The Wingham Advance Times, 1930-05-22, Page 5Thursday, May 22nd, 1930
WINGHAIVI ADVANCE -'RIMES
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... ,iSAr J'S HOLIDAY 1
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•tettPECIALS.
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Manufacturer's Clearance of Spring and Summer
. .4 Coats and Comprising New Models in Plain Cloths
and Fancy Tweeds. Sale Price .$9.50 and $11.50 r
BE
ft Shipment of new Dresses in Plain and Printed
s ;Effects, Wonderful value at .
® .::... . , . '6.75 8.50 10.50 14.95 —
Sweaters at special cut prices .. $1.90, $2.50, $2.95'` °I.
w Girls' pleated skirts M fancy plaid $1.39
L<ti
Girl' new dresses, color fast, choice patterns ..89c
® Children's Fancy Lisle Socks 39c
Hose at cut prices, Lisle and Silk. ,
. . , . .49c, 69c, 89c 98c, $1.19
Lace Cuff and Collar Sets, now 25c
Ili Linen Handkerchiefs, °'Fancy Border" 10c
House Dresses, best colors and patterns, price 98c
- New Middies, separate collar and cuff, color
Corrall Aprons;, Bargain .... 79c
•
fast, now only ...98c
New Prints, yard wide, special .. 25c
Dollar Bargain in. Silk Underwear, value up to
$1.50, Slips, Gowns, Bloomers, Vests, best
colors, Holiday price $1.00
Corsettes with Inner Belt, regular value $2,00 $1.39
Corsets Special at 98c
Umbrellas, strong Covers with fancy handles,.__ 95c
Men's Work Shirts, cut price 79c
— ▪ Men's Plain or fancy Broadcloth shirts, bar-
gain at .... ........ ...... $1.39
Pi Boy's Wash Suits, .now only
a
Men's Fancy Socks,.. good colors 49c
C Boys' Khaki Suits, on sale 75c
▪ Work Socks, all wool, 5 pair for
Men's Underwear, Shirts andDrawers
95n -
$1.00
5c
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$1.00
59c
E. Isard &Co.
X1:1
III uminifnpillmHlullt
d.. ... Nj Hear Thy sudden greeting rise—
"Peace be to youl It is I;"—
Secrets
;"-Secrets of Thy kingdom learn,
Read the vision open spread.
Feel Thy word within us burn,
know Thee in the broken Bread.
FAVORITE HYMNS
Forty days' of Easter -tide
.Thou didst commune , with Thine
own;
Now by glimpses, Lord descried,
Handled now and proved and
Known,` Most Merciful,' yet veird;
Else before the awful sight
Surely heart 'and flesh :had fail'd,
Smitten with eXceeding ]iglu.
Risen Master, fain would we,
Sharing those unearthly days,
Morn and eve, on shore and sea,
Watch Thy movements, marl' Thy
ways;—
Catch by faith each glad surprise
Of Thy footsteps y o tees drawing nigh,
1,111 PAIN
Ends
Minute
"Ended burn,itch and pain of piles
In i minute with'Sootha-Salic ," writes
L.T
.Bears. "Bleeding stopped. Pies
soon vanished. Avoided operation."
Get instant results today. Alt dtttgcisti.
So Thy glory's skirts beside
Gently from grace to grace,
We Thy coining may abide ,
.And adore Thee face to face. Amen.
Richard Baxter, author of "The
Saints' Everlasting Rest," 'and of
many other valued works, perhaps of
all men of his age is the best qualif-
ied to form an opinion of another's
piritual standing, described the writ -
r of these verses, a brother clergy-
man of lthat. Church as "The glory
of the Church of England", No light
praise this, which will give that
clergyman •a supremacy Over Baxter
liniself!
But Baxley proves his point by say -
ng
the :Reverend John •'h
of dthe
Mason,
poet who gave us the hymn:—"The
'his spirit of wa,s
so heavenly;
his deportment humble and oblig-
ing,
dep I t soo g
ing, his discourse of spiritual things
so weighty, with such apt words and
delightful air, that it charmed all that
had any spiritual relish."
Born in Northamptonshire, , Eng.,
he was educated at • Clare College,
Anssonwrisimminemennonnininl
GOING OUT OF BUSINESS
Thous . s• of Dollars. Worth
Goods on Sale
S
�S �c Cut d��� of Co t.Pr� r s R �.
•
t ; e Sold .
E+ve>rylhYi<1 lr�,
�n ��� S��M��s � .:.j;(111$1$...
Cambridge, ordained and in 1668 ap-
pointed vicar of Stantonhury, Buck-
ingbamshira lave years later he be-
came Rector of Water Stratford,
where li'e remained, exercising a most
useful and successful ministry until
his death in 1694. He wrote many
hymns for Isis church services, which
were among the earliest so used by
the Church of .England. In its earli-
est days though; hymns were com-
monly ' used on other occasions by
British Christians, those employed in
divine worship were taken directly
from the 'Bible, `such as "The Psalms
of David", the Angels song at Beth-
lehem, the Blessed Virgin's Zachar-
ias' and Simeon's songs, etc,
A voltinse of Mason's hymns con-
taining his Songs of PPs•aise, Song of
Solomon, and Poein on `Dawes and
Lazarus and Six -Penitential Cries
passed through over twenty editions,
and was exceedingly popular.
Perhaps the best known of his
hymns is the one beginning "Now
front the altar of, our hearts," in
which occurred the verse not always
printed now with the hymn: -
"Man's life's a book of history;
The leaves thereof are days;
The letters, mercies closely joined;
The title is Thy praise."
That hymn, one of the finest of..
those old songs of praise was evident-
ly well knowr. to Benjamin Franklin,
the U. S, philosopher who came to
Montreal and, lived here for some
time while he made a vain attempt
to seduce Canada from her allegiance
to her monarch, as is shown by his
epitaph comparing his body to the
cover ,of an old book, etc.
Mr. Mason was one of our most-
valued hymn -writers and few modern
hymnbooks having scholars among its
compilers are without some of his
verses, The last verse of our hynin
printed above is a master -piece in its
way,and the thirdand fourth verses
arer; hardly 11.6s worthy' of our admira-
tion.
Excepting of course Ken's "Praise
God from Whom" was there ever a
finer doxology 'written than this one
by Mason:
"How great a- being Lord is Thine;
Which -doth all things keep;
Thy knowledge is the only line
To sound so vast a deep.
Thou art a sea without a shore,
A .sun without a sphere;
Thy time is now and evermore,
Thy place is everywhere."
There is barely one of Mason's
hymn, in fact, which does not contain
some splendid gem in line or verse.
The ending of the -greatly 'revered
pastor's life was rather curious.
About a month before he died he
preached a very arresting sermon -on
"The Midnight Cry," in the course
of which he announced a speedy com-
ing of Jesus Christ in Judgment. He
told his people that he had a night
vision of the Lord Jesus Christ cloth-
ed in unutterable majesty wearing a
glorious crown! The earnestness of
the preacher, the evident reality of
his vision, made a tremendous im-
pression.
In repeating the sermon his hearers
gave out the impression that the Lord
was to appear in Water -Stratford it-
self! From all neighboring localities
people came crowding into the vil-
lage, bringing provisions and. bedding.
They stormed the Rectory and the
Square and streets everywhere, spend-
ing their time in praying, singing, ev-
en Glancing in frenzy:
Mr, Masonpreached
s to them and.
for them, as longas he could
prayer ,
assuring them that he. had not said
that God's throne was to be set up in
that village, but that it behooved theta
tobe prepared meet p epa ed to Hint at His
coming,
Hedied int
c lc the ftllbelief that he
hadn Isis 1 s I ..old just J as the e excite -
m t was abating, sayingitg with t his
last breaths --21 am full of the laving
kindness Lord!"
of the I o d.1"
BLUEVALE BOY
IN ENGLAND
Below wen rint an article taken
from "Canada," 'published at 26127
Cockspur Street, London, S.W.I.,
England, and reads as follows:— `
"Dr. W, T. Galbraith (son-in-law
of Mrs. Richard Wiles, Manor Road,.
Godalming, Surrey) is shortly
rettu•n-
ing to London, Ontario, after having
been a resident of Godalming for the
last four. years. Dr. Galbraith, -came
to England in connection. with his
claim that he and his colleagues
`S s.
, 1 whom 71n... werei
(some e of ev c associated alert with
1)' Halting in the discovery of in -
Hie) has discovered a cure for can-
cer (says the Stirrey Advertiser).
Details of the work are to be sub --
united,
ub-,ni.ited to the "C'anadhan Ministry of
Health, Ottawa,' "In the nteanfinte,.
said Dr, Galbraith, in an interview,
"we are erecting a laboratory °at 'De-
troit, Mieh,, for carrying on the re-
search work, - and we are negotiating
with an :English firm of titaiittfae or-
ing chemists with a ',view to erecting
laboratories ies at Godalming and Folke-
stone,. which will be opened to '.he
•e,10'rlcl's experts to collie and see for
themselves the work carried en,"
Dr, Galbraith was the youngest Cap-
tain in the British Armies during the
Great War, in which. -he invented a
London, Ontario, He is also a neph-
ew of Mr. Win, Findlay of Wingham;
Wni A. Hays, 14th concession -of
Howiek, •the late eminent divine, the
Rev, Dr, Wm, Galbraith of Toronto,
and a cousin of the late, Field Mar-
shall :Earl Roberts. He attended the..
Wroxeter High School, and the.
'Vingham Business College, Graduat
ing with honors 'in the degrees :of
Doctor -of. Science and Bachelor- of
Veterinary Science from Toronto Un-
iversity, he is also a member of the
Intitittitc of Inventors of London,
England, and a collaborator in the
discovery of .Insulin, •
-
I)r. Galbraith was the yougest Cap-
tain in the British Armies cluing the
Great War, n whch he invented a
bombing machine, since then he has
developed synthetic rubber and a
fuelless motor which has had the ap-
proval' of British scientist..
A leading Detroit firio of manu-
facturing chemists are developing his
researches. Whilst in. England he has
been Chairman of The Transit Ex-
press. Services Limited. He married
Miss Muriel Wiles, a well -know dead-
ing English vocalist.
Many of Dr. Galbraith's schoolboy
friends throughout Turnberry and
Hawick will be pleased to learn of
"Torry's" - success and to know that
he 'intends entering politics upon his
return from England, where he has
been closely associated with Lord
Beaverbrook in the British Empire
Party.
Snapped in Hyde Park, Lonlion,
England, recently, Hon. Barnaby
Howard, little- son of Lord Strath-
cona and descendant of the great
Canadian who was one of the
founders of the Canadian Pacific
Railway, was photographed kiss-
ing- his cousin. the small daughter
or the Hon..Mrs. Arthur Howard.
Both children""are living links with
the'great past when one of the
major events in the history of Can-
ada was in the making.
Organized a few years ago by a
group of farmers' wives with Mrs.
Bertha Holmes, of 'Asquith, Sask.,
as president, the Saskatchewan
Poultry Pool handles about 75 per
cent of the entire egg production
of the province. Last year the
Pool turned over 26,840,184 eggs,
valued at $540,000; 823,743 pounds
of dressed poultry valued at $1.84;
000, and 32,561 pounds of live poul-
try at $6,000, or a total turnover
of $730,000 for the year.
After 15 years of seed planting,
the experimental work of the Can-
adian Government Department of
Agriculture has developed sixteen
varieties of apple trees suited to
the climatic conditions of the
prairie provinces. Of these varie-
ties two have been graded "very
good," and four "good."
The first "Improved Sire Area"
in Manitoba has been established
in the municipality of Roland, ac-
cording to announcement made, by
Albert Prefontaine, Minister of
Agriculture of the province. Un-
der this scheme all bulls, boars • .
and rams must be inspected and
approved before owners, are per-
mitted to retain them for service
in the Area. ••
Over $82,000,000 have -been in-
vested 'in manufacturing enter-
prises in the province of Alberta
and they are paving about $14.000,-
000 yearly in salaries and wages
to over 11.000 employees. A sim-
ilar rapid development in indus-
trialism in the sister provinces of
Manitoba and Saskatchewan is to
he noted Combined the three pro-
vineBs haemo now a rs,r't rennet of
manufactured gams in. ,.,;, acigil-
t .. +.,,n,t of $1-5 nirt).U'td,
•WINGHAM C. OF •
C BANQUET
UET
The community singing led by Harry
Gibson livened things tip, while Bert
Abell in hisusttai good manner ter rer-
cerecthe song,
Canada for Canadians,
which was the cause of enough tumult
to bring hiitl back with an Irish
Comic, Mr. Bert Hiscocks rendered
a solo very acceptably. Mr. Hiscocks
has a wonderful. voice
and received
hearty applause.
Mr. Roberts of the Department of
Highways and who accompanied the
Deputy 'Minister, sang two very ap-
propriate songs and was his own ac-
companist,.
MrW. R. MCckillop, Supt: of C,1.
R„ tvas prevented from being here.
through having an investigation, arid'.
his absence was regretted by all who
know the 'part Mr. 11ticKiilop takes 111
any u,tertair,nrent. The big guns •ttn; of
the evening' were reserved till -the last,
and Mr: Chas. 'Robertson, M,P,P. for
North Huron, speaking for his pari
of the tiding said that Goderich was
the,pretticst town, but Wingham was
the best: business town in the whole
County, which ryas highly appreciat-
ed, T4c introduced Deputy Minister
12, M, :Smith, who brought regrets,
front Hon. Mr:, Henry for being -un-
able to'attend. The Deputy Minister
ainteresting talk on what
gave;very S
the Highway Department had done,
was doing and intended -doing, show-:
`tl0 that by the Time tlae toad (we
•
00,WW'":"'"
•
.raliatsz;;s#>t sjs.
ca S
of I s ents
en S w e
r
TNSPECTION of the Pontiac Big Six
reveals a number of advanced features
which enable Pontiac's big engine to deve-
lop maximum power with remarkable ease
and smoothness. For instance, the engine,
itself, is the largest in any six priced so low.
A carburetor of latest design is equipped
with an accelerating pump to assure rapid
pick-up and full power at high speeds .. .
and an automatic spark control enables
the engine to operate efficiently .under all
conditions.
To these must be added the principal fac-
tors in Pontiac's quite exceptional smooth-
ness . the harmonic balancer which
counteracts torsional vibration in the
crankshaft . . . the new type of rubber
mounting which insulates the engine from
the frame.
See the Pontiac Big Six. Arrange for a real
test on the road. Then, when you are con-
vinced of Pontiac's outstanding value .. .
use the G,M.A.C., General Motors' own
deferred payment plan,-
SIG SIX
PRODUCT OF GENERAL MOTORS
OP CANADA, LIMITED -
3 -
ow , W gham tnL
P.13305
IT'SBETTER BECAUSE I T' S CANADIAN
were celebrating) was ready for per-
manent paving, that we would re•
ceive a much higher type of road. As
this was his first time in Wingham,
he said he appreciated the reception
hwere to
accorded him, .0111. that we
be congratulated on such a large at-
tendance on an occasion of this kind.
But we must content ourselves for a
while with the roads we had as they
are as near the standard type as was
possible to make thein. He said that
in no other County was there such
a high class of roads due to having
Engineers of 'the calibre of Patterson
of Huron and Stevenson of Bruce.
These men were of the more efficient
class of Engineers and were a credit
to any County.
The last lap of the proceedings
hav-
ing been reached Mr. George Spotton
M. P. for North Huron, speaking in
high terms of the splendid entertain-
ment put on by the local organiza-
tion referred briefly to his experience
as Mayor of Wingham and member
of the Chamber of Commerce before
becoming exalted tohis present place
i„
,Canadian affairs, ti: s)e.Lin glowing
terms also .of the man he was about
i, • it thisthatwas
to introduce oduce t way he wa,
Par-
liament
most efficient minister in the 1 ar-
li.m•n of Canada, H then
Caad, e tzoctc
ed the Honorable James Malcoln't,
Minister of Tracieand Commerce, and
cc
the audience rose and sang "for he's
a jolly good fellow"' giving three
cheers tiger h r•s and i g r for one of the fin-
est Canadian politicians. It would be
folly to try and repeat what Mr Mal-
com said but there is one thing, he"
does not waste time, has facts and 1
figures at his finger ends and is a 1
most pleasing ;uest, and we p rec
-
late the honor of having been able to
have Mr. Malcolm with us. The stem
total of the evening's entertainment
is that it was a success.
Signed on behalf of the Officers
and mexnb is - f h' i t tt Cham-
ber
a the W t g ata Cham-
ber of Commerce,
' 'C'. J: McLean, President.
Comments on the Banquet
Bruce County was well represented.
Teeswater was there 25 strong.
:t(incardine sent a strong conting-
ent,
Ripley was very much in evidence.
Walkerton gave .sonic of, their beat.
' Chesley ryas not behind,- and we
wound have liked to have heard Ali•.
a1i tI� h p r 5 n Hydro
o- 1 w oTep e e t5C.rn
1'slission tit Choskey, but time did not
permit.
A good bratty other officials could
r
i
have been given a few minutes toi Quite different. When Goderich;
speak but that meant prolonging the !wants assistance they generally look
sleeting to a late hour. }te Wingham for help.
Heron County officials for some! Blyth and Lucknow fell down sadly.
reason better known to themselves, 1 Secretary Booth will give an ac -
r.
evert conspicuous by their absence, corral of file local standing in another
especially from the County Town. - !column,
01111111%.
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�IIt�.r�� IIp�9lht�� +111
qRl VIII nw tENiNlaq II�Uu�—
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Standard Milling'Co., Norwood, Ont.
Toronto, Ont Shpt. 20,792&
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