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The Wingham Advance Times, 1934-01-11, Page 2?AGI TWO THE WINGHAM ADVANCE -W(114$ The Winghaia Aderaii,!ee eTimes Published at WINGHAM m ONTARIO Every Thursday Morning by The Advance -Times Publishing Co. ubscription Rate -- One Year $2.00 Six months, $1.00 in advance To U. S. A., $2.50 per year. Foreign rate, $3.00 per year, advertising rates on application, TOXOID TREATMENT That toxoid clinics have donee .a great deal to prevent diphtheria is now a recognized fact. Facts end fig- ures in this connection are very in- teresting, In York Township where Fergus is holding a:Centennial Bon - spell. This club has the honor of be- ing the first curling; alb in Ontario; * * Iitilo Reno, President of the Unit- ed States Farmers' 'Holiday Associa- tion has a new idea. it is a barter agency to handle an exchange of the Products of the fanners and industrial labor, O.H.A. HOCKEY RULES FOR 1934 As there has been some misunder- standing in regard to some of the changes in the OB.A. hockey rules for this season, under which the town league is operated, we are re -publish- ing these rules, so that the players they have toxoid clinics for school and all interested in hockey will have rhildree the munber of cases of &ph- 'Fame. a better understanding oftheg theria has been reduced from 293 at the time the clinic started operations' A FEW OF THE MAIN POINTSa to $cases in 1933. 1. The puck may be kicked in any Many tines we have recommended fora goal. Forward through this column that such a r_lin- area, but not Passing is permitted in all zones. ic: be established here and we firmly believe that something should be done' 2. Only the puck carrier may be b i s g bodied by the defending .team, and about it. that may be done only in the defend- * ;t ing zones. A REL SPORTSMAN' 3, The puck must at all times be When "Ace" Bailey was taken to kept in motion and no defending play - the Hospital inr Bostonhockey a pias- er can carry the puck behind his goal tared skull every hockey fan and see snore than once unless checked or eral thousand of others, were ,lalling prevented by opposing player: for him to pull through. As the days puck The must not be passed and weeks crept on and he continued from the centre zone back into the to make improvement, people could defendingzone. (See rules for pen - hardly wait ;to hear further reports. sit When thenews finally came through all thh y)' .•: g that he was out of danger and was on the road to recovery there was silent cheer in everybody's heart. At last the day came, when the hoc- key official had to cleat with Eddie Sore, the brilliant Boston defenceman and, Bailey, real sportsman that be is, let Shore off by his statement to the officials. The fans are still hoping to see Bailey back in the game, and if it so happens that he cannot play, the game has lost one of its real sportsmen. s * * * A nervy thief stole the anti -freeze out of a Guelph detective's car. This caused the raditaorto 'boil and, no doubt, the detective also. * * * * 5. The puck- or puck -carrier must cross the blue line into the attacking area first. 6 Substitutions of players canonly be made when play is stopped. 7. Play must be stopped by the re- feree to impose a penalty. 8. No body -checking permitted' on the forward line except when back in their defending area. The 1934 rifles of the Canadian Amateur Hockey Association permit forward passing and kicking the puck in all zones, limits body -checking in the defensive zone to the puck -carrier alone, and puts; further restrictions on ragging. the puck.., Otherwise there areno changes in the previous code. Tishow the1934 rules this Under The United. States Government had play develops :and what can be done: a deficit of $9,000,000,000.. What a The Defending Zone difference a few O's make on the end Starting in the defending zone, the of a line of figures. puck may be passed or kicked forward * * * * and taken inside the first bine line by In Saskatchewan the farmers use any defending player. barbed wire fences as their phone However, should the puck be pass - line. The barbs of the wire are to ed or kicked' over the blue tine any rr 5.the soff convers<Ltton defending in player whowas in take the roughness d fe d i de- * fending zone when the puck crossed The Listowel Banner remarks that the blue line may skate up into the divorce is now becoming so common centre zone and play the 'puck_ that it will soon be just the little in- For a violation of this rule (that is tciinission between honeymoons. for a defending player in the centre * s. * .I, zone to take a pass from the defend - Itis said there is a fortune in liquor ing zone) an offside is to be called at the bottom of the St. Claire River. and the face-off is to take place at the That is one fortune that is well plac- point'where the puck crossed the blue ed. line. * * * =k Centre Zone A McGill University professor say This brings play into the centre that death of slang is noted • in Can- zone. In this area there is no offside, ada. 0 Yeah, and the puck may be passed or kick- * * * * ed forward by attacking players up In Oklahoma they are sterilizing to the second blue line. several thousands of criminals and When the attack reaches the second 'insane people. blue line either the puck or the puck- * * * * Premier Henry's son George is That is, to say, the player in posses - about to stump Eastern Ontario in ion of the puck maycarry or kick it liis father's interests. He also intends across the line or pass it laterally or to make a house-to-house canvas. It forward into the third zone. will be interesting to know what this When .the puck or puck -carrier youth, thinks of such a business when crosses the second blue line all the at - he returnshome; tacking players who wire in the cen- se * * * tre zone when the puck crossed the are lie mayskate up and play the' puck. The 'Toronto 73oard of Control n much concerned over. the city's street The puck may be kicked across the car service. That is one matter that second blue line or kicked by any will not worry our intinicipal repre- player in the third zone. sentatives. If an attacking player enters the * * * third ,r.zone ahead of the puck or puck - This This is Toronto's Centennial Year carrier play shall be stopped with a ---aro doubt we will hear much about face-off at the blue line; should, how - this as the year passes on. ever, an attacking player cross tire blue line and the puck does not en- ter the third zone play shall continue without interruption. The'Attacking Zone This brings play into the third or attacking zone and the puck carrier only filar be boby the def endiil,g' there is many a fat man who finds the tearii.,: going far front; easy. The following instance:— Ln tPlis zoite (asdied in the ether zones) letter describes one typical there is no onside andthe puck utay "I began to put ort weight this year, be passed ,ar kicked forward by -at- ' and developed stoutness iii the stone- 'seeking tone-tacking players, but not' kicked ,into ash which was very ugly, I 'took the net, (Special attention is called Kruschen Salts each morning for a to the fact that only the attacking month, and reduced my weight 13 lbs. player in possession of 'the puck may So I kept on, and have now reduced, be bodied by the defending team. And 19 lbs, altogether. Apart from that, he must not be charged or cross- i «has also relieved me of headaches, checked). land I feel absolutely fit each morning, Referees M; are instructed to .4vatc}l ready #or�a.h ardda . y', s work." --H. Morning, Krusch.eti of at- Taken every nt g, this jaarticliiarly and penalize all f !• tempts at , rough ;play and illegal eels a perfectly natural clearance of HOW ONE MAN LOST19 LBS. FAT Now Feels Absolutely Fit A fat man is commonly supposed to �be good-natured,, easy-going. ]31st checking. The attacking players are not per- mitted to interfere in any way with the movem nts of a goal keeper or his vision of the puck or play. The penalty for violition is a face-off at the blue line A goal, scored under undigested food substances and all ex- cessive watery waste matter. Unless this wastage is regularlyex ed Na- eP ,ll tore will eventually store it up out of the way in the form of ugly fat. Once Kreschen gets into the blood you will soon see that double chin begin to go, such conditions shall not, be allowed. and that too prominent abdomen be. No other defending player but the gin to disappear. goal 'keeper is allowed to sit, kneel or fall on the puck within 10 feet of his own goal. Penalty a face-off 10 .RATE AND ECONOMY feet directly in front of goal. When an attacking player commits a foul in the defending zone the face- off shall take place at the blue line. OF GAINS BY PIG (Experimental: Farms Note) The. marketing of hogs only when If the defending team commits a foul they have reached the correct weights the puck shall be faced off where the of from 200 to 230 pounds at the foul occurs, except where otherwise farm, and have acquired the proper specified, as in the preceding clause. finish is one of the greatest prob- gg g the Puckan Ra in . - les of our bacon industry. The mar- The The puck must at ._ tp it }pies be' kept seting of light. weight and unfinished, " in motion. and, overweight, heavy hogs causes a The teamin possession in the de- very large annual loss to our farm - fending zone, may carry the puck be- ers. Equally important is the fact that hind the goal line once, but after that the poor grade bacon produced from shall alwaysadvance the liPuck unless these hogs is a constant menace to - prevented by opposing players. the standing of Canadian bacon on carrier must be first over the line. and stops play—not the time -keepers. All games 60 minutes (three 20 - minute periods) with overtime' per- iods up , to 30 minutes, if necessary. All games scored on the point system, two points for a nen and one point, for a draw. The goal -keeper or his alternate cannot play any other position but goal. A player, losing or breaking his stick is automatically out of the play until same is recovered or legitimate- ly replaced. flier o r not The, referee decides whether e it is a goal. The gloant umpires re- port to the referee, when they believe a goal has been scored but the referee has the final decision and there is no. INNENSIBIONNEENNENZIEMENNININIERNIABINVINVENNI ai>rica1. Substitutions can only be made Mami when play is stopped. l+` !Mi flay niitst be steppes, by the ref- ill eree to impose a penalty. No body -checking permitted on the al forward line. The only 'players per - In the centre zone they may pass the British market. the puck back and forth but must not pass it back into the defending zone. The penalty is a face-off in front of the goal of the offending team: on Face -Off Must be On-Siden finish. Growth e must the proper weight and On all face-offs every player 109 show i own side of the pudk and and feeding data onhogs be on his that as the hogs grew older they re - no players but those facing off can conte within 10 feet of the puck. ruleb e- is to this Attention called Experiments at the Dominion:; Ex- perimental Station, Lacombe, have the island of Cyprus in the. Mediter- ranean through the Dominion. art De p shown that it pays to feed hogs well. m nt of A ricultttre at. Ottawa. The the'time they are weaned, and e g as the are to : seed; shipped from Charlottetown, P. to market as soony up E.L., consisted of three varieties, nam- ely Green Mountain, Bliss Triumph, and Irish Cobbler. The yields ob- tained were considerably' greater with Green Mountain, and'the Cyprus far- mers were impressed with the regular germination and growth of the Can- adian potatoes. Tests with Canadian her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Colii die. Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Willitts and family spent New Year's with Mr, and Mrs. W. H. Marshall, Mrs. John Metcalfe spent a,. day recently with her daughter, Mrs. H. Wylie, Wroxeter. Mr. and Mrs, Gordon Weir, How- lets, spent Monday with the latter's parents, Mt. and Mrs. Reuben Stokes. Ea - RADIO MESSAGE BY KELLOGG PRESIDENT On a radio telephone hook-up from St. Petersburg, Florida, reaching Syd- ney, Australia; London', . Eng.; Lon- don, Ontario; Mexico City, Mexieo; and twenty-six Battle Creek, Mich.; y sales offices throughout the United States,W. K. Kellogg, President of the Kellogg Company, extended New ' g •eetin s to members of the Year's ,,i z g Kellogg Sales Organization at home and abroad, at the same time review- ing conditions throughout the past year and plaits for the future. ,The founder and president of the world's largest, manufacturers of ready -to -eat cereals'stated that 1933 had proved an extraordinarily good year for the Company and that he expected conditions to -improve. "The Kellogg Company," Mr,: Kellogg stat- ed, "are employing more people, are spending more money and working. 'harder for business than at any other period in our, history." Touching on plans for 1934, Mr. Kellogg said that the company's pro- motional budget for the year ahead was larger than ever before and that the newspaper advertising alone will reach a new high mark in both scope and intensity. Canadian Potatoes in Cyprus Two years ago a trial shipment of Canadian seed potatoes_ was, made to spired more and more feed for 100 pounds of gain, with a resultant. in- - ff i le areas now.m crease in the post of grain, cause of 'the no o s. thegame•, The .pigs weighed at average of : Goal -- HowScored 13.7 pounds at the weaning' age of AA goal shall be scored when the sixty days. The growth and feeding, puck shall have been put betweenthe goal posts by the stick of a player of the attacking side, from in front. of great importance to the pork pro- and below the line of the goal on the a one -inch inch ne i top, and entirely across It required 319 pounds of grain to linear the width of the diameter of produce one hundred pounds of gain the goal posts, drawn on the acefrom for the first thirty clays, 375 pounds one goal post to the other. : for the second thirty days, 378 pounds A goalshall not be scored if the for the third thirty days, and 442 for peek is put into the goal by any part the last thirty-eight days, the aver - of the person of an attacking player age eegitirement for the total period or by his skates: A goal, hovveVer' being 392 pounds of ,rain per one shall be scored if the puck is put into hundred pounds of gain. the goal in any way by a player of The average daily gainper hog the defending side. started at 0,87 pounds for the first A goal keeper may stop a shot in thirty days, 1.14 pounds . for the sec any way he chooses, but i ust not and thirty days, 1:51 pounds for the hold' the puck and must o passthird thirty days; and 1.62 pounds for fordward with his hands but may pass the last thirty-eight days, the average it laterally or backward with his daily gain for the full period being hands. 1.31 pounds. Points to Remember Feeders are frequently misled 'by The referee's whistle or bell startsthe gains made •by their hogswhen data were taken at thirty -day inter- vals throughout' the life of the hogs and the results point out several facts ®I6 $III , Eg Buyers Of _ And Poultry ' cE UN TED FARMERS' COOPERATIVE COMPANY,' LIMITED. ViAnghatirio bo, 27 rte., MOO m.itted to use the body in checking are players of the- defending team when they are back of their own 60 foot Iine, but there must be no charg- ing by these players, "How is it you broke your engage- ment with Evelyn?" "Well; I only did to the en ege- rnetit -what it did to met" Fnglishtnan: "Why don't you make fun of my cotrotrymcn just as you make fun of your own?" Scot: "W'e11, anon, it''s bad enough being 'an 'Englishman without matin' a joke about it.i The only thing to be said for the people who keep on predicting the eaid of the world is that they get n bit: closer ,every time. about 220 pounds in weight. Because they are making more rapid gains than when they are younger and, smaller, they believe they are making cheaper gains. It is true that they are making greater gains but each pound is put on at . greater cost than when they are younger. With a steadily increasing cost per pound of gain for pigs over 220 lbs. in weight and a heavy cut for "heavy" hogs it sloes not pay to feed hogs al- ter they are tip to proper weight and finish. Similarly with a heavy cut in the price of light weight, unfinished hogs, which produce a low grade qual- ity of bacon it pays to feed pigs well until the proper weights and finish are reacted. Thursday, January 11, 1934 Thrifty Housewives Buy Quality 7 fr "Fresh from the Gardens" 011 seed were .also :continued; in 1982 by the Department of Agriculture at Cy- prus with good resu}ts while Irish 1 varieties were also tried out. These tests have not as yet, however, re- sulted in.conxmercial shipments of s . Canadian seed potatoes to Cyprus. Seed potatoes are imported into Cyp- rus duty free, and no bag of seed po- tatoes. must contain more than 112 pounds.. GEMS FROM LIFE'S SCRAP -BOOK RESOLUTIONS J "Be not too slow in the breaking of a sinful custom; a quick, courag- eous resolution is better than a grad- ual deliberation; ."—Quarles. * * "Good resolutions should not be confined to one day in the year, but rather should be made and. perform ed perpetually and adhered to with all the loyalty of one's understanding of Truth."—(Amanda Colbath.) Chris- tian Science Journal. * * *. "Firmness of purpose is one of the most necessary sinews of character and one of the best . instruments of success. Without it, genius wastes its efforts in'a maze of inconsistencies." --Chesterfield. "Resolve, , and thou art free." -- Longfellow. II -le Wasn't Ready Powassan i at .i�owassan ;,tlie Editor of the 1, News has been pressing for Payment' of overdue accounts. It is said he re- cently received the following in his morning's mail: "Dear Sir,—I got } your bill what I owed you. I ain't for- got you; plese wate. When some oth- er fines pay .ine. I pay you. If this wuz judgment day and you wuz no. more prepared to meet your maker as I am this account, you sure would go. to hell. Hoping you will clo this, 1 remains' your truly." * * "Do not, for one repulse, forego the ' t." e ole d to effect" your s that t a. purpose —Shakespeare. About Grafting Newspapers do not shun all good deeds in order to "play up" stories of crime. Not by any means. We ad- mit there has been column upon col - unite of space devoted to stories of graft in government circles, particu- larly across- the border line, but up here in Canada many newspapers are telling of another grafting story. ,A British Columbia arnan has succeeded in grafting on two trees six kinds of cherry, three kinds of apple and four kinds of pear. It's for Children's Coughs and Colds As well As your Own Mother, don't worry when the children have a bad cough or cold—just give them' BUCK- LEY'S MIXTURE mixed with equal parts of honey. One pleasant little dose will give im- mediate relief. Two doses are often all that are needed to end a bad cold. Buckley's is absolutely safe for the smallest child, but so supremely good that it will banish the toughest adult cough or cold and it's simply wonderful for 'flu or bronchitis. Refuse substitutes. Buckley's is sold everywhere. p4p,y.�.""�'SAr:.a' 0=====10=t O o! io OiSo —•- fid GLENANNAN (Too Late for Last Week) Miss Isabel Metcalfe, of Toronto, spent a couple of daysrwiith her par- ents, Mr, and Mrs. John Metcalfe. ' Miss Mildred Stewart, of Howick, visited for a few days last week with her aunt, Mrs, Richard Jeffray. Misses Janet Woods and Lorene Gilkinson, also Mr. Jack Fortune, re- turned to Stratford on Tuesday, hav- ing spent the holidays at their res- pective homes here. Miss Annie Campbell returned to her duties atShelbourne on Tuesday. Miss Evelyn Lincoln and friend, Mr. Harry Brown of Hamiltons, spent a Couple of days recently with the former's parents, Mr, and Mrs. Ar tiller Lincoln. Mr. Norman Muir returned to To- nto on Tuesday; he was accompan- iedby his mother, who will spend some time there. Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Renwick and, son, Walter, spent New h'ear's wit:li mmerc.ial' rinting WE CAN GIVE YOU PROMPT AND SATISFAC- TORY SERVICE IN Financial Statements Booklets Pamphlets Reports Folders Fine Stationery Statement Forms Factory Forms Business Forms Blotters Cheques Receipts Envelopes (all kinds) Tickets Business Cards Personal Cards Wedding Stationery Funeral Folders Announcements Shipping Ta. pp �` � �'s„ Posters s Sale Bill Windows Cards Auction Sale Bills PRINTED FORMS SAVE TIME AND SIMPLIFY MANY OTHERWISE TEDIOUS TASKS SETTER PRINTING IS` OUR AIM. PRICES REASONABLE. The Adv�n�erTimt�s PHONE 34. sirtO 01G0 JOSEPHINE ST. ji i 0 11 p o 0 0 O. 0