Loading...
The Wingham Advance Times, 1932-03-03, Page 2lug WO THE WINGHAM ADVANCE -TIMES • 4Y4t{t1 41101,111111,11Mttitii111011{4t 14M4114t111141411UM1114411+� NE f the IS ,i't RI „t,4t1Ai1111i144t,a,l It tlAlllt YIY11�41,AII11111ii1,Iq 1i 1AA,AA, {1!111llbtllt Erussel_s Schools Closed The. Brussels schools ware. closed last eek 011 ac t s not a t vv wed flu -Ideated of ;,o a ..y children being home with bad colds. The rooms were re -open- ed. on Monday for work as usual. Lucky Editor Congratulations are in order to.Mr. Wm. McDonald, editor of The Cites - ley .Enterprise, Who is richer to -day by $5,000, having guessed the correct papulation of Canada, in the recent Family Herald and Weekfy Star guessing contest: We are looking forward to Brer MlcDonalci inviting us to ,accompany him an a trip to Florida next winter.—Tara Leader. Called to Exeter The officials of James St. United' Church. Exeter, held a meeting on Monday evening and tendered a un- animous call to the Rev. J. H. Stain- ton, B. A., of Pickering, Ont, The. vacancy was caused through the re- signation of the Rev. Duncan Mc- Tavish who has been the pastor of the James Street Church for sic years, Mr. Stainton is being called to the largest 'United Church within many miles the membership being near the 800 {mark. The newly ap- pointed pastor is married and has a family of • two sons. He has been serving at points between Belleville and Toronto. teers. That Count; Culross does not drop in the rear of the van in extra fine cattle for the Canadian market as evidenced by a shipment on Saturday last from the Teeswater Station. Mr. jas. Thomp- son, of the 12th Concession, had four steers on the market, one of which brought down the scales at 1,860 lbs. The shipment of four tipped the' scales at 4.790 lbs., or an average of 1,596 per anima}. Good intelligent farming paves the way to success ev- en during the "depression." came to 'Magistrate Walker's 4.1ffice v1 and wanted to lay information w against her husband, charging assault ht vee all involved, Liquor . charges during tltc' fltmous I be laid against these •three men Times, which gave n a blame \vbatever was attached tarian to the great -.abut the Cadi did not think, from tl, them in ec4.nnection with Kunkel's wally known as 'Thi ` seas stif vrliat'he learned, that she'seas Its,ttt ci.atli, tivhiclt thejtirr found to haver.... Wiens,` iced in doing so, and he tuid her so. been caused by the dilation of the Like all reformers, the authors of \ citizen who knows the family act- ,,tcmach caused by the liquor forcingthis :lleit�canenk nitpolruhu with t ti iii the role of peacenn kers--\\calk- hu liters heart {gut of pusitlpn. Tills those who disliked ,ehau e, or who cram T.di•scope., vt'rdict tt a ba.c cl un the report .inf for some reason :Or another found two 1)r. t1. H. 5inclnir,'of fault With there for endeavoring' to Moved Here From Toronto \\'alkerton, and Dr. 079ole, Mild- restore to the British branch of: tlte. :11r. _'\. C. Williams, a disabled war Male. Church Catholic what lead been lost, •t i ternn in b ) 14 rc t t 'i t t Mr. Ed. \\•il- 4 � hams, local Manager of the Domin- ion Store, has moved here from To- ronto, with his wife and two children, ane]' has leased Jr.lNicholas ,Reich's My father says the paper h ]louse in the West \Yard. —Walker- isii:t put up right; ton Herald-Tirnes. Hurled Against Fence e Joseph Folrtier, of Chepstow, is confined to ];rune County Hospital at Walkerton, suffering from a frac- tured collarbone and dislocated right arm, received Sunday afternoon when leading a cow to Dunkeld . C..N,R, sta- tion for shipment. The cow, which was being led by a tone which Mr. Kolmer had twisted around his wrist, became infuriated, and after dragg- ing the mama distance down the road. finally lumped a fence, Mir. Falmer was slammed against the fence with such force as to cause the above in juries. Tracts for the the name Trac” revival now its Oxford Mltov e WHEN THE PAPER DOESN'T `'r uv erloukt tl; in the pari centuries. Isaac Williams had been for some COME time curate to I.Ir,.. Newman at Ox- ford, -ford, and was himself the writer of reads some of, the "Tracts," When Keble retired front. the pro- fessorship of Poetry, his logical suc- cessor, as was generally allowed, was his friend Isaac Williams,. who had come to be recognized as a poet of ability and promise, But the oppo- nents of the Tractarians mustered their fortes against him, and a gen- tleman whose poetic ability never re- vealed itself, was elected to that im- portant position. Mr. Williams 'was disappointed, es- pecially when it transpired that some of his intimate friends had turned against him. He retired from Ox- £urd and from public life and in the country at Bisley and afterwards at Stinchcombe, he remained quietly at work, writing and ministering until his death from tuberculosis in 1865. New Hotel at Lucknow. The Sepoy Hotel—that is what Mr. Chester Lee has decided to call his hotel, which has been open for busi- ness for some time now, and which is gradually being improved and fur- He finds a lot of fault, he does, per- usin' it all night, He says there ain't a single thing in it worth while to read, And that it doesn't print the kind of stuff the people need. He tosses it aside and says it's strictly on the bum, But you ought to Bear ]tin's holler when the paper doesn't come. He reads about the weddin's, and the sports like all get out,' He reads the saciol doin's with a most derisive shout, He says they make the paper for the women folks alone, He reads about the parties and he'll fume and fret and groan; He says of information it doesn't have .a crumb, hut you ought to hear hint holler when the paper doesn't come. nished until now it offers a more at-, He's always first to grab it and he tractive appearance.. Mr. Lee faced reads it plumb :clean 'through, a difficult proposition in remodelling this building, which Was formerly the Family Theatre building. He, has proved himself to be a capable car- penter and with the assistance. of his son has done the carpenter work himself, not to mention many attrac- tive pieces of furniture Which .Mr.. Lee has built by hand, The hotel has been open to accommodate travellers as well as the community- since the first of the year. Mr, Lee is a spe11- known hotel man and his acquaint- anee with the trade has helped toget ��� HYMNSTE hint off to a good start, as well l as Mrs: Lee's reputation as a culinary artist.—Lucknow Sentinel. a Lord, in this Thy mercy's day, Carries]. Off Third Prize Ere the time shall pass away, Mrs. jas. Kirby received last week On our knees we fall and pray, a cheque from the Bruce Old Boys' and Girls' Association, of Winnipeg, Holy Jest; grant tis tears, • being third prize money for pictures Fill us with heart-searching fears, from Bruce County, The photo was Ere the hour of doom appears. taken last winter in Teeswater when the snow was Over a foot deep, and Lord; on us Thy: spirit pour, Tnrk, their police dpi, was hitched to Kneeling lowly at Thy door, a 'sleigh in which was seated Frank Ere .it close for evermore. Ilenwielc, one of Mrs. Kirby's sons. The dog was alert, ears up and feet By Thy night of agony, ir. eadincs to rinip tuff at full speed. 1;y Thy supplicating cry, The photo was well worthy of the l y Thy willingness to Die; By Thy tears of bitter woe For Jerusalem below, Caused Death ,I.et us not Thy love forego. Dilation of the stomach; caused by ' drinking a combination of hard cider Judge and Saviour of our' race and whiskey, was given. as the rause When we see Thee face to face, s o death of Andrew Kunkel, forty- Grant us 'Heath Thy wings a place. year-old Carrick Township farmer,;Amen.by the coroners jury which inv {ti- _ gated his. death. No blame was at- tached to anybody by tl"te jury. Kun- kel .died last Tuesday -after a drink - mg party in which Alex. McDonald, Sullivan. Jacob Specht. cat Roll- a! L,. and A. Poerhniaii, of Formosa, He doesn't miss an item nor a want ad., this is true. He says they don't know what we want, the dern newspaper guys. I'm goin to take a day sometime an' go an' put 'em wise; Sonictinies itseems as though they must be blind and deaf and dumb, But you ought to hear him holler when the paper doesn't come. A Certain Type of Unemployed The other day a farmer from the Burwell Line picked up on the high-' •sway a pedestrian making his way to Mount Forest` soap Idtchen. The far - titer offered to give him a good home for a while if he would go back and do some chores for him, but the out - of -work rather laughed at the idea. A member of the Legion here heard of the matter and interviewed the young fellow, who became very sau- cy. Coon. Lewis was informed of the , case, and he and the Chief promptly put the pedestrian on the road again. It econe such test could be -applied regularly, 'conditions might improve, —Mt. Forest Confederate, A Murder Was Probable Last Saturday Chief Ferguson was summoned to a hou e, where, accord- ing to what he was told over the 'phone, a man intended to kill his wife or child. The Chief, with his son High Constable Archie Fergu- son, was soon on the spot, but he found that the supposed intentions ;tif the man in question had been exag- gerated. *Monday interning the wife pri'Ge.--Teesw iter News. Hard Cider and Whiskey j 'This popular little -hymn, so ap- ?propriate for the Lenten season, was written by one of the most amiable ;arid truly beautiful characters the last 'century produced. His name has 'beer perpetuated and made to be be- loved in the Province of Quebec'' by !two Bishops elf the ancient capital, mc rombers of his family one of whom,. the Right Reverend Dr. Lenox lt.tni. , still occupies the see of Que ' lit t'. The Reverend Isaac Williams, 13. I was born in 1802, his father being a lawyer practising in the London Chancey- Courts, He was fortunate lit haying as a private tutor the Rev. a MIr. I't lehatupton, whose pupils Were ,:iv'en -a thoroughly sound classical edueaii,itt. Su complete was the 'training in Latin, that I aae. li nts became accustomed to think in :,that laiiguagt arid to translate his id. - s knt,i Entli;:}i One emnsegiience lei' this was a precision and clarity in toe use" oi word, which :aat. rat 'distinction to his 'tale, and made his {teenies t ctj: i'n ate:t rtt Writing a delight t • eaders. at Trinity l e al}C a,c, Oxford, t+,. v' slag xi ht @ ats..cederl fri,am Yarrow; hc: t:;, :ti a c c'ht,iarsbil:i fig Latin verse:.\t idoaita ri. 4.1.41 afterwards. he 0 a t:.9Ya.rm;l ita and bee: am tutor his college: orlain d to Y :til"ib enr0T ' near Irt tr•y which he'a'l fOr a short time lief tre li Counsel (cross-examining prejudic- ed witness): "I suggest that Mrs. Qiggins is anathema to you" Witness: "Thep' you suggests wrong.,It's only my friends I calls by their 'first names," i�. * I'I0tiler (at bedtime): "Don't'Mum- blc your words, 'Nancy. I can't' hear. a •word you say." ' Nancy: "I wasn't speaking to you, mummy ' • ;i• g1 �t Doctor: "I hear you performed a very successful operatiott on Sir Al- gernon a few days ago." Surgeon "Yes, but only just it the nick of time, old roan;; another cou- ple of days and he'd. have recovered without it."` * Wife (looking up from newspaper) 'It says here, dear, that a man has just married a girl he first met when he dashed into a burning building and saved her life:" Husband: "H'm—that should. teach him to mind his own business in fut-. ure 1:4 Small boy: "What is college bred, pop?,, Pop (with son in college): "They make college bread, my boy, from the flower of life and the dough of old age." He published; several volumes of The customer whose account had poetry, most of it of a sacred char— been outstanding for some months, aczer, under such titles as The Cath- called round and paid up. edral, The Baptistry, The Altar, The "That letter you sent me did it," Catechism, also "Hymns Translated he said."I've never seen one like it. from 'the Parisian Breviary." Our hymns, "Disposer Supreme," "0 Heavenly Jerusalem," "0 Word of God Above," are from this last vol- ume. The Lenten Hymn reproduced herewith is from The Baptistry, a poem in thirty-two parts or `Images' as they are called, Party Twenty has sub -title "The Day of Days, or The Great Manifestation," and consists of a hundred and five three -line stanzas. From these six verses were taken for Et 111 a "Hconal" published in 1853' � by Ccoke and Denton. The hymn thus IN formed speedily became popular, es1111 - pecially so when Dr. W. H. Monk, Ifft musical editor of "Hymns, Ancient g and Modern," composed for it the lt well-known tune St. Philip. 0101 Why, it should get money out .of a stc.ne. How did you put it togeth- er?" The business man smiled sadly. "I chose the best bits out of the letters my 'boy sends me from school," he explained. . Thursday,It/larch 3rd, 1932 fromADAHES C L S AND SORE THROAT NEURITIS, � � y Fd�E RALG EA 0 Vi !{ Don't be a chronic sufferer from headaches, or any other pain. There is hardly an ache or pain Aspirin tablets can't relieve; they are a great com- fort to women who suffer periodically. They are always to be relied on for breaking up colds. It inay be only a simple head BEWARE OF SUBSTITUTES ache, or it may be neuralgia or neuritis; rheumatism. Aspirin is still the sensible thing to take. Just be certain it's Aspirin; you're taking; it does not hurt the heart. (Made in Canada.) The farmer marched into the little gracious, what do you want with all grocery with a firm step. Farmer: "I want that tub of but- ter and that barrel of sugar and all the other stuff you have in the shop." Widow (who kept the shop): "My the goods?" Farmer: "I dunno. But you see I'ni the executor of yourhusband's will, and the lawyer told me to carry out the provisions." ■ Several other tunes, some of them of much beauty, have since been writ- ten for our hymn, but Dr. Monk's is undoubtedly the one best known and most closely wedded to it. Isaac Wil- ilams died on the first of May, S.S. Philip and James' Day, which doubt- less accounts for the name given to the tune by the author. • �ry1 i ,i '%4tr �i. � "Y.v ea, .a a:� A" ii 9, yY \ } J II.h Wrecked Motorist. (opening his eyes) : "1 had the right of way, didn't Le Bystander: "Y eh, but the other fel- Ng low had a truck." lag * a'* * "What is your rule of business =' Kt your morin?"—the Stock Exchange magnate was asked. "\+cry simple,- he replied. , "I pay' for something I can't get with mon- ey that 1 haven't got, and then sell what I never had for more than it ever cost."' * * * e 11„ { lx� r3 "Do you know, John,". remarked Mrs. jaggy, as her :Husband stumbled upstairs, "that I've been awake for 4/01 hoiurs waiting for you to come home' ru from the club." "It that isn't just like a woman'" growled Jaggs. "And I've been at j 1 . the club fur ]lours waiting for you to 4.1 He was a new boarder, but when i prunes were aerved for breakfast for the third nioraiing in succession he felt that he was entitled to say sante- thing: "I'm not very fond of prunes,- lie said, "Have I no choice.;" k -ea," replied the lady' of the l.muse. "'•k ou may take them or leave them," iu l.c;vxr (elr;l>inl, with his adored,]: llciw much!, is the fare? Taxi driver: "That is all right, sfr. O:xh'rd. Ibe young lady s father aes nista.. iii his maderc'raduatr' days,. that." lead become warmly attached i l 1'E4`.1. JohnJohn,:ddc, i'x ctfes'�'<4r ,,f 4 lo rttt knoty" enough to be us try, author of The Christian Year" till in this 'office, boy "• ;team F,.tea laf , ,, `"Sun tf' any s".atii Thou Yes, sir, I left the last place be- ' i"rtfr' l't,•, a£a.'''"r•r tine hymns cause ow boss said I Icnt.m too t`•a'.Y t" lar. : t'e, It' alis' Ret`. innelt." .:wl. at.:'liii[y u:. "Lead Lily Light,- coal '.'raise to the " Smytli a. st ii: tlac lle sf t. afterwards H ' trait his 13..\. ant] his 0111111 :\4'?itYT::.t7,. \\'ith them and "Yes, I know; blit it's sli tl,er f"u'ikndls lie 4:oihtborated in pro-'wlio ..ttjlfrot'lC ]him.'". all CII tt 111511111111111114111111111111111111111 -11111111111111111111111111111111111 ■ a ■ ■ INa NI 41A, "Atti1,9,514 .. ,:oil }"414.,.a Tell anxious Custokners About Bargains lr e Y._ \ 1 1 4irtll ig \gg� s in t,lt,! j ;\ \:t; 2 ..�M ivlj ••rZR,7.,3 3- ,tea IMMEMMIUmmaigagmoyw ro r ,o �•lc d. x Y, A '3� e ii k', Is to -day the favorite newspaper in 2,000 hbmes in this district. There it reaches an army of buy- ers, counting the number of pos- sible grown-ups in each family, NOW MR. MERCHANT, isn't that the very army of pros- pects you're trying to reach? Aren't they the folks who should know about Four wares, your Saving Prices? Then up and tell 'ell] with: T ;reTn�'�n•�fir:nritlVLt1 �i'•re4.�. +!v*,�1suSciC, }n-.riStfllr,'�c fxrr�crr'1 iIi` li. s i s 4lV a Mil. ertisi •.x:....070.3 C py and Cuts Fu nis 1YJ::A.;,trldu. gt:;A,ti:�� M' Cali E CL SSIFIE. CILU ART L 7.SLOST, FOUND, STRAYED, WANTED TO BUY OR SELL, ET ETC. 4 RiNe .J