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Show THE MIDVALE JOURNAL Friday, April 1, 1932 e Rocks in Demand An unprecedeuted demand for rocks er 0'\Jl for ornate gardens of Cleveland resl<(]ences has b1.·ought a new source or revenue to many farmers 1n the 11orthern Qhio district. Boulders, whicll formerly were only sources of annoyauce, are being carefully select~ COMFORT .ed and sold to compaaies which do a .floUI'l!;)h]n~ brokerage business with home owner. for COLICKY BABIES • •• THROUGH CASTORIA'S GENTLE REGULATION The best way to prevent colic, doctors say, is to avoid gas in stom· ach and bowels by keeping the entire intestinal tract open, free from waste, But remember this: a tiny baby's tender little organs cannot stand They must be harsh' treatment. gently urged. 'I'hls Is just the time Castoria can help most. Oastorla, you know, is made specially for babjes and chlldren. It is a pure vegetable preparation, perfectly harmless. It contains nG harsh drugs, no narcotics. For years It has helped moth· ers through trying times with collck-y babies and children suffering with digestive upsets, colds .. and tever. Keep genuine Castoria on band, with the name: SBE used to call him udarling" ••• Now he's so tired out that be never takes her anywhere. So weary, that she no longer loves him. Yet it is so easy to hold fast to youth, to bring back the bloom of young vigor and health. Millions of average people have done it with Fellows' Syrup, the fine old tonic which doctors recommend. You can start feeling better and younger, tomorrow. Just get a bottle of genuine FeUowa' Syrup from your druggist, today. ~ CASTO RIA . . C H I L D R:' E N ,\·.· C R Y F0 R I T Simple Explanation She--1 wonder why we can't save anytblng? He--The neighbors nre always do~ lng something we can't afford. FELLOWS' ~SYRUP A Spellbinder makes a splendid '1:91!1" speeCh." •"Yes," replied Mr. Meekton, ..and I noticed she impressed an entire audience the some way she does me. wife Now easy to get rid of Gray She says what s11e lHtes and no one ~ven thinlts ot talking back." 4 Rheumatic Pains Relieved this Quick Way H stabbing pains Soot aCToss your back and cripple you, rub on good old St. Jacobs OiL Relief comes before you can count 601 ••• ltelief without burning or blistering. healing. aches and pains Rheumatisnlt Neuritis, Lumbago, Neuralgia or Backache there's noth· ing so quick or sure to bring relief. Get a small bottle of St. Jacobs Oil from your druggist. Golf a Ia Mode Golf ts pte for me." "ft must be. I see you just took another slice!' 11 NEWHOUSE HOTEL AU-Expense Spring Rat.. servations further tails. PLAN A • 2 PERSONS 2 DAYS AND 1 NIGHT Room, dinner, breakfut, prage, one th!ater ticket each. (Good weeJt..endl only. ) PLAN B • By ELMO SCOTT WATSON XB uf the t'1.puous remarks attributed to that grt?nt Ameriean humorist. Mark Twain, which is familiar to mo:::-t of his ft?llow-countrymen was to the effect that "Everybody tam:s 11bout the weather but nobody ever does anything about it." However true thnt stat~ment mny have been once, it'S paRse now. F'or modern s<.:lence nnd modern engineering have "done something about it,'' and now mnoldnd can literally 11 IDake his own wenther"-that is, t11e kind of weather he wants to 11av-e Ln hiS own horne or place of business. Of course, away back Ln the early history of mankind he lenn1ed how to make his habitation warm when Jt was too cold outside for comtort. In recent years our movie palaces have pointed tb.e wny to making their interiors com~ fortablv cool 'vhen it's too hot outside for comfort. But up to now the average householder couldn't afford to follow the lead of the movie houses nnd install a "'cooling system" as weU as a "bentlng system" In his home. So it is one of the triumphs ot modern science and modern engineering that now anyone who has e.lectricity nt his command also has at his conunnnd perfect tndoor weather for all climes and localities. And this is something more than regulation or heat and cold, for the new activity ot sclence, described ~n the two words "alr conditioning," means the correction ot alr to a point most desirable for personal comfort, with juat the right amount of warmth or coolness, correct moisture content or rela~ tlve humidity, reutoval of du~t particles and forced circulation without draft. Since It does include all those things, another favorite e..'\.-pression "It's not the heat; it's the humidity'• Is due to go by the boards. For it was that very thing, humidity, which started research engineers on. the track :that bas brought about the development of alr conditioning equipment which embodies the functions of heating, cooling, drying, moistening, cleansing and ctrcu· lnttng of air, And the beauty of it is that the air conditioner, smaller than the average heat radiator, is so compactly bullt that it may be lnstalled In any room, apartment, office, hospital, or place of business. More than that the conditioners are so simple in operation. and require so little supervlsion that two small switcbes on the end of the cabWet may be compared to the mythical lever whteh the cartoonists show the weather mao operating when he wants to supply cold, beat; JSultrinesa, dr)rness, rafn, wind or calm. As a matter ot fact the conditioner goes the weather man one better. The conditioner can't guess wrong. It pulls 1n the air of a room, corrects it as tt should be to provide personal comfort regardless ot outdoor weather conditions, then sends lt Into the room so quietly occupants are unaware of th.e conditioner's operntioo. To give to indoor aJr that deUcate touch of perfection, a1r conditioners should operate in rooms where the windO"-"S are kept closed so the correction ot the room atnH>S~\he.re l~n't dissipated Into the outdoors. This factor I.Jrtng::; up an interesting revelation ot the general public's regard for fresh air. Fresh njr 1Fin't what It's cracked up to be, according to our foremost scientists. In many ca~cs ft rnny be more harmful than the average indf\Ol' nfr. Air C"on.Jftiouers provide an answer to one '' This famous oil simply draws out inftammation and pain. It is soothin1g, 2 PERSONS % DAYS AND 1 NIGHT &om, gara;e, dinneT, breakfut. luncheon, 2 theater tfc.ket.s et~eb. (Good any time.) ONE PERSON••3.00. HOTEL NEWHOUSE Bali Lak• City, Utah C. W, W•t W. £. Sattom W. N. U., Salt Lake City, No. 14-19S:l J: ,.,.,:<<·. 1.-With a raging blinard, or a scorching sun raising havoc outdoors, the Indoor weather In this room Is cozy, comfortable and healthful. The air conditioner provides perfect air the year round, regardless of outdoor weather's eccentricities. 2.-No longer will the tired business man be tempted to run out on his office force and flee from the hot and sultry summer days. This air conditioner, Installed In his office In place of the familiar radiator is the answer. 3.-Physiclans, always alert to welcome any scientific or engineering achievement that will aid them in their work of relieving human suffering, hail air conditioning as a decidedly progressive step. No longer will patients be forced to undergo the added suffering brought on by hot and sultry weather, or by the injurious dry Indoor air of the colder seasons. A air condf. tioner Is shown here installed In a hospital room, so unobtrusive and compact it takes up little space even in the cramped quarters of the room. 4.-Turn on the heat, or turn on the cold! This air conditioning unit does both, and to complete Its reSponsibllity of supplying perfect i!'ldoor weather the year round, It keeps Old Man Humidity on the run In the hot and sultry seasons of the major demands and quests of mankindcomfort. In giving perfect Indoor weather the year round, despite changing seasons and er· ratic activities of temperature and humanity they open the way tor industrial and finnncinl development of the tropics and the Orient, where white men swelter In misery under the depressing humity, and laborers eollnpse from the ef· feet of Jmrd, manual activity coupled with beat a.ud sulirlness. The farmer who spends every daylight hour tn the ~ummer in the sun-baked fields will have respite, and his wi.fe, accustomed to ·a hard workIng existence among the pots, pans and cooking range in the kitchen, wUl blossom out a changed woman. Busl ness m~n who should wear their coats and keep their ties tied will be a:ble to work as energetically and as smartly appearing in the summer as in winter, and their clerks and stenographers will have the alertness and desire to please that helps so mnch in retaining the patronage or old customers, and building up good will wltb new. The answer to the brighter existence held out by aerologists to followe.cs ot almost every ac~ tlvity Is based on the tact that despite the .hOttest temperatures and most depre9Slng humid· ty ot the working hours a man or woman can stand them day atter day it they are able to sleep soundly tn real comfort and repose, instead ot fitfully and nncom!ortably. Wben alr conditioning experts talk about homes and buildings with closed windov.·s, a chorus ot public thought sings out wlth these Interjections: uwhat about carbon dioxide? How about hPadncltes brought on by cloSted, stuffy rooms? How about that depressing feeling that overcomes us when we don't get enough fresh a.lrJ You forget what doctors say about fresh air." The answer Is on file in the public documents ot the federal government ln Washington. Priv· ately many members ot the medical profeSiiiion have known for some years that factors other than a lack ot f:W)-called :fr.esb aJr causes head· aches and nausea 1n crowded places. But few have had the courap:e to be outspoken in the face of general belief and upset the belief lm~ bedded tD ihe public consciousness for so many yenrs. It Is Interesting to know how philosophers and sclentiRtS of cenntrjes n~o regarded air and how their findings ~tnck up with modern l!clentlfie developments. Arlstotle, founder ot a school -.t thought that swayed tbe thinking of mankind tor more than 1,000 years, reg111;Ued air as one of nature's four cardinal elements, the others being fire, earth and water. Up until li57 litHe was known about air. Th~n. Dr..Joseph Blac:k, who was experimenting with chemicals. made tlte discovery of a gas he called "fixed air," now kno\\-u as carbon dlox· ide. In 1775, .rose-ph Priestly tsolated oxygt>n, calling It "dephlogisUcated air,'' and thu~, foT tlte first time mankind began to have some exact knowleflge of atmosphere Lal'"olsler, a le3Uing studer.t ot his period, a few years later discovered carbon dio:xfde wonl\l extinguish flame. Be concluded, the1·efore, that an ex:c~ss amount of carbon dioxide tormed by breathing would contnmina•te indoor atr. His standing and repntotion brought ready acceptance for this theory, and it was but a natural step to the premise that fresh air, wJthout e.."Cces!-ive carbon dioxide and with an abundance of oxygen, was necessary tor human well be- Keep Hair Naturally Dark Now without using dangerous dyes you can darke.D; gray. ~air naturally, quickly restore Its ongmal shade by the world's finest, safe way which is now keeping millions of beads young looking. Benefits the hair as it da:k~ ens it to the shade you want. As stm· pleas brushing. Try it. Paydru~gist 75c for a large bottle of WYETH'S SAGE & SULPHUR and just foilow easy directions. Discussion ''I'd rather be right thnn be Presl- Cient." "You thlnli: a fellow can't be both ?11 Nervous and Sleepless in~. ot scientists refused to concur ln Lavoisier's theory bnt most scientists, A small number engineers and medical men held ihelr tongut'S in the belief nothing was to be gained by t11e voicing of contrary opinions. Among the first public reports of these early theories is that of Dr. R. R. Sayers, surgeon of the United States public health service, and chief surgeon of the Department of Commerce's bureau of mines, a division that knows as much i:t not wore about pure and Impure air than any research organization in the world. In reprint No. 1.150 of the public reports, Doctor Sayet·s states: l•Jt was obsened by muny investigators that it was not until the oxygen content of the respiratory air fell below· 10 per cent that animals began to breathe with dtffi~ culty. Friedlander and Herter concluded from the results of their experiments that inhaling ot 2'0 per cent carbon dioxide for several hours has no poisonous effect. Not until a mixture of gas containing 30 per cent or wore of C'&rbon dioxide was introduced did they find an appearance of depression, Leblanc pointed out thnt under conditions in which the carbon dfolride content of the air increases considerably, In lecture roorus, theaters, etc., the reduction ot oxygen content ts small and very seldom falls below 20 per cent, while the carbon dioxide con· tent very seldom exceeds 1 per cent." The same facts have been established by oth· er investigators of standing slnce thnt time. W. Mehl, an engineer. in 1903 an,nounced definltt'ly the nonexi9tence ·of a "breath poi~on." He asserted the carbon dioxide content of a room is not a correct measure for the necessity of ventilation, The scientl.flc findings definitely established that it is the combination ot heat and humidit~· that Is so depressing and injurious to rnentnl and physical alertness, and the consequent rtamage to business and industrial efficiency brought on by personal discomfort. With these to.ct~. engineers working on conditioning of indoor nJr found thnt it is easy to be comfortable ln a room tn which the customary the-rmometei:' shows a temperature ot 90 degrees, If the hu· midity ls lowered. Leading economists, engineers find bnilde.rs l1ave bailed n1r conditioning as the next big industry 'of the nation, an inclustry suppls-lng a product that will take a plaee aJong with the telephone, a11tomatic refrigeration and the autOmobile In general acceptance and necessity· Tl1ey 110int out also that air conUiUonlng is a new acWevement that replaces practically noth1n;; now jn use~ finds for itself a plnce fn popular dem:.~ud, nnd opens the way to Increased manufacturing, sales and installation arthity. f@ by Western SewspQ.lJer Union.) STOP. RHEUMATIC PAINS WITH HEAT OF RED PEPPERS Reliwes Almost Instantly Good old Nature has put into red peppers a marvelous therapeutic heat that gets right down to the source ol trouble and almost instantly relievea the paine and aches of rheuma~a~, etilf joints, lumbago and neuntls. Thousand!~ have found it the one safeguard against chest col~, too: Now this genuine red peppers heat ts contained in an ointment that you just ruh on. ln less than 3 minutes you feel Te .. lief eome. It ia called Rowles Red Pepper Rub, Safe. Will not burn. or sting. Get a small jar from your druggtat. CHEST COLDS Yield OuicklyWhen You Use B. & M. THE PENETRATING GERMICIDE Your Druggist Can Supply It Large size $1.25 f. E. ROLLINS CO. 53 BEVERLY ST., BOSTON, MASS. |