HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1923-10-04, Page 6:'''''''.5.4-e,e•e"..,'•eseeeerkeele' • "'
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Tx -ix WINGAIAM -6a)vAl\lan
s's
seem-en"-
Peelrehed
inglroarl, Ontarto
fPt ¥40
s'e •s-
eieecriptleus' itetee: — Oa* year,
Aix! ,m(,uthe $100 in advance.
ifivereising Vtne. on. application,
4dee4rtieementa witliont specific di-
6iieleetiene .0. al be inserted .until terbid,
Aair Charged acoordin.gly,
• e
esjaeAneee for sontraot advert
; Meats, he in. the °Mee by neon. ;'"eens•
"el:dialler •
USINESS CARDS
WellingtOla Ailkittial Fire)
•,!11,?,;11"antee
eashlislied 1840.
Pt
Head Office Su
Risks taken On' al; '41°1
alabolte PrailTtY on the 0°1:Ilse° I"nr*
e system or premium
ABNER COSENS, Agen
Wingnam
DU LEY tiOLMES
•leARRtsTER, SOLicreinle, • ETC.
• ylctory end Other Sonde Bought and
Sold.
Office-- Block, WInghant
•
R VANSTONE
BARRISTER AND SOLICITOR
Money to Loan at Lowest Rates.
WINGHAM
11 r W ROS
• Graduate Royal Cott -ego of Denta• ll
Surgeons
• Graduate University of Toronto
Faculty of Der.tistry
OFFICE OVER H E ISARD'S STORE
FIRST TRIP OVER NEW CANADIAN 'HIGHWAY.
The service of the improved road rn
facilitating intercourse between the
different provinces of the Dominion,
and so strengthening the bond of na-
tional brotherhood 'which unites them,
was interestingly recognized recently
in the letter which Dr. Perry E, 1)oo-
little, president of the Canadian Auto-
mobile Association, carried froxn Pre-
mier E. H. Armstrong of Nova Scotia
to Prexnier G. H. Ferguson of Ontario,
when he made the first through jour-
ney over the eastern section of the
Trans -Canada Highway, from Halifax
to the Soo. Hon. Mr. Armstrong's
letter read in part
"I am advised by Dr. Doolittle that
he expects to accomplish this tip
within a period of ten days. If his
anticipations in this respect are real-
ized, and I -think they .will be, it is a four hours. He reports that the tflp
feat that should be of some publiel might easily have been accomplished
significance. •It indicates that in this in nine days if they had not been held
matter of highway transportation up on a portion of the road on account
some very satisfactory progress has of blockade.
been made during recent years. Your "I greatly appreciate the expression
province and all the intervening pro- of good -will from yourself and the
vincee, including our own, are Tanta- citizens of the Province of Nova Sco-
ally interested in the development of
this trans -Canada highway system,
We are also equally interested in the
economic and social advantages which
a propersolution of this modern probe
•
nOtario let me exprees a p
it may mean something more than 0,
mere formal letter. Let us hope and
believe that as this tranS-Canada.
highway connects the Atlantic pro-
vinces with the interior of our com-
mon country and •facilitates inter-
course, it may be but a beginning of
more cordial, more intimate, and more
frequent relations between the various
provinces, which have so many prob-
lems in common, and accomplish much
to bring abont greater reciprocity, and
etill further cement the sentiment Qf
unity that must and shonld prevail
between all the provinces."
In reply to this communication Pre-
mier Ferguson wrote:
"You will be interested to know that
Dr. Doolittle accomplished _his • feat
and reached the Soo in nine days and
tia to me and to ray fellow -citizens in
Ontario- There can be no doubt in,
the world that the development of a ,
modern system of highway transpor-
tation will do as much, if not more,
1'1.1
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P111
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•
WHENHE WORM TUFINEDI •
• —From London'Opinion.
• AUtUESITI
All seaeons hieve their 110411110. sit
is a sad. mistake to neglect or to lin-
'derirslue WIT one of tliena. the
bleak sineerity of winter is redeeMed
by the overwhelming splendor of
'veiled, unbroken fight.
Spring is the time of turtmlence, of
fresh,• exhaustless, youthful • ardor.
nGe.seratotf the 1 alzblunngdaritital:eSarsilrt Ttbheen.ritchte-
sclear, bright north winds,' harsla with
the last touch of the melting the fields,
UR young veins and young hearts with
stimultia and energy, •1
• Summer is the time of riPeneas.
when the incredible wealth of naturee
production matches, teases and In-
SPLres every resource of the matured,
balanced, perfect Daman body and
soul. - "
But autumn is mellow and fruittul,
full of suggestion and reflection for
nature and hunianity-aeike„Atets, best
autumn class not mean 'decaY Or sell-
The Little Kindness That
• Made a Great Man.
"He is the most stupid boy in school.
I can't drive anything into his head,
said the teacher of an English lad to a
visitor to the school the lad was at-
tending, The visitor rustle a little
talk to the scholars and then passed
47,
''Xixtenedele .0etebe; lks, '102($,
Notural Rescouiwsi.
tigence service err the Depart -
/341101n
The Natural neeetircerl Intel,
754eynst: of the Interior at Ottdeva,
large•
ttO hs
°rkta ael rm °lel) rel::
Source of ,wh.ich, little is known.
in Marty of tile Inland streams
•
raay te-erka. prom the Grand
River, in sonthwestern Onterie,
naniy tone of the ehells have
been takers. ,‘ rise has been
found for these shells in the
manufacture of freshewater
pea
rl 6w1Soutotxonteh. re eE horuntahiiesd et tplyir;
are lag p por
tion Of Whell •OOTVAS 'froin the
retintitiend tiSiteasetsesf,roTmhethbeutsthlell areby
rotary. cutters' some of tlae stia`n'S"' -•
. •.,• . • '
ility but just the faintly melanchory beiag, almost one-half
weh
sense of lite long lived, of riola stared
beauty past, of memory with all its
depths of desire and regret. Autumn
has it winds. and storms, greet sweep-
ing gusts that shatter the summer
world With bursts of rain and Swift,
compelling tempeat. But its typical inirably adapted. • 4 _
days are• -those of • raid -October,—
-ere 'afterwards
split to 'the, thickness required
- for buttons. • Aftor the disea
are oat from the shell the waste
le ground up and sold for pole),
try grit, for which it le ad- .
"'dream days" LongfelloW.delighted to••
tile.ernadeiln,:zhiraa,dei:orYf vrthliaentr arethev.ery 11(1:1.,then • •
• low sun cannot quite dispel :the creep- • ' " t•11 V7.7
niists
iio
•vv pros We e vv ant. ' •
•
•
The 'summer long, the tall 'trees Pr-s-Yed- winclieSS,.4niet, and tra.n. foiod fey 'a hew -wcYrI2,I, d-e$crib6 • ;'
, • " Pentecoat. s.ca,reely more than an. entrancnag
Iiase Quiet n
youth, but ot 'curious:and satisfying
'inew ,invention, Quite recently a Lon-
1 don paper had such competition for , .•
In all the speech they knew, olailitY, those are the -wards of autti
Uplifting tremulous hands of green —not perhaps the words far eager
To Heav-e•n's eterna4 blue. 'the purpose of finding a ranee fOr the
charm for softly settling age.
• Quiet coves
His 'soul has in its Autumn when. his
wings •
He, furieth close, contented so to look
On mists in idleness:—Lojet, fa,ir things ,
motor -glider But worde of title-
sbrt have a way of supplying them-
selves. • 'What Briton, for insta.nce,
thinks of ceiling an .automobile any-
thing but a "oar" or a heavier-than-air
flying machine by any ether name than
flW God heard,,asid..on the waiting wood.
le will mean for us alI. itnan anything else to brinz our -people sudden glory came.
"In expiessing my pleasure in ac- ieloser together andpromote
ceding to the request of Dr. Doolittleing a good will that will be to our
to transmit this note of greeting to mutual a.,dvantage."
th f I
R
13.Sc.„, G.M.
•Special attention paid to diseases et.
Women and Children, having taken
postgraduate work in Surgery,. 33-ao-
• terfology and Scientific Medicin.e.
Office. in the Kerr Residence,. betweeft
the Queers's liater And the Baptist
Church.
All business given careful attention.
• Phone 54. P.O. Sox 113
Robt. C. Redmond
M.R.C.S. (Eng).
L.R.C.P. (Loncl).
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
(Dr, Chisholia's old stand)
- DR, L. STEWART
Graduate of University ot Toronto,
Vacuity at Medicine; Licentiate of. the
Ontario College ot Physicians and
•Pffurgeons.
Otlice Entrance:
• OFFICE IN CHISHOLM BLOCK
•;JOSEPHINE STREET, • PHONE 211
Dr.. Margaret C. C er
• General'.Practitioner
• Graduate University of Toronto.
Faculty of Medicine.
Ofilce---Josephine SL, to doors south
f Briinswtek Hotel.
Telephoues-7-Office 281, Residence 151
Osteophatic. Physician
DR, F0A. P /IR
• OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIAN
Osteopathy, • Electricity. All diseases
treated.
Office adjoining residence, Centre
Street, next Anglican Clautch (forraer-
ly Dr, IVIaeDonald's). Phone 272.
Office closed on Monday and Wednes-
day afternoon.
DRUGLESS PHYSICIANS
Dr. J. A FOX
CHIROPRACTOR
Office Hours: 2 to 5 and 7 to 8 p.m.
'Wednesday 'Afterno-ons by Appoint
-
• ment only.
Telepone• 191.
11 The House of Dreams.
Irrtelligence Service 11.,yze bank from the st.eeteit stands
for Readers
Our anancls7 and earauxerele21
interests are deman'ding she.
mere energeth, dev.elo-Inatent
our natural :,..•-•-•on...,zes
in the liquidation of our war
debt. V.A.e'e reeteraitien of the
value of our national beri'Mge
has created and intensified the
demand trOM, CaStlialia1.1 and
foreign manufacturers for an-
curatel nformadon as to the lo -
curate informadon as to the la -
.W.cere .1z,e sunlight fiashes in shining
Over its gables ndo.through Its trees,
.,S-zi_-.red by a wandering wraith of
breeze;
LaugbtarS.zhees along its- hall, •
Love has 32....1 -ed. by garden wall
Where. .the hydran,gea blossoms blow
s.--,p—anner white as the winter's snow.
Many the 'folk who go by its door,
Mani the. folk. that have pawed at yore
Wb -3 saw just plan house standing
there—
progress in development or No mere_ To 1.1S "it is ever fair,
and other important works.
these resources, .....p-atin.11y as For all in life we have counted dear
they' pertain to our forests, min- ' its he,t waz.,..heh.,„„ed, mahy. a year; A momentary, casual word of en-
erals and wafer-powe.rs. Raw Beneath its roof bide the glints and wec'astthanigeomr'r that bay eanoPu7:111g.to ogvt:racnogm'ere
niaterials and power supply are gleams years of disparagement and ridicule.
the first necessity of inclusy, Of those ire.% intangible -things called
and the Department of the In- ; drama.
Natural Resources Intelligence J 'Very- Young Policeman - (who has
: And though in the days that are to be
broken up a fight between foreign sea -
Service, reports an increasing •'We may only walk there in memory,
men at docks)—"FVhere do you hie?"
number of requests regarding On the road that runs beyond the
these. This branch, fortuna.tely, slues.
is in a position to answer such *Another House of Dreams will rise—
a series of resource maps and ; earth— house ' on
enquiries, and has also issued The emmterpart. of this
other literature of value to the ' Ta hold new joy and to harbor mirth
' commercial interests. These are , Where the love we dreamed of yet
available on application, and it '',• never knew
is suggested that our readers Will bloom in aux House ot Dreams
_
into ar,,othor_ room, In leaving the T33..e trees in. haft and crimson, stood'
school, h.owever, he made an oppor-
tunity to speak to the so-called stupid
boy. Petting him on the head, he said,
"Never mind, my hey, you may be a
great scholar some day. Do not be
discoura,ged, but try hard, and keep on
trying."
The boy had. been told so often that
ho was a stupid good-for-nothing that came ,
1 he had begin)." to think it true. But the married again, this time to a Mr.
words. of the great man who had Maiden. Becoming a -vvidow for a
spoken so encouragingly to nun set second' true, she concludes. that
h rns
wit tongues. of fie e.
---Claribel Weelts. Avery.
• • What's in a NameT
An English woman recently wrote
to :newspaper, saying that she was
born A. Mann (Alice Mann.) She
married a.Mr. Husband, and so be -
it Husband. He died,. and she,
his ambition aflame and filled Bion though born A. Munn, she will die A.
with a new hope. They kept ringing Maiden.
in his ears, and he said to himself, "I
will- show my teacher and others who
,have so long regarded, me as a stupid
good -far -nothing that there is some.
thin,g in me." The boy became the
famous Dr. Adam Clark, author of the
great "Commentaxy on the Holy Bible"
terror at Ottawa, through its
The Easiest Way Out.
3.trilr :ervitil:=1-2sic .111-a-tnlheiliara wi-til
1...
Resources Intelligence Service
,
No Pain is Past Time's ,
Mending.
No grief but has its eliding;
No pain is past Time's mending.
Great griefs and little griefs
Hinder our way—
Great griefs and little griefs ----
Day
Day after day,
But they call all be borne if we recall
This truest truth of all:
No grief but has its ending;
No pain is past Time's mending.
—Mary Carolyn Daviasi.
.DR. D. IL Diel.NNES
CHIROPRACTOR
Qualified Graduate
Adjustments given for diseases of
all kinds, spedialize ht dealing with
children Lady attendant. 'Night calls
responded to.
011ice on Scott St., Wingham, Ont.
(in house of the late ies Walker).
Phone 150.
• Of Course•.
,'111.a deep interest tnken by the
Prince of Wales in the -various ittdus-
trial establishments he luta been visit-
• ing lately has started a new fad
orrelig(st certain sup-to-clate young wo-
Mete They have decreed that it is the 1
'ncerrect thing" ta go and do
It WaS one of this. 'type ho was be-
ing• aEW.A,rteft- deer e big loeomotive
and, Of COUrse, she felt bound
kat least to eimulate an interest she
d not really zeei.
"What 1a, that thing?" eke ailted,
Protected
Mary had a little lanab,
But soon it grew to mutton;
'Twas • of the kind that clearly loved
A something hard to butt on.
Said Mary: "When I go to school
With my pet ram, I reckon
That. smart old teacher'll have to find
Somebody else to peck on.'
collie true.
Lascare---"Calcutta."
Policenaan--"And where do you
Tire?"
• Chinaman--"Shangliai."
Policeman — "Um -- well, the best
thing you two can do is to pop off
home to bed."
Plenty of.00PPerg
- - A million pounds of copper was used
In the construCtion NeW irork's
tallest skyscraper.
Singing Lamp Warns Miners.„
Miners fear fire damp probably more
than any other menace of their call-
ing. Its presence leads to explosionS,
breathing it is dangerous and its. a.p.
'Preach is so insidious that the damage
may he done before it is discovered.
Safety lamps- have been in common
use for many years to -prevent fire
ex losions the famous Davies
amp p
'lamp being the one best known. Now
comes an improvement on the Davies
lamp and also the invention of a Bri-
ton.
This nevr lamp not only is a safety
lamp from the explosive side of min-
ing and a real illuminating lamp, hut
It is also a Ere damp protector. Its
peculiar frame resembles a bunch of
tuning forks and they are made so
sensittve that the presence of even So
small an amount of fire damp in the
air as two per cent will cause the
lamp to sing, ar vibrate a musical
note. As the fire damp incres,Ses in
the air, the lamp sings more loudly
and More shrilly, affording ample
warning to the underground worker
of the deadly menace.
The Dreamer.
He caught the rainbow's gleams
And wove them Intocireasais;
He dared to die, or do,
And all his dreama came true.
—Eliot Kays Stone.
14.0•
432=4"'
- The Forger
"You say he'd a forger?"
"Then why isn't he working in . the
pen?" "
"Because he works in the foundry."
Things •that are easy to do are sel-
dom worth the . effort.. •
Ceilings which have became black -
•
ened with smoke may -be cleaned with
Pass by unheeded as a threshold brook. Yet,whileE I is themost pro- -
We have in mind a broad, open, hill- lifle language in existence, there are
side on an Optober afternoon. The still a feW everds which are badlY •
cloud shadows drift gerstrY over the wanted, and which would be vastly ap- eee,
p.eaceful landscape. In the foreground preciated by everyone who Wields a
is a wilderne.sa of red clover and s -nap: '•• „
dragon, and svvarms of pale yellow
butterflies float and waver and quiver
over it, like slow, clinging delicate
thoughts •
That have kept wateh o'er inans mor
talky.
"-
Thera could. be no more restful
pn. .• . sees
One crying. need is for a pronoun . - .
which Will Mean equally he or she •
Take an example in point. A deetar '
-Writing directions as to the use of -, •
a liniment. "The patient must' apply ,'
the liniment wherever he (or' she) is
in.. pan' but at the same, time; it
. ,
image of hea,ven ger a. weary heeit.--- necessary to caution ..him (or her),
Youth' Compe.nien, ,, •
Watchmen of the Sea.
More than a thousand lighthouses
and lightships, guard the coasts of the
BritishIls, and all are under the
contol, -direct or indirect, of Trinity
House., For the purpOse of contrdi the
coat ie divided into districts, of which
the London District is the most inn
portant. It extends from Southwald
In Suffolk to the North Foreland In
Kent.
The stares for thie district are kept
at Trinity 'Whar, at Blackwell, and
here are to be seen casks, of oil, an-
chors, mooring chains, oomplete lan-
terns, and machinery Of many sorts, as
-well DR quantities of buoys cif different
sizs, shapes, and colors.
The anchors used for mooring light-
ships are huge implements' of. iron
shaped like great umbrellas, and as
for the mooring chains, these are
dameed in" warm water and
DOWN AND OUT
1 often talk with, down-andenters, when I behold them in the
glen, and they are always ardent spouters of perfidy in other
men, The.y're not to blame if they are busted, and lacking bedS
and olothes and prunes; in false and fickle friends they trusted,
and found themselves betrayed Bassoons. I'd giv-e ten. cents to
meet a dead one, who'd say, "My life's a bonhead play; I'm short
of tears, or I would shed one, for all my chances fooled away.
My friends. were kind and tried to aid me, I've often had a goodly
berth, and my employers often peed me mo'e Coin than I was
.' truly worth. I wesn't born to be a winner, and so yen See me
down and out, and if you'll stake me for a dnner, I'll' fill my
empty works with kraut." I'd think it to hEind a penny to
one who'd thue confess his atranie; but, woe is me, there isn't
any who will admit Ire is to blame. "The world IT 0,01.1d and
fierce and beartIest.," the "outers" sty, "nd eo we -weep; tor we
are bedlese, breadless, tartless, and have no hay in whith
to
sleep. Meet's hearte are v cold as is the gran.ite of which New
England hills are made, and so We'll drift around, the planet until ,
the sexton plias his spade." Men's hearts are warm aticl kind
and tender, we give, and give, and give some more; to -night I
gave a Pink suspender to Richard Rae, Who sought niy door.
Vi)ii nig• With her dainty parasol. s
• '"ettlat, aaswered the
engine'
Hole latereetingl . But
they Veil engineer she Want-
te know,
txutliA • the iNigit,e,, tahr.tori'
p.1.,ted th4 reoureetui
The' fitst ovdento a • bellet 4t•
Apogoetei .111 the
!jeliV Sono ,,Ak 141'0116,60AV /ektin go.
TA IS WILL Bt. A OH , FOR
GOOD PLACE. TOR s HA "S
U$ To HAAt\IVmEyPc. I L 1A
GO0V Ail 614 i)givt
ODW, SPON ,
HERE: TWO 6,*11-5,
AN RA AL GY° Luf ‘?
RABBI -I -WC -AO
keR
1\11CK
• 60 /M/0+1/4?
•
Such a pronoun vvould save the writ-
ing ofilliFon of unnecessary words
in tho course of a year. Will some' •
kindly pla1logist oblige?
Other languages, are less well -found
than our ,own, and have abs.olutely '
equiValent for many words we
Use every,day :af our- - • , • -
"Uptairs'" and "downaairs" are ' , , '
1W01"(161 which have no. d.irect euiva-
lents in French, nor is there any
French word far teconifort." The verb . •'.'
"to Idek" hae to be paraphrased, if you
wish to put it into Frenh, and ex- •
pressed as to strike with the foot."
Befo-re the war the Germans -had ,
adapted bodily a number of English
words for which they had no ere:live-
lente in- their own cumbers.onie tongue. e ,
•
"Tailor-made," "lawn..tennis," and . ,
"sport" are among the terms -which • • 1.1.e„,
were thus appropria,teci. It would. have
been pathetic, if it had not been comic,
tested hy hydlailliC power up to 800 to see their struggles in the early peat --
-
tons othe war to. find German substitutes' '
the 0001e, eoin,e are new; others are, `I\he Germane have always used sub-
. ,
Can. bUOYS) SPIle.ritai 131107 —^.^.1.- Of leS,S than seven syllables for these '
been stitates. for the n.ameS. of ,a good many .
brought in fair painting and rePair. aGrotrinicleasnina eyterauyda_asyhones,e„. .,Aa stloivmetil ..°
old and b.,ttred, and- have
l'ainting buoys goes on all the year
rund, and the Work is done by the
men who are a,sh.ore from lightships or
Lighthouses., Life on a lightship is no
joke, especially in bad weather, and
eaelf Illall after two months afloat gets
a month ashoe.
•
buoys', bell and gas buoy.s. are liere by w'orde.• - - - -• - - -- -=------ ''A.,---.1
"linge-r-hat" while a grasshopper is a
i'lrrs.x-h.orse," and chickens are fea,ther-
cattle." • .- -
A Useful Device, -
•
-lmming and rattling doors are
, simply eliminated by means ot a small
to ligirtshins, rellef-hlp •
Since accidents' sometimes happen -
.16' alw'a pneumatic ,custrion, described and li-
kept moored at the wharf ready: to
lustrated in Popular IVIechanincs, The.
start at a moment's natioe to replace 1
device •consists of an angular piece
any- vessel which has drifted from her
moorings or been. sunk in eollision. '
SchoolroomMottoes.
Perseverance is the road to success: •
Patience is powerful.
Look before you leap,
1.Ate is short so improve each milmte.
Practice makes. perfect.,
Who never tries will never, win.
AU' a well' that ends well.
Speak only tire truth ,
Make hay while- the stin Shines.
Conestant occupation prevents tempta.
tion.
A poor, workman quarrels with his
toels. . s , , s
One cannot make all shoes peels the
Youth s.hoold be a savings beak. • 1,... Great Oiscovery
Youthi5 life's eeed. tinee, Prof. Bag --1 Must • be in Egypt„,
We Shall never be younger. . hrs a sphinx',
Metal with. a hollow hemiaphere Of
rubber inserted in the larger side
ing- against the door jamb anll a small-
er similarly shaped plece In the other
side whioh projects' at right tingles to
the jamb. Thesair inside -the spb,erical
rubber pieces deadens, the force of the
impact. -
• • •
Wt AT
WAN TA
N01) WANT__;" Y°U
NICKEL LiTr"VE
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