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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1906-05-10, Page 5THE WINGHAM ADVANCE 004.00••,0090®O,...04.,4000••$•+0•+•H••9•++000000044 e • • • • O O O Our Iiat Department is showing all the latest shapes in Stiff and Soft Hats for spring. Prices—$I to $3.30, Why Crowder's Clothing BECAUSE: CROWDER'S G LOlIIING the es t that ca t be produced and better than any produced in Huron county for the money. CROWDER'S CLOTHING- is thoroughly up-to-date. While showing all the latest. style features, it is neither too extreme nor too conservativ6, but just right for the everyday man. CROWDER'S CLOTHING is so well tailored that it not only looks well when first put on, but it keeps looking well as long as it is worn. 0 0 • • Men's Suits—$6, $8, $10. 0 Elsewhere they would be more. Five styles to choose from, single or double breasted Sacks, in plain a:nd fancy Tweeds, Serges and Worsteds, including; the now tweed stripe and check effects; sizes 33 to 40 chest. Men's Suits—$12 to $15. Elsewhere they'd be $15 to 418. Eight styles to choose from, in single or double breasted, centre or side vents; colors—greys, browns, nixed tweed in stripe and plaid effects, in- cluding the Now Blue Worsteds and Serges; sizes 34 to 44 chest. Boys' 3=Piece Suits. $3.50 to 40.50. We have just received a large range of Boys' Suite in single and double breasted styles, new stripe and check effects. Sizes 20 to 34 chest. Boys' 2. Piece Suits. $2.50 to $5 00. Boys' Tweed Suits (2 pieces) in single or double breasted styles, stripe and overeheek effects; sizes 21 to 32 chest. Boys' Wash Suits $1.00 to $3.00 New Colored Soft Bosom Shirts, sizes 12 to 19 neck. Prices 50c to $1.50 ® New Wash Vests New Stock Ties 1 ao• ••N,•,000N0004O0000444s4 40'00+t00000444000N0000•000 • Boots, Shoes and Trunks. The R. 11. Crowder Go. Wingharn, Ont. OUR TURN NOW. M.M/.JW\M/,M/WWVW� In the last eight years, you've heard of groat cut prices in Furniture, and clearing sales. Now, if you want to see and experience a real Clearing Sale, you can find it our store. From now until May 31st, we intend offering our large stock at reduced prices, and also keeping up the stock, so that none will be disappointed. We have carried a large stock over winter, and have large orders coming in for the spring trade. All mast go at the same price, You have done well to wait for this great chance. Parlor Suites, Bedroom Suites, Extension -S Buffets, Hall Race.. Couches, Dining Chairs, Sideboards, tables, fin (., Iron Beds, Springs, Mattresses, 1n fact anything needed iu a house. Thanks for past favors; a continuance of your patronage solicited. Undertaking promptly and care- : fully attended to. Walker Bros. & Button Walkerton. $101.09 was contributed to missions Y b the Methodist Sunday School scholars in a special collection taken up last Sunday. The new ambulance presented to the Bruce Hospital by Messrs. Robert- son and Rowland has arrived and is a • splendid vehicle in every particular. Mr. Wedd, manager of the Walker- ton branch of the Canadian Bank of Commerce, has been tt'ansferred to the managership of the Berlin branch. Furniture Dealers and Undertakers The Canadian Pacific Railway pee - pie approached. the Grand Trunk with a view of erecting a union station at Walkerton. The Grand Trunk did not care to entertain any proposition along that line. The Canada Furniture Co. have de- eided to increase their accommodation I „ase at the Rattan factory. A storey is to' be added to the varnish room and a I two storey extension is to be made to the store -house extending to the (trees, The Company calculate on spending about font thousand dollars, in the buildings Mentioned. The following tariff of rates came into force here on May lst :—All eased goods, 15'e a, glass et 2 for 25c ; draft whiskey, 1Oc, or 3 for 25e ; ale, quart 2i)c, pint 10c ; lager beer and soft drinks, 5c, It will be seen that lager beer and soft drinks rennin the saute, but there is no doubt that the day of the big schooner is doomed. A. special meeting of the Town Council WAS held on Friday evening last to consider a proposition advanc- ed by Mr, 1!, H. McGuigan, General Supt. Of the G. T. R., and other of- ficiais of the same company, who Were in town on the preceding Tlhttteday. The Council invited tate Board of Trade and the Retail Merchants' As- sociation to be present, and togeth- er the three bodies politic went into eonaideration of the matter. Teeswater. The first of July celebration at Tees - water will this year be under the auspices of tied Baseball Club. Commencing on Sunday, May 18, Rev. Mr. Fitch of SVinghaut, will con- duct services regularly in the Baptist Church during the summer months. The llou' of service will be 3 o'clock in the afternoon. Daviel Brillinger and family moved with their household effects to Owen Sound last week. Mr. Brillinger was getting to be one of the old -tithe resi- dents of the town having lived here for twenty-five years. A fete farmers in the north part of the township have plowed up their fall wheat, on account of its having gone back during the cold dry wea- ther of last week. Wheat on the high rich land about here still looks well. Mr. Peter 0, Scott of the loth con. of Culross, dropped dead on Tuesday of last week. He had been subject to fainting spells for the past year or more, but was as well as usual until • after eating his dinner when he sud- denly expired without rising from the table. Death was due to heart ratite. Ice was aged 40 years and 4months and leaves a widow, three sons and two daughters. t. Mews litems --'.elle people of 13ritisll Columbia have sent 500 tons of provisions to San Fratticisco, --AI. Dc Rct of Stanley township, sold to. Mr, A. Innes, a colt two yeasts 01(1 past, for the sum of $250, This is a good price for a two-year-old. —The annual (i,P,It. spring rush at Owen Sound is now in its prime and fifty ears of steel rails, grain, lumber, .` + h. h eL., ave bete shi) cel south. , g 1p ward, --Thirteen women have applied for positions on the police force ae Min- neapolis. Their chief object in get- ting on the force is to secure the carrying out of proper sanitary re- gulations. —'Tin, C. P. R. Isis issued a bulletin reporting that seedingh nearly com- pleted throughout the Canadian West and that at nearly all points thele is an increased acreage of between 5 and 40 per cent. —The immigrants arriving at New York last wed* aggregated 45,000. This breaks all weekly records for the past, and if anything like this rate is kept up the total at'rivals for the year in the United States will be nearer two than one million. --Capt. V. T. hills, Delaware Co„ 0., hes, the Breeders' Gazette says, a Red Polled cow 22 years old, and still in active condition. She has led the herd to and from the pasture all her life, and still is the leader ! She has produced 18 calves in her time, many of them of gieat value. Stratford, May 3.—\SThile walking on the track near Mitchell station this afternoon, an unknown than was stralck by a train. Ho was removed to Stratford hospital, and died shortly afterwards. IIe was unconscious from the time of the accident to his death. Ice was well dressed. A Million Dollars Squandered. It is estimated this sum was waisted ' last year by pe01110 trying to find a cure for catarrh. Foolish for suffer- ers to experiment when it's co well known that "Catarrhozone is the only remedy that cures permanently. Other treatments only relieve, blit ('at- ' tarrhozoue CUM incl prevents the disease from ever returning. "I had caltarl•h in its worst form" writes G. F, Fadden of Royan, Que. "I was in ( bad that ordinary medicine didn't even relieve; but ('atarthozone cured perfectly." No chance of disappoint - rent with Catarrlloz0ne--it's certain death to cure catarrh—just try it, — A peculiar and rare circumstance occuered in Goderich township, the other day in which a steer got en- tangled in a fence. It managed to free itself all but its tail, and with much bellowing, tearing the fence clown and leaving part of its tail be- hind in the encounter, the poor brute is destitute of its fly protector. — In no way can the value of a farm be so easily added to as by the judic- ious planting of trees. A double row of maples lining the driveway from the public road to the farm home, and a row of spruce planted so as to pro- vide shelter for the farm buildings, will in five years give an increase of 500 per cent. on the cash and labor in- vested. Woodstock, May 1.—There was trouble in the negro colony here this afternoon. One Smith, an employee of Mr. Taylor, influenced by motives that are not known, is said to have deliberately smeared a cow with kero- sene oil aucl about 5,30 set fire to it. The suffering beast was discovered in time and the fire extinguished. The skin was badly burned, but no serious results are feared. THURSDAY, MAY 10, 1906 Clinton. The excavation for the new John- ston block is now completed, and the cement work will be pushed with all expediency. On Friday morning last Mrs. A. Mc- ,ICenzie departed this. life at the age of 03 Years and 0 months, She le 1aEi 11. devoted wife and mother and her de - pasture is an irreparable loss to her husband and family. Rev, M. D, Coltman, formerly pas- tor of the Baptist Church here, is now connected with a western land syndi- cate, and last week succeeded in turn- ing over their holdings at a profit of $105,000,000 of which $25,000 eaiue to Mr. Coltman, Samuel Halls, formerly of Exeter, died at the House of Refuge on Friday last, aged 80 years, Before entering the H. of R. he was an inmate of a Home at London, but would not stay there. Ile was well-connected and was a paying patient, Dr, G, E. Holmes left on Tuesday for Saskatoon, Sask„ where he will probably practise Itis profession. lie has at brother in that booming town who combines newspaper with the real estate business and we would not be surprised if G. 1:. also embarked in the latter. Mr. Oliver Mills diel not long remain in the dairy business, having sold out to Mr. W. Mason, son of Mr. Robt. Mason, who took it over on Monday. The latter has been employed with the Rose Create Dairy Co., Toronto, and has aclolltccl the mune for his own. Mr. Mills will still supply Mr, Mason with milk. At a meeting held last night the 1 local hotel -keepers decided that "all whiskeys, brandies and gins be not less than ten cents a glass." This ad- vance has been caused by the higher license fee which must now be paid. The trade throughout the province generally is putting up the price, ex- cept on lager and beers which remain as at present. —All through the Canadian North- west there is 0 big demand for horses of all kinds, and shipments which have already been received from out- side points have found a ready sale, in fact many of the carloads were sold before they were unloaded. Two cars of farm horses arrived at Virden re- cently and were sold within an Hour after their arrival, the lowest price being $100 per team. —Twenty-five years ago W. J. Ewell of Waldboro, Ale, began setting an orchard of 2,000 trees, and was laugh- ed at as foolish. Apples, he was told, could not be rinsed on worn-out land without quantities of fertilizers, and then would be small. Now according to country Gentleman, Mr. Ewell is doing the laughing. Ice sold some of his Baldwins in Boston the other clay at $5 per barrel, and lie realized $0,000 on last years's crop. The Clifford Express says :--A two - headed calf created quite a sensation in the village on Wednesday and Thursday. The monstrosity was brought in from George Preiss, N. and M. towuliue, by Veterinary Per- due, The heads were perfectly form- ed and distinctly joined together, and were too large to be delivered by the cow. The veterinary cut one head off before delivery, and the animal only lived a few seconds. The rest of the body was frightfully deformed. —According to the assessment roll Kincardine is increasing its popula- tion. The Review say. :—"A gain of 278 in the population of the town is noteworthy. In 1005 it was 2308, which this year has increased to 2078. Tho increase between five and twenty- one years of age is 75, and between five and sixteen years is 01. Births increased from 33 in 1005 to 43 in 1000, and deaths are 20 as compared to 10 in 1005. There are 103 dogs registered being 30 more than on the roll last year." --The smallest Iliitislh possession is Gibraltar, with an area of two squat* miles. The largest is the Dominion of Canada. Its most populous depend- ency is India, with its 201,360,350 people, while Ascension, in Africa, with only 380 inhabitants, is the least populons. British possessions in the grand divisions, other that Europe, are as follows : In Asia, 1,861,830 square miles, 208,801,52(1 people; in Africa, 3,507,051) 511(1111'0 miles, 43,10.1,- 051 people in America, 3,010,001 square miles, 7,103,025 people ; its Austt'aliat, 3,132,707 square miles, 5,001,370 people. Are Good Looks Valuable ? If nature had her way every com- plexion would be clear and delightful. But many allow their blood to become weak,—hence pimples, sallow skin, dark circles under the eyes. To have a beautiful complexion use Ferrozone regularly. It brings a, rich ruddy glow to the cheeks, nourishes the blood and thereby destroys humors and pimples, For beauty, health and good spirits use Ferrozone. Yong ap- pearance will improve 0 hundred fold. Fifty cents buys a box of fifty choco- late -coated tablets—Don't put off—get Ferrozone to -day. Lucknow. 11Ir. 3. W. Hunter of this village has purchased a general store in the vil- lage of Hornings Mills. A valuable snare belonging to Mrs. R. IC. hiller, of SL. Helens, died. of in- digestion in Lucknow on Saturday last. Constable J. H. Armstrong left on Saturday for the Soo to bring back a prisoner who is charged with seduc- tion. Mr, David Boland has purchased some eight acres from the Agricultur- al Society, on the east side of the park. Mr. T. F. Cain has sent his pacing mare"Debbie O." to the Vhgha nh track for training. She will again be in charge of Mr. Welsh, who success- fully handled her last season. Nearly all the merchants of town are in favor of early closing and it is too bad if the others do not fall into line. They do it in other towns, and we see no reason why it cannot be worked in Lucknow. The sudden death of Miss Mary Mc- Gregor, which took place at her nloth- er's•residence near the South Kinloss Church on Monday night last, was a terrible shock to her friends. She had been in poor health for a thee but was not ccinsidered dangerously ill, and dropped dead while getting a drink of water. The funeral of the late Mr, 0. W. Berry, on Saturday afternoon last was largely attended. The religious services at Lite house and grave were conducted by the Rev. Mr. Millyard, of the Methodist Church. The breth- ren of the Odd.fellows Lodge, of which the deceased had been a member for over 33 years, marched in a body to the cemetery. • 4 -- have you pains in the back, inflam- mation of any kind, rheumatism, fainting spells, indigestion or con- stipation, Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea makes yon well, keeps you well. 35 cents. Ask you druggist. 1' To Cure Fever, Chills, Ague, We know of no remedy so reliable as Nervilinc, Twenty drops taken in hot water three times daily not only stops the chills but destroys the dis- ease completely, Ncrviline has a direct action on ague and. chills and removes their exciting cruises. In stomach and bowel disorders Nervi - line has held first pine() for nearly so ears I is powerful, sttrif ' to .act y It t , and perfectly safe, Being pleasant to taste it's popular with everybody. Your druggist sells Polson's Ner'viline in large. 25c bottles ; satisfaction is guaranteed. • Hary many old sailors are there who can equal the record of Capt. Alexander Simpson, who lately com- pleted his 71st voyage from England to Australia and back, a voyage which he has been making regularly for over 40 years. Altogether he has covered 2,000,000 miles without mishap, a dis- tance equal to four voyages to the moon and return. For 18 years he has been studying ocean currents by throwing overboard bottles, many of which have been returned to him, Notice To Drainage Contractors. Sealed tenders will be received by the Council of the Township of '1'uruberry, up to f, o'clock p. 711. of tho 29th day or May next— Nor the cnitrging of the Municipal drain in I1>e 12th conee,,ston of the said Township, for a distance of 31 miles; also for the opening, of a branch drain on lot 2e, in the said 13th conces- sion, for a distance of 178 rods, and laying tile in tho said branch drain, The whole work to bo done in accordance with the plans and specifications made by C. 11, Jonea, Esq., Township Engineer, which can be seen at the office of the Township Clerk, Bluevale. The contractor or contractors will bo required to filo with the Township Council a satisfactory bond for the faithful performance of the said works. The lowest or any tender not neces- sarily accepted, unless otherwise satisfactory. Marked Tenders to be addressed to— JOHN BURGESS, Tp. Clerk, Bluevalo P. 0., Ont. Turnberry, April 23rd, 1906. —The Owen Sound Sun of May 1st says :—"Owen Sound is to -day a local option town in the full sense of the term. AL eleven o'clock last night all the bars in town were closed up and this morning they remained closed. Contrary to expectation the advent of the measure was not lual•kecl by any serious disturbance. All day yester- day and last night n great number took fall advantage of the occasion to "celebrate," lint other than making themselves noisy at times they Were not offensive. Chief McAuley and the full staff of policemen were on con- stant duty. They broke up a few noisy trowels but diel not find it neces- sary to stake a single arrest and there Was a clean sheet at the police eourt this morning, On May 1st all the hotels are open doing business as be- fore ---except, of course, that the bars are all closed, It is said they will all be conducted as boarding hooses, 4.716 WINGHAM L011r Jil1iS PRICE LIST : Star Flour, $1.90 to $2.15 per i2 bbl. Mau. Flour, $2.00 to $2.25 per ; bbl. Bran, $18.00 to $20.00 per ton. Shorts, $20.00 to $21,00 per ton. Low Grade Flour, $23 to $25 per ton. Chop, $17.00 to $25 per ton. Goods delivered promptly to all pasts of the town. 'VTe want 12,000 bushels of Wheat this month, and will pay the highest market prices in cash for any quantity deliveaed at the mill. HOWSOI, HARVEY & BROCKLEBANK. Tins iith!ii In all its branches done neatly, promptly and at reasonable rates. Good stock of TINWARE on hand. Try us for your Jobbing and Eavetroughing I;avetl ou�,hing STOVES and RANGES of the best makes on hand. Our prices are very reasonable. When in need of anything in our line, give us a call. We'll treat you right. Robt. Mooney Grow Seed Peas littlerislt now— good profit— Been reading about peas in Guelph College Bulletin and Provincial Crop Records ? They say the pea -weevil is gone for seven years. Queer thing about pea -weevil he comes for seven years and van- ishes for seven. This is his first year for vanishing. Safe now to grow seed peas. Report of Department of Agricul- Lure shows average crop is twenty bushels cf seed peas to the acre. Some Canadiar,s raise three crops a year. Price ranges from 75e. to 85c. a bushel. Easy crop to grow...market never glutted .. , profit sure. \Vhy don't you go into sled peas this Spring) CARE OF THE DAIRY CALF. iietho(1 EmploYeil Mt 1lrtnne,autts iieriment Station. 7715 following method of caring for calves Is in use at the Minnesota exper- iment station dairy barn and seems to give the most satisfactory results, writes P. D. 5. in Northwestern Agri- culturist After the calf has run with bis mother two or three days and has been put in good order by her colostrum milk he should be taken away and shut up in a very small pen, a partition oft from the large calf pen, so that he can - he other MU - not suck tcalves' ears, which w Ir is a very objectionable practice to al- low in a bunch of calves. Now, right at this stage comes a very critical time for the calf. White scours only too often attack him at thls period, and often, too, he is laid low by calf cholera. Now is the time to give a pre- ventive. Take about a pint bottle of milk at the temperature of 98 degrees F., no cooler, and p::t in It a teaspoon- ful of any of the good creosote disiu- fectant compounds for sale in the mar- ket. This, of course, Is a germicide and will kill the germs of the cholera in the rtomach of the calf. I know this to be 1 good remedy and If given will often save a calf's life. The next thing the calf must do is to learn to drink out of a pail, This often takes time and patience. Be free with both, as a little dairy calf three days old Is pretty tender and must be han- dled carefully. First of all, you must have that whole milk at the tempera- ture of the mother's body, about 98 de- grees. The cause of the most of the scours in calves is feeding cool milk. Dip the finger in the milk and then let the calf suck it off once or twice, mean- while drawing his head in this way closer and closer to the pall until his muzzle is right in the milk. After he once gets his mouth Into it be will very soon learn to drink. He should be fed on whole milk for about a month and then for two or three weeks on half and half and then on skim milk. At the 'station we find it a very good practice to put blood meal and bone meal In the shim milk. Others use flax- seed meal with very good success. After the calf is a month old perhaps he will eat a little hay, and then you can turn him out in the big pen with the rest of the calves. Now, as these young animals are very susceptible to parasites and diseases and as such pests thrive well in moist, dirty places, we therefore see that it is very impor- tant that we keep the calves and pen clean by the liberal use of fork and brush and occasional application of a disinfectant. Above all things, the drinking pails must be kept scrupu- lously clean, It takes a little time, of course, but !t pays, because it kills dis- ease. Don't be afraid to use plenty of bedding to keep the little calves off the damp floor. I DAIRY FARM WISDOM Milk is capable of absorbing almost any odor with which it comes in con- tact, and during the process of milking a large amount of air is incorporated into it, driven by the streams of milk from the udder, says Kimball's Dairy Farmer. If this air is pure, it will aid in cooling and aerating the milk; if im- pure, it will taint the milk with what- ever disagreeable odor and undesirable bacteria it contains. No other article of human food will absorb more of the surrounding atmosphere than milk. How many of us would like to have our entire breakfast left in an ordina- ry cow barn for twenty to thirty Min- utes, as is often done with milk? Re- membering that milk is a human food and that it absorbs injurious o so quickly, let us be very careful how we handle it. A Stall For Each Cow. There are two waysof considering economy—one for the cow and the oth- er for the owner, says Hoard's Dairy- man. Iu the end the man who is eco- nomical for the cow's sake will flud he has best served his own economy. The objection that most farmers make to the plan of a stall for each cow is that it takes more room. Yes, but it in- creases the efficiency of the cow, and barn room is cheaper than cows. Teat the Cows. If you test your cows one day each week during tbe milking period and on the same day of the week or will test them, say, for a week when they have been in milk for a month and take this for the average of nine weeks, four weeks before tbe week test and four after, you will feud out enough about your cows to induce you to make more full and complete tests hereafter. —Wallace Farmer. The Dairy Ball. When a farmer thinks of buying a dairy bull to improve the quality of This future cows he should look to tihe qual- Ity of the bull, not to the cheapness of price. The character and reliability of the breeder go a great way in such a transaction. Ice should try to buy a "future" of good quality that will run on for generations and that will help increase the good effects of every future sire that may be used.—Iiol- stein-Friesian Register. Cow Ignorance. About one-third who milk cows lose money on them, The main cause is ig- norance. ImproF'inx the Milk. The work required to sponge an ani- mal's flank and adder is but a trifle, and great improvement can be made on the milk and its products. Get ma of Scrubs. Scrub care, scrub management and scrub breeding will perpetuate the scrub animal. It Is the skill and knowl- edge of right breeding, the influence of systematic and careful feeding, the at- tention to details in developing and se- lecting their breeding stock that will foree the scrub out of existence. Jrkatili�w r. ��yA e* -gga %'j isA.rs!'�',tu-+r':1; LLO ��,, ' 1440 'ast. S The el 15 I. t• :-rTiY,I 1 and (1a to 1..F hYill 'Nits01 i, Ia 1,t,' 11:mn l 1. nnA t 1 1 attttnd.6rn n11 ittca.rt'ttatnt t talo;am n>tt:10 nc kbfiny5+ora ilitt.tCatanl t'nt1W„110 (titadLl'o n, ntat'rm,trt. CURED NIS WIFE of LA, GRIPPE Quebec Man tells how the Great Con- sumptive e .WAS P an all-round Benefit ” My wife took La Grippe when she was in Ottawa," says R. N. Dafoe of Northfield Farm, Que., in an interview. "She got a bottle of Psychine and after using it for a few days she was quite well. I took a cold and am using it and am getting all right. I think Psychine is one of the best tonics on the market to -day." • There you have the whole matter in a nutshell. La Grippe and colds are among the forerunners of consumption. This man had one, his wife had the other. Psychine not only cured both but it built them up so that their bodies are strong enough to resist disease. AU seeds of comsumption are killed by PSYCHINE (Pronounced Si -keen) 50c. Per Bottle Larger else* SI and $2—all druggists. 1111. T. A. 8L000M, Limited, Toronto. LIFE FIRE INSURANCE Lowest rates consistent with absolute security. All claims promptly settled Abner Cosens ACCIDENT PLATE CLASS WANTED. --By Chicago wholesale house, special representative (man or woman) for each province in Canada. Salary $20.00 and expenses paid weekly. Expense money advanced. Business successful; position permanent. No in- vestment required. Previous experience not essential to engaging. Address— General Manager, 134 Lake street, Chicago, I11., U, S. A. 0N00000NN0000000NON4 Musko I SirtvpoTVan..e The best place to buy a Piano O or Organ, is right here; we have o the best makes, and prices are • right. • O 0 0 • • i O O s •• • i O v i SEWING MACHINES. In these we handle the White, Canadian, and New Williams; these are among the best on the market. David Bell Stand—Opp. Skating Rink •••••••••••••••••••••••••• • $1.00 ROUND TRIP GODERICH TO TUESDAYJUNE 19 RETURNING JUNE 21 St'r GREYHOUND 2 Days In Detroit WRITE E. H. AYER, AGT., DETROIT FOR PARTICULARS. HAVE YOU A BOSS? or are you Indo peadeut? If you are making money for some one else, quit and make money for yourself, Get out of slavery and be free. Write G. MARSHHALL. Co., London. They wi!1 show you the way. They have started thousands on the road to freedom. Seven dollars a day, every day in the year, is be. ing made handling their goods. Write now, Time is money. Ceylon Tea Mountain Grown Grand Mogul Tea is a product of the sunniest mountain tops in Ceylon. Prepared by machinery from plantation to tea, pot, it is the beverage of hygiene. Ci No exposure to store dust or microbes ---the pack- ages lined with air -tight paper bring it to you in the nicest possible condition. Insist on your dealer sup, plying you with this, the best possible blend of the finest and ripest teas. Dis- criminating housekeepers prefer it to bulk teas of doubtful value. Grand Mogul Tea C( Sold only In packages at 25e, 'JOE, 40c and 50c per pound, We divide our advertising appropriation with you by putting premium eau, poor in stab package. lllA{�llllE+`c,,�_Q""ll tFa ti jY: l�.. ♦ i+aaF *We 4b. aw�Niue .