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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1914-04-30, Page 3THURSDAY, APRIL. 30, 014 THE WINGHA.M AD VANE 7r assionssmoseamminsoussimmom Children Cry for Fletcher's • CASTOR A The Kind You Rave Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 30 years, has borne the signature oo i and has been made under his per- sonal supervision since its Infancy, ' Allow no one to deceive you in this. Ali Counterfeits, Imitations and "Just -as -good" aro but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children--Experien a against Experiixtent. What is CASTORIA Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Parc. goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its ego is its guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Feverishness. For more than thirty years it Las been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic, all Teething Troubled and Diarrhoea. It regulates the Stomach and Bowels, assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea—The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of Iu Use For Over 30 Years The Kind You Have Always Bought -tTHt CCNTAUR COMPANY. NCR YORK CITY. MR. J. J. HOUSTON, who lives on a road that has lately been im- proved, in Lauderdale County Mis- sissippi, makes the common-sense statement which follows : "I have never made an investment for which I have gotten as much financial returns and satis- faction out of as I have out of this road. The advancement in property alone has been sufficient to four or five times pay the whole cost of con- struction, and I don't think the county could make any investment that would bring in as much returns as to build a network of them all over it. It is such a good thing that I want -every man in the county to have one just like it, and I am willing to pay my part of the taxes to help him get it." Build Concrete Roads Then your road taxes will be invested and not merely spent. They will return many . times the amount they cost, and those returns will -show in the increased valuation of your property, the lessened cost of marketing your produce, the longer life of your horses and vehicles, the greater conveniences and general prosperity of your community. Concrete roads outlast all other kinds of roads and require practically no repairs for many years. They are safe, clean, permanent and passable every day in the year. Write for, free, Good Roads literature and learn how good roads will brace your conditions. Address : Concrete Roads Departmont Canada Cement Company Limited 808 Herald Building, Montreal •r�rr- r; .y, Your dreams of hearing the music you want when you want it have been realized by the Edison Phonograph When a few friends drop in and conversation lags, you need Edison Music. When you are alone you want Edison music, When you desire a particular piece played or sung by a particular artist you can have it, at once, on the Edison. it: The strong. steady motor of the ought to hear them today at your Ed. Edison is ralways ,dependable. 'Die iso* dealer's. The tone it constant diamond reproducing point enhances in quality. the wonders of the thousands of beau• tiful selections. The new types of hornless instrument --the Amberola --are phonographs de luxe and you moat' to,Fue a&cood... Edison Phonographs and Retards are sold by DA !' ID BELL ADVERTISE IN THE AD ♦ ANCE , re WA THU CIRCULATION_ tour-4 rzreto tke week BY REV. BYRON N. STAUFFER Pastor Bond Street Congregational 4hurcii, Toroato "UNDER -RATED PEOPLE" Text: "Seeing I ant a poor man and lightly esteemed." -1 Sam. xv111:23. I hold a brief for the under -rated, for those whom the world has not sized up properly, and who therefore do not earn as much as they should, whose advice is not listened to as it ought to be, and who, consequently, cannot do the good they might other- wise accomplish. There is always a reason for the discounting of talents. I divide all possible causes into three classes: Causes which the under -rated` ones themselves can cure, causes for which the outside world Is to blame, and causes for ,vhioh no one in particular is to blame, but which will in time disappear, The great majority of under -rated people may seek the lea. son for their discounted position in the first group, Some oyer -rate their own under-! ratedness. When David complained' that lie was a pool span and lightly! esteemed, he did not realize howl many heads were at that very mom- ent turned his way. Men do not, in after life, get marks as they did at school, People do not run alongside of the meritorious man every day and say, "Good boy," Preachers need not expect a whole congregation to wallt: up to the chancel after service and say, "Doctor, that was a fine sermpn." The only consolation the lonely par- son has is that silence bids content, and that when folks don't lilte the sermon they will be more apt to say something by way of cotnatent than when they are satisfied, Many men undervalue their place in life and wish some other form of success, Thirty British army officers were Mating down the St. Lawrence one da?'k night, on their way to the great- est British victory in the new world. The general quoted a stanza of Gray's "Elegy," just published in England, adding, "I would rather be the author, of those lines than to take Quebec to -morrow." And yet the eyes of a nation were on Wolfe, and Canada is his monument forever. So Carlyle: envied the stonemason work of his. father, and sighed as he declared: "A, noble craft Is that of a mason. A' good building will outlast a book." Ile did not foresee that his books' would be likely to survive even the' sturdy walls of 'Scotland's rock -hewn; castles. Do not under -rate your influence. Jowett said: "To have carried out some one purpose during thirty years, to have contributed sensibly to the happiness of others, to have kept a family together, to have added some - think real, if not very great, to the' stock of human knowledge; to have been a.good teacher; whoever obtains any of these aims cannot be said to have lived in vain; as the world goes, he may fairly claim to be called a successful man. Some are under -rated by the -world on account of their timidity. They are altogether too modest. They can- not, like Leonardo da Vinci, write some duke to offer their services, ad- vertising the wares of their accom-. plishments. with confidence. There Is a happy medium between a shrink- ing timidity and a brazen conceit. Two kinds of shop keepers there are who need not hope to succeed—those. who carry all. their goods in their show windows, and those who have' none on display. A good sign for a well-filled window is, "We have more geode inside." But if you had all the silks of Paris in a Yonge street store it would profit you nothing unless you' let the public know about them. "Boldness," said Francis Bacon, "is. the first and last requisite of success in statesmanship." Be sure you can do one thing well, young man, and then modestly but boldly offer it to the world. Others are not fairly rated because they have not found their right place in life. The world judges us by our trade. If you are apt in your calling, be it, ever so humble, you will be appropriately rewarded. But if you are a failure as 0. doctor, the com- munity will write you down as a nin- ny, forgetting to add as postscript that you would have excelled as a law- yer. Neither will the world take out its jack-knife to whittle into adjust• trent round men who happen to be In square holes, They will merely smile at the ludicrous 'sight and pass on. Many men are under -rated because they try to serve the world too soon. Native ability is lost through lack of training. Youg men want to get out into the strife of life. They may ever] be prompted by a religious motive. They hurry to help save a world, A man must be self•eentred if'he would have the Circumference of his in- fluence to touch others. A certain kind of selfflshness must precede al- truism. The Master served himself and his family before Ile gave His brief but potent three years' service to humanity at large. Suppose George A. Cox had given away his first thou- sand dollars, he would have lost the leverage to lift enterprises which en- abled him to give away millions. Had Dr. Grenfell contributed all his even- ings in early lite in his zeal to save men, he could not have 'developed the talents which he now so freely be- stows upon the poor fisher folk of Labrador. The steam in the boiler cries, "Let Yoe out as I generate; I want to run something." The iron rivets answer, "Not yet, not yet. Wait until yqu concentrate and gather ir. resistible force; then you will rue a locomotive at sixty miles an hour." Gather er the stearal of your et)thuslasiu in a boiler of power. Wait! Da not spend all your evenings now for others, Serve yourself first, and then you shall acquire something where- with to bless the world, Next, tho difficulty with some people is that they fail to get into step with great movements, They have ability, but not adaptability. They cannot adjust themselves to the occa. sion, Braddock was one of England's greatest soldiers, but he insisted oft fighting savages its the wiiderneee with the same military. precision and manoeuvring with which lie had fought Frenchmen on the open plain. No guerilla warfare for hint! No 'Wash- ingtonian suggestions for his troops! So he lost, not only his army, but his life! Some preachers cannot adapt themselves to their community. They cannot popularize their material, Carlyle did not get into step with the advancing hosts of reform, so he said i in 1860: "I never thought that the frights of a negro were worth discuss- ing, anyway." His heart did not de- velop with his bead. Some hide their ability in their tactlessness. I know an elderly man who is a fine penman and a good linguist, but he is constantly on the ragged side of starvation. He no sooner lands a position than he starts in to get himself disliked by his fel- lows. He imagines that he can curry favor by reporting the delinquencies of other employes to the chief. A man gave him a day's work and an overcoat, but he lingered to pester his benefactor by trying to sell him a book and solicit funds. for a charity. That man has been discounted on ac- count of his bothering remarks and his boorish habits. Slovenliness is another cause of real merit being sold below par. Samuel Johnstou's great gifts shone forth at last in „spite of the gluttony and unkemptness which had handi- capped him for years. Horace Greeley never stepped out to discus:; with sa- gacity the questions of the campaign without a titter from the crowd on account of his grotesque attire: Alas! many are under -rated because they are careless about their repu- tation—not their reputation as artist, or merchant, or preacher, but their reputation as men or women. Itepu• Cation is what 'men are saying or thinking about us; not to our faces, but behind our backs. Reputation is the verdict wlfich the jury of society is rendering in your case. The evi- dence may be circumstantial and frag- mentary. Take heed that the verdict is not biased by a few isolated acts of yours. More and more our whole careers are judged by the moral standard. Never again will the world endure the libertine or the drunkard in high places. Grover Cleveland was a great president, but I doubt whether he could be elected to -day with the same blemish which he admitted hav- ing in 1884. 1 yield to none in my admiration for Sir John A, Maddonald, but can you believe we would suffer his habits to -day, as our fathers did fifty years ago? But this whimsical old world some- times fails to appreciate her servants, Not always does a man , get what his merit deserves. Men judge by out- ward appearances and sometimes most unjustly. We dare not declare that every man gets his exact dues. Many a pearl is still in the unfathom- ed caves of ocean. It was not to the credit of the voters of South Waterloo that they rejected the scholarly James .Young for an ignorant German black- smith. No question before the elector- ate was big enough to justify that mistake. Blaine was set aside for the much smaller -calibred Harrison. The great Henry Clay was beaten by the negative James Polk. Henry Ward Beecher said that the world over-estimated the silent man. "There is great 'cunning in judicious silence," he said, "but the frank man is rarely taken at his full value." The frank man in the ministry often learns to his sorrow that it does not always pay in dollars to have positive opinions or to be frank in stating his position. Dr. Rainsford, who preached so fearlessly at Convo- cation Hall the other week, wrote some years ago: "It is not easy to be a clergyman and speak your mind. If I were to leave St. George's to -day I very much doubt whether I should have a call to many churches, cer- tainly not to many influential tines. St. George's would not have called me only they were so hard up." The last group of causes of the under -rating of men embraces the legitimate wariness of the world. Yonder is a young fellow with the gifts of a Cecil Rhodes in. business or of a Bryan in eloquence, but the world does not know it yet. He must bide his time. That he is not given his rig,stful place today is nobody's fault. 13a patient, young David! You will not long be lightly - esteemed. You will at length get at least an approximate reward of merit. ' The world is not to be blamed for putting your stock at twenty-five cents on the dollar until It is clearly established that it 10 worth a hundred. In the end, God's omen win. Earth may not witness their triumphs, but somewhere, some day, they come to 'their own. The stone which the 'builders refused will become the head stone of the corner. "We esteemed him not," Is changed into "He is the fairest among ten thousand." Some day the unrewarded conquerors of earth will receive their crowns. Men 'misunderstood, rind misjudged, and ander-rated wilt get their "Well +done," riut we need heaven for such a vindicatfot, i Report of Gram Harvest. A bulletin issued April 3002 by the Census and Statistics Office reports on the proportion of grain of last yeas -'w hervest that proved of merchantable cluntity and upon the quantities, in far. nt• s ' ht:udu at the et ti of March 1914, the repot t being based upon returns by map raper, jog c.orrsepondpets un wi .,:cit 31. Of :Ilk rural. PI;tirntired: nrn- ,ttt, hog, of wl' ' ' in. Olt -rade in 1913, .iitioneting 10 831, 717.000 toucher, 224, 810,090 l+trsnels. or 97 p, c., tooved to illi et ruerchatatahie quality. Thio to a 104.- 6;er proportion theft in any previous* yeas silo's estiwatrs Were filet obtained in 1010, mid bears out the known results of abC 3e attl excellentriot-Wog and barveitiug reason In the North -wee - provinces. The corresponding perces t tato. in previous year* were 92,$7 and 91, By provinces the proportions are lower throughout eastern Canada belga about 87 p. c. for Prince lid was d Weed d and Novo Scotia, 90 5 p. c. in New I3runawiok, 00 p. r. in Quebec and 0I p, e, in Oatarlo, In Britrsh Colum - bis the proportion was 85, 0 p. c, About 10 6 p, .o. et the total Canadian wheat Drop in ]913 is reported a re- rnaining In farmer'. hands at March 81, 1914, this proportion representing 38 303. 000 busbe] f This too is a luwer Ileum then in a,ayy previous year and is coneictent with ties high records of in- pection and shipment. Of the total oat crop of 1013, nmount- ing to 404. 699,000 bushels, 04. 68 p, c. Is estimated to have been of merchant- able quality represeuting 382,754,000 hubbele, Only in Prinpe Edward Is- land (87. 7 p, c,) and Nova Scotia (86 8 p. c.) did the proportion fall below 90 p. c, Ttte figurate for 1913 are the biggest. (•n record. The amount in .farmers' hands at March 31 is placed at about 80 p, c,. or 101,537,000 bushels, The proportion of the 1912 on hand in 1913 being 44.22 p, c., or 113,178,000 bushels. Barley, the total yield of which was 48,810,000 bushels, proved of merchant. ahie quality to the extent of 44,185,000 bushel*, or 05.08 p, c., the proportion in previous years being 87 p. e. (1915) 90 p. e. (1911) and 92 p. o. (1910), The quan- tity remaining in farmer's bands on March 31 was about 30 p, e , or 14,440,- 000 bushels, as compared with 17,289,- 000, or 35 p, c. of the 1912 crop In hand at March 31, 1913. Of other crops corn for husking prov- ed of merchantable quality to the ex- tent of 183 p. e., rye 90 9 p. c., buck. wheal 82 p, o,, ilexssed 04 8 v. al., pota- toes 82 P. c., turnipe, etc, 81 p. c. and bay and clover 88 p. c. The quantities of these crops on hand at Mirrch 31 were estimated to he : corn 4 308,500 bushel, flaxseed 2.205,000 bushele, pnta- toes 27,420 000 bushels, turnips ete. 11,- 230, 1100 bushel;, and hay and clover 2,. 075 000 tons. Live stock have generally wintered well and ate' repotted as being on the whole in excellent condition. The spring appears likely to be rather late in the Eaetetn provinces of Canada, but in the went the ground was report- ed as generally in good shape after a mild winter, It was anticipated that seeding would begin about the middle of Apt 11 under favourable conditions as regards boil. Garbage Incineration. Most Efficient Way to Dispose of City Refuse. -„ Incineration is the most eflt 'ient. sanitary, and, if properly maneg%d, economical way of disposing of gat- hage in cities and large towns. Mere dumping in a liege midden is not dis poealin the true sense of the word. It is simply an attempt• to sngregai e a nuisance. Buries' r,f rubbish req+ fres a large area of vowel and a long he ul. It rosy be suleablo for small town'• that enanot sff.trd an incineration plant. hut it is out of the qeai I iou for larger centres, Dumping into watee •should never he pertn]tted except 1'.y cities on the sea -coast, a.r:d tally t-lr'n prnvid,d the *idea are favourable and the waste material will not be wa,h.d back on the shore. I'. -•duet inn of go Ili - Age in "digeste, t," to retnuve gr see s. fa priesticed in many United S- a: es cif , hut the capital r' (Fired sed the •,prattling expetuis are high. More- over, ouch reduction plente alp liable o give rise to foul t dours, and tntny kinds of rubbibh, r•tu•h as bottles, tiv ane, ►rtk•-n furniture, cast, 1i clotb- n.e, etc., taus of be di+•Iosed of in this manner. The best furnaces for the cremation • f refute I re to he found in England. these, British deatr actors are of a high - it rairetatur,•, forced draught type, end need skilful tiring, but they will jet rid of all relate) and the reeul'ir,g gases and solid rtsidue are entirtly moniker). - Plants cif r.ituilar ea.t.tern are ingrain ed at West 'pout t, true., 04awe ut.ee. 1't i ., at:d San Francit'en, Cat., and s•re :riving good eel i, -faction. iVo More Headaches For Me 'thio can be your experience if you use Clhaniber- leln's Tablets -- they cure head- achesby remov- ing ov-- C m ing the Cause--+ trot by smothering the symp- to rs--'woman's purest cure for events:rest more eonitilon ailments, Try them, 25e, a bottle. Drageists card Dealers, or by moil. Clsantltorlain Medicine Co. Toronto 2 Get Your Wedding Stationery Printed ADVANCEL ,_ the i Cars That Run Without Steer. ing. A new feature iautomobile con• struction, that le expected to add greatly to comfot t and convenience its driving, gays Popular Mecbanice, is on arrangement of the front axle that ea.nses the front wheels to etr+sighren nut automatically with reference to the ear b(dy after the car bas turned a earner. In the ordinary type clear the axis of the knuckle joint on which the front wheel is turned in steering is vertical, white In (be new car the axis of this joint le Inclined so that the low- er end of the joint la ahead of tha up• per end. The entire axle is built on thie angle and, owing to the drop in the middle of the fixed axle, the sup- ports of the front end of the car body are an inch or more ahead of the wheel centre,. The spring supporting the body is also inclined at this angle, the front end being several inobee higher than the rear end, and as a rep suit of this, the weight of the car acts as a tin est forward on the axle. This thrust combined with the fact that the supporta cf the car are ahead of the wheel centres causes the wheels, when freed from the control of the steering column, to trail into position at right angle to the fixed Axle, for exactly the same reason that a easter trails into line when an article of furniture is being moved. With the knuckle joint inclined in the way described, the wheels lean inward to, ward the (entre of the curve when the car is rounding a corner, Alfalfa as Hog Pasture. Sines economical pork production depends largely upon the consumption of a large quantity of cheaply grown feed, hogs should, when possible, be pastured on some clean, tender, and palatable forage crop, such as clover, alfalfa or rape. While the cost of pork production may be materially reduced in this way, it is desirable to feed in addition. Mature breeding stock may be maintained on good pasture, but young and growing hogs should receive additional feed. H. i3 growers differ regarding the quantity of grain to be fed while on pasture but a medium ration would be one that Is equal to about 2 per cent of the live weight of the hog while growing and then a full grain ration when finishing. No bard and fast rule can be laid down for the supplemental grain ratiou, but not feeding any grain almost invariably results in a stunted hog. Mr.' W. D. Lang, of Indian Bead, Sark., who is doing il- lustration work for the Commiseion of Conservation, obtained the follow ing results with hogs pastured on lees than one acre of alfalfa :— Rev'd from sale of 60 hogs $656.60 Feed used :— t ton shorts $ 1100 150 bac, oats...... , ... 45.00 400 hue. barley at 40x.. I00.00 200 buy, wheat screen - Inge at 50c 100.00 --- 310.00 Profit $340.00 Skin On Fire ? Just the milli, simple wash, the well known D D. 1). Prescription for Ec- zema, and the itch iv t one. We have sold other remedies for s't'n t' o rhIe, but n'•nn that we could personally recnintnend as We can the D. D. D. Prtscription . J. J. Davis Druubit,t. Rich Indian teas blended with flavory Ceylons. se 602 Tea °°i$ food fes " RHEUMATISM We don't ask you to take our word for the remarkable curative power of SOLA,OE in cases of rheumatism, neural- gia, headaches or other Uric Acid troubles, or the word of more than ten thousand people So]:Aoso has restored to health, or the word of eighty-one doctors using Sgr,.AUE exclusively in their •practice. Just write us for a FREE BOX and testimonials from Doctors, Druggists and In• dividuale. - Also SOLACE remedy for CONSTIPATION (A LAXATIVE AND TONIC CONBINED) Does the work surely but pleasantly--Natnre's way. No distress —no gripeing—no sick stomach—no weakening, The TWO rem- edies are all we make, but they are the greatest known to the medical world and guaranteed to be Free of opiates or harmful drugs. Neither affects the heart or stomach --bot helps them. To prove the wonderful curative power of SOLACE remedies write for FREE BOXES. State if one or both are wanted. SOLACE CO., Battle Creek, Mich., U. S. A. THE DOMINION BANK SIS EDMUND E. met, M.P., PRESIDENT. W. 0. MATTHEW*, VIOE,PRE$IAENT. O. A. BOGERT, General Manager.. This Bank Offers Farmers a complete and satisfactory banking service. Sales Notes collected on favorable terms, and advances made on such notes et reasonable rates. The Savings Department is a safe and convenient depository for your money. interest at current rates ,is paid on deposits of one dollar and upwards. Ono dollar opens an account in the Savings Department. WIN6dHAM BRANCH: A. M. SCULLY, Manager. ``•.f, 4.4.. 'M21•:• :.•i +4•:4444••• 44.>,.44••p;:e4,4:•:••:44,•:•4.0i44.4.' ay..,'•1 4.0i•CH i404�•“ .�•e•.i41 I •:Mi:•❖ ire 4.:4i.0 r-..$ •�*"''= Be Particular ABOUT THE KIND OF SEEDS YOU SOW I In Seeds --as in everything you buy --there are many grades. And since it is impossible to judge their quality by examining, you must trust en- tirely to your Seedsmen. You can depend on us absolutely! We will send you, on request, our big 80 -page 4. !Catalogue—Free. VnleuCapleommFaREuw)h each Wrdetre for (SeTopdaagye. DARCH & HUNTER SEED CO. LIMITED Boz 1:-72 LONDON, ONTARIO is ,E11� you. r • a member of the. Got , u button We all appreciate comfortable, attractive homes, but we don't realize how much modern paint -making will help us in .improving our surroundings. Nowadays people aro giving more attention to the Tlec,,tiu'i,, a special water paint for this purpose. no interior decoration and furnishing of their homes than S -W Inside Floor Paint for your floors, or if you prefer they ever did before, Tho standard of living has been o. st:;ined end veeniyhed finish use S -W Floorlac. Ota raised. What satisfied us a few years ago will not do now. hafitlwocd floors nee t-3-yv iddar-not, a durable waterproof,. The Sherwin-Williams Co. has given particular atten- floor varnish. tion to the making of finishes for the interior decoration of the home and they have succeeded so well that their finishes aro used for every purpose in the most elaborate mansion, and also in the most humble -cottage. The walls of your hone can be finished with S -W Plat -tone, t durable flat -drying oil paint, absolutely sanitary—elm bo washed with soap and water --or S -W ror the cupboards,eed,eor�kl, door:;, eft. use iV raniily Paint in ai y d color. ycu desire. tse riopat 'Varnish for varnichin1 w aiu:;cotting, base boards, boors, and any Lind of interior woods: ork en which you require a varnish Iblieh. There in a t li rrt iti`Wiliiatus finish for every kind cf surfneo and kr every purpose. Coma and talk to us about your finishing problems. ALEX. YOUNG HARDWARE, PAINTS, OILS, ETC. . ;''INGHAM 11.4 Illllliii { I. e '•i "fith_ ,,^,- ...Y: R -�>1.11111 • "r,r ^.,'d T'A . •F`. 1 11111111-10-1011 I . ,, i7 �.u-- : ; �. 'rim HIM r I �1 i l 1 � :u • + 1 1� 1� 1 --. � ijtt* .i t>l lUus -I ,k � , h 1111 w4 :.e I •I I 1111!}•iiii}E}!. il Iutlt'-� wa �, iiii r;.., 1 I `l,j, li I f tt�t h r0 •'ilii i 'AL MI ui�t ..m ` !I :1 .j5 •, ..,.....�,: $. 3.4;:"7.:57::..7-3.::::::::::::•5":::-:*. 11 , lil11 1f0�1J. IIIiiN ".. Liu! •, • *MIN . .l'i1111, -•••••:::z...-:••••••••• ax - e' :fir ,� . r r �.............. 1 '1 J t.: ,E11� you. r • a member of the. Got , u button We all appreciate comfortable, attractive homes, but we don't realize how much modern paint -making will help us in .improving our surroundings. Nowadays people aro giving more attention to the Tlec,,tiu'i,, a special water paint for this purpose. no interior decoration and furnishing of their homes than S -W Inside Floor Paint for your floors, or if you prefer they ever did before, Tho standard of living has been o. st:;ined end veeniyhed finish use S -W Floorlac. Ota raised. What satisfied us a few years ago will not do now. hafitlwocd floors nee t-3-yv iddar-not, a durable waterproof,. The Sherwin-Williams Co. has given particular atten- floor varnish. tion to the making of finishes for the interior decoration of the home and they have succeeded so well that their finishes aro used for every purpose in the most elaborate mansion, and also in the most humble -cottage. The walls of your hone can be finished with S -W Plat -tone, t durable flat -drying oil paint, absolutely sanitary—elm bo washed with soap and water --or S -W ror the cupboards,eed,eor�kl, door:;, eft. use iV raniily Paint in ai y d color. ycu desire. tse riopat 'Varnish for varnichin1 w aiu:;cotting, base boards, boors, and any Lind of interior woods: ork en which you require a varnish Iblieh. There in a t li rrt iti`Wiliiatus finish for every kind cf surfneo and kr every purpose. Coma and talk to us about your finishing problems. ALEX. YOUNG HARDWARE, PAINTS, OILS, ETC. . ;''INGHAM 11.4