Loading...
The Wingham Advance, 1914-02-19, Page 5THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1914 T WING 'AN ADVA Neff a Three Days More of ISARD'S Thursday, Friday1 Sa t urda Mo ve quick for .BARGAINS, It will pay you to lay in stock enough to keep. you going for some time to come while the prices are so low, cextrical'.,►oODOCt00e 004,1eat tat ere r e)00 "XXX 100000000 000 0 t11 0 yard & Co. •14•14-1-1 4.1-1- •i--: ; ; -1 :--i-•i• : d •'i• 144•-17•1••' e ter .antan AR rmamasa. ,fir the tiveek BY REV. BYRON H. STAUFFER Pastor Bond Street Congregational t,hurch, Torontq" "WHEN THE MISTS de>}T that there is an outside at all HAVE CLEARED AWAY" eve call infidels. TEXT; "For now we see through 1 yiass darkly, but then face to noel —1 Corinthians 1$:IZ. I tried it yesterday in the modern sense, for I looked out through a treated pane. Beyond was a fine stretch ot Canadian landscape, the gardenspot ot a province, with the borderline of lake as a background. But I saw through the glass darkly, for ou the glass watt trozen mist. A little boy, annoyed at the hindrance, thawed out a little spot with his breath, and kept scraping the edges with his finger nails, to enlarge the transparent area, but the frost king regained his grip almost instantly and my laddie had. to content himself with an occasional peep through the wee clear corners. It was the best we could do and we soon turned back to our magazines, where pictures took the place of the real scenery so pro• vakingly withheld from our gaze. That is the modern picture of the text. The figure is just a bit changed'. • In. Paul's time the glass was Of scrap- ed horn, thin enough to admit light and yet so opaque that only the dim contour ot things could be seen through It. Now since we no longer have to see through a glass, darkly, we change the metaphor to the times. The hymn -writer has spoken of the mists through which we must look, and has sung: :+F++•1 -+1•-1•'2••l4•14•1•444• 144 14“1••i' Page BIG DEMAND FOR ire .ence Direct (Freight Prepaid) These pries subject to advance without notice. SALES of PAGE WIRE PENCE days Ig � mm� ax z s 4 30 22 10, 10, 10 5 37 22 8, 9, 10, 10 6 40 22 6t/, 7, 81;,, 9, 9 7 40 22 5, 5;/2, 7, 7, 71/, 8 7 48 22 5, 6u2, 71/, 9, 10, 10 842 22 6,666666 8 42 161/26, G, 6, 6, 6, 6,G 8 47 22 4, 5, 51/•-•, 7, 81/., 9, 9 8 47 161/4,5 514 7,81/,9,9 9 48 22 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 6 9 48 16% 6. 6, 6, 6, 6, 6, 66 9 51 22 4, 4, 5, 51/2, 7, 81/ , 9, 9 9 51 161/•_• 4, 4, 5, 5t/z, 7, 81/^, 9, `9 10 48 22 3,3,3,4,'51/,7,7,71/,8 IO 48 161/3,3,3,4,51/,7,7,71/.,8 10 51 161 3,3,3,4,51/,7,81/,9,9 10 51 '23 3,3 3,4,51/2,.7,81/,9,9 11 55 161 3, 3, 3, 3,"4, 5%, 7, 81/, 9, 9 PAG HEAVY FENCE Ht. a Ps.a. Niro : hrop4rheut to 20. ae. erne 40 Woo CNN, Pr•IcHt ►ate Spaeiut of Hori;oahis in Inches 5 6 6 7 7 8 9 9 10 18 20 3 MEDIUM WEIGHT .EEHOE }Maritime Province prices or Medium Weight. also Special Poultry 1eneos, lncludo painting.) No. 9 Tot, and Uotto,n, and No. 12 High Carbon Horizontals between; No. 12 Uprights; No. 11 Locks. 161/'N, 8, 10, 10 36 161% 6, 7, 7, 8; 8... 42 161/. 7, 7 & 10, 10 42 151/,6,6,7,7,8.8 26 8 3,3,4,5,5,6 48 161/4 5 6,7,8, 9,o. 36 12 3, 3, 3, 4, 5,. 6, 6. 6 30 161/3,4. 5,6,7,8,9,9 54 161/ 3, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9. SPECIAL POULTRY FENCING No. 9 Top and Bottom. 1ntermedlate5, No, it. Uprights i Inches apart. 48 8 Close bars ..... .,.... 60 8 Close bars PAG "RAILROAD" GAMES 10•ft. opening - _ _ _ -' 3 80 12.tt. opening�9i' _�� • 4.00 4: 13 -ft. opening R�. 4 2• 4: 14 -ft. opening 4. 4 4 PRICES OC 0(5J S d O 4 tl e • oa?e2_ $o. $0.18 50.18 $0.19 .18 .20 .21 .21 .23 .24 ,23 .25 .26 .23 .25 .26 .26 .28 .20 .28 .30 .31 .26 .28 .29 .29 . .29 .31 .32 .31 .33 ... .29 .31 ... .31 .31 .33 ... .33 .31 -.33 ... .36 •.. .18 .19 .20 .21 .2+ .21 .2 • • 24 .23 25 .2• 28 .27 .29 .21 .30 .31 .32 42 .44 .47 't STAPLES 25.1b. box, freight paid•._. .... _.._. .. .. _ 1 .75 BRACE WIRE, 25•tb rolls, freight paie ..... ..." .• .70 STRETCHING TOOLS, Complete labor•saving outfit, ft. pd l 8.00 4.....1..'..O,O.�. 40 4.00 4.20 4,45 4.711 .22 .24 .24 .27 .28 .31 .32 .33 .35 .46 .52 .80' .85 .75` .80 8.50 • 9.00 for the past 30 da s have been amazing. The enormous demand for QUALITY Pence means that no wise farmer will use other fence,'when he can get PAGE QUALITY FENCE at these remarkable prices. Quality Tells Try PAGE FENCE yourself. See how big PAGE wire really is. See how it's woven into perfect fence. See how PAGE Fence, on nearby farms, alter 20 years' service, is still good for 20 years more. Prices That Speak for Themselves Compare these low PAGE prices with the price of common fencing. - After 22 years of leadership, PAGE Fence is still FIRST in quality and the lowest -priced high-grade fence. Competition can never lower PAGE QUALITY --nor reach the same high standard as PAGE, A Rare Opportunity To -day, you can get PAGE FENCE direct from its makers at the price of ordinary fence. You get quick shipments from a nearby PAGE ware- house—freight paid on 20 rods, 200 pounds or over. You get lc. per rod discount on carload lots. You ,,,can order through your dealer --we'll allow him lc. • per rod, You can buy from PAGE the best fence at low cash prices. , To save time and get quick delivery, send your order to the nearest PAGE Branch. 104 -PAGE CATALOG sent on request. PAGE, WIRE FENCE CO. LIMITED 1240 King St. W., - TORONTO MONTREAL ST. JOHN 8'ALKERVILLE WINNIPEG • "Page Fences Wear Best" 4 • Did you ever use 41)•� t �i s ria c-wi, s ary Garden. Perfumes and Powders . Once you try thein you will use no. other. Nothing surpasses them in. de- ." Rade odor They are . the newest and the best. DAVIS' CORNER DRUG STORE Successor to A. L HAMILTON Capita? Patd tip $3,000,000. Reserve $3,760,000. Total Assets Over 000. ti 000 �4, , Save YOU Money wAS` a mattearhs is bot no. important as What be savea. An office boa' making $6 !s week, of which smouot he tutees $1, ib act.lislly earning more than the $25 a week man who saves nothing. The boy's business is paying a dividt+nd ; the man's is 'a failure. No matter .tow small your salary' may b•+, you mike a serious mistake When you. fail to sive a flare of it. When you get yottt nexti week's salary, meke up your mind to de- posit a e ertain percentage of it in this bank, whete it will draW interest et the bighest onrrrLt rate. C. P. SMITH AGENT WINGHAM "We shall know each other better When the mists have rolled away." But outside of these four classes of exceptional people, there are many ;who never do look through the win. down. They just barely know there is a 'window there, but they're never parlous enough to . walk up to It and look out. They aro like the foika that never go away from the house and lot. They never go to see anything or to hear anything. TI circus, the exhibition, the Mendel; Sohn Choir, the great Paderewski the October garrison parade,ma> dome and go, but they never go ou They are like the people who rid la a railroad trom Hamilton to Wei land with their backs to the window} reading the book of Job, and never looking out at the gardens and the peach trees and the lake. Did you ever laughter. The wonder Is that not One arose to protest. It would have beep refreshing to see some oue leave the room in righteous indignation. The penalty of sinning against tile light is au awful degeneracy it is wo in %rallies, Have yon ever been. to a home where you felt that some Where between two generations there bad been the &lipping of a cog,. Socially or morally? The children were ill-behaved, the conversation vulgar, the housekeeping shiftless. There was nothing of brightness, !n- telleotualtty or godliness. But on the wallil you spied a picture of a tine old, insn. Opposite • was the portrait of a grand old matronly face. The man of the house explained that those were his parents, in the parlor, in an old dilapitated bookcase were a few tine old volumes, evidently never looked into. You felt instinctively that through some cause or another there had been a retrogression, the penalty of which was the blight which nature always casts upon the degener. ate. It has been so with nations. The saddest thing that can be said of any race Is that they, forgetting their fathers' God, have lost their fathers'. promise and integrity, God .expects much of Canada. We have all the advantages of Anglo-Saxon ctviliza• tion, all the help of the intellectuality get impatient with the eountry fellow of EngIiahman, Irishman and Scotch- who shoves up his car window and man, Here on our prairies and in puta his head out to look up ahead owr:valleys, we ought to build more at the engine and lets a draught in wisely than even they did. _Then we on you? Don't get angry. I'd far have the experiences of our nelgh- father ride with him in front of me bora to help us. We can emulate the than to have the man with the book successes of the United States, and of Job ignoring all the beautiful thing- avoid. her errors. But it sometimes Belshazzar's grave is made, Clod has made as a kind of foreglearu .appears as if we were trying to imitate His kingdom passed away, of the glories of paradise. They are every American vice and neglect the He, in the balance weighed, thousand bright 1e101411 Shone Q'er that high festival. 4 thousand cups of rind In Judah deemed divine Jehovah's vessels 11014 The godless heathen's wine. In that same hour and hall, The fingers of a hand Came forth againet the wall And wrote es if ou sand, The fingers of a mart•, A solitary hand, Along the letters ran., And traced. them like a wand! The Monarch saw and shook, And bade no more rejoice, ,All bloodless waxed his look, And tremulous his Yoice, "Let the men of lore appear, The wisest of the earth, And expound the words of fear Which mar our royal mirth." Chaldea's seen are good,. ,But here they have no skill, And the unknown letters stood, Untold and awful still. And Babel's men ot ago Are wise and skilled in lore, But now they were not sage, They saw --Put knew no more. Captive in the hand, A stranger and a youth, Re heard the king's command. Hs saw the writing's truth. The lampd around were bright, The prephecy to view. Ile read it on that, night— The ightThe morrow proved it true. like the people who can read Les Miserables and never wipe .away a tear, and lay down "The Mill on the Floss" and never once heave a sigh for poor Magsie. They can read the death of little Eva in "Uncle Tom's Fabin" without blinking. They are the unchristiike who leever look out into the infinite. They an listen to tales of glorious deeds br kindness and never say "Amen." I told one of tnese practical fellows who came over to visit me from Buf- Introduction of every American re- form. Let us beware lest. the sting of Beishazzar's remorse will be ours; "Though thou knewest all this." God sometimes in this life gives us foregleams of coming retribution. Let me say that we of the liberal school believe in retribution, and can preach it as those cannot do who believe that the dying profligate can receive for- giveness, complete and full, and enter at once into an immediate and a super- lative Heaven. We do not believe that the death -bed penitent can lightly If Paul ' were writing it now, he f elo, about a rich Toronto man who escape future sorrow, for sin. would say, "For we see through a found a poor little lame, hafr-lipped •The handwriting on the wall tells frosted window dimly." So the mean- orphan girl and because interested in of an irreparable past and an fin- ing is this: Here on earth, man's ,her, sent her to the hospital for an exorable future, lashed together with view of the infinite is hampered by pperation on her mouth and adopter' a chain of steel. The handwriting on dimness of vision and by the mists her. She became a loving daughte' the wall says: "Whatsoever a man of doubt, but in Heaven we shall see to him, nursed him in a long tunes: sows that shall he also reap:: with perfect sight. Mankind is in a and was a blessing to him in his dying The handwriting on the wall says: house, and the outside is a great world hours. I told the Buffalo man that. .,,The clock strikes twelve," of which he has known but little. true story' as best I could, and when The handwriting on the wall says: The house is the finite. The outside 1 had finished I looked up expectin,. "The judgment has dawned; the books is the great infinite. The window I'd find bis eyes filled with tears. Bu are opened; weighing time is here; through which we gaze out is our his face was as empty as a boardin get on the scales, throw in your acts, spiritual qualification, or comprehen- (house cream pitcher, and he saic your record, your character."- sion. The frost on the window is our ;'Paas?" I do despise a man whos The handwriting on the wall says: limitation. Conversation is limited to small talk ++The verdict is to be rendered in this .. We are all in this house of the 'Arid as soon as you reach: something world or in the world to come:" finite. For the present, it is our grand to speak about, can only an- Here to -day men are being weighed. prison. We have a kind of jail -limit ewer "Yeas?" and then perhaps ask Your record is now being read, young freedom, but when we try to escape as this man asked, if I knew whether man. Do not be wanting in virtue we find the guard leveling his musket the United States duty on Canadia. and honesty. You. live in times of at us with relentless aim. We are hogs was really taken off. Sucl great light. You have every advan- chained to place. The chain is long people' hover do hear any muse. Ise tags. Beware lest the reason of the enough to deceive us occasionally in- use trying to show them a sunset verdict against you shall be: "Though to thinking that we have rid ourselves They never notice anything grand o. thou knewest all this." Beware lest of it and we make a dash, like a dog the street or in the cars: Them it shall be said to you: "Thy king - from a kennel, only to find, like the hearts never melt when they hear th done is given to another." Beware dog finds, that the chain is stili there. story of Calvary. They never bright} lest you come down to your office We are kept indoors by a remarkable up when they hear about Jesus an. some morning and find your keys in sentry called .gravitation. We can the halt and the blind. :roma one else's hand, your desk in move north, west, south or east far 0, God, give us a place among tht someone, else's charge, and a letter enough to exercise oursei:' . but not faces at the window! Stand aside r telling. you that you have been weigh - one -millionth part of an inch away bit, Tennyson, while you're lookin. ed in the balances and found wanting from the crust on which our soles out and singing, "When I Have Oro' in sobriety or honesty, and that your rest. Even if we dig a hole towards sed the Bar," and let me also se kingdom is given to another. the antipodes, someone must counter- the Great Sea and the Pilot's boat. "Thou knewest all this," is n act the power of gravitation sufficient. Get over an inch or two, Mendelssohn L1A$1Jai'py AND NOT AN ASSET. ly to bring us back to the surface and give bumbler folks a chance tt it is an argument against you, and and even then, their feeble efforts to see and hear the sublime things tha not an apology for you. Many a man raise us up depend on the power that you report to us, shorthand, as you sayer "My father was a drunkard be- gravitation exerts over them. We are received them from the mansions of fore tne and I naturally follow in his prisoners of time and place in this the celestial, and form the lips of steps' Society answers and God an - house of the infinite, angels, Ah, Abraham Lincoln, you'll ewers, "'Thou kneweet all this:' Outside is a great world where place make room for us common people, We have the benefit of the bitter and time wield no sceptre. We call and let us get a glimpse of the love experience Of Others. We read of the it the infinite. Once in a while we Which you saw and felt, even while penalty of the evil -doers. The postal gaze out earnestly; and even the look you walked through the fiery furnace. clerks of the Continent have the thrills us. Here and there are folks We want to look out, We'd fike to solemn benefit of reading of letter - that keep 'their faces to the window raise the 'window and put our heads Carriers found out and sentenced to all the time. We call them poets, out, and let our dishevelled hair. wave, prison. The bank clerks know what They look out so intensely and in- we. Can but sen something. happens to the, young fellow who has cessantly that they sometimes forget ' The window is frosted, We • can used the bank's money to play the to get their hair cut and their whin- just look out bete and there, soma races. The preachers of the continent kers trimmed, acid the folks that dont times more distinctly, sometime} have read "The Scarlet Letter" and look out es much as the poets do, more dimly. The frost is our handl- are reading new- editions of the book say: "Come away, Come away, you're cap, our liniitation. We cannot see in the newspapers every month, looking out too long." And there out at all, and then we go and hide Youilg wane.' are hearing more and gets to be something akin to iil-will our faces in our hands and Cry Snore of the horrors of a Iife of shame. .. takewarning o to ,belief when 0 ought thereforeg between the practical folk that dont Father, forgive our unbelief," W 0 $ look out much and the dreamy folk it really wasn't our fault that we from our newspaper reading and avoid that put their faces against the pane Gould not Bee. the pitfalls into which others have all the time. And in fact one of the The things about our PatTfer'a tallep, that It May never be said to great problems , of our finite house• throne we see through a glass dark. tett `"Mott knewest all this." keeping is: How much time should 1Y• Did you ever stand at the foot ItallishingtOn Alistori spent twelve we spend looking out of the Window, Cf the American Falls and look up? t'ea•1's painting the resat of Belshaz• and how much tine should we spend :` IO wind blows the mist directly gar and left the work untinished be - la dishwashing, in sweeping acid dust- adrotrs Your line o; vision, and you btuse he Could not paint the despair leg and in looking after the furnace? II.�. of bee. Wait a moment, and, if 15ghUZar`s face. In other words, how Isbell we poise ithe wind 'eerie, you'll be rewarded Hark, the alarnrm bell rings! "The ourselves between the look at the faith Quite a perfect view. But not sob, they deme, they comet" Cyrtta finite and the peering into the in. Ito with the Canadian Palls. They are has been digging. Cyrus is itt the finite? 1+olks who deny w0 are in a always partly hidden. You look into City. 1 -lis' soldiers 'are In the palace, bolls} at all call themselves Christian he deep green Of the horseshoe's The bnnpueters aro put to tete sword, Scieetists; tolke who try to bring the urt+& and Tod hope by waiting to the king amok them, and Cyruti • outside lute the inside we call Spirit. Isett the mist blown away' so as to tneunts the throne. .Lord Byron Halista. Polka who merely sty. "1; kain the coveted view into the rays- 'the scene: don't know anything about the onto holt of the great natetact's holy of The -king Watt on the throne, aide; yr* call t►tnostibee pow who Mies. But the Mist tel ever 'theta. ech. sttr'aps thronged the halt, Advertise in the ADVANCE rel 'All 41 41'r.t 't Is light and worthless clay. The shroud his robe of state, His canopy the stone, The Mede is at the gate, The Persian on his throne. ARMORER'S TOOLS. Fine Relics of Ancient Times in New York's Art Museum. Very few people are aware that in the heart of modern New York is •utuplete armorer's shop. writes h. A, tiuvert:rop in the American .Machinist.. It is ll the basement of the Aietropoll- 1;,11 11aseunt of At't and is equipped with a (-omit tete outfit or over RttO •tr- u,of 'S tools Many of these re very Ila, having descended from master to +nate or 110111 father to son through nutty generations Their work111110• hill Is ec'elleut. Where steel faces have been welded to iron bodies the t olds are clean and perfect, and the .01 of Iron and steel Is distill. ;oish:lhle only by the difference In ins- . er 01 the 1:vo metals. The tempering, of the steel faces .01.115 to he gond and uniform, as net nor (rucks nor.dents are apparent. A t ur.ory glanne at these tools will al ,,nr'e :14 "Ise us of the origin of many our eastern sheet metal workers' 111141en1e1Us, The world ng faces or all the tools are highly polished. se that •hey do not "grill" the metal being ,vat kelt, 1ehi1•h it is free to "slide" to the shape desired by the armorer. Every colleetluu of ancient armor re. Jrdrt'5 tc',h11i'al (813 for its upkeep rhe oble(ts .1111151 be kept free from rust. 0(ca51oua1l ' remotilted, and from rinse to tilbe 1'}51011111008 10(151 be made to preserve these priceless specimens to oilier to carry old this work the mu. .110111 has arranged the shop referred to so that these necessary operations. may he carried on. The armorer's tools once belonged to Daniel 'I'achaus, but are now the property r,f the mu- seum. Mr. 'Luchaux 1 rought them to this ro entry When he came from Paries is i:Httl to make some repairs In t:10umsettni s collection of armor. The . oul lit consists of over 4300 tools and includes nearly 100 kinds of stakes and a gl•eat variety of hittnlners, swages. etc: MAKE THE MONEY CERTAIN. , i , e , 1 Every crap rotation mast con' taint grope that wage menet' for the farmer. Few fanners can afford to experlmeut. 'Tie must be left to the experiweut sta• tion., The crops grown must be thole} beet adapted to the type of farm and to tbe tocation. 1t a farmer can make more money out 02 one crop than out of any ether, then that crop must form the basis of his rotation, and other cropo way be added in sash proportions ass to snake the best balance of labor, product and fertility. -:sanies indu,ltri• that. STUFF BEHIND THE CROP. Ws Always There—Successful Fermi inp Means Discovering it. Behind every big crop you will Bpd the stuff that made it grow. It may not all be in the form of a finely ground dust purchased in a bag, nor in a crop plowed under. nor In a heavy application of barnyard scrapings, but. wberever there is the big crop there must be the abundance of available elements to produce it. There are oth- er things than fertilizers that make crepe grow. The old Englishman Tull chimed that "tillage is fertilizer," and If you .mean by fertilizer something that brings a fruitful return Tun was about right. If you are in the field when the crop that makes the remarkable yield is planted you will usually find deep and Careful plowing and repeated harrow- ing, rolling and dragging that pro- duce a perfect seed bed, firm below, free from clods, fine On the surface to hold moisture during drought. Con- tinue to watch this crop and yon will find that the tillage is frequent and careful; that there is an extra dose of fertilizer added just before fruiting time. The invariable tendency is to hasten seeding by neglecting tillage, and quite as invariably it is a mis- take. A few days in planting bays little to do 'with the yields of most crops, but an extra harrowing of the seed bed may mean a great deal. Those- who hosewho skimp on tillage are usually bless- ed with a naturally perfect soil of sand and loam, but they usually bave a shortage of natural fertility which they must make good. 1! you must skimp on tillage do it after the crop is planted, but have first conditions right. --Country Gentleman. GRASS LINED BOOTS. They Are Worn by the Nomadic Lapps. Who Never Get Cold Feet. While civilized man salters intensely front cold feet every winter, the Lap lander. living in the far north of Eu rope, has no such trouhle. A traveler Writes: "Their hoots are made of rein deer skin and are worn very large, and the toes are pointed and curve upward sons to be ('1181ly slipped Into their :Otis The Le pp usually tills his hoots halt full with 11 peculiar green grass. into which he thrusts Ills naked feet. 11e then pecks the boots full with more grass. 111ek5 the ends of his trousers .1 ill nilbinds Mein tightly round a with many turns of a brightly Weyer) braid. mut these precautions they never sutrer from cold feet, and chit Wallis, torus or such like civilized ecru plaints are an untinoWn horror to them" Concerning other castors the Annie writer sot: "The nacos are essen tinily 8 numadlc race and spend 01084 or their lives wandering fancy free among the wild and •41011ons scenery of their northern '00ule. flowerer. at times mi doubt the stillness of the frozen 1110ti111aii15 000141ttes tau still. •111(1 they turd their he'i•ds and start ,award their nearest meeting place. t`1vh e a year they` hold these general atlwlings at Easter Sind Inid,u1041)0t when they eon„rt'gate and uloid It .;etterlit fair. It Is on these 00(11510ns that they 'cetehrffe their weddings and T11109'515 '('be revelries hast only about ton days, but many Inarrtages take 1(1100 betWeelt mucitis W110 perhaps hate never met previously. "it4 soon as tt Lapp eats 8 'ot d to buy enough reindeer for himself he lento the parentni tent.. tithes a wife and t'otnns array wherever his heart or reindeer dictates. Tbero are no socia! distinctions In Lapland. Should n Man have 110 reindeer or possibly'have IMO wlitt he had be. travels With a rich roan and helps him tend the herd. but ne lives and feeds with theca le the same tent and 18 (10110 on a accede wlUSlity mall he 'au afford 10 start of 6-+•I«1••t••1••i-I-i-I.1- :1: A son may inherit a farm, but not a crop. d-•1•i-•F"1'H'i 1'i" PUTTING iN PLANTS? if You Are, Here's a Dibble That Will Help You. The illustration shown herewith, ta- ken with the description from the Or ange Judd Farmer, Indicates how a 3ibble may be made to space plants at egpai distances. It consists of a beam 111 wee ii ,11t.S 1tt0 a., I 1, ' ., ..1 intervals and a handle which bolts to the beam. If an old spade handle Is not to be had a crocheted limb, es shown at c, DIBBLE FOR SPACING PLANTS EQUALLY. Will serve the purpose. Stout wires. as shown at 11, a. indicate the positions of the nest row and help to keep the planting on the square. At 0, b. are shown other cross beams spaced differently front the one at- tached to the 11)111411e. For use in the greenhouse a handle only three or four inches high may be used. Hint For Stock Raisers. A well bred animal costs very little more to purchase and generally less to feed than a bad one, while the progeny Is always salable. Itow Oil Was round. Tho discovery of oil In Papua, Brit- ish New, Guinea, was the result of a no 've boy being whi,lp3d for plac- ing kerosene in a miner's tea. The -y deela:ed his Innocence and lad the miner to the well from which the water had been taken. It was found that the surface of the water was completely covered with oil. the source of which is being developed into ,a huge commercial enterprise. 108 NOX A COLS IN ONE DAY Refuse imitations P very bottle has the nututber and cs ordin ft, 108 Nox lis Colic Thte is the gr. st44 end most wofiderfnl,of all cough m' diotnes. 25o and 600 pet bottle at all drugstores. Mr. Geo. Moir 'Malice to announce to the careene of "Windham tient he io in the old demi to late . Shot Shining Ised Dyeing. Cirali's, Chun LAeCeI, tit.