HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance Times, 1934-01-11, Page 5,Thursday, January 11, '1934'
Hres' Qukkest Smpksi
may to Stop a Cold
1 Take 2 Aspirin L DrinkfullgIassofwater. if throat is sore, crush
1 Tablets: ■ Repeat treatment in 2 {�'e and dissolve 3 Aspirin
hours.
Almost Instant Relief z:
in this Way
The simple method pictured above
Is the way doctors throughout the
world now treat colds.
It is recognized as the QUICK-
EST; safest, surest way to treat a
cold. For it'wih check an ordinary
cold, almost as `fast as yeti:caught
it.'
Ask your doctor
about this. And when
ASPIRIN TAeLETs ARS
MADE IN CANADA
Tablets in a half glass of
water and gargle according to
directions.in box,
you buy, see that you get Aspirin
Tablets. Aspirin is the trademark
of The Bayer Company, Limited,
ands -the name Bayer in the form
of a cross is on each tablet. They
•.' dissolve:. Almost ;:instantly. And
thu;3.work;almost instantly when
you pke them. And for a gargle.
Aspirin Tablets dissolve so coo-
pletely they ;leave no. irritating
particles. Get a box of 12
tablets or 'a
t bottle 'of 24 or
100 at any drug
store.
DOES NOT, HARM
THE HEART
"That fello*- owes me fifty dollars."
"And won't pay it?"
"He won't even' worry abotit it!
"Waiter, my bill!"
"W11at did you have; sir?"
"I don't know."
"You don't know:•'
" *7o. 1 ordered a tender steak."
'The Scotsman 'was .fumbling in his
pocket. "You don't need to pay me
in advance," said the dentist.
"I'm nd' .goingto," was the reply..
"I'm only counting ma money before
you gie me gas." .
PEN OF .8: C. W. LEGHORNS OF WALTER ROSE, BRUSSELS
Which were entered in the last Pro- 287 eggs each with an average egg
vincial Egg Laying Contest at Har- production of 231 eggs that graded
row, twelve of these birds laid 202 to •better than extras:
T.[ . WINGIIAM ADVANCE -TIMES
THE TORY IDEA
SUITSTIM' BEST
't' the Es itttr, av' all Utatn
Wingltam paypers.
Deer Sur:—
The milder I git to be the more
shore 1 am that the Tory oicica is the
roight wars. "Lave well enough alone"
is the only safe rple to wttrruk wid,
fer, slime, didn't it win the elickshun
fer us in nointeen elivin, Ay coorse
we had wan other shlogan, "No thru-'
ck arr thrade wid the Ya kces" to
hilp us, but both av thio waist party
much the same ting,°hso they did.
Thirn Grits : to be always wantin
to change tings, an only lasht wake
they wits afther changin theer laider
in the Ontario House. It wud serve
thio roight if Mishter Sinclair wud
turn Tory, an, Shure, it is a foine man
he is intoirely, an `tis plaized we wud
be to hev him wid us.
Purty soon now ye will be afther
hearin from iviry Grit platfoorm:'in
the Prawvinee the same oyld shlogan
they always hev. "It is toime feria
change", whin they throy tp; defate
good Tory Governiuts. •
Av coorse, bein• an ould farnumer,
`tis mesilf that knows that ye can't.
grow whate in the same field year 'af
ther year; 'tis a rotashun av ,,crops' ye
musht hey, but, all^°the 'same, if ye hev
a field ay. fallwhate that has, corne
trop the" winther fairly: well,. it wud
be a inishtake to plow it up an sow
barley arr oats.
`Tis the'sarne way wid the Binnitt
an Hinry Govermints. Nayth;er wan
av thim looks loikely to yeild more
than "twinty-foive bushels tothe acre
on trashin day, but whoy turn, thio
down an take a chance' widthim Grits,
ani mebby' not git more than tin arr
fifteen bushels, at the: m'oisht?
Whin I wus-•ruitriin the farrum I
shtuck to Durham cattle all the toirne
an made plinty av money out av th`im,
but the bye tought he knew more than
the ould man, an shtarted changin ar-
round to furst, wan brade, an thin an-
other, till now he doesn't know what
he has, but wan ting I' know is that
he can't pay his tint.
Some fellahs always do be tinkin
that they kin do betther somewheer
Ilse, an so they •change to another
shtore, arr to a diffrunt dintist, arr
docbtor, arr blacksmith; yis arr meb-
by to aliffrunt Church, nivir tinkin
that mebby the thrubble is wid thim-
silves.
"Lave well enough alone" is a good
rule, but, av coorse, ye niusht undher
shtand' how to use it. Fer inshtance,
if `ye hev been votin Tory all yer loife,
shtay wid it, aven if yer parthy does
some tings that look purty bad, but
if ye• hev been votin Grit till it has
got to be a bad habit'wid ye, thin
the -sooner ye mind yer ways the bet-
ther fer ye.
Yours till nixt wake,
Timothy Hay.
"Do not, for oitte repulse; forego the
purposethat you resolv'd to effect."
-Shakespeare.
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.. floIari
By Mary Imlay Taylor .
"THE BRIDE"
DOLLAR is made altogether absorbing as Mary
Imlay Taylor tells it, pouring into its chapters such an abundance .i
of LOVE and ROMANCE.
A Charming ng Lowe. Star Ohu It FU// of
- r%enee Advinliure and 'Interest
"Nancy Gordon trades herself in marriage for fifteen thousand dol-
lars'- the price of her family honor * and the freedom of her bro.
thea•, Roddy, who stole from the bank in which he worked. Nancy,
desperately Roemer, in love with young Page nevertheless agrees.
p
to elope with Dr. Richard Morgan on the condition that he keep
the marriage a secret.Dr. Morgan is
loved
b�HelenaHaddon, a
sophisticated young married woman, but he adores Nancy and
p Y,. g
hopes to win her after marriage.Nancy refuses to see Page the
night before her elopement, and steals, broken-hearted, out of her
house early the next morning to keep her rendezvous with her fut.
ure husband, At the station while they wait for the train, they are
see 'by Helena Haddon's husband.
IN is a Wenderlul Starry
aimmenc rig in This Issue
4-i1'dF9F+1F*• •** i1�'3F9hit"1t•%^it--Y.'3i'^JF�Y,•tic
Happy Ending of �4.'
t Bermuda rui$e
t By LEETE S'f'ONE 0
e
cc XC!LJSE 'me, , ~'Danforth Evrtnt"
said to a lovely girl leanins
tigainst the rail of the steamer Elspet)
bound for Bermuda, tbe. first :hour out
'Excuse me; but you dropped this' pa
per or't of the book; under your arm.'
I -le., held it out between two' finger:
andMs smile was very winning,,
"Ever so thankful, • What a gorgeuu:
sea 1"
'So started one of the million ship•
hoard romances, It went like this:
"Yes, isn't it?, May I stop and elm'
awhile?"
"Please do!"
"I s'pose this is just a trifling es
cape from too -pressing suitors fol
you? Danforth Evans said in his test
manner. "This little voyage, I mean,"
he added..
"Say!" the girl tanned squarely to
faee Danforth. "We'll get along''_fn.
tnously on flits voyage if you don't try
to pull . any highbrow, `wealthy ser`
stuff on rue. If 1 let you, you'd go or
,to relate that you're one of the • spe
sial. c]arlings of Southampton; that
you're engaged-, but you hate it; Est'
you've got the next best fortune 't'
Ella Wendel's it yourtitherdies cor.
reniently soon . oh, I know the
it1d'etuff, big boy. This Is my thin'
sea voyage."' •
•` This outburst left Danforth Evans.;
9, bit aghast;, but he rallied nobly.
"Quite right! You called my titch..
, fluff, lovely lady. t.was about to see
;est that 1 bad a great deal of move,-`
in my ownTight, and that we, you and
4 ought to continue this cruise down:
.trough' the Canal Zone and up ti
:;an Francisco where we might got
married and start a tour of the world
for a honeymoon. But yon called iiia
plenty: I'm a clerk at the men's fur
,rdshtngs in 3ainegan's; and I've saver
for this vacation for a year. 'I'heree
•he lowdown—and while. I'm at it, let's
.rot know each other's names. Let's
von call me Dan; and I'll call you
Nan -•-eh?"
"0. iy., Dan; now we're on a straight
"otin,;. But tell me, you aren't en
reed, are you? Iwas 'kidding ahous
:int—rind I hope you aren't heemi.t
reeve rot a 'free look about you• Me
'11 he frank. I work in department
fere, too—sales girl JD ladies' lingerie..
eiw let's start square!"
ltiglrto, Nam! ' You guessed ane the
"r st time! I was going to tell yn'i
'te whole sad story of how I was en
'need by 'fond parents to my next don'
I ighbor•'s daughter while we were
»•th' in kilts -on accoune of =nevi
"neer, you know. . Well, we'll
et out all that, Nan. There's gala.
n be a moon tonight. F. looked' It ue
the' office calendar. .feet me here:,
'nd let's talk' some more, will your
"0. K., big boy -I'll meet you any.•
vhere so long as you're square. Lisi
lerstand?
"Righto 1"
They met that night as naturally as
mater is drawn from two streams into
ne. At the prow of the ship where
hey were bathed in moonlight,and
he gilded phosphorescence tinged ,the
eaping waveswith.silver. '
"Remember! This is a shiphnin•d
'omance, Dan. Nothing serious!' Nan
eproved'as he put his, arm gently over
ter shoulders.
"Trust ane; I know all about thein,"
.)an flippantly responded.
When the short sail was over, how -
•ver, there was something more than
'ippaney and insincerity in the gaze
g these two.
"It may have been a shipboard ro•.
"once, m
Dan murmured earnestly, "hut
'l1 find you again on land; and when
! do P11 keep you -just remember'
�lnt"
Danforth Evans arrived at his sato
teal mansion, in Long Island a fe'W'
.c eks later after a good good sunning and
-ening on the beaches, quite fit for
father's brokerage office and the
pyre -racking din of downtown Nev
'tele He found the house in festit e
egay. His mother, 'a silver -haired
enveger of society, greeted him with :
"Well, Danforth; I'm glad you wired
ne. Otherwise, I'd have been sure
'ou'rl forgotten that tonight is toy'
'tr t;v for you and Blanche—she's just
.11011 from the Sacred Heart convent."
"Oh, gee, mother! This isn't tim
fiddle ages! Why trust I go through
ilt that Childish contract between.
erl and her dad. Don't make me go
‘1 rough with this childish engagement,
"hy. 1 haven't seen her since we ate
•l'yt'ops together,"
"Vtery well, -.my son. All I desire
that you meet her tonight. You
na'ltt just happen to like her."
ell of whieh explains why llalaforth,
;vans 'vus tilled with 'a great disgust
n fancily pacts and ancestral Earl;
'1 general, as his mother escorted him
tri oegli the palatial drawing room to
fret the girl he had been affianced to
ears ago.
"~'here she is, son 1 Tallying • to,
'lake Leigh. Isn't she sweet?
"My God !" Danforth Evans tent -
r d revert'tttiy. "1't can't be, tree—
: You're kidding the! £'kat
:11 '1.
flini eh 1' Ileyw'ard?''
1,luriehe hadseen the glandap-
roatch and site turned to motucr any
(>h yes it 15, Danny—but for the
r
i Hisq
� ; . e of a Them -tide cruisE. I use
.•,nrrSitre Grace or just,' plain Nan, in -
read. 1 rC ogni'etl you r'
r +" � l the moment
you—that unmistakable nose=--
al 1• hated you for not knowing Yue.
'it spitE' Of the 'filet that we haven't
,t,a c ;>� h other since 1ti11j^itoLa days,"
I :r . 111 Gllb'o me li
ta' t;'ine,v,, Danforth Evans sttittiTed
1,oe,ific'sntlle on his face,
OILMEN WIN 3-2
AS WELDERS FALTER
Second Periods Rueli ;Winsg'fbt' The
Supertest,
Areata, Jan. 4.—The orange clad
Supertest team grabbed off two goals
in the second period Tuesday night
and walked out of .Herb. Campbell's
igloo with two more points. Despite
the nine penalties handed out, the,
'game was a good one throughout with
the Welders malting a desperate third
period attack which .threw .them with-
in one goal of the hard-pressed Oil-
men, In the second game, which was
an. exhibition affair the Old Timers
outscored the Prudentials by the Same
score 3-2. The Oldsters were award-
ed two points when Lower Town de-
faulted and two former Villagers ap-
peared with the Ancients.
Ted Elliott, the blonde left-winger
was the man of the hour in the first
game;" grabbing off two goals and
playing steady hockey throughout.
Not a brilliant player, this boy takes
full advantage of any openings that
come along. 'Midway in the first p `s-
iod "Dawn" Cruickshanks' angle -shot
found a corner and gave the Welders
a lead which they held till Harold
Mitchell's back -hand ' shot eluded
Douglas early in the second. Bert
Mitchell drew a slashing' penalty and
just as he was climbing back in El-
liott's shot fronig near the boards° sail-
ed under Douglas' arm into the twine.
The third period had barely start-
ed when the Pride of the Junction re-
peated the performance and put Sup-
ertest two up. From thenon the
Welders did most of the puck=carry
ing and a lof of close calls result-
ed. • The Lower -Enders got a tough
break when Cruickshanks' shot hitthe
top chord across the net and bounded
over, Not to be denied "Cruicky".
picked up a ` fine pass from Mack.
Groves and slipped a close one by Zu-
lauf, but try as they might they could
not grab off the equalizer.
Supertest—Goal Zulauf; def:, Bain,
Wain; centre, L. Brown; 1. wing, ;El-
liott; r. wing, H. Mitchell; Subs, F.
Hopper, Bell,
Welders—Goal, Douglas; def., Rae,
B. Mitchell; centre, Cruickshanks; 1.
wing, Sturdy; r. wing, Groves; Subs,
Gurney, Scott, Mellor, Templeman;
Beninger, Harriston.
Referee—Somers.
1st period—No score. Penalties, L.
Browne, . M. Groves, H, Mitchell, R.
Rae.
2nd period -1 Welders, Cruick-
shanks; 2 Supertest, H. Mitchell; 3
Supertest, Elliott. Penalties, R. Rae,
Bell, B. Mitchell,
3rd period -4 Supertest, Elliott; 5
Welders, Cruickshanks (M. Groves).
Penalties, ,'L, Browne, B. Mitchell.
Oldsters . Beat Prudential 3-2.
While it was only an exhibition
game the second affair gave the fans
some good hockey, with both goalies
having theirbusiest night of the sea-
son. So hot were some of the shots
that Earl Groves split a finger and
also got banged on the big toe in one
of the scrambles. "Dutch" Lockridge'
two goals on hard shots from the blue
line and B. Browne's' goal on a pass
from Howson, won for the Old Boys
while H. Brownie's solo effort and
Somers' goal on a pass from M. Rae,
completed the scoring for the night.
SUPERTEST CLIMB
INTO 1ST PLACE TIE
Shut Out Old Timers 3 - 0
As Welders - Prudentials
Tie 3 - 3
Arena, Jan. 9.—The orange and
black clad Supertest grabbed off a
nice 3-0 win over the Old Timers on
Tuesdaynight and now share first
place with the Pruds. The latter hung
on by virtue of a draw with the Wel-
ders, new haberdashery and all. Soft
ice precluded any possibilityof fast
hockey and it was a case of shoot
and wait forthe breaks.
Sporting their new green and
white' jerseys for the first time this
year the Welders somewhat outplay-
ed McMichael's Pets but two great
rushes by Murray Rae kept the black
and white in the running. Murray op-
ened the scoring with a solo dash
five minutes after the start and shov-
ed the puck past Douglas. Three min-
utes later Somers deflected Bert Mit-
chell's shot into the unguarded corner
of the net andjust as the period end.
ed Mac. Groves' long angle short
found the opposite corner.
Rae uncorked another dash 'and
licked up his rebound off the boards
and ;shoved the rubber into the empty
net for the only goal of the third
period.
Len. Bok's surprise goal on a pass
from Scott Mitchell sent the ].'ruck
ahead early' in the 3rd but "Colonel"'
Rae barged through for the tying
goal soon after. Andy Scottalsohad
a hand in this goal, Boli teams seem-.
ed content to let it go at that and i.io
futlier scaring resulted.
Prudential—Goal, Grovos, r, defy
Smith; 1. def., Somers; centre, Gray;
r, wing, Williamson; ! 1, wing Rae;
Subs, leak, Ellacott, S. Mitchell,
THINK PRINCE D
PiGE, ,]I',r
DGING P CESS SERVER
Prince Alexis Mdivani, husband of Barbara Hutton, Woolworth heiress,
who is thought to have left a transcontinental train at Reno to avoid Cali-
fornia process servers. The prince is seen here with his wife. The process
serving is in connection with his brothers' oil ventures in southern Cali
forma.
Welders—Goal, Douglas; 1. def., R.
Rae; r. def•,,:B. Mitchell; centre, John
Cruickshanks; 1. wing Gurney; r. wipg
M. Groves; Subs, Templeman, Sturdy,
Mellor, Harrison, Scott, Beringer.
Referee -W. Locicridge.
lst period -1 Predentials, M. Rae;
2 Welders, B. Mitchell; 3 Welders, M.
Groves. Penalties, E. Gray, R. Rae.
2nd period -4 Prudentials, M. Rae.
Penalties, M. Groves, Gray, Smith.
3rd Period -5 Prudentials, Bok, (S.
Mitchell) &'Welders R. Rae (Scott).
Penalties, B. Mitchell, S. Mitchell.
Final Score, Prudential 3, I elders
3.
Ancients Absorb Shut -Out
It was apparent that one goal would
likely win the second game, a a roll-
ing puck made play hard. Displaying
good all-round playing the Oilmen
grabbed off a goal in the second to
stave off the desperate Ancients and
added two more when they •iutskat-
ed the tiring Old Bays back into Old.
Timers' territory.
Lance Browne's pass out from the
side of the net which F. Hopper shov-
ed into the unprotected corner mid-
way through the second period was
enough to win but in the third period
threw caution to the winds and first
Ted Elliott and then . Thompson
caught them flat to skate in on the
unprotected goal and put the game
on ice. The Old Boys tried hard but
Zulauf was either too good or too
lucky.
Supertest-Goal, Zulauf; 1. def,
Mitchell; r. def,, Wain; centre, Lance
Browne; 1 wing, Elliott, 'r wing, J,
Thompson; `Subs, F. Hopper, Mason.
Old Timers—Goal, E. Groves, left
def. W. Lockeridge; r:. def., A. Lock-
eridge; centre, Howson, 1 wing, A,
Mitchell; r wing, B. Browne; Stabs,`
McCool, A. Porter, Merkley, N. Pot-
ter, R. Hopper.
—
Referee Somers,
lst period—No score. Penalties, H.
Mitchell 2, N. Patter,
2nd period -1 Supertest, F. Hopper
(L. Browne). Penalty, H. Mitchell.
3rd period -2 Supertest, Elliott; 3
Supertest, Thompson.
Final score Supertest 3, Old Timers.
0.
HOCKEY RESULTS
Thursday, Jat . 4th.
i
Supertest 3; Welders 2.
*Old Timers 3, Prudentials 2.
Prudential 8, Welders 3.
Supertest 8, Old Tuners 0.
"--Exhibition.
Standing ,.
G. W. L. T. F. A.'' I'.
Prudential 4 2 0 2 9 4 0
Supertest : • 4 3 1 0 10 3 6
Old Timers 4 1 1 2 1' 4 4
Welders 4 1 1 211 7 4
Future Games:
Jan, 11 Prudentials vs. Supertest.
Old Timers vs. Welders.
16 Old Timers vs. Prudential.
Welders v$.» Supertest,
Simpsons "How emelt are th
big' for ,yatii' rent now?"
Tinipsoe: "About twice
a tlay.
sk-
•
A HEALTH SERVICE OF
THE CANADIAN MEDICAL
ASSOCIATION AND LIFE
INSURANCE COMPANIES
IN CANADA
.FORTUNATE (PEOPLE
"What a lucky person!" exclaims
the thoughtless individual.. Good
health is not a matter of chance or
luck. Good health is the reward for.
proper living. It is just as important
to display the sante intelligence in
health matters as is devoted to busi-
ness and other affairs, of life.
The worna.n who dies• of cancer is
not unlucky. She has 'either been ig-
norant of, or has disregarded the ear-
ly
arly signs of the disease. The woman
who has recovered from cancer wcrff
to her doctor as soon as she noticed
a lump in her breast or some irregu-
larity in her periods: Call her lucky,
if you like, but it was really the fact
that she paid attention to what she
knew that saved her life.
Thechildwho died from diphtheria
was unlucky because he was the child .
of parents who were ignorant or care-
less, with the result that he did not
receive the injections of toxoid that
would have protected him against the.
germs s of diphtheria,
Fortunate is the child who is born
to a mother who recognizes the im-
portance of breast-feeding, and who
knows that vaccination against sntall-
pox and immunization against diph-
theria are practical means of safe-
guarding the child. Fortunate is . the
child whose parents realize that child
care is a difficult task-, i
for which
training is required,
;child who does not receive in his diet
the minerals and vitamins required to;
build healthy teeth. This proper diet
requires some understanding of food
values and calls for planning on the
part of the mother; it cannot be secur
-
ed by chance.
A healthy child is a well-trained
child, A healthy mind and body are
the reward for good training. Health
calls for a certain amount of self- dis-
cipline which is reaspnably easy for
the adult who secured a proper ;;tart
in life, through good training,
We are not all born with the same
degree of intelligence or the same
physical capacities but what becomes.
of us is not a question of good luck
or bad luck; it depctids upon how
well trainedwe' area children, and
sc
how, as adults, we make use of our
training to take rare of :ourselves in
order that we may enjoy physical apt!
mental health,
Questions concerning Health.,
dressed to the Canadian Medical' As-
sociatioe, 184 College :Se, To1'o11ia,
will be answered personally by toiler,
Good teeth are the product of a pro-
per diet and care. No amount of luck
will give strong, sound teeth to the