The Wingham Advance Times, 1927-10-06, Page 2WINGHAIVI ADVANCE -TIMES
Thursday, October 6th; x927
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URE LINiEN
TELLING
Treasure Hunt Value l C
WRAPPERETTE NEW, PATTERNS
Extra Value, per yard •
GOO til QUALITY
'WHEELING YARN
All The Good Shades
Treasure Hunt Value
Per ib. 89c
25c
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8
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eto
a?rs *sem
27
hero You Save
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9'2..-F:.,.,i, G;,u,.•a..
ai.en, au a a'u„ xar
ch. FLANNELETTE
Treasure Hunt Value 12c
'PI'S TWEE
Size's 24 to 29
1039
EXTRA SPECIAL
MILITARY BRUSH
AND CONY':,
This number is so good it worth
laying away for a Christmas
Gift, while they last,
per set.... 99c
mops ALL WOOL S/COATS
V Front style, Fawn or Heather, sizes 36 to
$2.39
42, Extra Value,, each
LAD TIE'S tCw EPE
SCARFS
Sizes 13 in. x 541in. Colors
Peach. Jade, Coral, Sax -e,
Sand, White, Etc. Treasure
Hunt Value, each 89c
LADIES'
SILK
LOOM 'ERS
89c each
:'nly"'M,,.R11:
LADIES'
Slice data wrtaw pllwoo I
SLIPS
.139e each
worth02.00 any
day.
LADIES'
SILK
GOWNS
$L39 each
These would make
suitable 9hristtas
Gifts,
pet
BL ITERS
Sizes 30 to 34 401.40
SCOTCH FINGERING
YARN
Away belowvalue all the want-
ed shades, 2 or 3 ply, lb. 95c
1511.1..1131.
O+"'S ALL IMO ll,
PULLOVER SWEATERS
89c e
Suitable styles, Suitable colors, Suit-
able sizes - 24 to 32. A most remark-
able bargain.
BOY'S HEAVY S/COATS
Heather mixture, Blue trim, Sizes 26
28, 30, 32, each... • • 1.59
IID
oats)
LAYE'S ALL WOOL UN,t Efi' ! l OSE
(Seconds) Treasure Hunt Value, per pair 39c
The
!',iced Low
NeW Cloths, New Colors, Snappy
Styles, Lines well worth up to
818.50. A very special put -
chase allows this ' low price
Treasure Hunt Value
At GIB Pike
Made from quality Pin Point
Cloth, all have Fur Collars and
1
R.I,I+, ..aatY�r P i+i', av<�f,.1014�'
•
5
PURE LINEN
LUNCHEON SET
$L98
One 52x52 Cloth with
• Six Napkins to match.
ir,, 1 isree,
Waiker Store
REAL LENT[- E11
PURSES
95c each
A most wonderful "'bar-.
gain, away below its
actual worth.
•ALUIV NUL7,01„
PERCOLATORS oo
Cuffs, Absolutely the biggest.
Snap of the Season.
Treasure Hunt Value
....461434 n -Q,04;t6[a.[..,, 411 MI :10 Elim, 4. :., r::nxl1L4
TABLE CLOTH
$8c each
made from a splendid quality
fine cotton yarn, Beautiful
Damask designs.
32 > J rely ALL W L FLANNEL ,,
Ne Shades, Extra Value, per yd.
'S:dlvl;" ' , 404;'n14
BEAUTY BAT
SOAP
5c cak
Suitable for all the
family, even the
Baby's tender skin.
offers Bar
ains dalore
All
STAMPED
GLASS TOWELS
19c e
c
Start working them
now for Christmas,
Red and Blue check.
79c
'+ vein'Y.9N'tii ttiff.:kalt1K •�'•:_•t-..y
Over The Store
FAVORITE HYMNS
Jesu, the very thought of Thee
'With sweetness falls my breast;
But sweeter far Thy face to see;
And in Thy presence rest.
•.No voice can sing, no heart can framer
Nor can the memory find,
A sweeter sound, ;than Jesus' name,
The Saviour of mankindl
hope of every contrite heart)
o ,joy of all the meek!
To those who fall, )tow kind Thou art!
How good to those who seek!
But what to those who find? Ah, this
• Nor tongue nor pen can showy
The love of Jesus: what it is
None but His loved ones know.
Jesul our only joy be Thou,
As Thou our crown wilt be;
In Thee be all our glory now,.
And through eternity..
* * *
This favorite hymn is one of sev-
eral derived from "Jesu dulcis Mem-
aria," the most touchingly beautiful'
of all Latin, mediaeval minstrelsy.
It, writer, Bernard of !Clairvaux,
Who flourished, hed, 'in the twelfth century,
was one of tlic greatest figures of an
important time. His father, Te,aselin,
was renowned as a knight of more
than ordinary' prowess, the cowman -
10n -in -arms awl friend of the Duke of
3 iii ;lindy,
Ise vas boil: in the ancestral cls
t
o ill
it� of Les I oiltalrtcs, near Til . )n ,
torr, dliti (;'tit up to be a yotlnF, Ivan
ttif .n,pa-sinl.; lrersi,n,.c1 beaity,;and of
alt 'rl r•c.sistible charm of Manner. fligh•
ly
educated, of high bir'tii and wei1•1t1,
a dead mother's` influences inotilekd
his whole life. In his twenty-third,
year he entered a tnonaste.ry, and such
was, even then, his persusive ability
that he took with him his uncle and
two brothers, who .,renounced their
promising worldly careers at his call.
His mother, who had died eight years
before, had come to him in dreams,
he declared, and implored him to give
himself to his Master:
Two years later the speedily over-
crowded Monastery` of Citeaux put
him at the head of twelve monks and j
others, and 'sent him' forth to estab-
lish another abbey for his numerous
admiring followers, which, after ,many
privations and trials, he founded se-
curely at Clairvaux. His talents and
learning won him a leader's position
in the church and he became celebrat-
ed as one of those theologians known
as the "Schoolmen," and was probab-
ly the best skilled controversalist of
his day.
It was the time when the College
of Cardinals at Rothe was torn by
factions,' and two rival popes were
elected,and reigned at the same time.
One of them, Xntoeent II, fled to
France for safety, and it was decided
to leave it to St.Bernard to deterrn-.
ine whether the French bishops
should aelancnvlettge Innocent or Arm -
clews I1, who remained in Rome as.
their pope, A great council was sunt-
,bone'. and Bernard announced, after
much consultation, that Innocent was
Pope, 'and: Anaclettis anti -l'o'pe, Of
course, war was the result, but Ber-
nard won over the English rh King,
JTenry I, and Lathair, theGerman
Emperor, to suppcu•t the :French
cause, which enabled the allied forces
to ' advance; into Italy and to Rome.
1 otltair and his army, however, de-
serted Bernard =in Rollie, and there
was at weary waiting ,until the rival
Pope Anacletus died, and his suc;ces-
sor, Victor II, had .been induced to
resign, before the question was fin-
ally settled. and Innocent was univer-
sally acknowledged to be Pope.
I . It was allowed on all sides that St
t f
Bernard had won,, he victory y orn- In-
nocent
nocent andat the Lateran' Council
of 1139, the largest church council
ever 'held up to that time, the Abbot
of Clairvaux was the commanding fig-
ure. During the next few years he
appeared as the indignant and, suc-
cessful defender 'of his order, when
clergy who were of Chiny and not of.
Clairvaux were nominated for high
positions, He it was who prosecuted
the renowned lover of Heloise, the
theologian Abelard, and secured, his
tondetnnatton for heresy..
In 1 146 he set out to preach a cru-
sade, and was so marvellously suc-
cessful that it appeared the whole
population of Christian Europe took
up' arms to win the Holy sepulchre
and Jerusalem from the Saracens. Of
the unnumbered hordes who took the
crusader's cross, ttot a tenth ever
reached Palestine, and the Ding of
France, with Conrad, Emperor of
Germany, returnedi home,, disgraced,
with mere fragments of their armies.
Some. of the blame for their defeat
fell upon Bernard, who wrote a vig-
orous defense, which is still in exist-
ence. He retired from public life,
weary and saddened, and spent, a
;year or two in quiet, during which
time he probably wrote his undying;
poem "Jesu dulcis mcrtior'ia,"'oil the
name of Jesus, He died in tin,
St. '1leriland':s best known hymn—
for tie wrote a few others of inferior
vaitii-'was in forty-two . four -line
'verses.: From it comes: our hymn
printed herewith, a translation by the
Rev.. r, Caswell, a Roman Catholic
clergyman, a ltymo-writer of ' great'
ability; "Jests, the very thought is
sweet," by Rev. J. M. Neale, the well-
known Church of England writer and
translator; "0 Jesu, King most won
der£ul," "0 Jesu, Thou -the glory art,'°.
both by Mr. Caswell; "Jesus, Thou
joy of loving hearts," by Ray Palm-
er; "Dear Jesus, when I thins: of.
Thee," and several other much valued
hymns of adoration.
St Bernard of Clairvaux must not
be confused with Bernard of Cluny,
or of Morlaix, who gave us the "New
Jerusalem" hymns, "The world is very
evil," "Jerusalem. the golden," and
"For thee, 0 'dear, dear country."
Both lived in : Franca at the same
rime, but they belonged to different
and fiercely differing orders of monks.
The latter was an Englsihman by
extraction, who lived ard died in the.
magnificent Abbey cif Cluny, perhaps
the most glorious for its buildings
and the splendor of itsritual and ap-
pointments the world has ever known.
Many :tunes have been set to our
hymn, St: Agnes and I3eautitndo, both
by the justly revered I.Rev. Dr, Dykes,
as popular, perhaps, as any of them,
The one most frequently used for it
was composed by an English organ-
ist and composer, Richard £3edhead,
who was born in Tezo and died in
reor, aiid who published a valuable
volume of "Church hymn Tunes" its
GET In USE tT for Sore Throats,
Bronchial Asthma, Quinsy, Bronchi-
' tis, Cough, Head Colds, Catarrh, an't!.
Tonsil Diseases. Good results oi• mon-
ey back. It's Mrs. Sybilla Spahrs Ton-
sii,itis. C. H, McAvoy, Wilil;ham, T.
R. Allan, Wroxeter.
CHANGE IN HUNTING SEASON
DEER AND MOOSE
The Ontario 'Government have an-
nounced a change in the open season
andmoose this for deer ear, in that
ais y ,
either animal may be taken in the dis-
trict ,south of the French and Mat-
tawa; rivers from November 1st to
November 3oth, and in', the district
north of the French and Mattawa.
from October loth to November 3otlt.
These; periods are very much in fa-
vor of the hunter, especiai]y if the
weather may turn cold, and, it titist-
ed the action of the Government will
result in a marked, increase in the
Humber of those taking to the woods..
For their transportation, Canadian
National Railways have provided with
their usual care and forethought and
printed copies of the Hunters' Train
Service leaflet inay be obtained short-
ly on application to Canadian Nation-
al Ticket Agent.
Maitland PresbyteryAneets in I.nek-
nova on 'Tuesday, October YSth, when
Rev. lir. Grant, Superintendent of,
Missions, will present the budget of
the church.
By Virtue of Merit
IP
T5&
is the outstanding leader in Canada.
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