HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1901-5-9, Page 5II
.titer/rat.
Is published every Thursday Morning,
at the Office,
MAIN -STREET, EXETER.
--+ By the—
ADVOCATE PUBLISHING COMPANY
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y _ charged accordingly. Liberal discount made
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PRINTING tur
ned utin the description
style,e,
and at moderate rates. Cheques, moneyord.
ers, fico. for advertising, subsoriptions,eto.to
bo inacl-opayablo to •
Chas. IL Sanders,
EDITOR Alin PROP
Professional Cards.
H. KINSMAN, L. D. S. & Da, A. R.
KINSMAN, L' D, S., D. D. S•, Honor
graduate of Toronto University,.',
DENTISTS,
Teeth extracted without .any pain; or any
bad effects, Office in Fanson's Block, west
side Main Street, Exeter.
'T"NR.D. ALTON ANDERSON, (D.D.S.,L.DSO
1111 , honors Graduate of the Toronto Uni
rsityandRoyal College of Dental Surgeons
of Ontario, Teeth, extracted without pain.
All modes of Dentistry up to date. Ori
in new block south of Carlings' block,
/Medical
R.T. P. MCLAUC;HLIN, MEMBER OF
1l eons
nd ur
Physioians S
Ph o
cele eof g
theC g y
Ontario. Physician, Surgeon and Aocouoh
etir. Office, Dashwood, Ont.
Legal.
DLitcksoN & CARLING, BARRISTERS,
Solicitors, Notaries,' Conveyancers,
Commissioners, Solicitors for the,Molsons'
Bank, etc. Money to loan at lowest rates.
of interest. Offices, Main, Street, Exeter.
L R. CARLING, B. A.. L. H. DICKSON.
F(#LADMAN, (successor to Elliot & Gladman,)'Barrister. Solicitor, Notary
Public Conveyancer, Etc. Stoney to loan at
lowest rates of interest. Office Main Street,
Exeter..
Auctioneers
TJ• BOSSENBERRY, Grand Bend, Licensed
Auctioneer for County Huron, Sales
prom rtivattended to, and charges 'moder-
ate. Orders by nail will•receive every 'at-
tention.
r7� BROWN, Winchelsea. Licensed Allot-
. ioneer for the Counties of Perth and
Middlesex, also for the township' ofUsborne
Sales promptly attended to and terms rea-
sonbale.Sales arranged at Post office. Win
o helsoa.
Insurance.
ELLIOT,
Insurance Agent,
Main St. Exeter
FARMS FOR SALE,
MONEY TO LOAN.
The undersigned has a few good farms for
sale cheap. Money to loan on easy terms
JOHN SPACEMAN,
Samwell's Block Exeter
THE LEADING
MEAT MARKET.
For Fresh, gooda.nd the choisest cuts
of meat, call on the undersigned.
While all our cuts of meat are the
finest,`. we make a specialty of meat
delicacies.
Meat delivered to all parts of the
town . .
John Manning
TO CURE COLD IN ONE 'DAY
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine -Tab -
1'' lets. All druggists refund the money
if it fails to cure, : 25c, E. W. Grove's
signature is on each box.
!ae0 on � .,
'••�;\:\' r X!(''•. face, Polished •�s7'P
NickelWAtel
Ameri-
can can Lever Movement '-
y
for selling only 2 doz.
packages of Sweet Pea c.
.) //t 11 ff .r Seed at ioc,apackage. Eachpsek-.
e.
contains o sag
e t
a ase 0n '
didmixture
., t • .r
Po lie
most �n tfrArnat
vu
rtotios
0
g.... falls.
•Yeu CM .
.in Dorn
this
find
e•� +i' Via'• ' Watch
afternoon Betting to ',earls once.
eryryofyour Watch at once. rite today. as the season rrSethem,rutn themoney. we guarantee cafe deity -
1 r artmn d we will the Heeds,
i
.edacgsculls
short. Seed. supply Cp., Toronto,
The Mo sons Bank.
(Chartered by Parliament 1855.)
Paid 'up Capital....... , $2,500,000
Reserve T+und.. 2,050,000.
Read office Montreal,
JAMES
ELLIOTT, Esq.
GENERAL MANA(tEIL.
llioney'advanced to good Farmers on
their own notes with one or more endorsers
at 7 per cent. per annum.
--EXETER BRANCIT—
Open every lawful day from 10 a.m. to :3
p.m; Saturdays 10 a.m. to 1 p.m,
A general banking business transacted
CURRENT RATES alloWecl for money nn
Deposit Receipts. Savings Noire at $ cent.
Dict so' & fJutr.INci. • N 1) Tlultror,
Solicitors. Manager
Weiivo this heal dila,
Send Geld plug, het,
With for oelllug
only 15 pickcgcs oY.
SteootPeaSe tatioe..each.l:ach
agknao cont yiiio a;iplendld i if X.
ureoftkomostfraglimty rlo•"
tioi' ofall colors. 21,nl ns.thls
adVe tisemeet anal we Well for
ward the Sest11'. Sell theft'',ro �I
lust Yina :" h a� ^,
aV.',11 ,hese nil �u�i 1, b^,iii' u�u'� 'uM...
edlnaveltgttI;ttlbol. VrIlc
A,ltna efvdtaifatl"boit rete$oUd}t:.Titbdoa±tofiiforheil.
sctdiaek-'Nlifideitfls i iVC4,,l''0`>toiite,C•:iat
t,
If you have it, you k,,
know it. You i i,
know all .4.
about the
heavy feeling
in the stomach, the
formation of gas, the
nausea, sick headache, <^
and general weakness of
the whole body.
You can't have it a
week
without
your blood
being. impure and your
all exhausted. l
There's just one remedy
for you 1
There's nothing new
about it. Your grand-
parents took it. 'Twas
an old Sarsaparilla before
other 'sarsaparillas were
known. It made the word
"Sarsaparilla" famous
over the whole world.
There's no other sarsa-
parilla like
arsa-parilia.like it. In age and
power to cure it's "The
leader of them all,"
$1.00 'a bottle. All druggists.
Ayer's Pills cure constipation.'
After suffering terribly`I was
induced to try your Sarsaparilla. I
took three betties andnow feel like
a new man, 1 would advise all my
fellow creatures to trythis medicine,
for it has stood the test of time and
its -curative power cannot be ex
celled, I. D. Goon, ,
Jan. 30, 1899. Browntown, Va.
Write the Doe>r®.r.
If you have any complaint whatever
and desire the best medical advice you
can possibly receive, write the doctor
frosty. Ton will receive a prompt re-
ply, without cost.. Address,
DE. J. 0. AYER, Lowell, Mass. i.
THE SMALL-PDX.'
• Toronto, May, 7,-A revisedstatement
of the small -pox cases in the Pro-
vince, prepared by Dr. Bryce, shows
that the situation is clearing, and
that the authorities:tppearently bare
the outbreak under control. Since Jan.
lst.501 eases have in all existed in the
Province, but att present, accordingto
the latest returns, the number of eases
is only, 67, located in 16 :centres. Of
these the most important is the Sud-
bury camp, where the men issuing
from the lumber camps weredet•-ained,
and in Carden township, Victoria
county, where the circulation of the,
disease was stimulated by the attend-
ance of an afflicted exposed person at
a dance.
scoirs-
EmoIsi FN
of Cod Liver Oil is the means
of life, and enjoyment of life to
thousands: men women and
children.
When appetite fails, it re-
stores it. When food is a
burden, it lifts the burden.
When youlose flesh,it brings
the plumpness of health.
When work is hard and
duty is heavy, it makes life
bright.
It .is the thin ' edge of the
wedge; the thick end is food.
But hat is the use of food,
when you hate it, and can't di-
gest it?
Scott's Emulsion of Cod
Liver Oil is thefood that makes
youforgetY
our stomach.
if you have not tried it, send for
free sample, its agreeable taste wII
surpprise ou.
SCOT' dt BOWNE, Chemists,
Toronto.
60o. and $1.001 all druggists.
EXETER FAUNDRY
J.
MURRAY,
Manufacturer
& Dealer
• .ln...
Por tablen.nd Stationery .Engines and
Boilers, Plow's, Lane! Rollers, Mow
ers, L+tc. Iron pipe and fittings, re-
pairs on Agricultural Implements.
and general rue chinery promptly eta
tended to .
2 Good Second }land Mowers for sale.
cheap; also 1 Steden's cot Burns' Por-
table
:'or-t able, Threshing Engifae for sale in
good running order, Price $175.00
cash.
Sole agent in Exeterand viciaity for'
t ic...El.ctrc.B
lOMeer Ooii`ipound, Guni'-
az
1 ,
rcc;
s : m'
to 1 .. strictly first-driss for
•cgscales, etc.
i i3
�aV tiiA p � M J�i's� ��i �4 CHICK HATG11lNG•
n
SSoate Practical iiinta About Setting !fen
in the Poultry Douse,
Other thing's being equal, a chick
S'Udden:Tie-Up of the LackWar)" en hatched in ('irly Alirtl is worth
na Car Shops at Scranton.
FOR THE RIGHT TO ORGANIZE,
French )liners ''i11 Go to work—j•olede
Carpenters Win -Prospects' of the Min-
ers,of England Striking 'Over the.
Coal Export Duty Lessening
There MMay, Ilon ever, Be a
Bi^ IL
ailry '
a Strike.
S
Scranton, ancon, Pa., May 6. -More flier
one thousand efuployes of the ca
shops of the Delaware, Lackawann
and Western Railroad at this plac
n
twice as o- ue11 as One hatched in
T11111e. It costs 11 little,', more to raise
it, il'ut on the other hand an April
chicken is less 'likely to be troubled
with lice• A pullet of the medium.
sized breeds hatches( in April ought
to begin haying in October and will
produce eggs schen they are high,
while alate pullet reserves her ener-
gies for providing eggs when they
are loay. The cockerels of title early
hatch are ready Co eat or sell in the
early fall.
The only place for liens or 4hicicens
at nay' command is an ordinary hen-
house in which .T keep 12 liens, If a
lien was set in the henhouse the
ti other liens would lay in Ole nest, and
When cliickeus ita,tcheci, the hen, in
e
trying to defend: them from invaders
was likely to step on andkill them.
, So I got a box 18 inches long, 14
• inches rvide and 18 inches high. The
✓ top Was taken off and split so that
_ one strip was 7 inches wide, which
_ was nailed to one side' of the open-
• ing,
pen-i ig, as shown in the cut, Two short
- pieces were nailed on this at A and
13 to hold the door, This box is used
for a nest in which to set the hens
and it stands on. the floor. 'Several
went on strike at noon on Saturday
in support of the men at the Dover
N. J•, shops, who are on strike fol
the reinstatement of two of . thei
number, discharged beoause of ac
tivity in forming a, pinion. It is 1•e
ported here that . the men. in all th
car shops along the line from IIobo
ken to Buffalo quit simultaneously
With those of the larger shops here
F'renolt. Miners Will Go to Work.:
Monteceu Les Mines, France, May '6
-The shiners' 'strike is apparently
over. Wort. will be resumed • to -day.
Those who have been dismissed have
consented to seek work elsewhere;
The collapse of the strike is due to.
the outcome of the referendum, when
only 30,000 miners favored a .gen-
eral stoppage of work.
Toledo Carpenters Win.
Toledo, -Ohio, May G. The 700
union carpenters in Toledo have won'
their stril:e; and went back to work
on Saturday, receiving." $2.40` for
eight hours, instead of $2.25 for nine
hours, as was the case before the
strike.
British Miners Divided.
London; May 6. -There are, further
indications that the coal -owners
merchants are. wavering; in regard. to
the advisability of urging the min-
ers e s to close the pits.
The divisions
P Islons
among men, too, are 'becoming more
marIced,
The Derbyshire !liners' Associa-
tion, representing•, 30,000' persons; on
Saturday unanimously passed a re-
solution against the export tax.' on
coal, but• by a"smna11 majority decid-
ed not to stop work.
On the other hand, the Northum-
berland delegates, at a meeting at.
Newcastle, _unanimously ,decided to
support the stripe.
The Durham miners, at a meeting,
agreed to abide by the decision., of
the National Conference,
The Lancashire `and. Cheshire min-
ers took up a similar attitude. Those
of the Yorkshire voted against the
strike, the' opinion being expressed
that if the men agreed to' a. 'shut=
down of the pits, the>owners 'should
continue paying their wages,
�� ,/ _
7�' f — '
1l
Biml.
NEST FOR SITTING HEN.
!holes are bored in"the box for ven-
tilation.
When a hen shows a strong inclina-
tion to sit, I make a: nest' in the
and' box, put intwo or three china 'eggs.
and shut the heli in. The next afte•-
Ip.00n I open the door and lift her off
' to feed. After; she becomes accus-
1
.toned
to the
new
nest the real a eggs
!re put underher. Keep the box
a,closed during the day and open late
in the afternoon so she can come off
0 to feed.
'1 hen it is not practicable to give
this care, the door is 'simply taken
off at noon andreplaced at night.
Alrnost all the hens lay before noon
and the sitting hen isnot apt to be
disturbed after 'dinner. :.>I have fre
quenti.y bought -sitting: hens from
I, people who do not care for them. If
a hen is carefully moved after dark,
I there is seldom any, trouble about
her sitting in the new quarters.
I
FRUIT TREE ,BORERS.
Valuable Suggestions Condensed From an
Experiment Station Bulletin.::
Many orchards suffered a heavy
and unnecessary loss during the last.
Summer - rrom the attacks of borers.
Most . farmers ' do not, notice that
there is anything wrong with the
trees. .until the leaves turn yellow
and begin, to fall in midsummer. Af-
ter this stage has been reached there
is little hope for the tree, and it dies
before frost. A glance at the tree
wille
b sufficient to see thate:
th bark
on the trunk is dead and black in ir-
regular spots and lines. Just be-
neath the dead bark fs the borer's
burrow filled with worm dust. If a
large spot of bark 'is killed, the bark
and wood begin to rot, aiid are soon
filled with a hnushroolngrowth which
develops the fruiting portion on the
outside of the -trunk and resembles
that which is seen on rotten logs.
The rot limy hasten the death of the
tree, but a tree that is sound '. and
free from blemish' is very seldom if
ever attacked by this rot. The best
thing to do is, to keep the tree free
from borers and other injuries. ,.The
litnd should be kept free from, grass
and weeds and well cultivated. Good
clean cultivation is worth more than
all the washes and dressings that
canbe applied to prevent borers. A
good wash, however, is often worth
MAY BE TROUBLE YET. •
Friction Between Northwestern Railway
and Its Employes.:
London, May 6. -The long -deferred,
but inevitable struggle between the
railways of England and the employ-
es't
upon� r
th eaters
to be precipitat-
ed by a dispute with the. Northwest-
ern Railway, the greatest English
system.
The directors recently ,dismissed
eight men, arid transferred others
who were concerned in a libel case,
brought by a district superintendent
against a newspaper of . the union.
The paper alleged that the superin-
tendent was a drunkard, but did not
produce any evidence to support the
charge, and the jury gave a verdict'
for the plaintiff. The company then, '
as a result of an investigation, 'dis- 1
ciplii:ed the men onthe ground that
they were engaged in an alleged con-
spiracy. The company's case thus
far is weak, so far as the public is
concerned, because while, announcing
the reasons for the action, it does
not give the facts, and the men deny
the charge that the union made this
a test case.
The crisis will probably be reaches}
this week, : when the directors will
give a final decision, from which the
chairman announces in yesterday's •
papers there will be no change.
Electric Linemen on Strike. •
Boston, May 6. -The strike of the
electric' linemen, decided upon Thurs-
day night, took place on Saturday,
and involves about 400 men.
Kingsville Glass Men Back at Work.
Windsor, Ont., May 6. -The strike
at the Kingsville Glass Works isoff,
and the men have gone back to
work,
NEW EXPLOSIVE TO BE TESTED.
Ironclad Scorpion to Be Fitted as Target
For Flagship Crescent.
Hamilton, Bermuda, May 6. -The
coast defence ironclad Scorpion, now
at Bermuda, is to be fitted as a tar-
get .for shells loaded with a, new ex-
plosive after the manner of blie ex-
periments ' with the old battleship
Belle Isle.
She Will be started under easy
steam and will be shelled by the
first=class cruiser Crescent, flagship
of the British North_ American and
West. Indies station; flying :the :flag
of Vice -Admiral Sir Frederick Bed-
ford, The main battery of the Cres-
cent consists of 19 4 -inch guns surd
12 6 -inch gun, quick -firers.
Americans bird french -Canadian Catti°.
Albany, N. Y., May 6. -Articles of
incorporatio(1 of the 13i eeders' Asso-
ciation of Trench-Canadi.an 'Cattle of
the United Stiltes of America were
filed on Saturday with the Secretary
of State. The directors are: 'Me11111
IT. Merron arid Aaron S. Snyder cif
Tlowe':s Cave'; Charles E. Colborn of
Poh•tla.nciville; Wi1Uaiu. 3. ilfciVtnrdy
of Coni.lin; Gorge 111 !Bell of Rome;
.
and Jelin Gardiner ''of. P1lilitiilc,l fig i
The l a
Tire principal office 15 11 91inr'haK19
ton, ,a `#,'..
many times what it costs to apply
and will do much toward preventing
the attacks of borers and other : in-
sects. = A one -pound can of cencen
trated lye dissolved in two or three
gallons of water makes a vary good
tree w
ash.nether good wash o c an
be made of one-half pint pine tar,
one-half pint carbolic acid, and two
P
gallons soft soap. These washes can
S
easily be applied with an old white:-
wash
hite-wash brush or a swab made of old
rags tied on the end of a stick. The
wash should be applied two or three
times to the •trunk and large limbs
during , the spring and early sum-
mer.
Plant a 'Plot of Cow Beets.
I think gm an farmers and articu=
larly those; who have no silo, lose a
great opportunity in failing to plant
a field or : plot of cow beets. On
good land it is easy to grow °12 to
45 tons per acre. These roots will
keep, without any trouble in any cel-
lar. or . frost -proof basement, and
prove agreat addition to the win-
ter food for cattle and hogs. In no
other way: have we ever been c>nabled
to winter brood sows et! so little,
Cost. l:rl Alarc}i we were, feeding a
bushel per day to our six calves and
they appeared to thrive With. little
or 110 grain dia.nd l'',Lri.iher.
Value of reeding Standards.
reeding standards are useful ` as
guides rather than as rules. Any
standard is better than n n but th
season's feeding campaign, accord
uuce wuth sundry considerations,
They: niay be used in calculating a
,ton or in planning a season's feed-
.
iig campaign.
Y`lennfiness in Cheese Staking,
Tlie greatest cleanliness must be
observed in all stages 61 cheese mak-
ing. . The vessels ' nlnst'be 'washed
he
v+'Lh.boilln. tv-fr'
h � Water and subjected to
live steam if possible. %5i t,1lout such
proeaiitions the best results are m-
1)ossi bee.
° ia.rn'• 44 su. o 14. - .,
A SHREWD HEN.
!Flow She Worked a Scheme to Sava!
Her Neck.
"I don't care nothin 'bout a hen's
morals s'long as she's a good layer,"
remarked a beetle browed man to a fel-
low vegetable vender as they were
about to enter a restaurant' on State
street the other day. "No, sirree! An
if she can't la T it ri
of her
d mighty
g m bhty
sclinn
Y
i d I Yes,
sir.
b.
"But I had a hen las' fall what was
a caution. Lay! She couldn't lay
down! She wa'n't no earthly good as
a layer, an yet she was the most likely
hen I had. She was a gay deceiver,
an, say, she netted me more egg money
than all the rest of the flock put to-
gether. I had noticed for some time
that she was a' dead loss in the yard,
an one day I said to my old woman
that I guessed the next time we had
company we'd better let her figger in
the dinner. She was a-eatin corn right
at my feet at the time, an when I went
on to state to the woman that there
was no use in keepin a hen what didn't
lay none she, perked up her head an
looked at me long an earnestly. Says
my woman, 'I'11 bet that hen knows
what you are sayin, Daniel.' Says I:
'I hope to gum she does, for I mean
business. No aigs, no fodder, in my
yard.'
"That hen stood as if slie was turned
to stun for 'bout a minnit and then
scuttled off. The next mornin when I
went out she come up a-cluekin an act-
in queer. At last I made out that she
wanted me to foller>her. She led the
way to a ole toolhouse, an : if there
wa'n't close to a dozen of fresh laid
aigs. Course I was surprised. I know
ed she hadn't laid no aigs for several,
weeks. Well, I took 'em in, an the
next =ruin I found the same thing.
Then I begin to feel interested, more
so 'cause George Perry told me at the
storeh
t at afternoon that his hens
wa'n't la'
none
y1n lies my neighbor,
you know. That night I watched.
Purty soon I see'd my nonpayin hen
a-leadin a hullcolony of Perry's hens
across lots to the toolhouse.
"Then I understood. She couldn't
lay no aigs herself, but she was tryin`
to save her hide by infiuencin her
neighbors. An, do you know, she kept,
that up till snow come. An I'm savin
her, 'cause she knows on what condi-
tions she keepsoutof the stew. Yes,
sir. She's a shrewd hen, an if she was
a man she'd life my mortgage inside of
a year." -
His Orders.
An Irishrecruithad the misfortune
to part company with his horse. Ac-
cording to custom, the sergeant strode
up to him and demanded, "Did you re-
ceive'orders to dismount?"
"I did, sorr."
"Where from?"
"Prom hind quarters, yer honor!"
said Paddy, with a grin. -Tit -Bits.
An Incorrigible Brute.
"They tell me that you have been.
tra in
vel g abroad, said the young wo-
man who tries to make conversation.
And the man wbo seizes the slightest
pretext to be disagreeable answered:
"Perhaps you will be kind enough to
explain how I could have gone abdoad
without traveling.
Accounted Tor.
"I wonder why we always have some
very bleak weather after the beginning
of spring," the observant boarder re-
marked.
"Oh, the weather bureau has some
winter remnants to work off," the dry
goods boarder said. -Pittsburg Ohroni-
c1e-Telegraph.
Criticism.
"Some novelists don't know ' what
they're talking about. here's one wbo
speaks of a girl's 'raven hair.' "
"What's wrong with it?
"All wrong, Ravens don't wear hair;
they wear feathers." -Philadelphia
Times.
Only Open en DateIle e Had
Magistrate -How did you comea to rob
this man in broad daylight on a. fre-
quented .thoroughfare?
Highwayman -I couldn't help it, your
worship; I had an engagement, for ev-
ery night of that week.
When Charm Meets Charm.
Mr. Jackson -I done liab my rabbit's
toot erlong, but she give me de mahble
heabt jes' same.
Mr. Johnson-Mebbe she done hab
her rabbit's foot erlong,too. Smart Set.
Sensational Turn.
Blobbs-He told me hair raising
story.
Slobbs-About what?
Blobbs-The profits In Belgian rab-
bits.
His Threat,
Lovesick Monk -It you refuse me,
Angelina, I'll go to the lion and eall
hien a liar. -New Yorl? Evening Jour-
nal.
CoOrtesr,
ti ] '' ,
'4 relicsaki
tele
�su1 i
,,rl 1 boy's mottles;
"I hope you are polite to everybody."'
"7 01 011, I atm. I sleked: the dog on a
tramp, but I said 'Excuse n:o' after,
Ward."--•,Wesllingten Star
00 NOT RUN
11116 question that must interest you..
Have you your New Suit ? If
not, drop in and see las at the
first opportunity and let "us
show you a few prices of the
Fancy, Worsteds and Scotch
Tweeds.
Have you seen the new Stale and
Staples
Therring bone patterns. The
are beauties. p y
A big range of Blues and Black, Irish
Serges,at the old prices.
If you want a black we have what you
want in Twills, Venetians and
Clays.
OVERCOATS
Overcoats in Beavers, Meltous, Curls,
Naps and Montanacts.,
All work done in the latest style and
fit guaranteed.
V .. H. GtIE E
Opposite Post Office
Exeter--%
ROLLER
MILLS.
Farers 9�(e�doq a
is>1
7
E have
procured a
car road of Thomas
Phosphatewhich
whi.ch
L
is- the best Fertilizer on
the market.
Give us a Gail
J. GOBDLEDICK & SON.
—o •
We
O
are constantlyt
receiving n1
new
a,
goods and it is a
pleasure ,for us to
show them to you.
Our Pianos and Organs are the
most beautiful in tone and appearance
that money can buy.-
We also , show Violins, Gutars,
Mandolins, Mouth Organs, Methodist
Hymn. and Sunday School Books, also
Presbyterian Books of praise.
Sewing Machines and Repairs al-
ways in stock,
Sheet Music of all Kinds.
CALL AND SEE US.
S. MARTIN
OUR
NEW PREJJI!SES.
We have moved into our new pre-
mises opposite the Central. Hotel and
are now open for business. Our pre-
mises are modern and we give your
modern and up-to-date goods and
made in the most modern style.
We Per onall .
Cut.Eveiy Garment
That's made up at this establishment
-as well as fit it -and look after
all the details. This is only one
reason•why.our prices are moder-
ate.
Gent's Furnishings . .
Come and see us in our newplace
of business and examine our stock of
Gent's Furnishings.
Bert. Knight.
REPAIRING
l'f �-ou want your Repawere dor, e '.
to 1L. HICKS -Watches, Clocks<
i
and:J'ewelxy a specialty:.
i16Al2RAAf+i LICENSE,
Marriage Licenses issueciand Wcci-
dingliillgs always o:'t hand.
Tj,-:anson'S Bloeko