HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Signal, 1902-8-7, Page 44,' TiltMOAT, August 7, 1909.
THE SIGNAL : GODERIOH ONTARIO
Best Things
for Men.
The pick of the products of
hues workers, in white or
colors, Latest designs in
mens's and boys' Shirts and
Shirtwaists. Cool, comfort•
able, fashionable. .trite
from the most fashionable
English Yid American
goods. Wear well and keep
their color.
Prices. $1.00 to $150.
TIESN.Mtas adds w the drew of a mea like • Moeif you bays • sloe
• tie other Imperleotloue la drew at• easily overlooked. Our new stook to
.�� @triage, bows, lour 1. heeds. imperial. and •soots 1. greatly &dotted,
sad M meeting with a ready sale. Pries* range from 100 to $1 00.
See oar mercerised silk Underwear at 81.00 pm salt. People who have were Ik my
isle the airiest underwear they ever had se, tt Is se owl end oomfortable, and the pries
lees r1dioalowly low for snob geode, SLOG,
SUMMER CLOTHING
for men and boys, 01 all descrip-
tion, can be had at this store,
and at any pries you may oboose
W. va•tsstes the n.1 of all cur dolhlag. Inspection isytted.
WO. PRI DRAM.
Pedals Plots, Clothlsg Hoose. Msa's Clothier, Fat nigher and H atter.
aifignal,
m rpeuaasD
EVERY THURSDAY MORNING
AY t. MWgAaeDN?
OODIRICS. THURSDAY. ALIO. 7. MIL
IMMENSE CROPS IN HURON.
IT is not too much to claim that the
season of 1902 will go on record as
one of the fattest years that have yet
greeted the hasbandmen of this
Bounty. Both grain and roots rield
abundantly, and the orchards also
have borne generously.
}Fall wheat will average fully 27
bushels per acre, 30 bushels per acre
being common, and 35 and even 40
bushels per acre being sometimes re-
ported. The Hessian fly did but little
injury after all.
Spring wheat will average say 22
bushels per acre, which will be fully
one-third above the ordinary yield.
The straw is abundant with this grain
also.
Barley has turned nut well both
la quality and yield. The average
will be about 35 bushels to the acre,
and notwithstanding the rainy
weather the � is said to be of
good color. Thin grain is now mainly
fed upon the farm is finishing off
stock -making more b/ef and pork,
and lees booze and potline victims.
OAta are a corking crop. The
average yield will be fumy 45 bushels
an acre, although many' fields have
turned out from 50 to 60 bushels per
acre. Heavy rains knocked down
considerable oata, snaking harvesting
rather more difficult than usual, but
the lar, a yield ot grain, the immense
amount of straw, and the comparative
freedom from rust makes this and the
other crops among the beet on record.
The root crops are also doing well.
The seed made a good catch, and the
abundance of moisture Inas given an
mecelknt start to the crops. As far
as can be seen at present a big yield
of potatoes, mangles and turnips is
ensured.
Orchards have yielded well. A big
apple crop will be gathered, but a lot
of the fruit will be scabby, as frequent
rain have washed off the Paris green
and the emulsions used t y the
sprayers.
Pastures are as lushy and green as
in June. Live stock are sleek and
frisky. Indeed, Huron county just
Ito now ie a rural Paradise, except in the
case of the hired man, who has the
life of an Egyptian slave in trying to
overtake his work. in this instance,
however, the taskmaster is doing as
big a share of toil as the servant.
POLITICS OR TEMPERANCE.
MAN with • glass eye could gee
that W. W. BreW AN and his outat,at the
recent Alliance erinventinn in Toronto,wers
very willing to give a political trend to the
work done by that 0 -gemination. N. W.Bu•
ON ANAP/ Is working ae energetically for
WHITNEY as if he were on the Conservative
payroll, and when we consider the efforts
he mute to prostitute the ratios which he
espouses to party Bede last May, we are
forced to wonder that he is not in closer
touch with the Tory pay -car than appears
from an outside glance.
But while W. W. RucIANAv was at-
tempttag to sot es political chore -boy for
the Grand Old Party -which Ire always
given a black eye to temperance sad good
government, -the large majority of the able
and treated candidata whom he endor.ad
and whose came he eepnused were not on
deck to implement his action. As is well
known to throe who took any interest in
bite temperance idea that was taked into
Iden rennet Provincial election, seven Tory
easdidatee pledged themselves to put tem
penmen before party, and for doieg en, re -
steamed Mreparasoe support in their canvass.
Ase would think that 1.1140014 men, freah
blew the campaign, would be down in a
body ea give pointers to their less tweet nal
Albano* friends on the ways and means
me' gs.ry to awry the referendum on De -
ember 4. But they were not. Veen Mr
Mtvregs.i., who at the riding temperance
ememiMga held at GadSttlt shortly before
.Orme rvative eonvsnUon, was en pleased
'le stand as the good .Id temperance plat -
fors,," was abient without explanation. 1t
is true that he was present in Toronto at
the Conservative rally imiuddiately after
the election, and, we understand, has been
down educe then es party business, but it
is also true that he tailed W preeent an ay
pearance at the Alliance l' 1-i entiou held
last week.
And so it wan witn every Tory candidate
that had been endorsed by W. W. Be-
cuANAN'S temperance outfit and The Libera-
tor at the recent election The whole
thin., was • fraud, an we steted at the time.
and the effort« that were then put forth to
drag politics into the temperance agitation
are now bearing fruit. Alliance, or no Al-
liance. the men who are undertaking the
campaign for prohibition this tall, have •
heavy task b handle. In Huron county
more injury to the cause was done by the
foolish udvuwa'es who came here to be-
drabble temperance principles with party
politics, than ean be made right in years
"•'Tie true, 'tie pity; and pity 'tie, 'lis
true."
"RADICAL.' BU r NO r NECESSARILY
INADVISABLE.
The suggestion of The Sun that Canada
should have power within itself to amend
its oonstitut'on without asking leave of Mr.
Chamberlain or anyone else is labelled by
Tux /Dilute Sweat. "A Radical Proposal."
Yet wby "radical"? We know far mortice
the people of Great Britain than the people
of Great'Britain know of u", and are, at
least, as well qualified to regulate their in-
stitutions as they ate to regulate ours. -
Toronto Weekly Sun.
The Sun api arently does not appreciate
t heetigni&canoe ot the terns "radical," whit h
Tits SIUPAL used to theme 'truing a ptu-
posal which certainly goes to the root of
our relations with the Motherland and
bring» under oonseteratton a fundamental
change in throe rotations. Whether the
uhange ie selvlsab'e or not is another ques-
tion altogether, one upon which Tee Rea -
NAI. was not venturing an expression of
opinion. The pr. blem which The lime's
saggestion calla up i' a very large one, a
nicety -sided one, anal one wh ch will bear
much discussion, However, we have ne
doubt it will reach • solution u soon se the
people o1 Cane da really desire a change.
DOUBLING THEIR CAPACITY.
1'OR the pat two years we have hid
It limited into our earl that the ('an-
aliall woollen trate was going to
the ttemnitiou bow•wowe owing to
tbe preferential tariff, amt so it to
rather refreshing to real tbe following item
from The Mitchell Advocate -a goal''orv,
paper by theway :
Mr. Ben. Williams, foremast of the
Stratford Woollen Mills, has purchased
hone -third intetWel in the Mitchell Wool-
len Mills,and will more to town at once
and occupy the petition as manager over
the weaving aepartptent. The hrm will
hereafter is known Sora, house & Willums,andWater-
sitdding several
new machine" to theiy well -equip -
Pei plant,they propose Aping dowels the
amount of business. The capacity of the
mill in its present conditioq in not sufb-
cient M supply the demand which it re-
celyes from foreign agent«, bet with the
propoeed change" they purpose Manufact-
uring double the quantity of goodie,
and,
it neie..ary, to •apply tie trade. will
operate their machinery both day and
night and employ a double staff' of
hanies, which will be advantageous to our
town in general. We welcome Ur. Wil•
hams to Mitchell and haven't the sigh••
est doubt but that he will te quite an
acvluisition.
That dos not look much like disaster.
SNAP 81-101
- Roee'a majority of one is still in est•
denoe.
-Ibclnra say that hay fever, this season,
is a short trop.
-CUMIN fit Rettig to have a Large crop of
cereals, fruit and heroes thi. year.
- Now, Rnw•Axn, pet the crown o0 the
bald spot, or you may get "unwtruck.
- The ooronstion is bound to Ie A
miserable dreg until the &Pony is over
-The Dammer girl leads the prrcentoll,
and she make. a right smart Insider ton.
-The Britiall Lion is now lionising Boer
generale, and it won't find them fre.h meet,
either.
--It isn't ne:eesary tor • hank clerk to
have •,500 a year, so far a tt.e girl" ere
concerned.
--All the work done hy the temperance
folk previous to the Prcvinoial election will
have to he done over again.
-Gang oft on vacation and getting hack
Irom varaiion are the two most memorable
events, if we eroept writing the cheque..
-All title talk about a heal strike doesn't
send anything like the shiver down one's
back in Augnst that it would to February.
--The "water -cure" policy of the Ameri
nus in the I'hlippines will have a tendency
to retard the progress of prohibition among
the native.. _
-These Boor getterels are treated in
Kuglaed as If they wore real heron.. The
English people evidently know good men
%heti they see them.
-It is now reported that the prohibi-
tion uampaigu will start in September.
Some people were of opuuol that it started
up here early nl Ysy.
----
-Premier LAl'Rlga socms 10 be getting
along e'1 right ill bnglaud i0 spite of the
adie,ue critioiems in The Saturday Review.
By -the -way, who supplies the vitriol for
The Review t _
-The newspapers are all wapiti; that
Lori UoNDoltALn is the right man for the
job, but we are waiting to hear Mre. Mae
'IitOaNLaY's opinion when the caliteeu
question noses up.
-Commamlaut Saearsas fell into the
hands of the British too poen. Hari he not
been .hot to death by oder of a drum -bead
,ourtmartial he would be royal'y receival
in London today, with the other Boer
commas, dere.
-That chap Ifociote, of Santiago fano,
must have an advertising agent who is a
a past grand in keeping his client before the
public. That last splash in the muddy
Missouri was, as AaraaVa WARD would
say, "2 muteh I'
-Whou no one could be found to fairy
Wtu.las Lan, of Perth, who died of small-
pox, Rev. Father THOMAS DAVIS volunteer-
ed and cowpleterd the task. There is more
real Christianity in that unselfish act than
Cell be found in all the eontrover4tial ad-
dressee delivered in the put ten yeas.
-The New York Central has issued an
order that no goodbye kissing hereafter will
be allowed at its stations or platforms.
The New York Central must think it owns
the public, body and bones, when it pro-
mulgates such an onler. 1f it isn't careful
it will lose the patronage ot the giddy
gushers.
WHA r 01 HERS ARE SAYING
TIM Yo0L AND TIM /IRRA•a.
Montilla) Star : A revolver Is such a its•
fat tbiog to carry around with you t leo
f fol stoned be wttheut on.••
WHAT 1.Anal1R MAYS 00C4.
London Advertiser : The Lender Globe
quotes a provincial Berman newspeprr as
sayeig that 'Sr'iWilfrid Laurier bit decid-
ed that the prooee lon that was arranged for
Friday shall lake pieoe as ....ranged, and
that the tnu.w and princes Wail be present.
This Is almost •. good se tie oft repeated
story of the Free. -h Canadian habitant, who
cm Learing that Albert Edward bad beets
proclaimed Kiot, remarked, •• What a pull
he moat hare bad with hurler!"
Kxtr EVERLASTINGLY AT IT.
Printers' ink : V..ity 1. traumatic, the
obs besetting tie of bu,ioeet men. They
liber under oke della:on that If they adv%•
U se dosing the tow busy months the public'
will ke. p them In mind for the remainder
ot the tearthey overlook the fact that
when tie mlgbtlset of eartb pass •way, peo-
ple ce ea to talk or thiok of thorn atter •
week. to order to be le the poetic mind
oars must keep his name or his business be -
foe the public. Adyertieleg !imus oos•halt
el its efficacy when put out spasmodlo.11y.
w.'I.O SPOIL Tllg 11A MIR
Toronto Weekly Son: One neaten wby
there te strong op.o.itloo la some quarters
to Ike wtranoe of American roads to Man
•teba is that they elk so subsidies. Our
railroad promoting couttsaally us.ri that
railroads would n• t bs built In Canada wilt -
out donations. R elroed building by the
Amer:ems would, of neons, disprove this
w art n^, and • black ey• would thus be
given to the treasury raiders. The pol!-
tlolane, too, who share the spoil, aim smear
be b. opposed to • Thane. that would die
U • y ea of her p 1oolpal sources of
nye ars.
0 It r01.T \t ITII PNrng.
Tt.roo'n (11nhe : Mr, R h. Gomel', 000e
editor .1 The Christian Planet, writing from
New Ycrk t, Ties Vlotnrte, 14. (' , Colonist,
says :-' Remedies@ of political predilec-
tiose, every feenadun must have a feeling of
pride In the per.on•hty of the mw who
tow to Lennon to represent fns errantry of
his birth, and who by virtue of the Imp ort
twee of that oonoiry and the same dsllr-
g elshed peronallty will take preoedenoe
among the Premiers el the emoire, saving
only the Prime Minister ot England, It 1.
• time who we can bury oar prejudices
dup down oat of sight and cheer for the
S ame that steads for os. it is oat with th•
feelings of beery or • Liberal then we reply
to • qu sties by an America, i T New Yerk
or on bead the reenter : "Wbo le that dl.-
tmgulshed-l okteg man?' 'That Is Sir
Wilfrid Laurier, the Premier of Canada'
It le with the pride of a Csoadlan, rennin'
delight to claim as a romp.tr:ot a mite who
ranks like Saul among the prophets where -
ever he goes "
M.I1 ,'I1501:1 40R A i•LIFIRL4,11,
Guelph !deviltry : Three Canadians who
think that all `lir Willed bas to do to yet a
preferential dasy ter Canada ,n the British
market s to ask the British Government
for It might well else Sp th• messing of the
overwhelming defeat of the British Goner, -
moot In the two bye-eleotlons which hove
been held smog the Impo•itlon of th• .,rain
duty. These byaeleotlons hate bas n fought
an the two main Maes of the grain duty
sod the education bill, and the expression of
pale o opinion to Bury tut North Le.d.
against these manures and easiest the Ooy-
• rom.nt Is something to which we are a• -
tarty ooao,oaseme 1 to this oouotry. Ne
more emphaHe verdict could have been ris-
.n, save the N. w York Tribune'. @tee .I.
If Canada gets • preference, it will be h -
c•a.e the Rrlp.h linverhmeet waste te give
.rime rebate oo the s rale duty be a sop to
the c000lry Hot, when the temporary
grain duty la Abolished, as moat lolli.w it the
Vetted Kingdom enetlonee to its preemie
temper, th• real diff malty In continuing •
colonial prel.tenoe .114 have to be faced.
ELECTRIC ROAD NEWS -
Till 01)MI1411 TRAMA At, x'IlIe1TIONY,
Ludo GLM ; The opiates of the Tram
ways 'Wilhite.. :at the Asrtoeltor•I Hall,
Leedom next month, will serve to call a.
tenon to the growth et an Iadaetry whlok
today lo rapidly rivalling seam treatise in
national Impersanw. Twelve yeses ago
then was not a Nagle electrical tramway In
Crest Britain. Today the amount of depi
MI Invested la sew and Doming el•osNo
trao►Ino mimeses is and armed Loudest
alas* amount. t. about 050,000,000; while
there are many hundreds of oldie of elastic,
street railways In the oonetry. And the
.xtea.loa of the emit tee years will make
the existing eesditlo of ►blegs seem is-
dgalfiaet.
"RAT Till IIJ,TRI1 aoeiri 511,1, 130.
Teresa. HIw The mild enoreslies la
mate thrown eat that the Metrnpellsaa
Railway Is not sexton" te haul freight tato
the 0 ty,bwt septets that the oily will Insist
os It and not allow the oompany to eoeIeet-
sdly perms Its way arrying pa -enters to
and from 1h. Wily If M. nempany nae
perenede the reslelpallty .1 this 11 wUt
he a rimer bit e1 Inde%, bemuse there 1s
so doubt whatever that the siegM4e railway
are gado as •axl..a ors Mal freight
ate tees as wB ego te have Is bvewgh$ l..
Ref, re getting dews te kesleess It will h.
STYLISHNESS for the ladies.
COMFORTABLENESS for the men.
RUGGEDNESS for the children.
t1'c1'e 1 .1111 our stuck accord mg
t.. those ,oras.
And style doesn't leave out durability.
Neither dose long wear secri6ee looks.
It needn't and it doesn't.
All-round shoe goodness for every member
of every family. As low as 81.00 • pair,
As high as 85.00, but all worth what you
are asked to pay.
W.StlARMAN
necessary far the city and the oempeoy to
recognize the fact thrill the Latefite to be de-
✓ ived are mutual. 'The ocmpeny wants to
haul freight to muket because it will be a
paying trace.
The ronolog et electric can throne/It the
oouolry In all directions, truing not only
pse'eogers, but all kinds of prodooe, will
ask• a revolutionary ohan•' In taro bb.
Distance will be corgtiered and farms
twenty and thirty miles away w
brought as near the city market as those
fiy• miles away have been. Comte' ter town
will be a common oocurrenoe and sot a big
In term .xp.rt*sce. the larmer's
family will be able to get dally newswpsrs
and • daily mall servio., and they wil he in
slr..% t000b with the world at lege, Tbs
tools' iso of farm life w111 be largely removed,
with the r. salt that there will not be such a
teodsecy on the part of the young to poll
tp stakes and move into town. Not
that oily, nut there wall be a movement
of town- Ind people into lb" country.
When a man can ,o out ten miles and let
an acre of Iced and miles of soeser7 for the
pilots h• would pay le town for a 20 -foot lo',
and a vise of someeolye ba. k yard, he wilt
go out and w I build there. of his occupation
a not one that romps!. ham to be easy al
Me oth.:e. This movgm. n, has begun eau,
west, and north, sod the pettier lag of the
subutban system will ex' end and give tt a
'rest Impetus. Another oleos of people w111
seize the chance to live Io the country will -
In easy reach of the elty -those retired
farmers and co ,utry Madame man who web
to give tie r oblides. a good educable..
They Ilkat the o ty for Ire advantages, out
they dislike 1t* nobs, smoke, narrow epitome,
and . h• the md,ffer.noe people have for snob
other. !bey will prefer to It,. cues de,
where they w,11 kuow people and be known
by others. Th. suburban roads will benefit
the tamers and make the mato roads mous
popol.00s shah heret,for..
Cleanest fare ter Weak Lugs.
The best roe Iv lar are, weak longi, s
the soothing vapor of C.'arrh, zine %blot,
traverse' every •Ir cell and peeing' of the
breathier order.'. It trots remote pat*
that much mixture' and .prays can't at -
prose•, and kits tbrusands of germ. at
every breath. Caterrhtz as drives away
pal,, merriest too and loll imp anion ; it
makes breathing way and reale .r, and ex-
erts a marvellous IAuones on troughs, ooldi,
sore tbcoat, brouohitis, eatarrb, deftness
wed luny trouble Cetera h.so.• ourfA a
ogee la delightful to Inhrle sad simple to
age Price 81 00; small sire 25,. Drugs
elate, or Polson A Co., K o,.tes, 0 it
Dr. Hamilton's Pills euro censtlpatlon.
AMONG OUR EXCHANGES
Mer glut Ride Was is uederlrb
(Clinton New Era)
We mecCooed lest week the feet that a
young lady eighteen years ot mg had never
teen on • railroad train. The st•tment does
not h tin good any looggr, as the 'one' lady
t.notee the S. S egouraloo, and thought the
@sparrowoewa. d.ltghtful
Set Ike laugh en the Coal utas
Stretford Heaton
The pleating owes ,• bis from the pest
maoutaotorteg of Ellice and North E,t.thnp.
that this fuel wall ba plaosd on thematic."
ACTS(itbfTtY Aci., LIVER
KIQE BOWELS
P
CeS � M
pi SP�NSEO�pES Sj
OVERCOMES N
D
STIPATION
ABRUAL GOPERMANENTLY.
ITS BENFFjGIAL EFfE�TS,
BUY THE r,ENUINE-MAN'P'0 BV
citirs*N IA KSYRUP
`stat., °rr .�"r • Mr 1 , russet
mo Stitt et aft 00v 6i is PRKt 501mHR3&
n ext week In sufbofot gaaatdrlss to must all
the wants of Stratford oltissos, and at a
very reasonable prior. This should allay any
worry on oke port of boanholders that the
(mppty of ooal *111 be deficient or reach soca
• 8guie "bat only the well to-do w111 be able
to afford suoh a luxury Peat has been twitch
In Stratford by many and Ibe results hays
been more than satlslac'ory. With a possible
output of over twenty tons of peat per day
here shoed be ao fear t f • Iasi Limier,
DIZZY ALL THE f IME.
every Usk Woman a5.uI. Mead the Marrs
meat el Mrs. Riley, a Caps Brehm Lady.
Rock Dal-, C R., August 4- (Special). -
Mr.. David Riley, of this village, suffered
for over eight mem 1/110 female wmimes
Sbe could not Ido anything and was d'zz)-
heede,t all tht time. No mcllolu• teemed
Mlle to belp her and tSe pain In her b.ck
was so great that many time. elm Alt like
giving op altogether.
But she didn't. Site began to u e 1)edd'.
Kidney P,Ils, and io a oho t time was 14111
She ray.:
"If It had not term for Dodd'. Kidney
Pills I wool•] have hod to guyis ma they
•re a rtam'y a wonderful mnhotn., seal 1
oan and w.11 r.00mmend teem to ell weak
w omen who rsff,red as •uffere 1 for over
eight year.."
JEWELRY
BY MAIL.
If there is a post office in
your neighborhood and you
have a jewelry want of any .
kind, we can supply it almost
as well as if you visited us
personally.
Write fes oar cat • sad
thus hay., pr c the
Saint stock of jaw y la
Canada to choose from.
Besides, .it system of gee
price 1a peals Agar. &aa ear
gaarante• as to quality mesa
aerosols to sat -o( -taw. Myers
We prepay all delivery
charges, and if what we send
does not please you in every
particular, return it, and by
next mail we will cheerfully
refund your money.
HJ. H. COLBORNE]
TE11NS :
Carp r Prodnc
DRESS MUSLINS.
For the last two weeks our Dress Muslin' Sale has been satisfac-
tory. We still have about two hundred yards left, which must lea
cleaned out at any price. Solite of these are put as low as
5 CENTS A YARD -JUST HALF PRICE,
GINGHAMS
Too we are selling regardless of cat. Just Dote these plicas
28C FOR 150. AND 200 FOR 72iC.
A job lot of Embroideries both in edgings and insertions, at about
ha'f price.
A lot of new Drees Tweeds, Homespun and Friezes from 20c to 7,21
Cosmopolitan Patterns. 'Phone 86,
J. H. CO
BORNE
What is a Sponge
Some say It la the skeleton of
lee animal.
Labors claw 11 In the vegytabl.
dom.
All class it as A NEaSSITY.
sebum.
klag-
We have • new supply.
Sarpsasleg values.
Yee oar lines from 5i to 25o.
They are worth mere,
Fine Imported Cigars.
American
Toilet Articles.
We pay special annottos to these Ilan.
Try na for molt lines u :---
LYON'S TOOTH POWDER,
/.YMOLIS PREPARATIONS, the
bl b-olase aatlaoptlo toilet articles.
I'OZZONI'S POW ORBS,
1'STLOW'8. HOYT'8, SEELEY'S sal
many other haps
WE LEAD IN PERFUMES.
Try , be sow ones. Florodora, Pink Peony,
Czarin• (7n., ane&P, Czarina Violate, ste.
W. C. GOODE, Chemist, -
BEDFORD
BLOCK,
IT'S IN THE AIR.
Everybody knows
about S.W.P. It's
success is in the
air.
It gains fame for
itself ° with every
gallonthat'sspread
on a house.
Uniform good
quality has given
it a popularity
greater than any
other paint on the
market.
When you want
to paint a build -
SOLD BY
Eng, inside or out-
side
THE
SHERWIN-WILLIAMS
PAINT
will do it better
and more econom-
ically than any
other. It will wear
longer, look better
and cover more
surface.
it's a paint with
a reputation found-
ed on merit. Ask
us fur color cards.
N. D. ROUGVIE,
'ajThe Cash- Hardware Store. Goderich, Ont.
Hammocks
RYRIE BROS.,
Tease see AdelaIM
TORONTO.
STRACHAN'S
MACHINE AND
BLACKSMITH
SHOP
-AT THE (11.1) FITAND-
Victoria Street, aoderich
.iAS. A. STRACHAN has
taken over th• plant and bushes*
concuoled ssaoswfully for so map,
veer. hy his lather, the late 1). K.
Str.oh•n, and Intends refitting ih•
shop In the most np•to due man
her po. ethle.
He w111 make a •penalty of all
hied, of repalrler, such se
Threshers and Engines, Binders,
Mowers, and all kinds of Farm-
ers' Implements.
Mill Machinery, Marine, 9ta-
i onary and Portable Engines
th orougnly overhauled andre-
paired.
Pipe and Steam Fitting.
Machine and Blacksmith Work
of all kinds done to order.
All the specialties manufactur-
ed by the late D. K. Strachan
will still be made on the prem-
ises.
OaII or write Inc particular*.
J. A. S1racn
Our line ot Hammocks this season ranges
from 75c to 95.00, We handle the famous
"Stag" brand, known for their durability and
fast colors.
A 54 z 12 Hammeek, foil colored. with pillow
A 36 x 76 Hammock. fall colored, with pillow
A 36 z 76 Ham nock, full colored, pillow and drapery
A 40 z tt0 Hammock, fall colored, blue or black, ellk warp pillow. frleg.
drapery
81.50
2.00
3.00
4.50
Croquet Sets, 4 Balls, 5.. Mallet, $1.25:
Croquet Sets, 6 Balls, 6i, Mallet, $1.50.
PING PON.
Full se°, wooden rackets, 4 halls 91.00
Fall set, skin rackets, 4 balls 2.50
Full set, vellum rackets 2.50
Hand Paper Rackets, separate, 50c.
Wood Rackets, separate, 25c.
Balls, 5c each, 50c a dozen.
KIDD'S BOOK STORE
PURE 1NC1IEDIENTS. -
Every drop of water, every ounce of flour,
all of every ingredient that goes into Par-
nell Dean's Bread is tested for its purity
and its nutritive value.
We use the best ingredients to m,.ke
the best bread.
Parnell Dean's Bread is best by far.
PARN ELL DEAN'S
BREAD
Contains 20 per cent more
gluten, is lighter, whiter,
sweeter and richer than any
other bread. it is made in
the cleanest bakery in Canada.
Order it from
W. P. WESTOBY,
AOENT.
lailise SC,