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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance Times, 1933-11-02, Page 2PAGE FOUR THE WING AM AD"V'ANCI -TIM]S Thursday, November 2, 1933 Twin Day Boosters ARMITAGES' DRY 'GLEANERS McKIBBON'S DRUG STORE WILLIS' SHOE STORE MUNDY'S GROCERY MacLEAN LUMBER & COAL UNITED FARMERS' CO-OP. NORTH • END GROCERY CRAWFORD'S GARAGE HYDRO SHOP SELRITE STORE WALKER'S FURNITURE I -L E. ISARD & CO. OLVER'S GROCERY DOMINION: BANK HUB CLOTHING CO. GEO. MASON & SON HOTEL BRUNSWICK CHRISTIE'S GROCERY ON Lf4A+ °IY Friday., Satur., 35.00 .IN CASH PRIZES GIVEN AWAY - 18 PRIZES 1st Prize $.00; 2nd Prize $4.00; 3rd Prize $3.00, '2 Prizes at $2.50; 4 Prizes at $2.00; 2 Prizes at $1.50 7 Prizes at $1.00. Tickets given with every $1.00 spent with any of the businessmen advertising on this bill. No tickets given after 10.15 p.m., Saturday. Draw made at 11 o'clock in The Advance -Times Window. Only 1 Prize to Any One Person. - Gil: l?' an 71 i �r ,a'k"r{c1t' ..4. 1i1/44' ys•rit•{'t'b�:r,,,"�Huzf ttir�v�k4Citl!F'Mw,kuNx;=tuM+11k"„3.'2zi&'�5iPu1".:�eio� IA k F� -ip• t t. -, •.;r'^ r t,�'1 7>r'v'.'.c': ,rfar .:kava. K r w%tit �++JJ��.hr ..net= y•x,.. .r.��-_.+�.. .nd *.:� .• ,7.•1�•.3.1h .. -� Ce ;07,4,,h4( tilt( Twin $ Day Boosters BURK'S LADIES' WEAR WALKER STORES, LTD. DOMINION STORES, LTD. RED FRONT GROCERY BIGGS' GROCERY HARRY FRY, FURNITURE McKAY'S LADIES' WEAR KING BROS.. MCAVOY'S DRUG STORE HANNA & CO., LTD. OBERLE'S CASH GROCERY GIBSON'S BAKERY WILLIAMS' JEWELERY ELMER WILKIN1SON BANK OF COMMERCE GREER'S SHOE STORE THE ADVANCE -TIMES ,��}'�) �i. �finS f• f a ;irk lE, V e{ F< 1 A. • - k The Wingham Advance -Times Published at WINGHAM - ONTARIO Every Thursday Morning by "The Advance -Times Publishing Co. Subscription Rate — One Year $2.00 Six months, $1.00 in advance To U. S. A, $2.50 per year: Foreign rate, $3.00 per year. Advertising: rates on application. t€HYDRO WORTHWHILE Chairman John R. Cooke of the Ontario Hydro -Electric Commission has announced that seventy-seven Hy- dro municipalities are now in ,a posi- tion to burn their power mortgages and assume complete ownership of their local systems. Seven additional Hydro towns and villages out of a total of 300 odd are close to this point. ._ If these municipalities were not on the Hydro system and were supplied power by some power corporation, they would never have had this chance to own their own systems. Most likely, what would have hap- pened, would be that the, power cor- poration that supplied them with the power, would have split a melon and the shareholders and not the users would reap the benefits. When municipalities enter the Hy- dro system and many debentures are issued to cover the cost, it must look ahead to the day when these deben- tures will be paid off and then they will be in the happy position of the seventy-seven municipalities that are mentioned in this article. * *. :k BICYCLES SHOULD CARRY LIGHTS The person who rides a bicycle probably does not realize that a bi- cycle at night is hard for a motorist to see. This is especially so when another car is approaching,, and the approaching car's lights make it diff- acu Dave oc- `. It to ee. Many Y accidents oared this year by persons riding bi- cycles with nog lights. This is a very dangerous practice and the driver of the atttomobile in almost every case is right' up to thebicycle before he can turn aside to avoid a collision. g ridin g bicycles The practice of Ycles with oust lights is a bad one and very. dan- gerous. * * * RUSH FO'R GOLD American prospectors are rushing the Denver gold fields in search of that precious metal. This rush is due to President Roosevelt's statement lobi"TPUTUPWITI- • an : 'UGLY SKI. Fruit -a -taxes: glee new beauty Jet was ran down and listless. 1 felt irritable. nil the, their. My face was a sight, due to pi ofl and vea pro ashamed a fust whameet needed.In less than two mouths my sk(n cleared up i got rid of severe constipation and felt full of pep, t`volt yes « .. all drug store that the United States will buy dom- estic gold at $31.76 per ounce. Some new discoveries have been reported: *, * * .* It has been unofficially .reported that the trouble between the running trades employees and the Railways, has been settled by compromise. To settle these questions by conferences is a wise plan. * * * -lc Storms fast week drove the ships on Lake Superior fo shelter. The risks taken by the teen who sail the Great Lakes in the fall calls for stout fearless men that they are. * * *, *. The Provincial deficit will be about $2,000,000, instead of $3,000,000. That will help some. * , ;k Anxiety was felt last week when no report of Colonel and Mrs. Lindbergh. was received for'some time after they flew from Inverness. They turned up in Paris safe and sound, hon;ever. Flyers may come and flyers may, go, but "Lindy" seems to go on forever. * :;c * * Mr. Hans Steiger of Milverton who won a car by winning the Globe's let- ter contest writing on 'What I Learn- ed from the Canadian National Ex- hibition', ibition', came to Canada from Swit- zerland in August 1929, and at that time could talk' but little English. He is the type of citizen Canada is proud to welcome a.nk we take great pleas- ure in extending congratulations. * * * * It is reported that industry in Can- ada Chas absorbed 135,000 workers since the 1st of April. It is also stat- ed that this number would reach 275,- 000 if all industries reported. Slow; but sure. * * * A rugby player at Lexington, Ky., practiced all week with a broken neck. One has to be tough to play that game. ame. * * * * A Sarnia young man says that he keys learned to use skeleton forburg- laries bur g laries at:a reform school. That most likely truee as the boys s atthese in- stitutions are there because they have done a wrong and, no doubt, think it 'smart to boast of their criminal know- ledge. TIM ADMITS HE SIT- DATION IS DIFFICULT To the Editor av all thim Winghain paypers. Deer Sur:- I didn't fate able to Wroite ye a letther lasht wake afther the defate us Tories got all along the line, so to shpake. It-wint'party harrud wid rue, an sittled in me back, so I didn't git down town fer siveral days af- ther, but shtayed home an shplit up a lot av tough ould blocks in the woodshed in ordher to git the road out av me sishtim, Av coorse nothing is ivir quoite so bad as it looks at fursht, an sildotn is theer a total loss widout anny sal- vage', as the foire insurance min say: If ye do be livin on a farrum an hev a hars i die ye kin save the haide ami. the :shoos, an if it happen',in the fall av the year ye save the'winther's. kape ler the parse, 'mitt. Grits talk as if they won tree sates from the Tories, but, Shure, they onlygained wan from us. Wan ! sate wus Grit befoor, wan wus Pro- grissive, an only wan wus Tory, so they heven't much to crow about: &anyway, the Tory parthy is loike the British Army, we may lose bat- ties, atties, but nivir lose wars. Mishter Phil. Potts says that .purty soon theer won't be a Tory Govern - mint in all Canada, an ie oulcl fried an naybor, Sandy Banks, wus throyin to take a roise out av me wan day on the shtrate, sayin that theer isn't wan man in British Columbie who dares to run ori the Tory ticket. 1 tould him that it wus a bad outic.ok fer the Pacific Prawvince in that case an that got him •shtopped. Av coorse webby us Tories hev got to repair our finces, so to shpake, arr mebby build a new platfoorm in Ord- her to "dish the Grits," as ould Sir. Jawn used to say. Theer is no ray - son, at all, at all, whoy thim C.C.F:'s an U.F.O.'s an all the resht av thim rinegade Grits shuclden't be votin wid us Tories. Theywon't go back : to the Grit parthy, an, they spud see that theer *only chance to git what they are afther is to jine up wid the Tor- ies. They voted wid us in Ottawa oftener than they voted wid the Grits whin Parleymint ..wus in sishun, so theer is no rayson whoy they can't form a coalishun wid' us allover the counthry, an mebby we cud give Mishter Woodsworth, an Mishter Phil. Potts cabinet posishuns, an make good Tories out av thim the same as we did out av Hughie Guth- rie. 'Tis a pint that nades some con- sidherashun, an I musht be afther talkin it over wid Jarge Shpotton. Av coorse, I prefer a •fellah who wus barn an arised in the Tory fold, fer thine lads we take in out av the could do be apt to shlip, afther we git thim warrumed up. Shure, out, av all the fellates' we tuk into 'the Union, Gov- ernmint in nointeen sivinteen Hughie Guthrie is about the only wan that shtuck. But av coorse the ould 'Cory ship rthe is ort badlybatthered at bei. purty prisint toirne be the waves av de - d e.rsit so ri. h to an thewinds av a v. p s t ay,; that it is a case av anny poort in a shtorni wid us. Indade it moight be a good oidea fer. Mishter Binnitt, to shtale the lower tariff polis'hy av titin Grits, in ordher toplaize the West, He wud only be follyin in ,the foot- sliteps at the Tory parthy away back in 1878, whin we changed from low tariff min to hoigh tariff min cver noight. 'Someting musht be done. Yours till •nixt wake, th Hay, Timothy Amateur Hockey Association permit! forwardpassing and kicking the puck I in all zones, limits body -checking in the defensive zone to the puck -carrier alone, and put further restrictions on ragging the puck. Otherwise there are no changes in the previous code. Under the 1934 rules this is how play develops and what can be done:. The Defending Zone Starting in the defending zone, the puck may be passed or kicked forward and taken inside the first blue line by any defending player. However, should the puck be pass- ed or kicked over the blue line any defending player who was in the de- fending zone when the puck crossed the blue line may skate up into the centre zone and play the puck. For a violition of this rule (that is for a defending player in the centre zone to take a pass from the defend- ing zone) an offside is to be called and the face-off is to take place at the point where the puck crossed the - blue line. Centre Zone This his 'brings play into the centre e zon . In this area there is no'offside, and the puck may be passed, or kick- ed forward by attacking players up, to the second blue line. When the attack reaches the sec - NEW HOCKEY RULES ALLOW FORWARD PASS Professional Rules Adopted by Can- adian Amateur Hgckey Association and Ontario Association in Attempt to make Game Paster and Elimin- ate Many of the Stops Heretofore, Objectionable to Spectators. The new rules, just off the press are generally the same as those of last'year. briefly, we give the official interpretation of the new forward' passing rule as passed by the C.A.kH, A, and which says: The 1934 rules of the Canadian and and blue line either the puck or the puck -carrier must be first over the line. Thatis to say, the player in posses- sion of the puck may carry or Lick it across the line or pass it laterally or forward into the third zone. When the puck or puck -carrier crosses the second blue line all the attacking players who' were in the centre zone when the puck crossed the line may skate up and play the puck. The puck may be kicked across the second blue line . or kicked by any player in the third zone. Ifan attacking tarlcin player enters the ' g P Y third zone ahead of the puck of puck - carrier play shall be stopped with .a face-off at the blue line; should, how- ever, an attacking player cross the en- ter and-thepuck does not blue ter:the third zone play shall continue without interruption. The Attacking Zone This brings play into the third or attacking zone and the puck -carrier only may be bodied by the defending teat.. In this zone, (as in the other zones). there is nooffside and the puck may be passed or kicked forward by at- tacking players, but not kicked into the net. (Special attention is called to the fact that only the attacking player in possession of the puck may be bodied by the defending team. Asad he must not be charged nor cross- checked), Referees- are instructed to watch this particularly and penalize all at- tempts at rough play and illegal checking. The attacking players are not per- mitted to interfere in any way, with the movements of a goal keeper or his vision of the puck or the play, The penalty for violiticn is a face-off at the blue line. A goal scored under such conditions shall not be allowed, bio other defending ,player but the goal; keeper is allowed to sit, kneel or fall on the puck within 10 feet of his own goal•. Penalty a face-off 10 feet directly in front of goal. When an attacking player commits a foul in the defending zone the face- off shall take' place at the blue. line. If the defending team commits a foul the puck shall be faced off where the foul occurs, except where otherwise specified, as in the preceding clause. Ragging the Puck The puck must at all times be kept in motion. The team in possession in the de- fending zone, may carry the puck be- hind the goal line once, but after that shall always advance the puck unless prevented by opposing players. In the centre zone they may pass the puck back and forth but must not pass it back into the defending zone. The penalty is a face-off in front of the goal of the offending' team. Must be On -Side on Face -Off On all face-offs every ,player must be on his own side of the puck and no players but those facing off can come within 10• feet of the puck. Attention is called to this rule be- cause of the no -offside areas now in the game. Goal -,.How Scored A goal shall be scored when the puck shall have been put between the goal posts by the stick of a player of the attacking side, from in front andbelow the line of the goal on the top, and entirely• across a one -inch• line orthe width of the diameter of tlie goal posts, drawn on the ice from one goal post to the other. • A goal shall be scored if the puck is put into the goal by any part' of the person of an attacking player or. by his skates. A goal, however, shall be scored if the puck is put into the goal in any , way by a player of the defending side, A goal keeper may stop a shot -in any way he chooses, but must not hold the puck and must not pass., it forward withhis hands but may pass it laterally: or backward With his hands. Points to Relmember The referee's whistle or bell starts and stops play—not the time -keepers. All games 60 minutes (three 20 mimite periods) with overtime per- iods up to 30 'minutes, if necessary.' All games scored on the point system,. two points for a win and one point for a draw. The goal -keeper or his, alternate cannot play any other position but goal. A player, losing or breaking his stick is automatically out of the play until same is recovered or legitimate- ly replaced. The referee decides whether or not it is a goal. The goal umpires report to the referee when theybelieve a goal has been scored but the referee has the final decision and there is no appeal. Substitutions can only be made when play is stopped Play must be stopped by the ref- eree to impose a penalty. No body -checking permitted on the forward line. The only players per- mitted to use the body in checking are players of the defending teami when they are back oftheir own 60 foot line, but there must be no charg- ing by these players, GEMS FROM LIFE'S SCRAP -BOOK REASON. "Reas9n is the most active human faculty."—Mary Baker Eddy. "Reason is a permanent blessing of God to the soul. Without it there can be no larger religion."—Henry Ward Beecher. "Reason gains all men by compell- ing none."—Aaron Hill * * * "If I' go to Heaven'I want to take my reason with me:"—R. G. Inger- soll. * "He is next to the gods whom. rea- son and not passion, compels." •— Claudian: * * "Nothing can be lasting when rea- son does not rule." -Quintus C. Ru, fus. • * "If you will not,hear reason, she will surely rap your knuckles,"- )3enj. Franklin.`' k huce t .+o V;1'liu. ra.r.rti • �'., Both the photographer and the ino- ther had failed to make the restless little .four-year-old sit still long en- ough to have his picture . taken. 'Fin- ally the photographer suggested that "the little darling might be quiet if his mother would.leave the room a few minutes. During her absence the picture was successfully. .taken, On the way ; home the mother asked, "What did the nice man say to make. mother's little darling sit still?" "I -Ie thed, "You sit still, yoti little brat; or I'll knock your .lock off," so I sat still." The pencil, has made "a number of pointed remarks about the sponge be- ing soaked all day and the waste -bas- ket's being full. The scissors are cut- ting up and the paper -weight is try- ing to hold them down, while the mucilage is sticking around to see that the stamps gets a good licking. The ink's well but apears to be.blue,. while Bill is stuck in the file and the calendar expects to get a month off. The blotter has been'taking it all in. A nice Iittle boy had„.,a favorite Ir ish terrier called Paddy. • The : dog became ill and died. On the fateful morning the mother crept into the boy's bedroom and said, "Dear, I'm sorry to tell you Paddy's dead." The little boy gave a disinterested grunt. In a short time he rose and whistled for the dog. "But, dear," said his mother, "I just told you Paddy was dead:" "Oh, Paddy," said the boy, 'burst- ing into tears, "I thought you said Daddy., Cop—"Say, do you realize you were going 65 miles an hour?" Sweet Young -Thing—"Sixty-fiver Don't be silly! I could have been go ing over 30 at the most. In fact I don't believe I was going more than 25 at the outside." Cop—"Well, maybe you're right. I'll just tear this ticket up and give you one for parking." She—"Did you read in the papers that some people were poisoned thru eating chocolates?" He—"Yes, dear, I did, but what about it?" She -"Nothing, except that I was thinking er—how safe we are." "My advice to you, Colonel, is to. go through the movement of driving i .i without using the ball," satd the golf instructor. M y dear fellow; answered the Colonel, "that's precisely the trouble I'm wanting to overcome!',' "Allow me to introduce the man who has written more nonsense than. any other man I 'know." 'What is he, a journalist?" "No, •shorthand writer to' the House of Commons:""You'll have to get work." "It's no good. Even people who like it can't get it" i $9.55 per month' saved from age 30 will provide a pension of $50 per month for life at age 65. .Aralnt:ial dividends may be used to repremium-paying duce ,tihe period or increase the penSion. Pensions can also start at 50, 55 or 60. Writeor details o f f a simple plate , to safeguard f your future. Nes Tile Mutual Life Assurance Co.. of Canada) Waterloo, Ont.(Este 1869) It