The Wingham Advance Times, 1927-05-12, Page 2•
TR
WIN,G} AM ADVANCE -TIM
MIPMMINPOPPIRMINIMPOIIIMPOIall
nimiiiisimaimisicomummo
essI
SALE,
STARTS
THURSDA '
MO NING
9 o'clock.
I/I
COA'i' :V'ALU Is
That Axe Starting.
OUR ENDEAVOUR IS TO MAKE A COM-
PLETE CLEANUP BEFORE THE HOLI-
DAY.
MILLINER
BUY A 'HAT TODAY AT BARGAIN
PRICES. ALL LINES OF LADIES' AND.
CHILDREN'S HATS REDUCED FOR A
CLEANUP;
LADIES' SUITS
PRICED LOW r �`
4 Only—TWEED SUITS—Sizes up to 20, Or-
iginal Price ` was $22.50 and $26.50. 15.95
This week we offer them for a cleanup at •
4 Only SUITS --All Dark Colors. Sizes 20 and:.
38 only. Less than one half price. Your 9,95
choice at a price of
7 Only SUITS-11lostly, Navy. Sizes up to 42=
worth 3 times what We ask. `' Pick them 6.95
up at r:
BUY A SUIT -CHEAP .TO -DAY. .. PAY
CASH AND BU? FOR LESS
Children's 'Coats
P.RICED'FOR A CLEANUP
2.95
This is the chance of the season. Seven
only,' in the lot. Sizes 6-7=8-9--10
12. If you want a good seviceable school
.coat. Buy one of these.
Other Lines of .Children's Coats. Speci-
ally Priced for this Sat.
Lot No. 1—Contains our Range of Better Coats, in
Cloths,, such as Charnaene Poiret 'Tw .11, nicotine ,Sat-
in etc. Sizes from 16 to 44 in the lot, 28.95
Values up to $35.00. All go at Special Price.
Lot No. 2—Is made up of a range of Choice 'Coats,
which have sold at real value. Prices up, to $29.59.
Colors, Black, Navy, Sand Cocoa etc,. and sizes up to
45. This is your chance. Price
23.95
Lot No. 3 In the Brighter Shades, such as Princess
Blue, Rosewood, Cocoa, etc. Most stylish coats and
priced low. Worth up to $25.00 and better 19.95
Special ,t
Lot No. 4—In the Big Selling Shades, this season,;Navy,
'or Black, and sized up to 44. Selling price has been
up to $22.50.; Our Special Clearing Price 17 95
Lot ,No 5—At the most poyulai price for this time of
year. Colors, Navy ,and Cocoa only. Sizes up to
44. , ' Regular up to $23.50. While they 15.95
last 4
Lot No 6—Con-pins a Coat for Serviceable wear
Tweed, Velours, Charmene, Checked Short..: Coats etc.
All low' for : a uick` clearance. ' Your
priced�, 9:95
choice for
RESSESI, DRESSES,
DRESSES.
AT MOST POPULAR PRICES
PRINTED CREPE DRESSES. Worth. up 5.95
to $8:50. Clearing ate"
PLAIN COLORED CREPE DRESSES.
Values up to °$27.50. Very Special at
7.95
KNITTED SAX DRESSES. Black or ,Colors 9.955'
Your Choice for
PRINTED FLAT CREPE DRESSES. 12 95
Were selling at $21.50. Clearing price'
GEORGETTE AND CREPE DRESSES: Real
Value in every one. Special at 1.95
For 1. 79
You' can Buy, a Child's''
Dress, made from Voile,
Flannel, or suiting cloth.
Sizes up to 14 years. Spec-
ial Low Price to Clear.
For 2.95
You can have your
choice of Misses Dresses,
in sizes 16-18 or °20.:
Lines that have been sell -
Ing up to $10.95.
WIMP
Mainly For W -omen
(By Dorothy Dix)
.LONELY MOTHERS
-(By "A Woman With a Duster")
, I write many sermons for women.
Here is one for men, and the text is:
"Don't forget to Write tQ Your
Mother." Women
don't- need this
sermon' because the don'r
r y t forget.
But aman '
as liable to be neglectful of
family ties and to forget how ow lonely
and desolate ane those who sit .in the
twilight of old age beside g g s e solitary
hearthstones and who wander, through
empty rooms listening to the echo of
the ;gay young voices that are silent.
TIREDOUT? Perhaps in the whole of human ,life
'�� there is no such ironic contrast be
-
RUNy,.R�rt,fL� : DOWN? tr�-een our noble ideas and our ing deeds as'is shown in the way the
�f
falter -
NERVES r
0 _a.ve a man • o -average a x treats his mother. His
aNlSaiVlA
S LIFE
r .affection ;#o r
is hisP
rofoundest
WORTH LIVING AGAIN emotion, least expressed,
He may
not neglect her entirely. He may
may
pat himself 9n the back and think lie
is a goad, son because he has given
her the little house4n which she lives,
and if she is poor, sends her a.month-
ly allowance, But he doesn't yvrite
toher. r
The man's excuse is that he is too
busy to write. Maybe so, but mother
was never too busy to answer his call,
when he needed her. She was never
too busy to hunt the baseball glove he
wanted to go out and play with or to
wash the little shirr he deeded when
he wanted to go out with other boy'.
Too busy to write to mother! But
she, Mr. Man, was never too bury to
do every possible thing for you;
MR. J. O. 1UNGHEIM. You forget to write to mother; but
,°Ll3efore I learnt ,about 'Fruit -a -fives' It never for a single second in all your
felt tired out and run-down, and my life has mother forgotten you. How
nerves were completely gone. Work: 1 c mug t sound to the
int ossibie. Since taking Iruit-a- such excuses us
. empty.
Lives' feel like loin my work.' Life is ,old lady who is waiting patiently and
warth tuning ngan, I n ern act resent lrealtli ' a `Fri =' Y pnhesi-
iinconiplainingly fora letter. from the
sv t u t a trues and u
tatiogly recornlnetd diem," son who is still a child to her, rio mat-
So writes Mr. Jelin' 0. Ringheim, of "
ter if to t
'�'ynndel, 31C" whose. eat crier;; is t :. he rest of the world he looks
ical of thousands restored to health b a statlt, bald -beaded old. gentletnan.
this fine`fruit medicine.' To her he is the world and, all there iS
When the bowels and kidne
ys are 'net. of interest iii it, The smallest thing
functioning properly and the stomach is
hampered it its work, nervous troubles !that concerns llisn is of greater isnlyor,
often follow, "ii'1frit-a-tines", the natural, 'Italica to her than the fall of an empire,
Medicine,�sei: clay -its ylgltt quickly and Wand if lie ;toes not wait_ and let her l reit-a Lives is composed of
fresh fruit juicr.;s, rntc:nsifrecl atria corn, ;,share it his hopes her lot is n desolate
lilted with tonics .a wonderful artedichre..'one
Step into the nearest drug store, Buy
2$ -cosh or SO -cent box. Ai/41010w good'
,
C'at�altll s•• rti)a. A Lltercfore.roti, who
Irese,lInes,
sit down at once and write to , your
mother along, human, gossipy letter,
telling her, all that you are doing and
thinking and seeing: Don't let your
mother be one of those poor, neglect-
ed women who watch every day for
the arrival of a letter, and when they
do not get it, turn sorrowfully and de-
jectecI y away, wondering why the
letter they look for nevier 'comes,
APPRECIATE THOSE LIVING
A poor, sick woman, whose suffer-
ing had made her a little morbid,
made. a curious request -of a friend:
"When I ani dead and my neighbors
come to my door with regret and sym-
pathy, do not let any of them in' the
house, because I have lived •there
for years, lonely and forlorn and'shut
in and not one of them has dropped in
to cheer and comfort me. If they
offer their cars for the funeral, reftise
them, because they never asked nm to
take a ride, though they must have
known how much an invalid would
,enoy getting out Do not let them
lay a flower on my coffin, for they
never gave me a single bloom in
life."
Now this woman's, neighbors arc not
especially hard and Heartless people.
They' are just busy people, engrossed
in their own affairs, even as you and
I. And when they hear that the
poor invalid across theh street is dead
they will bo conscious stricken at hav-
ing failed in kindness to her and they
will rash over to her house and try to.
atone for their neglect by. heaping
their tributes on her. bier:
\Ve all do the 'same thing, and I
often think that the most cynical thing"
in the world is that weehavc to dieto
find out what our family and friends
think of us, and the estcezrl in which
we are held in the community. ; The
words we hungered ' and thirsted to
hoar, the love that 'we broke our hearts
for,
are only whispered into deaf.
ears;'
if the spirits of 'the depa,rtcd fire
act tv earth, it
permitted to c
must surprise many a one to read on
'his or her tombstone that he or she.
'was the beloved husband or wife of
1 „w n -
so-and-so, The poor ghost had ev
1 er suspected ,such a thing.` In life,
,only rio ni callous,
or she had .o y tvs
cold, indifference, neglect, fault` -fund
nggueruo s p ,
l � u. com Taints never a-
,
word of praise or appreciation, never
.a kiss with a thrill or a passion in.it,
never any tenderness.
It cannot matter to those who are
LI, safe in the love of God to know that
their husbands and wives really loved
1 them, or that their neighbors esteem -
i
l,ed them,' but it would have made such.
:a difference to thein while they lived,
lilt would have made a flower -strewn
Pathwy
I a '' of what wasd
the r•oa to Cal-
vary. Let's not wait until ;'people
are dead to show our lone and'a1?P reci
ation of them, Let's send flowers
to the living—and let's begin today,
•
THE PROPER AGE TO MARRY
The proper age at which to wed, if
one would secure happiness and er-
P P
inanency in the marriage tie, has been
g
decided, by the Journal Of Social Hy-
giene. After having examined 'the
domestic relations courts in several
large cities, and comparing thein with
marriage
the arria a licensesissued i
gn� those
places, they have announced at 29 is
the proper age for theroom and"
g24
for the bride. The man is allowed
a leeway of four :years on either side`
an the bride but two. o Young w ` Yot ng men
must pick .their mates from the ages
between 22 and 26; older and younger
feminity has a penchant for rushing
to the divorce court when things do
not, go just right.
A SPRINGTIME DISH.
Sing a sc ng of Springtime,
Onions;.in a, row
Lettuces and radishes
Making a brave show;
Eggs are getting cheaper
�' � p
Almost every day,
Ever tried to eat them.
The Italiantvay. ?
'Tis' good to change the menu
When Spring is on the way,
Boil some macaroni ,,
The water strain away;
Cut hard-boiled, eggs in slices,
Chopped ' ham �m in. neat. array; ,
Wash' well the radishes, .
And peel the onions too;
Chop up the lettuces,
Add gerknis, just •a few;
Then toss it all together,
With butter just a knob,
A squee2e: of lemon added,
Then warm .upon the. hob; -
Serve with fried
potatoes,
Made crisp and, brown, and Biot— -
You'11 find this Springtime dinner
A change you'll like a lot.
ABOUT BEAUTY SLEEP
(By f osephine Huddleston)
We all know that plenty of sleep is
essential to beauty, but whether or not
the old regime of eight hours is ab-
solutely necessary depends largely up-
on circumstances. One woman will
find that seven hours of dreamless, re-
freshing sleep is sufficient; another a-
wakens after eight hours of restless-
ness more fagged than ,before retiring.
Naturally the amount of fresh air
in the sleeping quarters is of vital
importance: One feels more refreshed,
after ,six hours sleep in a well ventil-
ated 'room thartone feels after nine
hours sleep . in a stuffy xoom.
' It is possible to lay the foundation
for a restful, beauty -restoring sleep
as delibef•ately as it is to carelessly
bring upon oneself a night of tossing
and bad dreams, with certainly a lin-
ed, distressed appearing face the next
morning. The mind and body can
with the accomplishment of this,
be put at peace before retiring, ,and
with the accomplishment of this, a
"bad night" will disappear.
By removing all trace of make-up,
dust and relaxing the tissues of the
face bymasa
;a, many women : have
discovered the path to restful sleep.
An egsr .. excellent r `n=
�e si -for this is the
following treatment:
Cleanse the skin thoroughly, using
a soft cream, lemon cream if the skin
is inclined to oiliness plain cold,
cream if .the skin is inclined to dry-
ness. Remove this carefully. Then
massagd a good tissue or muscle -
building Bream into the skin, letting
it remain on a few mintites. After
refnoving the excess cream, pat on an
astringment or pore lotion and allo
it to dry into the skin,
VALUE UE' is not a matter of price alone. It 3s
V simply; warn! you get far tJ,c price you pay.
Chovroirt is low in prise—but not at the ex-
ppense of quality, It is econotnical--beca se
#t is not cheaply built. It (S supreme in valyue
bccausoit mos more of the things you want
for the price you pay,•
First and always, gaality •aunts with Chevro
let. 'There is gaality in the di-stiactiv"r isher
bodies; in the long, lo�F lines,r51 the rich
lustrous 15uco long,
in the smooth, powerful
Valve.in-head engine; in the 'scores 01 refine-
, Krems, ,such its air cleaner, oil'filter, gas
strainer; in the lu eury of its appointments and :.
Upholstery; fn h0 long,'reslgient• springy;' ail
the easy, three -speed transr0ission. •
The Most Beautiful Chevrolet. in Chevrolet
History is now selling at new and lower prices
the lowestfor which Chevrolet has ever beeert
sold in Canada.
'Roadster . $655 Touring .. +, . $655
Sport Roadster 0730 Coupe, - - , • $780
Coach"$7.60 $760 Sedan • • • • . 0865
�briolet . + . $890 Landau Sedan $930
Ttnparial Landau Sedan .•. . $97$
Roadster tietivery.$6$9 Com.rc'1 Chassis $490
1.Ton'Truett Chassis - .' $64$ •
Pikes at Pactory, bs1raram—Gavcrnriseat Tax
Z?ktra •
r:F-49113
Am Mb C A FOIRA,WiklialldiMr Ont
ueale> in Chevrolet, Oldsmobile and McLaughlin Cara.