HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance Times, 1926-02-18, Page 7t.
THIS—THAT—AND •THE OTHER
—o--fio
One of London's don's famous merchants asserts' that ,• the
greatest of all crimes is laziness." That's not a crime.
'That's a luxury,'
BILE EXHAUSTS!
• h.UTOMO.
multitude of anato : where pass-
ing
tires cover a, nkx
ing over some luckless pedestrian,
—--o---
Tad' oneof those so-called "Chummy Roadsters" threa-
ten our existence to -day. In fact, it got so chummy that
—ttivo inches more and • it would have embraced our phy-
sicalsical
frame.
—o-- •
:c fine at sixtymiles an
He claimed his. motor worked
hour. Now he's settling the claim -by working out the
•
judge plastered
fine the on him!
> g•
—o—
TheY 'tell us there's a plant over in India that hats mus-
cles and, if you -strike it, it shows fight. It'll sort, o' plant'
one on your breather, so to speak?
0 -
UNCLE JAKE SAYS:
"Ifon one cheek—turn to him the
a main smite thee
other, ,Brit—duck': before he swings!
"Hefightsaway—better stay who wild runs'' aw y in hiding if
hew ants to' save himself a hospital :bill.
"Manyhit`the.hi h spots
a man starts out to in life but,
g
sooner or later, he lands: hard on the fact that it doesn't
pay.
"He who would advise Youth nowadays—can learn
something.
"Many . a' short fellow can talk way over the head of a
tall one."
-0_--
Not a few Misguided, persons in this world with appetit-
ea for "Roast Breast of Peacock" on incomes that barely
permit the lowly Beans and Pork.
-0
Oft where there's a will, there's a way—distant relatives
-have of thinking it's a chance for getting' some money
• without Working for it.
—o—
HERE IT COMES—THERE IT GOES!
Papers say married men make more money than bach-
elors. But that don't mean • anything. They never have
it long enough on pay day to realize their superiority,
It may be soft coal but the bills' for it are pretty hard to
"take sonic ti111i;5.
These are the days the coal baron. ,still chirps -"Mine is
a lovely business!"
—0 ---
FAMOUS .LAST
0—.-.FAMOUS,LAST. LINES
"Excuse me. Your mistake!"
HOUSEHOLD HINTS.:,
FOR FEBRUARY
By Betty Webster
Tea Wagons
Save your steps. What's in a
naive? - A tea wagon is, of coarse,
useful for the service it is made for;
But why net make it nt,ore useful?
Here are few added, uses for your tea
cart.
1. Use cart to carry things to and
from kitclien in preparing a meal,
2. When washing windows 01'iin-
side. place necessities in tea kart and
wheel from window to window,
3. Use it for a mending table. S:a
ek clothes on tea wagon that need
mending after the weekly , washing
has been assorted, Wheel in xoom or
onto porch or to any convenient spot
in which to mend.
' q. The work of cleaning days can
belightened by using tea eart to hold
supplies.
COOKING HINTS
Peanut and Cabbage Salad
This is a dandy winter salad:
2 cups of shredded cabbage_
u small green pepper(Ctifi up).
I cup of chopped peanuts.
eanut
s.
Iix lightly. Blend with
French
dressing.
g
—o—
Tomato s As iell
P Jelly
1.
envelope of gelatin.
P
cup of cold. water.
cups of canned. tomato
31P
Little onion.
Little celery.
Little cloves.
Little salt.
Fete grains of cayenne.
2 tablespoons of vinegar.:
Method:—Soak gelatin in
ter' a few minutes. Mix all
gradients except' vinegar,
minutes. " Add vinegar and.
es, ,
cold wa-
other in
Boil 15
dissolved
gelatin,
Turn into large hold or individual
molds. Serve on lettuce leaves. Gar-
nish with egg and green pepper,
-a_
CLASSICAL MUSIC WINNING
OVER JAZZ
By R, M. Sherrill
(Radio Engineer)
It is being internationally proven,
that radio audiences are begitviing, to
prefer the classical musical programs
Pere A. Scholes,
tothejazz. Mr.Y classical. ` further check of ballots
the widely known music critic of the 'ca e that Idaho was on
received indicates s
British :Broadcasting Co., who is on a
:Ithe fence with a tied vote between
n tl
c
tour of America, 'says "Less than ofOppO'iig musical_camps.The voting
ghteennontlls ago,• the majority
n Colorado was very close.
the -Britishradio audience charged i voting, generally, was
trial- B h Beethoven •Wagner, etc Canadian g, g y,
tempos and conventional numbers.
Upsetting the predictions of season-
ed dopesters all but' five western sta-
tes swung to the classical' column
Arizona, Wyoming and North Dakota
gave an over whelming choice to ra•
pidcopation.. South i)alcota,
it w-fireas notesynd, gave - its majority tc
BAKING HINTS
Butterscotch Apples
Core desired number of apples, Fill
each cavity with brown sugar. Place
a piece of butter on top 6f -each apple,
Place apple in baking pan. Surround
apples with water to in depth, Add
more sugar in water to make a sy-
rup: Bake in moderate oven. Serve
either plain or with whipped cream,
—0—
Baked Onions
Method: -Peel onions or parboil in
slightly salted water.. Pour off water.
Place onions in a buttered baking
dish. Bale until tender,: Baste oc-
casionally with melted butter and hot
water,
Bach, ]lk Listeners, however, gave their
were acceptable only to. .`highbrows' , g
' rit
and that the average listener got little mato y to :conventional music. ,
i _Half of the Votes
'from music by composers I Women Cast'
enjoyment
wPending!>
-with mi roiiounceable halite' '1Vomapproximately < j proximatel y
half of
n `-sky.' f_ately, however, the attacks the total ballot, whereas, less than ten
in the classical •.
tl programs have ainost months ago, barely one fifth of the
•
entirely ceased, and the .British listen- mail addressed to I.OA was wriltetl
ei-s are at last learning to admire the by
women:
works of the classicalco Poset,."An
unprecedented flow
of com i
un-
The swine trend in musical taste, is cations disclosed that the jazz -classic
being observed in the United States 'L truggle was heard in restaurants,
and Canada, and is a surprising eon- chool houses, hospitals, barber shops
tradiction to forecasts made by many hotel lobbies, widely scattered mining
experienced observers. The latest in -'camps and even in jails.
dications of this tendency towards ' KOA Adapted for Such Tests
classical music are the results of tests i The central location of KOA, its
conductedby the General Electric high powered transmitter,' and the su •
Station, KOA, of Denver, Colo, As a perior quality of its transmissions,
program novelty, KO\A put on a spec- makes this station especially suitable
tacular musical competition between for tests like the above. The respon-
the jazz and classical schools, Lead- se from the vast and well distributed
_0—
(Readers, Note: If' you -have any
questions concerning Recipes and
other Household Hints you would li-
ke to ask Betty Webster—address her
in care of this paper,)
ing 'artists and representative compo- audience of this station, may safely be
sTiions of both .factions' were featured. considered as representative of the
A Fair Trial 'general opinion of the whole of Nor -
Broadcast listeners, representing th America.
all walks of life, and all parts of the -O—
country, and sitting virtually as an in-
ernational musical jury, Radio' Questions and Answers
voted three (Mr. Sherrill will be glad to help
o, two, that jazz ` is ng fallibehind in You solve your radio problems. Write
g
> hiin. in,care of this paper.).
opular favor, and therefore will n� «
Q.—G. E. K. asks: "How can I tell
verre lace the works of eouver.'dorali
P
AVING is just as
for earning is taut o°
saving "is assurance of ee ttl
the foundation of prosperity.
The Dominion Bank protects the funds of it
depdsitors by the prudent Inarnigement e
f
experienced officers. z�
V'INGHAM BRANCH
JPA WALLACE,
1
1
i elderly,
>roticlzitis is rather certain to cough. Perhaps Pharyngitis
T: \vii es; - ill u please
• . itis, .l t VV y .
The 'ordinary attack of bronchitis,
el 1 x what •s 111e nittet vriu 1 iz,
however, is somewhat self-limited.
t 1. � e
Atfirst the cough is dry, perhaps
throat? Ia Heems a_ if tiierc w s
painful. Eater, F
is the course of the
hail• 01 it grid it has.hee1i titdt ...., for
bronchitis tends to recovery, the
about a year''
cough becomes loose, or "productive" Reply
The loose cough ser-
ies
er- We earl only gars'.. The sensation
as it is called, T 1 g
,ynas m
p-
it lila- that ou complain .of is of�c y �
vena with 't purpose in of ig Y
aerial from the air -passages. torn of a forth of chronicp11? - t gltis. '
u lug re �ir: :-!t''ileilt far some
Some people, especially the Yo y q
have a cough every winter, Many of constitutional coiidipson as -� 1» L! 10 -
bronchitis cal treatment of ?:lie throat, '2 01 dray
these folies have a chronic, .
which is made worse by the cold profit by instruction in 2 t proper
The cough usuall disap- use of the voice. rant 1-; ,.lnber that
weather. o Y
pears with the coming of warm uvea- we are only guessing. Ni 0! ! C<in `.
1
ther. make a. diagnosis at long distance, and
s be certain that. the diagnosis is e or
But it does not necessarily follow
g Have -our. doctor 2 13nline y011
that everyone who coughs has abion- icer, 5
chitis, either acute or chronic. Nor --0—
Hardening of the Arteries
H. G. asks: "How long: can a per-
son hope to live after the arteries get
hard? Do people; who have hardening
of the arteries always die of apop-
lexy? I have known people who had
o'mposers 'if a 201A type tube is becoming in-
( Ans.:—You can male measurements
rs were invited to vote jazz,
tone of the characteristics of the tube, but
classical, or for a combination of both an easier method would be to try the
types of ,music. On the face of pi•ac
tube in place of one which `t you know
tidally complete returns from listen is good,
ers, the classical camp won three of
every five votes cast. I
.o
I Q,—L. P. S. says When a series
Of the total votes cast, more than
tug condenser is used in the prim -
50 'p. c. favored the classical school' wry of a receiving set, how does it al -
the remainder. being' split between
fect J the.wavelen us
As g
e
judges of this studio clash, lis -"sensitive?"
Report of Hog Shipments
For week ending February 1itl:.,
1o.,G. W �
a ingllam, ' total hogs 51; select
bacon 16; thick smooth 31; heavies 2;
shop hogs 1. Wroxeter; total hogs,,
69; select bacon' 3o; thick smooth 32;
lights and feeders 2. Bluevale, tstal
'hogs 65; select bacon 19; thick smote
th 38; shop hogs 6. Huron County,
total hogs 1514; select bacor. 448;
thick `smooth 884; heavies ;58; extra
heavies 6; shop hogs 52; lights and
feeders 19:'
Ontario's Motor Traffic
proponents of jazz and those who
Ontario's passenger motor cars.
showed an increase of 32,395 in, 1925
trucks, etc,, an increase of 3,202, a to-
tal increase of over 35,000 in these
two types of motor -driven vehicles,
excluding motorcycles, . buses etc. In
Toronto alone the increase in passen-
ger'
assen-ger' automobiles was 6,145, and in
commercial vehicles 486, a total of ov-
er 6,600. Automobiles in Toronto; ex-
_clusive of motorcycles, etc., have in-
creased. from 26;1,57 in 1919 to 65,871'
in 1935, an increase of 39,734 since the
war. The number has more than don-
(bled since 1920.
1
Quality Radio
Apparatus
Quality unexcelled, is express-
ed in a most pronounced degree
in both appearance and perfor-
mance of all Stromberg—Carl-
son Radios. That's why there
is more money invested in
Stromberg—Carson Radio sets
in Wingham than ANY OTH-
ER line.
"They are sealed like a
Packard"
The Radio Shap`.
W. CRUICKSHANK
Phone 234.
WINGHAM, ONTARIO
Amateur Station
7.O.K.E.
does a cough that is more or less per-
sistent, .necessarily mean tuberculosis.
For there are several causes of the
symptom of cough aside from affec-
tions of the organs of respiration. In
fact, dry cough may be a symptom of
a surprisingly large number of distill-- hardenedarteries and high blood-
.
bailees. pressure who died of apople' y. A
Varied Causes near relative has recently been told by
a doctor that he has hardened <:rtcr-
i n dtte to the inhalation of •
T.rritat o les, and that is the reason ut by
Idust, smoke and irritating vapors interested; in this subject."
may cause .cough. Constant exposure.
to any of these may cause a chronic
cough.
2 Anse—Putting a series condenser in
the circuit, 'shortens the wavelengtll
,'to which.- that circuit was tuned. The
greater the capacity of the condenser,
however, the less the wave length is
I shortened. Thus With a variable sex
''ies condenser, the higher the capacity
of the condenser the higher the wave-
length of the circuit.
O R P 5 "1�I cabinet is
r
Reply
There is no set time: The condi-
tion of the heart;' kidneys, and w e-
Cou
Cough maybe a symptom in cerlair_ ther or not the blood -pressure is high,
g
forms of heart. disease.. In such. cas- are very :,important factors in the out -
es, the heart ladles the power to 'pro took. ;Death. does not necessarily re-
perly pump . the blood. Blood is suit from apoplexy. T,luis plan sl oulcl
dammed back -into the lungs, • causing be exarnined frequently. Early:; coy,
a congestion: The resulting irritation rection of disturbances of health; av-
n'im impulse to cough. infections and careful liv-
causes a p g oidance of
Another possible cause of coughing ing may enable him to enjoy fair'hea-
is irritation in the ear: The restllting• lth for considerable tine.:
cough may be severe and persistent. -o—
Other' possible causes could be• hien- (Note: Dr. Scholes will answer such
tioned. But these will serve to illus health questions in these columns as
trate the futility of attempting to will be of interest to .others and per -
treat all coughs as though they, were missible in public print. Personal
caused by ``colds," questions Will be :answered only when
true that most accompanied by self-addressed stamp-
. It is probably
coughs are, the result of affections of ed envelope. Address Dr. W, j. Sc -
the organs of respiration. The point holes, in care of this paper,)
is that these are not the only possible
au es it is obvious that treatment
c
for a cold, aside. from the rest which i
is usually' advised,` will not greatly'
benefit a wean heart: Nor is such
treatment likely to bring permanent
—° relief when a cough is caused by Some
_ — says: y c<
a copper irritation in the ear.
lined on the inside with.PP r frequent dr cough
A persistent o q Y
circuit To kitht part ofthe ground- occurring, without other evidence of
circuit should the shield be, ground a cold calls for a careful search for
ed?" :- its cause: A cough of this kind does
Ansth The shield is usually ground -no good; .It may even be harmful, es -
cd to the negative side of the fila- pecially if the ' heart is diseased. 'The
inent.tiattery. In some cases, howevway to 'a permanent cure is through
proper treatment of the disturbance
which caused the cough.
—o—
s,
er, it may be grounded to the negative
`side of'the C battery. Endeavor to
lave' as many as possible of the tun-
ing controls grounded to the shield.
BETTER HEALTH
,COUGHS
By Dr. W. J. Scholes
Quite often the victimi of a more or
less frequent dry cough tells how he
or she has done everything that is
usually advised for a "cold," but with-
out relief. The favorite "sure cures"
of neighbors and friends have failed
to cure: Or after an apparent cure,
the cough returns,
Now it is possible to have more
than one cold during the season for
colds. And anyone who develops a
/ $4 Ac LAST
f "(Ot.) WAVE AGREED
CO td$21E, , FOP.-
-
1 A.LWA,YS°
ORSSS V>lllEl'! WE'RE
GONNA kAMIE COMPAN
- DON'T .I1
-2i* THEY RE
MOT . COM NG
• Bra'c'h `Ccs Mog1ow
N'tthti!
wet.o, FOR OtdCt:
NE a
'API) EPA Ni
-rt-\E 7Fir3LE LOOKING;
Ltt(E P
cFi4'fLEMAI4
Money Easily Made
We have handled several hundreds
of dollars worth .of subscriptions to
outside papers during the past few;.
weeks and many have taken advant-
age of our clubbing offers who have
always paid the full 935.00 per year to
other agents for daily' papers: There
are still several hundred people whose'
Advance -Times subscription is in ar-
rears. :-Why not bring us in $6.50 and
pay your daily -renewal here an have
the small account with us wiped up?
On the whole you save 5o cents, We
must have oursubscription aenewais'.
paid up more prompt than in the past -
Questions and' Answers
Difficult Breathing _; !McDonald of Culross
W. D. asks: "What is the cause of The nen Warden of Bruce Court
getting out of breath on the least ex- ty is a native -bora son of the Conn
ertion? Does it conte from the ty, the offspring and namesake of the
beast?„ late David McDonald, who was
Reply among' those :who left Scotland ffor
heart is one of the the (iben) far-ofE land of Canada. It
A disordereduW25 in, Culross where his pioneer of
most:frequent causes. Fat is another. ° cleared a farm: and -;CSta1?1i51ted.,
Hardening of• the 'arteries, Bright's, forts c
the homestead The members of tllc
disease and anemia are oilier causes. McDonald family -eight sons and
In all of these the immediate cause of
the difficult breathing is probably a and three daughters—were born:
weakening of the heart muscle. Have
`
some. .doctor, give you a careful exam=
ination;
514.\?t. INt ZIA )D6
\NE ENT \ROUNQ
11A\S 301-1
'',,
1I'�'11171�14i� li)ait_.'
i4
.:, N, rm. tM.
6nOhCt+Ae'0'+
there. The new Warden's span of
life is 53 years: By strange coinci-
dence, he is the fifty-third. ` Warden
of :Bruce. Mr. D. Forrester, the
County Clerk, has recalled this. It;.
is the seventieth year of the o1c1
Comity. Soule of the early inettlu..
bents of the :wardenship remained in
the presiding•' officer's chair for sever-
al tcints, one for nine consecutive
years, Warden McDonald, who has
entered upon his eighth year on the
township council of Culross, four as
Reeve, has'nlade his abode within hall
a mile of his birthplace, Two sons
are attending "1"eeswater.IHCigh School:
The Wardell of 1926, who, politically,
favors the 1.1,1eral cause, and is 'a
tnemlirr of the Presbyterian Chnreh,
is highly respected by his colleague,
and will direct rite affairs of the; Colin-
ty coils(te.l1tiO.ltsly, llruce 11,is reason,
1500
to be pleased with the choice for the
'Watdonship.- _ Walkerton 'Telescope.
BORN
Cesto,�
1. t. at}d 12,11x. A\"ilhinw0n; a soot.