page 2 the georgetown herald rwed mmony evening january 25th 1939 the georgetown herald fhomk no j m moosttebastor n4 iwalmiiw a weekly newspaper devoted to the best interests of the- town of and surzoundlng country including the villages ot olen wqumuav norval i4rtehoiso btowarttown balltnafad and terra oottm issued every wednesday evening at the office on main st georgetown sobsohxptton rateb1s0 per year in advance united states 50c additional single copies 3c both old and new addresses should be sdven when change ot address is requested advertising rates legal notices 12c per line for first in sertion 7c per line for each subsequent insertion readers 8c per line 3or each insertion if in blackface type sc per line additional notices qualifying as- coining events such as concerts entertainments society hurch or organisation meetings etc 8c per line minimum charge 25c jteports of meetings held gladly inserted free in memotian notices 50c iwi pw urn extrajoxpoetry birth marriage and rifath notices soc smajl advertisements one inch or less soc for first insertion and 25c for each subsequent insertion display advertising rates on application although every precaution will be takento avoid error the herald accepts advertising in its columns on the understanding that it will not be liable for any error in any advertisement published hereunder unless a proof of such advertisement is requested by the advertiser and returhea to the herald business office duly signed by the advertiser and with such error at corrections plainly noted in writing thereon and in that case ir ahy error so noted is not corrected by the herald its liability shall dot exceed such a proportion of the entire cost or such advertisement as the spce occupied by the noted error bears to the whole sjiace occupied by such advertisement the herald does job printing op all kinds- dreams keep thou thy drea though joy should pass thee by hold to he rainbow beauty of thy thought it is for dreams that men will some times die and count the passing pain of death as nought keep thou thy dreams though faith should faint and fall and time should loose thy fingers from the creeds the visit of the christ will still avail to lead thee on to truth and ten der deeds keep thou thy dreams through all the winters cold when weeds are withered and the garden grey dream thou of roses with their hearts of gold beckon to summers that are on then- way keep thou thy dreams the tissue of all wings is woven first of them from dreams are made the precious and imperishable things whose loveliness lives on and does not fade understanding your cat lester banks ir youve had much experience with people of various dispositions you have observed that the most reliable persons and the best friends are not always the most demonstrative its much the same with animals to con demn a cat calling it unsociable in different ungrateful merely because it is less demonstrative than a dog is decidedly unjust a dbg barks and wags his tail to show his happiness a cat purrs and rubs against your legs the latters pleasure at befng with you is not less j language endures robert burns the great poet was born at adoway near the town of ayr on january 36th mm his fattier william burns or burness though very poor gave him a aolld education and the boy eagerly read all the teoksjlb could find at the age of is robert was working as his fathers head laborer on their farm the father died in 17m and robert struggled on bravely but with poor success during the next two years many of his best poems were written including the cotters saturday night holy willies prayer ad dress to the dell the mouse the daisy the twa dogs and others in 1786 having published a small volume to gain passage money for ttamaicarbn invitation wedihburgh made him famous he gained how- ever nothing but the appointment of exciseman in 1789 with which he settled at dumfries in 1791 in 1788 he had married jean armour the bonnie jean of his songs like other bold spirits of his time lie was aefcused of sympathy with the french revolution and it is a fact that in the spring or 1792 he sent to hie french assembly two guns that had passed into his hands by pur- chase from a captured smuggler they never reached france however two of his best lyrics a mans a man for a that and scots wha hae written 179295 show that the fiery spirit of the great upheavel had reached hun nevertheless when the french invasion of britain was threatened he joined the dumfries volunteers burns died in hard straits at dum fries july 21st 1796 leaving his bonnie jean and four children he was given a military funeral four days later the poetry of bums was the out come of his nature his scathing satire of hypocrisy the wild humor of tarn o shanter and the jolly beggars and the burning passion ot his f6ve songs will live as long as the burns wrote nun keen for being less noisy i drecl of poems among the best the cat expresses friendliness i known in addition to those already and gratitude in many ways if you mentioned are the death and dy- are fond of him but he knows it if big words of poor mallie the you are not and hes not much given i vision halloween address to waste of affection a cat is the unco guid and a bards harder to win than a dog this is epitaph his songs include hlgh- not because or comparative dumbneaa j land mary to mary in heaven but comes from fear implanted a red red rose duncan gray through countless generations no scots wha hae ye bonks and a modern rendering of t meter version of the second psalm why rage the godless dictators why should the people mind they plan and scheme to rule the earth know not their eyes are blind hff that in heaven sits hall laugh the lord shall scorn them all fio shall he speak to them in wrath in rage he vex them shall tor god hath said unto his son the nations m make thine and for possession i to thee will give earths utmost line the sure decree i will declare no evil shall prevail against the man whose rule is just his kingdom cannot tail menxles- housing in 193s other domestic animal has been so maligned and abused as the cat you have to overcome that instinctive fear the suspicion inherited from a long line of ancestors who had very real reason for fear cats greatest pleasure next to satisfaction of his hunger is to be a part of the household he wants to come and go as he pleases but home and regime mean more to a cat than to any other of the lower creatures he is the greatest luxury lover and is not at all blind to your part in providing him with comforts and special joys but dont expect him to make a great fuss about it all he can do is purr rub your hand with his head and look into your eyes that means his heart is yours and could you more not all cats will lie in a persons lap unwillingness to do so doesnjarj prove a act unaffecttonate the nicest cat weve ever had preferred to he at our feet another an exceedingly proud fellow always liked to lie on a chair just as near to my chair as i could draw it hed even sit at the dining table that way and never put paw on the table i dont misunderstand such conduct and call the cat unresponsive the same cat that wouldnt lie in our up always struggled when we tried to carry him but pot him down and call him and hed follow anywhere reminds me of some horses who wont be hitched but will wait reliably un hitched but while on this point most cats resist when taken into a persons arm s from sound slumber on a chair or the floor the real reason is that the cats first thought on awakening is to stretch and grabbing him up in that way gives nun no chance to do so wake him up first let him stretch and yawn then pick him up also even the gentlest cat may scratch his master when snatched up without warning we ourselves unexpected things when slmiliarly startled in our dumb animals braes o bonnie doon auid lang syne alton water comln thro the rye and o a the airts the wind can blaw mary how is it the eggs are sometimes boiled soft and sometimes quite hard well mum im sure i dont know puts them hi regular as the clock strikes eight and i takes them out without fall when i hears the down train go by can yam beettae that in the good old days nobody ware a the kitchener record has a long list of things that happened or dm not happen thirty yean ago and most of the kerns certainly can be interpreted in terms of progress for the present day here are the thought provokers nobody wore white shoes most young men had livery bltts farmers came to town for their mail the heavens were not full of man- birds nor the seas olive with under water birds the hired girl drew onefifty a week and- was happy- the butcher threw in a chunk of uver the merchant threw in a pair of suspenders with every suit nobody listened in on the tele phone straw stacks were burned instead of baled publishing a country newspaper was not a business it was a dueling game the safety razor nod not introduced the cleanshaven face the radio did not give people the jitters by broadcasting an invasion by tile martians and the ptoture could be wttb more nlrtwllwi and fidelity to what about the fire cent bttohtng the horses and dust and mod streets the wooden sidewalks the backyard wells and the horse pump and trough in the towns before and after during the time of the socalled crisis in tgg a clergyman in the east end of london announced to his parishioners that he would keep his church open every evening for any who wished to come and pray for peace his parishioners con sisted of laborers and hardworking men and women busy all day but they came after theirdays over and the church was crowded and they all prayed for peace after a fortnight peace was sign- ed and that evening his parishion ers came to the clergyman and said sir we have prayed for peace for a fortnight and qod has given us peace now for the next fortnight we should like to thank him for giving peace so the clergyman kept the church open every evening for the next fort- nighx and they all came and thank ed and praised god for answering their prayer 100000 canadian f urnaces give grat8 mating satlsfactlon dont take chukacawid unidentified fuels follow t rf j who nave dunged to better hearing b bine coal tor the finis moat aoahufraa hearing youve ever enjoyed order a ton today w h kentner a son u ue coal cjir time table passengers for toronto tutt vsb cji paprnigbm sundays only ut ptsa and man 6js pm passenger sunday iltt pt saturdays only testing tq at iijbo pin arriving at oecsfjetowr 1z25 ajn first trip november mb going sowth mall and passenger i gray coach lines time table effeeure sunday september zsth leave georgetown to toronto a 708 am 928 am 114s am c 223 pm 438 pjn 4b pjn 903 pjn 935 am xll20 ajn xoo pm cx25 pm ay445 pjn 700 pjn bbjjo pjn dxlljos pm exll50 pjn a except sun iwi hol b sun and hol o sat only d except sat sun and hol e sat sun and hol x to kitchener y to stratford tickets and information at w h long directory lerot dale slc ml sybil bennett la i h e moltrn fufl f0 id comfort the heralds big offer national housing act loans for 1938 amounting to more than 814600000 17 above the combined totals 1 1936 and 1937 are shown in a special yearend release issued today toy the honourable charles a dunning minister of finance this total in- eludes advances under the dominion ttfwuring act which was in operation to the end of july 1938 and under the national housing act which superseded the dominion housing act to august loans providing housing acconuno- datlon for 4438 families were approv- ed during the 12 month period com pared with loans providing for 1961 family bousing units in 1837 and 934 units hi 1938 during the year loans were approv- only 26 years ago says an article in ed in 134 additional communities the current issue of the canadian where previously there had been no magazine canadian mine production tffrnitlpg act loans of these 99 were j and export of mine products have i from a relatively minor position added to the list during the last 5 h clearly indicating the effec tiveness of the new provisions of the national housing act designed to meet the needs of the lowcost home owner in the smaller and more remote adomnnnuues and in special districts of larger centres communities in arhlch loans have been made now to tal 393 and the number is increasing aseadiry the increasing importance of the nonunions legislation in saitsttog the wfii further illustrated in the decreasing else of the average loan the aver- gt loan par family unit for all loans tlndertbe doxntojon h act and the national housing act which stood at ttjbb as at december dot bad declined by the end of ism t tmbl for 1938 alone the aver- mm was sm per family bousing baaed on the generally accepted as- ttnafe that 80 of the oast of eon- aoucllbn aoes to aahour directly u b tton to date aocognts cbr a at labour ofasrjroximateiy vjooqjooo gaamnces 6 over tatfloojob under an tojq account as wett it is evident risen to the place where canada now ranks as one of the principal sources of supply for many of the most im portant minerals of present day in dustry practically every province of can ada has a part hi the dominions great mineral production three pro vinces however ontario british co lumbia and quebec contribute 80 per cent of the total or 90 per cent of the metal production two other provinces nova scotia and alberta are responsible for 76 per cent of the fuel production seventynve per cent of the non production other than fuel is from ontario and last years metal production canada the article goes on included more than 385000 tons of copper 306400 tons of lead 186000 tons of sine llljooo tons of nlckcl 4o00j00o ounces of gold and tljdoujooo ounces of silver the platinum metabv and cobalt an rad were in important irwiinta tons of gnisum al most 480000 tons of common salt and 3jw0o00 barrels of petroleum laky down pup lay down order ed the man toull have to say ne down a tor- declared a boy thats a z ton terrier grandma always was a keen ahopper and quidc to soap up a bargain but youll recognize these bargain offers without her years of ex perience yon save real money yon get swell selection of magazines and a full year of our newspaper thats what we call a break for you readers no wonder grandma says yoitvb got something there allfamily offer- this newspaper 1 year and any three magazines please check three magazines desired d mocuani mogul 24 d rod end gas i yoar all four 1 d shrr sctmh i twor only o nationol horn montmy 1 yw q american ff- growvf i yor q canadian magaiim i yar rj p mot s chatftlalm i yaar q american boy i met g notorial kil i yam q cmsks horald 4 mot d conodion rtortkottnf tss rj opon rood fw boy i yost magoiina i yaar supervalue offer this newspaper 1 year and three big magazines group a select i o nmwl t m d tro start i yr o sctmijand i tr d jimfa i yr d mccobv i yr d moynim digmt mm d rsjtwrh i yr d cjtrittla hwald i yr o wi hr toob i yr q cv i yr ci ar n yr group 8 select 2 i yr q natiarml him mmrtuy i yr d camdio mafrrtir i yr a cfemrin i yr d rod md cm i yr a s0r som yr d rvterm itnin 1 yr o amwfcm fnrjt c i yr d comdii ituft t horn maosbmo 1 tf o opm tnd hr tr i yr all four only t 05 georgetown ontario office gregory theatre bldg batjl i kenneth m langdon rilcttar notary hrst mortgage money to ijoaa office ualn street south phone at r ft watson djjs ildjs georgetown office hoars 0 to 5 except thnrsssv dr j e jackson dcsftb xbey office hours dehy 9 to evenings 7 to frank petch walter t eras c general famraoce ocean stkabtbhip 8etbvb0s monuments pollock ingham 8acranon to cater at wrjnn gait onl nnu a ei t w aw tnmjr out wortt hi oluouauod j collections ok january tth vim a to ronto euant srrote ns in pan as fbdows t would surely reoonv- bbbnd yon to anyone x teow who has bills to eodect as i earn sure u they can be codeoted your ttiinfnit can do lt x ib fng you another note hata- wtth t can e be of similar orvtoe to ja kelly 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