The Wingham Advance-Times, 1951-06-20, Page 9Cec Walpole
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A
PAGE isrpre MoDNESDAYt HINE 20, 1951
THE WING' AM ADVAN0,-TIMES
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Spence; R. Shearer, Blenheim, Ont„
'News-Record; R, A. Giles, Laebute,
Quebec Watchman; George Cadogan,
' Durham, Ont., Chronicle; D. R. Wil-
son, Shawinigan Falls, Que., Stand-
ard; CI. C, Craven, Ridgetown, Ont.,
Dominion; and L. Guertin, Shawini-
gan Falls, Que„ L'Echo de St. Maur-
ice.
LOCKJAW IS PREVENTABLE
Ina STILL CLAIMS LIVES
Tetanus or lockjaw is one of the ,
most serious of the infectious diseas-
C6, occurring predominantly among
children during the summer months,
according to Dr. C. S. Anglin of the
Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto,
writing in the current issue of Health
Magazine. The seriousness of tetanus
does not lie in the number of children
affected, which is fortunately rela-
tively few, but in the agonizing
P. S. Fisher,
AM
ness for the sacred volume and read.
at least a chapter a day of its incom-
parable contents like genial Tom.
King used to do, And having a clear
title to the mansions in the skies, let
us pledge ourselves to be our brother's
keeper till the end, and enact the
golden rule from day to day.
May God bless the old boys and ,
the old girls—if girls ever get old—
and by the investment of the influ-
ence of our united lives may them
yet be a much better leVingliam than
has been.
Telephone 139
Chevrolet and Oldsmobile Cars
Chevrolet Trucks
Discover How Good
iced Tea Can Be !
:Make tea double strength and while still
hot pour into glasses filled with cracked
ice . . Add sugar and lemon to taste.
Ze MD TEA
THE
CANADA LIFE
ASSURANCES COMPANY
takes pleasure in announcing that
F. C. HOPPER
has qualified for membership
in the Company's
PRESIDENT'S CLUB
Quarter Million. Section
for 1951
Mr. Hopper's continuous success since joining the
Canada Life in 1916 has resulted from the life insurance
services he has conscientiously provided to his clients.
For the past live consecutive years his efforts have been
rewarded with membership in hi; Company's senior
production group. His combined knowledge and ex-
perience renders him a competent counsellor in all
matters pertaining to life insurance. .You arc invited
to consult. Mr. Hopper at any time to secure the benefit
of his advice.
A Boy's or Girl's
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3
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3
just for saving lucky Kist Bottle Tops. Here's how it works!
In just a few weeks time you can own one of these brand new
bikes ... a smart table radio ... or many other valuable prizes
Whenever you get a Kist Bottle Top, lift the cork lining, If 0
you find a K-I-S or T printed on the inside metal surface save a
that top. Then go to your nearest Kist dealer's ... the man who a
sells delicious ice-cold Kist ... and ask for a copy of Kist Contest
Rules. They'll tell you how you can win yoga- new bike or one'
of the many other valuable prizes. a
Newspapermen visit St. Luc, Yard:
weekly newspaper publishers and
editors of the Ontario and Quebec
division of the Canadian Weekly
Newspapers Association took time out
for their convention in Montr'al to
visit the Canadian Pacific Railway's
St. Luc _freight treminal, the most
modern in North America, Shown
Old Times
By P. S. Fisher
At a previous writing I mentioned
the excitement and fascination at-
tending the annual Fall Fairs and
also intimated that as a lad of sixteen
I was a proud exhibitor. Early in life
I had a flare for poultry, starting in
the business with one white mongrel
hen and climilxing my career in this
regard by showing eight pens of fowl
about the year 1899 at the Autumn
Show. I got five firsts and three sec-
onds but do not think the same judge
was allowed to decide which birds
were the best the following year.
Discovering that almost anything of
apparent extraordinary value could be
exhibited for the modest entry fee of
one dollar, I decided in the warmth
of my youthful enthusiasm to enter
the family cow. Now it is a well-
known fact that a sleek coat makes
any animal look better and at the
rate girls go to have their hair done
shows how important this adornment
is in emphasizing a good appearance.
I decided to frizz the cow's tail, and,
believe it or not, I am, of the opinion
that so far as Wingham is concerned
I was the originator of the perma-
nent wave, I gave her an afternoon
appointment and allowing for other
minor duties I was able to "take her"
at four o'clock.
Her stall, to the best of my know-
ledge and belief, was the first beauty
parlor in town. The process of frizz-
ing was preceded by the last foot of
the tail being immersed in a pail of
water, which was placed on a stool
directly behind the patient quadluped.
I think I used Sunlight Soap for
that was my mother's favorite as
Lever Bros. and my mother's ancest-
ors both came from England. After
a thorough washing and rinsing in
several waters the tail was braided
while wet, and by the same time next
day it was bone-dry and could be
combed out like a feather duster.
When groomed from head to tail. I
stood back and looked at our lovely
cow and in later years when I first
heard of dual personalities I under-
stood perfectly what was meant, as
I thought of this Ayshire animal,
which looked so much like a cow in
front and so much like a lion behind,
A wise judge gave no prize to this
bushy-tailed monstrosity.
Compared, contrasted by what
others think
Alas! how sadly our possessions
shrink.
I fared better, however, with wash-
ed ducks, The hectic morning of the
showi I was without a chaperone for
a Pekin duck; but at the last moment
I was able to borrow Bradley's drake
and as they were as unclean as lepers,
here at the hump office of the yard
are a group of the newly-elected ot-
ficers of the division, led by prtsi-
dent E, A, Spence (centre), of the
Strathroy, Ont., Age-Dispatch. Left to
right: W. A, James, of the Bowman-
vile, Ont., Spokesman; J. P. Picket,
Paris, Oat., Tribune; V. Farrow,
Bracebridge, Ont., Gazette; Mr.
I washed them both, bills, feet and
feathers, in a tub. Dripping wet, I
put them in a pen—a show pen--
made out of shoe boxes from Mills
or Kings, and the afternoon sun rea-
ching their pen before the judge they
Plumed themselves out in spotless
white and took second prize.
These and kindred experiences of
a like character, make up the sum
total of my old-time recollections.
Time would fail me to recount the
half of them and these' twelve instal-
ments to the Editor 'of the Advance-
Times have been written for personal
amusement and with the thought in
mind that some of the former boys
and girls who are yet in the lati'd of
the living, on seeing these incilents
related, will immediately recall sin.-
liar occasions in their own care-free
childhood and so get a happy respite
from the corroding anxieties of life's
later years.
In the short time that remains
while we naturally seek to "husband
out life's taper at the close and keep
the flame from wasting by repose"
may we also acquire a deeper fond-
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Course Of the disease, and its very high
fatality rate.
"A disease which is completely pre-
ventable by toxiadng," writes Dr.
Anglin, "tetanus should only be of
historic interest in ,these enlightened
times, However, each year in every
province of Canada,' children die from
this condition, indicating the need
for continued vigilance on the part
of health organizations to publicize
the necessity of universal immuniza-
tion."
Tetanus or lockjaw is caused by
the poison from a germ which is
often found in soil, manure and putre-
fying material. The niero-organism is
frequently normally present in the in-
testines of horses and other animals
which spread the germs in their drop-
pings. It usually enters the body
through a site of injury such as that
produced by fireworks, embedded
splinters, puncture wounds, insect bit-
es, burns, and compound fractures.
Prevention of tetanus should begin
with routine immunization of every
infant with tetanus toxoid, which is
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