects of heat and
cold on therjtumnn body and .mind
at a joint nteeting of nasal engin-
eers and architects,
He had worked On the subject
for sante t:tile and his eoncltltiions
were more or Iola the sante com-
ile
i settee`, ,tones-: re'atheil :"by -the
lean in il.e street; except that his
findings were mare precise.
Eleven Morse Code operators
were set it three-hour test under
tenlperauues' that varied from 75
io 105 degrees ,I'.' They dispatched
Ione' messages, each consisting of
250 groups or five letters or num-
bers. Mistakes crept .in between
90 degrees and 100 at tho rate of
12-17 an hour. At temperatures'
above that they rose to 94 an hour.
Physical work was done best in
temperatures up to 85 degrees;
- after that, signs of .deterioration
act in rapidly.
Tests were also made tinder very
cold conditions, when it was proved
that the movement of limbs and
judgment Were seriously impaired.
One set of humans can accustom
themselves to -conditions that suit
another; but all humans' suffer in
efficiency when it is either too
cold or too hot.
-Three Belles—And alls well with
Britain's navy as three sailor-
ettes from the Girl's Naval Train-
ing College at Portsmouth
"man" the riggings of H.M.S.
Foudroyant. Built In 1817, the
Foudroyant is the oldest of.the
British navy's sailing ships still
'afloat.
Travels 16,000 Miles
Hunting A Pet Cat
For a whole heck Mrs. Gladys
Doggctt,wandered among the -palm
trees in stveltering Singapore call-
ing "Plies, Pttss'i1 She was trying
to find Tibby,`'the eat she had to
leave in Sangapore ten months
previously when she returned to
Britain,
Mrs, Doggett had travelled 16,-
000 miles out to Singapore again in
the hope that she could locate her
• lost pet. The trip cost her over a
thousand dollars. l3ttt it was in vain.
She could find no •trace of Tibby.
She spent many hours searching,
the big general headquarters camp
of Far Eastern Land Forces in the
hope that her cat was being cared
for there. She called on all her
old friends to see whether Tibby
bad taken refuge, with them,
She inspected an identity parade
of eats In 'the British' sergeant's
mess. But not one of them, she
reported sadly,' looked remotely
like her lost cat. She even asked
some soldiers' to seatter bbzes tort-
taining tasty pieces of Tibby's fav-
ourite fish round the catnp, think-
ing that Tibby; might turn up for
meal.
All Mrs. Doggett's efforts proved
vain, and she had to return to her
Kent ho'itle'without Tibby. But she
has still not given tip I1ph that one
day she may hear -news from him.
Two revellers were driving along
a highway when a policeman stop-
ped theni; "Look here," he, de-
manded, "What's -the ,idea el driv-
ing backtvardsP"
"Backwards?"
Ares!" anappetl the policeman
The revellers looked 'at "each'
lather. "l say," nitsed• one "no.
'wonder it's taking us so long •to
get home,"
SPLOAtTr
013.
XfiLrC%i' is
Reams and reams of stuff have
been written and printed regarding
the late -- and from a Canadian.
standpoint, unlamented — Olympic
doings over at Helsinki. We've
heard about the Yankee star who
won the Decathlon; about the
Czechoslovak husband and wife who
between them deeded up enough
gold medals to make a full set of
teeth for Champion Jack Johnson;
about this one, and that one, and
the other one.
But perhaps the most outstanding
all-round athlete at those games re-
ceived—at least as far as opr per-
sonal reading went -about as much
publicity as would pad a crutch,
and n very tiny crutch, at that. Not
to make a secret of it, he was Larse
Hall of Sweden, the winner of -the,
Modern Pentalthon; and while we
have never done any Modern Pen-
talathoning ourself, and have no
immediate intention of starting, we
would judge that it is a very tough
event indeed 10 win. Or even to
finish, when you come right down
to it. And if you don't believe us,
give a listen.
* * *
This contest for five widely
diverse sports is the modern ver-
.sion of the most appreciated com-
petition in the Olympiads of an-
cient Greece. In those days the Pen-
thathlon consisted of a sprint, a
discus throw, a long or broad jump,
a' javelin throw and a wrestling.
tournament. The Greeks used to se
great store on all-round develop-
ment and thought more of the "pen-
tathlete" than they did of the spec-
ialist'in one event.
The Modern Pentathlon which
includes none of the original five
carne into the present series of the
Olympics in 1912 at the instiga-
tion of the founder, Baron Pierre
u an His Coubertin of France.. ., H s main
desire was to try and interest mili-
tary leaders of all nations in a com-
petition that would„appeal to sold-
iers” Thus the modern pentathlon
submits entrants to .the sort of
thing a dispatch rider might have
to undergo on active service. It
comprises , horse riding, fencing,
shooting, swimming and cross
country running.
* * *
What happens is that the com-
petitorrides a horse, please note
that it's a horse and not his Horse,
across a 5,000 -meter obstacle -
strewn route traversed only once
previously. He loses marks: for falls,
refusals and speed below 450 yards
per minute.
* * *
His horse isf then supposed to •
be shot from under him and he
engages his adversary with. the
sword, in this case. the epee, Then
otir hero is obliged to resort to a
pistol. He is allowed 20 shots at
disappearing silhouettes ranged at
25 meters. Running out of ammu-
nition he takes to the water and
swims to the far bank—a distance
of 300 meters, On climbing ashore
he has to make the rest of the way
on his own feet — a 4,000 -meter
cross-country run to the final
destination.
* * *
Military men have always dom-
inated the event but this year for
the very first time a non-military
competitor was the individual win-
ncr, we learn front' the ` esteemed
Christian Science Monitor. Larse
Hass is a carpenter and part-
time policeman at the docks
of Gothenburg. The excellence of
his all-round efficiency was clearly
demonstrated by his ability to fin-
ish firsts in two events and no lower
than 15th in the other three. And
all in a top -grade international field
of.51.
* * *
Victory for Hall was not alto-
gether a surprise because in 1940
and again in 1951 he was world
champion at -modern pentathlon-
ism. It was also in keeping with
tradition because except for 1936
the Olympic gold medal winner
has always been a Swede. In fact,
except for U.S.A. in the pole vault
and broad jump it is hard to find
an Olympic event which one coun-
try has so consistently dominated
for 40 years.
* * *
When the modern pentathlon
made its Olympic debut in their
capital city •of' Stockholm the
Swedes packed one, two, three.
They repeated at Antwerp' in 1920
and yet again: at Paris in 1924. At
Amsterdam • in 192$1,:and at Los
Angeles in 1932 the Swedes missed
"This is the master's bedroom
and there 11 --Master; t
He's All Ears—In the jungle of his cornfield, Basil Soupos holds ,a
yafdstick• to demonstrate the prolificlyield he has received v a
liberal fertilizing. Seven ears' can be counted in this 36 -inch -seg..
ment of Soupos'. 100 acres of corn. The civil engineer -turned -farm-
er fjgures`he has about 30,000 s$olks per acre while some of his
neighbors get no more than 7000. Because of the lack of rain
Soupos probably won't reach his coveted goal of 200 bushels per
acre, but if the dry spell continues he'll flood his field with water
pumped from the Chariton River. Looking.ahead, Soupos says he
won't be satisfieduntil he raises 300 bushels, per acre.
the grand sweep by only dropping
third, place both times. In each case
their third competitor finished
fourth.
***
At Berlin in 1936 the •representa-
tives of the blue and:,yellow flag
for the first andso farConly time
were not among the medal winners.
They placed fourth, 10th and 16th.
At London fn 1948°they "were back
a
aIh and placed first' and third,
with their number three competitor
occupying 17th place. Then over'at
Helsinki they were first, ninth and•
eleventh, which gave them second
place in the team tourney officially
decided Inc the first, time incon-
junction with the individual com-
petition. Hungary ' with second,
third and 12th was the winner. Fin-
land was third," U.S.A. fourth,
U.S.S.R. fifth and Brazil sixth.!
1 t
As Inc bfc, Larse Hall, the indi-
vidual champ, Inc, is, prgbalTy back
at his ditties' of icarpentering and
part-time policing.W
a merely add
that we would hate, to be a yegg
on the lam in dear old Gothenburg
during the part of the time Larse is
pounding his police ,beat
Loved a Girl, so
Burned Her Village
If you loved a girl madly and
she jilted you, would you kill her,
or burn down her house and with
it a whole village? In cold blood
you'll certainly answer no.
And yet such things happen to
seemingly Sane people.
Way back in 1937 two Arab
troopers of a famous French Co-
lonial cavalry regiment went one
evening to a soldiers' cafe, where
both fell in love simultaneously
with a lovely blonde dancing girl.
Each claimed her, and neither
would give way, thought they were
close friends.
The Unknown Blonde
Quarrelling violently, they de-
cided to fight a duel to the death
—for a girl neither had known
for more than .ml hour!
With the girl, they made their
way to a quiet spot, Then, draw-
ing their heavy cavalry sabres, the
troopers formally saluted and
crossed blades. For twenty min-
utes the fight raged furiously. The
girl, the only witness, clapped her
hands ecstatically whenever one of
them was in danger. Cut and
parry, thurst and lunge, every
trick `of swordsmanship was used.
Suddenly, the guard of one was
pierced and he fell mortally wound-
ed. At that moment police arrived
on •the' Scene, and the victor, hav-
ing killed his on friend for an un-
known blonde, fled the scene For
his life—without the gird
jealously, too, was the motive
which led an Indian to seek re-
venge on a girl who refused :to
marry him. Enraged, he set fire to
her home in a village near Aligarh,
United Proyinces, when the sir1
and her family were inside. They
escaped ilijury, though the fire
spread rapidly and burned down
almost every -hoose in the Indian
village. Some people were badly
injured, but no lives- were lost.
The Indian was impr'soned for
arson, 1
Often the fit of jealousy lasts
only for a few seconds, to be fol-
lowed by bitter remorse. It hap-
pened that way to an Italian, who
arrived home one night to find
his wife in the arms of a lover. In
jealous rage, he picked up the other
man and threw him out of the
window—to his death1 In vain Inc
pleaded in a %ante court for clem-
ency. Bitterlylorry though he was,
he was sentenced to five years' iln-
prisounlent.
Playing With Fire
One of the oddest stories which
has its origin in jealousy is told of
a beautiful coquette nailed Mute.
`Tirevit, an actress at the Imperial
Opera in the early nineteenth, cen-
tury, in ,,Paris.. Playing with fire,
she deliberately caused two men=
M. le Pique and M. do Grandpre
—to fall in love with her.
Each begged her to marry him.
Mme. Tir'/rit refused them both,
but promised herself to whichever
should prove himself the better
man. They decided to fight a duel
—in balloons!
So two identical balloons were
built, and in the garden of the
Tuileries 'thousands of people
gathered one fine morning to wit-
ness the strangest of all duels. The
balloons were released some eighty
yards apart, both containing a duel-
list, accompanied by a second. At
a given signal, each was to at-
tempt to shoot down by blunder-
buss his rival's balloon. ler le
Pique fired first but missed. M. de
Grandpre's aint was better, how-
ever, and he put a shot right
through his opponent's balloon.
Collapsing, it fell to the ground
with such force that both M. le
Pique and the second were killed.
Did the victor marry his be-
witching lady? Not Mme. Tirevit
refused to keep her promise.
Only a few years ago a strange-
story
trangestory of jealous love was reported
from Nice south of France. A nine-
teen -year-old youth, Andre de
Maurizl, wanted to marry a seven-
teen -year-old girl with whom he
was, deeply in love.
Tragedy in a Bar
Icer father, refused Itis consent,
saying she was promised to an-
other. One evening his sweet-
heart was having a drink in a bar
when Andre walked in and threw
his arms 'around her. Almost in-
stantly there was an explosion,.
killing the girl and mortally injur-
ing Andre. Before he died, he con-
fessed Itis plan to kill them both
with a hand grenade hidden under
his shirt.
Sometimes, the act which pro-
vokes mad jealousy is innocent
enough. For instance, in Warsaw
in 1937, a young man named
Wasyl Tynkow saw his sweet-
heart dancing with another man.
It led to eight deaths!
IIis girl, twenty -year-old Par -
asks Pawlyszlco, was the local
beauty queen. Though in love with
Wasyl, site liked to dance with
other sten. Wasyl knew, however,
that Paraska had another suit-
or, much wealthier than he, and he
suspected that her relatives and
friends were trying to stake her
jilt him in favour of the wealthier
man,
He 'forbade her to dance with
others, and, when he saw her do-
ing to, raced home and wrote a
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HAVE youanything needs, dyeing or clean -
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I0A7i0AL*7 sate of two: three. four and.
ave Reek old 'Bronze turkey potato.
Non -sexed, hen. or town. Send for apodal
Price.
TWEDDLE CHICK HATCHERIES i.Tn.
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FIVE' registered Angus butts, eleven to
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Come and look these bulls over. Kenneth
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MORNINGS MALLS
52,6011 cash. No balance for thisbeautiful,
newly decorated 11 storey house 3 bed-
rooms, open hearth rtreptnee. glassed In
verondnth: drilled well. Garden steely
loadscaped. A home You will be proud to
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J. r. ALLAN
Real Estate Broker and Insurance
81 Smith Station Street. Weston. Ont.
CH. 1-2031 Alas 130
short note in which Inc stated his
suspicions. Then he loaded his pis-
tol and hurried to Paraska's house.
Soon, Paraska and her relatives
and friends arrived home from the
dance. While she was changing her
frock, \Vasyl appeared and shot
her dead. Then he turned on the
screaming woolen around and
calmly shot them, one by one, as
well as three men who sought to
stop him. After he had watched all'
seven die, he turned the gun on
himself.
Golddigger Chloe -"You say
Ethel breaks her dates; what's so
bad about that?"
-Joey —"I still say that getting
hone broke every time I go out
with her is too mucin."
Probably True—Lily—"Sorry, I
don't go out with perfect stran-
gers.n
Billy — "That's right — I'm not
perfect."
30AII E
LM
gentilee', Laretett Stare Knee 1035.
IlooS Tires, $1.010 wed 00. retreaded.
fires, 000 x 10, 514.00, Other atm, priced.
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^bargee one way: Peninsula Tire Corpora,.
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'hone. t-13;1. I •,akl'_„,.,,
ARAGES--Portable, prefabricated, rust-
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Lornted: «gone of Coreorathlo. Town of
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Frame and Steel (buetructioa, Equipment,
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Extra, Consent Betiding, ASprox. e0' X
115'. Equipped tor Poultry 0r Hog Role'
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1k,01,10 Comae. -A1'prOx. 3 Acr00 Land.
To close Eeta10 . , 80.500.00, Terme,
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Montoro, One
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58.600, 100 acres. 82 workable. Erick
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8$21.
NEWTONVILLE
MUST SELL TO CL0532 ESTATE
$14,000 for Oils 100-0cre farms, no balance.
lIouse la solid brlek. 10 rooms, centre hall,
excellent water 50501y, 2 springs, .well and
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rich windy loam, sutlahlo fore tobacco
0001001,15. all level, 15 miles to No. 2 High-
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ALSO 31.600 cools, tun price for this .3 -
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on 1 -acro, apple trees. epriligs, close to
stream, good barn, exclusive listltay.`
J. P. ALLAN
REAL Ef'TATF. BROKER—INSURANCE
30-31 SOUTH STATION ST.
WESTON
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ISStlE 35 — 1952
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Elmira, Ontario
No Fire Tending!.
But So MUCH HEAT
i
with My Clean, Automatic
M m MannIuG
OIL HEATER
Wake Up In A Warm-Housel
Say goodbye to fke-tending, dust ens 51,1.50ur
Warm Morning Oil Healer taker the work at of
baler, sooty wants—Ihre 3 to d room,,
Lots Of Heat On The Floor!
Important Warm Morning !colorer not only get
ample heat out of Net, they'ro505, that haul to
gbv, you top comfort, ,pread.o "heat -carpel"
on floor. Demolish too --rich baked -enamel Nish
Cool And Gas Models, Tool
With odvonced factum, that won 1i
million then. Models to tot 1 to 5
roams, porcelain -enamel Mites. (Coal
models aha le eluad'stoel) Sae them at
your Worm Moming dealer's.
Mangum
Oil, Coal and Gas Heaters
, B00N.STRACHAN COAL CO., LIMITED(
boonlnlon Square Building, S
Montreal, quo. 1
08 ' Montreal Toed Building, 1
Toronto, Ontario
pleas, sand tee your 5511111unrorod folder :000,1no g
the famous WARM MORNING Renton. Rndimlu)
1] gaol 11 Oil ❑ Gas
Nam
LAddre
4
1
LtU SS Sit rtoS
( Elf
Goet/tce (749-140
L . 17 q 17 V lJ $ Q ,L
SEAGRAM
MEN WHO THINK OF TOMORROW PRACTISE 1VMODERATXON TODAY ,,.