The Lucknow Sentinel, 1920-05-06, Page 5•
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Let Us
Help You Make a Garden
'
BEAUTTFUL surroundings add to the valueof your pprop-
trty. A flower garden to beautify --a Vegetable'garden to reduce
our table cost. We have everything to snake garden work,eaey.-
••- 1-... ,sea des, rakes, lawn hose, lawn
• Beautify n mowers, Prr:
Y your house with O -Cedar Polish (25r to $.3.110 'sizes
0- Cedar Polish. Mop, the time and. fahpr=saver, is St so •
. ' NEW PERFECTION 01L COOKING .S'1' O.V E S ,
ALL SIZES AND S'fYLF.S.
MARTIN-,SENOUK PAINTS.' A ND.V,ARNISIIES. A
hIND TOW -EVERY' PURPOSE.
w
•
(;ET OI'R PRICES ON- CORRUGATED GAL'VAN_
IZED ItO('i'T INC, WE HAVE A QUANTITY AT FAIL
LESS THAN PRESENT WHOLESALE PRICES.
BRANTFORD ASPHALT' SLATF SHINGLE.
S AND
HOOFING. THE BEST OF ITS KIND ON`THE MAR!
KET TO -DAY. • LET US SHOW Y 01 WHY,
I'iti:l'-%fEI) P1,.\s'1'•f lt.
. .t c 1k 01 PORTLAND C.'F.%iE', f•J1 i 1}:;1�t rtl
\‘ i• iJ.3� 1: t Iti 1,1;1ltii `rt 1►!' Et 1,''.!1 HAN', 1:1
('.1('1.1.:S IN' COOL,. ICLI'AItG ;IV I I:I1�11�C I
BICYCLE REPAIRING' •AND S UPI'LIES.
WE HAVE A SPECIAL. COAL OII. FOR INCU-
I!A'I'ORS-
McLEOD & JOYNT
THE STORE WHERE YOUR •MONEY GOES FARTHEST
' WINGHAM, ONT.
The shoed with competent instructors and superior courses. Graduates
•
placed' in positions. Affiliated with the Elliott Business College,. Tor-
onto; and the Central Business College, Stratford. Write for free cata-
Iogue. Inter any, time.
D. A. McLachlin, Pres. Phone 166 Murray McLeish. Principal'
Itt tc' asirct
fess .MILTON
KAT ars you going to do with
the $5.00 in your r pocket?
Are you looking for a place to spend
it? There are hundreds of places to
spend it. .:1 Rank of Hamilton sav-
ings account is a good place to Out it
if you want to use it later on when''
t•hit4-S 13* --
and matt% otters. whic.b )i►ha eau lit .1.i
to it if 'you will only do so.'
BANK OF HAMILTON
LUCNNOW BRANCH J. A. Clennie, Manager.
THE St'1'Fit:I.O('S PARLOR
S.pring , t•ime is moving time in many
places:, Just about the time when this
is •being read, hundreds of women 'will
be 'moving into new homes. 1V1ien
they' do. so—or indeed when they
.Spring clean their old homes-letlthem
ask themselves a question. hate I
a room in the house that is practi
tally superflous' is it not• true that
the best and brightest• rosins in the
house, the room with the best furni-
,.ture is ppractietilly unused? \Vhy' is
this so? Why should the beat room
in the house not bet used?
Oaf gn'a't 'nei htx)r to the South -
has many ideas Vihia -we "mtt tt. wi'11
copy! One of them is the abolition
of the drawing -room -or old fashioned
parlor and the substitution of the,
living -room. lrhe very name, living
room, suggests pleasant possibilities.
It means' the room where the family
ilv
lives. It means the room where all
the young People slither in -the even-
ings and the 'gramanh'one is started
or someone plays t;he piano " and the
rug is rolled tin. and (dancing is in
Bulged in. It nlcians- the coon) where
the friendly game of cards is played.
It. means the room where Dad •ean
read• his paper and Mother can nwnd
the stockings.
It is heartbreaking in many hanies
to find the drawing -room not a living-
' room as it• should be, •but an inhos-
pitable place cold, spotless, formal
-t-a plaee where the young people sel-
dom venture, a place where no one
• feels at home. The family, cut oil'
from a living -room, is•
forced to con-
gregate in the dining -room' or inked-
• .rooms or in .sono' shabby neglected
corner. The really good 'room in the
'house if left unused. is reserved sole-
ly for the oecasional visitor.
• Now that spring has come along let
us determine • • abolish the s ld-fas- 1
lh•iond parlor Mut institute the new
living -room. We. must be up-to-date •
and that means that the besL.roonl in
the. house is for the use of the .family
ant/ nit for the use cf a stray out-
sider. Throw open the door! I'ull,-up
the blinds! IDraw the c,irtains! Strew
r>�tt),►azines-=inrintlinf,* Tho '1~'t'teran—
..ahout.! Anel. bit the fami.y congregate
the .
• ^--0•o•1► , 1
'fists' process of waterproofing fab -
:,'s ,
ab-
:, s, ill gt'ilt',':tl tI - 111 the British
na.Nal and military •scl•\ i..e is• the in=
.e ration of an 'English women, Mrs,
i'rnest hart
HEARTBURN
or heaviness after meals are
most annoying matliiestatione
of acid -dyspepsia.
pleasant to stake,, neutralise
acidity and help restore
normal digestion.
MADE EY SCOTT & BOW? F1
MAWS OF Scotts E.MLL.S1ON
u11
r
$ketch froth 'fetual otoarapb .
showing the distinguished' psy-
chologists trying the Realism
Test iu the Edison Shop, New
. York.
p1
We give it in our store. You can hear it exactly as did the noted
psychologists who visited the Edison Shop -»n Fifth Avenue, New York.
You've been hearing! about the astonishing
realism of the New Edition.-
- Now you ask : "Is this realism so true that
I feel the same emotions in ..li4terling to the
New Edison as I 'feel in listening to the
living singer?" '
Our answer is—put the MIN,
the test ! • .
Mr. Edison devised his unique Realism
Test for this very purpose. Then he invited
distinguished psychologists to ti -y it out.
Each of thethree then got sensations that
were startlingly vivid.
"I could have sworn there Was a living
singer standing behind me," said Dr. -\1".
Ediso'h to
13ingharn, Director of the De arttnent
of applied Psychology,P
Carnegie Institute.
of Technology.
"I felt the -presence _of a Living singer.
The accompaniment seemed by a separate
instrument..." reported Prof. C. H. Farns-
worth, Director of the Department of Music,
Teachers' College, Columbia University.
"The niiisie filled my mind with thoughts
.of peace and beauty, said Wilson Follett,
Esq., noted music critic.
We'd like to have you come inner our store
and try this -same test. See what sensations
you get. The Realism Test is the conclusive -
way for judgingthe realism of theXewEdison.
our Budget Plan. It shows iglu
your New Edison through ;Thug.
AthiStrong Lucknow
•
SUN LIFE ASSURANCE.
COMPANY OF CANADA
The applications for New Assurances received by the
Company during 1919 reached a total of over
$loo,000,000
This exceeds the largest amount of ordinary Life As-
surance previously written in One year by any Corp, ray
of the British Empire.
Get a Policy in 1920.
Qeo. H. Smith,1
Agent, Lucknow.
Never judge a man by the silks HONORE• D BY• KIN(; GEORGE `
tprella he carries; he may have '1
left a cotton one somewhere in its Mr..Ed. G. •Eidt, a Walkerton ,boy.,.
plate. who• won the Distinguished Cgnduct
Medal for gallantry in action in 1917,
receives} word last week ofl further
honors- that' hate been bestowed on
him. The . communication which is
signed by • Rt. Hon. Winston Church-
• Scott S Emuls' ' s ill,Seeress ��f,.._War..,.,,- seta
O�. -t.. Eidt, 1).( ,,11., 4t►th.
11'n.,m
'n., was entioned in a despatch
the, world - famous tonic - food. 0 front Field Marshall Sir Douglas
is the natural enemy of mal - and freshness.
I�aig, K.T., ,+dated the eighth
November 1918, for gallant and
Scott's three or four times r distinguished services in the Field.
daily, uild�s strength—helpsto. record Itis Majesty's pprec-
driue malnutrition awayr high a
iation of the services rendered."
MALNUTRITION!
is the root of much weakness and 1 i
hinders progress and growth
1
ftvitt Rar a roto, anali
t.
DRESS AMONG',WOMEN
W.M.S. Passes Strong Resolution .
•
At :the provincial convention of the
V.M.S. of the Presbyterian Church;
held at Stratford last'wcek, the' fol
lowing resolution was., passed;
Resolved:that-we; Passe‘
,-,
tI� nieiil�"e t s of
the Ontario• Provincial. W,M.S., ex-
press' oar. strong dila i
pptot�al ui the ,
'senseless, indecent, inllnodcst modes
of dress adopted among so ninny- of
our women, even amongst the mem-
hers of our churches, and 'W O ll even
in the House of God. We deplore
the lack of modesty displayed in a
lllust glaring Way, on tate streets and
especially at ev'enin
g CIikLrtallltrlt'ntS,
because c,f it.a .pernicious effects. be-
lieving that it lowers the .st.t,itiard
or • otti• womanhood, disgrates our
8e'\, lead to gross immorality;
a most , st'rlous menace to tits health. •
especiallyi of our. y(ung-_girls..
We' deplore the .prattisc of i,,ash=
ing •t,oung children 'fancy dant • in
inlnlotiest dress; . practicaily 1lle't
dancing, on the plea ^f mat;;n),f :nem
K.rat�e€tt1 .,bring in' u.t them n _ tt.: i_,.h .
ht•
public stage in behalf of chartable
objects, and thus destroying :.the
.-ln Oriliia 'grovel-, has a striking, sweet innocenceof childhood.
object lets sore in one of his Windows.
Three a lotatoe.:' .are shown, We also y ieW tt ith _seriou-s• a;Trt•
t�•hich, at I ht•115}•Otl the alarnlin * . .
the Ureses; price. art' worth tett cents. i`ly rapid },l �wth
These are flanked bybushels of beans . cif cigarette smoking) among ;' •the
at ten cents .a apound, and the 'economy • women of our country, par; i, :::ail.•
of using lthr latter • as a substitute in. fashionable ' c•entres. tnd «;1;11,1'
urged. 1'otatoc's now • are a luxut;�, urine upon all our Christian 11',•ine;t.
,l' especially the mothers.
and ec►r1111a.�etti�•t .�• few .� families salt �' . to' ,1s... ail
1 to i l � tl. lr' p(1We1.5 anti .iA. Ut'ne't' ' >. coin
rellll�� atiewiI , �- them. I , ,
t_h:tt fhc��v gft-'rtt t t'i}s.: t}tie:tfen:is•,•the
�Ir}totr Iio}iarit{ the I:+-}•rat•-olt1. Ron r I
of George Holland a farmer of Tuck-
ersnlith, Township. was found dead in
his father's lsarn, hanging by a rope
4 -oris a b;•attt, (sir April 2,. 13efbre
hanging himself' the young ratan had
taken a _fatal' dose of Carbolic acid.
'No n;otive can be insag:ned for the
rash. act. ,
ft •..:�
•
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moral life of ,our country. and }re-•
fore , their young ibeople 'thy fatal
conseque'nce?s of all these1)1':l,tlses,
and ahoc'o all. the great. sits of
,
ins' tl honor 11.11011 the s;icru,l name
and glory of+out• God and S:evieur
•.Jesus Christ, who gave 11inl-eEf • a
sacrifice for us.
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