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The Wingham Advance, 1918-11-21, Page 8
Pare eight woluotxxxxxxx • 44006 y, •, p,, t u,. .,,,,,a u,R!U.4I .A iu,ne�tllil, i_1 -.I- _ ,.-uaun.L.n_:1410064111,20,._,.�ulll_!..ulnweie.,+�iwiu.�,�,e.•L,�inbui.!.uvu La tXlec XX XX 'r "'`444. 4444444eteeeneee 4t JaIiie:Awn rt Sir John Molash 'tr Mr, Tho., Wu.411 bald the taepleoralt ++ instated in hgaue lain week He will N HANNA & CO.1 a,d:�' °�' Ladies' Winter Coats Fancy Silks Tritntned with Fur Collars and Plush T/r'in ined(��r fat reduced prices Prices $25.00, 35.00, 40..00 Extra Quality in Muskrat Jackets in very dark Northern Rat, sizes 36, 38, 40, and 42 Prices $120, -and 185. Hudson Seal Coats and Muffs, extra fine quality, plain apd trimmed. . Prices $185. ani. 275. Silk Lengths and Dress Lengths in Newest Fancy Stripes • $2.00 to. 3.50 per yard. Fancy Goods for Overseas and Christmas in Newest Novelties a T cia.Is � �r p 20 doz. Children's Vests and Drawers on sale at 25.cents 'each. Boys' Heavy Ribbed Hose on Sale at • 49 cents each. Hanna gcricxx�d11�/t'A•`ixi�/6xx xe®xA�4til xvirrea tt✓� t, • '-, zacs• ,t. And' it a great convenience. eaegetetatatatatatatee. eve, Mr. Wn !dolt arrived hos ie»lg.t week FIN" 14tCNA:tII, rit;rd lis, Cain. iron: Alpine where he had been fqc• the gait ttix menthe, We understand thathe e pact and stipple of body, was fire ieepector in that locality for the dark complexioned, dear prewervetion of . limiter• t=ie brought rile i a,h headed and tl k n apt• home two deer with him, He looks we]l,. and aetion la Aral: of all a great Mie- evidently the northern climate has arced trallan. If in Ills view his country with him bas any faults he forgets them in his Mr, Gideon Parke went through an mired enthusiasm for its virtues. ills ad -operation for appendicitis last week tie irtttforz for the land far which .he i* is getting over it fine and we trust he will particularly fighting is found strange- ly infectious. He easily -convinces one soon be all 'right again. that Australian tobacco and wines are Another old pioneer has departed in the the hest In the world and i e still Person of Mr, Robert McQutcheon who „More certatalY tirade one feel that lives a few mile*~. east of here, who died 'there is no practicable military feat 4uddenly last Friday. He was in his which Australian soldiers cannot mane health up to tbat time. Deceased aehieve. So heartily, does Gen. Mon wan 82 years pi age and leave. a wife, SC fsh believe in Australian tobacco, es" peelaliy for, Australfan graces, thltt three eons and two daughters;to 'mourn he touglit down a deal of opposition his lose. The family .have the sympathy in order to import seven tons of it of the community in their sad bereave - for his men. meat. This remarkable commander, Miss Pearl Payne ie home again re - whose daring and genius are written • across the landscape of Prence from cuperating after her hard time with the Amiens to the Hindenburg line, is Flu We understandthat she was one of what is termed a citizen soldier, or the worst cases with that trouble in Blyth• civilian in uniform. In peace times he is primarily a scholar and civil Miss May Burke got home last Friday engineer, his experience of soldiering after being away nursing flu patients in not going beyond the sphere of the Wingham and Clinton. Australian militia. Doubtless before Miss V. Elliott teacher ot No. 10 it made his acquaintance in battle ' the Kaiser's high command looked Morris, opened the school for tiueiness on e n upon hila with ineffable contempt. Monday of this week after r bei g closed Just now it is feverishly busy trying for nearly a month. rhe scholars. need to preventableslice himout fromofthtakingeHindeanbucoxarg, to work hard to make up for lout time., sider line. Mrs. J. VanCamp and children visited Like all good generals Monash it Bluevale friends on Sunday. pre-eminently positive. His whole • quality and attitude of mind is that Mr. John eh Miller is wearing a smile little it of one who believes he can do it. He these days. A lovely ]lk a gi 1 has come has unwavering confidence not only to make her bore there. Congratula- in his soldiers but in iris own ideas tions, • and In himself. His military inspir- • ation is a pertinacious offensive. This Mr. Samuel Snell who went out oh the is why the Australian army in France harvest excursion to see the 'Western has been fighting almost without re- provinces, returned a short time ago. spite for six months on end with the result that it has taken from the Ger- This was his first trip West. He bars mans more than 100 French villages three brothers and two sisters and hosts and nearly 200 square miles of : of friends settled out *here .. and he spenta French territory. You can travel for splendid time and enjoyed the trip very two hours in a fast motor car due much, east from Amiens without coming to the end of the ground from which Lab Monday the people in this vicinity the Australians since last April have went nearly wild with joy when the word beaten back the Germans, including came that the war was ended Gordon the second division of the Prussian Guards on Mont St. Quentin, Holt got his flag flying good and early. "And our success," said Gen. Mon- Many felt like making some kind of noisl; ask, to an interviewer, "was due In but bad nothing to' make it with. Quite a large part to the devotion and skill number went to Wingbam and Brussels of our junior placers. Of these 95 to see the sights Peace on earth and per rent, are from the. ranks. We good will to men. • have a democratic army.' We were told that our System of wholesale : - Promotion front the ranks would de- L.-, ea Fite- Triptcd. prive uc.of au officer caste and that There is en ileo et of 'road above this would be a bad thing, We have :e iamb, of . Forth where if' one found - the exact contrary to be the ,..:incl• conte to it in a tortunaie hour, truth. Ctur democratic system has .e would see the Grand Fleet, the been a success in every particular. ..miner-head.•et- 'the • British navy. By' opening a. way to ambition it has .wile after mile of great and little stimulated ambition and we have ,,ghting ships, their bugles sound raved the benefit of the enterprise faintly across the water to quiet of •• Mons men. There is only one streets ashore. ° eon- ay- into hur'comntissioned ser- It is four years -eibce the battle- eiee :ow and this doorway is' through -squadrons slipped' away to their war the tanks, station and the Baltica navy became "Mane of .our juniorofficers who suddenly ;one decisive and fixed fac- rose tem.), privates have ileen dazzling ton in an unstable world: • suceess..s. Two- of them have won The supreme task of the navy has the Distinguished Conduct Medal, the been to make secure on all the seas Distinguished Service ,order and the of - the world the transportation of Military Cross with a her to each,'_ men, material and food. Between the thus doubling the highest honors in date of the declaration of war and the service. In the whole Australian June 30 last, the needs of the Allies e -army at, this moment there is only have involved the carriage by sea of ono brigadier whose- regular profes- some 20,000,000 men, 2,000,000 ant- sion is that of soldiering. The others mals and about. 1.10,000,00 tons of are so-called citizen or civilian sol- naval and military stores, .cargoes diens like the officers of the Cana- whose vastness .and diversity had never been contemplated nor f re - seen... The submarine war intensified and taxed to its.greatest violence, yet the great work of supply and. transportation went forward with never an interruption, . The navy, which in August, 1914, had eomprised warships and auxil- iary vessels to a total of two -and a half million displacement tons, had swelled' by June of this year to a sum of six and a half millions; its personnel .had grown from 146,000 to nearly 400,000. Of the 20,000,000 men embarked -and transported, the total losses due to enemy action up to April 27, 1918, had only reached the relatively trivial figure of .3,282 —roughly equal to one lost for each *1;000 carried; - �� .�yr�r. r �s,�' +� . .�i��,�� lr....w. rA � � ♦ ,.. a►s �r.. � ..... err a.. i r �1► ♦�1I ♦ i �; I 7j,�'-_Trj��r ►• . -. *IN' wItr •rt}► •+oi•r •v �i s. R. HILL'S A MUSIC IC Ii .O . - MUSIC IS TO THE MIND WHAT EXERCISE IS TO THE BODY �4� A TONIC w Every Canadian Father and Mother' should give }� their cli11d1 en an opportunity to learn and acquire R the ART OF MUSIC eel To any one purchasing a piano trom us between now and Christmas we will give a quarter's lessons. But buy at once as delivery is very slow now on account of the many who are buying pianos these days and the short- age of labor we are selling them almost faster than we can secure them but the only thing to do is to get your order in and we will get you your arc. piano as soon as it is humanly possible. Give your children a chance They are worth it. We guarantee all Pianos, Phonographs and Sew- ing Machines bought from us. Start Your Phonograph If we ever had reason to be gay and to hold forth in song and sweet music. Surely it is now. We will take phonographs and organs on pianos,. A &ii .b' dicta militia. �, i eye _ "One :has heard a good deal of etc' skepticism on the question of the die - elegiac of Australian troops). Some eye thought we had too much freedom in our army, too much of the spirit rof civil life and too little of the ebar- ,f atter of a machine. Now look at •et those men out there. (we are spine ea. .g past straggling groups of Aus- tralian soldiers in a field near the A` roadside). They are not saluting me. he The general is, passing but they are carrying on. •:We do not make too much of these symbols or signs of rV discipline. - What we really want are not indications of discipline but dis• - c •cipline itself. There Is-- one supreme '$ and final test of discipline. It is -that lee every man at the appointed time and u place shall be on hand resolute to do ✓� his job. ny this test the Australian a army has passed 100 per cent. clean. "Look at that town of Peronna," A�A`� he said. "See those ramparts. They lee' seeiu Impregnable, yet 400 Austra- lians captut'ed the place, killing many Germans and bringing out 680 pris- oners. This - Mont $t. Quenelle, the last bastion between us and the Hin- denburg line, was held.by the Ger- lnans in strength and with these forces were the second Prussian Guards. Three battalions of Austra-- lians---•battalions se greatly reduced by long lighting that their aggregate number of men was less than 3.,500 men -•-••stormed the hill, littered it with enemy dead and brought been 1,600 prisoners." That Gen. Monash's admiration for his oflic: rs is amply warranted IH shown by the way they rebridged the Somme canal and its adjoining swamis titer the German demplitiou partiee l•ad done their workeftec- tively over the whole front. ri�roops T ♦ , I�` I ♦ ►),�', iii..*4 11. i:4►r�rf vfrtiia�:i r rbiwirit fe a.! ee A �.� ♦ a� ����r A .i► d `4.40 ...A• 40 .010 ••• Q 10 0 10 •A• IA let �A• A 1 Salem - Mr. Edwin Bennett left last Friday on a business trip to the West. Dislike, Frozen Meat. Sydney (Neer South Wales) retail butchers protest. that the frozen meat with which the Government has sup- plied them is unsuitable for trade. Mr, and Mrs. Hugh McTavish troth They call on the Government to sup - near Milverton and Mrs, GeorgeP Mit oft 1l5 fJe.shl - ,i1teaneat Many re - Wroxeter called on Mr, and Mrs. D. miters display the sign, "No frozen meat sold here." The meat itdmin- eWefr last Sunday, si rater has ordered 1 his practice to Mr, Mathew Dane of Gorrie called on es Abandoned. friends here last week. Mr. Robert McMichael had the Misfor- tune to tote a valuable ,cow one day re• Wr R � L(.„ iE Gently, ,»...... Mr. Wesley Palmer is doing some chop - D. b. S., L. D. S. ping in this neighbourhood. Honor graduate of the Royal College or cr'oseed the canal and descended on !Dental Surgeons of.Ontario. Honor grad- the enc:a; s rear, compelling him tes Mr, Wn. Mitchell has bought Mr. Dan 1uate of University of Toronto Faculty of retire. Then with a rapidity that McTavish's farm on the Turnberry side Dentistry. seems in.redible the Australians, Ws. for 4,00040, parlors over H. E. lserd & Co'. Store lug pontoons in the deeper water and ordinary bridge supports elsewhere, threw across the wide obstacle a bridgo that supports not only meet but guns and lorries of great weight, - _ This wet k was dine in les* thtdn forty-eib,.t hours and every 'hour of the titne the Australia*► builders were nutter lire. Tklis FLAG WILL FLOAT IN WINGltAM ete1"a Dungannon* The Victory Loan campaign came to a In a Hospitti' At the Front attelteeeteeteeteeeCteetatatotenettletee 0 visit the wounded In"the hospitals, to take them ni. garettea, chocolate, little comforts, to write lettere fon them attd hear theta tell the starkly ilramatie story of their wounding. -k there is probably' no woman worthy of the name in Canada who does not at some time long for the privilege of tieing this. But because of cite cunistanees many of you Will navel be ggblo to realize this_ desire. So 1 tfhottld like to crake yon a picture of the military hospitals in p'rancc to -day. In the Met place, these hospitals are quite dfifeett,lti 11). spirit frolu any lea :tnL yytrbeen: ever seen at home. The hospitals ot peace time where the sick etre houfined are sad places, .full of ghosts and sorrows, where Winds of agony blow down the white corridors at dawn. The military hos- pint's, in spite of the pity of them, the suffering—yes, in epite even of the still bodies carried out sortie• times under while sheets -- are hi some queer way cheerful `places, good places to be. " The sick are pale, emaciated, often pad • tempered, often complaining. A ward full of diem is a depressing place. Tho wounded are young, healthy looking. rosy cheeped and cbeerful, The drat time one goes in. to a. ward of thein one has an im- pf ession 'of a number of bronzed and tremendously fit young gentlemen who have just conte in from a foot• ball match and are for the moment . resting up --in Geis. Most of them never lose this lit look, for the mw jority of therm, the great majority o1 'those who reach the hospitals back of the lines whert; they can be visit- ed, recover from their wounds with: out seriousIy is impairin their general health. A man with acute stomacb trouble is a vastly more unhappy man than a soldier who bas just had an arm amputated. Shall I tell you the one place l have found in France where there is universal complaining and grousing' It is in the mump wards. The regu• lations require that a man shall stay in the hospital twenty-one days, The first week he istoo sick to care mach, but he spends tiro last two in one un- interrupted howl against tate. Any wounded man who acted as the inump boys act would lose the respect of Ws companions forever. I think I znlght-explain thediffer- ence in the spirit of these hospitals this way: Every woman knows that a sick loan turns as a rule into a peevish child. He is irritable and unreasonable and pathetic. But a wounded soldier doesn't de this. He stays a man, a soldier always. He n has none of that queer feeling of shame that we all feel about sickness. A wound is, an honorable, thing and he suffers it manfully. • Therefore, these hospitals are good places to be, Of course, no two Itospftals are alike and no general description would quite fit any single one. But they haeve all many characteristics iu common and some sort of composite picture may be given, I have never • seen a front line dressing station, but I think I have seen every kind back of these, and knowing nothing about medicine I have seen them as an outsider, as Most of you would see them. So perhaps 1 can make you see them too, There is, I believe, a theory that a 'wounded man follows a. regular beaten path from. hospital to, hospi- tal. At the front line dressing sta. time .he receives first aid, has bis wounds bandaged and is given a hy. -•podermie if he is suffering too great- ly. He neict goes to what the French caul a "triage," a `sorting station, Here his wounds are rebandaged 11 necessary, he ,is given hot food, an- other hypodermic if he needs it, or any other immediate attention -he re- quires. Ite is then sent- on, after being carefully ticketed to save time in,the larger hospitals. Next he goes to a mobile hospital, • housed in trucks and tents some ten kilometers or so behind ' the lines. Herd he is operated, the wound thor- oughly cleansed, the more easily reached pieces of shrapnel, etc., re- moved. If, however, the, operation Is a very delicate or complicated one it is left for 'the next step, the eva- cuation hospital, which is usually in a town of some size, welt behind the front, though -usually still in what 331<ek3ii- epett Awe than a year . OW' it IR an tttorsaay`s oneat be (ray's tun cad hes probably knew the law quarter of f outiott better, it pee - Able, than any other part of the city. Thug it is that the itauue: et Staple Ian si known to countless who have never seen the old black and white houses, or the door in the corner un - del the place tree whites led to Mr. ettee gfous' chambers, Staple Tutt bus aitered fur the bet- ter since Mr. Suagsby of "Bleak Howes" lived Itr Took's Court, 'hard by, ileiug both of a "meditative and i,eoetical" disposition he loved to walk in the inn "in summer time and 4* observe Trow courttrilled the sparrowe and the it' vt•s" were. He would cer- tainly fttsve appreciated the little wat- er 'garden which, since his day, has brought a freshness and charm to the reserve and u50 of the dark buildings. Except for the right of way which hrittge a few hurried passet•sby, Sta- ple Inn seems deserted but for the twittering cheery sparrows and their sooty brothers, the London pigeons. On the seat 4 the foot of the plane tree Mr. Snageby may bo imagined to be sitting, bolding forth to the two " 'prenticell on how he had heard Say that a brook 'as clear as crystal' once ran right down the middle of 11o1•. born, when; Turnstile .really was a turnstile..leading slap into the mea- dows," Except that tate happy event of the little water garden must ;snake it eas- ier her the sparrows to play at coun- try, Staple gun remains as Dickens described it in his inimitable fashion In "The Mystery of 'Edwin Drool"! "Behind the most ancient part of Holborn., London, where certain gabled houses . setae venturies Of age still stand looking on the public way, as if disconsolately- looking for the Old Bourne that bas long run dry, is a little nook composed of two irre- gular quadrangles, called Staple inn. It is one of those nooks, the turning into which out of the clashing streets imparts to the relieved pedestrian the sensation of lieu=ng put cotton in his ears, and velvet soles on his boots. It is one of those nooks where a few smoky sparrows twitter in smoky trees, as though they tailed to each Other, 'Let us play nt country'; and whore a few feet of garden mold and a few yards of gravel enable than to do that refreshing violence to their tiny understandings,, Moreover, it is one of those noolcs which are legal nooks; and it contains •a little hall, With a little lantern on ire roof; to what obstructive purposes devoted and at whose exppense, this history knoweth riot." Mr. Grewgious occu- pied a set of chambers in a corner house in the little inner quadrangle, presenting in block and white over its ugly portal the utystertous inscrip- tion successful close Saturday night in Ash- is Called the war zone and sate from'' field township, the cahvasseee reaching a anything but nix . rdidS. Here • he i6: given chore care: and a;$tention than splendid total, $125,000. The objective, has been possible "before, rests awhile, $100,000, was reached Friday night and and is then seat at last to a base an attempt was made Saturday to win hospital for the last most difficult the crown and they succeeded, The operations and the long pull at nurs- Weat Wawanoeh total, we believe, was in For the soldiers the base hospitals about $75,000, are mainly in pleasant spots in the . J. C. McFarlane was in Toronto on south of Prance where the war seems business last week. ten years away, moonlight nights birds s and thebr treaty, and d ns n1 be u Misses Pearl. McKenzie, Janie Stothers bells of the ''midi" fill the quiet air,. and -Ethel Case returnee to Toronto last For the British the base hospitals ai'e week. in "biighty," After the base hos- Wtn. Bailie's auction sale on 'Thursday 'pitals there are a few •convalescent Was very wellattended and quite success• camps—or home for those who will fol, Thos. Gundrywas the auctioneer. never fight again. All this time, from the triage, or Ma and Mrs. B. J. Crawford and Mr. Storting Station, •onward the man bee and Mrs. Fred Ross were Auburn visitors • pinned to him a card on which each Sunday, eucgeesive hospital writes what they Y have 'done for him and what tests Chas Elliott has returned from Golden Ire has been given. The length of Valley. parry Sound, where he was deer- time he remains in each place Varies, hunting for two week*. He is *tow busy of course, with each case. The trans- Wittig his friends here how nearly he evoatution is madespt as tar mbotokr as the !i' y evacuation hospitals in motor ambo• -came to getting the last,gne, lances, from there on be sanitary Interest in the coming bye•eleetton is trains+ lncrea.ing daily in these : parts, the . , Wasn't Serious, electors here to a man and to a cabman Driven' in Array Service Corps --- being more determined than ever to win, serious; No, it wasn't., a serioue acof- place their popular candidate. lir. Case, dent, Second Driver—Put 1 thought At the bead'of our eon, Never hat there youu said you nearly killed the repels ea titrir t,rl earl be made to move itr barna candidate So popular fn hie own you knocked down? Plait Driver*ler b1;taes . lilies vertleally or horizon- community ae the Dr. is, As a citizen he X m'can is )(lisle; Sera* bett d the cat but t t.•lte. a exceedingly well respected, a man of -��^� -'-- excellent character' told ability, a man STAPLE I!ellh. A r c•' ntly patented oscillating WJNOHAM NiARKI TS whowould not countenance anything dia. ' honorable. Because of hie broadminded A Picturesque dent ytt lifstoste (Correct up till Wednesday non) nese he is acceptable to both puttee, and England. Wheat.... . 2 12 to 2 G0 `I,iberalt as well u Conservatives are out whenle Inn Minty Y. wen nn he Chancery Fleur, per cwt, Standard.' 2 75 to 6 00 ! upAgincourt. It was the most popular' 82 00 to 36 00 i to back hint to the last ditch. The 40 00 he 44 00 fact that he hats three sons in uniform of the inns among law students In 0, pe Shuts, per ton Barley . . .. 85 to 901 maitre us all feel that he should be chosen EIlzaboth's reign, and in the eigh- 1 50 to 1 80 as North Huron's representative Tileteenth Century it le staid to have given Hay, 12 00 to 15 4 45 5 'tiding wants a man honest, upright, when "Oddity" left Clough Square, Butter, per 1b.- .dairy88 to , Eggs, per dozen.... gl ito 55 public spirited, genuinely ttatriotic and The history of the inn le therefore f,md 28 to 85' ambitious, 'That man lir .Dr. Catty, Vote both ancient and honorable, and its Cattle, rned., btitchers10 00 to 11 00 for hurt December 2nd, interest beeonres unquestionable to Cattle, butchers choice..11 00 to 18 00 . at least half the gioba'e Inhabitants, Hoge, liveeeeight • 15 00 to I8 25 Vote kir Dr. Case, the proud father of *hen its 4t nrfintion with Mate of 40 50 thre fighting a ,Bt rfat chariest Dickens' characters it recall - hospitality to Dt•. Johnson at tha tin .1 T 1747 .- In which set of chambers, never hav- ing -troubled .his head about the in- scription, finless to bethink himself at odd times on .glancing up at ide, that haply- it might mean Perhaps John Thomas, or Perhaps Joe Tyler, sat Mr. Grewgious writing by the fire." --Loddon -correspondent of , The Christian Science 'Monitor, A. Strange Ilrreak. On the authority of the Port,Hope rimes, one o±e the inmates of the House of Refuge there qualifies for the cattle section of even the C.N.E., being "part man, part cow. Halt this man's face le a bright red and the other side white.. He likes to get out in a field and pulls and eats grass like an animal, as well as showing other lower animal traits." i 1 '3usN4y. - 1 !IJLbw.LL I MI nPL. 1,!, e.,!aiv1.1CV n L u-wuau A .,u, •• � .�_ r • r��� .+s,nnuuu n.,l i..0 ,1.1!1:111,1,1.31 nit Purohaae Peao Buy VictoryBonds High Grade Shoos for Men for $3.00 per pair. tr About 30 pairs Men's Con- gress (elastic sides). At Present Prices they would • be worth $7.50 per pair. We will put in new elastics and sell for above very low price Namely $5,00 per pair An excellent and handy sine for any one to wear and you can make a saving of easily $4.00. One shoe of each pair wit'2 size ticket attached in south window. W. 110.WILLIS SOLE AGENT ' ?>CL FOR FOR •u LADIES I I, DES IMMINIMIMMEMMINSIONI THHE ENO OF THE GREAT WAR Once more aur gracious God has given our armies rest; Once more the Dave of Peace we welcome to our breast; The spectre grim that filled the earth with fire and blood Has vanished into smoke, with all his hellish brood. - Now freedom lifts again her bruised and bleeding head, And despots totter on their thrones in fear and dread; For mobs in haste uncrown their kings and count them less Than pawns the players move at will in games of chess. But soon our noble boys again we'll welcome home; Heroes and conquerors proudly, gladly will they come; And proudly, gladly will we greet each mother's son, -- Dearer taus for every scar that he has won! And ah! for those who never will return again,— Though hearts mustache, and bitter tears will fall like rain, Shall we not glory in their splendid sasrifice? Shall we not thankfully their precious mem'ry prize? Oh may the years of trial we have left behind Make us all more unselfish, loving, tender, kindl And for the blessed gifts of Victory and Peace May thankfulness and love to our great: God neer! \X\%tX'XXXXXIX%\XX%X%X%©X. XI4XXXXXXXXXXX FURS! FURS! gloves, XCashmere Hose made from beautiful all cashmere yarns, . fashioned, plain or ribbed, white or black at $1.50 per pair. f V New and Exclusive Models in 1-ligh Grade 0 Furs are here awaiting your pleasure 7`` to Never before.have we shown Furs of better quality and PI more lustrous finish. Beautiful Hudson Seal Coats and full furred Canadian � Muskrat Coats. . Setts or separate pieces in Alaska Sable, Natural Coon, r Wolf, Fox,' Plucked Beaver, Natural Oppossum, Thibet, etc, r, 1 .e ilosiery,U derwear 74 etc, at prices within reach of all. • seamless andfull N HOSIERY 'SPECIAL ----We offer this week end two very- special values in lad's` black Cashmere Hose. aLOT 1-15 dozen Penman's seconds, practically first class in every particular. Regular $1.50 quality for $1.00 per pr. LOT 2--15 doz similar to above. Regulai' $1.00 quality I for fisc per pair or 2 pair for $ 1 26. These are real bargains and will not last long. KING BR Christ' alas is drawing very close. We are headquarters for practical gifts, mo r ��m e��e 74 74 74 X Shop early it will pay you. s,