The Wingham Advance, 1922-01-26, Page 3lug Advance
Published at
Wingham, Ontario
Every Teem eche 'Mornitio
A, "Cc, SMITH, $undiaher
Subscription rates; One .yeat,
,00; sial nrontlis, $1.00 in advance,
Advertising,' rates on, application,
Advertisements without spec1Jic di-
recti ns will bo izaserted until forbid.
and charged accordingly,
Changes for contract advertiSO:
meats be 'in the oiheo by noon, a _on-
day.
'BUSINESS •:CORDS
Wellington • Mutual Fire
Insurance Co.
Established 1`840
Head Office,•Guelph:
Risks taken on all classes of insur-
able property on thecash or premium
note system.
ABNER COSENS, Agent,
Wingham
Y
BARRISTER, s01_I :IT'OR,, ETC.
Victory and Other Bonds Bought and
So'ld.
p:ffice—Mayor Block, Vainghain
BARRISTER AND SOLICITOR
Mooney to Loan at Lowest Rates.
WINGHAM
D.D.S. L.D. S
,
Doctor of ' Dental Surgery gery oi' the
Penn,syivania College and Licentiate
of Dental Surgery of nnta to
Office in Macdonald „Block:
0
0
O.
Graduate Royal College of Dental
,:Surgeons
Graduate University of Toronto..
Faculty. of Dehtistry
OFFICE OVER H. E. ISARD'S STORE
HAC.:..
B.Sc., M.D., C.M.
Special attention paid to diseases of
Wernen and Children, having taken
. postgraduate work in Surgery, Bac-
te•riolegy and Scientific Medicine,
Office: ie the Kerr Residence, between
the Queen's Hotel and the_ Baptist
Church.
All business' given careful: attention.-
�' Phone 54. P.O. Box 113'
' ao .•r
.. C.mond
.R.C.S. (Eng).
L.R.C.P. (Load).
PHYSICIAN' AND . SURGEON
(Dr. Chisholrn's old stand)
all ' i i
i.,
o o
t
�r+
Graduate of University of Toronto,
Faculty of Medicine; .Licentiate of the
Ontario College of Physicians and
Surgeons.
Ofldce. Entrance::
-Second Door North of Zurbrigg'a
Photo Studio.
.IOSTREET
JOSEPHINE -• - �rrcE�-
a phIONE2:t
�5 .
e, Ilflargaret. C. Calderro
General Practitioner
Graduate University of; Toronto,
Faculty of Medicine.
Office—Josephine St., two doors south
of Brunswick' Hotel, •
Telephones --Office: 281; Residence 151'
I SELL
Town and Farm Properties. Cali, and
see my list and get :iny prices,. I have
some excellent values.
• cF1m. @io •Aid's®61�Id
W NCHAM'
Phone 184 Office in.Town Hall
DRUqLPSS PYII
CHWOPR::
it is -easier to keep well than to le -
cover lost health. Chiropractic.'.'Ad-•
jestrnents is the Key to Better' Health:
They remove the Cause of Disease,
DR. J. ALVI,
FOX o
Phone 191. Hours -2.5 and 7-8 pan
g
,cru Proviim'
The halibut .Catch of British Oo1uz
Ina last year has averaged anla oX-
m
mately 500.000 noarnria per anon tin. Tie
.:total catch for' the year is 'over twenty
�nzillion pounds, with an est7iiieted.
value of; $2,274,625. •
A sixty thotis.and .doiiar. b'oijtliu
will be erected Vancouver by 1;t. x)
Farmer, of Fort Werth, Texas.
The per man unit etprodue:tion at
the Granby Consolidated Mining and:
Smelting Coinpainy'•s reMelter• at; Anyox,
B.C., is aid to be geeater than that of
any other smelter • on tthe continent.
•Seventeen thousand gallaine of benzol
produced each month is shipped to
i
Vancouver, the reinaindeoP' the out-.
put, 7;000''gallons; being, used atAnyax.,.
Twelve and a half million pounds of
creamery' butter w ire aanerfactured in
the province of Alberta during the.
past year. This ' is half a ranillior.
pounds greater than the 1920' output,
and it; is .expected" that; production dur-
ing 1922 will ohow further increase of
thirty per cent. Cheese making is for;
,ging ahead rapidly with.ash increase of
130 pei cent in1921.
xr vestigating firm has made a report, the
geveeninent willdeal with tbo case
dieeeLteastead of throwing the cams of
collection on 'the minere themselves.
The -Bishopric Lent Contpait ,, which
has undertaken thedevelopment•of
g the sod1uan suIphate deposits at. Stink
Lake, Sa le., Hoax Dunkirk, southof
Moose Saw, has . let contract for the
erection of b'rr ldings, •inclu:ding fact•
tory,^ rnanager'e-houee, anal Workmen's
dwellings, .'Mirk leas already' eon):
menced on the plant and will. continue
during the winter. The machinery to
be installed will cost. $70,000, During
the past year two carloads of row rna-
terial,were shipped out, but no further
shipments will be naa.de until the eonx
pletion, of .th.e plant,
The Northerii Light` ' Milling Co'm-
'parry, Grande Prairie, Alta., • .whose.
plant was destroyed by fire during the
summer, announces that it will rebuild
in the early spring. The new' plant, ac-'
e!1•rdirig to . the manager's statement,'
will :be the most rileidern of the small
.er mills of the West, with a cairacity
Of 125 barrels per day.
Discoveries of platinum are, reported
Iwo utiles out of Nevis, Alta., on the
Canadian • Pacific Railway, ori' the
'banks ,of the Red Deer.,iver, , where
a number of claims have been staked.
In the opinion of experts the proba-
bility that'
nether= will be found in
this location in paying quantities is
very slight.
The Albertaprovincialgovernment
established a�r � e
p ec dent in dealing
with wage disputes when they appoint-
ed a 'Calgarry firm to investigate the
claims made by certain miners in the
Ardaey coal field•s , against their em-
ployers for back wages. When the In -
An inerea.se of 3,561 in the number
of farms in Manitoba during the last
live years is reported by>George Bathe,
editor of agricultural publications for
the • provincial. government, Farmers
in th:e province numbered 46,623, in
1916, and to-day-thereare 55,184.
Manitoba lace -7L r'
e er
a have el 'had' an
exceptionally successful year; returns
to the provincial department of agri-
culture show that approximately 1,-
000,000 pounds of honey have been pro-
duced the 1921 season, Mani-
toba now las • 14,721 colonies of bees,
a
compared with 7,593 last spring. An
a.ye'rage''of 118 pounds of honer was
produced; in each hire.
,
ritits Tarr erret Eno
itiZ
QF `,
RINcESSi
� i . `�
EPIY
BY GIRL FRIEND - OF ,HER
ROYAL HIGHNESS.
Whose Recent . Betrothal to a
British' Peer Was Acclaim
by the VVhole Empire.
After all, it isn't easy to be a 'prin-
cess and yet remain like any other
girl. •; Princess Mary, however, seems
to have accomplished the feat with
creditable felicity. She is juet a hap-
py, wanting -to -be -pleased girl, like'. all
others.
I. think that perhaps Princess Mary:
would not have had the :same, scope for
her talents and temperament but for
the events of the last few yeaas. • The
war with its necessity : for comrade-
ship and: for consideration of the hu-
man aspect of life, swept her into her
own.
Maybe she had a little bit of a tussle
over it at first, but she soon made it
evident that she could do things :that
she had a notion that life is pretty
much the same thin •
g for over'ybody,
that every living m:an, woman, and
child' lies tohave his or her sorrows
and joys, and that hands extended one
to another are the only links which
can bind the world safely together.
The Moment She Dreaded,
She voluntarily stepped -down from
her princessy pedestal, and mingled
`with`thecrawd. I
think—in fact am
sure—she felt a little shy at first, and
sometimes suffered torments "from her
conspicuous. position.
I was present upon her first visit to
Downing 'Str'eet. Indeed, I' think it
wae the very first affair she had.. at-
tended without her mother. The Lloyd
Georges were'. installed there, and, ef
eourse, a huge crowd turned up for
the function. as well as a
,. perfect liri-
,gade of Press. photographers.
When the usual request was made
Sol a photograph, Prineess Mary stood
up at once, and, with smiling lips,.
faced the row of cameras. But just as
the cameramen were getting ready
she turned arid whispered to a friend:
"Oh, this is- the moment I dread
more than anytk!ing!"
Of cotues•e! We all knowthat horrid
feeling when the-pltotagraphem 'says
"Ready, please!" but how' Bruch Worse
for a young .girl facing twenty cameras
and linowirg that next morningg
her
ace, with posailnly a grimace instead
f a smile, woe be in all the papers,
or the camera, will play tricks with
DRUGLESS PHYSICIAN
�1 STEO1 ATHy
DR F.:A PARKER.
Osteopathic Physician, only qualified
Dsteopath•in Nostlt Idttron.
Adjustment of the spine is more
tiuiCkly seeared and with fewer treat -
meats is tdian 'by any other' method.
P9r,r;,i '„reeetire and cthei' examine,
lone made.
OFFICE OVER CHiRiSTItE'S`STORE
Why Die Youhg?
13r, Alexis Carrel of tile Rockefeller
Ynstitxtte for Medical 1iesearch, and
other scientists, declare, ass' a result 01
1 --their researches, that there is no
{ 1 d', .. .,. r
•:�;iiYs Wr ; :w .rt:i, vu: why a -ht1l. iii
thg cannot five 150 years,
Tho Irish • p'xee State is entitled to
Poopeesentation. in the League of 'NU»,
Poco.
LnTL E'9'(
i •I,tF1tBL,ir.:
14001(:.c?t 1c� N f
�.
*50 (AN)1`g
'Royalty as weal as with the zest of the
world.
"Only Grendpal"
As a eh
hi' id Pr'not
Marywas
5
nearly ea. shy as she is now; but and -
400d.
is rarely self-conscious. I know
that upon one oeoasion King'Eclward
was in the Royal nursery when a visa
to, .eanie to the door. ' Seeing the Ring
there she made as if to withdraw.
"Oh, come in," 'pipbd up the little
Princess, "it's only grandpa here!"
My re.colleetioai of the - Princess:'
when her grandfather, Who was very
fond of her, died, is very sweet. Dur-
ing those first few days of bereave-
meat I' did not see a great dealof the
Royal ' Family, but there will always
Y
remain in my' mind a . picture of Prin-
cess Mary -a little fail--1hairedirl°ri -
g d
ing in one of the carriages with the
Royal ladies, as King Edward's body
was carried instate to. Westminster
s mzttstar
Abbey,
Two of her brothers walked ked behind
King George es he _ followed his fath-
er's coffin, but the little Princess was
iii dden from the gaze of the multitude.
It was well, perhaps, for 'she had not
then learned that IEayalty must stay
the deeper demonstrations of grief in
public.
The
than were in her bonny eyes,
and sometimes they welled over and
down her olateeles,' for the dearly be-
loved grand arent'and
p playmate was'
gone. She wore a little black cap,
something litre a Scotch bonnet, over
her curls -neon •that occasion, and ; I
could not help thinking how fair and
sweet she looked.
"Nurse: Mary."
y.
To talk of later, happier days I
think the Princess really enjoyed her-
self most when she began: to go to the
hospital in Great Orincside Street to
learn something l of xnothercraft and
the care of chdidren. She washed' the
babies, learned how to get their
.clothes en without fear of breaking
tli.ein, and was Nurse Mary to the -old-
er mese
I found her sitting bSr the fire one
day, a baby in her lap, her hair gleam.
in,g
le rrn-
ing` under her nurse's cap, and her
simple uniform suiting her to perfec-
tion, as it does most girls. The fire-
light was playing on her features, and
While she was crooning over the child
I haven't a doubt that she was dream-
ing; of"'a happy future of her own.
Of cou.rse,.she had all .bier responsi-
bilities when she attended the hospi
tel. After a time shewas allowed. to
'handle a syringe, frequently used by
nurses and mothers :in minor ailments
at little whites. Naturally, Princess
Mary went home to luUclieon at Buck-
ingham Palace quite excited with the
news that she was making progress,
Ring George, however, was rather
nervous about it, and wanted to know
`:Vit
.:73t;n}
AND A SWEETHEART Ii1,N EVERY PORT
—Drawn by Clive "Weed in Judge,
if she was quite:sure she' tiled mini u -
P d
bated ; the instrument:' properly, •- and
whether the mite was sleeping well
ter her attention: g af-
ter
A F
ether s Anxiety.
He got on the 'phone to the hospi-
tal, and wasn't satisfied tisied ,until reas-
sured that Princess' Maa•y had done
everything with the utmost care, and
that all was Well. It is .difficult for a
parent, and especially one so fond of
his daughter as King `;George is, not
to be over-anxious at times; and one
oan well understand that many a girl
might have been vexed at what seem-
ed like lack of confidence in her,
The Princess, however, took the
matter in very ;good part, for she well
understood two -things -first, that the.
Killwho.
King,is almost ridiculously fond
of her naturally feat desirous that his
daughter should da weld;. and second-
ly, that it would have been even worse
Yoe' a Princess to be clumsy than for
au ordinary purse. •
I remember another little girlish `in-
cident, which happened when Prinoess
Mary was, going backwards and for-
wards to ` this hospital. In a,street
through which she passed there was
a little shop, started by a woman for
the sale of all worts of peasant goods
-pottery, baskets, smocks, .and so
forth:
Fond of Most Sports.
The Princess' went iii one dayto buy
y
some pottery and baskets:, and among
the miscellaneous articles she noticed
some pots of home-made jam, which
had beensent up from the,country for
sale. Jani• in those days was a terrible
luxury. •
"Olt!" sighed the Princess. "How I
should like to take some for tea—but
T`mustn't!
• At one time it used to be thought
that Prince 9.1bert was his sister's
favorite, but really she has got on
splendidly with all her. brothers. She
has entered into their sports and pas-
times, playing tennis with them, tak-
cgs, and generally kee,ping up with.
their pursuits:
Prince Hefimwho is
Y, o now In the �in-
teres:tieg stage: •of.. finding ,e-yerything
fresh and new, has found has sister a
great friend...."
It was the same with Prince Albert
the two belling arather inclined toet:
g. .
up to niscii:ref at times. One of the r i•
eseapades .was foie ;out olreafter neon
to the cinema, ,when cinemas were net
so Papular or.d-ooleed upon°Sa lnsze5,
es nz zttereof..ceurse, as they are now.
'rtneets Mary, has indulged in most.
;spgnts: at''scrrxe time cos other. Nobody
Sits a horse 'better than she.doee, and
she dermas,s,n °-d plays quite well.
In addition, sheds very adapt at such
femrniere pursuits as sewing- and eni-
brordei• y •: Shea •
U s always', +
S however,
owen>er,
been deed 'to simple things, and has
never overstepped thebounds ofood
taste. g
There have been many versions of
the Royal romance, but I happen to
know (and I knew ofits beginning),
that Viscount Lascelles made his pro
posal, like any other modern laver, to
his beloved fiat.
The next day he had her "Yes," and
then he took his courage in his hands,
and went to the King.
Why Teeth Decay.
Dr, Clarence J. Grieves chief of
the
Johns Hopkins dental staff, has found'
out why human teeth decay; also, why
a rat's: teeth are the best of all. The
rat eats a balanced diet and human be
Ings do not. Ile took Mr. Rat and
fed him n ant
the a v erage human diet
and the rat began to lose his teeth.
"People should eat more greens—
w++hick contain these vital elements—
and more dairy products, such as milk
and cheese," he says.
Truck Rates Lowest
There are 600"rwotor trucking com-
panies izr Great Britain, some of which
carry freight for distances exceeding
100 miles at a lower rate than is of -
mg an interest in ...Leta horses and feted by the railroads.
grit
iK Inc
Y'
9
AI, -
r>� i
SPRING IS COMING
Soon the winter will be gone from the haunts of freezing
men, and gbe grads uponthe lawn will be turning green again;
verdure Soon will run amuck, and we'll hear the quacking dtick,
and the earnest, thoughtful cluck of the busy setting lien. Oh
the wintry tempest blows, and it howls along the street; there,i ,
s s
ice upon nny.neee and my •ears are full of sleet;bieak the sky
that o'er us bends, but the worst uprising ends; .arid well soon
be telling friends that we're weary of the heat. Oh, the winter
isn't nice, when it blusters to and fro, and my shoes are full of
ice and my hat is full of snow; but I try to dance and sing and
be happy as,a king, foe,I have a hunch that spring pretty soon
her goods will abbey. And she has the finest line that a man
could wish to see, singing birds on every vine, and a homing
bumble bee; sweetest fragrance in the air, and a rosebud here
and there,olden sunshine e everywhere, and a flower 7aestudded
los. Roughhouse Whiter stays a while, filling us with diseoutent,
heaping in a crazy pile snow that isn't worth a but ut he soon
is out of sight; then comes Suring, a bride in 'Waite, 'bringing
comfort and delight to the breast of every gent.
rte----
He who k now s that
power is .in the soul, that
he, is weak oalY because he
has: looked for good out of
him and elsewhere and, so
perceiving, throws himself,
unh esitatingly. OD his
*thought, •instantly rights
himself, stands erect, corn
nrands his limbs, works,
miracles. - ers
�+"I11 troll.
A New University Course.
On Monday of thisweek wck th
e Short
Course in Civics and Town -planning,
opened at the 'University of Toronto.
Though only :twenty-five studeihts had
been ' expee•ted, forty-one enrolled an
the first day, most of them architects
and civil engineers, This is the first
course of the kind ever given in Can-
ada and is, therefore, something of an
experiment, &f town -planning; is a
science (and most people agree that
it is), then town -planning should be
taught; if it should be taught., the
provincial university is the place to
teach: it. To judge by the numbers
end the enthusiasm of the students, it
may safely be predicted that this new
course is the first of a series of an-
nual coursers on the subject.
4•
Sixty -Eight Years in House
of Lords.
The. Earl of Ducie, who died in Octo-
ber, was the "father" of the House of
Lords,, having sat in that body since
1853, more 'than sixty-eight years. Al-
though he was in, his ninety-fifth year,
he was not the oldest member of the
upper House, Lord Halsbury is ninety-
eight, but he has been in the House of
Lords only since 1335. The Earl of
Coventry became a peer in 1843, but
as he was then only five years old he
did not enter the House until 1859.
The Barn of Dacia was remarkable
not'only far his age but also as a mem-
ber of a large family. He was the old-
est of ten brothers and four sisters,
His title now goes to OM of the broth-
ers who is eighty -Seven y e�.arsold a y and
who has t and wo sons a d s_ven daugh-
ters.
To Revise the Calendar.
RoYnan Catholics, and Protestants
have fixed Easter by the Gregorian
calendar, but the Greek Church and its
comumunieants have held to the Julian.
01 late years the inconvenience of an
Easter that cyan fall on any one of
thirty-five dates has led people to pro-
pose either to make it a fixed festival
or greatly to restrict the range' of its
possible incidence. The Vatican an-
nounces a conference of astronomers
to take place in Rome next April, with
the object of refarming the eecdesiasti-
cal callendar and fixing Easter.
,e
Should moths get into :apiano the
hest means of destroying thein is to
air
Iter as Of Int est.
Don't expect atplease, Deserve it.
:.Imerndng melees a silly inari a thou-
sand tinies' more insufferable.
He who estimates his money thea
highest values himself the least.
Good will, like a good name, is got
by many actions :and last by one.—
jet-Frey.
ane.—Jet rey.
Personality is a combination of la,
dividual equalities developed . tg the
highest degree of excellence.
ft you here • half an. hour to spare,
don't spend it with soirmeene who
hasn't. n ;
Over 10,000,000 children:~ of ,.sallfiel
age are not in. school: Yee these are
our fsture sovereigns.
There are persons who are not ac-
tors, not speakers, but infiuei-es,per-
sons, too great for fame, for display.
—1} mersotx.
He who, has imagination witlieut
learning has wings, but rvo feet.
Says Sem: 1 always liked that story
about-theFrench fanner who took up
a hand -fel of dirt from one :of his fields
and exclaimed "Here in my han�d.is
,
France!"—a six -word sermon prac-
tical
rat-
.
tical patriotisan.
Saving money ;and starving the
mind dis.
the worst kind :oi economy.
u
you" After.. auwill unravel crowd
9uiekex than any pushingto
be first:.
Without economy hone can b re ricl..
,
en with it
d w none ne licca be TOOT,
The King of Dennask delights in
crochet :'stork. At an early age h de-
veloped
• • e e-
veloped a taste foe this eort of work,
but, as it was eonsidered by his par-
ents to be effeminate; lien- did it ae:..'
cr-etly. Queen Alesasidr^a possesses a'
fine s1iaevi made by his hands.
New B^.a n:ewick foaanero, wwp diva. -
.._,.
Painted at prices in Ontario are Ship-
ping large quantities of . potatoes
across the border u_
bord• into ta iE� 'n ,
Maine, v here
ber,
a large percentage of the eclinfitations
will be .used for seed
purposes. The
netrie "
p ey received are said to be con-•
I sidera.bly butter than geese being, paid
in Ontario.
' P11oto"
Scnnl t�n>�e Carves
Reliefs from Pictures.
At the Royal Photographic Society
exbibhion, in London, Eng., a: demon-
stration was recentlymade nha.,e of a pro-
cess ,of „photo -sculpture." The sub-
ject to iie photographed is illuminated
by a projector:'which throws a spiral
of light, similar to the groove in a
phonograph record, upon it. . This
spiral is distorted, on the negative, by
the, irregularities of the suixject. A
positive is made, en glias., to be used
in the carving machine. Tbi,s has a
disk, to hold the material to be carved,
a carrier for the phctographie record.
and a microscope and high-speed drna.
mounted together. The cperatc•r moves
the drill so tsisa.t it cuts the material at
varying depths according to the form
of the subject. in this way excellent
reliefs fs have been obtained in reed,
ivory, and alabaster.
Getting Him Identified.
Sir Frederick Bridge is said to con-
template retiring from the conductor-
ship of the Royal Calera' Satiety* at the
end af'the present season,
"Westminster Bridge," as Sir Fred=
erick has so often been. called, was or-
ganiet at the Abbey for . forty-three
years, and has many tales to tell. conn-
ceruin„ the 'famous old structure.
One that he is -fond of relating con-
cerns a certain guide who was escort-
ing . a party of provincial sight'seer's'
rou d.the• building.
"Here, "he said, "is the tomb of 4d-
dis+on.
The usual interval of impressed'
silence was broken by a husky north-.
ern ascent from the rear:
"Ay; lass, that's the mon ea, invent-
ed the grammyphone!"
A Sixteen -Shot Revolver
Made in Belgium.
.4. Belgian concern is manufacturing:
a revolver 'which enables the user to
n`
re 16�•-
bullets without reloading, The
rut has two barrels, one above .the
then, registering 'with two set'iee 01
igltt holes each in the cartridge' ahem-•
ern. It is fitted with a double firing
in, and the bullets are fired alter-
nately from the inner and outer circles.
Wimen all he cartridges have been dis-
charged, the empty shells. are thrown
out all together by pressure on an
ejector rod.
a
0
e
Melee 11p a' mixture of turpentine, 1)
benzoline, and oil of lavender, and P
squirt this inside the instrument by
means of a scent spray, or any small
syringe. Use seven parts of benzo -
line to one of turpentine, and add a
few drops ofoil of lavender.
ju!
5..
LAR FELLERS—.
ALL T`
Pita -rr
Y Gen* Byrnes ...
lx1N�( Dt15141- `(.0
t_.r M is,t;1X'i\
Kbto iJJ otA ~ `tt-tti
t laCJIST' t '
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