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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1890-10-31, Page 7Is. D• OCT. 31, 1890, THE BRUSSELS POST CO NS= 1 roverest a `A+ 4'ts, READY-MADE CLOTHING, HATS, CAPS, MILUNERY, CROCKERY, t C To be Slaughtered in the Village of Brussels during the next few months... THE Rush to our Establishment these days is becoming Terrible, and the peopla. are now fully realizing that we are going to leave Brussels in a few months, and they consider that it is, best to take time by the forelock and get what goods they will require for the next year from us before. :TB, we leave. They are asking us and themselves the question, Where will they be able to get goods cheap: 8. when we are gone P This question we cannot at present settle for them, as we do not know any other men in this County who can furnish goods to them at the prices we have been selling at, or the prices. we are selling at to -day. &o. and Is. bite to tied ock 'es, ;on - at cidy the ded V to s who sell our ;11. Ewe kin - and of !find • 4 dry. Think of it We have distributed to the people in this neighborhood, since we came here, upwards of $40,000 Dollars worth of General Goods at Wholesale rrioeso We defy any other man. in the County of Huron to show a similar record, Our presence in this community has not only helped the farmers who dealt. with us, but our name has been used by men who have not dealt with us, but they have been meas_ enough to use our name as a leaver to get goods cheap from other merchants, while they were not mea, enough to support us while we were keeping the price of goods down to suit their pockets. We have, since we came here, done away with some of the country storem. around Brussels. We have taken the trade of what's left from them to such an extent that their cus- tomers have taken the advantages of our selling cheap and are doing their trading in Brussels with use. at the same time benefitting the hotel -keepers, hardware merchants, tinsmiths, harness makers, black.: smiths, wagon makers' and every branch of trade we do not carry. We have spent a fair portion of the margin on goods bought at 60c., 70c. and 76c. on the dollar in advertising and bringing people to Brussels to show them how cheap we could sell goods to them. Now, if this has to be left to business men who buy their goods regular you may look for big, long prices, and you people that buy the goods will have to pay the piper, the same as you have been doing where you have been buying your goods from the merchants the past summer who have been so extravagant in their expenses that they' must have the streets watered at your expense. If the people in and around Brussels had dealt with us as they should, from the inducements wo always had to offer them, we would have still stayed among them, but we are going, to leave them. to suffer by big profits and long prices for a few years and then they will know how to ap- preciate live men, whose aim has always been to build up the trade of Brussels and at the same- time. furnish the poople Goods at Wholesale Prices, thereby drawing the trade from Seaforth, Wingham, Lis— towel, Ethel, Blyth, Wroxeter and, all competing villages within a radius of thirty miles. gaupglaKom 04 MN ;, t,'4-,41p11ai4.,le!cl44?tt!an 411f11 ITO,tli;!Mala i4'1`1iPTAI :EiAI61Uirn mum isMPY$P= R4 i Nt t.!!1!14 °` "e must j'ag,t gay here that we ask all who aro Indebted to to to kindly Pay 79 at their Env,°liesb Co viab oa: as we'nlay loave Brusaels very alurulrtly at any time i. we get a stock of goods elsewhere at a price t.1 suit its, 0.11(1 it i;: 010011 ni ere satisGietory to we arc here, as we will have to leave our hooks in the hands of our attorney for collection when we are gone. Y*U;6 0ZBPLO I 1STT >..bi V A1.'',1'`.1' have 011 1 ialt_n's $ettleei w1 ilc, cctau. otw£s1s../.'\s cLER!