Listowel Banner, 27 May 1920, p. 3

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if i ne iran eg ing condition. lubricated with Imperial Polarine. operation. of oil on every wearing surface. on'display wherever Imperial Polarine ig sold. also in 1214-gallon steel kegs, by dealers everywhere. wuPERlag olarine IMPERIAL POLARINE (Light medium body) IMPERIAL POLARINE HEAVY (Medium heavy bedy) Accurate Thorough Lubrication [ MPERIAL Polarine gives thorough lubrication und er every operat- Cars and trucks give longer, cheaper service when. Imperial Polarine will not break up or run thin under continued It reduces friction to a minimum by maintaining a coating It seals all the power behind the _piston by establishing a perfect piston-to-cylinder seal. Learn which of the three grades described below is best suited for your car from the Imperial Polarine Chart of Recommendations, which is Sold in one-gallon and four-gallon sealed cans, half-barrels and barrels, ™ IMPERIAL POLARINE A (Extra heavy body) A GRADE SPECIALLY SUITED TO YOUR MOTOR Sy tan! ') SS i: IMPERIAL OIL LIMITED . Power - Heat - Light - Lubrication fee in all Cities into their serious pursuits as if pra pursuits were their own. Children’ e troubles to them, all their joys, and ‘) camifide. in them as they would in a friend sy in a companion ‘ot their own ag But th are drawbacks. Children quarrel with their companions and dispute with them; and with parents of this,order the quarreling and dis- puting take place also, sometimes in @ manner that is rather unseemly.| The old-fashioned parental dignity When you are always an bit a child with your children, it is difii- cult to y semblance of iscipline, difficult to establish the damentals of moral and spiritual] ining; and there are still persons who think it a pity to lose those things altogether. ~ There are parents of another tenip- er who feel keenly the charm of such gay, unrestricted fam'‘ly intercourse, but who cannot achieve ite’ ll. They love their children, ther v d make any sacrifice for them. ici, try as they will, they cannot get near them, cannot feel at one with them, cannot enter into their livés. There is af- fection on both sities; there is dey votion on one side and respect on the other. But there is no happy inter; change of spirit. ere real east, no omfort when e gether. ‘‘he children long to'get ot of the pa ental atmosphere to some other whe -e they can feel at home. The parents realize it and would give the world to change it, but cannot. There is no known remedy for such a state of things. But the best pal- liative is, so far as possible, to become a child yourself. You were one once. Think yourself back into childhood. Become a child once more. Do not look at life as a weary grown person looks at it and thinks a child ought to look at it. But look at it as you did when you were ten years old. Put yourself really and whole-heart- edly into your bhfldren’ s place. Then you will laugh as they do and weep as they do, and they will feel at home with you as well as love you. with t em enter into their sports ane : disappears entirely, and with it go} 85 vicinity. At axes rebuilding wall, be known. *- ¢ s * .* * oe rey . . s a * s which salt is pu Used in sweeping out moths. will revive it. Salt in whitewash from discolored teac In oven under b As a gargle will throat. dripping fat. . On fingers when meat and vegetable. will forgive the qua of galt. 7 USES FOR SALT f Salt is indispensable. old Father Neptune and Mother Earth eee ee s * * s Here are only a few of the uses to}’ carpets to-keep Thrown on coal fire, which is low, makes it stick. Put on ink when freshly spilled on a carpet will help remove stain. Salt and soda exéellent stings and spider bites. Salt amd vinegar will remove stains for bee ups. Salt puts out fire in a chimney. aking tins will prevent their scorching on bottom. In-water is the best thing to clean ‘| willowware and matting. cure soreness of *Trown on coal fire when broiling cleaning fowl, meat or fish, will prevent slipping. Used to season practically every Let us hope rrels and strifes on earth and will allow no “shortage” It was probably years ago that An painted the sketch gar, that has come There are many kingdoms of heav- en, and into hardly any of them can we enter except we become as little | children. | Absconded from Refuge— spring always produces a certain un-| rest at the Refuge, and despite the watchful attitude of the Keeper, some of the inmates are sure to make a bolt for liberty. Last week two ab- sconded from the institution and hit TASTE IS GREAT! Péredixo Tooth Paste MADE IN CANADA TASTE IS GREAT Prevents Acidity — halts decay: Cleanses Teeth — keeps them clean. Polishes and Preserves Enamel. Leaves Mouth Cool and Re- freshed. Very Economical— J. A. Stuart the trek back to their old haunts. Of these, one arrived back in Teeswater, and after staying a week knocking about and finding the welcome a rath- er frosty one, returned Tuesday, and was taken back into the fold. The other, a chap named Badstone of Wiarton, who annually takes a spurt north, is still at large and wil! like- ly fetch up somewhere on the penin- sula ff his feet hang out. He is as good as gone for the summer, and the Refuge won't waste any of the’ was done some years ‘ago, but will rather wait for the snow flurries and northern winds to drive him in. That he will be back when the robins go south again is a much greater certain- ty than that Mr. Frank Rennie, M.P. P. for South Bruce, and others that signed the “round robin" to increase their salaries from $1400 to $2500 for a session of some six or eight weeks’ duration, will ever get back! to Parliament again. Woman's Inhumanity To Woman Women do not fight fairly. says a contributor to Good Housekeeping. and they take as insults small matters than men would consider as jokes. $t a women’s convention in Washing- —_— ‘ ~ a” . NEXT TIME Get your suit at Bradburn's and be satisfied. Expert tailoring and No. 1 stock - of suitings to choose from. ; No extra charge for better work. Favor us with a first order that we may convince you. | *“ W. E. BRADBURN The Tailor Upstairea Over Kibler’s » ° . When You Think of Meat Think of No. 26 7 At the other end of the line is an establishment that stands for quality and service. If you want meat satisfaction, get the habit of calling ‘‘two- six.’” 1 The choicest fresh and cured meats, sausages, bologna, head cheese, lard, etc., always in stock. | G. A. Kennedy WALLACE 8ST. SUCCESSOR TO 8. J. STEVENSON. & NOTICE TO EVERYBODY ! WILL PAY CASH for Beer and Whiskey Bottles, Rags, Rubbers, Newspapers and Magazines, on and Scrap Metals of all kinds. Highest market prices also paid for Furs, Beef sd and, Horse Hides, Wool and Poultry. Sprung Wall Papers Have Arrived Call and look them ,over Livingstone The Druggist Telephone 59 4}. good of you to-want to do it,’ ton a delegate in the balcony, a temp- eramenta! soul with a camera in her hands, started to applaud the entry of the grand president and dropped the camera. It fell twenty feet and hit another woman on the head. Full of contrition, the delegate rushed downstairs to make any possible a- mends and incidentally to get her camera. “My dear woman.” she began heart- ily, “I came down to see if there was anything on earth I could do for you.” “I think you’ve done quite enough for one day!” the woman said frost- ily. The delegate was not yet discour- aged. “Please let me do something!” she begged effusively. “Can't I get you a doctor? Or won't you let me get you another hat?” The victim looked her over delfb- erately from head to foot, a long. comprehensive glance that covered | every detail in a manner perfectly per- ceptible to the person observed. “It’s ‘ she said sweetly, “but I'm afraid your financial position really doesn't justify such ex- travagance.”’ The delegate was speechless for a moment; then the woman in her came to the surface, “I do wish you'd let me send a doctor, anyway,” she said. “I’m not so 8 I’m sure it looks at least as well as it did before.” . She rescued her cam- era and marched to her seat. +e Amherstburg’s tax rate for the current year is 50 mills on the dollar, On The people ican people by Charl An Artistic Mark of Gratitude. just about 300 tony van Dyck on wood of St. Martin sharing his cloak with a beg- to the Toledo Museum of Art, as a gift to the Amer- es Leon Cardon, Belgian art critic and connoisseur, Belgium. additional interest minor changes Dutch master made when he painted the worked out details subordinate figure of original conception. sketch was exhibited the Brussels an American city to Belgium for help in that nobody at the imminent. that n recognition of American nesistance’e The sketch is believed to | have been made by the painter as Walkerton Times—The arrtval of) preliminary to painting the large al- tar-piece in the Church of Saventham, between Louvain and Brussels; the altar-piece is held to have been painted in 1622 or 1623. How long the sketclpreceded’ unknown, but it could hardly have been much earlier, and it now has an and the painting is in showing the the famous in his design altar-piece. He of architecture omitted in the sketch, changed the an Ethiopian in- 4o that of a man wearing a metal casque, and otherwise modified his In 1910 the in juxtaposition ; with the Saventham altar-piece at Universal county’s funds hunting him up, @S|and halberdiers in ancient costum guarded the two treasures. Now an ocean separates them, and the beau- tiful and brilliant panel testifies in Exposition the gratitude of an hour of need Brussels exposi- tion seriously imagined could be so Even mermaids valuable commercial flesh is very parts of the creature veal and pork. beautiful polish, and nish an oil resembil medicine. face of the sea, with oe of perpoies, with huge it to stay for a long ers the upper jew are mark of. the male. land, coming in stretched across ¢ such flats dera exposed to view, times given rise to one of the most We Eat Mermaids. nowadays yield products. Their o eat, different t resembling beef, Their skin makes an excellent leather; their bones take a their livers fur- ing that of cod Hvers which is commonly used for They are not called mermaids any longer, but “dugongs’ like appearance when seen at the sur- ‘—their human- head and shoul- having in early animal is about the size of a lungs (enabling time under wat- ke those of a er) and ruminant. Tusks that protrude from a distinguishing Dugongs denizens of seas. Often “they approach near with the tide Be feeding on the submarine algac of mud fats, To capture them nets are They become entangled and, unable to rise to the surface to breathe, are drowned. Diner—I gave it for it would be out anyway. Out of Season. Waiter—What was your order, sir? I’m sorry to say I have forgotten — bad so long ago I don’t remember, but I'll change it, of season now, bout the hat./ and The Answer. “Is life worth ae" asked the “I think that ‘Fresh quainted? (Suddenly on the hard ice.) ora) ell ive toe @ long-standing acquaintance, auyway. ye ee o> rdiywikiy Abide “We at comes @ cropper gracetully(f" eto discourage the present fitty skilled | mechanics afe out of employment as ~~ result of the fire, but within a w days the intentions of the firm rer at which time the combs plenty of room, both it chamber and in the super,” entrances should be given to onies as soon as conditions ourable, but these always be-enough to prev ing in mene places, especial north, z If the apiary can be- lace. old stand an empty hive, to whit ich swarm will return, the queen been meanwhile picked up and ed in a cage in the new hive. field bees wilk join the swarm parent colony will be so much ' ened by their loss that it is not} to swarm again. Where the aplary cannot be wat ed, the plan of preventing « by examining every brood phe every colony every week, and destr ing all the queen cells is very la ious and not always efféctive. simpler plan is to remove the qu at the beginning of the clover ho; flow, and eight or nine days la destroy all the queen cells except o or destroy all and give a ripe cell select parentage. queen is obtained which swarm and, besides, will be mot lific in the fall and next year” the old queen, and will be less Hig ly to swarm next year. This ph however; causes a certain amount loafinge until the new quéen. 8 laying. This loafing can be m reduced by introducing a-ripe qu cell at the time the queen is remove and if this ig done early enough bs fore any preparations for swarming’ have been started, the bees are’ un= likely to build further queen cells, Where, however, one prefers to @ the surer method, only those cole that are actually preparing to swe should be treated, and some me for quickly ascertaining if a co is building queen-célls In prepara for swarming should be_ employe One of the best of these is to have the brood nest occupy two chambers, and then by prying up the. up chamber, one can see at a glance. the queen cells are being built the lower edge of the combs in»! chamber. In many parts of southern ‘On southern Quebec and similar the desire to swarm is strong 6 during the first two or three we the separation of by a queen exclud only empty combs and found may be enough to tide the ¢ over this period. Another good p that may be enough to prevent s ing in this region is to use two brood) chambers and confine the queen to the lower one early in the honey digas a chamber usually contain a large nam ber of empty “o W. L. Sladen, Aplar A Cultured — Every family in Buen to rida the privilege of ey & least one opera each season free Be charge at the new municipal o house to be erected under the su vision of the Government. Caffeine In Holly. One species of American holly” hat been found to contain large amounts of caffeine, as much as one and half per cent. of the drug being tained from died leaves. sll “5 Never Miss Howles—I don’t think we were really anxious'to hear me on He (earnestly)—Indeed, I was!’ E had never heard you before, Politeness. ‘ ‘ wite—Why do they say “Dame Gossip?” Husband—Dun’no, except, haps, they are too polite to the “o" Own Your Own Home— ai * The ultimate aim of eveex man is to own his own home, and ii tae = ent state of the house market there is more reason than ever for want- ing a home. Rents are high there seems to be a general outcry. that landlords are profiteering, alk though the charge is d to sub- stantiate. “The upkeep of houses is many times more than-it was in pre war days, owing to the high prices asked for material and labor, This same high cost also acts as 4 deter- rent to building. Everything a mad buys nowadays costs two or three times what it did five years ago, and landlords cannot possibly keep their properties upo n the rents char before the war. But paying a poor substitute for house own When a man owns his house he is of not becoming a victim of a gr the mohey he puts into a Ow: longs to himself. At the en year he has som gondle of rent receipts; monthly . ag Fs more than he paid io rent.

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