Zurich Herald, 1925-12-10, Page 21-""---SUGAIIEETS IN MANITOBA
With beet growing and beet sugar can and southern portious, of the Pro-
peosinetion sueeeeefielly inanguretedi visite of Manitoba, chiefly in the Red
the piseeriace of Alberta, other eeetiene River and Aneinibeine valleys. Early
Pt the Canadian prairie are turning wet weatim was • a handicap to the
their attentien to •this, industry, and beet crop sus it delured niaturity, and
there appear& to be, even. likelihood the.entwerme were bad ip. place.% but
- of a wide. extension te both the awl- ti mite of these factors eighty per
caltteral and- industrial eases be cent of the crop is stated to be quite
Western Canada.. Events, in Manitoba , satisfactory. 01A0 Speeimen taken ao.
iu particular would Bee= to eager the 'a sample streed sixteen incheet in
early establiehment of an industry leeigtb, and almost the same in greet -
there. • est girth, being of excellent shape.
Experiraente of carious natures ear-. 'Phe analysis of the sugar beets
rte d on over a. tramberr of yea= have! Whioli Is under way at the present
long established the feet that a auger lame -points definitely to a sufficient
beet of unsurpassed quality eau be 6ugr or:al/tent and atirity, aecording to
proanced in Manitoba, the soil of the report. A few case are 'to be shipped
Red River valley espeoially, whieh i to Chaska, Minnesota, for c.ommercial
simile to that About Grand Forks in trial at the factory there, and ar-
North. Dakota, where the eulture bee 'rangemente are already being made to
been suecesefully established, being ,incree.se the acreage eoneederably for
particularly well adapted to beet pro- next year, when it is hoped to ship the
crop to the feetory now under wa-
rn 1924, very thorough inestige.- truction at Grand Forks
time were (serried on in this area, by . There now seems every possibility •
representatives of an United States of the fisseelopmeut of a sagar beet in -
concern looking to the posedble future dastry in Manitoba, which, taken in
establishment of a plant for the mama eaujunction with that which has gat
facture of beet eitigaz at some I19.4.111- away to such a fine start in Alberta,
toba ceutee„ probably Winnipeg. Planseoints to a wide intreduction over the
were concluded in that ,year to line Prairie Peoviecee. A1 authorieies are
itp Yemera to awoduct a sufficient • agreed that this will be attended with
number of beets to make s practical oonsiderable benefit to the a.grioultur-
oommercial investigation into tb,e nelets of Western Canada. in addition
feasibility of such a project. At the :to the additional profit springing M-
eanie time endeavor were mad'e to irectly from the marketing of the beets
interest local capital in the establish- and tb.eir messufecture is to be expeofe
ment of a plant and out of this sprang el the indirect development from face
the Manitoba. Sugar Corapany. i tory lepproduets of a thriving live -
In 1925 beets grown on a purely ex.:stock industry such as is to be found
Periniental basis were produced on a • in the beet dietricts of the United
of 260 plots throughout the
•
total
eaSt-
States,
Horizoneal.
1. A holy or godly person
6, Takes unlawfully
10. A kind of fat
12. A plant used in soups, stews, etc.
13. To proceed
15. Sharp to the taste
17. To produce, as pictures, on metal
or glass., by means et lines eaten
in by chemical agents
19. The first woman
21. To come together
23. To behold
24. Coarse hominy (U.S,)
26. Organs of hearing
28, One who exactices medicine (title)
29, One who tells falsehoode
31. A. part of the face (plural).
34. Actual
38. The ,skin of a beast
38. You and me
40. Implements to be inserted in locks
42. Without light
44. A young flower
46. To gather a harvest
48. To -deface
40. A child (slang)
51. A thick plate or sliee of anything
63. Missouri (abbe.)
54. A plume of certain herons
56. To 'catch, to ensnare
58. To keep
59. To try the flavor of anything
. Manifestly Impossible.
"I knew an artist owe who pal:lilted
a cobweb on the ceding so realksticale
ly that the maid spent hours, trying to
get it down."
"Sorry, dear, I just don't believe it."
"WhY not? Artists have been known
to do such things."
"Yee, but not nuaide."
Vertical
1. Wise men
2. Exists,
3. A hard -shelled fruit
4.•A group of horses yoked to a
wagon
6. A treposition
7. To piece out laboriously
8. Branches of learning
9. Intertwined
11, A woody perennial plant
14. Having the shape of an egg
16. A kind of cluck
18. A person. distinguished by an act
of valor
20. To send forth
22. An excursion
25. A piece of land in a .city kept for
ornament or.„.public amusement
27. Went quickly
30. One who rues
32. To shut noisily., as a door e.
33. A. material used in automobile
tires
35. Part of a needle (plural)
37. An English trolley -car
39. A. largewave or billow
41. A food seasoning
43. A German gold coin
45. To start and run with velocity
47. A division. in the hair
60. A beverage
52. The noise made by a sheep
55. A note in the diatonic scale
57. An addition to a letter
BRITISH CROWN •NEVER WORN BY MORE COMELY QUEEN
Queen Alexandra was ever beloved by the Britieh nation tor her beauty
-of clean:del., no less than for the personal beauty an. charm which she re-
tained to the very end. As a queen she shared waft King Edward the honor
of being a real leader in European royal circles and during her long widow-
hood devoted her life in a quiet way to the many philanthropies In which she
had always been iiprested. A rare photograph showing Queen Alexandra
and King Edward (then Prince of Wales) in their wedding robes.
Horse Saves English Girl
• From Drowning in Lake
Miss V. Mussel -white, daughter of a
Blackfield farmer, was saved from
drowning in Mopley Lake, Fawley,
near Southampton, recently, by the
horse which she had been driving to
a trap, 'says "The Cardiff Times."
She had stopped at the edge of the
lake to give the horse a drink of water
when the animal missed its footing,
fell in about eight feet of water and
drew' the trap after it. Miss Mussel-
white was pitched head first into the
lake. She could not .swim, but manag-
ed to struggle clear of the horse and
the tangled reins. The R-Orse also
kicked itself clear,ILleelt Miss Mus-
selwhite was fighting in the water a
few yards away and swam toward
her.
Miss Musselwhite was near the end
of her resources, but managed to
clutch the reins and the inane of the
horse, which immediately felt the pull
at its head, turned around and swam
to the shore. She then clambered on
its back and rode to her father's home,
two miles away.
Look to Whee! Chains.
With the approach of winter the
autoist should be sure the wheel
chains are in order.
The invention Eloquent.
Of all the 'modern miracles of
science, radio has had the most articu-
late infanty,
.
he Autorti()t)i e
ENGINE OF CAR MUST BE KEPT COOL TO WORK.
Every motorist should understand
at least a • little about the principles of
,engine cooing and why it is necessary
for a cooling system to be functioning
properly in every automobile. He
• should know that the automobile on,
• gine derives its power from hest, A
•oharge of gasoline, mixed with Air, is
taken into the cylinder of the engine
in a comparatively cool state. In the
cylinder it is compressed and ignited.
As it burns the temperature is greatly
increased and the pressure in the cyl-
inder increases in • proportion to the
increase in the temperature,
HOW POWER 15 DERIVED.
That's •how it comes about that
power is derived for driving the ma-
chine, However, the excessive tem-
perature, which .reaches 2,000 to 8,000
degrees Fahrenheit, heats the working
parts of the engine, that is, the pis-
tons and cylinders, to such an extent
that unless some of the heat is dissi-
pated it -would be impossible to main-
tain a film of oil between these work-
ing parts. Deprived of lubrication
they would stick fast and the engine
would cease to function.
Furthermore, the metal parts form-
ing the combustion chamber would also
get so hot that the incoming charge of
fuel would be ignited as soon as it
came in contact with them, And that
would mean more trouble.
That is why it's necessary .to carry
off enough heat to keep the Working
parts cool enough so they will permit
both proper lubrication and insure
control of the ignition. , To accom-
plish these desirable ',results, every
"The. Oxford Voice"
Put on English Radio
"The Oxford voice" is to be broad-
cast throughout England. • It hasbeen
the subject of much unfavorable com-
ment in England and is supposed to
be something which should be avoided
by every self-respecting man who will.
not wear Oxford bags. But England
must hear "the Oxford voice" whether
it wants to or not.
A radio broadcasting station is to
be opened at Oxford which will reach
every part of the British Isles with
talks on every phase of -university life.
In many sections of England the pub-
lic insists the -average Oxford man
speaks in a manner entirely rtnintelli-
gible to ordinary human beings,. but
the British Broadcasting Company
has decided to take a chance at. it.
,f,PurceIrs Music.
The influence of poetic imagination
and a love of poetry, upon the work of
a composer of music, is well illus-
trated by the ease of Henry -Purcell,
greatest of English composers. His
•
automobilef is provided with a cooUngl
system.
In the water cooled system, foundi
on most cars, the heat is abliOrbedl
from the cylinders by water carried in
jackets surroUnding the cylinders. The
hot water -then flows to the radiator
where the cool air extracts the heat
from it.
A pump generally is employed to
maintain a circulation of water, It
takes the heated ,liquid and sends it
from the cylinder to the radiator)
where it travels through many small+
passages surrounded by air space.'
This provides a large area of surface
for the air t6 come in contact with
the water, and a fan keeps the air,
in lively circulation.. So much of the
heat is extracted from that water,
that it is possible to return compar-
atively cool water to the cylinder fori
it to get hot again. And that, in
brief, is the cooling process.
EFFICIENCY IN OPERATION.
The engine, to operate at itseereat-
est efficiency, should -be rather warm
when running, because whatever heat
is carried off is not turned into power.
Overcool the engine and its power is
decreased. A car may be provided
with a visible thermometer in its radi-
ator to give the priver a checkup on
this situation, and the amount of air'
circulating through the radiator may,
be controlled with shutters.
The operator of a motor vehicle
will do well to study whatever cooling'
system his car may have. Some auto -1
mobiles are entirely air cooled. No
water is 1,1sed. He should know what'
he has and how to get the best results
in all kinds of weather.
mind was attuned to poetry, and it
inetnctively wedded to the words of
poetry music which admirably reflect-
ed them. In this regard he was far
in advance of his time, for it was not
until a hundred years later that Gluck
established the claim of words used•In
music to the consideration they de-
serve, and the place they now hold in
vocal music. That is one of the rea-
sons for. our reverence of Purcell as
one of the geatest of all rausicians.
Answer to last week's puzzle:
F
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Tax on Irish Bachelors.
The Irish Free State has imposed
a tax on bachelors.
lesivate P. Milligan (lett), representing Canada and overseas, and Private W. Haugh, representing the Bri-
tish expeditionary force, with tho Armistice wreath they laid on the London Cenotaph on behalf of St. Dunstan's.
The Persi_an Dyer,
The old master dyer emerges from
his fiat -roofed home. He stands at the
door, his heart pulsating with joy. An;
other day with his art. 1 -lis swarthy
face beams with happinese.
The sun is beginning to peep over,
the distant hills where sheep are al,'
ready browsing. He sees that
"The day unfolds like a lotus bloom,
Pink at the tip and gold at the core',
Rising up swiftly through water e of
gloom
That lave night's shore."
He gazes ecstatically toward- the
fast -brightening east. His black eyes
apa.rkle with the intense delight he
has for colors.. A dreamy, faraway
1look .comes• into them, for he to think,
Ing how he could combine shades th
produce the varying hues of the sun-
rise.
Taming from the door, be linger
beside a rose, the petals of which are
of the richest -create veined with pink.
"Wonderful -marvelous.," he Inui-
• mursi.
t
Large copper vats stand at the side
of the house. The cold ashea beneath
them are soon -covered by 'chips. Pre-
eently a fie craokles, and the water in
each b &gine to steam.
Dyes are shaken painstakingly into
them. Enraptured, his swarthy face
glowing with icapiration, the old dyer
tests the hues, then retests. He stirs
and lifts.; now in fancy he le srweep-
in.g colors froni the sraurtee into the
mixture; from the rainbow he bor-
rowa radiance, the hues, of autumn he
uses, then he tones all with shades
from nigb.t.
Hanks of ths softest whitest wool
are immersed. Eagerly, tenderly, he
stirs them; as they boll and bubble
the believed fumes are as the sweetest
incense to him. The stiok with which
he ocoasionally lifts, them is a magus
wand.
Alt last the wool is taken from the
dy,e, rinsed ceeefully, they hung upon
lines to d•ry. The •derer, his hands and
face now splotched with many stalne,
views his work with satisfaction, mur-
muring incomerently about marveile,
about rugsand sheep and 'veep.
Small onde.r that he is, the master
dyer!
Bibleein Esperanto.
The Oki Testament Is shortly to be
published in Esperanto.
Wilt Not Burn Ash Wood.
Icelanders will not use ash -for fuel,
believing those sitting around such a
fire will become enemies.
MUTT AND JEFF -By Bud Fisher.
ThiC-is'S Ate °Lb
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GOING To
ThESAP STLibles:
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t AIN'T VERY
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k/
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Ttis Lt51-: tose
"rpbAY As 'GRANbPA* •
IN GRANI:IPA'S
FLIRTATIole!
Mutt's Pride Takes An Awful Flop,
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