The Wingham Advance Times, 1928-08-09, Page 2°W INGI'IAM ADVANCE-TIMES
Thursday, August 9:11, 1928
DTAT= 1BY COMMANDER.
TEA
Our experts search through thousands 'of tea
samples to find Just the right teas to go in '
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UNIVERSITY OF WESTERN ONTARIO
,ARE YOU A. GRADUATE NURSE?
The University offers .four courses
for nurses. One five-year course for,
the degree of B.Sc. (in. Nursing), i.e.,
two years in Arts and three years in
Nursing and Public Health. Three one-
year courses for graduate nurses lead-
ing to the certificate in Public Health
(C,B.H.N.);, certificate of
Instructor in Nursing
(C.I.N.); and certificate in
Hospital Administration
(C.E.A.)
The Certificate Courses are
recognized as the best courses of
their kind.
For additional in-
formation apply to:—
R. P. R. REV1LLE,
Ph.D., Registrar,
London, Canada.
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leiEggs, Cream and
Poultry
!a
Highest Market Prices.
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Let us have your order for Ice. Cream, Soft Drinks
Etc., for your Pic-Nic or Garden Party. We will
deliver Ice Cream and Pop.
i4
W. B. THOMPSON, Branch Manager.
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Wellington Produce Co., Ltd.
Win ham, Ont.
Phone 166 Wingham
Branches: Wingham, Tara, Wiarton, Grand Valley
Head Office, Harriston, Ontario
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THE HYDRO SHOP
FRIGIDAIRE
Drop in at the Hydro Shop and see a demon-
stration of Electric Refrigerators.
Make your own ice from pureclear water.
Preserve your food in a cold dry atmosphere.
Wingham Utilities Commission
Crawford Block.
Phone 156.
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OUR TRUCKS ARE GATHERING ■_
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FARMERS'1
�� . � ,1�►P.,. RATIVE
'�'IIiL UNITEDUNITED
COMPANY, LIMITED.
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W"Inehlln. Ontario.
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Cream and Eggs
CALL 271 FOR TRUCK SERVICE
OPEN SATURDAY EVENINGS'
Phone 2/1
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IMONO masso Igol ILII IMI1fi IN ll osol
New 0. O. in Mufti Got ()pinions
About .tits Popularity.
An enterta.inxnent of the 35th Bat-
talion, C. E, F'., carried the command-
er's memory bath to the early days
of the organization of this famous
lighting , unit, Lieut -Col. Bick hav-
ing been appointed to organize and
command the 35tb Battalion, being a
rural officer and one of those modest
kind of chaps, was very anxious to
know Just how his appointment was
going to take with the rank and file.
So ,proceeding to the armory in To-
ronto one afternoon where quotas of
the Q. 0. R., Royal Grenadiers and
48th Highlanders, which formed" a
part of the battalion, were drilling
(the colonel was in mufti) sauntered
up and down among the different
squads, Noticing a squad of the 48th
standing easy, he approached the big
Scot's sergeant and entered into con-
versation with him, asking all sorts
of silly questions: Then, leading
along, he ,sated 'who was . in charge
of thesemen. "Oh, I am," said the
sergeant, in his broad Scotch, and
shoving out his chest. "well," said
the colonel, "do you have charge of
the whole battalion." "Oh, no," said
the sergeant. "Weil, what I wanted
to know, said the colonel, "is who
'is boss when they are all formed up
into a battalion." "Oh, oh (and his.
hand went up to scratch his head)
now, just waft a wee." And after a
little thinking he said: "Oh, his name
is Bick; from out in the . country,"
The colonel said: "Did you ever see
him? No, he has not been around
yet, but they say he is a d good
fellow."
So the colonel left for downtown
feeling that things were not going to.
be too bad. A few. days later the
colonel was inspecting these same
squads at work. Corning up the ser-
geant he said: "Well, Scottie, what
do you think of your commanding
officer?" ''Scottie, now remembering
the previous conversation, said: "Oh,
you put one over on me."
MIXED-UP Rum BOY.
Organs In Chest sand .Abdominal C.av-
ity Are Completely Transposed.
A Hindu. lad of 13 years of age,
who was not long since admitted in-
to the Osmaaia General Hospital at
Hyderabad, India, has the doctors all
guessing.
He was suffering from a complaint
of the knee joint, and when they got
their stethoscopes and other instru-
ments busy none of them could be-
lieve their ears. Outwardly there
seemed to ; be nothing out of the
common with this lad. but, making
the usual routine medical examina-
tion at the hospital, the surgeon was
surprised to find all absence of heart
beats at the part where the heart is
usually located.
An X-ray examination of the whole
body in the upright position and af-
ter what is known as the Bismuth
Meal , in the newly -equipped X-ray
laboratory, with its magnificent plant,
revealed the :startling fact :that all
the organs in the chest and abdominal
cavity were completely transposed.,
The liver occupied the deft side,
the heart was Iocated on the right
side, the spleen quite on the oppo-
site side to the normal, and the stom-
ach lay ha an inverse direction to
the usual.
Caeeum, the fruitful area of ap-
pendicitis, was fognd to be on the
left side of the abdomen, and the de-
scending and ascending colons were
quite opposite to their usual positions.
This boy enjoys life: as much as
other health human beings, and yet
is en amazing proof of nature's pow-
er of adaptation. It is thought that
the early influence of the larger left
Venus trunks becoming twisted dur-
ing the first few weeks of the em-
bryonic We is chiefly responsible for
this rare transposition of all the in-
ternal organs.
Eve's First Sewing xessou.
How did Adam and. Eye learn to
sew "broad, smooth leaves together?"
Sir John Bland Sutton (quoted by
the British .Medical Journal) sug-
gested
uggested in a lecture at Liverpool that
they may have profited by watching
the tailor bird spin its thread and
sew the edges of adjacent leaves to-
gether to form its nest in the trees
of the Garden of Eden.
Sir John was .explaining that sur:
geons are still searching for the per-
fect stitching material for wounds,
and said that plants, insects, and ani-
mals had been ransacked for the !deaf
material.
It was by no means improbable,
he added, that tendon for thread and
thorn for needle were the first sewing.
materials used by prim.itiee' man for
closing .wounds.
There was no material used by
tailor or cobbler which had not been
of service to surgeons tor stitching
wounds.
Fong Gude for Pilots.
A new' gyroscople indicator, to en-
able airplane pilots to fly in fog and
at night, has been adopted by the
British Air Ministry.
The device is k io'wn as the Schilo-
vsky-Cook indicator, and tests have
been carried out for three years.
It is four inches in diameter, the
gyroscope being rotated by a few
volts batteryo The smallest deviation
of the airplane from a gi!cen straight
course Is signalled by the appearance
of red and green luminous sectors on
the dial bf the instrument, which en-
ables the pilot to rectify his course
at once, even though. no land marks
can be seen.
'wawa thrtt Goes I"'brevet.
A watch which, it is claimed, will
gd for ever without rewinding has
been made by Calixto Orbero, a' young
Watchmaker, of Lerida (Catalonia).
This watch shows the seconds,"mm-
utes, hours, days, weeks, months, .and
i est e
ears It h r
v hots b night yg y ght or
day, the day of the creek, the day
ole thy, month, leap years, the sirs of
the zodiac, the lluteber of 'weeps re-
maining in the year, the time of wine
rise and sunset, the phases of the
moon, and a number of other things,
'I11ere are more than $OO parts fin
the watch, *Web ; was made in 1,100
hours of spate -tulle work,
F VO TE 1IY N`.
Sweet Saviour, bless us ere we go,
Thy' word into our Minds instill,
And make our 'lukewarm hearts to.
&ow
'With lowly love and fervent will.
Through life's long day and death's
dark night,
O gentle Jesus, be our Light.
The day is gone, its hours have run,
And Thou hast taken count of all,
The scanty triumphs grace hath won,
The broken vow, the frequent fall.
Through life's long day and death's
dark night,
O gentle Jesus, be our Light,
Grant us, dear Lord, .from evil ways
True absolution and release;
And. bless us, more than in past days,
With purity and inward peace,
Through life's long day and death's
dark night, .
O gentle Jesus, be our ;Light.
Do more than pardon; give us joy,.
Sweet fear, and sober liberty,
And simple hearts without alloy
That only long to be like Thee.
Through life's long day and death's
dark night,
o gentlelesus,.be•our Light.
Labour is sweet, for Thou hast toil'd;
And care is light, for Thou hast
cared;
Ali 1 never let our works be soil'd
With strife, or by deceitLes,, •3:
Through Iife's long day and death's
dark night,
O gentle Jesus, be our Light.
For all we love, the poor,the sad,
The sinful, unto Thee we call;.
O let Thy mercy make us glad:
Thou art our Jesus,` and our all..
Through life's long 'day. and deaths
dark night,
O gentle Jesus, be our Light.
This pretty and popular hymn was
intended for use at daily evening ser-
vice at the. Brompton, Eng., Roman
Catholic Oratory, and has in the last
verse, omitted in most of the hymn-
books using it, a mention of the pat-
ron saint of the oratory, St. Philip
Neri:-"Mary and Philip near us . be."
It was written in 1849 by the Rev.
F. W. Fabre, who was the son of a
Church of England clergyman, edu-
cated at Oxford, where he won a fel-
lowship. He was ordained in 1887,
and in 1843' became rector of Elton
in Huntingdonshire. While there he
published several religious and pole-
mical works, defending very strongly
in some of ahem, the historic church
to which he belonged. He also pub-
lished at that period several poetical
works, including "Lives of the Saints:'
In 1846 he followed his friend and
leader Cardinal Newman into the
Church of Rome and was given
charge of a .school at St. Wilfrid's,
Staffordhire. While there he turned:
his hand and his poetical talents to
the writing of hymns, and .published
eleven of them in a Tittle book for
the use of his scholars. This little
book was the beginning of a Iong
roll of valuable hymns in use now by '.
Christians of all denominations. l
Three years later he left for London ,
to establish, an "Oratory" (so called
from the Latin word for "prayer'') of`.
the "Priests of the'Cgngregation of
St. Phillip Neri," of whish order
Latin, "Glory be to Jesus" from the
advisable a few years later to remove
this Oratory to Btoinptoti where Dr.
Fabre lived and worked until he died,
St, Philip Neri, the so-called Apostle
of Rome, one of the holiest of men,
taught the glory of serving God in
common life, and insisted on making
God's services in church beautiful.
with fine music.
In his preface to his next collection
of hymns, "Jesus and Mary, or Cath-
olic Hymns for Singing and Reading,"
he says', "It was natural that an Eng-
fish •son_ of St, Philip should feel the
want of a collection of English Cath-
olic hymns fitted for singing. The
dew in the "Garden of the Soul" were
all that were at hand, and of course
they were not numerous enough to
furnish the requisite variety. As tram
all ye Faithful," "Jesus, the very
thought of Thee,""Jerusalem the Gol-
den," "Brief Life is here . Our Por-
tion," "As now the sun's declining.
rays," and scores of others from the
Latin, "Glory be to Jesus" from the.
Italian, "0 happy band of pilgrims,"
"The day is past and over," &c., from
the Greek, "Guide me, Q' Thou Great:
Redeemer,' from the Welsh, "Throu-
gh the night of doubt and sorrow,"
from the Danish, "We plough the
fields and scatter," and Luther's great
hymn T. ' Carlyle put into English
form the German, are only `a very
few of the popular translations, the
poorer as well as the richer members
of English congregations, are glad to
sing.
Our hymn, "Sweet Saviour," is one
of the hymns ,in Dr. Fabre's "Jesus
and Mary," and first appeared in it
in 1852, 'three years after it was put
into use at the Oratory. It had seven
verses as first written, the. last one
being left out of most hymnals. It
came into popular use, very rapidly,
lielped,ii;no doubt, by the simple old.
English tune "Stella," which, by an
unknown author, appeared in its full
form in 1851 in a tune book entitled
"Easy Hymn. Tunes."
Dr. Fabre died in 1868 leaving a
legacy 'to the whole Church Catholic
of some one hundred and fifty hymns,
some of which are'amcng those most
highly valued by English speaking
people, as for instance, "IVfy God,
how wonderful Thou art," "0 come
and mourn with me awhile," "Hark,
hark, my soul, angelic songs are swel
lin," "Souls of men why will ye scat
ling," "Souls,of men why will 3 c scat-
iour that calls you," andl our hymn
"Sweet Saviour bless .us."
SIXTEEN HORSE ACT WITH
SPARKS CIRCUS
Requires a Vast Amount of Patience
in the Training — Coming to
Goderich Friday, Aug. try
Patience is the watchword and a
goodly supply of it must have been
very essential in the training of six-
teen—or rather seventeen to be exact
--"liberty" or "rotation" horses, for
horses, let is be known, are just • as
moody as the most temperimental
Prima -Donna and an "understudy"
must be carried at all times in case
of sickness, accidents—or obstinacy.
And right here permit us to say that
sixteen is just four horses larger than
!any' similar act in the entire world,
!When one considers that each annual
! is individually trained and that mon-
ths are required in the training pro-
f cess, can you imagine' the enormous
;amount of patience required in the
training process, can you imagine the
l enormous amount of patience requir-
ed in the training of sixteen high-
, strung German thorobreds?
When Mgr. Chas. Sparks of the
Sparks Circus contracted with John
T. Benson, American representative
of the famous Hagenbeck Trained An -
1 imal Farms of Stellinghen, Germany,
for a group of sixteen ""rotation" hor-
ses for the modest sum of, fifty thous-
and
housand perfectly good American dollars,
half of the horses were to be chest-
nuts and the other half greys and
none to be over the five years of'age
limit—he Iittle knew what a vast un-
dertaking
he had entered into. First
of all the horses must be perfectly
matched in pairs and of pedigreed
stock, for . animals • with a superior
brain prove to be more susceptible to
the art of the wily trainer. It requir-
ed just eight months of difficult scout
duty of the. Hagenbeck lieutenants be-,
fore sixteen perfectly matched horses
were obtained and even the sacred pre-
cincts of the Kaiser's private stables
were invaded in the quest. 'They were
then turned over to the world's mas-
ter trainer, Prof. Ernst Kloske with
instructions to educate them to a de-
gree of perfection never attained by
any other equine group. After four-
teen months' Post Graduate course hi
the Trained Animal School of Hagen -
beck at Stellinghen they were pto-
claimned by the world's most compe-
ent horsemen to be trained to the very
highest degreei
g of perfection and rea-
dy for their American debut with the
thouglits•and feelings, and consequent-
ly
famous Sparks Circus where they are
the poor do not seem to take to
them. The domestic wants of the
.now,prese'nting a series of astounding
evolutions and maneuvers that are ab-
C)'ratory, too, keep alive 'the feeling solutely the most marvelous the world
that something of the .sort was need-
has ever seen and a1i without the co
ed, though at the saute time the au- inmand of man. Sparks Circus is due
to. invade Goderich on Friday, August
r7, and anrentire nrioltnted, section of
the mile -long street parade is coin-
prised of this famous battalion of
thoroughbreds,
Seats can be secured Circus day at
CJp-town ticket office Satre price as
at show grounds.
thor's ignorance of music appeared
in sortie measure to disqualify hint
kr the work of; supplying the defect,
Eleven, I however, vv ver of the hymns were
written,. most of them, for particular
tunes, anis on particular occasions,
and became very popular with court -
try congregations."
Dr. 7t"abre was tremendously wrong
itt his idea that poor people do not
"take to" translated hylnus. "0 come
Charles Kneehtei, of Meaford, is'
spending a:few days in town,
WALKER STORES Ltd
LADIES'
SUMMER
HATS
Clearing
1.00 Each
LADIES'
SUMMER
DRESSES
Clearing
$2.95 Each
LADIES'
CREPE
DRESSES
Clearing
5.95 Each
ROMPERS
and PANTIE
DRESSES
Clearing
59c Each
NUMODE
CORSEL-
ETTES
All sizes.
Special
89c Each
Full Size
Package
KOTEX
Special
35c Each
FINE
VOILE
GOWNS
Clearing
79c Each
Woods Ulwear
(Seconds)
Vests ....$1.19
Slips .2.19, 3.19
Bloomers .1.99.
Gowns ... 2.89
Comb's. . 1.89
Month of
AUG UST
Specials
45c Fancy Towels 29c
15c Wash Cloths 11c
25c, Turkish Towels . ... 20c
15c Dish Cloths Ilc
45c Colored Voile... ...... 22%/2c
Odd Lines Wash Goods 19c
Fancy Broadcloths . 39c
Voiles, Rayons, etc. ..........39c
$1.25 Crepes and Rayons
To $2.00 Crepes & Rayons .1.19
To 39c Child's Bloomers ....21c
To 49c Ladies' Bloomers . 32c
25c Children's Vests -. .... ...19c
25cadies' Vests
L .. .19c
Child's Fancy Som 19c
Child's Silk Sox, 3 pair . $1.00
Turntop Stockings . ..29c
Ladies' Silk Hose (Seeds) .. 25c
$1.00 Plain Silk Hose .69c'
$1.50 Pure Silk Hose 1 19
Men's Bal. Combinations ...79c
Bal. Shirts or Drawers 49c
Merino Shirts or Drawers 39c
Boys' Cotton Jerseys, 3 for $1.00
Canvas Work Gloves Ilc •
jersey Work Gloves, 2 for 25c
50c Lisle Socks ' 19c
65c Silk Socks .:. 39c
Wool Work Socks ....29c
Men's Fine Braces .......
Men's or Boys' Belts ..........39c
$1.75 Khaki Pants ...... $1.39
Boys' Pants or Bloomers ....69c
Boys' $2.00 Wash Suits ... $1.39
Pine Linen Hkfs . 19c
21 Piece Tea Sets ..... • , .. $2.95'
Earthenware Tea Pots 69c
10 Qt. Alumintun Kettles 89c
SHOP FOR, VALUES AT "
Wingham's Big Sore
"Air Costs nothing--laci of 'it means
miles off the life of yotw tires.'"
MORE
than half your tire troubles are caused
by raider -inflation. There's a
correct pressure '
for every size tire according to its Toad. Two or
three pounds under this will take miles off its
running life.
Near enough wont do. Use a reliable gauge end
be sure.
Or, call at this depot once a week and let las loot
over your tires. We'll watch for bruises, rim cuts
and embedded flints. At least twice a season let use
remove each tire and look for inside fabric breaks.
It will mean extra mileage—and dollars off tire bills.°
A Iominiori Tire will give marvelous
mileage tfyou treat it right,
DOMINION
WINGHAM, a BELGRA YV
E
W. C. L +'IARC ,1. A. YOUNG
tiORI?ll—R 1, CARSON ec SON
tis