The Wingham Advance Times, 1930-11-13, Page 2WI'NG>iiAM ADVANCE -TIMES
YOUR VALUABLES
Titre, theft and carelessness—allhave
your valuables at their mercy.
A safety deposit box costs so little
that no one need take the risk of
losing bonds, stock certificates, con-
tracts, wills or other valuable papers.
Ask us about this service.
THE
DOMINISN BANK
aNIIIIMINOMONOMMISONAMMIOND
A. M. Bishop, Branch Manager
Wiughain, Ontario.
JeNallMila
HEALTH SERVICE
Of The
CANADIAN MEDICAL ASSOC-
IATION
TREATMENT
The treatment of disease, in many
wises, represents an attempt to deal
with a condition whirl; should never
have occurred, because it could have
been prevented.
When illness does occur, treatment
should be secured. That is not the
time to discuss prevention. Early
treatment is really- preventive in large
measure; because such treatment very
often will prevent the development
of more serious conditions.
In practically every case cf advan-
ced disease, that case will have passed
through a period when the disease
was not severe or serious. if such
cases had been properly treated der -
big this early mild stage, much would
have .been accomplished in the pre-
asuutt
s4•
eTroubles
Ad
INDIGESTION
ACID STOMACH
H[ADACME
GASES -NAUSEA
00 Much
ACID
MANY people, two hour= after
eating, suffer indigestion as
they call it. It is usually excess acid.
'Correct it with an alkali. The best
dray, the quick, harmless and efficient
way, is Phillips Milk of Magnesia.
R has remained for 50 years the
standard with physicians: One spoon-
ful in water neutralizes many times
its volume in stomach acids, and at
once, The symptoms disappear. in
five minutes.
You will never use crude methods
when you know this better method.
And you will never suffer from excess
acid when you prove out this easy
relief.
Be.sure to get'the genuine Philips
Milk of Magnesia prescribed by
physicians for 50 years in correcting
vention of the severe later stages.
One of the conditions which exists
today and which in a tremendous 'a-
mount of suffering is the attempt
made by people to treat theenselves.
Proper treatment cannot bepres-
cribed without knowing what the con-
dition is that it is desired to treat. A
diagnosis must always precede treat-
meat. Diagnosis of disease is the
most important service the physician
gives his patient. The individual
thinks that the sympton is nothing
important, merely a little indigestion,
biliousness or some such condition,
and then he prescribes for himself,.
thinking that he knows what is wrong
with him. This is merely guess -work
however, What he should do is to
consult his doctor, who, after having
made a diagnosis, will prescribe what-
ever means are available to deal with
that particular condition.
It is comparatively easy to dia -
nose an acute or advanced case of
illness, but diagnosis is difficult in the
early stages. In other words, the un-
trained person is attempting to do the
mare difficult things, and it is only
when he is very ill that he calls in
his doctor. People still sal• that they
are "sick enough to have a doctor, -
Every minor illness does not lead
to an acute serious condition, but
there are tremendous numbers of ad-
ults coming to their physicians for
the first time, seeking relief for well-
advanced heart, kidney or other simi-
lar disease. They come to the phys-
ician at a time when medical science
'can do little for them. In the early
stages of the condition, they dosed.
themselves with this or that because
somenne had told them it was good,
and the result is that they missed' the
help of medical science when it might
have done a great deal for them.
The mare that people make use of
their physicians for bringng
their
aid the benefits of medical. science
early in =disease, the less often will
they call upon them to treat the long
drawn out serious conditions that
grow out of the improperly treated
or neglected illnesses. which are
thought to be of little or no import-
ance, and about which h is not nece-
ssary to secure advice.
In order to secure the most from
medical 'science, have a hearth exam-
ination
ination once a year as an aid'. to keep-
ing well.
Questions concerning Health, ad-
dressed to the Canadian Medical As
,sr,ciation, 184 College street, Toronto.
+will be answered personally by letter,
excess' acids, 25e and 60e a bottle
any drugstore. "Milk of Magnesia"
has been the U.' S. Registered Tracle ,:nsiblc crate is anynnc; wghi+
Mark of the Charles H. Phillips P
Chemical Company„slnee 1875. l agrees with us.
INONVINNNNIININNSININNININIENNNENNEINNINSINNIENNEI
Maitia
ist
CREAM
EGOS
POULT
mu
veli t QSHOitNE.
1'
'Pular Orrhestva ',seeder Owned
From TO oilto,
Will Osborne, a Tcronto boy, who
attended St. Andrews O'oliege a few
years ago, has ainxost over night be-
cotue the most popular orchestra
leader in the cotzn,ry, Capturing
New linnet with his crooning, the Co -
News and: Information
For the Busy Faritxatelr,
(Furnished by the Ontario
Department of Agriculture)
Housewife is Interested
That an enthusiastic response is
lumina Broadcasting, Company have being given by the city buyer to the
put him on the air over its Boast to Ontario Government's "'Use Ontario
coafan�ntailt ain until exceeds inhe Toronto number the mail .Products" campaign is shown by the
of any other radio celebrity. Osborne flood of letters received from listen-
receives more than a thousand letters ers-in to the daily broadcast by the
e day from admirers, most of whom
ask for his photograph. Department of Agriculture frorxi sea
William Osborne Olipha:nt was tion 'CFRB, Toronto. These short
born in Toronto. His father was a dailytalks which are addressed to the
musician and his grandfather was a city and town housewife discuss, xnar:-
/toted surgeon, His mother Lady
Oliphant, some years ago definitely ket conditions and prices, way of ut-
established her claim to the dis- ilizing Ontario farm produce, and in
tinguished Barony of Gask, in Scot- general.site at arousing interest in
.arid, farm produce from Ontario farms.
When William was eight years old
his mother took him to London to
study music, where he mastered the ' Three Years Show Progress
pianoand quickly learned harmony.
He was determined to learn every Can good potatoes be grown in
niusical instrument and has faithfully Ontario? The Central Ontario Po -
practiced six and seven hours a day tate Growers are showing that this
to accomplish this. provincecan' produce' potatoes which
After travelling throughout Europe F
and South America as a part of his need not take second place to those
early education his mother entered from any other province. The as-
him at St. Andrew's when he was sociation is demanding a premium
fourteen years old, and some may re- for their ','Tee -Pee" brand over New
nail him when playing in the school
band. there as William Oliphant. 13runswicks, -and is securing a ready
Notdesiring to trade on his family market that seems extremely pleased
name, nor on his. mother's title,
reatnery1
7.9
1♦
Wanted
Phone for Prices,
X
TUE 'UNITED FARMERS' CO-OPERATIVE t•`
COMPANY, LIMITED„
Wf tgbaf,. - Ontario
Phone 271
000000000010011
he with the quality offered. The situs -
decided to use'his first two names,
Will Osborne, as the shorter names tion today stands out in decided con-
were better suited anyway in the pro- trast with the conditions of three.
fession.
At the age of sixteen years he ran years ago when eastern carload ship-
away
hipaway from school and went to New ments invariably sold above locally
York—and` its music ---only to find it grown stocks.'
cold and heartless.
Broke and hungry, Osborne got a
job rustling freight for the Amer-
Royal Party for Girls
lean Express Co. in the Grand Cen- Asi in the case , of the Royal 500
tral Terminal. At night he would Party for. farm boys in previous years
visit the theatres, sit in the balcony, the chief object of the Royal Fair,',
and watch the individual musicians.
Then be heard the great Paul White- trip sponsored by the Department' for
man: jazz was the rage, and White- representative girls from each court -
man was the king of jazz. But the ty this year is to provide "opportunit
music was so loud, and so fast that
it made people almost dizzy. People ies and privileges which would other -
bad to shout so their conversation wise not be available, They will visit
could be heard by the person sitting all sections' of the Fair and witness
next to'them. interesting portions o£ ring programs.
He got an idea. He would have an In addition visits will be made to
orchestra and introduce just the op- ,
posite to jazz— slow tempo, quiet, educational institutions, manufactnr-
lilting tunas, crooning melodies—and ing plants and retail centres which.
he did. He got together seven men,
and at first nobody wanted to employ will be of particular interest and val-
him. He tried for three years to get ue to rural girls. The Department
recognition on Broadway and then he hopes that the trip will establish
had to qut and go to Texas. But he ideals on the part of the girls had introduced a new: style of. music
con-
-the slow tempo. cerned and enable them to return
Returning in 1929 he found home and introduce improvements.
Broadway: adopting his original style and methods which will .add to the
of. music, and other leaders were
crooning tunes and Osborne and his efficiency and comfort of the farm
slow tempo was anally recognized. home. The Department is providing
Radio 'demanded him, vaudeville railway fare, lodging accommodation
booked hini, musical productions and meals,
made him big offers, and Will Os-
borne and his orchestra became sud- Weekly Crop Report
denly one of the biggest attractions According to the weekly reports of
the agricultural representatives, fall
1/YEASDRIISIG MILLIONTHS. work is well advanced in many parts
of the province. In . a few counties
pan Measure One Thousandth Part from 75 to 80 per cent. of thefall
of Cigarette Paper. a snow a short rim ,ago which left
The British Physical Laboratory the ;round in good condition but the
has just reported' an important dis- ;
covery, The Salt Tower of the Tower dryness has been a serious handicap.
of London is moving in the dirotion In Dundas the milk supply took a 30
a
is about the thickness of the average of Se tons per acre of sugar beets
pin. This seems a small enough is reported from Essex wliil.e Lamb-
what
measurement, but it is nothing to ton states that the crop is above the
what can be done nowadays. average of the Bast three years.
If a steel bar half an inch thick
and a foot in length is arranged to ditches,
project' horizontally, the distance The report' deals for the greater
that it bends when a fly settles upon part with the difficulty experienced
it is quite easily measurable. Did
you know that walls grew? They do. by farmers in plowing, on account of
The Laboratory bas been experiment- the dry weather. Bruce County had
oneo . itsown wall-
ing on f w s at Ted plowing is completed while in others
Ted-
dington. A wire of invar, an alloy not over 50 per cent, has been done.,
which is unaffected by temperature,
is stretched between two supports In Eastern Ontario there appears to
along the wall. From. a comparison be an increased interest In drainage.
of these it is easy to determine that 1u several counties, it is reported,
the wall is getting a little longer each
oat the stage.
of the, Thames at the rate of half a per cent. drop in one week. A yield
millimetre a year. Half a millimetre
iti
year that many farmers are talking advant-
One measuring instrument is age of ideal weather conditions to
known as the millionth machine. It clean' out and open up satisfactory
has no difficulty in measuring a thick-
ness equal to one thousandtb part of
that of a cigarette paper. Preparing Turkeys
There is a quay wall _ on the
Thames which looks solid enough,
but measurements show that it moves
a thousandth of an inch or so from
tho river as the tide rises, and comes
baeir again as it falls, •
"T'i'14-Y.”
Word Has aVery 'Wide Meaning in
Scotland,
The word"funny"has a vet d
nn u y"y wide
meaning in Scotland. It does not
merely els-reify amusing or entertain-
ing; it is more frequently used to
describe something interesting, un-
usual, or even alarming. In child-
hood to feel fanny on ti Monday
morning often; meant a day oft
school; it was a vague form of 11T -
nese that might be anything, and was
safer than complaining of anything
local.
"Ile's a funny character" does not
Imply that he is an amusing person, leo not contturkeys for fattening
but that he ie rather shady. But per-
haps the funniest u$e of "funny" was i especially if they have been run oit a
that of the old lady who asked her
little grandson when he returned
from a 'visit to the neighboring' gas-
works, "Was it funny, Johnnie; was
It funny?"
Turkey ho=vers are now bcginniug
to finish or fatten their birds for the
Christmas, holidays, it is customary
to begin the process of preparing
the luscious turkeys " fcr the nation's
festive dinner tables by feeding them
small amounts of grain which grad-
ually are increased until, the birds are
on full feed. Due
tothr
large
e s
uppI
y
�
of wheat available, this grain should
be used to advantage in the fatten-
ing ration. Wheat has nearly the same
fattening gualitites as corn, but does
not produce the rich yellow color of
flesh that yellow corn does. It is im-
portant, however, that all grains be
} ould
'
t
free from moldiness and they Y s1
be fed in hoppers to counteract cer-
tain diseases that cause heavy loss.
Thiers
ay, November '1tih, 193tp
WALKER
STORES, LIMITED
ATS f l RESSES z FIATS
THE SEASON'S BEST AT EXCEPTIONAL PRICES
laczcsoasmaxamaarawmaammarmunmarsogilitli
Zinc-l3lende.
A. metal found in. Southwest Af
ries, and known as zinc-blende, pro-
duces abright light when struck or
rubbed, riven under water.
Tubercaxlosle.
Deaths from tuberculosis, which.
were two per thousand eat the begin-
ning of line century, are now reduced
to one per thousand,
Measures Daylight.
A. machine for measuring daylight,
called an integrator, will iteeeord the
amount of daylight received o'veir PAY
period of tiiao.
C
For ' Ladies' & Children
made from This season's
Finest Cloths, trimmed
with the Latest Furs,
compiled in the . newest
range of styles.I'riced within reach of all,
DR
S
E
H
AT
That are smart
although very
low in Price, Sty-
les & Colors as
you want them
for this Season's Wear.
For Women and Children in
Felts and Velvets, another
new shipment, just arrived,
on Sale this week -end at
Special Prices.
The Famous
D&A
.CORSETS
Corsets &
Corselettes
s Brassiers &
Bandeaus always Fresh in our Stock.
`PURITAN MAID"
The Widely Known Hose
of QUALITY
WOOD'S
(Lavender Line)
GORDON
(Quality Lingerie)
ARE MAKES OF LINGERIE
WE FEATURE
More Wear. For Your Money
in Every Garment.
In many Shades and
Prices, Obtainable
at all times , to
suit every
Purse,
WALK -ER STORES, LIMITED
The Favorite Shopping Centre
meat by 'cooking after the details of 1
the contest in each city, it is expect-
ed.that judging will take place ace o
n or
about Nov. 15. The Royal Winter
Fair is co-operating with the Depart-
ment in conducting this contest.
Plans to Aid Farmers
Hon. Thomas L. Kennedy, Millie -
ter of Agriculture, annauteced in a
recent address that the -Ferguson
Government through the Department
proposes in the next few years to
spend more money for the benefit of,
O tario farmers than ever before' in
the rovince's history. He stated 'fur-
ther that within five years it was
hoped to dot the province with high
schools teaching scientific agriculture
and domestic science, similar to the
would
to
Rid crown
A survey1
one at
Ridgetown.
be matte of the province to deter-
mine what was grown for export and
what was purchased, in order to in-
crease s=ense farmers revenues. Another
proposal to which effect had already
been given, was the spending of more
of the Department's appropriation on
marketing, in discovering and holding
direct markets for the produce of Ou-
tario farmers,
range, for range birds cannot ;stand A Timely. Address
confinement,
Addressing the St. Thomas Ki-
wanis Club, W. R. Reek, superintend
Window Display of Ontario Forth crit of the Ridgetowit experimental
Products Farin, predicted that when the present
The Ontario Department of Agri- period of depression and reduced
culture has a lark program mapped prices for fartn prodttet:s had passed,
c.ut planned to extend the demand for about ten her cent, of those in the
Ontario farm products in the cities agricultural industry who he deserib-
and towns of Ontario, A new feat- as. "fair weather farmers"' would be
ure of this program will be a window- out of business, while the farmers who
dressing display for the retail mer- weather the storm would be thinking
chants of Ontario 'ate, This display more scrlotasly than they have in the
will consist of Ontario fault produce past. He declared that it takes per
alone and is panned to interest the iods of depression to make farmers
Ontario housewife as well as thet'e- realize the importance of culling the
t i`rl nterchant, Cash prizes and rib- unprofitable cows from their herds
bons will be. awarded, Loeal'city or- and the boarder hens from their
r aniratroris will assist than Govern- flocks, He criticized the docteinc of
reduced farm production; at the sante
time advising that the farmer should
endeavor toro u
p d ce jest as much.
grain on a smaller acreage and devote
thew other land to production • or
roughage and pasture,
Raised 2,000 Turkeys
In its' effort to promote the pro-
fitable raising of turkeys, the Ontario
Government established a. turkey farm
in the County of Norfolk. The ob-
ject was to show that birds of this
variety can be raised with profit. The
experiment has proven quite success-
%l. This year more than 2000 tur-
keys were hatched and raised on the
farm. A' h time short t me ago one thousand
of them were sold at 30 cents per
pound. What is possible on the Nor-
folk farm is equally so onother farms.
in the province. Turkeys can, be rais-
ed and sold profitably at a much low-
er price than that demanded about
Thanksgiving and Christmas.
Gentldnient frequently:marry brun-
e'ttes before they begin preferring the .
blondes.,
Wash Day:
Is Easy
Now
Particularly if you have
a modern . Connor Elec-
tree' Washer in your
home. No tearing of
.clothes, no back -break-
ing work. Just fill the
tub with hot water, drop
in the clothes, turn a
switch and the work is
done.
Wi l -..l.am UMW
Crawford Blocks
S orxmiSSiO
Phone 156.