The Seaforth News, 1937-02-11, Page 7THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1937
THE SEAFORTH NEWS
PAGE SEVEN.
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The Seaforth News
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-omen II.sa a
Peggy had just reached the ripe age
of sixteen and. considers 'that the
World' is her oyster. The other even-
ing after 'putting her ,parents to bed,
she ex'plained to her 'boy callers:
"B'ringing up parents is all a matter
of kindness and patience."
"I 'eat' ,seven eggs this mornings."
"Of course you mean 'ate'."
"Well, maybe, it was eight"
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Smaplo copy on Rawson
Canadian Pacific Extends Air -Conditioned Service
6�4:�>irilil�3i�'•
ir he
Angus Shops at Montreal are
humming with activity these days
as the Company continues its
comprehensive programme of air-
conditioning. In the current year,
air-couditioning equipment will
be added to 196 cars, Including
standard sleepers, dining cars,
tourist sleepers, parlor cars, and
day coaches, and these, in addi-
tion to the 130 cars air-condition-
ed in 1436, will permit a very
considerable extension of air-con-
ditioned services throughout the
Dominion.
Provision is made by the 1947
programme to provide air-con-
ditioned dining cars on all trains
carrying air-conditioned sleepers
or parlor cars, besides additional
on trains between Montreal and
Quebec, Montreal and Ottawa,
Toronto and Ottawa, and trains
39 and 40 between Montreal and
Saint John, N.B. Air-condition-
ing of tourist cars for use on the
transcontinental trains between
Vancouver and Montreal and. Tor-
onto is a new and interesting fea-
ture of the 1937 programme. This
will supplement last year's ser-
vices which allowed air-condition-
ed standard sleepers, compart-
ment -lounge, bedroom and parlor
cars to be used on transcontinen-
tal trains between Montreal, Tor-
rento, and Vancouver; the Mont-
real, Toronto, Hamilton, Chicago
services; and the night trains be-
tween Montreal and Boston. Air-
uuadattuued sleepers and lounge
cars were also provided for the
"Mountaineer" service between
Chicago, St. Paul, and Vancouver.
Some idea of the work connect-
ed with air-conditioning is given
by the pictures above. Carsare
stripped, as in lower right, and
insulated to keep out heat, cold,
and dust. The pictures at the
left show some or the material
being placed iu the cars. The
satisfaction written. all over the
face or the young lady. is "Lower
9," expresses the public's feelings
toward this new type of contt'ol-
led comfort. En the centre is a
close-up of the control equipment,
by which, as the arrows indicate,
the individual can regulate the
volume and direction of the flow
of air.
YANSEN
(Continued from 'Page .Six)
lower boor, or wharf, fifty feet ,be -
When the manager returned to the
freezing room, Yansen had disappear-
ed below the floor in the hole he had
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THE SEAFORTH NEWS.
SEAFORTH;' ONTARIO.
sunk in the pile of 'fish. The herring,
a'ithougth frozen hard. yielded readily
to the biow.S of his sharp axe. His
greatest .hindrance lay in getting the
broken 'fish up out of the hole he was
digging: At last two riggers chopped
a hole dawn through the boards and
'tarred paper over the shaft, and by
means of a basket and long rape, be-
gan to hoist up the broken fish as
Yansen filled the 'basket.
"Yansen." •said the manager. re-
turing to the freezing -room and stan-
ding above She deep ;hole, "here's a
lantern, a large wad of cotton waste
wet in vinegar and a piece of rope.
"The rope," said he, "1 ant going
to lead ;front you up to the men ou
the roof; tie it beneath your arms.
Keep the wad of waste beside you
every minute. The floor is gradually
settling and should the coils break,
press the waste over your nose and
mouth and ;breathe through it. The
vinegar will neutralize or loll the
gas. 'I am ,going now to examine the
piping," ,said .he. dowering the 'lantern
and waste down into the shaft.
Yamser ;heard the manager's feet
creak on the 'frosty floor. He stood
listening, The building gave a sudden
tremor. The .freezing -room floor set-
tled 'quickly. A sharp hiss of escaping
ammonia, 'forced •by powerful .team
pressure, !burst out. In a clock -tick
the sharp caustic gas filled the place.
The 'manager, blinded and choking.
made a dash for the open door and
landed on the stairs outside. His was
a narrow escape. The two mea on the
roof, when they 'felt the boards settle
beneath then!, ran for the 'hoisting -
crane and slid down the cable to the
wharf.
The manager, when he recovered
from a fit of coughing, cried out to
the 'crowd •on, the wharf, "Get me
some waste and 'vinegar, ?quick; The
ca?ls (have burst, and Yansen is 'down
thirty -Ave feet in the 'hole!"
Then he yelled to the two men on
the roof to hoist Yansen out of the
'hole to the roof. Bart to his surprise
and anguish, they answered ,him from
the 'wharf below.
An engineer came on tb.e Jandrng
with a fire-ibucket 'ha'l:fafilled with
vinegar and •waste. 'The .manager seiz-
ed th.e waste, and pressing it over his
nose and mouth, he .ran into the free-
zing -roam toward the Mole.
He rett!rned almost immediately.
"The freezing -room floor has settled
to the middle so much that the hole
os-er 'Yansen's head is entirely closed
unpd" the sih'outed,
1He'i( suffocate in a minute!" cried
•the engineer.
The manager ran down the stairs,
opening each of the two lower room
floors to allow the .gas to escape. "Get
a section of four -inch pipe. quick!" he
napper "At !east twenty -feet long!
fret ,sledge;llanttners an.! a block of
'len ran in every direction. The
151151a,4er hats tete.! to the freezing -
„,,,,n, an,' covering hi- nose and
m mth, measure,: tag ,listance from
the shaft to tine side of the building.
\\*hen he returned to the wharf, the
engineer and men had brought a
lath;.g senior of iron pipe. 'four inches
in diameter. and three sledgeham-
mers.
A staging was quickly rigged sonic
feet above the wharf. The long piece
f Pipe was pointed in the open door
of the lower room, 'Phe sharpened
.io Men plug test- inserted in its end.
Suddenly the manager caught the
-.unit of blows coming. from within
the building. He ,an; out to tile Wren.
'l'an you shear him now?” ,he asked
the engineer.
"Now and then. I catch a'hlow " en-
soered the Mil, "htst they are faint
an I 'irregular.
"The t.: is beginning to affect hum,
no doubt sai Cie Illanlgtr, "Force
the pipe m with all your vii. -ht. Wren!"
�'r ssstie'd I'nt' �:: �tlnsttl`Jss' .
Ironr. icer of pipe remained outside
'lift her ;lard:" the manager cried
1 every •bio,t the sten struck• and
11 his anxiety se begat to remove his
.,en coat, when the big pipe suciden-
shot ahead its remaining length.
"We've strucic the shaft 'safely!"
•vied the manager. He put- lois ear
low o to the end of the pipe• to see if
he could hear or feel Yansen touch -
me the end of the pipe Or attempting
to remove the ,plug in it,
He quickly seized a length of two-
inch pipe, and sliding it within the
larger pipe, he rammed it w-ith all his
might against the plug, forcing it 'in-
to the shaft. "`tansenl he criedin
the big pipe; when he withdrew the
smetier one.
But no reply .Cance.
'Yansen! 0 Yansen!" Ise called
again into the 'pipe !leading into the
shaft,
".A right-- ir!" crime a muffled re-
ply. Even Wren standing Back in the
orowd 'heard the voice.
'Yansen," cried the manager, "put
your nose and itnouth to to the pipe
and breathe through ill [Keep the
waste you have around the .edges to
keep out the ammonia."
"I'm doing --that, sir—batt the 41alt
from—up above—fell down and bur-
ied the—waste and lantern!" came the
words in broken, gasping sentences.
"The pipe is SO In It above any head--
fltat—1 have to lung to it in the air,
D. H McInnes
chiropractor:
Electro Therapist — Massage
Office Commercial Hotel
Hours—Mon. and Thttrs, after
neons and 'by appointment
FOOT CORRECTION
by manipulation--Sun-ray treat-
ment
Phone 207.
to reach!" ,said he.
"I've seat for a • diver,`., Yansen,"
spoke the manager.
"Come qu'iek su, if you're corn-
ing,'My strength is—going, sir. 'I
can' -t' hold my head—up to the pipe.
The—gas is sta'kin'g me weak." calve
bark.
A team came flying clown the
wharf. ,In it sat a diver in his rubber
suit. He :held his Copper helmet in
his hands and wore a little cap. Two
Wren clung to his air -pump.
The manager hastily explained that
Situation to hint. IIis whole ,life ;had
been spent in hazardous undertakings.
lie said little, but c` tnbe.d out ,of the
wagon. Then he mounted the ;stairs '
to the freezing -rooms door. His air -
pump was carried to the far end of
the wharf, out of the reach of 'the
fumes of amnioma. His fielntat was
screwed 011 and the :suit inflated with
His attcudant, hukling . the tele- -
nhoue, guide -rope and the rubber
tube, passed hint an axe, and he 'en-
tered the freezing -room door.
The crowd on the wharf drew near-
er the building. Then could .plainly
hear the iri=s of the escaping ammon-
ia in the coif -room above when the
diver had disappeared. Then they
caught the ,blows of his axe ,cutting
through the floor.
"Yansen," cried the manager into
the pipe, "the diver is coming down
the hole after you now l"
"I hear—him—sirl" calve a weak,
distant voice from within. 'He's too
—late—sir. 1 can't=get ,up--to--The
pipe --again. This is—the last time --II
—" Yansen's words 'broke -Off short.
The manager cried to the diver's
attendant to urge him on ''faster.
"He's through the hole and ,started
clearing the fish," came 'back the an-
swer.
"Vansen!" cried the manager. But
no reply came. He deft the end of the
pipe and ran up the -stairs to the hole
in the roof: and stood watching dowel
the :haft, The diver had disappeared
from view When he arrived.
Two men• the engineer and his as-
sistant. joined the Manager on, the
roof,
H e':s lowering himself down 1"
crierl the diver's attendant.
The men on the roof caught a sleep,
171U ffled couglh below in the shaft. The
eubire neighborhood seemed to grow
still and quiet.
Suddenly the diver's attendant cried
out. "Co ahead!. Quick! ;Haul up,
men!" .
The men on the roof hauled with
all their Wright. The 'heavy load came
toward the surface. it caught and
stopped suddenly. They pulled again.
and in four long heaves the copper -
helmet of the diver shot into viewin
the daylight of the freezing -room.
In iltisarms hung the limp form of
Yansen. The ;liver rushed for the
door the minute his feet struck the
floor. The manager, .the engineer and..,
the assistant reached there at the
sane time, and Yansen, helpless and
apparently dead. was hurried to where
fresh, pure air was forced . into his
hogs.
'The crowd thought he was dead..
But he was not. He is second engin-
eer now in the mechanical depart-
ment and the manager values him
highly,
LOVE AMONG THE TREES
Oak, •Ca.roline fir yew 1 :piste;
O11, willow, will you be mine?
Thy :hazel eyes, thy tulips red
Thy ways, all 'larch, have turned my
!head;
All linden shadows by ,the gate,
1 cypress on my 'heart and wait;
Then gum! beech cherished. 'Caroline;
.We'll fly for elms of 'bliss divine.
Oh, spruce young .man! d .ceder plan
Catalpa's money, if you can;
Yousumach ash, ,brut 'not my heart,
You're evergreen, so now :depart:
You'd like to be!poplar—that I see—
Birch 'you walnut propose to me--
Here's
ire—;Here's papal You'll see Hemlock 'the
gate:
The maple litety say: "'Tis date."
'Ambrose, in the conservatory be
te-een dances: "Have you ever loved -
before?"
Laura—'TNo Ambrose. T have often
.admired men—.for their strength,
courage, handsomeness, intelligence
or something like that; but with you
it's all love—nothing else!"
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