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THE HONGKONG TELEGRAPH. SATURDAY,
FEBRUARY 15, 1936.
PLANS FLIGHT 25 MILES UP
IN OPEN BASKET- GONDOLA
· ANOTHER
COMMON
FOR:
£200
INFORMER
Another "Common Informer" has been awarded £200 in the King's Bench Division under the Lord's Day Observance Act of 1781 in respect of exhibitions of all-in wrestling on two
DARING YOUNG MANĮ Sundays last July..
IN A
FLYING MACHINE
Boston. Plans for a hop to the stratos. phero in an open-basket balloon were disclosed to-day by Mark. E. Ridge, 30-year-old aviator and balloonist of Dorchester, Mass., who hopes to reach a height of 20 to 25 miles in an ascent over Europe next year,
At home be told, an almost incredi-
ble account of tests carried on in English laboratories. of the equipment he will carry with tim. Working with Dr. J. S. Haldane, Fellow of New College, Oxford University, and Sir Robert Davls, manager of Biobe, Gorman & Co., Ltd., now stratosphere sults were tried out at the submarine engineering plant, London.
As a result of these tests, nays Mr. Ridge, it was established that lack af barometric pressure in no reason for enclosing oneself in a sealed) gondola, and that immunity from cold can be gained by wearing a spe- cially designed suit of aluminium foll resembling a diving suit,
17 MILES UP
The sult was designed by Sir Rob ert. In testing its value, the young balloonist stepped into a special steel chamber, the door of which was made air-tight by bolts, and allowed! himself to be subjected to reduced atmospheric pressure representing a height of 90,000 feet, or similar to conditions more than 17 miles up.
The penalties were granted to Mr. Eric Edward Kitchener, of Aldbourne Park, Shepherd's Bush, against Mr. Bob Gregory, of
Queen Street, Hammersmith.
Other cases brought by Mr. Kitchener followed, and it was stated that, with the £200 alrendy awarded, his claim amounted to £1,450.
In the first case heard Mr. Bob Gregory denied that be was the "conductor and manager," but Mr. Justica Atkinson held otherwise.
Thero must be judgment for Mr. Kitchener for £200, 'with costs.
MAY BE REMITTED
Stay of execution was granted for seven days on condition that £100 was paid into court. The judge said there was more chance of a remission in this case than in, that which he decided on the previous day.
This related to £300 granted to an informer respecting Sunday bouts' at Chelsen Palace.
ta
The hearing then opened of an action by Mr. Kitchener against the Evening Standard in respect of advertisements on 17 Satur- days relating to Sunday all-in wrestling at Kilburn and Hammer- amith. They were headed: "Lane's Promotions.” ·Mr. Kitchener claimed £850 penalties.
·
Mr. Kitchener gave ‘ovidence as to attending the wrestling on Sondays, July 21 and 28, at Queen Street, Hammersmith.
On the first date, he said, he saw kicking and `biting by the wrestlers.
"SHOULD BE STOPPED"
Mr. Justice Atkinson said, that he could not conceive a case which was more within "the spirit of the law" than the present. The disgusting exhibitions should be stopped.
The final case was then begun. It was a claim by Mr. Kit- chener against Mr. Harold Lane, claiming £400 penalties against him as "keeper" of the premises.,
The hearing was adjourned,
The projected trip for 1936, how- |ever, will not be an attempt to reach the absolute ceiling. Mr. Ridge Though slightly warm because of intends to take aloft the instruments his clothes, he expressed himself offered by neveral having felt perfectly comfortable throughout, experiencing
none
American and
of European scientists and hence does the ill effects usually attributed to not expect to go above 18 milcs, high altitudes where pressure is low.
Glad in the aluminium sult, he Dr. Haldane, who was in charge of anya, he will be free to move about the experiments on respiration and pressure, explains that not knowing and make meteorological and other what they might encounter, they observations on instruments actually subjected Mr. Ridge to successively in contact with the rarefied atmos- lower pressures over a period of two pheres of those unknown regions.. weeks until finally a pressure of only three quarters of a pound per square
In order to keep down"weight, hel
Leap Year "Origin" Suspected
SCOTS DEBATING OLD PROBLEM
GLIT
Glasgow, Feb. 1. With the arrival of inch was reached as compared with intends to use only a single layer other Leap Year, with its -normal atmospheric pressure of 14.0
per square inch. Oxygen was of fabric and a new type of varnish legendary privilege of allowing pounds supplied automatically, "but the instead of five layers of cotton in-women to propose marriage to pressure in the chamber could not pregnated with rubber, as in the bashful swains, an old discussion be made any lower, since the excess recent Stevens-Anderson flight,
has broken out again among |Scottish, historians.
of oxygen was constantly escaping
into it."
LIVING IN VACUUM
IMMENSE RANCE OF VISION
For nearly a century as supposedl Following the vote of the Royal statute signed by Queen Margaret Society lust fall to sponsor the ex-of-Scotland-in the year 1228-has This is the nearest to existence periments, Sir Gilbert Walker, Pro- been offered as proof of the origin in a vacuum" any human being ever fessor of meteorology at the In of Leap Year. experienced. During the time he was
at this low pressure, he was breath. perial College of Science and Tech-
In that year the Scottish parlia
ing pure oxygen and continued to donology and 20 years director-generafnient is supposed to have passed this for about a half hour before of Indian observatories wrote in the the following law: pressure was slowly increased to nor. London Daily Mail:
ual agala.
"Given fine.gar, without clouds
The shit was next subjected to tests against cokl. Wearing a glove or mint, I should any
Mr. Ridge
of aluminium foil, Mr. Ridge thrust would have በከ immenso, horizon
la hand into a small chamber at below him. If he renched his great- 150 degrees below zero and kopt it
there for more than an hour with eat height over England on such a no discomfort: He then put on the day, he would be able to gan the: ordinary gloves of fur word by Arctic Aps,
explorers and with the temperature
at 110 below found that a minute "The value of Huel 'n' uscent to nd a half gave him severely "frost-meteorology is the fact that it would bitten" fingers..
give meteorologists abotutory con- ditions for testing much that has
side for two hours he removed the suit and went for a swim.
•
"It in statut and ordajnt that during the rein of hir maist bfisait Mayeste Margaret, for ilk peare knowne as lepe years; i mayden ladye of bothe highe and lome catatë shall hoc liberte to bispoke ye man she lilcua.. Gif he refuses to tak hir to ben his myf he shall be mulet în ye sum of ane hundrity pandce, or less, as his entait may be, ex- cept and alwais gif he can make it appeare that he is beiréthit. tri anither woman, then he schal *be free.".
Satiafled with thean experiments, he next allowed himself to be packed been arrived at by other methods.
A large group of modern his in a dry ice container where the. Of course up theft, although there torigns point out that, although temperature was 110 degrees. below is terrific cold, the sun's rays are 1228 was a Leap Year, there was zero Fahrenheit. After allting id fiercely hot because of the absence no "malst blisalt Megoste Mar- of any diffusion, and a man.exposed garet" on the throne of Scotland. to the conditions without the ape From 1214 to 1249 the country "Suitably clad," says Mr. Ridge. "there is no limit. tp the height to cially designed suli Me. Ridge will was ruled by Alexander II, they which a man fay ascend. It ear, would be-frozen-solid, while point out.
Moreover, they claim, the first simply a question of how far a bal- the nucface of the 'skin would be
mention of the statute was found can take him. English.
Sir Gilbert pointed out at the In The. Illustrated Almanac" for tests, that a trip to heights of 26 or time, that whereas shooting stars 1865 and the "conscientiously. Film companies have found the last key to successful seroon affer. 30 milds is possible in a light basket enter pur atmosphäre as a rule at antique wording" suggests an
balloon, unencumbered with weightyn eight of 126 miles and burn-out ings in beautiful womens make-up according to colour harmony by Max-struments. Success will put an en before they penetrato 40 miles, theme imaginative writer rather than 4
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Toon
untists are agreed,”-following the black by the sun,” „*--
tirely new meaning on stratosphere is still plenty of atmosphere to be exploration.
'Investigated."
genuino
document af the thir- teenth century—United Press,
Just Received.
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OUR BRITISH CROSSWORDS
ACROSS
1 Mar wish (anag.).
4 Force it in the gravy.
8 It's not true that this describes
a shop nasistant's exploit.
The foolish bird graduate.
11 The
12 A very ladylike expletive.
Flowers
13-
with edible portions.
16 What highwaymen do, with rood
and song.
10 It might be as I'm in.
17
The
fairy of the ego.
10 A suburb where Thespians
persevere.
20 The point is: fish.
9 Put out.
14
10 Don't believe him! He's always
stuffing.
13 Divided hair,
14 Picked out.
17 Part of the week-end we dislike,
as a rule.
18 Another name for 17 AcroNA. 21 Eke out.
23 Stir up anger and make a roy.
Grinds
teeth with a wooden
heart.
26 Just dry after thou.
27 Had an encounter with a coal-
scuttle this way.
30 Eager:
22 Could do with --n-drink-uot-31-This-is-unusual-in-Edinburgh-
sweet..
25 Round about lea? Yes.
27 Associate of sen-maidens.
28 Inflagrante delicto.
20 The riparian part of a'clock.
11 Custonis that force us to escape. 32 The sea-plane (anag.).
Showing how ten nnga' may be made flyers.
34 is to be found close by.
DOWN
1 Old name for a stream-lined
lady.
2 It was round about a week ago. 3 Musical corriedy (two words, 3,
& Plundera arms.
Empty and sometimes
aching:
7 Describes Hell and rente, hut
not taxes.
liko antics-shore-
8 Something'
in fact.
Yesterday's Solution.
|MI OD LEAGE - BROOM UMARIED CARE PEU MANAGED LIONESS PGA HABE AW⠀NK 8 MELT EXTENUATE, WEB BA SCHNEE INT BABBO SHERBORNG ||FAE IN EN SHANKHE STILLNESS NAMUR ENEMAA ET DU ARB CUTANDRUN. ADDER TRE EM TRON? ERA INGRESS INITIAL ONED THEÄNNER-P NUR BE TELEGRAPH
the Admiralty-Beuler.
SIR FREDERIC DREYER | Dreyer is shortly resuming duties at
EXPECTED TO-RETURN TO POST AT ADMIRALTY
London, Feb. 14. Admiral Sir Frederic Droyer ar- rived in London to-day and war welcomed by his two daughters and Vico-Admiral James.
"Interviewed by Reuter, Sir Frederic said that he was happy to bo back in England though he had had a grand tirng out East.
It is understood that Bir. Frederici
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SALESMAN SAM
SO SHE SEŻ,
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THERE GOES MRS JABBER,
YEAH! PEOPLE` SAY SHE TALKS AND HER HUS~) A'LEG OFFA
BAND!
HIM ALL TH’ TIME!
Who Wouldn't?-
By Small
WELL, TH POOR SAPTIRED? SAY, TH POOR DOES LOOK KINDA
·TIRED!
WELL, I'D RATHER BE A WIDOW'S SECOND HUSBAND, THAN, HER FIRST ONE!
GUY'S. ALL INĮ I FEEL "SORRY FER HIM! HE'S HER SECOND HUBBY, YA KNOW! US BOY, I WOULDN'T WANNA BE HIM] MAIL
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