Loading...
The Wingham Advance, 1921-10-13, Page 6ova toe Winghn,,m Ahmice The Yomig 014 Lod llabli.;he(l at wilagNan, ont"rio Every Thursoily I410pning A. G.SMITII, 110Mher Subseription rates,: -- One 42-00; six moliths, $1.00 Ill adv"'.11ce. Advertising rateq on aPPliNktiOn. Advertisements livithout 81)Qcille (11- rections will W Inserted until forilia and charged accordingly. Changc3 for contract advertise- nieut,i be in tbA office by noon, �:ou­ day. BUSINESS CARDS v4afilgton mutuv.l Fire Rnsurance Co. 147'stablLsbcd 18-40 I -lead Office, Guelph 10.91cs taken oil all elas,�es o2 Insur- able property ou tho eash i)r preratum note sy.�tem, ADN1011t Agent, Wingham Id IV 110 1 D U 0 _F43 11 L BARRISTER, SOLICITOn, ETC. Victory zor; Other Sonde Bought and Sold. Block, Winghm 1R.. VANSTORE I1ARl1lGTC-R AND SOLICITOR Ocney to Loin at Lowest Rates. WINGHAM AR TVAMRI I IRWIN L,D. -,. Dt�ct,,;r v? D�Illtal Surgery of tlid� Penn;q'i"allia C(J!,�.Po and Licentiate of Dental Surgery of Ontario. Olfl,,-� in Mlcdonald Block. DR. G. H. ROSS Graduate Royal College of Dental Surgeons Graduate University of Toronto Faculty of Dentistry OFFICE OVER H. E. ISARDIS STORE "L R. HAIMABLY S.Sc., M.D., C.M. SPecial attention Paid to diseases of Women and Children, having taken Postgraduate work In Surgery, Bac- feriology and Scientific Medicine. Office liv the Karr Residence, between the Queen's Hotel and the Baptist Church. All business given careful attention. Phone 54. P.O. Box 113 Dr. Robt. C. Redmolid M.R.C.S. (Eng). L,MC.P. (Lond). PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON (Dr. Chisholm's old stand) STEWART DR. � R. L. � R1 Graduate of UnIvemity of Toronto, FacultY ofAtedicine; Licentiate o! the Ontario College of Physicians and Surgeons. Office Entrance: Second Door North of Zurbrigglar Photo Studio. JOSEPHINE STREET PHONE 22 Th Yr. Margaret C. Calder General Practitioner Graduate University of Toronto, Faculty of Medicine. 0111ce—Josephine St., two doora. south of Brunswick Hotel, Telephones—Office 281, Residence 151 I SELL Town and Farm Properties. Call and cee my list and get my prim. I have some excellent values. J. G. STEWART WtNGHAM Phone 184 Office In Town Hall DRUGLESS PHYSICIAN CHIROPRACTIC It Is easier to keep Well than to r& cover lost heaith. Chiropractic Ad. JuRtMents I& the Key to Better Health. They remove the Cause of Disease, DR. J. ALVIN FOX 0 Phone 191. HOurs-2-5 and 7-8 p.m. DRUGUSS , PHYSICIAN OSTEOPATHY DR. F. A. PARKER 0800WWO PhYrAcian, only qualified Osteopath in XOrth Huron. Adjustmont Of Ma gpl.to 1�3 more quielcly F,coured and with fewer treat- ments than by ally other method. JH1iX1,1 pnp,5�tairo Ind other exanllna� lokV4 wade. OPFICC OVER CHRISTIE'S Cooking Iltnterg. pcur ploctrin, room Ileatero of file, ladi'Olnt type hilvo been mounted by 411 1�',Ingllsh Inventor oil arm$ eltend. it%, front a baso, (�aclt 0.61)arafel�, cul. luetable ag to Augle, It being pasalhict' 10 tWn two 40 cooking ean b6 done on New Ull-Inea, sceond largeat it'l, still praeflml there. The )", -,,n aro en One 'globo, ovenples tho paradorxV.41! Tave the virtue of cleanliness �stjw a marked tiegive. Bathing with position. ot being it once the oldc� them is almost a part of their religion, and You!1gQ-1A spot on the earth, There. and they believe the spirits of the do - 'ire found auinlal.,, that 703111Q(l cell- Partod ,ire "is much addicted to water turies ago, when gerns grew to the as the living. This belief accounts for Aze cf giant trees and glaciers were the carefully made. paths which lead niahing valleys, and thcre too I% Ono from every grave in a tribal cemetery of the few ulieNplored portious of 'che to the water. T1 tk living have made v;orltl. smooth the way of the dead to the Thirty-six yeam ago Great Britain, bath. 11011and .1nd Gormany divided the Is- The area of the island is close to land or, Paper, anit with the exception, 300,000 square miles and supports a of .1, few tra(ling posts on the coast population, estimated at 1,000�000. littlo change has been made. The por- Virtu -ally the only portion of the is - tion formerly held by Germany has land known is the coastal region and bee'a placed under the control of Aus- is, of course, tropical in ebaractcr, as tralla. The interior Is still held by the equator Is only about twenty m9.es wild tribes whiell bear a &trange re- oft Its northernmost point. reniblance to the Negroes of Africa The animal life in Now Guinea is and their origin Is a mystery. The strange to western eyes and repre- Papuan% as the natives are called, se-nts a fauna of bygone ages, All of are Rthiopin in almost every cliarae- I the native animals are marsupials, teristle—woolly hair, flat noses and having poc%ets, like the opossum of thick lips, 'while the natives, of the ad- North America, and many of them lay japent 14;lands are Malayan, eggs, like birds. In the number and The Papuans seem to have a weak- beauty of its birds the Island is with­ ness for elevated homes. In the north- out a rival. One of the most beautiful ern and eastern portiolis of the Island members of the feathered family na- they build their houses oil piles ald tive to the Island Is the gorgeous bird In the south-eastern Part they live in of paradise. Bird skills form one of ende huts In the treea. While ilne.eni- the chief items of export froill the is - ably savage, head hunting and canni- laill, AU A Ir TFV OL10 Sri' FF all I - Stories of Famous Peo0le Some People call never m4lw up Illustrate,% his aversion. The Incident their minds, while Others. often defer occurred during the Peace Conference, their decision becullsO they love argu- When 110 W110 taken to hear the comic mont for Its own sake. Perhaps the Opera "La F file do Madame Angot,,, in roputaticn. Mr. Baliour has Ja some Paris, Afterwards lie wit" asked how quarteivi for Indecision Is explained by lie had enjoyed it, the fact that he relishes a 41scusslon,. "Well, It wouldn't be, so. bad,$) he re. whether It Is an the subject of Brl- Plied, "if It waisn't for the singing!" talu% foreign relations or the advisa- those formerly conducted, and to in -1 bilitY of holding oil to a mad bull's It 18 Pleasant to recall, Ill the midst tall. of uncomfortable thought about India, Ono day, auring ;)in important de- that Hindus possess. their sense of' bate, Mr. Balfour rattled off a string lillmor and can enjoy the lighter side of logic, while M. Clenienoeaut Ilstened of lite. to him with deferential resignation. Ali Indian mallarajah's car was re. At lant. after about twenty minutes, cimtlY held up before Buckingham the s,poaksr fmtilown. Palace, 110 scintillated with emeralds, "C'est fini?" quarried M. Clemen- Pearls, and diamonds, and an Ameri. ceau. can woman stopped to admire his daz., Mr. 11altour intimated that he had z1flig brilliance-, At last she could not finished. contain her curiosity, and addregHed "Tell me," said M. Clemenceau him. blandly, "are. you for or against?" "Do you speak English?,, she asked, he present hiring cost of the small- st quantity I ssix guineas daily, T41Q maharajah rewarded her with more than travel -tales nd a a beautiful smile, and shook his head There have been many rumors of the as though regretting that conversation return of Air, Bonar Law to the Brl- between them washpimpossible, fish House of Co-innions, but apparent. "Now I wonder," sald the American ly he has no present Intention Of lady to her companion, ,I wonder how emerging from h1s retirement, He much those' jewels are worth? That. does not seem anxi011s to "face the Is," she added, "If they tire real?" mus,le again," perhaps because he 'has As- the maharajah's motor move(I on an Inherent dislike of music of any the noble occupant boat forward and kind. murmured in T� GOT HIM PULLING AWAY FROM THE PLATE ANYHOW. There Is an amusing story which, "Paste." Why the Sea is Blue. i - 4 When to Vecide. Don't decide anything when you are feeling down; at such a time Your one thought is to get the thing settled; you are ready to yield everything. What you -want to do when you are feeling like that is to, wait a bit; stave the thing ()if for p., while Ilatil YOILL are ieeling better, as you surely will. There never was a storm yet but it cleared off, bring- ing bright skies 'and cheery weather. It will be just the same with your little period of depression; it will Pass, too, and restore to you a sense of confi- dence and courage, This is the frame of mind in which you want to attack the problem: don't decide anything when you are feeling down. The Power of Position. VV,- began our trip with a day at Niagara Falls. As we stood watching the rush Of mighty water the tremen- ddus power of it fageinated us and made us forget ourselves. There is Bnough, power In the falls to turn all %e wheels of that part of the country. Where does Niagara Falls get its Dower? And how Is it that such vast power is stored up in the water of L,Tlagara, whereasvirater of many times 'hat volume, such as thie Dead Sea, is Dowerless? of course the Power is not Inherent in the water itself; It the Des,d Sea could be raised to the top of I cliff and Poured over the edge, it 080 Would have vast power: but there thes thirteen hundred feet below the evel of the sea, lacking the power 3ven to lift a tiny stream out of its �wn depths to BorVe the world. No, .be Power Is not inherent In the water tse-1f; It is the power of position! And as I looked at the rushing Water, I thought of another power, not If water, but of souls—the Power of in endless life. 'What was it that uade Paul able to Say, "I can do all hings through Christ which strength. Lneth, me"? It was, not the power in- ierent In Paul, himself, for not many rears before his spiritual Power was ow like the water of the Dead Sea. -16 had sunk Into the depths of selfish- iess. and sin. The Power Of Paul and the power of .VerY soul mighty In Christ is the lowerof position. j,, is the power of he life lived above this sordid world. %rist said, "And 1, It I be lifted up, . . . will draw all men unto me.,, le was "lifted UP," -and He has shone [Own with his Infinite light and varnith into the sea of sin and raised Ouls to himself. There In that posi. ton of power beside Christ we are no oliger helpless like the dead Sea, but kave Infinite power so that we an say, 'I Can do all things." Coal in Japan. Japanese expert& have- estimated the *at deposits of their country to e0n, aln. nearly 9,000,000,000 tons, of which 11110st 3,000,000,000 tons are avail -able 7 modern mining methods. he blue of Lae sea, is not, as is generally supposed, due to reflection from the sky, but to, the saltness of the water. Nowhere is the sea more blue than in the Mediterranean, where the water Is particularly salty, for the reason that it is not only exposed to almost tropical heat, but because compara. tively few rivers Pour fresh water in- to It' The North Sea is green, partly as a -result of its clearness and partly be. cause of the sandy nature of the bot- tom. The Atlantic is almost uniform- ly green, for the same reason as the North Sea. But blue and green are by no means the only hues observable at sea. The Red Sea gets its name from a tiny weed -like growth, dull red In color, which covers its surface. The Yellow Sea of China is popularly supposed to be so called because of its muddiness, but scientists have proved that it de- rives its color from a multitude of minute living organisms. In the Bay of Loango. the water Is blood red, due to reflection of the red bottom soil. A few years ago, the sea off the q coast of California, turned black, the whGlev of Santa Cruz Bay assuming an Inky blue. The phenomenon was leaused by countless animalcules, t known as whale's. food. s A steamer Plying betwecn 1,Cong- I Xong and Yokohama ran Into a snow- white sea, which was so dazzling that it bewildered everyone on. board. An- I other ship sailing off the coast of h Guinea found itself In what looked like I a sea of milk, caused by vast numbers, I of small white animals, which- for some unaccount ' able reason had risen to the I surface from the great depth In which T they usually lived. e Laugh While You May. Learn to laugh; a good laugh, is bet, ter than medicine. " Learn how to tell a story; a good story, well told, is as welcome as a sunbeam In a sick -room. Learn to keep your own troubles, to Yourself, the world Is too busy to care for your Ills andsorrows. Learn to stop croaking; If you can� not see any good In the world, keep the bad to yourself. Learn to hide your aches and pains, under pleasant miles; no one cares to hear whether You have headanhev, earaches, or rheumatism, Learn to, meet your friends with a smile: a good-humored man or womar Is always, welcome, but the dyspeptic is not wanted anywhere. Above all, give pleasure; lose, no chance Of giving pleasure. You will pass through this. world but once, Any good thing, therefore, that you can do, or any kindness that you can show to any human being, You had better do It now; do not defer or ne. glect It. For YOU will not pass this way', again. 4— Urge deposits of phosphorus harve been discovered on an uninhabited island south of tand owned, by Japan, life s Lom,mflon -I MITIffilla CM w-,( Shackleton Goea Back. The call of tbe'Ras� or the call of Is 0%( ut-A -MIS Oxford Secures Radium. C NSS Nwr. ON A common thing, you say? is Why, dear ' heart, life is made of common things; t4ow r -Y. r t H a The violet that blooms beside the way, Oil Tuesday evening, October 4th. Thel The wee nests born of love and summer -time, 0, The shadow and the sunshine of each day. ?bject ing the -winter season, to eontlnue� vhich Prof. Frederick Soddy, of the Julversity of Oxford, has just brought those formerly conducted, and to in -1 life s Lom,mflon -I MITIffilla Workingmen's Classes. I Shackleton Goea Back. The call of tbe'Ras� or the call of Announcement is made of -a mass , Oxford Secures Radium. meeting of members a -ad prOspeptivel A common thing, you say? members of the Workers' Educational Association in the Socia' S6rvice Why, dear ' heart, life is made of common things; Building of the University of Toronto The violet that blooms beside the way, Oil Tuesday evening, October 4th. Thel The wee nests born of love and summer -time, is-io arrange for classes dur- I The shadow and the sunshine of each day. ?bject ing the -winter season, to eontlnue� vhich Prof. Frederick Soddy, of the Julversity of Oxford, has just brought those formerly conducted, and to in -1 I love God's common things, Wate new ones. Public speaking, Sunrise and sunset� moon and evening Stars— trade union law, and Marxiayl, econ- Oh, common stars, lighted so long Etgo­ omics are proposed in addition to The sunshine flashing back from soft, brown wings, J eco terna n fi n ps no�mics, in tio at na ce, y - The full, strong sweep of tides that ebb and flow. chology and logic, political phil- osophy, British history, English liter- k� A common thing, dear heart? ature and composition. Thi-ough these classes, for which The grandest song is made of common chords,. the provincial university supliez most The fair white statue formed of common clav of o tutors and n rlv all the funds The noblest life is rounded By common deeds that f out at last workers in any occupation have an make the common day. opportunity to secure the advantages —Florence Jones Hadley, of higher education. Similar classes are conducted by the University of Toronto in Hamilton and in Ottawa. Shackleton Goea Back. The call of tbe'Ras� or the call of Oxford Secures Radium. Study Men. The Workers' Educational Assoclation the wild from any quarter, does not British scientific medical research Some men have within -th-em that had last yeax its most successful sea- seem to be more potent than the polar lure, even after both the vill be enormously helped by the ac- which always spurs them on, while son in Canada and hopes are enter- some need artificial initiative, outside tained that the coming season will be Of ultimate points of Uldnia Thille have been, at. nisition of two grammes of radium, he largest quantity ever accumulated, encouragement. even better. The arrangement is Some men exert themselves, under based on the one which has been so tained,, -ShacklctGn is now starting of," in a vhich Prof. Frederick Soddy, of the Julversity of Oxford, has just brought stern discipline; some respond only to beneficial in Great Britain and fur- wee bit Of R steamship, not simply o, England from the Czecho-Slovaklan a gentle rein. nishes anotiier example of the varied Some driving; type of work done for the becauEe he wants to find a petrified forest, or sco strange islands out of tats, -mines at Joachimstal, says a men need some coax- community! ing. Some need the spur; solne the at large by the provincial university, hail Of all the trade routes, or meas - ondon despatch. The precious mineral Is valued at sugar lump. ure the depth of the ocean and the 137%000, and was specially packed in Some men do their best with- work Secret of "Adam's Apple." rate of flow of currents. He goes be- cause he cannot stay away. Fven the ead three Inches thick. The radium piled shoulder high; some men must have it given them a piece at a time, Wh�en our forefathers read the Bible terrilylG voyage of 800 wiles in all as been rented for 15 years by a ondon company which -will sub -rent they were fond of pursuing the stories Some men thrive on discourage- open boat to Obtain aid for his com� C and Incid-ents contained therelli, ever ment; some cannot work without rades on the last trip has not sur - The outpui of the mines at Joach- cheerfulness'. farther than the Scriptural explana- feitted tions. lifin wdth danger and, derring. installs Only four grammes- annually. Study men—the men over you, un� Where the Book of Genesis, for ex- der you, around you. do. But the expedition 'will bring baelt he present hiring cost of the small- st quantity I ssix guineas daily, t ample, merely relates the episode of something Study them and learn how to ge more than travel -tales nd a Eve and the apple In the briefest and from each the beat that Is - in him, — most concise language, legends, 90 sure material for popular lectures. It i3 to result in substantial contribu. much fartlier — connecting various kinds of animals and birds with the Fall of Man and Introducing scares of trimmings which do not appear in the original version. One of these legends Is responsible for the name "Adams apple," a,% ap. plied to the thyroid cartilage of the larynx, a projection which, usually is much more apparent in men than in women. This legend states that Adam, when he attempted to swallow his bite of the apple from the Tree, of Lite, choked, and the fruit stuck In Ills throat. All males since Adain have had this protuberance as, silent evi. denee of the indiscretion of their an- cestor., —4— The Empire Supply of Timber. Even it we do not accept the idea of a; world timber faminer, we must admit that never was there a time before fit which the Empire depended more on Its own efforts for Its supply Of tim- ber, nor has there ever been a time more favorable than the present for urging the examination of our Empire resources and, it thought advisable, the definition of an Empire forest policy,—Lord Lovat, at Empire For- estry Conference. Trial'by ju;; is said to have existed in 2000 B.C. �MMr t<;N> N 4x- 'IN IMD tions toour knowledge of the physio� graphy, the mineralogy, the plant and anima.l. life of regions. whose place Or* the charts is marked chiefly In the interrogatory terms of dotte& lines, There Is still a deal to do to satisfy man's lawful curiosity as to the world he lives in;,and whereas In the Arctic rogions there are Eskimos cheea-fully ready to help venturesome voyagers from the gouth, in bleak Antarctica mankind, may expect no native com- pany but the penguin,, and must do-, Pend entirely on resources of his own importation, Rothchild's Dodge. Upon a money -lender complaining to Barai� Rothchild that he had lent ten thousand franca to a person who had go,ne off / to Constantinople without leaving any acknowledgment of the debt, the baron said: "Well, write to him and ask him to send you the fifty thousand francs lie owes you.,, "But he only owes me ten," said the money- lender. "Precisely," rejoined the baron, "and he will write and tell you so, and thus You will get the acknow. ledgment of It." - - 0. Although the area of Holland ia less than that of eitbk'r Denmark oir Switzerlantl itspopulatiGn of 7,006,000 excee&g the combined populutlon of those t— mad - 1"Alsr WINS -TWL v4hmt� Olt 00R. CANM�f NNI M\4 CNT- -fovsr-q 405BLtD 11�4 UP �Nsr A J., tions toour knowledge of the physio� graphy, the mineralogy, the plant and anima.l. life of regions. whose place Or* the charts is marked chiefly In the interrogatory terms of dotte& lines, There Is still a deal to do to satisfy man's lawful curiosity as to the world he lives in;,and whereas In the Arctic rogions there are Eskimos cheea-fully ready to help venturesome voyagers from the gouth, in bleak Antarctica mankind, may expect no native com- pany but the penguin,, and must do-, Pend entirely on resources of his own importation, Rothchild's Dodge. Upon a money -lender complaining to Barai� Rothchild that he had lent ten thousand franca to a person who had go,ne off / to Constantinople without leaving any acknowledgment of the debt, the baron said: "Well, write to him and ask him to send you the fifty thousand francs lie owes you.,, "But he only owes me ten," said the money- lender. "Precisely," rejoined the baron, "and he will write and tell you so, and thus You will get the acknow. ledgment of It." - - 0. Although the area of Holland ia less than that of eitbk'r Denmark oir Switzerlantl itspopulatiGn of 7,006,000 excee&g the combined populutlon of those t— mad - 1"Alsr WINS -TWL v4hmt� Olt 00R. CANM�f NNI M\4 CNT- -fovsr-q 405BLtD 11�4 UP �Nsr A