HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1910-09-29, Page 5THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1910
THE WINGHA.M. ADVA.NOE
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MR,
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THE WOOL IN OUR CLOTHING DOES NOT
COME --NO ?AWT OF IT---FWOM THE COT-,
TON FIELDS. MANY A LAMB •HAS HAD
HIS FLEECE SHOWN FOW THE BENEFIT OF
OUR CUSTOMERS.
WE SELL OUR CUSTOMERS ONLY SUCII
CLOTHING AS WE OU'RSELVES KNOW TO
DE GOOD. THE CLOTH XS ALL WIGHT ;
THE FIT IS ALL 'RIGHT; THE PRICE IS
ALL WIGHT.
COME IN AND SEE JUST HOW . GOOD A
-10 SUIT OF CLOTHES you CAN Buy FROM
US -FOW `013.50.
McGee & Campbell
CLOTHIERS Cd2, MEN'S FURNISHERS
a
Genuine Parchment Butter Paper for
sale at THE ADVANCE OFFICE.
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§ WINGHAM FALL FAIR
Sept. 29th and 30th
§ 0
GI .A. chance of your lifetime on 1
the above dates at
1 1
i W. G. Patterson's
_+ 1
z g JEWELRY STORE
8
4'
4'
4'
4'
4'
4'
4'
4'
4'
4'
4'
to buy all kinds of up-to-date
Jewelry at lower prices than
you ever heard of before. •
%Diamond Rings ; all kinds Stone
Rings ; Wedding Rings, the new
style ; Pendants ; Lockets ; Chains ;
Bracelets ; Pearl Brooches ; hand -
painted Brooches ; Ear Rings, that
you can wear without piercing the
ears ; Cuff Links ; Cut Glass ; Sil-
verware of all kinds ; Clocks ; and
we have the largest and best stock
of Watches, at the lowest prices,
ever sold in 'the county.
We also keep the largest assortment of Optical
Goods in. the county. Come in and get
your eyes tested, and see.
W. G. PATTERSON
THE GREAT WATCH DOCTOR
Opp. Queen's itsfel
Winghata, Oataitio
Who Would Live Thee?
Wild beasts and snakes were the
eause o 21,901 deaths in India in 1008,
states a blue book, Tigers killed 909
people, leopards 302, wolves 209, other
wild animals (180, and snakes 19,738;
while 17,020 wild animals and 70,491
snakes were destroyed. Of a popttla-
lation of over 201 'Winona in India,
277,728,48$ persons can neither read
T or T4rite in any language. The
deaths from fevers, cholera dysentery,
gm al !pox and plague totalled 8,-
053,007.
An Aged Couple.
On September 21st, in Leamington,
Ont., ALijor A. W. Morley, 81 years
old, was married to Mrs, 1Jary Wood,
aged 73. The happy couple will reside
in Leamington, after spending their
honeymoon at Cleveland and Detroit.
Major Morley is a veteran /6f the
American Civil War and carries two
bullets in his body as mementoes of
that strife, He came to Leamington
in July of this year and fell in love
with Mrs. Wood, who had made her
home in the town for a year and a
half.
FOR FALLING HAIR.
You Rua No Risk When You
Use This Renietl3r.
We promise you that, if your hair
is falling Mita and you have not let It
go too far, you can repair the damage
already done by using Rexall "93"
Hair Tonle, with persistency and
regularity, for a reasonable length of
time. It is a scientific, cleansing,
antiseptic, germicidal preparation,
that destroys microbes, stimulates
good circulation around the hair
roots, promotes hair nourishment,
removes dandruff and restores hair
health. It is as pleasant to use as
pure water, and it is delicately per-
fumed. It is a real toilet necessity.
We want you to try Rexall "03"
Hair Tonle with our promise that
it will cost you nothing unless you
are perfectly satisfied with its use.
It comes in two sizes, prices 50 cente
and 131,00. Remember, you can ob-
tain Rexall Remedies in this cora-
munity only at oar store --The Rex -
all Store. J. W. McKibbon.
Runaway,
Owen Sound is to have a dry dock,
says Plesherton Advance, in keeping
with the prevailing state of dryneas
in that town. The line between the
booze and temperance elements is
closely drawn up there. The writer
saw, a short time ago in that town,
an hotelkeeper's horse run away,
simply because a water waggon was
approaching,
A High Altitude.
It may be interesting to know that
the O. P, R. climbs a grade of 772 feet
in going from Walkerton to Saugeen
,Tnnetion. This is a higher hill than
Jack and Jill climbed to get a pail
of water, says the Walkerton Times.
The railway follows the Saugeen
river from Walkerton to Saugeen
junction, a distance of 38 miles, At
Dundalk, which is only two stations
from Saugeen Junction, is the high-
est railroad point in Ontario, In go-
ing from Walkerton to the Junction
the O. P. R. climbs an average grade
of 20 feet for sivery mile travelled.
It Pays
Figure
it out in
dollars and
cents. If you
" can make five tons
of coal last as long as
six tons and with coal at
$6.00 a ton, don't you make
$6,00 clear. Now the cast iron
range illustrated will save 20% of
your fuel when hard coal is burned. It
is fitted with that gfeatest of modern
stove improvements the
GURNEY -OXFORD ECONOMIZER
It is a device that is put on Gurney -Oxford Stoves alone,
and in putting them out for your inspection we feel justly
proud of the choice we have made in selecting this line of
satisfaction giving stoves. Look them over on our floors,
For
-111...44100.
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ri pot
er, T21) 01
ecaL.
Itse'
W. J. BOYCE
WINGliAM
MAXWELL'S
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1 Big Clearing Sale I
IN FULL SWING
1
I I
I Do not delay to leave your order or that 1
I Suit and Overcoat. Remember the
watchword.— I
"DO IT NOW" t I
,
Delays are dangerous, for although" we have a large
1 stock we 'might sell the entire business if the right
I man should come along. Those who have been in, I
say we should not be long in disposing of our stock
at the prices we're quoting. Call and be convinced.
I ' . 1
1
The Making and Trimming
Is just the same as at the original prices.
1
Robt. Maxwell
FOR SALE
lighted ; hot and eau %waft, upstairs and down ; inside closet ; flee -place ; cement floor in oellar.
earn. nouse nee nine room '-tour rooms
_firat:sjat, ;is. two_ 11.torey., prick_ IlL:ou.se _or ,corne,orwl
bedrooms and bathroom upstairs ; heated by furnace: electric
}IOW. MA.X WHLth
rtt4,ha:d Toti.
*
1
'4414-0, This Is The Place To
Get Your Clothes
Dig the borers out of the trees.
Be a progressive, if you know what
hat means.
The ram should be pastured
from the ewes.
away
The good horse will sell himself,
Why raise any other?
- Leaks in the barn and the house
roofs should, be fixed right. away.
Before taking the colt from the darn
be sure he has learned to eat grain.
If you have not already done so,
do not delay to cut the asparagus tops
and burn.
, The crop of children Is just as im-
bortant looking after and cultivating
as the field crops.
Think of the fruit season next year
and give the bushes and trees the at-
tention they need.
ProVide the dust bath for the hens
before the ground freezes and it is
impossible to get the dust.
in deciding what fruits to grow on
the farm be governed by those varie•
ties which do well in your locality,
Pin money for the farmer and his
family would be more plentiful if the
chickens were managed more intelli-
gently,
Now is the time to go through the
orchards and vineyards and pick co-
coons and egg clusters from the trees
and vines.
Good care of the work horses al-
ways pays. The season's hard work
should be offset by better care and
better feed.
The old corn crib can be made rat
and mice proof by lining with wire
netting. The cost of netting is more
than offset by the saving in corn,
The manure from a cow is worth
about $6 a year if hauled out to the
field at once; about $3 as handled on
the average farm. Do you see the
point?
The suspicious noise in the hen
house may be a weasel at work. Find
out, rout out and kill if you possibly
can. If you don't, rest assure Mr.
Weasel will.
Dirt hauled on the roads means
muddy roads next spring. Do road
filling and dragging in the spring.
Then in the fall, supplement the work
by good dragging again.
Improvements continue to be made
in the milking machines, so -that now
several seem to be doing satisfactory
work. Where 26 or more cows are
kept the machines prove profitable.
Clean up the orchards, burn all rub-
bish and you will not only destroy
many insect pests, but will remove
lurking places for mice who would
do injury to the trees during the win-
ter time.
ICnowing how much the cows are
giving in milk, and knowing how much
it costs to produce it, are two differ-
ent things. But the second is more,.
important than the first in carrying
on profitable dairying,
An all-around good fertilizer is
made up of 500 pounds of nitrate of
soda, 200 of good bone, 200 of acid
phosphate, 100 of muriate of potash;
apply at the rate of 200 to 300 pounds
per acre, This is Prof. Voorhees' for-
mula.
am.
Paralysis in pigs if not of long
standing may be helped and even
overcome by giving three drops of the
fluid extract of nux vomioa, in 15
drops of the oil of gaultheria, and a
tablespoonful of cod-liver oil twice.a
day for several weeks.
Store onions hi a loft, rather than
in a cellar, as in the latter place they
are apt to sprout. A few parsnips
can be well kept in the Cellar bY put-
ting in moist sand. Don't pull them
all, though, for freezing sweetens
them, Potatoes should be stored in
bins,
If you do not want to keep the cab.
bage in the cellar try this method:
Select the driest place in the patch,
pull up the cabbages and stand °close-
ly together, heads down. Cover with
soil from five to six inches, thinly at
first, so they will not heat, covering
only enough to prevent freezing as
the season advances. Thd burying
beds may be made from four to six
feet. wide. Cabbages in quantity
should never be stored in a cellar.
Ought TO Be Happy.
The farmer who owns a farm, is the
particular person who is fixed. Banks
may fail and factories close, 'workmen
strike and mines anspend.; merchants
fail and towns brim Unto may be
panicky and even crops may be short,
but the farmer who owns bis acres
will get along. Eo will live in com-
fort and quiet, with plenty to eat,
drink and wear. Ire is the most hi -
dependent man on earth. Yet there
are lots of them who do not appreci.
ate their situation,
Because:
OUR Goops ARE RIGHT
OUR PRICES ARE RIGHT
OUR STYLES' ARE RIGHT
The Clothes you buy means a
considerable outlay—the expendi-
ture of a good many dollars in
course of a year. It is your
desire to get and our desire to
give every possible cent's worth
of real value for every dollar
you spend for clothes.
That we do give you, at this store, the most
real value for the money, we will prove to
you if you will give us the opportunity.
See the Garments and you will be charmed by
their attractiveness. Try them on. and you will
be fascinated by the way they fit and hang.
Wear them and you will then fully realize
their enduring qualities— their unsurpassed all-
round excellence.
We have put forth our greatest efforts to gath-
er together, this season, a collection of Clothes
positively unmatchable at the prices we ask; we
° think we have succeeded.
JUST R8CEIVED.—New Coats, New Skirts,
New Wrappers, New Waists, New Dress
Goods and Silks, New Shoes, New Under-
wear, New Sweater Coats.
H. E. Isard & Co.
JUST A FEW FACTS.
ABOUT OUR STORE
We are no showing a very at-
tradtive assortment of New Pall
Suitings and Dress Goods, con-
taining the correct material for this
season.
All Wool Diagonal Serges in the popular shades,
combining style and durability.
Venetians, 54 ins, wide, pod weight and st-aple
colors, at only 50c per yd.—a snap.
All Wool Shepherd Plaids, 54 ins. wide.
Basket Weaves, Broadcloths, Satin Cloths, Cashmere
Plaids, etc., at prices to suit all.
This is to be a good Velvet season, and in an-
ticipation of that we have imported direct from
England a good range of shades for suits and
gowns.
We have a nice range of silks in the fashionable
Soft -French Pailettes, 40 ins, wide, at $1.75
per yd.
A splendid Black Taffetta Noblesse, at 75c.
Silk Elastic Belts, Fancy Beltings, Paisley Neck
Frills, Bows, Linen Collars and Beautiful Fancy
Ribbons in Paisley designs the newest thing
for Girdles, Trimming.
Come in and see our splendid line of new imported
Moreen Underskirts. They are generous in
width and beautiful in design, well made and
will give satisfactory wear. We have them in
all staple shades' from $r,25 to $3,25 each.
"itlidil!.....telothOte•WINIW•44.1.611*111
T. A Mills
WINGHAM