HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance Times, 1929-02-21, Page 2Gives coldweather health at low cost
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I' fora 41{l;er walk with Go&
A cairn and heavenly frame/
A light to shine upon the :road
That leads me to the Iambi
]here is the blessedness i. knew
\-'hen first 1 saw the Lord'
'here is the soul -refreshing view
Of jesua and His Word?
hat peaceful hours I once enjoyed!
How sweet their memory stili]
int they have Zeit an aching t old
Th« ovaria can never fill.
R, talria, 0 holy Dove! r- turn,
`Sweet messenger of rest'.
]latei the sins that made Thee incrust,
And drove Thee #rcaYii my breast,
'The dearest z{xct1 I have 10: 1,11 n,
11 ba:te'er 7iaat idol b,
Help I 4 to tear it from Thy ti3rone,
And worship -only Thee!
So shall my walk be close with God.
taint and serene m,< frame:
Se purer 'light ,hall mart the road
That leads me to the Lamb!
enter, be anti to.:St'S..t-
,a :l Ytite h altaty p ,:ti 'r tai: ;, l:ran
•$...JS4"'i,?.. rellia'citts P ettar, it tae x"sitor=
ri. akablo becauset a:: ].i, ion t;
r.
I �':�a-1i...- 1 ,Lii':teat
Ti'C _ «? .:t,. - .S. •
...ii
ins 17.:111„,c. n:,-;•"•7.
-':;e - l 7.:::17 t!at o:t:ei scholara
CSe-ted ;'flare than .he ust.al t3rl;tal
cy of s.;niors to their rantiara. Hi
lire \t a, a . misery to hint tii1..c, anti
't was a happiness to hint to sc:a;'a.,.
:n eatrance to the ramous V c min-
-tc r . cllt`,ul, within the VET) pra:cnrcts
. t the,: ; loriou :;obit y, which has,
tarncid. out -many +f our most noted.
Army -writers, C1rns-k- 'tt e; z_r am --
gat them.
There Cowper r spent .s:,uze happy
°tars . Genial -companions, autc•sl„
a^lix7rri-
was the 2tterwarda reneiwned,
1 rat
India administrator, 'Warre
r
Iiasti-a., a helped in his derelopnlent,
and he became an adept cricketer and
eotbafler. as well as a ready rh rrne-
Villi leaxing schecol he .crit"
lta
study of law, his fellow cicri:
ryer's office being the cei-bratrd
lord Thurlow.. Fascinatedby a
st zn,. Theodora Cowper, he ;made i{,•:c•e
to her in poetry and ie person, but
late engagement to hiin aaas forbidden
by'' r father, on the grnurd of their'
:elatioizship to ore another. Theo -
tiara obeyed her father but never
t:ra eel to admire her devoted lover.
l: a ter life, both she and ger sister, ,
l Lady iieseetb, often gave hint fin-
i arcial and other encourageanent, But
Oto Cowper the blow was a heavy one,
and induced those terrible fits of reel-
anchoiy, which persisted throughout
his life and developed finally into in-
senity.
However, he passed his-:sarniaa-
tions for the bar, and, straiteaed in
means through the death of his Fath
ea, supported himself in part b4' writ -
Mg ballad; a' iuth \etre sold on print-
ed slips, and by literary work ear
'strnze of the magazines.
1•,.rfortui atea for him, tit was ar-
tc rated clerk of the Journals ,f
z..-
2 ,use of Lords, art imp{orta:i: and
]restive ^set?: aka To c ez .' tint: -
pointnient lie had tett appear,and aite
ar& c ability to keep ri.^:atcs,
etc.. before a caminitlee of the Haase.
\t� atibt foolish, avaggi:h friarals
'magnified - the importance of such
ctantererc , which in his case Witt 'd
probab y have been only I r xsal, and
-i tier •u_ lay ae; ht lost his ea
i n, and attetapted tt"s i3'h. his own
life.
Farturtately for hiln he was
^tatted to the mat- {:,t Dr. Nadia"
Cotton,.. a y,o ly; Lt,\ -r sfc.ziaii't
Saki? cases, :n avriie l,t byTnns.
R y
ic-,i d .n .ti.t•.
t..: ' ..
a7.7717 SI' Alba
.e.. 1.. i..a I:;
t. i 1 1 t
Mrs.:.rain . 1-i 7:1.., .:1.. ,"tea::
yin,.. aa,zl it was
- re cw.1
:lee letter after hiss leen:.-e1 r':1 si+'g `.
ca;:e ref b :r .,r «zat years, after her
I;u band's ii�atttthat ziZtll3' b refs
•Yl7Ci3. ,a reason.
Meanwhile lin: had met xvl::rr .lee
Reverend John Newton, the convert-
convert-
atv,-.•:r, with avitom he lived as a
><t, -v., -':er 'n re ,u. ', r3: and in
compeeine and peibla long the one
well krc.wa, and le...pular " t:liney Hy--!
john XcSa c{; LEov a strong, 'pupti-
i Ciristisr, preacher and parish
clergyman, man, was a mantic of gloom
dtararter, alwaye mindful of his e-t•'ii
past, and hit influence upon Coweterl
was, probably rather harmful than c th-
erwiee. However, Cowper did write
atiticli charming poetry, entitling him
to a good place among; British poets,1
as well as some eighty or hire;. hy-
ninti, several of Ilion the finest in;
anti'
X° hymnbook of standista~ i; vs-itll-
out some or other of such loyriins aa
'"Gotl. moves in a mysterious 'Fray,"
'Hark nay soul, it is the Lord,"
"There is a fi`funtain filled with
Moeda' ::God of my life, to Thee 1
jiiiiitmasumaiiirsuinwasiimiressmatunintimuunig
•
u•
•
X111.
land Creamery
Buyer
t ":-•esu lahc'i r Thy peaple meet
"SOI tinea a . iilsl1 :. surprises,- x`1" {:
mercies countless as the sands' .ant
the one printed herewith.
A gentle, shy, .nervous shillposd
rtsst;d William Cowper's frame. In
AO ANC -TIMES
iTIRESNOWSHOES
ME:rAC ti, .Oh' THE
R�'T1FT.
Tats fits of deepest depression he spent 1d4Ixiy cddztttt s'e I' tett is
Dive in his :garden at Olney, two or':`c~ . re 'e +t;z•.—
r•ee tunic. hares, .aicssY timid o an- :`coley of teeet .hare Matted Baia--
kbwi a problem
anni'1
much of his time in a little su
er- t ro . c y
is Nature tz aviator—
Is,
i tut
itizaIs, his eloses t corxapanitnn:. Tel -
.4'S a poetical, and also as a prose
ea titer to a more than ordinary de -
e, he won a :;rand reputation for
himself
Alwaye fearful s f Ms standingaaltin'
his Maker, it was remarked after lois `
'death in 1800, that on his face:
1 "there mingled as it were a holy sur
,prise" Was that caused, ons: WM-
jderv, by the nett consciousness death's
I change brought with it of the am-
"azingly loving forgiveness of his nen
reply Father, the tender all -slider
asta'nding mercy of Je us Christ, and
the bountiful opening of the treasur-
es of :heavenly wisdom by the "'Hely
Dove," God the Holy: Ghost?
Splendid as is the fame of the poet
Cowper, it may yet be that: the fut-
ure will remember him best as the
author of some .:f our most highly
treasured ha -inns.
ASHFIELD
Mr. Johnson Rot>;lstoia, 'nearRipley,
spent Sunday with his daughter, Mrs.
Cyril Caznniaell.
Mr, George Hunter bought the 20.0
acre farm on The 12th ccn..., formerly.';
owned by Mr. Isaac Andrew and now
occupied by!'Jr; Pepper.
Mrs. David Hackett, iaf
now,
spent' a few days with #ser da'u.•ltter,
Mrs. Harry Hackett.'
'Mrs. Ritehardohne in, 9th con.,
spent two weeks' with her sinter, Man
Wilfred Heilman; Din-' -]lies Orn.
The atiek Brothers ers have,:finiehed
drawing lig as from C,;cil : Mullin
bush, to 1... ckncaT kr Mr. Datum
mere a. CJ. T33erL'
Large cargoes of wheat .'art, be-
ing sb ip:ee. 'o - Jepan and he
Orient '•.'F".. oagh Vancouver these
ws Ii' seem:.: like. venom,
.k+ Ni- e i?t e to sendfie= to
•
aarna tattaaaaaaa tat?, old
+f.*,at 3 .a"s c::aoi
taa.if t'
Steel s ' - : Y 't fc- gbt
11.• 411aa;!. r "1.4•7g s...:r>'i3', tin
t, fez. e p nT`i' 1' be alt'
s:.rlaettetrraalan :navazinin .
-t a load of7 •�
'z`dun i..
Pur-barl;z n ,..ve.
z� ci n m2ry
branches. one of the most recent
being the organization in ' anito-
ba 'of the Manitoba Muskrat Breed -
era Association The Sod" piths
to study mtnskrat b: tad ng condi-
tams
oadt tiems and to Investigate all pluses
of the industry_
In a recent speech at Kitchener,,
Ontario, E. W. Beatty, -ehairnart
and president -of the Canadian
Pacific pointed out that the aver
age freight rate per ion per mile
in Canada is about 524 per rent
dower than in the U.S., and that
the average of C•anraiian grata
rates is 40 per teem fewer.
The Trans -Canada will cross the
continent in an hour and a 'halt
less time tbound, and an hour
fess w stbotned than it did last
year. This dens not mean that
Canada has got arty smaller, but
that the Canadian Pacific Railway
is running the famous flyer on
an improved schedule.
Penny postage, a angurate d at
Christmas, is wtrridng well and
brim about a notable inereaae
in letter mails from Oanada to the
British Isles, according to federal
postai 'officials. It is ea'Eitaated
that the increase in the ceurss
of •a year would be 'suet' as to
biiset the $a,0O,ip0il estimated re-
duction itt revenue by the pearly
rate.
wan
farms. 1
hit,thed t=
it take a garage
Filar razz;
the mo
the sixth suocessiwe yL sr
Dean Sinclair Laird sof T medoaaid
` olloge, Ste. +"nue de Bellevue,
qartebee, will eonduet an •all ex-
penselour aoross Canaria turd
back, stattlag Trow Toronto
•Icily 22, and iantitrg tor :'1 tla �5
The party travels itt .a, speeini t:•rain
with a, baggage mar 'titled IUP- as tt
satt3'4tcot drrlss`ing-rotrin.
rig *' tT a be'w-rudder, k
tp 't4eyla that will aid in ataoi
1tarbsurs of Victoria.
ver ,and the rimers Or
'lumbi* Cost, the
iII has arrived ort,the
til to ote the fleet
:mn!s1:a1 servlers rd' the
t t Railway. :skit is
h .ship to be ]atilt for
tel has least bell t tsrr-
c;lri4il.tY[ . Slit, t t s'nipbtulding star"
d :irk Soollw•- `
14iritr3ttal�a there is one tractor
fiery 4.G farms; is Saskatche-
eer3' 4.7 farms; and
for every '7.5
tractors were
row long Gaunt
ecteatie to reselt
•
-The error of the north'ssrn
woods,"wrote a naturalist who knows
what Dr, Hent;' Van Dyke once called
an adult male whiter, north of the
Arctic -Circle, -is not the Gold—there
are many ways of meeting that—but
deep. snow. Snow is the tearful melt -
e, snow which covers up the rood
supplies, whirl robs the swiftest of
its speed anti ]Fares it at the mercy
of the foes that are winged or ether -
arse equipper] to follow fast and lay
it low," writes Ernest Ingersoll is tlw
Montreal Family Herald and e4'eektti'
Star.
In fact in those northern" tonna:
nature must equip its creatures who
are to spend the whole round of T?aa
year there with protection ageinsz
both the biting chill of extreme eois
and the -obstacles matte by the snow-
fall. Not many animals attempt tr
survive the stress of these coftabined
adversities stave by inlaying The
aetves and escaping The hard season:
in that coatinuous sleep we call hi-
bernation, which is Latin for "win=
tering." The white polar or ice twat-,
cite Arctic wolves s : nd rotes, row and
then a wolverine; the caribou and cer-
tain mountain -sheep, white hares as
mouse -Tike leauu ngs, roust cemplct
the List of animals that cat ueiths
run or hide away from' the ail -but
rata:] climate w to :e, as the anti:r_ta
thought, flouri-hed Berens. tI t ;o 1
t.r demon, nha ]:Teas the north wb d
from his frozen ebeeks. Let us e a:a-
i31e fur a moment how the liaren
Creatures nieatioued are arated
agaiael.. such Weather:
First;. all wear r;uats of Iong bait;
beneath which is an eudcr_birt. of
'clow]. felted, wool -Bite" hairs. Th -se
:.lairs- entangle a .'-Lim :of dry. :.1',351
ilr which firey 'nts the heat of ra'te.r
is dies, sustained b1 their food, item
seeping. Par dos not so mueheere-
• - I.l:e cold fr tea entering to fats
s?ti„ as it preserves the bodily cleat
m :eating out, owing inainii- to the
ftiy ,r t: holds. for dry air is among
:e St of 13•n tc.nr",uctors. But
?_t -_e a:nienais nus* And nourishmeat.
in order to kitep up the necessary
bodily heat. To get this food they
mast travel on and dig through the
s euw; hence their feet must be Pro-
t. d and adapted to this condition,
and the fact that they are, in fact,
tatalifad annually in these al—liana—is
t7 3._ f, their ability to dwell in
tI _ A.ics T€ _13 all winter.
t : _?_ vase of :he polar bear we
at. u::lik • t.her bear. the .soles
f:set are no: laked, but are
)7 a a owth of hair
7:%- rni'- p Smics freezing but
t %cling tinnily to lee
_,.,_ ivt. saate
.1A .t..,. .
_ •
771.1-7:-•
-`r .1 r - i
i izew e c- t 71 ni
oe.s. a,' row
� e card rt cel •D as S r r to
Y en c a.eh of 3.r the toes. d- d 1.
.air.?;: ', e.- the bird's f. t .
as 3t—, warts, about it hears only _^_:131
• lunch i eight on alle sutfacl-
r•ads as is summer while it wan -
ars -in search o: food; and tlat. ataa
.s .l:• 1.'1 'a'N;i' to go ` more freely
c.. La s I.;. ,u,t;` than. the. -
.•7•:7 can S013aw.
grouse ..•;s acquired also the iiaH'
2 :t snow a- a pro-
,
.lnsi the banrlii_ of -Ila,.
ws: A:rls :Sod
plains, ..s.uoh as foxes aut2
,-•I., and to ret shelter from kill-
lug blasts when a biirrard swe
ncz 1-,. their elatnhts.
Sir:tlarly the Aro is lemmings,
w hich do not hibernate, acquire an-
nually an alteration of the feet that
tips them t -o dig through hard snow
down to the ground, where they may
et .at the herbage on which they
mainly ',alas' and pick tip dormant in-
sects. This feat- they must do ineese
santiy, and to enable them to do it a
great henry yad forams in /ate autumns
oa the underside of tbe two middle.
tala,ws of each of the fore feet, hard-
ening the claws to tizeii'F` rough work.
The pads s10ulh DAL when :spring
comes and they are no longer needed.
But the most:strikix= 'g adaptation in
Ibese animals --relics of glacialtimesand .4-renditions—that now !un-ive
thorough ,Arctic ..eters is that of the
white hart, or enowahoe rabbit, so
familiar in northern New Eng'la'nd
and in Canada. The 1.3ir1dlegs of this
fleet ,creature are fiatuaaily larger
and. stronger, and the feet broader,
Shan in other hares of their size; and
winter these great hind feet, with
-heir hong, spreading foes, become en-
tirely cohered: with a heavy coat of
lrair forming inroad, snowshoe -1ikr
pads, which enable the hares to run
easily over soft snow into 'n -hick the
narrow Illiabs of their eneauies sink.
tabu
noting their progress. it pe rhap
is ?o titin tape, more titan tit an,
either, that these rabbits are able to
saseape in host eases the htuirr.•:four-
ted bunters that try to catch tb •ltd.
dine}- -do -catch them by exact, but
rat'ely by chase.
l4ig' state.
I wonder xrlaat a (et'lain iHOrte:
exf ,td 1"a1ivtrsita -rill .pink If he air" i
et: -r a of u_ being the cbitf actor to the
Yol't+rtaii i sforr:
.11 ohe. 'Oxfo tl examination st•booi
t•i-; 'an,iidatts till'' in alpbabetiea'i or-
ai a. r'La he entered a }min;; man was
7r r.il br 9'h:. pater:: "What's ye
sir'!
replied the young -stn t.
yea s'it itt bell t1 , tt '
the ,'Ceektitty,
•: ,,1;.
mart its - timer .:„are
• t. Cazaterburlr,
d7
4' t'?at tI;
rrsday,
102
WALKER STORES .
NGHAM'S "THREE FLOORS" DEPARTMENTAL STORE
•
YARNS
OF
QUALITY
LISTOWEL BOTANY
65c Skein
LISTOWEL P -K
c Skein
SCOTCH FINGERING
29c Skei-n
HORNS WHEELING
29c Skein
FOR FACTORY
25c Skein
REGAL SAXONY
25c Skein
NG:LISH ANDALUSION
30c Skein
GRANNY'S OWN
KNITTING
L
�.. ME a7 ING
nein
7yy
. ''Y'S pp,��OW3
M...�. N D' I N G
5c -
I`e'in
The
Best Yarns Always ,
.:::wi•dl.agb.....,:o�:x �l�e,�..:w:..,. �S s..'Na..+vz;::•. n e. ;. ': ,,:9.
Week -End Specials
—FOR—
Thursday, Friday, Saturday
CHILDREN'S UNDERWEAR,
Vests or Drawers, sizes 26, 28, 30, 32. ,
Each lac
LADIES' NO SLEEVE VESTS, each
Woods Seconds, worth up to $1.50, Special
"Lavender Line" Double Slips
First Quality, regular $3.95, Each
$2. 8
WIDE SILK & SATIN RIBBONS
Worth tip to 50; Extra Special, yard --------------
8c
:....M.-_- _.._M____.._
8c
FANCY WOOL GOLF SOX
For Skating, Snow Shoeing etc ,reg. $1:25, pair --
98c
FANCY LACES & T.R1MMJNG.S
Values to $1.00 :yard, while they last, yard
7c
FLETTE & COTTON EMBROIDERY 3c
Narrow and wide widths; worth to 30c, yard __
WOOL TWEEDS & DRESS GOODS 39c
Worth to iuc, While they last, yard
FANCY DRESS & COAT FLOWERS 99,
Values to MI , while they last, each w__...._ �_._.._..
FAa I TRIM1NG BUTTONS
your S>n•^:mrr sl,uply; now, card w._......-.._...
A1C
WE SELL.
"PICTORIAL R VIE
?ATTEY
ZNS
$15.00.0 STOCK ALWAYS ON HAND
AG.I`' ES SECURES
ON TEE RIGHT TRACE.
backed by the Ontario gel'ernuient
NEW SUPPORTER; TER and. private contributions, is to begin
It was mentioned in the . " Ontari-3 work tin 'Ontario's lout -rade iron ore
g
!: bodies '
!Legislature that iron tiro used in Can-: s. That's what is needed. We
Guc„d Story as to Why 'Piot;=• Con-,
!adieus blast furnaces comes from I.1nx- want the best brains int the world to
ser-vative. Joined U. F. Ct..
ted States. That, of course, is a. fact, tackle a problem like that, and. tell
land this p-actiee bas been .going rat ins hoar- to make use of these deposits,
According To the Durham i~Iareirs- .
_'liar a long tiltlN because it is painfully apparent that
a e, .l'ilts Agnes McPhail has -seen"
i There are znanv de osi• ." o •r n we know a't>_ry little about it noay.
era a new supporter in recent weeks= t5 # i v z
acid that no fess a personage ;hats i ere in this prorisice, 1wi ti eye are not
i There have been experiments, most -
and
lir with the electric furnace, but there.
a . Kuban Eawarea, tat Conserv-a-'used because they: are logy grade. In
has not been enough gash behindthnm
tive candidate in the federal election'their native state they'caniaot he blue
they have been the 'efforts til indiviri-
# 1956. .as to r;hat Mr Edward's; ed in the blast,. furnace,.
mals, and one could not expect then-
objects re -ere in Uniting up with /he/ So our policy has been to, importi
1. t1. fcrce chere i. ' s f
orerom i to ko on indefinitely because they
s In South east i lin ted States rather than
could not afford to do it.
Grey cans'idesable' s ecnl- , io 1,togo seriously about e'
>y at n list re t 9 u the business of I.earnin
is the 'solution tfere •-.mh g }what to do with cviiat we
d by the '�hron ilea -ruing � to snake use of mar o�ro--ti, have is the Dne sure 'foundation on
organ 6i the ,low grade ores,
ditch to build fbr uidustrittl ,leader -
An aooarcement is made today that ship in Ontario. --Stratford Beacon -
the Ontario Research Investigation, Herald.
the Conserv
i riding,
it -bins that Mr. Edvrards, who is
cue of the leading -agriculturalists €
Glene7g, raises :a few pigs once in
nhile by ray, of exercise. Once the
are in condl•7aion he lilies to get rid o
then], and with this purpose in ode'
lie Ioaded. anp a bunch one day las
c e It and started for Markdaie. Ar-
1 is ta1Mr there, there were no buyers--
save n7ae, the U. F. O. buyer. Lik
coyer oragniizations of its hind,
U. F. 0, Las rules, and in this ;r
at least stack to them. The U. g,
finals^er wax+ld bur the Edward's grun
ers bet on one condition
x rnetuber of the U. F. 0..could s
the {>rC3attzaiior.
Thi irsraer Consei
are" ;Frail ed itis a.l-i
e biayet• ta•as karma
lxt-ards derided the Ellis Parker
cutler was right, aha: : "Pigs Is Pigs"
lot the uld either have to shell
znelnhership fee or carry hai
g 9tutnne, ,iaaally signing be the dot
e,d ne. .So .far, Edtenttls is but
rrivate itr the rear rank... but
ititrYaes its afst as he :ctartedxsiav
o be a lance corporal
tt hati:alie+'Yt s't a tafit nt:ajCr;
Slit e Standard;'
l'e a"t Ws, but
it"itially lit.
att}:
At`
.:THE H D H F
have.You. Plotye
In the Houle
If there is a spot in the home where shadows
fall and obscure the view; where it is •+cif: %
�.. �teult �-
see 'dist netly, an additional light, or an existing
one changed will give you added comfort and F lea
sure.Ihen use Hydro Bulbs and your troubles
are over
Ingham Util io
Cr wfortlitiotk,