The Wingham Advance Times, 1932-05-05, Page 2AGT TWO
The
Wingham, Advance -Times
Published at
WINGHAM - ONTARIO
Every Thursday Morning by
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BRITAIN LEADS IN
RETURN OE PROSPERITY
It is gratifying to hear that Bri-
tain has succeeded in balancing her
budget with something to spare, and
particularly the announcement of
Austin Chamberlain that so far as
Britain is concerned the depression
is definitely ended, This will doubt-
less have a far-reaching effect in
that we may more quickly en
from these, depressing times.
•* * * *
Before the bill to' abolish the'
Oath of Allegiance to the Crown,
becomes law in the Irish Free State
it must pass the Senate. If the
Senate rejects this bill it will be an
argument in favor of continuation
of the Upper House.
as * * *
Senators McDougall and Haydon
are being condemned by their Con-
servative colleagues and vigorously
defended by the Liberal side of the
Senate. Apparently political eyes
cannot focus correctly on right .or
wrong.
There is talk of bank notes being
made smaller. Trying to make lit-
tle money go a long way.
* * * *
.g.e
other countries through the restora- We can understand a fool and his
tion of confidence which is so badly money are soon parted, but where
needed at the present tiine. While he gets it is what gets us, -Sher-
brooke Record.
this confidence will doubtless go a
long . way towards bringing the
world back to normal conditions
there is considerable housecleaning
tet he done before we in Canada, for
example, can hope to reapthe ben-
efits of better times when it arrives..
* *
The relief of hungry stomachs, I
believe, is a far more important is-
sue than the indulgence of parched
throats. -William G. McAdoo.
* * * *
Incidentally better times will not You may send a man to the
simply come by waiting alone. We House of Commons but you can't
mustdo something to help it along. make him think. -Sydney (N.S.)
In this connection it should not -be Record.
forgotten that Britain has only rea- * * * *
ched her present condition through The man who built a two -car gar -
tremendous individual sacrifices and
the exercise of rigid internal econ-
omy. The wealthy men of that
country for example, have been re-
quired by the government to sub-
scribe to the treasury through in-
come tax and other means to a far
greater degre than in this country
or the United States, in fact all
classes have had to share in the
burden, and the sooner the wealthy
people in this country particularly
are taxed in a corresponding man-
ner to Britain, the sooner will con-
ditions rectify themselves here. It
is not sufficient that we should in-
crease our borrowings to meet ex-
penditures and maturing debts. This
is merely postponing the final day
of reckoning and what should be
aimed at is an actual reduction in
age in 1928 was foresighted after
all. He keeps the car in one side
and lives in the other. - Guelph
Mercury.
FARM NEWS
AND VIEWS
Published by Direction of Hon. Robt.
Weir, . Minister of Agriculture
THE WINGHAM ADVANCE -TIMES.
the crop be small or .large,, while
only. a few items vary directly . with
the yield. Items of expense such' as
rent for use of land, preparation of
the soil, seed, seeding, cutting and
machinery do not vary materially no
matter what yield is secured. The
costs of hauling and storing, and
threshing do vary with the yield but
they are relatively a small .percentage
of the total cost. Larger yields will
give snufflers costs per bushel or per
ton of crop, unless the cost of the
increased yield is greater than its
value.
Testing Maple Syrup
On account of the number of re-
quests which are being made by in-
dividuals ifor the testing of maple
syrup and other products the Fruit
Branch of the Dominion Department
of agriculture call attention to Sect-
ion 81 of the Regulations promul-
gated under the provisions of the
Maple Sugar Industry Act, which
provides a fee of $5 for official an-
alysis, and to section 82, of the same
regulations, which precribes a fee of
$2 for a determination of any other
purposes. Formerly testing was done
by' the Department of National
Health from time to time, but now
that the new Act is in operation all
testing is doneunder the supervision
of the Dominion Fruit Branch. Test-
ing maple products for purity is very
technical and complicated. With the
close check-up maintained on the in-
dustry since the coming into force
of the Act, there is practically no
cause for complaint with respect to
any product labelled "maple" and
bearing an offical licence or regist-
ration number on the package.
Need Quality And Supply
Butter Production Increases
The current issue of the Dairy
News, prepared by the Dominion
Dairy & Cold Storage Branch, Otta-
wa, shows an increase of 20.9 per
cent in butter production for 1931
as compared with 1930. Production
of butter in 1931 totalled 224,661,940
lbs., as compared with 185,751,061
our indebtedness rather than an in-
lbs., for 1930. Production of cheese
crease. Such an object could be for 1931 shows a net decline of 7.2
accomplished by adopting the same Per cent. The "short story" which
methods as in Britain, or in other may be taken from these figures is
words by having those who can af-
ford it paying to the full extent of
that on the whole butterfat product-
ion has increased throughout Canada
but it has been diverted from Cheese.
The High Commissioner for Can-
ada in London in a recent commun-
ication to the Minister of Trade and
Commerce stated: "We are careless
about uniformity of quality, and
would seem to be almost indifferent
about continuity of supply. You will
readily appreciate how unsatisfactory
it is when we have secured a cust-
omer for Canadian business to have
him report to you shortly after that
he can only get supplies intermit
tently, or that the goods he does
get vary very considerably in qual-
ity." There is a wealth of interest
in this timely message from one who
is himself a farmer, and it indicates
a way in which agriculture. may well
give a lead to Canadian business by
developing both quality and contin-
uity of supply to the Britsh market.
their capacity, The burden of the When To Plant Sunflowers
present •depression hasfallen far too to flutter for marketing purposes. Special studies as to the best time
Fi h rlrfeal Su lies Protein at which to plant sunflower seed
have been niacle by the Dominion
Experimental Farms. The results of
these studies are summarized as
follows: (1) early seeding has given
greatly upon the farmers and work- s pp
ing classes generally who can, least The results off experimental work
afford it and it is now time 'those in connection with the value of fish
who can should assume their prop- meal as a source of animal protein
er share. There are Many men and i" summarized by the Dominion
women ' in Canada who could easily Experirnental Farm at Nappan, N.S., • the highest average yield over a
give up .say half or nu,re of what as follows: (1) Good quality tuft
they own and ,till have enough left meal, lugh in protein and low in oil,
to live in luxury, certainly without furnishes -a valuable source of animal
experiencing the sufferings Of the , protein, providing the cost is reason -
great masses. It is within the pow- , able; (2) skim -milk still . remains the
• er of the Government to adopt such ' most dependable source of animal
measures. Will they do it? !protein but when not available, fish
* * * meal may be used with good results;
Hon. James Malcolm, l,iheral, ; (3) gains made by hogs fed on fish
eotitpliniented the Minister of Trade ,meal were practically equal to those
and .Commerce, Conservative, on the : fed skim -milk.
new Canadian -New Zealand Treaty. Larger Yields Cost Less
Men big enough to forget party, ? The production of larger yields
when they agree with their oposit- ;per acre is one of the most import -
ion, are few and far between. 'ant methods of reducing the cast of
Would it not be wise to bury the ' production per bushel or per ton of
political hatchet and combine of-' crop. Many items in the expense in
forts, regardless of party feelings, I growing •a crop are the same whether
,1411�ti"d
Ir 11V ,
t
cloth
dem n».d
!� ro
for
rviCe
mid 1,uarant `"ed
NovCaitim rpt Six Lamp,o
/n the /loose
' Wi ghain Utilities Cornmissiol
Cr wford flock. Phone 156.
Look tor ISTft, Leirrox
#h r 1.#4.I 647
PoOWt
•ro�imr!lMt J1Nr t.m �sa
period of ten years; (2) cool weather
immediately following seeding will
!retard germination and apparently
!results in lower yields, particularly
if the land is heavy and cold; (3)
'the best results will be obtained over
a period of years by seeding as early
as possible, providing the ground is
,warm and indications point to a per-
iod of warm weather immediately
following.
Ice Cream Is A Real Food
The offical records of the Depart-
ment of Agriculture at Ottawa shows
that ice cream is one product which
is steadily growing in popular favour
in Canada, It is a dairy product
which contains all the food proper-
ties of milk; with the addition of
butterfat in the form . of cream or
sweet butter. The .protien is the pro-
tien of milk, and the vitamines of
milk are retained in the ice cream
while the sugar (cane, honey, or
maple) used in its makingis an en
orgy producing food. Ice • cream is a
FOOD and ought always to figure
in the menu, Helping most import-
antly as it does to maintain health,
strengh and vigour. It is one of the
lmost important foods in the hospital
and sick room, and is the one food
Which combines rare palatability with
high food value.
PUBLIC SCHOOL
REPORT FOR APRIL
Homuth 556, Frances'. Lockridge
542, Billy Burgmati 520, . `Hilda
Brown 514, Noreen Benedict 518,
Marion Templeman 513, BettY
Lloyd 512, petty Saint 500, Virgin-
ia Currie 492, Veronica Morris 486,
Jack Ross 485, Mac Habkirk 485,
Jeanne VanNorman 483, Bill Scott
482, Myrtle Fothergill 482,Nora
Finley 475, Trevor Davison 469,
Agnes Seli 466, Jean Lee 442,
Phyllis Turner'. 440, Kenneth John-
son 439, Donald Adams 431, Rena
Elliott 421, Bertha Casemore 405,
Kathleen Saint 403, . Jack Fraser
401, Charlie Ross 892, Donalda
Henderson 390, Harold Cantelon
385, John Lee 880, Gertrude -Finley.
360, Bill Sturdy 345, Arnold Steak
;ley 342, Fenton Barnes; 331, Joe.
Wilson 238, Frank Angus 217, Alvin
Lediet 130.
A. Mahood, Teacher.
Junior Second .
Total 550, Honors 412, Pass 380,
Frances Robinson 493, Marguerite
Ingham 491, Helen Hammond 483,
Adelle Livingston 480, Velma Ohm
466, Bill Harris 457, Mable Camp-
bell 442, Bill Forsyth 442; Louse
Lloyd 437, George Johnson 420,
Dorothy Mellor 401, Roy Dark 400,
Betty Groves 390, Louise Thomp-
son 378, Eliner Deyell 374, Joe
Falconer 368; Laura Collar 365, Bill
Seddon 364, Hem Lee 357, Leslie
Adair 345, G. Helen 314, H. Mont-
gomery 311, Jim Kennedy 310, Jack
Gorbutt 306, R. Collar 296, N. Fry
296, Carl Vanner 293, Joyce Carter
283, William Fitzpatrick 223, John
Wilson 220, Kenneth Crawford. 169,
Florence Finley 137.
B. Joynt, Teacher.
First Book
Total 440, Honors. 330, Pass 264.
Donald Smith 409, Betty Gannett
407, Norman Mundy 406, Louise
Reid 405, Anne VanWyck 404, Edna
Hogg 400, Kenneth Baker 395, Is-
abelle Ross 387, C. Ohm 376, Jack
Hopper 374, E. Vanner 369, C. Case -
more 368, A. Williams 367, H. How-
ard 365, Eileen Dark 364, James
Cameron 363, Clarence Hamilton
361, Betty Fitzpatrick 358, Iris
Templeman 357, Eva Lediet 354,
Isobel McLean 353, Eric Schatte
Harry Posliff 471, Lloyd Carter 460, 345, Margaret McGillivray 345, Jack
Bob Rae 459, Jim Lee 454, Gordon Tiffin 343, Jack Rich 325, Grace
Jones 451, Clarence Cantelon 446, Hutcheson 323, Jack Carter 322,
Evelyn Gamble 444, Marjory For- Margaret Finley 319, Kenneth Jones
syth 441, Lloyd Dark 440, Jack Hare 316, Harold Hutton 316, Frances
439, Isabel Lamb 419, Edith Mundy
417, Alice Dore 409, Irlma Harrison
396, Evelyn Carter 382, Lillian Full-
er 372, Irene Clark 352, Jim Durnin
344, Hazel Lediet 314, Billie Lepard
297, Wornold Finley 281, Jean Mel-
lor 271.
C. 3. Farquharson, Teacher.
Junior Third
Total 600, Honors 450, Pass 360.
Betty Rae 547, Margaret Marsh
Adolph Hitler failed to be elected
President of Germany a few weeks
ago, but he succeeded in increasing
his . representation in the Diet from
6 to 162, only nine short of a ma-
jority over all other parties.
430 J. MacDonald 429, L. Ellacott
415, ' J. Currie 407, H. Groves 400,
R. Carter 391, J. Bunn 388, B. Dav-
idson 385, L. Bok 351, G. Carr 336,
J. Lamb 326, B. Forsythe 311, J.
Broome 307, M. Smith 289, D. War -
am 256, S. Forsythe 177.
B. H. Reynolds, Teacher.
Senior Third'
Maximum 600, `,Honors 450, Pass
360.
Eleanor Dunning 545, Winnifred
Smith 539, Doris Armitage 535,
Verne Walker 527, Mary Preston
520, Muriel Williams. 517, Jean
Cruikshank 503, Marie Hopper 484,
Durnin 308, Mary Black 307, Mary
Lepard 305, Jack Atwood 304, Alvin
Sell 302; Josephine VanNorman 296,
Pat Fitzpatrick 237, Isobel Mellor
110. P. • Johns, Teacher.
• Primary
Total 345, Honors 260, Pass 210.
Grace Ilingston 341, Joan Ingham
338, George Lloyd 338, Donna Bu-
chanan 334, Buddy Cruickshank 830,
Doris Finley 330, Dorothy French
Thursday, May 5th, -1:932
SELL NO MORE EGGS
inlintatani
SELL NO MORE ,CREAM
MAKE NO MORE PROMISES
UNTIL YOU HAVE TRIED
taammissim
- THE --
ells y.... ion Produce Co.
Limited -
W. L. WHYTE, Manager.
Winghamrn, - Phone 166
Open Saturday Nights Until 10. p.m.
MORRIS
(Too Late for Last Week).
Mr. Hubert Kernel, of Preston is
at present visiting old acquaintances
in this vicinity.
Misses Helen
visited friends
eek end
w - .
Mrs. Thomas Burke also Miss June
and Master Frank spent Saturday in
London.
The men in this community are
busily engaged in seeding.
Master Glenn and Kenneth Sinna-
mon of the boundary visited at the
home of Mr. Joseph Casemore's last
Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Elijah Higgins, of
Winghant, are with their son, Mr.
Robert Higgins, third .line at pres-
and Frances Edgar
in town over the
ent.
Mr. and Mrs. Nelson McGuire and
family of Holstein, visited at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gol-
ley's on Sunday last.
S. S. No: 7, was closed last Tuesday
on account of their teacher, Miss V.
MacLeod being sick.
, A little boy had taken his mothers
powder puff and was in the act of
powdering his face when his small
sister, aged five, snatched it from
him, "You mustn't do that," she ex-
claimed, "only ladies use powder.
Gentlemen wash themselves."
"If you love work, why don't you
find it?"
Tramp (sadly) : "Alas 1 madam,
love is blind."
546, Patricia Parker 541, Mabel 330, Norma Brown 329, Douglas
FothergiII 532, Russell Zurbrigg Fry 327„ Lois Adams 325, Grace
530, Ruth Hamilton 518, Scott Reid Parker 324, Ruth Harris 324, Jack
516, Irene Chittick 513, Mary E. Ludwig 323, Grace Small 323, Craig
McKibben 480, Lloyd Hutton 459, Armstrong 321, Carl Clark 820, Jack
Evelyn Campbell 455, Charlie Krohn Day 319, Marjorie Falconer 318,.
427, Charlie Zellwood 424, Lillian Robert Chittick 315, Ambrose Zett-
Howard 422, Edythe Campbell 403, ler 283, Madaline Mellor 281, Wall -
Evelyn Edgar 386, Harold Ross 385, ace Hutton 275, Donald Hastie 270,
Elma Attwood 382, Darrell Biggs Ileen Morris 268, Everett Hammond 1
372, Eilene' Curtis 361, Allen Small 268, Lloyd Mundy 266, Doreen Gar -
356, Herman Kennedy 328, Carl lick 258, Frank Zettler 258, Donald'
Bondi 320, Robert Casemore 312, Campbell 255, Eddie Fitzpatrick 242,
George Boyle 303, Billie Groves Jimmy Sanderson 223, Jack Mellor
293, Charlie Baskerville 284, Edward
Finley 231, Harry Ross 220, Raphael
Morris 151, Margaret Brophy 54.
E. M. Tyndall, Teacher.
Senior Second
Total 600, Honors 450, Pass 360.
Kenneth Jackson 562, Margaret
Senior Fourth
Total 575, Honors 431, Pass 345.
3. Zurbrigg 528, I. Habkirk 51.5,
H. Miller 487, M. Ross 478, E.
Field 472, K. Rintoul 453, R. Mit-
chell 440, C. Wellwood 424, G.
Brackenbury 414, R. Howson 414,
1?. ` Brown 383, 11. 'Elgin 383, C.
Chittick .:382, N. Blatchford 368, M.
Cruikshank 367, E. Finlay 362, R.
Hammond 361, 13. Mundy 846, E.
Webb 345, D. Rich 334, G. Falcon-
er 817, 'W. Small 808, W. Carr 801,
13. }tantilton 290, J. Fitzpatrick 282,
H. I3iirgess 282, M. Wilson 218.
A. L. Posliff, Principal,
Junior Fourth
Total 600, Honors 450, Pass 360.
E. Krohn 522, I.. Campbell 409,
V. Stoakley 498, 1'. I3ig•ggs 496, W.
Mc ;evict 494, I. Mellor 485, L. Car-
ter 482, Z. Cameron 478; T. Davi-
son 464, A, Wilson 482, il, Colar
218, Jean MacLeod 210, Betty .E1-
liott 202, Mae Rellinger 1'72, Marie
Lockridge 148, Lorraine Brown 119
Margaret MacLean 100, .George Lo-
gagianes 63. Margaret MacLean,
absent.
A. G. Williamson, Teacher.
C L
NP
D ,ul!". CHES
RIM, NEU'L QA
Don't be a chronic sufferer
from headaches, or any other
pain. There is hardly an ache
or pain Aspirin tablets can't
relieve; they are a great com-
fort to women who suffer
periodically. They are always
to be relied on for breaking
up colds. •
It may be only a simple head -
BEWARE OF
SUBSTITUTES
ache, or it may be neuralgia or
neuritis; rheumatism. Aspirin
is still the sensible thing to
take. Just be certain it's Aspirin
you're taking; it does not hurt
the heart. (Made in Canada.)
CRACK TRAIN DERAILED AND HURLED DOWN .EMBANKMENT
The Grand Trunk Railway's track
Maple Leaf .express, Chicago -bound
from Canada, was derailed its South
Bend, Ind.; the engine overturned
GRAN]) TRUNK TRAIN Wi ECI<R1D--•COACH HITS HOUSE
and killed the fireman and engineer 1 Jeff Bradburn and his son who were
and the house stuck by the car a
and two baggage cars hurled down l sleeping in the home. A view of the the RIGHT.
an embankment, one of theist strik- ( wreckage is shown ABOVE, the oy-
ing a dwelling and seriously injuring ertrtxned locomotive at the LEIiT;
tq