HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1915-04-22, Page 4TEE WIN MA. M ' ADV A.TNC.
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Inlaid Linoleums 2 yds A ide .?
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IPTG BROS.
Beautiful
Draperies
If you have a drapery or
upholstery problem let us
show how inexpensively and
attractively it may be solved.
Our stock comprises all that
is artistic and in good taste
and We dffer a selection of
designs to suit all styles of
decoration, simple or elab-
orate.. Chief amongst our
lines are Dalmor Fabrics
and Novelty Curtains which
we show in Many attractive
patterns at moderate prices.
(4)
Window Shades and Poles
We are agents for Dalmor window shades
.!•, and carry a full line in Light and Dark Gr( en
and Fawn in plain and trammed with inser-
• tion. Prices 50c, 85c, $1 and $I.50 each
►if
Kirch Brass Window Rods
►i.
q.
The best rod for Draping, will not sag and
A • have all the Equipment for fancy draping,
.;, 25c, 50c and 75c
q.
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I;ffr Printed Linoleums and Oil Cloths
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C Printed Floor Oilcloth is pretty floral and
black patterns in widths 1 yd, 1 A -yd and 2 yds
►`+$$ Prices 30c, 35c and GOc
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Printed Linolums.2, 3 and 4 yds wide
Our import order of Scotch Linoleums have
just been stocked, and are the very best both
in quality and design, Prices $2 to S3 yd.
Very attractive, Pxtra quality inlaid Lin-
oleums in neat block and tile patterns, suit-
able for kitchen, dining room and bath
rooms, every color goes through to the can-
vas, Prices $1. $I,25 yd
Rugs, Carpets and Squares
In Wilton, Brussels, Velvet and Tapestry,
p11 sirs. Prices to enit all
KING BROS.
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Phone 71 Agents for Stan -
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dard Patterns
mompasmourammeirmse
Unusual Bargains in Square
Pianos and Organs
offered by Ye Olde Firme of
Heintzman Go,, Ltd
When selling our famous pianos player, pianos, we often take as
part payment a used piano or organ. These instruments are thor-
oughly overhauled by our own workmen and are put in first-class
shape. It is the duty of our Mail Order Department to sell these
instrumento, Just at present we have a very Large number of five
and six octave organs, Square pianos, upright pianos and player
pianos which we are offering at remarkabiyelow prises and on the
easiest terms. Every instrument is guaranteed to be exactly as re-
presented. You are just as safe in buying one by mail as if you
came in and picked it out yourself. We give below a few organ and
square piano bargains which are real snaps. If you don't see just
what you want mail us the coupons and tell us the kind of instru-
ment you want, and about the price you want to pay. We will im-
mediately send you a big list to choose from, Write us to -day. The
sooner you act, the better choice we can give you.
flominion.. ave octave organ,datk wainutcase, high top
with music pocket, sliding Tailboard, Lamp
stands, hes 9 stops, including Coupler, Forte, Viola, etc, Grand
organ and knee swell. A fine little instrument with a ��(]
very tone and a bargain at a7
Karn five octave organ, oil finished walnut case, high top
with mirror, sliding tailboard, has 9 stops including
Vox Humana Forte, Couplers, etc, Grand organ and knee swell.
Has been put in perfect order by our,;own expert, and $41
has a loveytone, Price
Estey" five octave organ,walnut case,bandsome high topwith
"mirror, sliding fall board, music desk, with place
for keeping music, lamp stands, has 11 stops including Vox Hum-
ana, Forte, Bess and Treble Cowplere, etc. Grand organ and knee
swell. This instrument has an elegant tone and would be °417 A 17
an ornament in any parlor. Offered special at `f!
Thomas -.six octave walnut piano cased organ, rail top
with mirror, sliding fall board, three plain pan-
els with, centre swing music desk, lamp stands, has 30 sten s, includ-
ing Vox Humana, Base and Treble Couplers, JA.ise, etc. Grand
organ and knee swell, mouse proof pedals. Has a very rich tone
and has been thotroughly overhauled in our own workshop�p
A speoial bargain at X77
Uxbridge -.six ortave organ, piano cased model, mahogany
finish, sliding tailboard, automatic full length
music desk, has 11 stops, including Forte, Bass and Treble Couplers,
Melodic, Viols,, etc. Grand organ and knee swell, mouse proof
pedals. A lovely instrument with a very sweet tone, $ 70
Price , twoo
Be11- six octave organ, piano cased model, rosewood finish, rail
top with mirror, eliding fall board, threeplain panels in
top door, lamp stall ds, has 11 stops, including Vox Humana, Forte,
Baas and Treble Couplers, Melodia, etc. Grand organ and knee
swell. This is amaze of organ, known all over the world and
has has had very little use, and is a splendid bargain Q e9' 9
at ., $/ 1
Jronas & New York --n quare grand,
J Sons, nicely finish-
ed rosewood case, carved legs, full metal frame, over -strung Peale, 7
octave keyboard, is in perfect order, has a sweet tone •� O�
a 1
and is a bargain at.
Heintzrnnan, t ', Co --square grand, handsome dark
��1++ rosewcod case, carved legs,
carved lyre, with two• pedals, full metal frame, long over -strung
scale, 7 octave keyboard, has genuinefieintztnan tone and touch,
has been thouroughiyoverhauled in our own faetor,y $145.
and is offered spooled at ......... „ , .. , . ,
isavrearamarrisswerearammt lei
Etta payment
ale
t
yp y Ems
Organs
ans and Square
Pianosunder $30, $ i
cash and $ per" month;over $JO, fey calsis and
$4 per monthh,
slat mi+a2e
Cut
out and mail.
0
Ileintzman & Co., Ltd.
Please snail me complete lint of
bargain instruments, 1 saw your ad.
in tbe,'Wingham Advance, April 1st.
Natne... , .. , .
Address
Heinft man J ail
I93—I95-197 Yong° St., Toronto.
UMW
LEADERS IN THE WAR.
Strict Censorship Has Hindered
Knowledge of Generals.
One of the remarkable results of
the strict censorship has been the
anonymity of the lesser generals of
the war, who undoubtedly have come
into prominence during the past foul
months on the greatest battlefields of
all history. It is true that Gen. Sir
John French has mentioned a num-
ber of British commanders who have
assisted him in Northern France and
in Belgium, but if we except the tri-
bute to Gen. Smith-Dorrien for his
retreat from Mons, the commenda-
tion has been of the nature of praise
rather than generally distributed.
The only German name that has
been brought to the fore has been
that of Von Hindenburg, on whom
has devolved the difficult and im-
portant task of resisting tlie Russian
onslaught in the east. Von Kluk has
disappeared from the headlines, and
the world does not knew whether his
advance on •Paris and his subsequent
retreat to the Aisne have gained him
a place among the immortals or not.
Little more has aeon heard of Von
Buelow and Von Einem. The Crown
Prince of the German' empire, the
Crown Prince of Bavaria and the
Duke of Wurtemburg have frequently
been mentioned, but there has been
a constant suspicion that these royal
names are used in lieu of those more
closely identified with German stra-
tegy.
In the early days or the war Gen.
Paul Pau was mentioned so frequent-
ly that his ubiquity, according to war
correspondents, was equal to that of
the German Crown Prince. But Pau
disappeared several weeks ago from
the French despatches and in his
place the recent French communique
mentions a number of generals with-
out investing any with undying fame.
The most prominent of Gen. Joffre's
assistants is Gen. Foch. But to th.e
cursory reader there is but one
French name that stands out, that of
Joffre, upon whom has rested the re-
sponsibility of the general strategy
of the allied forces fighting the Kais-
er's western army. •
The Grand Duke Nicholas emerges
in bold relief from the many Russian
generals engaged. It is safe to say
that the ordinary man could not name
one of the Austro-Hungarian generals
who have fought so valiantly in
Galicia.
Encouraging Milk Flow.
Comfort and contentment aro the
touchstones of success. When a cow
b comfottabte and contented she re-
sponds with a flow of milk far in ex-
cess ofthat she gives when, she is Un•
eomtortable and irritated.
1 Chiropratic
When the spine is right the body is
right. A Chiropra3tor will keep
your spine right that yon may have
continued good health. If your health
is already poor a Comae of Ohtrb
yrac-
tic Spinal djuetments will put our
spine right
J. A. PDX, D.O.
Graduate Ohirpractor
Try the •
"ADVANCE'
for your next
Catalogue
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i�ENCN AND FIELD OF BATILE
Shells Fail to Disturb the
a French Villagers—The
ea
Fighting at Suez,
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Y mall and in despatches from
old worlc newspapers there
have arrived, in Canada hu-
man interest stories . of the
great war in Europe. Some
of the latest and beet aro here given:
Major O. S. Watkini, of the Cana-
dian contingent, in a letter redeived•
from him from a point in North.
Franca, says: "in the village from
wbich 1 write, a shell burst, killing
nine soldiers and th.e village priest.
Most of the inhabitants have return-
ed to their homes, and are going
about their olinary tasks as if war
was far from them, apparently heed-
less of the enemy, which, as the crow
files, is not more than a mile or so
away, and not greatly disturbed even
when shells burst in the main square
of this little town.
In the nearest available village to
the firing line will be found the field
CONVALESCEIETT SOLDIER SHOW-
ING PART OP FIELD WHEnE
• HE WAS WOUNDED. -
ambulance and such, companies as are
held in reserve. Itis from this point
that the wagons are sent out at night
with rations, and it is from this point
that the ambulance wagons fly to and
from between the "regimental aid
posts," bringing in their suffering
loads of sick and wounded men. We
dwell in comparative safety, but al-
ways within sound of rifle.fire and
machine guns in. the trenches. Over
us from time to time shriek the shells
from our own big guns, winging their
way to spread destruction and death
in the enemy's lines. In our midst
occasionally the Germans burst their
shrapnel or their "coal boxes."
A MIRACULOUS ESCAPE.
"I am now permitted to state that
the artillery attached to the East Lan-
cashire division of territorials .was
sharply engaged on the Suez Canal
during the fighting of Feb. 3 and Feb.
4," writes -an English corre'spondeat,
"The behavior of the man under
fire and the skill with which the guns
*ere served were considered worthy
of very high•pra.ir. •
"An 'officer controlling the „fire of
one of the teri•itor.ial batteries in
these engagements displayed conspip-
uous gallantry.. In order to find the
ranges with the greatest possible ac-
curacy he climbed a date palm tree
near by and remained there an hour
while the position was bombarded
RUSSIAN WAR PRISONERS.
with shrrapnel. When the fire be-
came too hot 1'e took up a fresh
position in another palm tree and
remained there till the close of the
battle.
"One territorial gunner had a re-
markable escape. A shrapnel bullet
passed down the barrel .of the gun he
vias serving and flattened itself
against a part of the breech mechan-
ism without doing any damage either
td man or gun."
u r l CI,"
><t 1'x3,' N CHOICE."
O SO S C
Alfred Cappe, co-editor of The Fr-
garo, in a lecture on "The Press Dur-
ing the War," gave tee following; as
it typical dialogue between the cen-
sor and an editor over the telephone:
About midnigh the censor said:
"It would be very nice of you, mon-
Tae naiser't' Train.
The headquarter, of the German
ver staff,v, ith the Kaiser as its head,
r
a rpeciaily-constructed train, kept
open Y
n a certaicertainline. This.' train,
u,
says The Birmingham Daily. Post's
•orrespendent, contains dining sa-
:oon, end sleeping saloons. The train
carries expert telegraphists, and is
preceded and follo*ed by an armored
.rain. The war train was specially
built some years ago for such a pur-
pose, ttnd attached are well -fitted
boxer for the ICeiscr's: chargers and
iris motor -car, spare parts, etc. The
;vole thing is fitted up as the last
word in luxury.
Look at ytr ya'hl.
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OS
O▪ S
OS
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OS
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Alfr;d Capps Tel;s How s
Oe
the Censor Works ---The rit
Wedsn Anthem at Front. 1
OOPUS►OWOPirmitOYOYOPOPOPOY0e0Y0Y0Y0
toeUqo.oeooVo0OOPO.O.).O*O.OYOSOI0• e0
flour, to suppress, these few lines. I
telt you as a personal favor,"
The editor the! demanded to know
,vhat would happen "If I refuse."
"Ir you refuse," answered the cen-
aor, "1 shall be obliged, to my deepest
.uortiflcatien, to interrupt your publi-
c atiou."
M..Capus alsi told an anecdote of
war correspondent of The Figaro
1870 who asked a certain general
.o be allowed to approach the opera -
.ions so as to obtain a better view,
t'he general refused. 'the request,
aei.pon the correspondent retort-
ed, "Then .i shall not mention your
Battle In my paper."
t TICKLISH MOMENT.
It is Lieut. Harman, of the Royal
t`ie'd Artillery, who' tells how the
;sues of his battery were Bayed dur-
ing a ticklish moment. The Germans
had surrounded the battery, but the
artillerymen held them off for six
hours, retiring slowly as they did so.
Unfortunately tbty got into a very
aarrcvr lane, where, from the steep
banks, they were fired on, ambushed
at a range of abou. twenty yards.
The lane was far too steep and nar-
row to turn round, but the gunners
with their rifles drove the Germans
back. The battery, however, seemed
to be caught in a trap, but the men
determined to save the guns. They
built barricades, and when night fell
reconnoitred the German position. It
was during that reconnaissance that
a body of British troops were dis-
covered, and these men hurried to tho
relief of the beleaguered artillery.
"HEN WLAD FT''MADAUM"
An English soldier writing from
the .trenches nea • Dixmude says:
"It was a miserable night. A heavy
rain had filled the trenches. Sudden-
ly out of the darkness can a voice.
It was a Welsh ballad called 'Hob y
Dere Bantle,' sung in a fine tenor
voice. It was the cheeriest sound 1
ever hears. At the end a round of
applause came down the trenches.
But imagine our surprise to hear
clapping and calla for more in good
English from the German trenches.
Thereupon the Welshman gave 'Min-
tra Gwen.'
"Meantime we realized that not a
shot had been fired by either side
during the song. Wo had forgotten
seee
j
ILal.S. QUEEN ELIZABETH.
all about war. So a bargain was
struck with the Germans that if the
)� eishman would give us another
..ong n.ei.•ber side would fire any more
aatil daylight.
"The third song was 'Hen Wiad Fy
. hadau.' .It was perhaps the first
.ime the Welsh national anthem was
:ver heard on this dismal Flemish
eorass."
,1UN''S DRANK C.04 BOTTLES.
In a letter Lieut. Eric Pepler of
he 3rd company Canadian Field En-
eincers describes in humorous vein
.ne trouble ho had in making an
elderly dame allow his men to stable
their horses in one of her barns.
'.ventually he had to order the men
to clear the place out and comnlau-
deer the place. Ile stated that be
,.as been separated from Capt. T. C.
Irving and that Major Lindsay is laid
a in England.
"Where we're living is called the
'Petite Chateau' and it is very com-
fortably fitted up." Ile continues:
"The Gorman artiil•ery captain lived
hero when they marched through be-
fore, and, inciden=tally, he and his
outfit drank. 80C bottles of cham-
pagne from the wine eel -lets of this
house. Being mess secretary, this
grieves me very ranch, as 1 spent a
good part of this morning trying to
buy some Preach beer and a table
cloth. It was hard 'eo find the cloth,
for the madams that I went to said
that she used her last the other day
tv's•cf1 Xing George passed through."
Girl honored by Czar.
It is semi -officially confirmed that
the Czar has conferred the Crors of
St. George upon a girl Warrior nam-
ed Tichinena for conspeeuous brav-
ery. . The girl was wounded three
times while fighting in the trenches
as an ordinary soldier, Tichinena
was a schoolgirl at Kieft when the
war broke out,
Cost of ,v Bombardment.
Accrdg
Aecording to a *write; Inf The War
Budget, 'published recently, it would
cost the Qtteen Elizabeth, Britain's
new superdreadnotight, which is
working havoc among the forts of the
Dardanelles, $1,250,005 if she were
to Are all her guns to full capacity
for ono hour. The Lion, the flagship
of Admiral Beatty, used up about
$375 worth of cordite and shell every
time she emptied ono of he? 13.5 guns
at the Bit'alior,
Look at your label.
For middle-aged and elderly people
the ideal laxative is
The gentle but sure laxative
Their effect on the bowels is gentle, sooth-
ing and strengthening.
With advancing age comes inactive bowel
movement and sluggish liver; through weak-
ness, nature is unable to perform her proper
functions and needtt assistance.
Rexan Orderlies aid the secretions and
s[ti7
PLEASANT,.. EFFELMVEi LAXATIVE
O.IxD DRUG CO.
LMI ACT
MO
UNITED rro D. DA.
TORONTO CANADA.
.1,Aaw,.1 ire
functions of the liver, stomach and bowels, assur-
ing a gentle action without griping. They are the
perfect laxative for middle-aged and elderly people
and being so pleasant to take are a boon to
children.
Retail Stores everywhere sell Resell Orderlies, and will
refund your money if for any reason they fail to satisfy.
Made in Canada rind sold in metal boxes at 10c, 25c and 50c each at
Rexall Stores only. Get a` Box Today from �� e
J.W.
cKibbon, Druggist
PIT SILOS IN THE WEST.
They Aro Particularly Profitable In
Drier Farming pistricts.
Scattered over the drier farming
districts in Colorado, Kansas, Okla-
homa, Texas and New Mexico there
are something more than 2,000 big
hole, in the ground, dug for the spe-
cific purpose of fighting the effects of
drought along lines that have already
leen proved successful, writes Robert
II. Monitou. These _roles vary from ten
to twenty feet in diameter and from
twenty to fifty feet in depth. They
are lined with concrete. Some of
tier have concrete extensions above
the surface of the ground.
They loot; exactly like what they aro
—holes in the ground. They suggest
great cisterns, but their distance from
any roof shed which might catch suffi-
cient water to fill them even if the
rains were heavy enough proves they
are not cisterns.
They are pit silos, and into them is
packed the silage made from corn,
Kaffir, milo and sorghum, which in the
fall and through the winter not only
keeps live stock alive, but fattens beer
steers and causes milk cows to give
large quantities of rich milk. And
their number is increasing rapidly. •IC
is only natural that a farmer without
one of these holes in the ground, see-
ing with his owe eyes that his neigh-
bor has turned practically worthless
corn fodder and Kaffir and sorghum
stalks into feed worth from $11 to $20
per ton by packing it in the pit silo,
should decide to build one for himself,
especially since the cost is so small,
say about $25 to $50. One man built
his for $4.45.
A. small pit silo can be built for a
cash expenditure of $5 and a large ono
for $15 to $25. The pit silo has made
sure and regular profits from small
farms in the dry land districts of the
southwest. Any farmer, no master
how poor, can have one. Forage crops
never fail in auy year. They can be
Preserved any length of time in the silo
in a palatable form anal with little loss.
Silage fed to dairy cows with other dry
land i'oeds insures a steady cash W-
eenie every week in the year from
cream, and the skimtuilk fed with dry
land grains to pigs and hens assures
additional cash.
The pit silo is no new thing. It has
been in use, in isolated cases, for years,
in widely separated states. A coni=
munity in Iowa, a farmer in central
Illinois, another in Mississippi, and
others, have used pit silos for some
time and found_ thein satisfactory. But
it is a new comer in the semiarid ag•
ricultural.regions of the southwest, and
its appreciable influence upon farming
there dates back no further than two
years. Last year, when the long
drought came and burned up millions
of acres of crops and $100,000,000, thero
were enough pit silos in existence to
prove to everyone that they are a nec-
essary part of a successful farmer's
equipment.
Garden Roller For Hand Use.
A roller should be used freely in the
garden when the ground is dry, but
not when wet, as it tends to pack the
earth and retard the growing of; the
plants. The surface should always be
matle fine after rolling. A good roller
for hand use is not expensive. The
side pieces of the frame here illus -
_rated are 11/2 by P/-• inches, tapered
from crossbars so as to be ?2 by 2
Itches at the handle, which is 2 by 2.
and rounded. The crosstar clo:a• to
the roller is fire inches wirle and ha::
two tenons, 3/1 by 11,'-' inches at each
end. These are securely dinwllinned
Into the side pieces to brace the (rata;
Gudgeons of throe -quarter inch iron
tin.d of'a good length are used 1:: can
nection with the roller p:•o:!er. w!,'(..11
is made 01 0 log eig'.tteen int•heA i;: r11
✓meter and a trifle less than t:;o f,
long.—Orange Judd F arntcr.
magazzassig
"SUCCESS FARM;"
"FAILURE FARM"
0 you see the two farms 1
They are both good farms,
or ought to be, as are most
of those in this country.
THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN
i THEM IS NOT IN THE LAND,
BUT IN THE MEN THAT OWN
TH EM.
One of these men is an up to
date chap who READS THE
PAPERS, especially the farm
notes, takes agricultural journals
and applies scientific methods.
The other works just as hard,
but will not have a newspaper irr
the house and could not get a new
idea if it were bored into his head
with an X ray.
THE UP TO
GETS TWO OR
THE YIELD OP
DATE FARMERR,'`
THREE TIMES
HIS NEIGHBOR
AND WITH BUT LITTLE MORE
LABOR OR E)(PENSE.
He uses fertilizer', crop rotation
and intelligence. He economizes
every rod of his land; makes it
all count. He practices soil con-
servation. He gives back to the
soil as much as or a little more
than he tak°es from it. He _mows
the latest e: [;periments made by the
agricultural department, the agri-
cultural colleges and experiment
stations, Ile reads the newspa-
pers. SE1VD lin YOUR SU13-
SeRIPTION TODAY.
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A:
PAINT ••
&VA Ni'i�(1•
•
•
F•
t{
j�.
i t 1F
ISI II.0I
.. .
IUiulu rl t
nvigr
41.
Asi
aeas
Let's All Join . ones on
the "Paint Up" 1 a ea
Let's interest the man next door and the man across the
street in this "Clean Up and Paint Up" Movement.
If they will do their share and go after their neighbors, you
can all snake a glorious success of this practical, helpful, sensible
plan of civic improvement.
,Whole -hearted co-operation is what is needed for
•
SPICalnitiiirEER
Do your part carefully and loyally. If the House looks
dull, or the Porch is worn, or the Fence is scarred, a coat of
"100% Pure" Paint will put yourplacc in the Spic and Span class.
if there is any freshening or brightening to be done inside
the house, we have the Paints, Stains, Varnishes and Enamels
to dotthework easily,satisfactorily
sf'
actoril and economically.
1n fact, we carry EVERYTHING you need to "Paint Up" with the good,
old, reliable Martin•Senour Paints and Varnishes—MAIM?, IN CANADA --and
Bold with our persona guarantee of eatir:actiott. 70
Rae & Thompson, Wiii hanli, Conti►
aasee
sae
'..
a
i
I
—
_ --
_rated are 11/2 by P/-• inches, tapered
from crossbars so as to be ?2 by 2
Itches at the handle, which is 2 by 2.
and rounded. The crosstar clo:a• to
the roller is fire inches wirle and ha::
two tenons, 3/1 by 11,'-' inches at each
end. These are securely dinwllinned
Into the side pieces to brace the (rata;
Gudgeons of throe -quarter inch iron
tin.d of'a good length are used 1:: can
nection with the roller p:•o:!er. w!,'(..11
is made 01 0 log eig'.tteen int•heA i;: r11
✓meter and a trifle less than t:;o f,
long.—Orange Judd F arntcr.
magazzassig
"SUCCESS FARM;"
"FAILURE FARM"
0 you see the two farms 1
They are both good farms,
or ought to be, as are most
of those in this country.
THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN
i THEM IS NOT IN THE LAND,
BUT IN THE MEN THAT OWN
TH EM.
One of these men is an up to
date chap who READS THE
PAPERS, especially the farm
notes, takes agricultural journals
and applies scientific methods.
The other works just as hard,
but will not have a newspaper irr
the house and could not get a new
idea if it were bored into his head
with an X ray.
THE UP TO
GETS TWO OR
THE YIELD OP
DATE FARMERR,'`
THREE TIMES
HIS NEIGHBOR
AND WITH BUT LITTLE MORE
LABOR OR E)(PENSE.
He uses fertilizer', crop rotation
and intelligence. He economizes
every rod of his land; makes it
all count. He practices soil con-
servation. He gives back to the
soil as much as or a little more
than he tak°es from it. He _mows
the latest e: [;periments made by the
agricultural department, the agri-
cultural colleges and experiment
stations, Ile reads the newspa-
pers. SE1VD lin YOUR SU13-
SeRIPTION TODAY.
••vx .,,.. �r ag, a1...: " >.t taro ,iw ii `a r x
,\\\\\\li\C���\\v�\\\\\\\m\\\\�i�\\\\\Z��\C\\\\\ \\A\ri ��\ v\ :t�\1'•aaMirv. U i\\K.\hre....a:.E.L�\i.:vd ..ai.i::....$.`:c,`.
A:
PAINT ••
&VA Ni'i�(1•
•
•
F•
t{
j�.
i t 1F
ISI II.0I
.. .
IUiulu rl t
nvigr
41.
Asi
aeas
Let's All Join . ones on
the "Paint Up" 1 a ea
Let's interest the man next door and the man across the
street in this "Clean Up and Paint Up" Movement.
If they will do their share and go after their neighbors, you
can all snake a glorious success of this practical, helpful, sensible
plan of civic improvement.
,Whole -hearted co-operation is what is needed for
•
SPICalnitiiirEER
Do your part carefully and loyally. If the House looks
dull, or the Porch is worn, or the Fence is scarred, a coat of
"100% Pure" Paint will put yourplacc in the Spic and Span class.
if there is any freshening or brightening to be done inside
the house, we have the Paints, Stains, Varnishes and Enamels
to dotthework easily,satisfactorily
sf'
actoril and economically.
1n fact, we carry EVERYTHING you need to "Paint Up" with the good,
old, reliable Martin•Senour Paints and Varnishes—MAIM?, IN CANADA --and
Bold with our persona guarantee of eatir:actiott. 70
Rae & Thompson, Wiii hanli, Conti►
aasee
sae
'..
a