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The Wingham Advance, 1914-03-19, Page 3THURSDAY, MARCH l2," r914 THE WINGHAM ADVANOB • BOW 'Concrete Crib Floors •and • Supports HEY keep the rats, sgliiirrels and other rodents from carrying away your profits. Millions of dollars are lost to farmers each year through the ravages of- rodents in cribs and granaries. Part of this Loss is paid by every. farrier Whose- crib floor 4q. 't built of concrete. Corr taus' vete crib flbors and supports stop the waste be - "They Protect `Your r Grain Con rete is strong, durable apd cleen.,jt never wears out nd needs practically no repairs. It is the cheap - s est 'fall materials for cribs and granaries. V . ite for this free book `'`•VVhat the Farmer can do with Concrete." It tells all abput; the uses of con - c, ete and will help every farmer to have .better `buildings and save money. : • ' Farmer's Information Bureau Canada Cement Company Limited 523 Herald Building, Montreal • IT REV. RYRON it STAUFFER Pastor Bona strait Clong'regational 41tureli, Tont*" e,. ARE YOU EASY TO LIVE Mit Are yeu and I early to, got aeons With? Ars Wei anreeable peOplett Will it be *aid et ue when we *1 gone, "Very plalant haat thota Seat to roe, MY brother hleatban?" The question, is not .coif' for the home, but for all oily relationships in lite. is our coutact with men *IV veted with gentleness? It ought to be a large part of our religion to be sweet. Indeed all our prayers and rules of conduct will be negatived by a contentique life. The root of disagreeableneett le iter• Matinees. dei quarrellomeuess is a variation of sottish inconsiderateness. But it will be helpful for us to cats.. Logue these undesirable people whose tratte we must try to avoid. First,—The Men with a Flory' Temper Pose people awaken in art ugly woad *I'M Meriting. It takes them half hour to recover their good nature. etatime they are mighty poor cola - any, Tey are puzzles, If you call em persistently for brealtfast, they ble. Meat morning if you let prem eleepthey berate you for allow - g them to get to business late. We people may dash sato their work - We one day with a surly salutation, t you atmoet dread their approach. 'Con, wish you might say of theca what is written on a gravestone in old Ply psouth; "He was always pleasant to poet." Fourth,- .The :Man. With a Grouch I know that is slang, but the sound of the word befits the man. Ile thinks tithe world unfair to him, so he "takes at out" en the world. He has failed • iind he blames society at Iarge, TIE easy have real merit, too, but it re• A very arrrOsteble telloir -most of mains undiscovered. I have sympathy the time, and generally kind. But he nor that men. It is a whimsical world Will suddenly flare up, say the mean- 'we live In. Its judgment is not ' in• bst things, and utter them so apon- fallible. It is dazzled by reputation taneouely that yon suspect he has long' and position. Other things being equal been stor1ug them up ballad hit smiles the pian on the pedestal of reputation and hits gentle words. Cross his re- tea the call. Aesop sounds a true ligroin or political views and he gets note In his fable about the famous white with rage. I heard an old sage buffoon who imitated the squeak of advise a group of young people: a pig so successfully hat the audience "Never discuss religion or politids, for declared he had a little porker hidden it will lead to bitterness." Wouldn't in his clothes and demanded that; he this be the better counsel: lunbutton hie cloak which ho did to Dlecipline yourself until you can show them he himself had produced dimes eiolltica or religion kindly, the sounds, Then they cheered him quletly' and soeratically., to the echo. A countryman proclaimed Two old 'White-haired cronies came that he would do the same thing next down the streiet slap In arm, Greet- day. On the morrow the buffoon ob- ine me, the one seta: "Shake hands tained another round of applause for with my old friend. We have been hili teat. Neat the countryman ap- chutna for forty years. We represent peered and pretending that he con - totally different religions and pplities, sealed a little pig beneath his clothes and we have some rattling good argu- (which he really did) contrived to menta, but we alweye end by a walk pull the ear of the little animal and downs Jarvis street." make him squeal. The crowd, how - Yet be careful how you refer to ever, cried out that the buffoon had your associate's religious views. Don't given a far more exact imitation. The '" come into the *Mee with remarks that rustle then produced the pig and will cauee pain, At a Canadian Club showed them their great mistake. dinner Bente years ago, e, speaker who Moral: Critics are pot always to be spoke scornfully of certain political depended upon. views earned this rebuke frons Ear11 Now ibat countryman could have easily become a grouch, Instead of taking matters philosophically such men eometlmee become sour and take their revenge on the world at random. Shay become grumblers, and make bitter remarks to their fellows, mak- ing things disagreeable for their in- nocent fellow -workers. Fifth.--Ths Supersensitive Man He le a twin brother to the grouch. He' is "touchy," constantly looking for slights, carrying the proverbial chip on his shoulder and hoping you will knook it off. Does he get a statement of account from the grocer? Down he stalks with the bill and the money, slaps both, on the counter, demands a receipt, declares he will hereafter trade where he won't be dunned. Does the preacher call next door? "Why doesn't he call here? Pte's Blighting us, and we will cancel our subscriptions." Such people have D apeeles of paranoia, the alienists would say. They can never keep • friends very long. The world' has no insult. i catered' the den of such a. , time to waste on the man who has bear to solicit a subscription for al is be rocked and nursed and given deserving charity. I was greeted by a knitted brow and a petulant refusal. ` „ cotrifort,. continually. The same evening a host In a pleas- ant home led the across the parlor to introduce me to his dear friend, ---- this same old bear of the morn- ing's incident, IRs embir,rpassment was painful to behold. "We met to- day, did we not?" he stammered;, "call again to -morrow, and I shall be at leisure." And the next morning as he handed me his cheque he ex- plained: "You must pardon my abrupt- ness of yesterday. I am always ner- vous when I am busy." You need not be! You can work hard and .be gentle every moment.. You can be intense and kind withal. You can be brlsk without belzig brusque. "third.—The Chanpeabie Man Ile can, never easy with Crew.: ADV ERTIS yv: E ADVANCE iT l HAS :THE -ti CULATION;. TOASTED r CORN FLAKES ?Re,,. Grey: "It insy be that some present honestly hold those opinions, and we must remember that they are our' guests to+night." A young man came four times in a year to ask help in finding a positron. "What iii Wrong with you that you can never beep your position?" 1 • asked, 11. protested that in each ease he had been laid off because they reduced the force of clerks. The manager at his last place gave me the information which the young man overlooked. "He cannot take criticism pleasantly," explained the chief. "And he Imbued the whole staff with irritableness and petulance." Second.• -The Nervous Man He is very congenial when he is off duty, but at his desk he is fretful and impatient. He is never terribly angry, but nearly always irritable. Woe unto the salesman who enters while the nervous man is disentang- ling a problem! The visitor soon feels the keen edge of the blade of Sixth. --The Domineering Man A square -jawed old man with a firmly -set pair of lips said: "In thirty years of married life, my wife and I never had a disagreement." With up- raised arm and clenched fist he added, "I wouldn't allow it!" Of course not. And you can picture in your mind the meek, frail little wife enduring a thirty years' peace at such a price. The man who always demands hav- ing his own way can never succeed in business, for he never can live with his associates, and even in the busi- ness world you Cannot reap the great- est success alone. The domineering man is a disagree- able traveling companion. The whole company must folime him, adopt his program, choose his route and submit too his caprices. Ile must always bo the majority. "But I am constant as the ntertheriit star, All these types of disagreeable Of whose true -fixed and reg people usually justify themselves. quality To use the words of Dr. Creighton, Thane is no tends?" lit the flrtnamelxt." they attempt "to whlteWash a dis- ' agreeable -rice into the semblance of You never Meer how to take the a respectable virtues" They clan to wan of moods. sue Morning he Will,. stand for principle, They have tit- gireet you like a long -lost brother, they ways fallen in -with contentious pea next like a etiangor, Finally you are.. pre. Their fellow workers ere ir- led to wonder Whether his nighty; fret religious; therefore do they wake the not spent at the kerning table or his: lot of Christians hard. days in betting me the horses, and If you have many altercations, if whether the ehareetet o! hie greeting; you too frequently quarrel with tuss- is not imaged by, hid gains or !osteo,. nese partners or associates, it you At alt events be has the gentler'e fit- runfrom church to church because Ctrl spirit. someene hes crossed your path, if,you sagehroominosigeleipemal•tialeiltffiONagerageliontesteritswilerem0 Help your Favorite Candidate win one. of the Big Peres in The ADVANCE • Prize Contest by subscribing for the Advahice cannot hitch up In lodge work, it your whole family complains of your fail• lugs, if all your brothers and sisters kava had fallingsout with yott— LOOK WITHIN! I call you to join with Me with a hatable resolve: "I will get along with people, with disagreeable people an wellas with pleasant folk, I will play the game like a game of chess. 1 will think before I move. "I will meditate on the good points ot men I meet and will, ite the words of the essayist, 'live by my Rdmir- ationa more than :pay disgusts'" "I will try never to give path unless to remedy a greater pain, I will try always to cure and not to kill, "1 will conquer all unkindness, by myself being kind. "I ,will drive victoriously into Day final destiny with the captives of my gentleness Chained to my chariot wheels." A West Toronto school teacher had in her class a little Italian girl, She was so sweet and winsome that the whole school made love to her, Near the Christmastide someone asked the dark -hued little lassie what she ex- pected to get from Santa Claus, "Last year I got a potato in nay stocking," she answered. A potato from Santa C1aue1 The children told the teacher, who gathered from the little girl's an- swers to her enquiries that her father, the fruit vendor at the corner was miserly and cruel. The teacher fam- ed a bright idea. In her own hoose she would arrange a Christmas tree for little Anita. A dolly was bought and tied to the upper branches, On Christmas eve consent was secured to bring the tiny maiden in, the room was darkened 'and the candles on the tree lighted. After an hotir the child returned to her dingy home unspeak- ably happy, with her dolly in her hands. Now for the sequel and its wonder- ful lesson to us. Next day Anita'e two brothers were seen coming up the veranda steps lugging a heavy basket filled with oranges and apples, bananas and pomegranates. "From our father and mother" was the ex- planation, as the boys ran quickly away. Kindness to his child opened the teacher's way to the Italian's heart. She is becoming well acquaint- ed with him. She has awakened his pride in his children. Her kindness has broken the bone of his meanness. It is time to announce the text o: this sermon. You will find it in the marginal reading of the twenty -thin' verse of the one hundred and thirty ninth psalm: "Search me, 0 God, and know m; heart. Try me and know my thoughts and see if there be any way of pain In me." British Briefs for Busy Readers --Boy $25,000 Gift to Town Mr. E. Riley, of Marlow, made a gift of $25,000 to that town for a recrea tion ground and assembly hall. Workhouse Inmate's Teeth New teeth, costing $25, were voted by the Nottingham Guardians as the only means of saving the life of a wo- man suffering from consumption, Trawlers to Have Wireless It has been decided to bring wire- less telegraphy into general use In the Hull trawling industry. Trawler owners will thus be able to inform skippers of the best market to which to bring their catches. The flowers below, the stars above, In all their bloom and brightness g'ven, Are like the attributes of love, The poetry of e . • th and heaven, Thus Nature'• vo'.0 ne, i ead aright, Attunes the so' 1 t,. minstrelsy, Tinging llfe's clouds s+ith rosy light, And 'all the womld with poesy. Telephone Manager Who Does H s. Glrla an injustice, Mr. George D. I.tiehnaond is thelocal Manager of the Telephone Company at ip.mliton, arida we are good at guess - inn, , be is also is manager of one t f the local Presbyterian Caw'etn's, In cavewe might be wrung there, we will take another shut and say that he is a deacon or same other functionary in the Methodist Church, Them are the only two connections that eve can think of which would re- strain any man from. issuing the fool rind lnterferltg order that; this man ,id the other day when he denied the hello" girls the right to dance the tango at their "At- florae" last week. When an employer usurps control over his employees, even though they may be giddy maidene, outside of their duiy hours, he is assunning a re- et,onsit'ility be has no right or title to �5eame• Cine of the girls (one of the prettiest, of course), bad the temerity to dispute his authorship over her titer she had left the switchboard for the dancing hall, and being rather wore expert in dipping the dip and the Gaby Glide than her fair slaters, she gave them an exhibition of the latest in the Terpsichorean art, Re- sult—instant dismissal. And now the other girls daren't hop on the floor in case the manager should .think they are practising the 57th step of the tan- dn. It is sueh bigots as this manager •vho must shoulder the responsibility rev „much of the wrong doing Oast ,;lames as a result of hiding one's actions •oto the world's ghze. Does he imag ine that because he prohibits the danc- ing ut tbe Tango at the girl'rJ• hop he ,as eradicated their desire to dance • he tango ? If he dors,that only eur- phauizes his foolishness. If these gii Is r:annot dance the Tango openly in the lance hall they will dance it secretly, 't it is only for the pleasure of doing +omething they are forbidden to. dr. Stolen fruit is sweet, and when it is ot under tbose conditions they don't -top until they have got indigestion. Mat may be a Little allegorical for our (Fiend, Mr. Richmond, but he can hink it out for himself.—Jack Canuck. Cow Testing Pays. There can be no question as to th.' aright light shed by dairy records un ne actual performance of herds and ..f individual cows. They are us. -fes' elite in proving the superiority of car ,ala cows as well as the effect of go" d Wry practice.. For Instance, records show that in t„- month a seven year old row gave 1,430 pounds of milk, out another sit,v- u year out an the same herd gave oniv 400 pounds. Again it is found that, 22 cows averaged 1,197 pounds of milk it, •t month, while another lot of 22 aver aged only 515 pmnida of milk. (ewe .hat are kept as dairy caw', fed and bred for production of milk and fat, Lre proved by their records. )l ve,. trona amongst those so kept, seiectint• necessary, othet.•wttte the herd will (alt off in its average -Brit the vidual record, so easily kept, will point detiuitely to those which are worth keeping. The value .of a pure bred dairy sire is also revealed when compering bertha One'he,d of 1•i cows gave 3 6 pounds of fat in a mouth: Io an adj riving held of )4, where cow testing bas b'e n carried on for four years arid where rhe sire is pure' bred, the yield was 556 t„,unds of frit, in other worn' the it, - come was seventy five dollars more for that one Month. lie sure you take up row testing this, year, bect*use it pays well. FOR ECZEMA Use a mild soothing wash that in- stantly stops the itch. We have sold many t tiler rear die - Cm skin troutite but none that we e 'nid'pereottally recr'.'n 'nd as we d„ Vol D D. DPiero I tior, If I hurl E •zrni+ I'd u -e. D. D. D. PRESCRIPTION. 3 J. Davis, `druggist, Winghaui, essesstauswassensweentenaireate 1 Leaving Town $7,000.00 Stock of Watches, Clocks, Gut Glass, Jewelry, Silver- ware, Leiter Goods, Ladies' and Gents' Um- brellas, Wall Paper, Stationery, Window. Shades, Fancy Goods, Etc., to be sold at and below Cost as owner is leaving town. Everything must be sold. Sale now on. Mon 65 LnO OPPOSITE NATIONAL HOTEL A lady's comment— °Tastes bettez'--goesfarther.' ose HEUMATISM We don't ask you to take our,word for the remarkable curative power of SOLACE in cases of rheumatism, neural- gia, headaches or other Uric.Acid troubles, or the word of more than ten thousand people SOLAOlt has restored to health, or the woi d of eighty-one doctors using SOLACE exclttsivuly in their practice. Just write us for a FREE BOX and testimonials from Doctors, Druggists and In- dividuals, Also SOLACE remedy for CONSTIPATION (A LAXATIVE AND TONIC CONBINED) Dot's the war k surely but pleasautl} Natitre'n way. No dietrt•ss -no gt•ipr'ing—no sick stomach--uo wt akiuing, The TWO rem- edies'arta all we make, but they are the greatest known to the medical world and guaranteed to be Free of opiates or harmful drugs. Neither affects the' heart or stomach—but helps them. To prove the wonderful curative power of BOLACL remedies write for FREE BOXES. State if one or both are wanted. SOLACE CO., Battle Creek, Mich., U. S A, THE DOMINION DANK 811R EDMUND D. DSLER, M,P., PRESIDENT. W. D. MATTHEWS, VIDE•PRESIDENT. 0. A. BOGERT, General Manager. a .. Capital Paid Up , , $5,400.000.00 Reserve Fund and Undivided Profits 7,100,000.00 You Can Start a Savings Account with $1.00. It is not necessary for you to wait until you have a large sum of money in order to start a Savings Account with this Bank. An account can be opened with $l.00 and more en which Interest is compounded twice a year. gi • 0 oo,. gi a syi � In ao'. — s it `` Nate,r Ire° tVy '.i• X `� , �:, Y -,..' ,fit : r% ( 1 1111 : _i Z, - m iiumr There is just one question after you've heard Edison PhoiQgraph "How soon can I The wonderful new hornless instruments played themselves -into amazing popularity.- running motor, the diamond'reprbducing bothersome changing of needles, the beat toned, unbreakable Blue'Amberol Records Listen and see for yourself. Any up. to -date phonograph dealet will be glad to give you a freeconcert on the Edison today. Insist aipon.haa ing„ths, Edison. You can get onCzithayt delay' Edison Phonographs and Records • DAVI1)* -BELL. ^or to ask an get 'one? have talked and sung and ' The • silent, smooth- point that does away with f' of design'and the sweet. require no argument. TRADC-MARill t &MAUD are sold by • -• v '1 ► it .VV.S.v ...r ++._ .. O w.•• IT REV. RYRON it STAUFFER Pastor Bona strait Clong'regational 41tureli, Tont*" e,. ARE YOU EASY TO LIVE Mit Are yeu and I early to, got aeons With? Ars Wei anreeable peOplett Will it be *aid et ue when we *1 gone, "Very plalant haat thota Seat to roe, MY brother hleatban?" The question, is not .coif' for the home, but for all oily relationships in lite. is our coutact with men *IV veted with gentleness? It ought to be a large part of our religion to be sweet. Indeed all our prayers and rules of conduct will be negatived by a contentique life. The root of disagreeableneett le iter• Matinees. dei quarrellomeuess is a variation of sottish inconsiderateness. But it will be helpful for us to cats.. Logue these undesirable people whose tratte we must try to avoid. First,—The Men with a Flory' Temper Pose people awaken in art ugly woad *I'M Meriting. It takes them half hour to recover their good nature. etatime they are mighty poor cola - any, Tey are puzzles, If you call em persistently for brealtfast, they ble. Meat morning if you let prem eleepthey berate you for allow - g them to get to business late. We people may dash sato their work - We one day with a surly salutation, t you atmoet dread their approach. 'Con, wish you might say of theca what is written on a gravestone in old Ply psouth; "He was always pleasant to poet." Fourth,- .The :Man. With a Grouch I know that is slang, but the sound of the word befits the man. Ile thinks tithe world unfair to him, so he "takes at out" en the world. He has failed • iind he blames society at Iarge, TIE easy have real merit, too, but it re• A very arrrOsteble telloir -most of mains undiscovered. I have sympathy the time, and generally kind. But he nor that men. It is a whimsical world Will suddenly flare up, say the mean- 'we live In. Its judgment is not ' in• bst things, and utter them so apon- fallible. It is dazzled by reputation taneouely that yon suspect he has long' and position. Other things being equal been stor1ug them up ballad hit smiles the pian on the pedestal of reputation and hits gentle words. Cross his re- tea the call. Aesop sounds a true ligroin or political views and he gets note In his fable about the famous white with rage. I heard an old sage buffoon who imitated the squeak of advise a group of young people: a pig so successfully hat the audience "Never discuss religion or politids, for declared he had a little porker hidden it will lead to bitterness." Wouldn't in his clothes and demanded that; he this be the better counsel: lunbutton hie cloak which ho did to Dlecipline yourself until you can show them he himself had produced dimes eiolltica or religion kindly, the sounds, Then they cheered him quletly' and soeratically., to the echo. A countryman proclaimed Two old 'White-haired cronies came that he would do the same thing next down the streiet slap In arm, Greet- day. On the morrow the buffoon ob- ine me, the one seta: "Shake hands tained another round of applause for with my old friend. We have been hili teat. Neat the countryman ap- chutna for forty years. We represent peered and pretending that he con - totally different religions and pplities, sealed a little pig beneath his clothes and we have some rattling good argu- (which he really did) contrived to menta, but we alweye end by a walk pull the ear of the little animal and downs Jarvis street." make him squeal. The crowd, how - Yet be careful how you refer to ever, cried out that the buffoon had your associate's religious views. Don't given a far more exact imitation. The '" come into the *Mee with remarks that rustle then produced the pig and will cauee pain, At a Canadian Club showed them their great mistake. dinner Bente years ago, e, speaker who Moral: Critics are pot always to be spoke scornfully of certain political depended upon. views earned this rebuke frons Ear11 Now ibat countryman could have easily become a grouch, Instead of taking matters philosophically such men eometlmee become sour and take their revenge on the world at random. Shay become grumblers, and make bitter remarks to their fellows, mak- ing things disagreeable for their in- nocent fellow -workers. Fifth.--Ths Supersensitive Man He le a twin brother to the grouch. He' is "touchy," constantly looking for slights, carrying the proverbial chip on his shoulder and hoping you will knook it off. Does he get a statement of account from the grocer? Down he stalks with the bill and the money, slaps both, on the counter, demands a receipt, declares he will hereafter trade where he won't be dunned. Does the preacher call next door? "Why doesn't he call here? Pte's Blighting us, and we will cancel our subscriptions." Such people have D apeeles of paranoia, the alienists would say. They can never keep • friends very long. The world' has no insult. i catered' the den of such a. , time to waste on the man who has bear to solicit a subscription for al is be rocked and nursed and given deserving charity. I was greeted by a knitted brow and a petulant refusal. ` „ cotrifort,. continually. The same evening a host In a pleas- ant home led the across the parlor to introduce me to his dear friend, ---- this same old bear of the morn- ing's incident, IRs embir,rpassment was painful to behold. "We met to- day, did we not?" he stammered;, "call again to -morrow, and I shall be at leisure." And the next morning as he handed me his cheque he ex- plained: "You must pardon my abrupt- ness of yesterday. I am always ner- vous when I am busy." You need not be! You can work hard and .be gentle every moment.. You can be intense and kind withal. You can be brlsk without belzig brusque. "third.—The Chanpeabie Man Ile can, never easy with Crew.: ADV ERTIS yv: E ADVANCE iT l HAS :THE -ti CULATION;. TOASTED r CORN FLAKES ?Re,,. Grey: "It insy be that some present honestly hold those opinions, and we must remember that they are our' guests to+night." A young man came four times in a year to ask help in finding a positron. "What iii Wrong with you that you can never beep your position?" 1 • asked, 11. protested that in each ease he had been laid off because they reduced the force of clerks. The manager at his last place gave me the information which the young man overlooked. "He cannot take criticism pleasantly," explained the chief. "And he Imbued the whole staff with irritableness and petulance." Second.• -The Nervous Man He is very congenial when he is off duty, but at his desk he is fretful and impatient. He is never terribly angry, but nearly always irritable. Woe unto the salesman who enters while the nervous man is disentang- ling a problem! The visitor soon feels the keen edge of the blade of Sixth. --The Domineering Man A square -jawed old man with a firmly -set pair of lips said: "In thirty years of married life, my wife and I never had a disagreement." With up- raised arm and clenched fist he added, "I wouldn't allow it!" Of course not. And you can picture in your mind the meek, frail little wife enduring a thirty years' peace at such a price. The man who always demands hav- ing his own way can never succeed in business, for he never can live with his associates, and even in the busi- ness world you Cannot reap the great- est success alone. The domineering man is a disagree- able traveling companion. The whole company must folime him, adopt his program, choose his route and submit too his caprices. Ile must always bo the majority. "But I am constant as the ntertheriit star, All these types of disagreeable Of whose true -fixed and reg people usually justify themselves. quality To use the words of Dr. Creighton, Thane is no tends?" lit the flrtnamelxt." they attempt "to whlteWash a dis- ' agreeable -rice into the semblance of You never Meer how to take the a respectable virtues" They clan to wan of moods. sue Morning he Will,. stand for principle, They have tit- gireet you like a long -lost brother, they ways fallen in -with contentious pea next like a etiangor, Finally you are.. pre. Their fellow workers ere ir- led to wonder Whether his nighty; fret religious; therefore do they wake the not spent at the kerning table or his: lot of Christians hard. days in betting me the horses, and If you have many altercations, if whether the ehareetet o! hie greeting; you too frequently quarrel with tuss- is not imaged by, hid gains or !osteo,. nese partners or associates, it you At alt events be has the gentler'e fit- runfrom church to church because Ctrl spirit. someene hes crossed your path, if,you sagehroominosigeleipemal•tialeiltffiONagerageliontesteritswilerem0 Help your Favorite Candidate win one. of the Big Peres in The ADVANCE • Prize Contest by subscribing for the Advahice cannot hitch up In lodge work, it your whole family complains of your fail• lugs, if all your brothers and sisters kava had fallingsout with yott— LOOK WITHIN! I call you to join with Me with a hatable resolve: "I will get along with people, with disagreeable people an wellas with pleasant folk, I will play the game like a game of chess. 1 will think before I move. "I will meditate on the good points ot men I meet and will, ite the words of the essayist, 'live by my Rdmir- ationa more than :pay disgusts'" "I will try never to give path unless to remedy a greater pain, I will try always to cure and not to kill, "1 will conquer all unkindness, by myself being kind. "I ,will drive victoriously into Day final destiny with the captives of my gentleness Chained to my chariot wheels." A West Toronto school teacher had in her class a little Italian girl, She was so sweet and winsome that the whole school made love to her, Near the Christmastide someone asked the dark -hued little lassie what she ex- pected to get from Santa Claus, "Last year I got a potato in nay stocking," she answered. A potato from Santa C1aue1 The children told the teacher, who gathered from the little girl's an- swers to her enquiries that her father, the fruit vendor at the corner was miserly and cruel. The teacher fam- ed a bright idea. In her own hoose she would arrange a Christmas tree for little Anita. A dolly was bought and tied to the upper branches, On Christmas eve consent was secured to bring the tiny maiden in, the room was darkened 'and the candles on the tree lighted. After an hotir the child returned to her dingy home unspeak- ably happy, with her dolly in her hands. Now for the sequel and its wonder- ful lesson to us. Next day Anita'e two brothers were seen coming up the veranda steps lugging a heavy basket filled with oranges and apples, bananas and pomegranates. "From our father and mother" was the ex- planation, as the boys ran quickly away. Kindness to his child opened the teacher's way to the Italian's heart. She is becoming well acquaint- ed with him. She has awakened his pride in his children. Her kindness has broken the bone of his meanness. It is time to announce the text o: this sermon. You will find it in the marginal reading of the twenty -thin' verse of the one hundred and thirty ninth psalm: "Search me, 0 God, and know m; heart. Try me and know my thoughts and see if there be any way of pain In me." British Briefs for Busy Readers --Boy $25,000 Gift to Town Mr. E. Riley, of Marlow, made a gift of $25,000 to that town for a recrea tion ground and assembly hall. Workhouse Inmate's Teeth New teeth, costing $25, were voted by the Nottingham Guardians as the only means of saving the life of a wo- man suffering from consumption, Trawlers to Have Wireless It has been decided to bring wire- less telegraphy into general use In the Hull trawling industry. Trawler owners will thus be able to inform skippers of the best market to which to bring their catches. The flowers below, the stars above, In all their bloom and brightness g'ven, Are like the attributes of love, The poetry of e . • th and heaven, Thus Nature'• vo'.0 ne, i ead aright, Attunes the so' 1 t,. minstrelsy, Tinging llfe's clouds s+ith rosy light, And 'all the womld with poesy. Telephone Manager Who Does H s. Glrla an injustice, Mr. George D. I.tiehnaond is thelocal Manager of the Telephone Company at ip.mliton, arida we are good at guess - inn, , be is also is manager of one t f the local Presbyterian Caw'etn's, In cavewe might be wrung there, we will take another shut and say that he is a deacon or same other functionary in the Methodist Church, Them are the only two connections that eve can think of which would re- strain any man from. issuing the fool rind lnterferltg order that; this man ,id the other day when he denied the hello" girls the right to dance the tango at their "At- florae" last week. When an employer usurps control over his employees, even though they may be giddy maidene, outside of their duiy hours, he is assunning a re- et,onsit'ility be has no right or title to �5eame• Cine of the girls (one of the prettiest, of course), bad the temerity to dispute his authorship over her titer she had left the switchboard for the dancing hall, and being rather wore expert in dipping the dip and the Gaby Glide than her fair slaters, she gave them an exhibition of the latest in the Terpsichorean art, Re- sult—instant dismissal. And now the other girls daren't hop on the floor in case the manager should .think they are practising the 57th step of the tan- dn. It is sueh bigots as this manager •vho must shoulder the responsibility rev „much of the wrong doing Oast ,;lames as a result of hiding one's actions •oto the world's ghze. Does he imag ine that because he prohibits the danc- ing ut tbe Tango at the girl'rJ• hop he ,as eradicated their desire to dance • he tango ? If he dors,that only eur- phauizes his foolishness. If these gii Is r:annot dance the Tango openly in the lance hall they will dance it secretly, 't it is only for the pleasure of doing +omething they are forbidden to. dr. Stolen fruit is sweet, and when it is ot under tbose conditions they don't -top until they have got indigestion. Mat may be a Little allegorical for our (Fiend, Mr. Richmond, but he can hink it out for himself.—Jack Canuck. Cow Testing Pays. There can be no question as to th.' aright light shed by dairy records un ne actual performance of herds and ..f individual cows. They are us. -fes' elite in proving the superiority of car ,ala cows as well as the effect of go" d Wry practice.. For Instance, records show that in t„- month a seven year old row gave 1,430 pounds of milk, out another sit,v- u year out an the same herd gave oniv 400 pounds. Again it is found that, 22 cows averaged 1,197 pounds of milk it, •t month, while another lot of 22 aver aged only 515 pmnida of milk. (ewe .hat are kept as dairy caw', fed and bred for production of milk and fat, Lre proved by their records. )l ve,. trona amongst those so kept, seiectint• necessary, othet.•wttte the herd will (alt off in its average -Brit the vidual record, so easily kept, will point detiuitely to those which are worth keeping. The value .of a pure bred dairy sire is also revealed when compering bertha One'he,d of 1•i cows gave 3 6 pounds of fat in a mouth: Io an adj riving held of )4, where cow testing bas b'e n carried on for four years arid where rhe sire is pure' bred, the yield was 556 t„,unds of frit, in other worn' the it, - come was seventy five dollars more for that one Month. lie sure you take up row testing this, year, bect*use it pays well. FOR ECZEMA Use a mild soothing wash that in- stantly stops the itch. We have sold many t tiler rear die - Cm skin troutite but none that we e 'nid'pereottally recr'.'n 'nd as we d„ Vol D D. DPiero I tior, If I hurl E •zrni+ I'd u -e. D. D. D. PRESCRIPTION. 3 J. Davis, `druggist, Winghaui, essesstauswassensweentenaireate 1 Leaving Town $7,000.00 Stock of Watches, Clocks, Gut Glass, Jewelry, Silver- ware, Leiter Goods, Ladies' and Gents' Um- brellas, Wall Paper, Stationery, Window. Shades, Fancy Goods, Etc., to be sold at and below Cost as owner is leaving town. Everything must be sold. Sale now on. Mon 65 LnO OPPOSITE NATIONAL HOTEL A lady's comment— °Tastes bettez'--goesfarther.' ose HEUMATISM We don't ask you to take our,word for the remarkable curative power of SOLACE in cases of rheumatism, neural- gia, headaches or other Uric.Acid troubles, or the word of more than ten thousand people SOLAOlt has restored to health, or the woi d of eighty-one doctors using SOLACE exclttsivuly in their practice. Just write us for a FREE BOX and testimonials from Doctors, Druggists and In- dividuals, Also SOLACE remedy for CONSTIPATION (A LAXATIVE AND TONIC CONBINED) Dot's the war k surely but pleasautl} Natitre'n way. No dietrt•ss -no gt•ipr'ing—no sick stomach--uo wt akiuing, The TWO rem- edies'arta all we make, but they are the greatest known to the medical world and guaranteed to be Free of opiates or harmful drugs. Neither affects the' heart or stomach—but helps them. To prove the wonderful curative power of BOLACL remedies write for FREE BOXES. State if one or both are wanted. SOLACE CO., Battle Creek, Mich., U. S A, WINGHAM BRANCH; A. M. SCULLY, Manager. i»: ,;«;•SS•�•ej•,h•,' 'Q'M•� e,4• i t •�»4e� ,� .�e•�ee�e•�.p. , ie�. �ee� ,� e�e•R ��1 '. Be Particular •• ABOUT THE KIND OF SEEDS YOU SOW 1 •h aeeeaaele.OP•a e,alate0,0�0• see a ee la •ee S •a iP nes ••a•+ aa • nae Oa atfea•O ee.e.y'oee• In Seeds --as in everything you buy—there are many grades. And since it is impossible to judge t: 4^�' ; their quality by 'examining, you must trust en- s ....- ,-4,`,. . �� tirely to your 'Seedsm'en, ,, -' You . can depend on us absolutely! t'5.,:., `,;, We Will send you, on request, our big 80 -page r1., E t,.. +Catalogue --Free, -t>” , •' Valuable Preenlum•--PRPE••-with each order. (See pace ••.,'2,.,.. "`x• �-- ono of Cataloitneloe particulars.) Write for it Today, 5:41:44 ..e, og 4 ''''':'`.:4 4444DARCH & HUNTER SEED CO. LIMITED i :• :•.••.•.. •• ...°•a••••a,,•os••.•o.• Box 127:. LONDON, ONTARIO is s ° THE COOK'S DELIGHT will he r quail• d by your own when yr.tt find t'ow couch b.itter things to tat you get by using our Baur. CUSTOM GRINDING We t:lo'+ silt*,ial attention to this bootee of our business. We might please you; let ne try, \Ve are a'so arranging to instal the town pow,r when along with our own st•.ein power wem will be In a b tier po•ition than ever to supply our customers' 'wants at all times of the year., 1±TonaI'`. ed and all kinds of Meals given in t-,u-hsnge for Grain. Try a sack of the celebrated Vtlson'a Catmeal, trash from the mills. EMECKLEY, WINGHAM Phone 84. Bos G2, Parra for Sale or Rent. The undersigned effete for sale his farm, E. half lot 88. non, 5 East Wawa• nosh consisting of 100 notes more or less, tin the premises are a good bank barn with enter betiding*, good frame house with telephone and main delivery, 8 neves good orchard- Thio farm is Well footed with wire fencing' 55 hetes plouaho;l yearly for spring crop; 3• serfs fall wheat, Tete farm mint be sold et ranted rig the peep. 1.8 gi-"ing up farming. 1?'or full particulars ripply to=a- J011N W1ttLIA`1S Ii.It. blo, a tflyth. AFTER COUGHING TWO YEARS 1 Waycross, Ga., Woman Found Relief in Vinol. Did you ever cough for a week? Then just think how distressing it must bo to have a cough hang on for two years. Mrs. D. A. McGee, Waycross, Ga., says: "I had a very heavy cad which settled into a chronic cough which kept me awake nights for fully two years, and felt tired all the time The effect of taking your cod liver and iron remedy, VInol, is that nay oougb is gone. I can now get a good . night's rest and I feel much stronger in every way. I am 74 years old." It is the combined action of the medicinal elements of the cods' liv- ers aided by the blood -making and strength -creating properties of tette iron which makes Vinol so efficient for chronic coughs, colds and bron- cbitis—at the same time building up the weakened, run-down system. Try a bottle of Vinol with the nn• derstandieg that your money will be teturned if it does not help you. Walton/et eKibbon,Drugglst, Wirteltartm • Mr. Geo. Moir Wishes to announce to the citizens of Wingbain that he is its the old stand to may. Shoe Shining and Dyeing. Cigars, Gurn, Laces, etc. Give us a call. Werervaleaseegentervilelealegeteraneseeet CASTOR I Igor" Infanta and Mitten, 'Tha`Kind•YeINIavti Always Bought I3oa11 the $igtaattate of THE DOMINION DANK 811R EDMUND D. DSLER, M,P., PRESIDENT. W. D. MATTHEWS, VIDE•PRESIDENT. 0. A. BOGERT, General Manager. a .. Capital Paid Up , , $5,400.000.00 Reserve Fund and Undivided Profits 7,100,000.00 You Can Start a Savings Account with $1.00. It is not necessary for you to wait until you have a large sum of money in order to start a Savings Account with this Bank. An account can be opened with $l.00 and more en which Interest is compounded twice a year. WINGHAM BRANCH; A. M. SCULLY, Manager. i»: ,;«;•SS•�•ej•,h•,' 'Q'M•� e,4• i t •�»4e� ,� .�e•�ee�e•�.p. , ie�. �ee� ,� e�e•R ��1 '. Be Particular •• ABOUT THE KIND OF SEEDS YOU SOW 1 •h aeeeaaele.OP•a e,alate0,0�0• see a ee la •ee S •a iP nes ••a•+ aa • nae Oa atfea•O ee.e.y'oee• In Seeds --as in everything you buy—there are many grades. And since it is impossible to judge t: 4^�' ; their quality by 'examining, you must trust en- s ....- ,-4,`,. . �� tirely to your 'Seedsm'en, ,, -' You . can depend on us absolutely! t'5.,:., `,;, We Will send you, on request, our big 80 -page r1., E t,.. +Catalogue --Free, -t>” , •' Valuable Preenlum•--PRPE••-with each order. (See pace ••.,'2,.,.. "`x• �-- ono of Cataloitneloe particulars.) Write for it Today, 5:41:44 ..e, og 4 ''''':'`.:4 4444DARCH & HUNTER SEED CO. LIMITED i :• :•.••.•.. •• ...°•a••••a,,•os••.•o.• Box 127:. LONDON, ONTARIO is s ° THE COOK'S DELIGHT will he r quail• d by your own when yr.tt find t'ow couch b.itter things to tat you get by using our Baur. CUSTOM GRINDING We t:lo'+ silt*,ial attention to this bootee of our business. We might please you; let ne try, \Ve are a'so arranging to instal the town pow,r when along with our own st•.ein power wem will be In a b tier po•ition than ever to supply our customers' 'wants at all times of the year., 1±TonaI'`. ed and all kinds of Meals given in t-,u-hsnge for Grain. Try a sack of the celebrated Vtlson'a Catmeal, trash from the mills. EMECKLEY, WINGHAM Phone 84. Bos G2, Parra for Sale or Rent. The undersigned effete for sale his farm, E. half lot 88. non, 5 East Wawa• nosh consisting of 100 notes more or less, tin the premises are a good bank barn with enter betiding*, good frame house with telephone and main delivery, 8 neves good orchard- Thio farm is Well footed with wire fencing' 55 hetes plouaho;l yearly for spring crop; 3• serfs fall wheat, Tete farm mint be sold et ranted rig the peep. 1.8 gi-"ing up farming. 1?'or full particulars ripply to=a- J011N W1ttLIA`1S Ii.It. blo, a tflyth. AFTER COUGHING TWO YEARS 1 Waycross, Ga., Woman Found Relief in Vinol. Did you ever cough for a week? Then just think how distressing it must bo to have a cough hang on for two years. Mrs. D. A. McGee, Waycross, Ga., says: "I had a very heavy cad which settled into a chronic cough which kept me awake nights for fully two years, and felt tired all the time The effect of taking your cod liver and iron remedy, VInol, is that nay oougb is gone. I can now get a good . night's rest and I feel much stronger in every way. I am 74 years old." It is the combined action of the medicinal elements of the cods' liv- ers aided by the blood -making and strength -creating properties of tette iron which makes Vinol so efficient for chronic coughs, colds and bron- cbitis—at the same time building up the weakened, run-down system. Try a bottle of Vinol with the nn• derstandieg that your money will be teturned if it does not help you. Walton/et eKibbon,Drugglst, Wirteltartm • Mr. Geo. Moir Wishes to announce to the citizens of Wingbain that he is its the old stand to may. Shoe Shining and Dyeing. Cigars, Gurn, Laces, etc. Give us a call. Werervaleaseegentervilelealegeteraneseeet CASTOR I Igor" Infanta and Mitten, 'Tha`Kind•YeINIavti Always Bought I3oa11 the $igtaattate of