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Georgetown Herald (Georgetown, ON), July 6, 1938, p. 2

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page 2 the georgetown herald wednesday evening july 6th 1938 the georgetown herald it j tuso pet year in advance united states 50c additional singmoopier se both old and new addresses should be given when change of address is requested i iutmisliifhaletfliegal no- tloes 12c per line for first in sertion 7c per line for each subsequent insertion readers 8c per line for each insertion if in black face type 6c per line additional notices qualifying as coming events such as concerts entertainments so ciety church or organization meetings etc 8c per ifeae mini mum charge 25c reports of meetings held gladly inserted tree m memorim notices socj and 10c per line extra for poems birth marriage and death notices 50c small ad vertisements one inch or less 50c for first insertion and 25c for each subsequent insertion display advertising rates on application although every precaution will be taken to avoid error the herald accepts advertising in its columns on the under standing that it will not be liable for any error in any ad vertisement published hereun der unless a proof of such ad vertisement is requested by the advertiser and returned to the herald business office duly sign- ed by the advertiser and with such error or corrections plain ly noted m writing thereon and in that case if any error so noted is not corrected by the herald its liability shall not exceed such a proportion of the entire cost of such adver tisement as the space occupied by the noted error bears to the whole space occupied by such advertisement j m moore publisher pbone 8 georgetown the simple things god of the rainbow and the rose that lies across the shadow of the sunset skies god of the mountain crested white with snow and or the brooks that multicolored flow is there no lesson for the mind of man in these that show creations primal plan help me to see only ripened store of berries on the bushes by my door but green of leaf and symmetry of form and strength that does not break be neath the storm and let my eye look on the golden pear and know that it is sweet and also fair god of the planets lovely in then- place and of the leaping trout s unchalleng ed grace god of the seashell s symetry and hue god of the green fields the skies of blue is there no teaching in these things for me lest i grow blind and fail somehow to see help me to and the charm in dew and mist and in a lily by the moonlight kissed the beauty in a field of rlppened wheat a maple tree the clover at my feet true happiness lies in the joys that spring prom seeing as god sees the simple things the boy who didnt pass a sad faced little fellow sits alone in deep disgrace there s a lump arising in his throat and tears drop down his face he wandered from his playmates for he doesn t want to hear their shouts of merry laughter since the world has lost its cheer he has sipped the cup of sorrow he has dipped the bitter glass and his heart is fairly breaking bes the boy who dkln t pass in the apple tree the robin sings a cheery little song but he doesn t seem to hear it show ing plainly somethings wrong comes his faithful little spaniel for a romp and a bit of play y but the troubled little fellow bids him sternly go away and alone he sits in sorrow with his hair a tangled mass and his eyes are red with weeping he a the boy who didnt pass oh you who boast a laughing son and speak of him as bright and you who love a little girl who comes to you at night with thfrg eyes and ifg feet with honors from her school turn to that lonely little lad who thinks he is a fool and take him kindly by the hand the dullest of bis class he is the one who most needs love the boy who dldnt pass may moon illusion by elaine ie cuub c mcclur newrpftpar syndicate wnuservica a lmost noiselessly the maroon car whirled along now and again entering a zone sweet with the fragrance ot opening fruit blossoms but for the most part speeding its way between narrow white fences and low pinestudded hills surreptitiously little anne taylor glanced at her watch half an hour since they had left the city behinq them and almost as long since a word had been spoken well they mfght go to pine rock and return in utter silence for all she cared i and they might have done that if an overburdened apple bough had not scraped against the side of the car and showered anne with its petals doesnt it look tike confetti she murmured and then bit her lip in embarrassment while a dull red suffused her neck and mounted to the edge of her very golden shingle roger holt glancing sideways noted her confusion taking one hand from the wheel he laid it over annes small fingers never mind anne im not going to bother you any more well have our ride out and then ill go well maybe it would be the best thing for both ot us as ive told short short story complete in this issue minister how are you mrs mc- gulre have you been enjoying my sermons of late enjoying them i i think i have i was just tellln my nabor th day that ye are a rale fallen angel a religious old woman was asked whether or not she believed in evo lution no sir she replied where z came from doesnt bother me its where i am going that really counts you before a girl has very definite ideas about the man she wants to marry and when what sort of a man do you want anne dont interrupt and when a girl is young and has all the world be fore her she can afford to wait all right im through making a fool of myself well go to pine rock and watch the moon rise and then we will go our own ways oh say what was that look around at that tire will you its fiat anne announced her emotion did not equal rogers that being the case i am going to fix it right now here you can look at this evening paper if it isnt loo dark with a great show of interest anne rustled the pages of the ga zette suddenly she paused in her haphazard turning to read twice through a column on the personal page then thoughtfully she fold ed up the paper and laid it to one side made quick work of that and roger wiped off his hands and took the wheel again anne moved clos er to him anne chatted nervously until the car was stopped and they got out to take the last steep climb on foot remember the last time we were here just after your class day two years ago roger you sweetheart to think that you remember tool look anne the moon is coming up through those pines right at our feet the moon rising roger holt im going to sit down on this ledge and watch that moon after what she considered the equivalent of 15 minutes had passed anne arose and placing her hands on rogers shoulders began to talk as though she were thinking to herself that moon is so new so young and waiting it seems al most breathless at least it makes me feel breathless and theres- nothlng going to happen at all itll wane and for a few nights lovers will miss it and that is all there is to it or to life if we could only make ourselves under stand that nothing is going to hap pen and oh roger i for roger had sprung up and caught her in his arms and very willingly she yielded to his caresses bless that moon he exclaimed vehemently as he at length released her dont you bless it too anne for showing the way it made you understand that life was right at hand didnt it oh anne this was my last chance i was betting on it beauty makes us see things in their true light the paint brush of nature 1 oh you darling old fool said anne softly two hours later mrs taylor met her young daughter at the door youre late anne then after a moments hesitation claytons en gaged did you know it sure saw it in the paper to night well maybe til put my own in one of these days meanwhile someone ought to send bis fiancee a card of sympathy why i thought you liked him in fact oh that was just one of your pet illusions i cheer up mother i guess we all have em well kiss me goodnight im just dying for sleep once in her own room anne leaned out of the window the moon was high now sailing white guid ed by a single bright star natures paintbrush she muttered aloud a little scornfully and a little lovingly if hed said printers ink hed have come near er the truth caleb lifetim devotion international tjnlferm sunday school lesson july 10th 1938 golden text let us go up at once and possess it for we are well able to overcome- it numbers lesson passage joshua 14 615 the things i really need are all quite sensible and wise the things i think i need are just to dazzle others eyes rebecca mccann one grand old hero 68 cale6s admirable old age was due to the way he had spent his youth prom youth to age he was a hero he did not look for the easy places he sought out the hard places he took his lire in his hand when he went as a spy into the land or cana an he was willing to bring in a minority report when the other spies took counsel of their fears en- charles reynolds brown says of caleb this brave modest cheerful man simple and rugged like adam bede holds the centre of the stage through a large part of the book of joshua he was a man who had the courage to speak out in direct child like fashion exactly what he thought forty years old i was when moses sent me to spy out the land and i brought him word again as it was in my heart he ns the real thing with no taint of pretence or make- believe he had never ceased to re gret that his advice had not been taken yet he had not allowed his na ture to become soured he is an out standing example of a man who knows how to grow old gracefully cherishing a promise 9 as a reward fot his courage as a spy moses had promised caleb that the land he had marked out would be ghen to him through the long years or delaj he had held to this promise of his trusted leader moses he felt that to doubt the pomlse would be to be disloyal to hit leader it is this same kind of faith that a christian needs to have in chrlst to his fol lowers christ made certain promises he promised to be with them he p omlsed that his kingdom would not fall there are oftentimes dark days of individual experience and prtods of stress in world affairs when it is hard for a christian not to reel mis gtv ings yet e have every reason to trust the word of christ he did not make these promises lightly nor without full knowledge of the evils amid which his followers would have to live he made them to cheer his followers on and in order that they might be saved by hope but never to mislead those who have put thetr trust tnhlm amidst the welter of industrial and international disquiet christians have need of patience and faith but they have no ground or despair it may appear to be a dar ing thing to believe in the final vlc- torj of trls spiritual kingdom but it is faith that is justified by the char acter of christ a young old man 10 ii it is wise counsel to give to young people that they should never miss a chance to make friends with the aged especially ith those who though old in years are still young in spirit caleb was such an one he was eighty five years old but he still was planning to do new things his eyes faced the future the spirit of a pioneer lived within him what a ring of confldenc- there is in his words as yet i am as strong this day as i was the day that moses sent me as my strength was then even so is my strength now for war and to go and to come in that was not the boasting of an athlete it was the confidence of a hardy saint whose faith was that the lord kept him alive shakespeare has portrayed the character of a a sturdy old man who attributed his strength in age to his clean irving in youth it may be dlf ficult for joung people to look fifty years ahead but tnere is no question of the fact that the standards of youth determine the lot in old age young people who trifle with the laws of health in their twenties will find that nature may visit her retribution in the sixties or the seventies if happ life endures that long calebs fine old age was the reward of his upright youth and middle life give me this mountain 12 other men might choose the plains but caleb asked for the hill to cul mate the sloping land might be dlf ficult and the warriors of hebron might attack him and their fenced cities might be difficult to overthrow but caleb old as he was did not fear to undertake the task a young man heard a sermon from this text and it became a proverb in his home whenever there was anything hard to do he would say olve me this mountain two positions were of fered him one safe and lucrative the other that of daring pioneering he turned from the tempting plains to the hills and said give me this mountain his unselfish youth is fitting him for an old age like that ot caleb the hard places make the heroes mountains to be mastered by men with hearts like that of cal eb 1 the strong man of old was found on the mountainside where the giants of difficulty confronted him and all strong men march in the same brigade a heros reward is 14 in the end caleb was granted the land he desired jpshua knew that his claim was just and assigned to him the land of hebron joshua honored the man who had wholly followed the lord the god of israel and the land had a rest from war there was a chance for development to the arts of peace canada has had twenty years of peace following four years of war the effects of the war are still felt what a country canada could be made if the full strength of the nation coum be exerted for united purposes as it was in warl what natural resources could be developed i what educational standards could be attained i what social welfare could be assured what spiritual nobility could be achieved au these ideals are part of the kingdom of ood on earth our dominion has a rest from wax that it may advance in the high er victories of peace 1 should the young think much of old age a how many nations prevent treaties from being scraps or paper 3 is sufficient attention given to health teaching in homes schools and churches 4 why do cushy jobs end to make cushy people 5 how has a spirit of disunion and division developed in canada since the war trains timber wolvfs as sled team for bio us sportsmens shows big j t joe 225- man in montreal but now living at oogama in northern ontario is a visitor in the city who knows his timber wolves as well as a housewife knows her cats in fact he knows them so well that he is never quite sure just what they will do from one minute to the next but generally manages to keep them under control he uses his timber wolves for the same purpose as the ordinary hus kies are used and prefers them to the more domesticated animal joe came to town to meet albert c rau general manager of the bos ton and new york sportsman s wlnt er show they met in the office of c k howard manager tourist and convention bureau of the canadian national railways to make arrange ments for sending a wolf team down to these american cities for the shows next winter and i m going to be there and with a wans joe tri umphantly stated just now he is on the hunt for a new team his old one being plaed out joe said he knows of two timber wolves in sas katchewan and he is endeavoring to get them between now and october he hopes to collect about five from the sudbury area which linked with the other two he hopes to get will give him a seven wolf team he pointed out that due to business rc is unable to set out and attempt to collect the wolves himself he did this with three of his last team which he mid to an amnrlcan movie con cein for 75 a head in 1928 in trap ping those three in 1922 joe said he used a no 3 beaver trap padding the trap on either paw with a bundle of cloth he set them in an area where wolves were taking a heavy toll on deer one of the wolves he caught just by one toe in a mink trap leather harness for a wolf team is no good joe pointed out he stated he makes his own harness out of canvas a wolf would chew a se of leather harness to shreds he declared one wolf i used as a lead would take a three quarter inch rope in his mouth and without any exer tion or strain on a muscle would cut it in two in the vicinity of oogama joe even skidded ibgs with his famous wolf team the last winter he had them he recalled the ice on the lakes was too thin to support a team of horses and there were no roads leading from oogama into the bush camps so he had an all winters job hauling provisions i had plenty of narrow escapes he said one day i was skidding and i had a dog on the load when i turned them around one wolf pete made for me i had a pair of mitts m my sweater pocket and i was lucky he bit the mitts and just grazed my stomach x grabbed a jackpine tree and pulled away shouting to another fellow to bring me my whip three cracks over the head with the butt of the whip and i knocked the wolf out i was sorry when i saw him on the ground for i thought i had killed him when he came around about five minutes later i gave the comamnd and head ed for oogama i never went near him and shortly after that be be came tame i could even let him run jfose and he would come to me on command althoughhe did try breeding wolves be never mad much success aw said his attempts to breed a female wou with a male husky were unsuccessful he did however succeed hi breeding three female huskies with male wolves and one of the offspring is still in oogama he said a resident of oogama since 1bsv joe collected bis first pure wolf team in 1923 and the following year ex hibited them in montreal in this team he hud nine brawny timber wolves the largest 95 pounds and the smallest 70 pounds in 1925 with the same team joe went to toronto but the big thrill of his life came in 1926 when he boarded a canadian national train at oogama bound new york to exhibit at madlsfrt square gardens when i mushed them down broadway thousands of people stood in the streets cheering he said and now joe wants to repeat that experience and when he gets bis new team together hell be on old broadway again with bells on doctor answers the question discussing the question of suppor ters and supporter selling a number of druggists have stated that fre quently the customers expressed or implied fear that the regular wearing of a supporter may weaken him in an effort to obtain a solution to this problem a prominent toronto doctor was consulted on the follow ing two points 41 what does a supporter do for the wearer from your point of view 2 will the daily wearing of i supporter weaken the wearer the doctors answers to these ques tions may be summarised as follows before considering what a sup porter will do for the wearer it is well to understand what a supporter will not do because most ruptures are inguinal ruptures arising from a condition present from birth a sup porter will not ordinarily relieve or preent a rupture a supporter can of course be of assistance in conva lescence from a hernia operation or indeed may be of use after an ab dominal operation more important to the wearer are the things a supporter will do for him if he is in good training and condition he needs a supporter main ly for protection if he is not in good training he needs a supporter not only for protection but to prevent fatigue drug merchandising old fashioned mii uptodate s baby was out of sorts so she went for the family doctor who inquired about its teeth etc well the best thing you can do for baby is to give her a good dose of castor oil said the doctor but doctor said mrs uptodate castor oil is so old fashioned well madam said he so are babies special one wbjul only 2 suit t j 25 2 light ccu 01 2dkucs 1 fants 3se eatons cleaners dyers agcntullico huffman mondays wednesdays fridays enioy 12 h0uks of fascinatinc muskoka lakes sceneky daily 730m fkom muskoka 100j alt csoge tim fare oafy mials ixtia rms sagamo driv up tba olsbt mora sad highway no u from toronto mm tour doubt tw aach sincte tt-mr- room tana maala and kaaanrad chair fa first claaa ta rmj particular ithmtiaw famar iu4 m rratfl mm ooaa as eapanaa acluda far stato- tha muskoka lake navigation and hotel co limited ox ii ciavimhijut ohtallo are yod sure your eyes see correctly y our pbios ib thb sauk as out prici3 o t walter ro expert watch repairs by j h jordan georgetown phone 11 lane block cjet time table d mail 10j i passenger and mali 840 passengers for toronto 940 i passengers sundays only 131 going north mail and passenger going sooth mail and passenger 652 gray coach lines summer 7ime tabic effective satarday z5u1 leave georgetown to toronto ab08 ajn 88 ajn ii 43 am 218 pm 410 pjn 6us pjn 910 pjn a except sundays to london x935 ajn 150 pjn x750 pj x connections for owen sound standard time tickets and information at w h long o o directory leboy dale kx m sybil bennett ba georgetown ontario office gregory theatre bwg mill st kenneth m lngdon barrister solicitor notary paha plrst mortgage money to loan office main street south hone 88 georgetown baney gbaydon lawrence cook 465 bay st- e ptaser raney ko h edward cook gordon graydon 333 main st north brampton telephone 798 harold r lawrence loblaw bnodhag brampton telephone 843 r k watson dd mja georgetown office hours to 5 except thursday afternoons dr i e jackson dentist xbay office hours dally 9 to 3 evenings 7 to 9 raone 2e4w geobgetowit frank petch licensed auctf oneek far the omdatlea peel aaal hi prompt service cheltenham 28 r 23 georgetown mr post offlm f7hftlttt walter t evans co general insurance ocean real estate malm st north georgetown 183 monuments pollock ingham successors to cater 8c worth gait ont inspect outi work tn greenwood cemetery o a m nielsen tstk tr rf chiropractor xray draglea therapist ohid orer dqtolnlon scon hour r t jo u0 pj o the teathoonal mistress engaging new cook x want to tell you that my husband- la very fussy about his food cook oh i understand maam my husband was just the same notta lng x ever cooked seemed to suit blnbr- germany is expected to spend 3400000000 on rearmament this year 7

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