HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance Times, 1934-02-15, Page 2'AGE TWC
The
Wingbaxl Advance -Times
Published at
WINGHAIVI -. ONTARIO
Every Thursday Morning by
The Advance -Times Publishing 'Co,
Subscription Rate --- One Year $2.00
Six months, $1.00 in advance
To U, 5. A., $2.50 per year.
Foreign rate, $3.00 per year.
Advertising rates on application.
TOXOID PREVENTS
DIPHTHERIA
From tiniie to time we have urged
through this column the use of Tox-
cid as a means of protection against
diphtheria. So far we have create
but little ,impression: on the public u
officials in this district. As we scan
ned the exchange papers last week w
came upon an article in the Gran
Valley Star & Vidette that proves th
use of toxoid is spreading to th
smaller villages and towns of Ontario
The article is as follows and was sign-
ed' by the Medical Officer of Health,
Dr. M, W. Berwick.
"The first inoculattion of Toxoid
will be given the childrenof Grand
Valley Public School, at the school
on Thursday of this week. This treat-
ment is free of charge to children of
the school section and three inocula-
tions will insure complete' protection
for life from the dread disease, diph-
theria, in 90 to 95 per cent. of cases.
The injections are harmless, even to
• young heildren, Parents of children:
under school age are urged to come
to the school an Thursday ~morning.
and bring all the children`. from nine
months' of `age up."
The administration of ..toxoid in
larger centres such as Toronto, Ham-
ilton and many other places, has
been carried on for some > time, and
the wonderful results from these in-
oculations have proved beyond doubt
that toxoid is of great benefit to man-
kind.
We qoute from the Toronto Star
Weekly "In 1929 there were 1,022 res-
idents of Toronto who contracted
diphtheria, and 64 of them died. Ev-
ery year there was a reduction in both
cases and mortality until in 1933,
there were .only 56 residents who had
diphtheria, and of these only 5 died.
The residential death rate from this
disease dropped from 10.6 in 1929 to
.S in 1933 -probably the lowest en
the continent for any city of over
500,000 people. t
This is a remarkable record and if t
a great 'time. Come in co e and
help make the carnival the greatest
success in years; at any rate, be pres-
ent and enjoy' the fun and help a
worthy cause, The X -Ray Fund, the
Band and the Arena will all benefi•t..
by pour presence,
* ;;: *
EDITS HIS PAIPER AT 80
This week Mr. A. W. Wright, of
Mount 'Forest will be 80 years old,
and is still oh the job every day to
edit his 'paper, the Mount Forest C'nn-
federate.
Mr, tiVright is well-kown among tit,
members of the Newspaper Associa-
tion who hold Bina in great respect.
We extend to him birthday greet-
ings:and wish hire many- more years
d of health.
✓ * * *
'Who said that this was going, to
e be an open winter?
d as a *
The groundhog' evidently knows his
e stuff. He beat a hasty retreat when
• be saw lils . shadow.
• ' * * ?l:
A member of Parliament referred
to another member at Ottawa last
week as a "skunk." Such piffle in the
House when men should be seriously
considering the country's business is
not expected of those we send to
Parliament.
* * * :i:
The extreme cold last week caused
considerable discomfiture to the
members of parliament as the build-
ings could not be properly heated. It
is a good thing they get cooled off
once in a while.
• * * *
Hon. C. .H; Callan in an address to
Ottawa women last week stated that
the deficit of the Canadian National
Railways is about $50,000,000 per,
year. That amount is, like a millstone
about the people's neck.
* *
A headline says "Around the World
in Seventeen Days by Zenplin and.
Plane." This surely is an age of
speed.
• * * * *
Will French history repeat itself?
Will the riots of Paris cause the blood
shed and violence . that the followed
the fall of Louis.
*
The World is still nursing a head
ache received from the Great. War
and yet we hear of rumors of war in
Europe, and in the Far East. Will
he people of the world never learn
hat there is no profit in tear?
it can be maintained the saving of
human life will represent a`•wonderful
advance in humanity,'s battle with die -
ease:
-
ease: Pheproa
progress
d
o far reported is
the result of an: organized effort to
have people avail'thentselves of the
pz'otection against diphtheria which
medical science devised. The fact that .
"toxoid prevents diphtheria" has been Golden Text:
brought prominently to public atter- I will have mercy, andnot
Y, sacrifice;
tion. for `I am not come to call the rig• hte
Medical' science has discoveredi
< n cans, but sinners. (Matt. 9:33.)
this toxoid an article that can greatly
benefit mankind but unless it is used eTee. CredentialsKing"
of the
it is of no use to a community;, might well be used as the title for this
* * ,* * lesson, The Sermon on..the Mount,
THE BENEFIT' CARNIVAL given in the three chapters of Mat -
On Friday night a huge Benefit thew just preceding, sets forth the
Carnival will be held in the Arena principles of the Kingdom as declar-
and, as it is some time since the peo- ell by the King. He now proves, in
ple of Winghatn have had an oppor-the ,two chapters under •study, His
haat}, to take part in such a winter I royal "power to banish from the earth
festival Old and Young should have !the consequences of sin and: to control
j THE AY SCHOOL
,.W.o.meom.oa�ow10•0woca omamo.w.o sew.m.
JESUS' POWER TO HELP.
Sunday, Feb. 1$, --Matt 8:1 to 9:34
YOUR LIVER'S MAKING
YOU FEELQU1 T SORTS
�fl 1 S
Wake up your Liver Bile
—No Calomel needed
-When you feel blue, depreeeel Dour on the
world, that's your liver which isn't pouring its.
daily two pounds of liquid bile into your bowels.
Digestion and elimination are :being slowed
up, food ie accumulating and decaying inside
you and making you feel wretched,•
efere bowel -movers like salts,, oil, mineral'
water, laxative candy or chewing gum or
roughage,
don't go far enough.verlsiseet1nS
Carter's Little
Liverbee,afy ee•
table, Sure. Ask for them by tame, Refuse
substitutes. 25o. et all druggists. 52
!the elements of nature."' There is a
rapid succession of stupendous mira-
cles, possible only to God. And .the
ratan Jesus, according to His own plain
declarations throughout the Gospels,
was God—the Son o an
f G d d God
.o ,
the Son.;,
Leprosy throughout • the Bible is a
type of sin: slight, almost unsuspect-
ed, iii its beginnings,steadily pro-
gressing and increasing in its destruc-
tive power; finally destroying much
of the body before it kills; and hunt- quiet and of sane neind,
1 only incurable. Even today 'the phy_. In a crowded meeting, soon after,
sicians who have specialised in the another paralyzed ntan was brought
I treatment of leprosy by. chaulmoogra Ito the Lord, and He spoke an Miele.:
THE Wik,TG .'AM ADVANCE -'T MES
NEW WARLORD QF ,JAPAN
General Senjuro Hayashi, new war
minister of Japan, is shown here in
a late photograph. He succeeds Gen-
eral Sadao Araki as head of the Jap-
anese military establishment Jan.' 23.
General Hayashi, pictured here in' the
ease of Japanese dress in his home,
formerly was inspector -general of mil-
itary education,
oil . arc ,cautious in their claims as to
complete cure, preferring to say that
the disease is arrested' rather than
eradicated.
But a leper came' to Jesus, and first
"worshipped Him," then said: "Lord,
if Thou wilt, Thou . canst make me
clean." The leper was unclean, and
was obliged to cry, 'Unclean, unclean'
to keep peopleraway from him.
In the Old Testament in the' book
of the Law, Leviticus, two of the
longest chapters (13, 14), with a total
of 116 verses are devoted to detailed
instructicns as to how a leper night
g
be cleansed, according to God's law,
given by inspiration to Moses. Now
"the law was given by Moses but
grace' and truth came byesus Christ"
J
(John 1:17), and this leper was com-
ing to Christ, not to Moses. The con-
trast between Law r`
and Grace is most
impressive
.tie azid
PInstead of
the elaborate ceremonial to of the Law,
requiring 116 verses to describe a
single n ecce in
Matthew tells: us that
g.
"Jesus put forth His hand, -
s a d, and touch-
ed him, saying, I will; � , be thou clean:..
And immediately his leprosy was
cleansed."
This same Saviour wants us all to
come to' Him •'in the sante • way, in
simple faith,, no matter what the lep-
rosy of our, sin has been, and as we
worship and trust s1. Hnn we shall find
that "the blood 1 adof lesus Jet Christ .
cleanseth us front all sin" (1 John 1:
7),
A Roman centurion'had a beloved
servant who was grievously suffering
from the palsy, or paralysis, and as
the Lord offered to• go. to his home
and heal his servant, the centurion
showed; amazing faith -such great
faith, the Lord Himself said, as He
had not found in Israel., For the cen-
turion asked the Lord to•' "speak ,the
word only, and my servant shall be.
healed" -without the Lord's even go-
ing to that home, Christ' took him at
his word, spoke, and the servant "was
healed in the selfsame hour."
There followed miracles of healing
of every kind of disease. Then, as
the Lord took ship with His disciples
across the tempestuous sea of Gallilee,
and one of its sudden storms `swept
down upon them, threatening to en-
gulf the. boat, He "rebtiked,the winds
and the sea; and there was a great
calm." ,Nothing ccauld withstand His'
power, .
Two men of Gadara were possessed
of demons,: fierce and uncontrollable
by men. But when the Lord spoke
the word of command the demons
were cast out, and the men became
®1111t1l11
11�
,rl
ithy sins' be forgiven thee." cheer;
, ..... n tet word. "Son,be of good
11fl1111193 MIME OMNI ®loll ztly God can forgive sins, and the
Jewishleaders said, `This man bias-
g�^ nhetneth," It tt`onld have been blas-
e d� Nitta~ if Christ were not God, It was
not, blasphemy, for Christ ie. God.
Then the Lord asked the Jews
is
uyers Of tvhich was easier to says Thy sins
7 be forgiven thee; onto say, Arid, and
is
compAN
1
iK ,•
Ontario.
Phone
SLISX
walk?"'
They dared not' answer — and He
-answered His own question. "But
'that ye may know that the Son of
man hath power' on earth to forgive
sins (theta saith He to the sick of the
}palsy) ,Arise, take up thy bed, and
go untothine house. And he arose,.
and departed to his house.."
Still another: miracle fnllrnved, .pes-
haps greater than any bf these,
The Lord saw a publican, ,a tate-
collector, busy at his nefarious busi-
ness "at the receipts of ettstortl.": He
was a publican, corrupt, grafting, ;'get-
ting rich by "squeezing" all Me could
get out of his helpless fellowmen, and
he was hated correspondingly. The
Lord said to hint: "Fellow rne," 'i'lte
tisiracte happened theft, for the pian
"arose and followed Hiro,"
It was Matthew, who wrote the im-
mortal Gospel, we are studying, He
beeazne one of the twelve apostles,
He gave a great banquet for the
Lord in his home, and "marry publi-
cans and sinners carte and. sat down
with Him and His disciples," The
Pharisees complained. And the Lord
answered th.ezn with the unanswerable
work of a Saviour." "They that be
whole need not a physician, but they
that are sick"
WHAT MAKES
A GOOD MUFFIN
By Barbara B. Brooks
The proof of the pudding is in th
eating and so it is of the muffin
Tastes differ but it is generally agree
that the good muffin' is light, tende
and free of tunnels; has a crisp, brow
crust and a slightly rounded top with
out peaks. This is the standard wile
titer for plain or sweet, bran, 'wiled
wheat, rye .or" rice muffins; or fo
those to which raisins, dates, prunes
berries, ' jam, olives or bacon hav
been added; or for those topped witl
fruit or nuts, By the way,. even a
this long list, we have not itarned al
the variations which a good .cook ca
think of.
After deciding a. good ood muffin
is, how :shall the cook make it? Firs
of all, get a good recipe and follow .i
exactly. There is one important rttl
of mixing that is the secret of success
—do not over -stir the batter. Do al
the stirring you like before adding the
flour. Then count each stroke of the
spoon with an idea .of using the few
est possible. Stir only until the flout
is moistened and disappears.
The egg muffin is the basic recipe
for all others. Raisins and other dried
fruits, and nuts can be added without
changing- the recipe, For bacon muf-
fins, about a third ,of the shortening
can be omitted and a half cup of dic-
ed crisPly fried bacon added. (Left
aver bacon is fine). When other- flours
or cereals are used in place of all or
part of the white flour, the recipe
trust be modified. It is best to use
the recipes especially worked out for
each kind of flour.
For bran muffins there is one oth-
er secret of success in addition to the
little stirring rule. Select a bran that
is readily softened, The crumbled or
flaked' bran which has been thorough-
ly cooked and prepared as a breakfast
cereal is: excellent. It will be crisp
when poured from the package. It
softens readily when soaked; Bran
contains a high percentage of cellu-
lose or fiber.- When fiber is soaked,
it absr s large quantities'ofo
f moisture
and swells in bulk It is this, softened
and increased bulk which is largely
responsible for the laxative effect of
bran. And it is the soaking of the.
bran which gives the good bran muf-
fin its even, fluffy texture, When mak-
ing bran -muffins, remember. both 'se-
crets for success -soak the bran, acid
stir the batter as little as possible.
Do you know that muffins can be
mixed using only one bowl?' Try the
recipes for .Bran Muffins and Egg
Muffins, mixing as directed and sur
prise yourself with the few di hes.
there will be tet wash.. These reci -pes
are so :easy that you will Want to
stake there upon every occasion.
Bran Muffins
2 tbsps. shortening
3. cup sugar
1 egg
1 cup sour mills
1 cup bran
1 dap flour
1 tsp. baking powder
Yr tsp. soda
% tsp. salt
Cream, the shortening and sugar,
add egg and beat thoroughly. Add,
sour milk and bran and let soak ttntil.
most of the moisture is taken up.Sift
flour with baking powder, soda, and
salt and add to first inixture, stirring
only until flour disappears. Fill greas-
ed muffin tins two-thirds full and,
bake in a moderate, oven (400° F.)
for 20 to 25 minutes. Yield; 8 large
or 12 small muffins.
If sweet milk is used ' instead of
sour milk, omit the nti teaspoon of
soda. and use 3 teaspoons baking pow-
der. Raisins or dates may be added
if desired. A small slice of apple,
sprinkled with 'cinnamon and sugar,
placed on top the muffin batter before
baling makes a delicious variation of
the recipe.
Egg Muffins
3 t•bspe. shortening
h cup sugar
2 g's ,r
1 cup ntiilc
2 cups float
3 tsps. baking powder
s✓e tsp. salt .,'
Create shortening and sugar toge-
ther. Acrd eggs, one at a time, ,beat-
ing thoroughly after each addition.
Sift flour, baking powder and salt to».
,ether. Add flour mixture and milk
alternately, stirring only until flour
disappears, Pili greased tnuffitt tine
two-thirds full and hakb in a moder-
ate ovclrt' (400" ;'ii`,)' about 25 minutes.
Yield: 12 medium muffins.
EYce; til''uffinS
cup
Thursday, February 15, 1934
t cup boiled rice
1. egg
2 tbsps. shortening (melted)
1 cup milk
5 tops, baking powder
1 tsp, salt
2•r/a, caps flour
Mix sugar, boiled d
shortening, and:
powder, salt and fl
add, Bake .in greased
a hot oven (400° F: ,
TIMOTHY VU'
SHORTER
INP_
To the Editur itv a. t
paypers,
.Deer Sur:
Wid both Parle l;
blasht, in' Ottawa a
`tis a foie tobne ii
bers do be. havi'n h
Chateau Laurier an
whoile the.raiders
are afther znakin to
av fellahs tink that t
to Parleyznint that t
ntaytins an lisleten
are in Church in th
but it is a rnisitalte
Thine lads . shpind
tointe in the raidi
over the shtock mar
ories av the latest '.h
robberies, an kidn
throyin to foind ou
head av tings in
'Tis the noospaYper
Wroiter girr�uls who
wurruk to do, an s
rice e
, gz;, melte•
milk. Sift baking
our together arid
muffin pans In
for 30 minutes
ANTS
SPEECHES
ARLIAMEN'I'
11 thin Winghan
rmints g•oin fur
n Toronto, shore
rtoirely the mini
angin aground the
the Royal York
av `tlte parthies
ng spaiches. A lot
whin we sind a In
hey. attind all cite
loike whin they
eer home towns,
intoirely, Sa it is.
mosht ; av cheer
n roams, lookiri
kets, arr the sht=
ould ups, an bank
appin news, arr
t wl't , is at the
France arr , Cuba.
byes an toipe-
hev the harrud
hoer . be dhrawin
the big salaries, an, shure, I hope •they
git thim. No matther if a spaich is a
moile long, an as droy as lasht Aug-
ust, they hew to lishten to it and git
it all toiped out, so a copykin be
laid on wary mimber's disk the nixt
marnin be tin o'clock, whin the thrub-
ble shtarts agin. Mebby it wud be
betther fer ivirybody, an save the
country a lot av money, if theer wus
less talkin an more shmokin in Part-
eymint,
If thim minibers wud condinse theer
spaicltcs, .an use sltmaller wurrudi,
mebby they wud git more av the byes
to lishten t thim. Lots av fellahs use
wurruds they don't know the mainin
av thiinsilves. I was talkin to a 'Grit
frind en the shtrate lasht wake, an
he wus afther tellin me a long shtory.
av what 'our foorfathers had done
buildin up this - ountry till we owe
more money accorclin to our popula-
shidn than almosht anny other couni-
hry in the whole wurr old. I asked him
if h knew t t r t
e e�1 1 ow the v� i t ld fo z--
e u o
gotshtarted in the futsirt
place.. He said .he didn't, so I wus
afther tellin hint.
"'Tis, this ,rY way ser I, "Ivifellate
.
bas a father, av cootse, so thats wan,
thin mosht loikely he has a father
-in-lata' an ..that makes two, thin he
has two grandfathers s,O that !.inaices
Poor; ;an so we hew the wurrud foor-
fathers. Mebby some fellahs hey the
luck to hew a slitepfather, arr- two
trowel in fer good mishure, but that
doesn't alter the facts av the case at
PEKrkiis
I
"Fresh from the Garden's"
to deface Charley Robertson he had
betther shtart wtirruk'on number foor
hoighway as •soon as shpring coarses.
Yours fer'less talk an moore wurrt&lci
Timothy Hay.
OFFICIALS RELEASE
SCORING RECORDS
Rae Leads Nearest Rivals by Five
Points,
Murray Rae, slim Prudential flash,
led the local Town League snipers,
according to the official reports just
released.: Rae rang up a total of ten
goals and six assists to amass sixteen
point, five points more than Harry
Browne and Somers, two of his team-
mates. Harold Mitchell earned the
doubtful Honor of being the league's
"bad man jtfst nosing out Col. Rae,
the Oilers' star spending ten minutes
Nvith the timers, while Rae drew down
the official ire for a total of eight min-
utes before leaving for fairer fields.
Following' the three Prudentials
the scoring records came three of the
Oilers, Ted Elliott with ten points,
Lance 73rowne and Harold Mitchell
with seven each. "Bob" Groves, in
tate Prudential net, had the fewest
goals scored on hits, sixteen, while
Lorne Zulauf, of the Oilers, had 'to
fish one more out of the twine: The
title of "Shut -cart King" was shared
by "Bob" Groves and Zulauf, each
with three, The Old Timers spent
the least `time, as a team, in the pen-
alty. box, serving twenty-twominutes,
while the Prudentials put in twenty-
five, the Oilers twenty-seven, and the
Welders twenty-nine.
Besides the clothes, etc.,' we receiv-
Final' Standing
Scott, :Welders 2 2 - 4
Lockridge, W., 0, T3 0 3
Potter, A., 0, T,' 3 0 . 8
V✓ lliams, Pruds. ..: ,3 0 3
Gurney, Weld. 2 0 2
Mitchell, S. Pr., SupI 0 2 2
Sturdy, Weld, 1 1 2
Ternpleznan, Weld. . 2 0414‘2
Cara, Sup, 1 0 1
Hopper, Super, 1 0 1
Lockridge, A., O. T1 0 ' 1
Mitchell, A, O. T1 0 1
Rae, R., Weld. .. ...... 1 0 1
Smith, Prud. 0 1 1
Towne, L.T. Prud: 0 ` 1 1
Williamson, Prud. 0 1 1
Benninger, Weld. 0 0 0
Henderson, ,5.,'L. T0 0 0
Mason, Super. 0 0 0'
3 0'
5 0
5 1
1 0
1 0
5 0.
1 0
5 1
0 0
0 0
1 0
5 0
8 0
3 0
3 0
1 0
1 0
1 0
1 0
WEST APPRECIATES
HELP `
FRONtHER
Some of the Women's Organizat-
ions of the United Church' here sent
bales to the West and the followiri
letter from Central Butte, received by-
Miss
yMiss Pearen shows how gratefully
these gifts were appreciated,
Central Butte, Jan. 30,.'34
Dear Miss Peaxen:
Just a note thanking you fells in
the •East for the lovely things you
sent to us Western folk; words can
never express how free -hearted you
aren
people. to send quiits; flannelette.
coats dresses and jilt everything hin to.
q
us' in times like. these: In sincerely
hope you will never be in need as we
are here, but if such a thing should.
happen, I hope yott would find us: as
free -hearted as our Eastern friends.
G,W,L.T,F.A. P. car -loads
Prudentials 10 6 1 -3 31 16.15 Fast, West and North. All are very
much appreciated. West
YOU folks : serely
Supez'tests 10. 6 4 0 2'S 17 12 se
1 alotof hme
must have spent `' ' making
Welders 10 3 3 4 23 23 10 ilts the one you sent pieced
Old Timers 10 2 5 3 14 21 7
qu spas a y
and stitched on both �des and
as
real heavy, so is very, warm. It su e
feels good to wake up knowing see V;,
have plenty of covers. We have had
no crops here since 1928, and last year
diel not have horse feed, and this is
Dili'~ from ere place.
rd all the folks once
you a 3
again. fol our ne verto be forgotten
Thanking
kindness and a reply if convenient, I,
remain
i
Yours Sincerely,
Mrs: George •Corort,
Individual Records
Player Team
Rae, M. Prdu, 10 6 16 2 0
Browne, ,H ,P t
,, rt ds, .... 6 5 11 5 0
Somers, ),'rods, 6 5 11 2 0
Elliott,
Super. 9 1.10 0 '0
'all, 'at all, so it doesn't. - Brown, L. Super..:..;:1
A lot av thim lads in Parleymint nlitchell, H, Super,
doe`loike me' Grit frind, The look Mellor Welders .....,•
b y. _, 6
woise an tally' about inflasltun an de- Thompson, Suer. • 5
1 P
flasliun an the resht av theer poor re- Bain Super, 3
P P
lashuns, not knowin what it all manes Groves, M., Weld3
widout an explanashun, Bell, Super. 2
Mishture Hinry will be afther an Bok, Prud. 4
elickshun this year sometoime, but. Browne, B,, O. T.....,3
fer the prisint the Glebe is faidin its, Cruickshank, Weld3
raiders on roast lame duck six days , Gray, Prud. 2
in the wake. Wan wurrud 'av advoice Howson,' 0, T. 4
I aro afther givin him; if he wants Mitchell, 13.' Weld:' ,., 3
6-: 7' 5 0
4 8 710 0
0 6 0 0
1 •6 1'0
2 '5 1 0
2 5 -2 0
2 4' 3 0
:Penny Bank Report
The report of the Penny Bank for
November and December ' 1933 has
just been :received. It shows that the
total amount on deposit at the end of,
1933 was $2,155.66 as compared with
0 4 3 0 $1,859,09 at the end of 1082. The per-
1 4 5 0 centage number of pupils depositing
1 4 2 0 during November and Desember is 46.
2 4 5 ,q This system of teaching the school,
0 4 1 0 pupils to save consistently is a worthy
1 4 6 1 part of their education.
NINE HURT AS ELECTRIC TRAINS CRASH ON FROSTY RAILS
Nine. Suffer el tumor injuries evileri
two L,ondcrn and fort Stanley I
w4t y trains collided head -ort, -ecat.
t err`
1? teeiniestet' station, The sort i
L bauritl.
train, carrying many passengers, was
baekinf into a passim; trick when •di
1sauthbound extra bore dawn, Having
ti:c rigitt of tray, it cxpceteri a clear
track. "Thirty degrees: below zero had
'So foisted the rails that the faster-
southbotmd train skidded and 1, rel ct•aslted
to the other, the veetibttle being
telescoped. The main bodies of the
ail -steel cars, ho;vever, 'resisted . the
impact, One motorman jtiinped itit45
a ?lr r
cit, ltanl, 'oriel the "Other; bitek into
his c:rr, and .lotin:
.both cscapccl with minor
htrr•ts.. The,. loss, insrtred, is said to be -
about $2,000,