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The Clinton News Record, 1931-12-03, Page 6-Page' 6 11 VALUES AND BARGAIN That will again Pack Plunsteel Brea. 'Store with Buyer, Meu's 1 -buckle Jer- $ 1 °CV 9 gavotte Galoshes A Men's 2 -buckle Jer- $ 1 .98 9 Q O seyettc Galoshes �P 1 Men's 3-buekle jar- $2 1 5 seyettc'Galoshes eV Men's 4 -buckle jar• $249 seyettc Galoshds e o 7 TITE CLINTON NEWS=RECORD THURSDA:y;; DECEMBER 3;'19.11' a leire,seseBow Etc. . RNA f. DARING PRICE SLASH MEN'S TWEED AND WORSTED SUITS & O'COATS $5,00 $9,95 $12.95 and $14•95 Women's So -Sight Rubber GALOSHES, black CI Co or brown, 2 dente �P ee With $2.29 Jiffy Slide . . , , . Men's Reg, $1.50 DRESS SHIRTS:. 89c Men's Reg. to $1.25 9C WORST SHIRTS : •8 s9 Men's Reg. to $4.50 Fancy Pullover; $+p 49 SWF,ATERiS Men's .Reg.to $2.75 Heavy Wool TweedQ 1 59 VESTS ` Men's Reg. to $4.75, All -Wool. $29 SWEATERS °8 d ,.41 Bros. Crowds Crowds! Opening Day Draws Capacity Crowds. Store Packed Tight with. eager buyers, and no wonder, Cl• when Quality Merchandise is Saerified to Prices tho Lowest known in Local Retail History, • Daringly the.Sale sweeps on, no let up in the going of Sens sational Values and Bargains. ' Read these items carefully. Melfi, Come and Buy with Complete 3``{� • Confidence. T 4.aI, .,,'d , i'ni%� tif'it=4J ''x"' -i '�i'n ;" Men's Reg, to 12.75 g gx 9 Jersey Knit o SWEATERS . 1 9Y Boys' fined Leather 25C Men's Wool. Lined • LEATIijSt MITTS 59 C WMen's,. 9CIC WORK PANTS 150• Pair Red Bark 98c OVERALLS 200 Men's Reg. $1.76 .$9C Faney Tweed .CAPS , . 90 Prs. Reg. to, $2.75 el DRESS PANTS. • .. • eA 109 yCAS•ty�t � r}: Stanfield's Blue Label $ e 59 Men's Heavy Wpol SHIRTS, DRA4CrER$'� 69, ( Women's Chamoisette 944, Stanfield's Red Label COMB, U'WEAR. '' SHIRTS, DRAWERS $ 39 Boys' Fleeced U'tvear 39C Children's Ribbed •� C • sutlers, DRAWERS 7 SCHOOL BIOSE, 19C Men's Heavy Fleeceogs' Fleeced, Comb. pr.. �511IRTS, DRAWERS • CO,„5979C Children's Wool Worsted UNDERWEAR .. sonooL HOSE 9c 1Ient4 Heavy Fleece ti ° •p Boys' Fancy Tweed 95 C COMB, WWEAR eiId Ge BLOOMERS . Wams. Men's heavy wool I'iblled 98c Boys' Fancy Tweed SILK HOSl7 . 39C siikRTS, DRAWERS LONG PAFancy 5 9S , Women's Heavy Fleeced BLOOMERS ..... 29c MEM A Group Men's, Boys' TWEED OAPS , 4.9C MMenReg.•en's Reg. $1.50 all-all-wool�79 9C I DRESS GLOVES . . Men's Reg. $2.25 Lit.' $ e 9� ed K'sid Dress. G75 LOVESewA . $2. N $1 FELT HATS . Boys' All -Wool SWEATERS.. -$..2.2* , yC Men's Reg, to S2 ,25 $ i • in SWiEATERS S 11E Women's SLIPPERS OXFORDS 98c, $1.49 Reg. to $4.50 Men's es) 7y.1 DRESS OXFORDS :'i'�1•® Reg. to $8.50 Men's $ 98 BLACK OXFORDS +WY dd�y Reg. to $3.50 Boys' el SCHOOL SHOES. V A •9u Men's 0 eyelet White No: 1 Quality Mackinaw RUBBERS .. ,,... }j72.49 Men's 2 -Buckle No. 1 $9°A9 OVERSHOES - , .. `IF - Girl's Ribbed DRAWERS . MITTS 2 Fo:5c, 29c, 33c Children's Regular 60e 9c C TOQUES . 8-4 Unbleached 39c SHEETINGS • Pure Linen Roller 12 - C TOWELLING, yd. 4" Jersey GALO'SIIPS Black or Brown $ i °98 2 Dome, for Jiffy Slide For ' Men's Reg, 30e WOOL SOCKS ]Vim's Reg. 35c WOOL SOOKS' Res'. 39,76 All -,Wood . $g°5 5"]b B:LANXETS . ep 12-.4 Flannelette ptl BLANKETS :... Girl's School Shoes Q �( Names ..... eal 95 c 9 $ 1 °2 9 .4;1141tb,rPr .N7 Men's Reg. 60e. Silk and 90 C Wool. SOCKS • Men's Fancy Dress q C SOCKS, 2 pairs for .: 2e7 Men's Reg. 50e SILT( TIES • Men's Reg. 60c SILK TIES .. . Men's Reg. 50e WOOL GLOVES . 29c . 39c 29c Men's Reg. to $2.60 ei 39. FLANNEL • SHIRTS eP Men's Reg. 75e WOLSEEY SOCKS Men's •heavy striped Flannelette PAJAMAS 59c $1.19 1 s, arammoneasesssueeesisseausameeziaireirseemasseaserearreasestuiresoessisseasesaaseramenesesseassessamerisassamainueseaceteasesmiesseneserisesegamistel .• • .-.it-11',,' P _ e e. AND HAPPENINGSOf_ INTEREST TO FARMERS araromatacamommagarammomoomemsoommea Timely Information for the Busy Farmer • ( Furnished by the Department of Agriculture ) The championship trophy at the Royal Winter Fair for the best half bushel of wheat, held by the prai- rie Provinces for many years back, cane to Ontario this year. The win- ner was Douglas Hart, whose farm aG located in East Zona, near Woodstock. He makes a specialty of seed grain and has been a suc- cessful exhibitor en a number of occasions. Champion P1':ato Grower Sbncoe County ivon a place on the potato neap of Canada at the Royal Winter Fair when the cham- pionship for the 'best bushel of pos tatoes was won by Edmund Mete; rice of Tiny Township. The prize of $15 in cash and a gold watch suitably engraved is a much coveted honor and is always keenly contest- ed. Heretofore it has been won by file Maritimes.' The Ontario victory should do a great deal towards fo- cussing public attention on Ontario potatoes. It is interesting to note that Mr. Maurice is a comparatively recent convert to the value of growing certified potatoes. Up until two years ago his crop was of the nondee script variety. Through the local branch of the Department of. Agre- e—tame he was interested in potatoes of the better kind, and now his Doll eys have captured the premier prize for Canada. Winter Care of Live Stock' With the e proach of winter, farmers should make sure that the barns in which their stock are to pass the cold months are clean and free from possible lefactioes diseasee er parasites. Most p ogratsive stockmen whitewash their ,stables at least once a year, but frequent duet" ngs with an old ,broom ' are needed. to keep the cobwebs and (lust down. l3efore the cattle '1eeet the •pastures. for the season, it is good pretence to Inspect the whole heal `for tpaksilite skin disease or parasites. Such dis, eases as ring-worxn, scab or mange, lice or warbles, ere dangerous and each needs special treatment. Ring- worm is doubly dangerous because Humans niay contract it through handling or from currycombs and Marshes. Tincture of iodine applied daily following washing with soap and water will cure ring -worm, but scabies or mange need to be clipped in or sprayed with special 'solutions such as crude petroleum or equal parts of kerosene and cottonseed oil, which mixture is also recommended for lice. No animal can give its best milk production or put on flesh when feeding such parasites. Guelph Winter •Fair On December 7 to 10 the 48th an- nual Ontario Provincial Winter Fair, will beheld in the city of 'Guelph. Ontario at International Ontario Grain Growers have for- warded ..to .the International Orlin and Hay Show at Chicago Mote than one hundred entries of grain, grass seeds and cont. There i4ere more entries . for •grain this year than In the record year of 1930.wben 'Ontar, io giesWer's wort a dliampionship„'and , forty other prizes., favorable, the shipment will no doubt ers, both in quantity and quality. It open. up a new and extensive trade was the only crop to remain green channel for Ontario barley. • :for pasture during resent very dry One ear left 1Viontreal by a C.P.R. years in Western Ontario.” boat to London on Nov. 26. The se- Mr. J. A. Carroll, Director of the cond ear left Montreal on the Head Crops .and Markets Branch, favors Line boat Dunnaff Head on Nov. 27. the idea as hardy home grown seed The results of, these shipments is so plentiful and ib would be great - will be watched with keen interest ly to the .advantage of Ontario and by barley growers and grain deal- added profits to the farmers if our ers. alfalfa acreage were. doubled. "A. Preparing Turkeys Turkey growers are now begin- ning to finish or fatten their birds for the Christmas holidays. It is customary to begin the process of preparing the luscious turkeys for the nation's festive dinner tables by feeding them small amounts of grain which gradually are increased until the birds are on full feed. Due to the large supply of wheat available, this grain should be used to advan- tage in the fattening ration. Wheal; has nearly the same fattening qual- ities as corn, but does not produce the rich yellow color of flesh that yellow corn' does. It is important, however, that all grains be free from Moldiness and they should be fed in hoppers to counteract certain dis- eases that cause heavy' loss. Do not confine turkeys, especially 1f they have been. reit on. a 'range, for range birds canhot stand confinement. campaign was conducted in 1925 an 1826," said Mr. Carroll, "which con tributed to the rapid increase in ae of Ontario and the Huntingdon -How - ick districts of Qy.ebec by Mr. David Hunter, Heldman for the Canadian Ayrshire Breeders' Association. They spent eight days in two Canadian National Railways box ears •bound for Vancouver, and during the trans - Canada journey were attended by two experienced herdsmen. At Van- couver they will be transferred to the liner to complete the remaining 5800 d miles of their journey at sea. They - will be approximately 28 days on the " water. reage from 381,000 in 1924 to over 806,000 in 1927. In spite of very severe weather and poor seed crops, with high prices • during the past four years, our acreage is still 'under 650,000." Weekly Crop Report . , Reports from most districts show that fall work is about completed Live stock and sheep are in goo condition due to open pasturing wea .het•. Eggs are now bringing good • prices. In Lincoln they are selling.as follows: Special, 50e; extras, 45e 'fresh firsts, 42e; pullet extras, 38c; and fresh pullets, 85c, The Oxford representative advises that the -or- ganization of the Oxford Fruit Co- operative under the management of Mr. George Laird operating a central packing plant, has been the salvation of the fruit industry in that section. There has been no waste in the or- chards that were taken tare of and there is every prospect of reaisonab, ly good prices fee the fruit. Down in Prescott and Russell the chicken thieves have been active lately, whole flecks of hens and turkeys disappear; ing over 'night. This is very disc eouragiiig at this 'time. when most farmers figure on the poultry side- line for cash returns. a • Sow Alfalfa "This is the year to soW alfalfa,' stated Mr. W. R. Reek, in announce Mg :the plaice of the Ontario Stand- ing Field roto» Committee to promote the use of legumes• freely next spring. Oetbrio hail a good crop this year of alfalfa and red clover seed and $ as expected that both of these will be reasonable in price next spring. Alslke Indy be included also as, high tariffs- diseourage export. , Mr. Reek says: "An a soil builder„ pasture and hay Producer, alfalfa stands supreme. At Xtldgetowe we praetise seeding all grain craps to alfalfa or miixtere of alfalfa, and other legumes. Even for plowing dome, .alfalfa, opens eier the soil and adds nitrates 'arid other, plant tools to 'ti •carne 'Worth 'tnih moire ,thein the 'price of 'seed. • It also' •inlnrodes the `netrelfeinicel cbied felon of the soil. for the, 'production ;:'•of 'hemi., boxte fall 't'rheat, "and othet craps. AAs it lleey been, alfalfa out -yields ;ill oth- Ontario Barley' S'or Britain. i. As a result of deliberations.. be- tvi'een the Canadian high Commis; siouer, Hon. G. Howard Ferguson, and Col. the Hon. T. L. Helenedy, Minister of Agriculture, two cars of high quality Ontario Tilting b'ar- ley will shortly go forward to Gre'a't. Britain. These cars are being shipped as a trial shipment by the Ontario •11Tar- keting Board, and if -the quality meete ',the standaiils of the Riitis'h Rh in t5tdlSirs %slid. 'tee Tina Vet:arl iaai its PRIZE CANADIAN CA'T`TLE EMIGRATE TO IION,O ltf)NO To Be Used For Breeding lyul poses and 'P.e'Supply, High Grade Milk Por `.:lie Anglo -Sanaa 'Set. tlemeitt Round fee Hong Kong, China, 85 "heed, of pore ;bred Ayrshire milk eews recently left eitstern Canada on a journey of nearly. 8,000 miles.. 'These emigrant cattle were selected from prize herds in the Dundas area These cows are to be used for breeding purposes by the Dairy Ice and Cold Storage Co., of Hong Kong, and to supply high grade milk for the white settlement of that city, according to Mr. F. W, Wash, Sup- erintendent of Agriculture for the Canadian- National Railwaysand who arranged their shipment. ' They ale above the average in breeding and production and are from two to six years of age. They are among the healthiest animals in Canada, for, in addition to the tuberculin, they have had to .pass successfully several oth- er teeod tests for foot and mouth disease and other more obscure tnal- mites. This shipment is in the nature of an experiment, which if sueceesfuk will probably lead to further exports of Canadian cattle to the Orient. In addition to the eastern Ayrshires, a further consignment of British Col- umbia Holsteins also were forwarded to Hong Kong last month. _. "THE OLD ORDER CIiANGETR ' YIELDING' PLACE TO THE NEW". A few weeks ago the majority of the inhabitants of -Mose Factory, in Northern Ontario, saw for the first titre a locomotive, as the inspection :train of the Teniisk•amnieg and North - nee `0rite:no Railway steamed into ;this historic I-Iudson's Bay trading post, the :second to be ' founded. in +Canada. by,the "Great Company," up. en the cottipletion of steel to the salt \eater. -Tide water had again been tapped in. • the far - North, first at Churchill, on the kludsoe Bay, and now on its southern extension, James Bay. An interesting comparison Of 'trav- el conditions in the North may be made by it 'glance over the last de- cade, ` When in 1921, three.-U'.ited States navait ba)loonists, were .driven nortloward 'by sto'rmt and made a forced landing near Moose Factory, it took then. some days to regain civilization and the end of steel. In 1931, the Canadian National Railways arranged to conduct the first tour to Moose Factory, for the following summer, under the auspices of the Toronto Young People's Conference of the United Church. It is expected that more than 100 people will make this trip and that a special train will be required through out the journey. The tentative itin- erary provides for it boat trip on Lake Temagami and side trips to the mining fields of Rouyn and Tinning.• A day and a night will be spent at Moose Factory ,itself, sleeping ac- commodation being provided for on , the train. This will be one of the first large parties to travel over the new extension of the T and N.O. to James Bay and will mark the be- ginning of what' is confidently be- lieved will become a regular rail- way terminal.—'Canadian National Magazine, GOOD OLD.FASHIONED THRIFT, PRACTISED BY GOVERN- MENTS AND PEOPLE, TIME ONLY WAY OUT OP DIFFICULTIES • Canada is over -governed. The a- mount spent for federal, provincial and municipal', government is simply staggering. H. Napier Moore, -edi- tor of ,MacLean's -Magazine, in an address at a meeting of the adver- tising men held reecntly in Toronto, stressed the alarming growth of tax- etion. Mr. Moore said in part as follows: "We find that the depression has given tine country 'and others one sof the, most vainable , assets that it could ,possibly secure, the ability to think, "There are more people. working for federal, provincial and municipal govermineets than work for factories and industries.' Fifteen per cent, of the. population •of this countryle en- gaged in wonting for one govern-, meet or another. The business .of' government•is increasipg its cost ' v- 'ery% day. ' . .. "The average citizen, paid. $165 in ;taxes in 1913, and in 1920, $405. In 1930, " the taxation .:had • i'iseir to $508,25. in 1913, the federal, pro - spent $209,600,000; in 1920 they spent $696,000,000; and in 1930, $964. 000,000. Tho federal government of this country today collects more money in taxes from the city of To- ronto alone than it did 'from the en- tire dominion of Canada a year be- fore the war. "It seems to me that it is a mat, ter of interest to every man in this room, and the representative of ev- ery business, that every tax planed upon a commodity or public servl is adding something to the cost the product, and is making it ;,est that much more difficult for the cus- tomer—that every tax added to bus- iness is a discouragement against the furtherance of a plan of expension. If a sufficient virile public opinion can be roused against extravagance, we are going to be in a much health- ier position, for the simple reason that the dangers of a recurrence of the slump are lessened." Two Carloads of Buffalo To Riding Mountain Park Returning tothe plains of Manitoba where the thundering hoofs of their proud forefathers once pounded•be- neath the surge of mighty bodiest,. two carloads of 'buffalo have been. shipped over Canadian National Rail, ways from the Government Park at Wainwright, Alta., to be placed: in Riding Mountain' National Park. The buffalo wereunloaded at Ashville, Manitoba, and will be confined in' the ..; new National Park, where the Feder- al. Department of the Interior will establish an exhibition herd of these• majestic animals. .One ear contain- ed 5 male buffalo, carefully selected' from the aurin herd at Wainwright, and the other car carried 18 young cows. ' MISTAIIES Everyone makes mistakes, - out mistakes may be the basis of suc- cess. They often point the way' not to go, the way not to act, the mater, ail not to use, bbs method not to employ. There would be little pro- 1 grass were no mistakes made. The chief harm from mistakes is Prone covering them up er trying to cov- .er• them up and in failure to profit:: ik vinelal and municipal ' governments. by' .berm:,--1'1`he- Went..