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The Wingham Advance, 1924-01-24, Page 6Fop? ? !!1 iP Wiay. 19n. • Te nershed ext }a F%*P ratxXt, Ont'eerlf) evory "i"huredne Morning 4, G. SMkTe1, Publisher Sebticrt1 Uo i rates: — Galan year, 14•00; ale Months, $9:.00 in advaxia:ie. Advertising raters 'on applkoation• Advertisements without specitie dt• !Peet—lone will be inserted until forbid stud charged acoordiegly. Changes for emit ract advertiegh aerate be In the canoe by noon. P.oai BUSINESS' CARDS Wellington Mutual Fire Insurance CO. Estabii.Sb e'.t 1840 Head Office, Guetplt Risks taken: on all classes of insur- ance at reasonable rates. A 31Ui t COSFNS. ,treat. Wingham DUDLEY IIOLMES BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, ETC.. &i ictorY and Other Bonds Bought and Seld.':, Office ---Mayor Block, Winohaen R. VANSTONE BARRISTER . AND SOLICITOR Money to. Loan at Lowest Rats. WINGHAM pracia.ato Royal C,olleate of Dental Surgeons university of Toronto Graduate Ub Y Faculty of,: Dentistry -H. E. ISARD`S STORE ti?FFiCE OVER R.1 I. � I lyli B.Sc., M.D., C.M.: aI attention paid to diseases. of >5 ci Pe Women and Clrildz•en, having taken A pr •,tgraduate work in Surgery: Bac- teriology and Scientific Medicine. Circe to the Kerr Residence, between ' 'e Queen's Hotel end the Baptist Church, ;eel business given e,arefut attention. Peone 54.. P.O. Box 113 Fillitte c m Nie•R,G.S. '(Eng). eLortd), PHYSICIAN AND SURGEOI'e (Dr ,Chlaholn s old stand.. l�r(3.ITela x.S 'illlti E F ACTOR IN CAB, Man- ti succeeded in producing Men closely aannected, with the uiai moat of cent ,. , \\, ere and distri iution of lnetor designs and cars which v,e,... e reliable cars znay have noticed a peculiar and ,#wive good service, trend during the last year or so. This lttictiagh, motor ears te-day are gen has been: achange in thebuying ptib-" erally dependable,economical in vary lic's attitude toward autolnabiles in 'mg degree,: and so; an, the fact re - general. ' mains that the automobile is esseet- People who use motor cars seem to -gaily a piece of machinery. More than have come by the idea that their that, it is a pieee of machinery which, choice of cars should almost always by and large, is :expected to stand begin and end with things like the more ill use and :receive .less expert body style; upholstery and the variaus care than any other expensively built items which they feel eontziUute to machinery in the world. comfort and convenience cassis Ts Fou2iDATXON, theone r' to forgeti er Theyhave. seemed gthe mach n, Y, � Just as the big factor which has to do with their is the mouudation of the motor car, comfort and Convenience the ca is the rias- so it is the foundation of the owner's cis;' and that if the chassis is right satisfaction, his comfort and his con they are ,sure to get the creates use -,1 e. All three of them rest fin_ nd t venienc fulness from their cera at the lowest! all- upon the service he gets from the c niaclune y ort, !ally R L L STEWART r Should they : fail in a In all,justice it should be said tllly large way, or in a. succession of an. the mater car buyers are :not wholly 1 noying small ways; the owner gets no have taken it consciously; It is true, of course, that the motor n able: degree if .the • word perfected to blame for this attitude. Many may ` satisfaction,. conifvrt or egnvenience. doubtless has come . upon others unconsciously. car has been perfected to' a remark The progress:and development of the automobile may be said to be respon- sible. CABs Now DEPENDABLE, In the earlier clays of the motorcar ilessexperimental. can be used to describe something that probably can never be made fully 100 per cent. perfect. But that does not,. of itself, presuppose that, all buying, caution should lie' cast bodily to the THE WINCIIAInf AI)VANCI.'l staid; v�,M71�tiJnw i "tl;ursday, �anuary 24, 19 A Destroyer of Cherished Illusions The new enlarged edition et " Poptae appears that owns de not avoid day: ler Fallaeles Explained and Corr;oted," i light, that oats see no bottet atfnight, by A, S,. p. cltern an, is a destroyer than otlior anemias, tixat tortolses- of cherished illusions. !?'or exalnapne,' placed fat ga de:is in the i'ond belief Neroden not fiddle while Benne was that they will eat up slags and other burning, for the reason that he was in garden pests do nothing of the kind, his villa et Autiuni, fifty' milesi away,; but feast themselves 00 the good gar at the time. Moreover, the violin oily den stuff. patriehes de not bury their^ dates from the middle of the sixteenth eeutnry., I)logenes did not live iu a` tub. The 'Curfew Tell was not insti- tuted by William the Opnquerar or, he simply enforced an existing regulation, King John chid'not .eign, the Magna. Charta, "the seal was probably put ori Lin the Chancery," It is. even .doubtful .Whether' King John could write. The first English Prince of Wales was not born. in Carnarvon . Castle, for - the simple ,reason that "the castle was barely com.mencod by;. Edward I., and not finished, until thirty-three years after the babyhood of his fourth son." Blondel, the minstrel, did not discover the place of confinement in Austria' of Richard I., though the story of his singing outside' the castle to let his royal master know of his proximity is. charming. Cabot Discovered North America. 'heads in tho aid .when pursued, oA black roof to a dog's mouth doffs not denote purity of breed, aiud a beaver does not use :'his broad, flatted as a trowel. Moles are not blind, although. their sight isnot brilliant, and mon- keys rarely, if ever, have fleas, , No Growing Pains. Turning to ,ourselves, there Is n°. such things as growing pains; and that "what aro called growing ' paips iu children are rheumatism," which it is Sir' Walter Raleigh did not introduce either :tobacco or the potato into Eng -c land.. Tobacco was introduced by- Sir. John Hawitins', or Sir; Francis Drake, and the potato firs:reached this coun- try as a result of one of Drake's ex- peditions to the New World:. Christo- pher Columbus did not. discover Anreri ca, at least not North America, which t was in amoreor was discovered by,John.Cabot, n Vene Different manufacturers have tian, in 1497. In 1492 Columbus sight eta .: Men bought no car until con winds. , a same for.food alad utlimately: finds its way St.' Thomas' Hospital, London, con ed "San SaAvador. and "on August lst, i own investigation or different. ways :of doing: the i winced, by their g 't ... ,. good thin"' to study what is hidden This peaceful penetrat ward. not appear to 1 otherwise that it was about the most thing into the; pockets of the people. in the tains thirty miles of pipes carrying:1498 he beheld for the first times ilio , ' hot water for: heating, etc. into every Yri buying a motor- car it is still a rural districts. g' ,mainland of South but dogs dependable to be had within theirYi a~. preion of Canada: - have lane ed. means. a from -'the south of the, line" i under the. shin_ hood and the by people . But that period of uncertainty, if , away i nd y.hinterland of :wilde'rness,, she b:olida � ur" oras is also beneficial . Graduate 'ef L,satssraity et Toronto, Faculty of lileditone; Licentiate o'- the Ontario :College of Physicians and Surgeons. Office. Entrance: OFFICE IN CHISHOLM . BLOCK :yI!DSEPHINE STREET PHONE 22 r Maigaret C. CalderGeneral Practitlofer Graduate University of Toronto, Faculty of Medicine, Office—Josephine St, tw a doors south of Brunswick Hotel. Telephones—Office 231, Residence 151 Osteophatic Physician possess Watt "did not invent the steam -en ally 'unlimited eve op- - 'erect; a 'Marquess and Earl of Won' , It is still a good thing for Y P . P = gine, but only improved it, The steam You was of shoat duration,1 floor Iso into g es a wealth of natural attractions cap - Y Please, it i b d other b' t Travel in a country dispels many er- meii r > • Y i no make so ie stud :of the cars "rester, in .1655. Marron d d tin'. n Y Fundamental principles were found,, to take into account the manufactur- in e ler ways, ecause ,is a Ing up :aUle of practic develop- engine was iaventecl by Edward Som l -' It is still a: ood''goodwill and a better understan.ding.:' d the are fundamental to -day., ei s reputatior g an y t Each manufacturer, perforce, settled! thing to these matters accordingto his own history and of the - opinion of its of them its. hg But all and owners. .strove, F. A--PAilIcLpft am*xam ''fid aR =sma m ��m®erm . - „OSTEOPATHiC PHYSICIAN All Diseases Treated. Office a rjoini„ng residence next AnglicanChurch :ou,Centre Street. Open every day'exeept, Monday: and Wednesday afternoons. Osteopathy Electricity Phone 272 DRUGLESS PHYSICIANS VALUE RESOURCESOU SCENIC roneous :impressions and reveals un- •eaoti n - . e law : bE.i o ilio Fortunately, th suspected national possibilities: It .is Foi Y, : ' undoubtedly true thatCanadaai'eyond �boonieran g principle, does not hold own borders is still often regarded ialono 'with •evil :.acts-. The'good deeds her. ow - ' are just,as sure to come back, and as a trackless forest, rosined over by "grin all thebl u they g bears, moose and Indians, where the inhabitants live wider' Aratie con e tions . e greater par ofe:year. unwise and even dangerous to neglect. Ozone,' which we are led to believe iS so healthful and invigorating, breathed in even urinate quantities "acts as au irritant to the air passages and is highly 1uirious." The •existence of ozone iu Ilio- air has always been doubtful, and "recent research s'ho`tir that it is never• present below altitudes of 8,000 feat. The smell attributed :to it at the seaside fetidly arises from de- caying' seaweed." • Cancer le not hereditary; brimstone and- treacle,is not good for children In the spring or at any time, arid; the good old linseed poultice :.beleved of our grandmothers is no gcod so' far as the linseed is coucerned (a sponge would do as well); the only: virtee in it being the hot water with which it es mixed. Mild Winter Healthiest. winter is: healthier than a A :mild cold one, and herefore a green winter ch - does -not neoesSarily` .fill 'the chug , yard. It'is a popular- belief that it is nlia bad to bathe in cold water when you are hot, but this it would appear is it as not -so. "On the contrary, better to bathe, ine coed water when the body is arra provided' no: time. is, lost in: vet. the wireless, telegraph, but:de=`- getting into :the -water.. n vela ed and applied it.:It was the.' - `Rooms warmed by •gas -stoves•- are. p- : unhealthy, neither, do they dry the mathematical work of Clc.ik Maxwell not u Y, and the scientific experiments -'of Hertz. atmosphere inaduly but care .should be hick produced wireless telegraphy. taken -that the stove w • p -as not too .power-. •- oiii f th io with them ° esse with which they were Gravel va, Cray Soli, fu1 for. tho size o e ' lathes.' This, '''dr. •c do not. eat ,.c 4 ti d' good intentions. fh t t th A thrown out. Moths. is a fa7�Iacy to believe that gravel done "by the grubs tlhai, develop front WTSli ,Prove Powerful Magnets for summer holiday in Canada is; ere- sole is healthier to live on that a clay the'eggs the' moths have laid. ; flla� Parks Continue t0 The amount of pressure.ap,plxed by e fore educational in the best sense and :soil. -,Asa matter of fact, rtheu gravel, The: bagpipe did Dat originate s RII'S.C� ��.C�?i1;•�t • Benefits. - to =the' ke s in one minute is Tourist Travel—Direct serves oaten as a preliminary to in- a pianist keys ..•. has been xonderod foul by infiltration oftenanythingup to .ton and a half. Seotland,.but.can be traced in ancien in Egypt, .. -e. has t at same mint y . d holiday alioIn h ins next year for w lona h y � Thebest 1 f h v immigration n t a' o it was a sin ger declared their intention of return vestruent of permanent eett4ement wi li organic matters it becomes "a Persia and bti inference Diming the past season n g to . es example o _ of i � . � . ., .z follows tourist travel is perhaps :found read about 1,500 signs and the fingers proved that national parks provide powerful magnets Inc'tourist travel from other countries. It is becoming increasingly clear that while the prim- ary purpose rim-ary:purpose of national parks is not commercial they are proving each year more and more profitable investments.; The national parks were' set aside to_ preserve some of our most beautiful. and outstanding g Dir.1 A FOX CH I FtOPRACTOR Office Hours: 2 to 5 and 7 to 8 p.ni, Wednesday >Afternoons > :by Appoint. Ment only. Telepone 191. The growth in travel, however, is in southern California. :Twenty years make about 2,000 movements. t fi d t national parks A ago southern California had a small what:are you planning to' do similar increase: in visitors was're- populationd 1• n't d" not confined o the nes i Girls and ported from many parts of the Do - Dir. J. o - e • very n r e• pros- with life?—develop it,. make ,the ' most. peaty. To -day, simply as a result of � en �•ou and: God has gtv , minion, particularly from those pro- capitalizing her scenery and cliivate i'accomplish something -for thevorld winces which have undertaken- special and developing her -roads and attrac or sit calmly down'and wait for the im- possiblepublicity and good roads' campaigns. tions, she has built up a large per -; to happen, or dream idly of scenic regions and to According to reports recently publish-; manent population and.. a: tourist;travel what you would :like to be 11 your sur provide recreational areas for the:peo- ed in the daily press the annual tourist' worth, it is said, $300,000,000 a year. roundmgs were only different? le. Yet because the desire to travel revenue of British Columbia has now In proportion "to heer population Can- the" astonishing total of $38, . n to see the wonders of other parts reached for possesses a greater area set•aside : Men who work in high temperatures. and h lobe is an almost universal 000,000, or a sum equal to the:total for national parks than any other douo1 ften•. lose. considerable weight from of the g o .. that of one; the..: world is making a path to annual mineral productionpro-try, and', she can loop forward to an 'unusual_, respiration and'perspiration. their gates and incidentally bringing wince. The revenue of Ontario from increasing appreciation of their at- Tliey also lose much `raft. In England. h o se e too mean tractions. S e s ss s workers In p � � y r' es of experiments' a se i p many direct and indirect benefits. Dur- this source has not been computed, CHIROPRACTOR divallfied Graduate Adjtistriients given for diseases . of all kinds, specialize in dealing with children; Lady attendant. Night Calls responded to. Office on Scott St, Wingham, tint, lin bailee of the late Jas Walker). Phone 150. the past season practically' every but it must reach a. large sum, while in other potentialities which as yet have mines seems to show that a small ins h p hi h- hot e largely to'im roved g parks showed an -increase in. Quebec,.du i b y P scarcely .been, .realized.: In. her suin-salt taken: dell relieves one of the he: quantity of y -e -last year,according to t travel. Jasper park, which was able ..ways, traz 1:mer and in her winter climate, her vir- for the first time to offer s nitabe the men of much of their;exhaustion. r commadation, had at times more visit- ors than it -could comfortably accom- modate and a large addition, to its bungalow hotel will he made for next year. Reports of its beautiful scenery l ac lVlinister of Roads, was 'worth $20,000; included 125,000 cars', In 000 and'in spite of a cool, season there -was also a large travel to the Maritime Provinces, New Brunswick reporting a total of about .$4,000;000, or nearly three fimos were -the cause of r riugisgmany .shun-....thet.af_..tis!a•vears. ago.:.-_It,must_.t?e re-..:� _._.._._ - -_ :: dreds of people to Canada from the membered, too, that the revenue from United States. In spiteof a wet sea- tourists is widely distributed among son and other drawbacks over 3,000 cars entered Banff and Kootenay parks from the United States. None. Of these visitors spent lets than five days in Canada, many of them spent considerably more and a large 1111/11- 0*. . gin forests, leer big game and fishing, A drink based on a solution of about her picturesque Indian and - Frenchsalt toa a1=, p one-third of an ounce of g Canadian traditions, her beau'tifui�:of water was most effective in elties•anii^rural districts,.and her great warding off fatigue.. all classes of people and helps to build up the prosperity of both town and country. Figures_ carefully work- ed out by publicity experts indicate that out of every dollar spent by the tourist approximately one-third goes Never explain—lour friends do not teed it and your enemies will not be. lieve you. anyway. The best safety appliance on on au'tomoble is a careful man at the wheel. litany Wk. -insurance companies, ac- cordins;'trr the Insurance Journal, ns longer consider an aeroplane flightwas' do hazardous as^to invalidate it policy; 'The main restriction is that the policyholder shall fly only over an. established route hi a, nit chine repay.. toted by a:regular transportatioi1 coin.; pony. Thecompanies still bar casual ltaghts with itiriei'ant aviators, Presses that faint the Bible work twentir-our hours a day. TheAmer- ican rilble Society recently received an order :for e million and a h*lf, vhlun e of parts of ilia Scriptures In r nc fish and Sltcu-sh, to make a book o1 sixtjy-lotii gigolr. 'l"he boons are Yi tl xs•tribti,tioii• in the United 1 r,•tes pail l houth,,Mleieriett. le it enii eieweeee- -nee �if:,:aY:,,•'.; � . �.,+i,`�,•:.w.$,%rLE/,+i. ,: l :.i:tq.,'J •�i'•�.:�7. ;,� � �' yi. 5,,(: ., .,.!�� �ns�•'1.a:;uKvv..,"�4•i•'JinyS... ,. {'v+.., n..s::G: H.M.S. S. CANADAA 14 . The gallant British warship which beats the name of the greatest Bri- tish, Dominion within the Empire, "The Canada," which took part in a re- cent review. WHO 75 Ti-(A`r SAID LOOK 'KG PA61-? IN` VJ l 7/- MRS. DuMSUNN'r; A QUESTION OF AGE "A man's no older' than .he feels," I say, some forty times a day; but,my'old rusty springs and wheels show many signs of giving away. When I -was younger I could fall and not be lamed back or knee; as springy :'as a rubber hall, no accident could mar my glee. But now if I fall. down the stairs I'm sure to dis- locate my back, and,if i,_stumble over chairs, "a. lot of ribs begin to crack. I sometimes slide on orange: peels, and bust nay dome, but still I cry, "A:man's uo older than he ,feels," which is a sort of truthful lie. I'd laave you think I'm feeling young, and, right side lip,. and good as new, and so, you see, I'in giving tongue to that which is not strictly true. And yet it's true enough, I guess, that I'in no older than 1 feel, and 11 my feelings 1 confess, the tale would make your senses reel. A h, well, ods bones and hully Ghee, the fact's too sad for tongue or pen; but rusty graybeards ybeards hate to see 'themselves oxytclassed by younger anon, They hate to thinit that they are done, -mere idle dotards 'on, the stage, they'd keep then places in the sun, and so repudiate their age, I feel my slugiishblood congeal, and still I cry, In accents bold, "Men are no older than they fee , and I'm a sorrel three-year-old." •: R.ABBITBORO J,OK SH8.'5` A NEW N t l-i8OR 0' MINE, 5iE.'5 MOt)If�il>iG FOR. A 00:554")N11) POOR T INCL ! A WiPoNA,C5 LIFE. i 5 HARt ON Z. ! E t re .ce. '.Alas very Hotbed of; disease."- haldaea and ancient G e Turning te.I:the -animal kingdom, it fol our illusions. Content. to ,'Remain Patients, No Doubt. - "What is it you'fnd so strange about the patients of that doctor who writes so many liquor prescriptions?" "Why, none :of nein,nein,has •ever been known either die or;to getll :we." Even the educated man sometimes finds out that what he doesn't know is just what he wants; that what he knows he can't use. Puzzled. • Bug Postman-`.`I.;wish these folks : would, have, numbers on their houses, How sin 1 to find A. 'Worm, Acorn Vil- lagei" "z sawsl hero, Cour- . No one ever a y x age has an open face. In 1Jiii, glaiid many :people • have, bought subniarine -'chasers . and con- vected them' into house boats. Strip- ped trip -ped of their large, high-speed engines, they make cozy homes. • IND1AN 1_AbIES TO BECOME: NUPSEE1 The first two Indian girls to leave that country and twain for, time nursing profession are now.in England, Lacly Reading, wife of the Viceroy of Tunis, is keenly interested in hospital Wotk, W I-10 SAID 5H5,WAS A Wili6W AN OLD