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The Wingham Advance Times, 1930-07-31, Page 7Thursday, July slst, 19134 ` Light x Opera Festival t vat to Be Presented at Canadian Chautauqua r;. THE LIGHT OP1N71i•A, FESTIVAL Featuring dramatic scenes train some of the world's most popular operettas, The Light Opera Festival brings an entirely, new type of entertainment to the Canadian Chautauqua here this season. Gorgeous costumes, expert staging and unusual lighting effects are skilfully used•' in the presentation,of scenes from "Rose Marie," "The Student Prince," "The Chocolate Soldier and "The Desert Song." Each operetta is condensed :with consummate artistry into the time allowed', for portrayal. Each member of The Light Opera Festival company is a remark- ably fine singer, having had wide experience in the operatic and concert gelds. . AT THE CHAUTAUQUA,"AUGUST 4, 5, 6, 7 and 8. HEALTH SERVICE sof the <CAsNADIAN MEDICAL ASSOC- IATION THE WAY TO HEALTH If we , desire the happiness, the ap Iiearance, and the ability required to. xlo- our' best work both for ourselves and for others, which is possible on .ly through the possession of health;` we should consider what is the way to health. It is necessary that we learn how ,to live so, that body and mind may receive •the, care required to keep them in a healthy condition. Know- ledge in itself is worthless in secur- ing the .desired results, It is prac- tice that counts. The factorthat de- termines whether or not we enjoy a condition of health is our manner of life. In order to provide a hygienic mode of 'life, it is necessary that we make it a matter of habit. To begin with, we must think before we act, the must remind ourselves to wash •our hands before eating, to clean our teeth night and morning. After a time these become a matter of habit, a rou- tine of life; we do them. unconscious- ly. In order to have health, we must 'have good 'health habits. When we have good health habits, we lily 'claim to have secured a good health •education. It is, not asimple matter to estab- lish habits of any kind, but good hab- its are as easy to cultivate as uncle- 'sizable ones. It is necessary to make a start, and then to persist until the habit is formed. The practice must be regular and exceptions must not .be made. Every time the practice is missed, a new start must be made, which only makes the acquiring of the habit more difficult. The health habits are not numerous nor: are they difficult to form. Their practice does not entailany expense, • and yet health is•nof to be .secured and .kept in any other way than through them, Failure to practice good health' habits leads, sooner or later, to a loss of health if not to ac-' tual ,'disease. The earlier in life good habits are formed, the better, but it is never too late to • learn. However, the form- ation of habits is more difficult in later years. because it means that any bad .habits must be overcome. It is never a kindness to a young child to permit him to 'form 'undesirable hab- its, because the day will come when he will have to pay in the results that grow out of such habits. The health habits have to do with diet, rest, exercise, fresh air, sunshine,.. elimination and cleanliness, and upon` these rests the health of each and every one of us. Questions concerning Health, ad- dressed to the Canadian Medical As sociation, 184 College St., Toronto, will be answered personally by letter. CROWN'S LA -i' British Law Officers nellriflzaish '1'ri ditional Right to Last Word. A further step has been taken in making the system of justice in Bri- tain .even more favorable to the ac- cused. The law officers of the crown have decided to relinquish the tra- ditional right to the last word 'before' the summing up in criminal trials. For a long time it has been con- sidered by counsel engaged in crim- inal defence that the right of the Attorney -General or the Solicitor- General to reply in certain cases is an unjustifiable handicap, and the gen- eral view of the Bar is that the law officers should have no greater privi- leges in criminal cases than any other, counsel appearing. Since this privilege of reply is a prerogative rifest of the crown, the law officers are not at liberty to aban- don it, but the Solicitor -General re- cently declared that neither he nor the Attorney -General intends to exer- cise the right during their tenure of omee. - Wash Da Is Easy Now Particularly if yotit have a modern Connor Elec- tric Washer in your home. No tearing of clothes, no back-brea,i,- ing work. Just fill the tub with hot water, drop in the ' clothes, turn a switch and the work is done, ' Vin ham tJt lit s t�mrnissio •Crawford ..clock. : Phone 156. ,ALL X- AN1,)B1 ,",5 40114lia. relxv Hon May Siam lie Conducted to Locate It. A ,peareh for the. tomb of Alexan- der the Great is likely to be con- ducted at •cast in his namesake city. Harold Carter, explaining his plans for the coming seaeon's final work at the tomb of Tutankbauen, expressed lntoreet in .eneking the tomb of Aleic- ander after his excavations at the Valley of the Icings are ended; Resi, dente of Egypt have countered with the suggestioxx that Bgypt night well undertake this in p,ortant search, and at present the need for locating Alex- eander's tomb is a much dismissed topic. The Macedonian conqueror, who fought the greater part of his world and won it, died in BahYlon. Plutarch stated that Alexander was taken to Alexandria and buried in a gold cof- fin, Hersdotus, another historian, mentions seeing a' glass sarcophagus of Alexander as it was carried In a procession leading westward from the Iluphrates river. If the tomb `is in Alexandria at all, it is most likely to be at the site of the lViosque of Nebi Daniel. Plans for excavating in this neighborhood were discussed at the annual meeting of the Royal Society q%i Alexandria, held recently. Prof. Breccia, curator of the Greco-Roman Museum at Alexan- dria, :urged 'Mat the .city undertake the excavations to unearth the tomb of its founder. The neighborhood of the xnosque is considered worthy of careful ex- ploration, for it was thepart of the ancient city where other rulers prob- ably were buried. A. granite pillar, still erect, was partly unearthed aol long ago by workmen engaged in street repairs in this neighborhood, and this bit of evidence of ancient construction has further stimulated interest in scientific study of: the place. Doubt that Alexander was ever buried in Egypt has been expressed by a correspondent in the Egyptiau Gazette, who cites reasons why the Greek hero would more likely have been taken back to his native town of Pella for burial. He points out that Perdicas was the moat influeri- tial of Alexander's generals, andthat this Perdicas would not have taken the conqueror's body to Egypt, be- cause 'Perdica's arch-rlstl was Pto- lemy of Egypt. The cortege seen by Herodetus, moving westward, might well have. -been heading toward a port to embark for the Macedonian town of Pella, he contends. CORNSTAL1 BY-PRODUCTS. Company Will Develop Processes to Use 150,000,000, Tons. Long-awaited commercial develop- ment of cornstalk by-products seems destined for a real trial with the for- mation of National Cornstalks Pro- cesses, Inc., in Chicago. This $1,000; 000 concern, backed by former Gov- ernor Low -den, Henry A. Wallace, H. F. Perkins, president Internation- al Harvester, and `other mid -west business leaders, has leased for five years the patents on cornstalk con- verting processes developed under Dr. 0. R. Sweeney at Iowa State Col- lege. Aided by the State, by the Fed- eral Government through the Bureau of Standards, Dr. Sweeney has spent some fifteen years in developing pro= cesses to utilize the 150,000,000 gins of . cornstalks produced annually. Some fifteen or twenty industrial by- products have been produced experi- mentally; the new company's first Product will be lumber substitute. Chains of mills throughout the corn belt are planned to reduce trans- portation costs. If they should be successful in their .aim to provide a market for cornstalks at $3 a ton or more an annual addition to corn belt farmer's income of some $450,000, 000 is,possibie.—a much -to be -desired outcome of Dr. Sweeuey's long re- searches. DOGS WITH FALSE TEETH. Surgeons Perform Delicate Opera- tion on Animals. Recent examples of the surgeon's skill on injured animals rival in deli- cacy many of the operations perform ed on human beings. Dogs have been fitted. with sets of false teeth, which remain in position despite the severe strain put upon them by canine appetitles. Amput- ation of animals' limbs is often ne- cessaryas a result of serious acci- dents, and it is possible' to substitute artificial lege made ,of silver and.vul- eanite covered with leather. Generally the little cripples accent-, nnadate themselves quickly to the use of their new limbs, but one valuable whippet proved very stupid. When he met,with an ,accident andlost both. forelegs, artificial limbs were made and fitted. But the anfmal.refused to. use them, and persisted in hopping about like a baby kangaroo, Ari Aberdeen terrier examined by. X-rays had 114 dint stones in his stomach, as well a,s a valuable dia- mond collar stud, but he was operat- ed upon successfully. Radio In Each School Room. Every school child of Shelby, Mich., will be within constant touch with the outside world, or the voice of the superintendent of the schools, when a radio system for Shelby schools is 'dedicated and put into service. Eery school room has three or more loud speakers placed in its walls -and neiling.and the •teacher has the choice of two Programs or silence at any time, The school superinten- dent may in ,as. emergency or for announcements project his voice through the ' system into any or all rooms. A. Painless Death. A man who accidentally received a 17,600 -volt current through his body, who Was rendered insensible was afterwards revived, declares that he telt absolutely nothing and that death by electrocution must be quite pain- less. WI Gtii0t FOOD 'arr*NClES. Sonne Diet Valli Which Animals Siat►n Are card to Explar,in Away. 'l'lxe new `Stehlin= llearda from: th. Canary Islands, recently acquired by the London Zoo, were„ea.ught in trap baited with cheese,' we are told, say nix article in Answers. One never ceases' to wonder at they odd tastes of ariitaa.is. In k'loricda the writer used to catch opossums in box traps baited with fish. A 'possum• -,-very good eating, by the way—is a tree -living creature, and its taste for .fish is even ».tore difficult to .explain than that of the oat for a similar delicacy. All cats hate water, yet I once saw a cat scooping goldl sir out of a glass tank In order to make a meal et them, This, I was told, was a habit of this particular cat when11thought no one was, about. But one day it overbal anced itself and fell into the tank; After that it left thegoldfish alone. Speaking of ash, cows In the Faroe Islands are largely fed on ish.during the winter months, This is no fairy tale, for it is taken from the sober sheets of a Consular report. The fish used is coal fish, a species allied to tbe pollack. It is not cooked before eaten, merely dried, then pounded between stones. The cows fed on thio queer diet yield an amply supple of rich milk Dogs, as a rule, are not keen on fish, but can anyone explain why, with hardly an exception, they are devoted to chocolate. It would be an interesting experiment to try choco- late on the .wolves in the Zoo. But most dogs like all kinds oa sweets. Some dogs have the queerest tastes. .A red setter named Sappho, who belonged to an Irish relative of the writer, would go into; the garden and pull ripe gooseberries off' the bush and eat them. She has been seen to do this, not once, but many times. In the Cook Islands, in the South Pacific, dogs imported many years ago have run quite wild, and are a great uaiasanee to the inhabitants. The brutes are alwaysfighting, and when one is killed the : rest make very short work of its remains. But these dogs have a taste in food which seems almost incredible. They eat bananas. The banana grows wild in the islands, and the moment an overripe fruit drops it is de- voured. - In these same islands some of the ponies originally imported from Chill. have, like the dogs, run wild. These. ponies are extraordinarily fond of coconuts. Now, a coconut has a very hard shell, so hard that you could hardly imagine it possible for a horse to crack it. - But onewho has watched them describes how the little beasts work the coconut into a suitable position with their forefeet, then stamp upon it until the shell is cracked, and after- wards eat the succulent kernel with evident enjoyment. Monkeys are usually vegetarians, but Sally, the famous chimpanzee of the London Zoo,had a curious de- light in animal food. She used to catch sparrows, bite off their heads, and eat them, bones, feathersand all. More than once she treated a pigeon in the same - fashion , while any; .un- fortunate rat that : entered her cage was caught instantly and speedily devoured. The love of many animals for in- toxicants is peculiar. Elephants and bears, delight in rum, while all tbe le- mure'are fondof alcohol. THE STATUE OF L113ERTY. Forty Persons Can Stand In the Head and Twelve In the Torcla. The erection of the famous Statue of Liberty on Bedloe's Island, New York. Harbor, was first proposed soon after the Franco-German war by a number of leading Frenchmen who commissioned Frederic August Bar- tholdi (1833-1904), a sculptor, to do the work. Berthold! suggested the present site, and it was set apart by President Hayes. The statue and the pedeetai were paid for cbieily with money collected in France and the United States, The pedestal is 89 feet in height, cost $300,000 and the statue ,itself about $700,000. The head was completed in 1878, and shown at the Paris Exposition, and the forearm, which had been finished earlier, was exhibited at Philadelphia in 1876, The statue was finished in 1883, the parts were landed from France in 210 packing -cases in 1885, the work of putting the parts together was be- gun,in 1886 and on October 28 in that year it Was unveiled. The, statue is 225 toils .in weight, 151 feet in height (to the torch), and the dis- tance 1 ifeet raneeacross the eye s 26 i Inches, Forty persons can stand in the head and twelve in the torch. Plumbing Up -to -Date, About 8,00e of the 35,000 plumb ors of the 'United States have trucks so completely equipped that the plumbers are sure to have all their tools and materials with there, re- gardless of tbe nature of the job. But only the George WinburnE Plumbing Co. of Wichita Falls, 'Tex- as, has, capitalized 'kine idea toits fullest extent. The Winburne truck is boldly labelled "Plerabing Shop ou Wheels,” and the business card of the company bears the siogan The job is free if the plumberhasto go balk for tools or material." In the Iast three years the com- pany has twice made good on this promise. French . ".Rome,' Sweet' Homo." "Borne, Sweet biome" is not tixe only operatic air that has become. ai kind of national melody, for, France has a tune wiib words of a sinxilar sentiment. This is "Ou penton ere ntioux gt1'ae seta de ea faxnille7"' ("Where can one better be than in the bosom of one's family?"). It was written by Gretry as a quintette in' his opera "Lucille" and first achieved a political position when it Was sung at Versailles on July 15, 1789, when the Bourbons were being turned out, Uoa Hnd ca Walter, agndedr 3, anad TVIdrpy, aged $, had been toid to make themselves nice and clean before setting out for a party, When the ordeal was over the two of theta went downstairs for their' rtxolller's inspection. °"I think yotu'll do," she said, After she had examine dtheir ears; ,their necks and their hands. "All the same, Mary looks fa. fralter.' the little bay was indignant. " rid iso :she ougbtl" he replle "I've been in tide World 'a year longer- cleaiXr than you do,than she has." �IiI)NlillllliM�ll(��Ilwllll�111f�1114MI11�I111�111>N.(11�)p1�111�l1I�I11N�1111�111�111llIIIlIl1$MIIIIIIiIINIJ1Mil111r111�llhJpllll�l(l�llI�I11MiIlIl�Illll 2 2 2 d 2 a E- a Yx 2 2 2 2 s 2 iti ®_ 2 2 i 2 it 2 2 2 2 WNW 1WNW MIII11 O Bi °'LL FOLLOW THE TIGER TRAIL WITH BREATHLESS - INTEREST i Let EdisonMarshall, the master of mystery yst ry stories, lead you on the,pat's of adventure, excitement, thrills, 'o h s, I nrsance--read thisextraordinary story— "THE TIGER TRAIL' By Edison Marshall You will be lost in the adventures of his heroine, Josephine Southley You will fear as she feared, the prowling monster that dealt blows of death. YOU WILL BE FASCINATED AND THRILLED ft A STORY THAT ONLY 11 EDISON MARSHALL COULD 'WRITE 2 Continued in this Issue of the 2 s IIigiIl2Nllililllhllllllllitilliiiiliiitriolil�lli®I(If$1119t11i#ill�IIit�i1i 1114iilf�lf1111t11t11i�iliRlil■Ill�liiiillilifitflislll�itllflilRHl�ilf�lif®ilhlli!!i!(®; i E 2 2 2 2 2 Wingham, Advance - Times For Wingham Merchants Only Being one a a series of chats with Wingham businessmen in whisia it is suggested how they may increase their volume of sales. Tuning S Sales into uick Turnover N this, the last of a series of six advertisements, the Ibasic idea advanced in the preceding five is empha- sized. That idea, simply, is this You've got to put forth every effort to keep Wing - ham's folks coming to your stores and busing in your stores. Advertising in your local hone newspaper can help accomplish that aim. Not only your own advertising, but the advertising of the manufacturers whose goods you stock as well. You cannot get the advertising support of 'these manufacturers merely by wishing for it. You've got to make the manufacturers realize how necessary it 1s to you, if you are to sell their goods successfully. And you can make the manufacturers realize it by selling their salesmen Ivho call on you on Wingham— by interesting them in Wingham as an outlet for your merchandise—by interesting thein in your local, hoiue newspaper as the means to more sales of your merchan- dise in Wing -ham. This is an opportunity, you Merchants of Wingham, that; `you should make The most of, one that may mean all .the difference between ' slow, infrequent sales and, quick, profitable turnover, You need the advertising aid of the manufacturers. whose goods you stock-••• urge their salernen to recommend your local, home newspaper, The Wingharn • . v Times