The Wingham Advance-Times, 1940-03-14, Page 61wnw wtiw HiWifl •
T¥
KRUSCHEN SHIPMENT
LOST AT SEA I
50,000 Giant Packages were
en route to Canada
Kruschen users who have learned
the utter joy of that “million
dollar Kruschen feeling” are advised
to get their packages of Giant
Kruschen at once to avoid dis
appointment. Recently 50,000
bottles, Qanada-bound, were sent
to the bottom of the Atlantic
and the supply is thus strictly
limited.
To avoid just such a catastrophe,
other Giant Package shipments
•were sent on different ships, were
.successfully landed and have been
distributed thinly across the Domin
ion. There is no saying when
further supplies of Giant Packages
will be made available. So do act
now if you suffer the pains of
rheumatism, lumbago, frequent
headaches or from blotchy skin—get
your Giant Package, which includes
the regular 75c bottle plus a free
trial size bottle. Your money
back if not satisfied after using
free trial size bottle. Simply
return regular bottle unopened.
At all drug Counters.
LUCKNOW DEFEATED
INDIANS 6-4
Tans Got Big Surprise When Sepoys
Came from Behind to Win
There was more pep and life to the
Indian-Sepoy tilt on Monday night
than there was in the Owen Sound
canter last week and the fans who ex
pected the Indians to win by a large
margin got a big surprise when the
Sepoys won by a two-goal margin
6-4, The return game to-night (Wed
nesday) in Lucknow, should be a dilly.
The Indians had Bishop and From
anger, of Owen Sound, .to help them
out but Bateson, Mitchell, Cruick-
shank', Baker and Murray Rae, were
not on the line-up. Goach Alf. Lock
ridge used two lines, Proctor, Bishop,
and Hepburn, and Elliott, English
and Brown/
Thfe fans really got a kick .out of
this game as they always do when the
Lucknow lads are the guests. The In
dians missed many scoring chances,
but Ritchie in goal for the Sepoys de
served special mention for his steady
play. In the other end Zulauf played
well, the defeat was not his fault.
The first period was not so much.
The second period was fine from a
spectator's point of view and both
teams really turned it-,pn in the final
stanza.
Lucknow; Goal, Ritchie; -def., G.
Book, Thompson; centre, B. Book;
wings, Greer, Fisher; alt., W, Harris,
McCormick, H, Harris, Solomon,
Dahmer. «>
Wingham: Goal, Zulauf; def., Fro
manger, Gard; centre, Proctor; wings,
Bishop, Hepburn; alt., English, El
liott, Brown.
Referee—K. Somers.
1st Period
1—Lucknow, W. Harris (H. Harris)
2—Wingham, Fromanger (Bishop,
Thursday, March 14th, 1940
I
Listen to "CAVAICAM OF MAMA"
Evtry Monday, Wednesday and Friday
CKNX - 11.15 A.M. - (1200 kc.)
Young Lions Won at Listowel 4-3 to
Win .Round 11-10 ’
1
WINGHAM ADVANCE-TIMES
WHEN A COLD
THREATENS YOU
i do this
To help prevent
colds developing,
use this special
ized medication* * izea mguicauuii
ft# C at first warning
▼ • w O w sniffle or sneeze.
Va-tro-nol
13.00
11,25
11.50
Proctor) .............
I’enalties—Thompson, Gard-
2nd Period
3— Wingham, Proctor (Gard) ...
4— Wingham, Elliott (Brown)
5— —-Lucknow, Solomon (H, Hajris)
..............................18.20
Penalties"—Bishop, W. Harris, Fish
er.
6— Lucknow, H. Harris ............. 3.40
7— Lucknow, B. Book (Greer) ... 8.10
8— Lucknow, Fisher (B. Book) 13.30
9— Wingham, English ............ 14.35
10— Lucknow, G. Book (Fisher) 18,45
Penalties—W,‘ Harris, G.
Fromanger.
Book,
INDIAN-TRAPPER
GAME WAS A TIE
Exhibition Tilt Ended 7-A11
The game between the Indians and
the Trappers here on. Thursday night
12.001 was a good exhibition game. At times
the play lagged a bit but the boys put . i
on a good exhibition. The late start
was much in evidence and the visiting
team certainly showed no considera
tion to the club or the spectators by
arriving’ over half an hour after the
game was supposed to be under way.
At the end of regulation time the
score was 7-all and it was not chang
ed in the ten minutes of overtime.
D. Weiss played the first two per
iods in goal for the Indians and then
L. Zulauf took over for the final per
iod. Lome did O.K. only allowing
one goal to pass in 80 minutes of play.
The Trappers led at the end of the
first period 3 to 2 and they were up
by twp, 0-4, when the second period
closed. Three goals in jtbe third per
iod by the Indians to one by the Trap-
ers tied things up about half way.
through the final stanza and neither
team could get the winning counter',
Owen Sound: Goal, Hyslop and
Neath; def,, Fromanger, Crawford;
centre, Sdhwan; wings, Bishop and
Bloomfield; alt,, Tenant, Davey, An
derson.
Wingham:'Goal, D. Weiss end Zu
lauf; def., Gard, Proctor; centre, El
liott; wings, English, Hepburn; alter
nates, Bateson, Mitchell, Brown, Bak
er, Cruickshank. •
Referee—"Buzz” Clarke.
1st Period ~
1. —Owen Sound, Bishop (Schwan)
....... ................ .....2.00
2. —'Wingharn, Proctor ............. 10,45
3. —Owen Sound, Fromanger ... 10.55
4. —Wingham, Bateson (Proctor)
......................... 13.30
5. —Owen Sound, Fromanger (Ten
ant) ......................16.30
No penalty.
2nd Period
6. —Owen Sound, Schwan .... 14.20
7. —Owen Sound, Fromanger (Craw
ford) ................... 15,00
8. —Wingham, Gard ................. 17.00
9. —Owen Sound, Bishop (Schwan)
'......... ..................18.00
10. —Wingharn, Hepburn .............19,00
Penalty—Crawford.
3rd Period
11. —Wingham, .Elliott (Hepburn,
English) ........ ..... 1.45
12. —Wingham, English (Hepburn)
:......................... 6.10
Owen Sound, Crawford (Bishop)
.................................8.15
14.—Wingham, Proctor ............. 12.50
Penalties—Tenant, Bishop.
Overtime (10 Minutes)
No Score. No Penalties.'
FREE!
SUN-TESTED WALLPAPERS &
FLO-GLAZE PAINT PRODUCTS
Every Saturday Beginning March 23rd
In co-operation with the manufacturers, we will give
ABSOLUTELY FREE:
One room of Sun-Tested Wallpaper and
One container of Flo-Glaze Paint, Enamel pr Varnish
THIS IS HOW IT WORKS
Duplicate copies of all CASH SALES of SUN-TESTED WALLPAP
ERS and FLO-GLAZE PRODUCTS will be placed in a sealed box. A draw of
two CASH RECEIPTS will take place each Saturday at CKNX at 7,30 pm.m.
BE SURE TO TUNE IN
MARYS-JIM-"WO POLITICAL PATRONAGE
Winners pf the Wallpaper draw will be entitled to a room of SUN
TESTED WALLPAPERS, any pattern!, equal in value to the amount of their
CASH RECEIPT as drawn. *
WINNERS of the paint draw will receive ari amount of FLO-GLAZE
PAINT, ENAMEL or. VARNISH, equal to the largest container of FLO-
GLAZE PAINT shown on the CASH RECEIPT as drawn.
Recepits for less than onfe pint will not be considered. A room' of wall-
peper must consist of both walls and border, ceiling optional.
The FREE PRIZE must be accepted in FLO-GLAZE PAINT products
and SUN-TESTED WALLPAPERS within 30 days from the date of draw
ing. We will reserve the right of announcing the winners’ names in the Advanr
ce-Times and over CKNX at 7.30 each Saturday night, and to post them in our
window. We will notify the LUCKY CUSTOMERS by mail.
>L./' i L -L, . „■
to her is the Queen Mary, third 1arg-t!s the Maurcntania.
est, beyond her the French Norman
die's, second largest. Farthest away
FORTHEIR COUNTRY
I CANT BELIEVE THAT THE
GOVERNMENT OF CANADA
WOULD LET IT5 FRIEND5 J
PROFIT BY WAR WHEN
THOUSANDS OF YOUNG MEN
ARE GOING OUT TO DIE
IT DOES NOT
SEEM POSSIBLE
BUT IT IS TRUE!
JUVENILES ADVANCE
. IN PLAY-DQWNS
Elmer .Wilkinson, Decorator.
A NATION AT WAR NEEDS
A NATIONAL GOVERNMENT
Authorized by Notional Government Headquarters, 140 Wellington Street, Onawa
The Young Lions battled their way
to a 4-3 victory at Listowel Thurs
day night to win the round and the
right to meet Eiora in the riext round:
'The Lions tied with Listowel here 7-7
s'o they, won the round 11-10.
The game in Listowel was a close
affair, as was the game here. These
young lads deserve great credit for
the way they fought to win at Listow
el. The first period ended a tie 1-1,
and the second was tied with 2 each,
Listowel took the lead in the third
period when Bean scored but the loc
als went to work and scored two to
win the game and round.
Wilson, in goal for the local team,
played a .stellar game with G. Johns
ton and Weiss also playing an out
standing game.
Listowel: Goal, Peach; defi, Jacques
and R. Jones; centre; Bean; wings, J.
Jones and P. Jones; alt., Weber,
Wray, Robb, Hamilton, Scott. '
'Wingham: Goal, Wilson; def., Seli,
Weiss; centre, Hamilton; wings, D.
Biggs, K. Johnson; alt., G. Johnson,
Gorbutt, Elliott, Haines, Thomson,
Porter.
Referee—K. Somers.
. 1st Period
1— Wingharn, Weiss (G. Johnson).
2— Listowel, J. Jones. '
Penalty—Gorbutt.
2nd,Period
3— Wingham, G. Johnson.
4— Listowel, Weber. .
No Penalty.
3rd Period
5— Listowel, Bean.
6— Wingham, G. Johnson.
7— Wingham, Hamilton (Biggs)
Penalties—R., Jones, Gorbutt.
PIG LOSSES
FROM ANAEMIA
RULES “GHOST FLEET
New York harbor's "ghost fleet” of. er as the Queen Elizabeth, nearest
luxury liners, laid up there for safety I camera, world’s largest liner, ended a
during the war, welcomed a new rd* I mystery cruise from England. Next
(Experimental Farms,, News)
The heavy loss of pigs during the
winter nursing period presents a ser
ious problem for the swine producer,
states H. E. Wilson, Dominion Ex7
perimental Station, Lacombe, Alberta. | sow an(j pjgSi
.This mortality is generally due ti im- I
poverished blood or anaemia in which I
there is a deficiency in the number of
red blood cells. It js especially likely
to develop in suckling pigs farrowed'
during the winter and early spring
and confined to pens with wood or
concrete floors,, and receiving no min
erals apart from 'thps’e contained in
the mother’s milk. This condition is
not Seen to any’ extent in pigs- which
are born during the late spring and
summer months, when they are out
and in the sunshine, and when they
have free access to suitable .soil and
vegetation.
Some pigs die suddenly while still
fat but Usually there are symptpms
which indicate the presence of anaem
ia, such as unusual, pale colour of the
gums, shout, apd ears, and a rough,
curly hair. Diarrhoea is common and
within a day or two they show a de
cided Unthriftiness and lose weight
rapidly. There is a heavy deposit of
fat at the jowl. It will be noticed that
anaemic pigs do not run and play as
they should but pre'fer to lie in the
straw most of the time. They quick-
,ly become exhausted when made to
exert themselves, and show a labor
ed jerky breathing which is usually
called 'thumps”. This condition is
most critical in continually housed
young pigs from one to four weeks
old; and it often affects the fattest
and sleekest pigs in a litter. As soon
as the little pigs begin to eM food
from the trough, danger of anaemia
is past. **“, 4
. Figs that have h$d ahaemia and
recover are likely to develop into
runts which may be unprofitable to
raise. Moreover, the anaemic pig is
very greatly weakened; his vitality
and resistance are lowered, making
him much more stisceptibie to other
diseases, or parasite infection. An
aemia of suckling pigs is traceable to
a deficiency of iron in the milk, spu-
plied by .the nursing sow. Feeding ir
on to the nursing mother will not help
for this does not increase the iron in
her milk. The iron must be given dir
ect to the little pigs. The most con
vention way. of administering it is in
the form of finely powdered "reduced
iron,” which can be purchased at any
drug store. Dosing the pigs on the
seventh ' and fourteenth days after
birth is sufficient; each dose being
approximately the arfiount of reduced
iron that can be picked up on a iten
cent piece. The dose, administered on
a home-made.wooden spatula or spoon
is dropped on the.back of the tongue,
the body marked, and the pig put back
in the pen.
It' is also good practice each day to
place sods approximately one foot
square in size* in the pens with the
Soil .contains consid
erable quantities of iron, and the
young pigs, in rooting around in the
dirt, eat sufficient quantities to •'make
good the shortage or iron. Extreme
ly .sandy soil •that'is very low in iron,
should not be used. At the Dominion
Experimental Station, Lacombe, Al
berta, the sods are stored in a suitable
place for winter use. These sods are
taken from areas of which pigs have
not been allowed to run, so as to
guard against infestation of parasites
in the'young suckling'pigs. To injure,
the presence of iron in the sods they
may be sprinkled with a solution of
iron sulphate, ^Diis solution is made
by dissolving a teaspoonful of iron
sulphate in one quart of water and
sprinkling this amount of the solution'
On each sod, with a sprinkling can.
WOOD ASHES MAKE
GOOD FERTILIZER
Approximately 10,000,000 cords of
fuel wood are cut and burned in Can
ada every year, and a great deal of
the ashes are thrown away, although
they have a definite agricultural value.
X" report from the Chemistry Division
of the Dominion Department of Agri
culture .shows t'hat wood ashes are,,
valuable as fertilizer. The contain
potash, carbonate of lime, and a small
amount of phosphoric acid which are
plant foods. Unleached wood ashes
may. have as much as 8% potash.
Few ashes, however, are pure: bits of
charcoal, earth, and other materials
are always present. Nevertheless, if
the ashes are kept under cover to pre
vent leaching, the percentage of pot
ash is around 4 to 6%. Hardwood
ashes contain more potash than ashes
from softwood.
Along with potash, about 70% car
bonate of lime and perhaps 2% of
phosphoric acid, both plant foods, may
be contained in wood ashes. Because
.of the high lime content,, wood ashes
are particularly beneficial on acid
soils, especially- acid peats and mucks.
The potash content of ashes . makes
them desirable for mangels and clov
ers which are both heavy feeders .on,
lime and potash.. However, ashes
Should not be used for. potatoes, the
alkaline nature of the’ashes encourag- '
ing the growth of Scab in the potat*
oes. Suggested rates of application of
ashes are for 1,200 to 1,500 pounds
per acre, equivalent to 60 to 70 lbs.
.of potash) 500 to 1,100 pounds of car
bonate of lime and 24 to 30 pounds of
phosphoric'acid, if the ashes are clean
and Unlcachcd.
APPLE PIE
4or 5 tartapple* Kteaapton tinted nut*
Ji cup white or . meg or cinnamon
brown eupar Ifoatooon butter
1 teaspoon lemon Juice Purity Flour Pastry
teaspoon eslt
METHOD! (1) Para apples, out Into thin
Blices and arrange evenly oh pie plato lined
with pastry. (2) Mix sugar, lemon juioe,
salt, nutmeg or cinnamon together *nd
sprinkle over apples. (3) Dot with butter (if
apples are very ary, add 3 tablespoons water
dr cream; if juicy, 1 tablespotfa Purity
Flour). (4) Wet edges of crust and cover
With upper crust. (8) Bake in hot ovon of
450 degrees for 15 to 20 minutes, then reduce
temperaturo to 350 degrees for 28 minutes
or until apples arc tender. Servo with
Cream, plain or whipped.
PURITY FLOUR
Best for all your Baking