The Wingham Advance Times, 1930-07-10, Page 2'An Evening in Hawaii l~
E►.., Chautauqua Feature
ViE2wi,.:.'S HAWAIIANS
"An Evening in Hawaii," beautiful spectacular musical Produetinn.
10111 be an interesting feature of the coming Ckanad.itwn. Chautauqua
here. :Albert Vierra and his notable coinpauy of native: singers and
inatrumentalists will feature Hawaiian musie as it should be played
,end sung. Mr. Vierra has won fame throughout Europe and America.
/Cur hie artistic musical productions which give a vivid glirepse a life
Sar, the fax -away and glamourous islands of the Pacific.
AT T 7 AUGUST and 8,.
THE CHAUTAUQUA, �CJISLJ�� �,l- �a '•T?
,r untutl,
IYretrrltll,ttl,lUttllaatttlx,N,ui ,
WI T ORAIA L1)VANCS41
Thursday,
ly 10th, 71939 '
Of the 'Saviour wttitzag there,
Y`I
don't think it ought to end like
that!"
`So Ler suint!. anti heart filled with
tolls thought, the little maiden remain-
ed for a season clitseted in her room.''
1'w"hat at lust she reappeared she Slip -
Ped a bit of paper into her mother's
hand, '•].•here, Mother," site c :chanted,.
think it sought to have something. at
the end like than.'
"Her mut her,greatly astonished,
unfolded the paper and read the lineti
btfgineing:
'Enter! Enter Heavenly Guest r
"The Inotlter !was ee struck tvit'h
the child': verse, as: wellindeed she
Wright be, that she forwarded it with
an explanatory 'note .to a religious
newspaper, and thus it met tilt• eyes-
and
y'.esand I incorporated it into the version.
of the hyrun in our mission book,"
From Canon Aitken's 1lissapun
Hyiun Brook the hymn, as thus coin-.
pleted, crept into other hymnals, and
Ira I). Sankey always in his later
years, thus used it, and printed it in
subsequent editions, ofhis popular
„Sengs ;and Solos."
It will be noticed that the little
maiden's verse, lead; way from the
know, who usually bety their- clothes
are having torero made so that they
can get something to suit them.
fluters are buying nothing but spurt
clwotlwtt, as they are not so badh Yes-
terday :1 came haute on the st'reelt
ear, with an acquaintance, and she.
saki she had gone out to buy work
dresses, and could get nothing but
long ones. Quite disgusted, she end;
ed by .buying' material and mailing ber
own. And so it goes!
Canadian w'onaen are nut the only
objectors, because a buyer in• one of
the large American' stores,: saysthat varlotts irnPotrtant bits of business
they cannot scot their slue!; stud are come before the board old Tereluy is
trt'irig to get clear of them 'at very consulted, and when no answer comes
Bow prices. He thinks that by Fall, from his grinning teeth he is record -
styles will be more to most women's ed 'as 'Present— but not voting.'
liking. He. also says that they have!"This dressed -up bag of bones sits
ivxna Ser -
never had so many returned dresses, at this board becatxse the 1
busy Bentham willed it -so. When
and the reason most Women girt", is Bentham died be left his whole for-
i+wgijk slim Et" IT OR iar`O 1 ' r, .- .!
A T.'ew Odd Things Ripley's Rook
Toll Us.
Although he died in 18aa, xerezny
Bentham still presides at every board
meeting of the London Untveisity
College Hospital,
"His gaunt form is erect," says
R. L. Ripley in "Relieve It or Not,"
'his sightless eyes stare outright, and
his broad -brimmed beaver hat is
never removed from the long locks
that dangle down .on his shoulders,
nor Is his gloved hand ever taken
from the cane upon which It has
rested for neatly a century. As the
that; their husbands do not like theme tune to University College, Hospital
l his , skeleton should
\Vomen seem to have arrived at the on eouditiont
rat e
be preserved and placed in the Pres-
stage
res-stt e which they use their cont- ident's Cita'ir at every board meeting,
mon sense and will not follow the This unusual testament has been
dictation of fashion blindly. faithfully 'obeyed; by the generations
Tourists of trustees that have followed, and
Jeremy still sits In the` President's
'Driving aksng• some highways, it chair," •
;renis as if curly house in certain sec- There are 620,448,401,785;259,
439,369,000 different- trauspositions'
possible -with .thirty letters, To illus-
trate this amazing statement, Mr.
!tipsy gives us a picture of five
square blocks each with six letters of
the alphabet printed on their sides.
The five blocks thus contain, a total
of thirty letters, and "all the people
on earth working day and night for
a million years could not arrange
these five blocks into all possible
xt5 in bona.
combine a
The population of China and its
annual increase is so great, that "if
all the Chinese in the world were to
math four abreast past a given point
they would never finish passing,
though they marched for ever and
tions takes tt#nri"ts, Not many of us
painting that:inspired the pacru, but ` live to eat, Birt most of us love to eat
not from the idea col veyed . in the, When eat, hut
ngrn ata= appetites -arc
original teat, of atir Blessed Lord's
sharpened and wd enjoy our meal.<
entering inby the Jpe#ted door into
the heart of the penitent.
Hints kor Homebodies
Written for The. Advance -Times
By
Jessie Allen Brown
Present Day Styles
--, Wherever I turn these days I Bear
!anti many another popular bylnus, The Women objecting to tine styles. A
Y „least
i le.
11 ,t,,, x „ a the a
,, M b o
b d
FAVORITE HYMNS I
Y' auAT11'TIYYIIYI It,lit!\,11,1a11Ti,MT,lt11,11,1f,tlHtYttki\aa3,,,,,t4U..
1
ithere!
h is
'ii w t
4I lw.
ext .k t w
Iw. ttwa.ian
'4,\wiling, waiting, oh, how fair!
Pil; rittat. str ange and kindly,
Never such wasseen before;
t l., illy soul, Ior such a wonder.
\\'iit thou not undo the door;
Knocking, knocking; still Hes there;
]!Waiting, waiting, wondrous fair;.
But the door is bad to open,
For the weeds and ry tendrils.
F''Cr round he,.hivees twine.
noel.rnt. , 1.1 ockiug ,nl t; all there!
g, waiting, grand and lair;
es. t1re;, lerereed hard ?ti'... ki, o, kttb
\Aid iw<neath:the iewaled hair
'it':airl tlttOf
patient eyes.
rte rs to tr
"w ,' 1 r in lLf
form t t the Blessed tri aw rt na
ening attitude. ta rdt
a fast tot ed
1La tt.. that
she tan get al
oi�
with'
door hillied ort the inside alatrttt She hopes by Fall that there will be
sou can but- cloth -
wv}aiclr briar; ogle wr i ed }a aw r ;rvwvn, 1 a epergne in then
more than ' usual: Perhaps that is
why specially good meals stand nut
in our memories, and sad to relate,
sometimes the chief i ccollection, wvq
have of some particular place, . is
that we had a w ery good meal there.
The reverse lnnv be the case, and we.
rerneniber particularly poor food.
People catering to tourists de not
always remember that the best ad-
w gal tisement is . a satisfied costumer.
'They' think that people will only be ' Gs.ptaiu 3. E. Hedley, of Chicago,
there once, and then will be on their is the luckiest loan alive.' Be "fell out
01 a 'plane nearly three. miles in the
way, so why worry about wi-ltat Bold sir and then fell back into it again,
.. nlines
they ata forget at white scoutingreser the Garman
of a meal Ott. The n r> t th
u
1918.
,tae, .: who thetourists w � 11 Ia •e 1d 1
wz have
may snake the same trill: Distance' Thera onee was 3 weak with two
Thursdays. "In 114T Pope Eugene
to i ;s, for w , ,. , e that she likes, Several women t; means eery little these. days and an- III, reached Paris on a Friday: Ion-
itww'sit its heizi` closed .t ltla,
ever! "
':so human,aax.t divinely,
longingly It
lw,
1t
is most striking and preaches a
,ine'st elen:tient sermon,
One who could w•tril catch the sig-
niiicanct' of that faiths painting was
Harriet Percher Stowe, the writer of ,
'the Widely known and influential
story, "Uncle Tom's Cabin." wird
while visiting' England in 1$53.4. i•is - ,
iters the arti t s studio. and was per-
nutters to see h in its just perieeted
condition,
What it meant to net- she wrote in -
it..) a touching poem our in tun has.
ybeen built up,
The Rev. W. W. Hen afterwards
Bishop ,,f Wakefield, in 31ST; , wrote
blit`, of :ler picture into
hi"'. hereat -Leri. n t
tiawiewtir ww tisist #Isre, his hymn:
�
Y
t "Cl It n. Thou art standing,
'hater! Enter!Enter!Hears-illy4aw:-tnr t: at.t , d . :
C�°t;asitlt the fast closed door."
Welcome! Welcome! to nay breast. Er
:t. .iii:a"'.eefront1 Mrs.
1 Y,.
,.lt ,w'i`t !irons., 'withstood d Thyt.l,t ilk I Y ,. 13' lay inn, was set te music by the
For heart was full for sin.
- - t, i' I,ti States is Sly At'!?'•n and writer of
I* it 1`hti to wt. haat e t etc.oz rt c, l , it.' `"
4.ter, i music. tot'or t Root. often
1fle_seai owns!"' -('la come _n':
referred to in these articles
Firs: -published and .mensi t:iy-
caregatt'lI sq tins r'•y a -ti • ,: �t �.a, t w':a t -., t ., e:.: this 'hymn
fo•alnoi in .n.k of the i.Trish.., ,:1 .lt,l i •:1$:*lira Of the lir1 tl.rt-c 1,er,.:.
Set,. n ].Tour, 11vs tor t ,.i a'ia. a Most t,t'tx it , l':1c.- tnhy -til-,veno
4's$... a_.lii'i; tk rititi:aui i..:tt tI rat .th Si. l:t:'�,ww' `"1+:' Ii:aId-}'itat:i'� pietairo•, s:•..
John the ])avis ie" dac ir.;x. the. vtst,,tts er'.d tits 1 w ir3r1 it' i,•Witt!'. as it *11:a1
,
t
Y
4 R'. t a � fit •¢�
i.. tri t
,) tix d t t the fi
1 t `l, a .e
* .af tl tk lax..i ww ri>o o wx; .,
t,...attla <
it the iditol! xa3' 1'itt8 o: it tits: 4ist a +,-agar w.r't w w C
to rraaneaue, ft. i i List cense .,s the a . to sits -la ?_1„ww div
Ct;itt:r t ix, i+•iaeTtl,,,Lans, I ai, t, :it, ,,tinl7 e a little sh oo, anddelle. wraarnn t ht'isttna., t:.a.F Ill,: "n iJ . ww it t ;a. x'..1i` w.hr.it.: t. tong e'r
- ce r: a'1'{i'he' d '✓ :'t.,'Stl :at t , t'. sw1 t<wdatiti , nits--^.. elft, a''e' of that"3r
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