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The Wingham Advance, 1923-05-03, Page 5Thiir04,tay,,Afio.304:49?* • l'or That Lad of Yours Who.Long to be a•Nlart.-- VOL/ want clothee that wear.like iron. He must play. You eatildn't keep him away from the lot sometimes even if you wanted to do Ir. And you wouldn't expect that; for you like him to wrestle, jump, and. slide so he will grow up to. bp ti regular man. • •• ' But his clothes must be ileac and, attrtietive; for his dress is , an expression of you testes, just what you desire will be found esti display of Peck's Clothing for Lirde Men Come in and inspect at your leisure. -- You will not be urged to buy. E. BARD & co. SUNDAY AFTERNOO ,tees.rSeme.*SegrrePIPSKS00.4,6SSe.. Great Idieg of natiolls, hear Qt PraYa While at Thy feet, we fall, . And hombly with united •ey, To •Thee for mercy call, The guilt is ours, but: grace is Thine; 0 tens 'us not aWAY But• hear tis from Thy iofty throne, And hells us when we pay. 0u -fathers' sins were manifold, And ours tio less we own, Yet wondronsly from age to age, Thy goodness beth beenshown. With pitying eye behold our need, As thus we lift our prayer, exportation to the Israelites' before hie emend eeneeseelenetelleerdnierrIllr'll, • Tns '17,0140}14km. At)vANct, r!IIIIFerdetneenF, 91ne Tee, 1'1 s, • 4,1 !•1 •enee.,,'li He Point's' out the weer they new •elothee, fo.r Easter. , i' "efs ,)' a f,101looirtIe x, ! ' ' f;orne ::gileat' 1:04ZA l'i,al','Iloilfeird-'i?'erli, , , , , , , . , us live both' ,theY eetri their keng, to `rho. btu:40f ie . becoming a little I Ther e lya Brother 1orri$0,11 fo,r in, I ben remake. w9ttid ne else trierelf secede, the bleaeing Of the 'Ged'ierlvern, thread-nere,,, e*esterday , there'. were estanee, , yen Reptile/. , morrisoe, ,, .yle, of all .Nerth gj Aellerice,,deellyeneie lateeie they' rejected when the Y deno$ea :We thrm ee ore' speeches to toreplete it$ was a go ,huge the, most 'eheerftil, 'wll ,i' be' ,Od'''.1:..)'Ottli'iriu'' nf' '4.114Oi' nons ' Tltun , felloWed g iniriaegi9Ue ;Sanc,,Ipaper finish,. ;The orators werefl , of ptly) g10(trri,btig$,.. ne.011,te4, lust r ' 'V ill'OS kiV,11.4 ' 1)10 Yll ':,,It'.71 01, 4 l'-'r,i4115i'",91A!' Marlifestation of God's power in eends john jeyet of North Huron, liartley like sir Andeow emae,ndeii, , A fase ,eos,e,e',.,„..•.' ..d• -•;..,e, •.,; at,: ' ;,:' ,,,, ing thunder et the time of wheet hers Dewart of Soulliweet Toronto end days ago in kleeltotr he iteel ,said 'that. '- ".4- h 3: e -. 0.01Y ',“1-1,:f :1P.I. ” gl:/91'0 '0 -04• '., •:' ; !:i. . veSt in corrOheratiOn of Sarnuel's Charles Swayze of Niagera Fells, 'farm, rife wa.s. 411, $0r,xovving 411d bor„ eiseeelteieee eenene he S'i)orke of 4116' ();,,, , - '• ,,',,, ,,, , . words, "None therefore stand and see Each had a different style and a- dile eon'ing, all -hard work end leo hard T: I -Te was eerprised eint this greet thing, which the Lord, will ferent subject, Mr. joynt had e rol- cash, His reason 'wee. that irt X92,e, ltis, toe re°e..„411i1.ztlm t0"Cl cra„.r0 do before Your eyes," This filled licking breezy style ;led his subjeet, seta lead to borrow monnu ey to pay his wiliskeY,' 'sfelte• or Ills' 10, ap"` their hearts With fear and in their his real subject, was anples. Mr. De- taxes, "Brother Morrison is a Pretty Ples'o.hacl no I°"° f�r hard eiders • ,, , • trouble they cried unto Serneel, "Pray wart loped glOng in 111$ USUal wefl inart mate' seid Mr. yoynt, "but he hut he did adirlireIt e ntto,riterg.e'llero.4, for tleY serstants mine the Lord, thy cadenced legal eant-er, a.rid 'the pitch doesn't icnow farming:, Ai/ove ,a,j) he' for tlic effielent tnetitlelr venteh AO' aGod, thet we die not; for we_have add- of his discourse was tinkers. Mr. knew- notbieg about epplee, Norjb. had, made the waY of the teetitsgee,eaine '; king. the burden of his . ?nesiong, leas th, The rest of Mr, Joynt's speech was w,leie.h, kePt, _Mrs. Ranee' freen , • Verses 20 tO 25! quality Of mercy wnicli ueht to fail pleaeautly erf imed ti N tn.'s Joint virmc° kePt malkmg ed, unto all our sins'thie eedl, to 'ask its SWayze soliloquized ' like' Hamlet and Huron apples. • , hard- It 'wee :no Arenbte- ' T $ reevelmessage of SarrrueI s sociai unfortunates like the gentle Spies, As he spoke one could see the 6 Inc and elislime right ander t. has much in common with Joetlha Correct us with Thy judgment, Lord, • Then 10 Thy Mercy spare, Amen (foltis Idainpden (arney,) PRAYER lost GI-et:toes God, King -of Kings, • and Lord of Lot -&s, we call unto Thee beemise we have called 'before, and Thott did.st hearest us. Lift ua again that we inay praise and. bless • Thy holy name. We have sinned against Thee tunes and ways without number; yet Thou has been mereiful . unto, us. • We confess our sins and we pray Thee -to lead us .moreand more toerepentaece, so that we inay praise _Thee in sincerity and in truth. This .1.104.1.11,12111101•49.0•101,m, SO ILL HE„..COITI,D NOTeLEAVA ' HOUSE • a 1,1,10•••••••••te• • r. Arold•a physical wreek—one bot-' . tie of Dreco, the famous heal_th 'sbuild.er .,gave him relief vainly sought or years. • The pereistent inroads of stomach troublee'indigestion gastritis, and the • resulting • constipation and sluggish liver, ovee la' period of several years • liad,broughtMr. Arnold of 68 E. 33rd. • ;SteeMt., Hamiltore Ont, to such a • ak d condition that for some time • he had been unable to leave the house. Didzy spells and other distressing' _ ierniptone made life miserable for him and to teeatment that he tried did the slightest 'good. -via, 'with the first bottle Of Dreco came the turning • Point in Mr. 'Arnold's, condition. Two • bottles have made a new man of him and legth lir. and Mrs. Arnold are en- • -thuslastic in their praise. • • --"We`thinle Dreco a wonderful pre - :separation' says Mrs, .tvrpolu. It. can, •he beaten. My husband has been sick •for several years and. hadn't been able • to leave the house for a long time un- • til he started taking Dreco. His troub- • le was stomach and liver complaint• , tdverything he eat would sour and • cause indigestion, gas and heartbttrn. 'I -le had dizzy spells and spots floated • before les eyes. He always had to lake medicine to keep his bowels open. His nerves were in bad shape and his • t wasweak and run down. We ,heard about Dreco and decided to try it. I.:Afters. two- bottles • he is much- str6eiger ;and :geseer .entilynev_alltse age,. nieeded totcoiniitende'thiseWeit- -clerful Medicine. -• • ; . death (chapters 3,-24) in which the dominant notes were "Take „good heed, leave •unto the Lord, Be very courageous to keep and to do," Verse. no—"And Samuel said unto the people, rear not; ye have done all the wicked- ness; yet turn riot aside froln follow- ing the Inerd but serve the Lord with all your tweet. Samuel expresses the desire that. God's showing Himself as more powerfunthan arty earthly king should not drive them away but rather drive them to God. That they should come to reeggnize that eBehind a frowning Providence, 1 -Is hides a stnilieg face." we ask in Jeeus' name. Amen. Verse ei—"And, turn, ye not aside; SUNDAY' SCHOOL LESSON POR for then should ye no after vain things MAY 6th., /gee • Lesson Title--Sarnuel: Judge and Prophet. e., • Leseon Pessage—r Samuel 12 Golden Text—x Sanittel la:24. • We read in the eighth chapter of this book how Samuel, owing to old age, appointed his sons as judges in his place. Their bad government led to the asking fora king instead of a judge to reign over the children of which cannot profit nor deliver; for they are vain. Here•.they are warned against idolatry. An idol is nothing in the world, (x Cors 8, 4) and there- foi-eaef they turned aside from God, no matter to what they turned, it would prove to be fenir undoing as as individuals and as a nation. After thus counselling them' and warning them, he proceeds to speak comfort- ingly to them, telling them that they, the children of Israel, were' in a spec- ial way God's peculiee people,. and He dew from, Heaven or the mist from apple orchard isnee-deeP tirnoth nose" P , •!, , ! Niagarn'Palle, and the old gnarled boughs blushinYti I Mr, JoYsit Indeen. Proved h'408,e1/7 Ur. JoYet, like HartleY Dewert, did like an Eeester het with rosy -checked, gloom diePeller end set .2! high etand- not get to his real subject right at Northern spies, ard peopheey pOetry for Ntri monecnet. haHdebeoel)nsefriavyeeddtohnataltlhseidgeosveevreni; izeM4rinJEoynngtlahnaddbay pamphlet pdhe,pleiltrteirtenutleor-f to 'up l'o" ,14° hesO W1;t4 a bugle' eiste. He %kiss that: the elope On their Own side. There wasn't an a,geleillture to advertise Ontario. It ticin lied been sounded and t t • , inch ,..of their skin that wasn't black 'was all about apples and coe the back; the' ministers were Parading to the , and hired He knew that it was his it was a scarlet clueter of apples, et Post With their good' deods' Writt0;11 duty as a good Conservative to heave contained a long and glowing account , c°0°1 -1S "res rhgir saddle cloths • - , a brick or two, but he had been fore- of ; the pornolegical prowess of Mr. He then gave the diberel cotirit,erPart „ stalled. "Some other brother," said Ieenneth Cameron, of Lticariow, Nor_ of lelr. Nickle's finaticial criticism, • ,' he, "has stolen all my thunder." No th -Huron, who last year got x9 bar- .--,-------- -- -,----------- doubt that brother was anr. Niekle. rels of Northern Spies of a tree 65 i rodffeene,neenseleese, 1111 1 , I . !! t 1111 AIM jOynt Is Cheerful years old. ; i , , . _ . , be a theilderets He has, a cheerful said' Mr- J°Yrtt- "Mr' Camercm is a ' Milk citeese d,isposition. He bel n' to the Con- neighbor of mine- He ha's farms it' i ' ' 1 ' servative party and lives in the awful my riding alongside of mine. Years I Cream sales Bet it is not Mr. joynt's nature to 1 raise th°se very apples TYself, '" • It nhadow of Arthur neeighen's perennial ago he planted eight acres, and II gloom, but yesterday he was of good. planted six. Little I thought but I'd i hie 'eased! humor. . hir. to -see him inade famous by ler. i 1 4 He wished to give the government Mannirig Doherty. 1. had no hand in , , , He this pamphlet. 'I've no brief for the I by Long fiistaize6 helpful, constructive criticism. did not care whether the provincial II Is, de government, but 1 want to , He was satisfied as long as the pro- especially theeNorth Riding of Huron, 1 quotations/torn recent reporeee treasurer had a surplus oy a .deficit. be fair to myself and fair to -Ontario, 1 some vince had money in the bank. He wes That booklet was -well worth publish- i "We depend on Long Dis- vincial debt is to be paid off in forty the total por_ ing '' It is the gem of all U. F. 0. I tanee to order milk and literature. I hope 331-o. Morrison will 'cream seorn farr;iers, anti - delighted to hear that years. He was overjoyed to learn that see it so that -he won't be a gloom bug to find a market hi the there is to be no increase iti taicafione Israel. The eiders -rxf Israel' cam° t° having made them this for I-Iis own He thought that Mr. Casselman's Samuel unto Ramah and said - uxito good pleasure, will also for His own speech on Wednesday was a brilliant him, "13ehold; thou art old, and thy name's sake not forsake them. (verse one, but it was too much tinged with sone walk'not in thyways; nose make ee). . pessimism. Mr. Casselrnan thought us a king to judge us like all, the nee- in verse 19 they asked_ Samuel to that the rural caucasian was being pray for them, ; He thought that they. Played out, that ehe villages were be - Ke took it to the Lord in prayer and coining depopulated, that Ontario was, imagined, for -a' moment, that now he Was not he but God ,they were reject- 'eras told to do as they asked, for it woulei geese to pray for them startles goingto the bowwows.. ', him, and he cries out "God forbid that . All ;thid tiejle about the bow wows ing''' Samuel' was instructed r°-• tell' I should sin against the Lord in ceas- initeded Mr.' joynt immensely. "I've thehl plainly what s'lid" of king they mg to pray for you.", He is no long- heard that talk ' for the ;east eforty Would eventually have reigning over er to be judge but he will still be their years," said he. ":"1 can ' remember them- This he did and at the dose prophet and exercise a prophets right whbn the farmers first began to leave of hi. cliseMers"theY rePlied: "Nay; of praying for and teaching them. All but we will have a king to reign over h's - teachings, hithexto, both by pre- cept and examene,, had been.no other haIvne trieleeorlicinetah'tahleldfitnednitithgcahtlar we his early childhood when.he waited thane"the good and right way." From ing of. Saul by Samuel. A elescrifeti°° upon Elisin the temple unto now his ofe.Sand follows and also of his reeePS life hadheen es•an ?open bee( known tion ,13S'' 'the ;Pope ----:``,And all 'the and read of.;a11, rneyge, and they.in this People- shoutatl,' tendaid, God stye aseernhly had set their seal to.the up - the' King."; .-They were, 'hawe'vr' in righneharacter lee.had ever borne; and that assert -11)1Y soilee who looked with lie -wishes them to regard,lurn hence - disfavour ort S,aule and epoke disparag- forth as their true friend. • In closing inglY• ' "14°w-, shall tili man save' us? he again urges them to •look to 'their And they despised him, and brought owneconduct in relationship to God, him no presents , Saul noticed their the King of Kings, and warns them of There are many men well on the coed road to the condition in ,which Mr_ uet -but showed his, wiedened by Arnold found himself—feat ;apProach- ehnotleclinrtglph9nis tpheeaheeH ie., itbetfidcledtiolot wiaitonce nowledgeHim in all their ways"As which hhe l : the consequences of failing to ack- a faithful watchman he gave them ing the day when ill health will coll- had heeendhosen and ,anointed, Rather warning:, andrcieliveren his own soul. fine them to the house and deprive he returned to Gibeah-aed to his ord (verses24_25). them of their power to earn, a living inary Work as a ploughman there to In this lesson. we see the greathess for. themselves and families- Dreco a'wait develogments, for this neWof ,thing , his life without any a public man who .conies to the will prevent this condition. Comhad come into - time wh,en another isle, take his peace. seeking on his parn It was not long This is a crieis which is ,hard, to meet. before lie was called upon t6 muster men to help defeed Jabesh-gilead In all history is there another who met it so ,nonly? "The conduct'of Sam - against the. Ammonite.s.So successful uel in this whole affair of the king -s was he.that Samuel said to the people,- appointment, shows him to have been "Come and let les go to Gilgal, and a great and good man, who sank all renew rhe Kingac'm there'''` in disinterested zeal for his country's In the, twelfth chapter we have record- good, and whose last words in public ed Sam tient of Israel into the hands of Satel. were to warn the peole and their king uel's resig,nation of the govern- were the danger of apostasy and disob- • rn the speech which he made he make edience to God." es it plainetlia.t he is free fitoninany . (R. Jamieson, Ds D.) suipicion of mismanagement in the, pounded of Nature's herbs,roots, leav- es, and bark. Dreco tones up the whole system and helps the stomach, ' liver kidneys and bowels to functioti properly. it will bring health to you just as it ,brought it to thouSands of others. ' Dreco pleasa.nt:to take, effective, 'and contains no mercury potash of habit forrning drugs. - • D"Wreco being specially introduced itt inghaen by J- Walton McKiblion, and is sold by a good druggist every - ,h • - them the good and the evil; the bless- ing and the curse. He then calls upon Maud Miller on a summer day, thm eto take notice of how God will Raked the meadow sweet with hay, inanifest' His displeasure at their ask - The judge came by and naade a bow, ing a king and concludes His farewell They're married and she rakes hens discourse to theili as their judge, by expressing the hope that all. will be well with them. • any longer_ , cl1r. joy-nt twitted Mr. Sam Clarke , with being also one of the insects of ; sadness. S:ans in "sepulchnral sensa-1 tional tones," bad sung the praises of the great men of the past, Mowat, Meredith, Ross and Whitney; and thus 1 magnified the mediocrity of the press "Long Distance is the . a exit. "There are great men still live; cheapest -way to sell iee ing," said Mr. Joynt. "All the great crewel:" - suer,. are not dead. yet. There are able - ' the, prime minister. There was Mt. "We purchased over $100,- 000 worth of cheese by cities for butter' , ' • .. - • "A 15 cent Long Distance tall enanled us to get - i2 ,, ,s cents . illore 'a .pound for our . butter -in a ,nearby n , ' • city"—writes earreer., • • men in this ea.ssernblY." Therdeveas Long Distatiee at a cost of $16. or .016%. This • " eDhieesta8isieeweat saolt-leoebty of."3$n3g0, tohl'e;(7tbauVayer,ls'ild 'neve): 'saw, • "We sell tleotisands.of dole Long, ga.oyDf Distance." rnipeclezuz r lhk• o you w Long Distance is being - used to increase aaes in your business? THE BELL TEI.,EPIIONE 0Cde. OF CANADA. Howard 'Ferguson. There was the North Huron. It wasn t because the lesider -oferlia 'Liberal -party, "one of country had gone' to the' dogs, or to the'most brilliant of men:: as he was the bailiffs. It was heeadde the C., R shortly to prove by his second edition of his much admired study of tinkers. R. was opening ug the West. Young' • . - men went away by stores and hiand- ., . - His Test Of Greatness rids. At every station they, hada° put Mr. .Joynt's test of greetness, was I on extra'coaches. We, who remained ability to prophesy, either before or • behind didelet Weep.. We knew the el after elections. "Weddwant to -day," Weren't lost to 'Canada. ' "When t was twenty years old,",he WORLD MISSIONScof affairs. He sets before andrnwaling Love the Unifying '707 Washington ,authorities to suppress unnecessary witli Congress 'adjourned essary noise is there? •1 Verses t to , . are striving 'S,aenuel, said unto all Isca,e1." What noise's. ;But a stsblime spectacle! The old and grey what =nee.. hea.decl judge stands up in the assort- , teseasssesalesInessszteesesosseses.stissaueaeraeasosertse hyI ste 1).:11111Y! •$• 1 'It Of all farm machines the • cream separator is the one on which you can take no -chances for the smallest- of cream losses soon mount • into dollars. IVIelotte has been the farmers' best friend for over • 30 years. It is the machin. with suspended lobwl and • enamelled bowl ‚casing. Hanging naturally on a ball- bearing spindle, the howl i• S perfectly balanced, and is • • guaranteed easier to turn • and to wear longer than any other • On account of the recent ad- •vance In raw materials, it is imPossibte to guarantee present low prices for any definite time. fl Teri -year guarantee with every •l'ilachrile Vetrte' for free descriptive booklet. Don't deaY• LISTER 811 co. (Canda) LAnuted Have you seeu the wonderful LISTER ijILgER Simplicity Itself t Awo AW (N w A.tlaess)flad Office, 1ta 00t. bly- and challenges any one to point out any flaw in his official lif. The note rteging out from it all is upright- ness and honesty and he is not afraid to call upon his God to be witness to the truth of all he said. "And they answered, He is witneas," They agreed with all He said, even using His very words—"Thou hese not de- frauded us, teor oppressed us, neither haat thou taken ought of any mans hand." It was not Samuel, the ven- erable judge they were tired of but tbe sons with whose bands he lead re- linquished the reins of government. Sanmel wishes to make it elear to them that his official life having been pure, they hed no just cause in throw- ing off divine government by judges 'for that of a king. And -when he adds God arid His anointed—the yoeng king Satil—are witness against you this day they cannot but feel the truth or it end reply, "He is witness." Having niade his position very plain to them, he tufts their Millets •back - to the early history epf the children of Israel, and goes dyer all the way by which the Lord bad led them. out of Egypt up to the present time. He recalls bow the Lord delivered them from the hand of their enetnies on every side, and 'caused them to dwell safe. At this point he emphasizes the fact that "the Lord your God was your king" and then adds "Behold the king whom ye have ctioseti and whom ye have desired" They would be Mentally and' spiritually very blind if they could not after listening to such an explanation of their condut, see their folly de aeltieg a kieg like to the neighboring nations, Ilaving spoken thus plathly he goes further and tells them that in the ehoice of Saul they were directed ,by God for "Bhld the Lord hath set a Iting ovee 14.4,41....0,44.r..0**1.4orimmootliihnlikilochon.11mmlirmr*m. tt 011*.r........*Intaling*fro*/*0 CortealY IN it tett •Syeseasetet ,..T°z*Prit64 WhixiP " 17'11r61;;1 R'6°1114' *1r° EIA Y .1"14htr'lh11461' '!"2"„ il lett tiAIMILIDNI 0P1mttlif wnimptooit, otior . .....„,,o.„„„„,....... tin g ;1.1,11.• 01, Force The, federation of the world cannot be brought about by laws, or tribunals or treaties, so long as the world lacks a unifying force: What shall that force be? 'The expansion of commer- ,ce? Tlte influence of universities? The power' of the press? The growing or-. ganization of labor? All these things may helpmightily towards the great goal of universal peace. But they are instruments, not creators. University end newspaper •and labor federation are the channels through which the stream may flow, not the, stream itslf. The reaepower is the proclamation of the divine unity and love, and the human- nity and love which must fol- low, Christianity gives eertain root - ideas', certain convictiOns, deeper than all differences in costume or custom, in habits and laws. Arid these root -ideas concerning the relationship of all men to one another and to Gott, once accepted, wil create ri world unity that must endure. Be- fore we can have international peace we must have international conscience and international friendship, But wherever the missionaries have attack- ed world evils—line' slavery in Africa, atrocities in Aineria, industrial cruel- ity hi Peru, opium smoking in China— they have been creating an internat- ional conscience, now •growing, more sensitive Med powerfel with each de- cade' (W H. P. Femme.) went 6n. 4rEiit1tfrYere7o scleOld rs itt our 'hire! echoed. ' Now in the; eame sehnol, there are only seen."' But "'id not complain; Old Ontario had built ads') the West. It vas now befitting up the nrth. It wes hard on Huron,•but it was good for Min I took my Loo out in a canoe, To float upon the river, Then a wild storm crashed and the lightning flashed, And we both began to shiver. As I held her tight, I could feel her fright; Cried She as the boat was 'tippng, "I fear no harm here in your arms, But my permanent wave is slip - DRIVE • . , AWA.Y "GI..001ed BUGS" Conservatives Classed "y, I." as Orie— • Praises..Raue tnforcernent of • the Ontaxio Teriiperance Act -- A,11 talk in the legislature 'thse days revolves areund the budget. There ittay be digressions into such matters as the Adolescent Aet, but sooner or later the candle again attrects • the iron- alleg 'Whey all' tile moths have • Isihgeti their sviris, vlien tho magnet Ott, hOld rtiort fFogs, in moth. 151.1s awl tire ttniSe vill put Oa SOVIe ming. Mr. Joynt had no use for the "glooni bugs," the sad -hearted despairing gloom bugs, who fell into the ice cream at all the U. F. 0. picnics and socials. "They get ' together to have good time," said he, "and then they talk about hard times. They get speakers to come and cry over hard work and crop failures and co -opera- Etobicoke and the Humber and emer- tive deficits." ge in the very heart of the city in said he, "prophets and poets in , the Proviace of Ontario" Men who could dream of a hundred million a year coming out of the gold mines of the north, men who could see two million people in Toronto. Toronto has been able to inspire affection and enthusiasm itt the warm heart of the member for•North.Huron. Many outsidecities ask what is wrong with us. He could find nothing wrong -with us, except that there was not nearly hell' enough of a good thing. He painted a very glowing picture of our future. He imagined the not distant day, when he would take a tube at our western boundary at Oakville, dive under the Credit, the Every Sea Telephoneis Lon' bisthnce &Won SUESSIVRINIMMOMINI!MIMOSEBRIMMONNIM alalli01.111.11101MINIMPmedia•el•se. 1'100% PURE" PAINT The paint for wear and weather. • SE1•100It' FLOOR PAINT It wears and snare and wears. "VARNOLEUM" beautifies and pre - !e atedeeL100:turieoth . l "WOOD-LAC" STAIN Improves the new —renews the old. "NEUsTONE" The sanitary, wash- able 'Flat Oil Paint for Interior Decor- ation. Nothing adds so much to the beauty of a home as floors that are properly cared for; on the other hand, floors that are not protected are unpleasant to look at, are 'hard to keep clean, and become injured through wear: Don't neglect your floors, beautify them end save them. Save the surface and you save all. AdARBLE-ITE Floor Finish is the perfect treatment for floors of all Weds. It is the one floor finish that has a money -back guarantee attached to every can. 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