HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1906-05-24, Page 5;,4,00000404,,,,0,,00000,0 „0,4,,,,4„00,,,04004,,,
We Clothe Men Who Care
CROWDER' S
Tailored
Crowder's Tailored Clothes are es-
sentially for the man who cares.
They aro equal to custom made at one
third the price, which ought to look
good to you. Here is well -tailored
smoothness and exactness of fit, to-
gether with the vary acme of style,
smartness, good taste, character, in-
dividuality and exclusiveness
Spring Suits
aro hero in every wanted color and
pattern, including a grand, range of
the new plaid and stripe tweed Sett-
ings. We show 5 distinct cont models
in single and doable breasted shapes.
Coat lengths, from 30 to 33 inches, with
centre or slide vents. Peg top or con-
servative trousers. Prices range from
$6.50 to $15.00 per Suit, but wo em-
phasize these lines at
$7.5o, $xo.00, $12,5o, $15.00
CRAVENETTE COATS -Short or
long lengths $9.50 to $12.50
BOYS' SUITS.
Boys' Fancy Stripe Tweed 2 -Piece Nor-
folk Suits, sizes 22 to 28 $3.75
Boys' Fancy two -Piece Norfolk Suits,
Buster Browns, &o., sizes 22 to 29.
Prices $2.50 to $5.50
YOUTIHS' SUITS. -Youths' Long Pant Suits in nice Tweed
effects, single and double breasted, sizes 31 to 35 chest.
Prices $5.00, $7.50, $10.00
ODD TROUSERS. -Boys' Trousers, sizes 22 to 34 50c to $1.25
MEN'S ODD TROUSERS -Sizes 31 to 46 waist. 500 Pairs
• in stock. Prices $1.00 to $5,00
1
•
GENTS' FURNISHINGS.
Men's New Wash Vests, all sizes $1.35 to
Men's New American Stock Ties.
Boys' Shirt Waists, sizes 11 to 14 75o and
Men's New Soft Bosom Shirts, 12, to 18?; neck... ,$100, $1.25,
Men's White Duck Trousers, all sizes
Men's New Holiday Neckwear 25o and 50c
$2.75
750
$1.00
$1.50
$1.50
20 Pairs Men's TRUNKS 15 Pairs Mena
Patent Leather ' SUIT OASES Box Calf Shoes
Shoes --Special .$4.00 . VALISES -Special .$2.25
NEW SPRING IIATS in all the latest styles, Hard and Soft.
Prices $1.75 to $3.50
The R. 11. Crowder Co.
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Kaiser the Jeweler
Has Opened a Jewelry Business
• Next to Hamilton's Drug Store.
• • • • • •- it
We have a complete line of Watches, Clocks and
Jewelry. Give us a call and get our prices before buy- I
ing elsewhere. 3ErFine Watch and Jewelry repairing
i
promptly attended to and fully guaranteed. s
Ike . .1 11 a 11,1.11 e)rlr1.1112.11Mlem®®iii, arum .e,...,1 ® 1iu1 , 111114 1 a)
Sporting Goods
Largest and Best
Stock in Towu.
Sole Agents for the famous Spalding Sporting Goods, and the
Celebrated Kervin's Dukes special Clock Cord Lacrosse Sticks.
We have everything iu Base Balls, Gloves, Mitts, Masks, Bats, etc.
Lacrosse Sticks, Gloves, Balls, etc. Footballs, Skin Guards, etc. Tennis
Rackets, Balls, Nets, etc. Taylor's Scotch made Lawn Bowls. Special
price to Clubs, come in and arrange. Tennis Rackets bought from us
will be restrung for 81.25 to 82 60 each. Palmer's hand -made Ham-
mocks. Fishing Tackle of every kind. Cameras and Photographic
supplies,the largestoat and best stock, free dark roomom and freea instruc-
tions. all
Paper business booming here.
R. KNOX
Opp. WinghnHotel
m
Watchmaker, Jeweler and Stationer
OUR TURN NOW.
/•N•V�MM/�M/�ti1���
THE WI NGRAM ADVANCE
..11111.1411.111 1111111
The North West Lands:.�"".�`."'
'illlem items
Ti USD MAY 04t 1. 906
(Continued from Page 4.)
millions of acres of free homesteads in
the United States, but these are all
now taken up and the settlers frons
both countries were compelled to go.
to our Northwest or do without land.
Twenty years from now, no matter
what government is in power, there
will be no homesteads taken up in our
fertile belt, because there will 1,o none
to
take.hi
T s shows what a
t a s' 11
I y,
illogical, childish argument this hoine-
stead organ nent is when viewed in the
light of known facts and common
sense. More, it is childish for the
government to try to excuse them -
y•• r
,Glues for wren -forst as they do
g I;,y
nearly everyday by saying that the
Conservatives did something similar
twenty or thirty years ago. What
suave vvo to do with this ancient his-
tory? Most of the leading Conserva-
tive members of those days are dead.
I am told that there are not half a
dozen of them now in this House and
that some of them have even followed
the loaves and fishes to the other side
and they may be seen there .occasion-
ally tLl �a
1 applauding C
t]
1r and supporting y I1 • � 111 Itmg thot,G
who are condemning themselves. The
hon. Minister of the Interior told ns
the other day that it was a cowardly
thing to attack a member when he
was not present although wo thought
that he should have been there. What
must we think of the same minister
when we find him attacking poor fel-
lows who have been dead and buried
for twenty or thirty years, simply be-
cause he knows they cannot come
Isere and defend themselves? I fancy
that if the mere shadow of the shade
of some of the great Conservative
leaders of the past could appear in
this House, those who have been con-
tinually maligning and misrepresent-
ing them would shake in their shoes.
If the Conservatives of those days did
wrong they were punished and driven
from power. The Liberals came into
power promising to reform and to
remedy these wrongs. They have
now been in power for ten years and
they have only aggravated and in-
creased them. Instead of getting rid
of the olcl lanes companies, they have
been creating new ones. Therefore,
by their own admission, they are do-
ing now what the Conservatives for-
merly diel and, according to their own
reasoning, they too should be punish-
ed and driven from power. The future
historian will not estimate the worth
of the members of this government by
the few paltry', political dollars which
they may accrunnlate in their pockets,
but by the wisdom, the honesty and
statesmanship which they display in
laying the foundations of this great
country.
Goderich.
Contracts for the brick and masonry
work and for the carpenter work in
connection with the new Bapthet
church have been let, the former 'to
C. A. Reid & Co., and the latter to the
Goderich Planing Mills.
Last Friday morning another bad
accident occurred, this time on the
Dunlop hill, resulting in Alex. Young,
the Kintail hotel -keeper, sustaining a
fractured skull. Mr. Young was driv-
ing into Goderich, when his horse be-
came frightened by one of the engines
at work on the C. P. R. construction
and turning round threw him out.
Tuesday of this week was the one
hundredth anniversary of the birth of
Mrs. Robertson, who lives with her
daughter, Mrs, P. Wylie, Lighthouse
street. Mrs. Robertson was born May
Wexford,
1806, in the county of Z` exford,
Ireland. She was nine years of age
when Waterloo was fought ; she had
reached maturity before the first
steam locomotive was built ; she has
lived under five sovereigns of Great
Britain.
The construction of the 0. P. R.
abutments and piers is making a big
inroad into the pile of gravel at the
end of "Waterloo street and a number
of teams are at work u
hauling ravel
to replenish it. The excavation for a
breakwater of cribwork is being made
on the Attrill bank at the point where
the C. P. R. track leaves the bank.
The breakwater will be between 200
and 300 feet in length and is necessary
to protect the bank at that point from
the action of the spring freshets.
1.
Teeswater.
Teeswater Bowling Club has reor-
ganized for the season of 1900.
Mr. Walter Rose has bought a lot
Clarinda on Clarinda St. between Uni n and
o
James Sts., from M. Shiestel, and is
preparing to build a dwelling house
on it.
The business of R. F. Howson & Co.
which got into financial difficulties
early in Febrnary has been finally
' wound up and the creditors settled
with. The business paid 68c on the
dollar.
In tho last eight years, you've heard of great ont prices in Furniture, and
clearing sales. Now, if yon 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. Wo have carried a largo stock over winter, and have large
orders coming in for the spring trade. All must go at the same price. You
have done well to wait for this great chance. Parlor Suites, Bedroom Spites,
Coueheit, Dining Chairs, Sideboards, Extension Tables, Buffets, Hall Racks,
Iron Beds, Springs, Mattresses, in fact anything needed in a houso.
Thanks for past favors; a continuance of your patronage solicited.
Undertaking
promptly and caro -
fully attended to.
Walker Bros. & Button
Furniture Dealers and Undertakers
50c
Will Pay for the Advance to ,
January Ist, 1907.
Assessor Campbell recently return-
ed the Teeswater Assessment Roll to
the Clerk. The total assessment this
year aulounts to $206,679. Last year
the figures were $262,933. The income
assessed is $1,749 and the business as-
sessment $31,590, leaving a general
property assessment of $233,310.
Mr. Geo. Colvin, youngest son of
the late Geo. Colvin, arrived in town
on Tuesday having conte almost
directly from San Francisco where he
spent the memorable night of the 18th
of April. Mr. Colvin, who way
travelling for boot and shoe firer,
was asleep in a room on the third
floor of ati hotel when the shock caste.
His first intimation of it was to find
himself and the bedclothing thrown to
the middle of the floor, He couldn't
imagine what was wrong but thought
it well to leave the house as quickly as
possible. After throwing his grips
through a window, he seized his clout-
ing and rade for the street, but could
get no further than the second floor.
The house seemed to have sunk into
tate ground or the first story to have
collapsed. To get to the street he had
to jump from a second story window
but this was so near the ground that
he got no hurt, though on his bare
feet,
-Winnipeg- has sixty-five licensed
hotels, twenty wholesale liquor deal-
ers and six breweries.
-The Calgary Milling Co, will erect
a 1,000 -barrel mill, the largest of its
kind west of Winnipeg.
---Oxygen is a colorless, tasteless,
odorless gas, forming eight -ninths of
theweight � e g11t c )
f water, and more than
one-fifth of the volume of air.
-Port Elgin ratepayers will on
June 4th vote on a by-law to raise the
same
f $30,000, for theur rose of in-
stalling
stalling a system of water works.
-Now that Exeter is likely to have
a canning factory, capitalized at $25,-
000, she is negotiating with a firm
anxious to establish a knitting fac-
tory.
-It is estimated that besides what
may come out of the properties now
developing,
Cobalt will sendthe
v on to t re
channels of commerce $3,500,000 this
coming season.
-John Armstrong, of the Ord con,
of Culross, sustained a considerable
loss last week by the death of an im-
ported Clydesdale mare. The animal
is said to have cost $400 in Scotland.
Death was duo to distemper which
has affected a great many horses in
this locality this spring.
-Chief Justice Meredith made an
order quashing the by-law passed this
year by the Township of Sarawalk,
near Owen Soutid, granting an ex-
clusivegas franchise cl sc f •
for twenty years
to one company. The court held that
the Township Council had not the
right. to grant an exclusive right for
that period. The township pays the
costs.
-An order -in -Council has been pas-
sed, finally disposing of the $2,000 im-
pounded by the Gamey -Stratton Com-
mission of enquiry, by handing over to
the Sick Children's Hospital, the iden-
tical marked check for $1,500, and five
$100 bank bills, which figured so large-
ly on that memorable occasion in the
House when Garrey presented them
to the Premier.
-Bailiff Philip Simser and one as-
sistant were in charge of fifteen pri-
soners for the Central Prison, at
Orangeville Station yesterday, and
two escaped. Bellamy Albino slipped
from his hand -cuffs and made off
down the track. Simser chased him
in vain, and when Simser returned
Sydney La Chappelle was missing.
The fifteen had been attached to the
one chain.
-The following statistics from the
assessor's roll for 1006 for Goderich
township, are of interest. No. of
acres, 52,209; acres cleared, 42,508;
acres of wood land, 3,023; acres of
swamp, 5,238 ; value of land, $1,408,-
490 ; value of buildings, $313,400 ; busi-
ness assessments, $1550 ; children be-
tween ii and 21 years, 683 ; children
between 5 and 10 years, 451 ; popula-
tion, 2,091.
London, Ont., May 17.-A man -fac-
ed colt was born on the farm of Alex.
Shaver, farmer, lot 26, con. 2, West-
minster, Tuesday night, The colt is
normal in all particulars except the
head. The eyes are close together,
and immediately below them is a
protusion like a nose. Then comes
the mouth, much further up on the
leach than ordinarily. A further
peculiarity about the animal is the
fact that it refuses the snare's milk,
and is being fed on cow's milk.
The Shelburne Free Press say :-"A
number of the forayer residents of
Dufferin county now live in Zion
City. Through the literature sent
out, misleading though it is, and the
work of emissaries ever ready to do
the bidding of Fakir Dowie, these
people were induced to sell their farms
and move to Zion City and deposit-
their
eposittheir money in Zion City Bank. They
have never received any interest on
the investment, and, more than that,
it is extremely doubtful if they ever
receive one cent of the principal.
These people are now in destitute cir-
cumstances and have been compelled
to stand in ]sue forr
hours r s a 1c1e e v u
days waiting for a dollar out of an in-
stitution where they had deposited
thousands."
How To Get Consumption.
Ninety per cent. of the "lungers"
contract consumption by allowing
power of resistance to fall so low that
a favorable condition for the develop-
ment of the baccilli is provided. In a
healthy system consumption can't
take root. But where there is weak-
ness and debility, there yon find tub-
erculosis. For developing strength
and building up the weak, nothing
equals 1i'errozone. It snakes the blood
nutritious and the nerves enduring.
The way it converts food into nntri-
anent, the appetite it gives is surpris-
ing. Just what the loran verging on
consumption needs, -that's Ferrozone.
If tired and weak don't put off. Fifty
cents buys a box of 50 tablets -at ail
dealers.
LucknoW.
The contractors, Messrs. Jardine 450
Robertson, commenced operations nn
Messrs, John Joynt's and A. Davi-
son's large block of stores last week
and are certainly pushing the work
ahead at a. rapid rate.. The entire
front walls will be of block cement
and when finished will be a fine look-
ing block of stores,
Another of the early pioneers of the
section passed away at her home in
this on 71rrs
a
y last, in the
person of Agues 1), Corrigan, beloved
wife of Mr. Peter Corrigan, in the 00th
year of her age, The deceased and
her husband were among the first set-
tlers in
r thetownship. of Kinloss,
where they continuously resided till a
few years ago, when they removed to
Lueknow. She was greatly respected
by a wide circle of friends.
The anniversary services in the
Presbyterian Church on Sunday last
were a decided success. The pulpit
was occupied on both occasions by the
Winchester, A. B. '4'i tnchester, I3,A., of Knox
Church, Toronto, and everybody pres-
ent were delighted with the excellent
sermons delivered, On Monday even-
ing the church was again well filled to
hear the address on the past and pres-
ent conditions of China, by Mi. Win-
chester, whose personal experience in
that country as a missionary enabled
him to give one of the most instruc-
tive and interesting lectures ever de-
livered in the church.
•r
Sir James Watson's Opinion.
He says that the commonest of all
disorders, and one from which few
escape is catarrh, Sir James firmly
believes in local treatment, which is
best supplied by Catarrhozone. No
case of catarrh can exist where Catar-
rhozone is used ; it is a miracle work-
er, relieves almost instantly and cures
after other remedies fail. Other
treatments can't reach the diseased
parts like Catarrhozone because it
goes to the source of the trouble along
with the air you breathe. Catarrho-
zone is free from cocaine, it leaves no
bad after-effects, it is simply nature's
own cure. Accept no substitute for
Catarrhozone which alone can cure
catarrh.
-Reports from Goderich township
and Colborne are that many fields of
fall wheat have been plowed up on ac-
count of being killed during either
the winter or spring, but to the north
and east the fall wheat fields are re-
ported to be looking well.
Battleford, Sask., May 18. -It is
estimated from the large number of
people looking for homesteads, and
the fact that there appears to be a
very few obtainable, that at the end
of the year there will not be a home-
stead left in the noted Saskatchewan
wheat belt.
-The Town Council of Nordhausen,
Saxony, has issued an ordinance pro-
hibiting women from allowing the
trains of their dresses to drag in the
streets, as a measure for the protec-
tion of health and for the prevention
of tainting the air with dust. The
penalty for infraction of this ordin-
ance is a fine of $7,50. The police de-
partment of Nordhausen had pre-
viously forbidden women to allow
their dress trains to sweep the side-
walks of a certain square in town, and
now the Council extends the regula-
tion to the entire city. Sensible.
.l.
Might As Well Have it In Style.
"Ma wants a package of dye, and
she wants at fashionable color," said a
littlea o irl t < druggist.
"A fashionable color?" echoed the
pharmacist. "What does she want it
for ?
"Nell," replied the girl, "the doctor
says ma has stomach trouble, and she
ought to diet. And ma says if she
has to dye it, she might as well dye it
a fashionable color."
Have You Heart Burn ?
It's quite common with people
whose digestion is poor. Immediate
relief follows the use of Nerviline.
Stomach is strengthened, digestion is
made perfect, lasting cures results in
every case. Use Poison's Nerviline
once and you'll never he without it
because every type of stomach trou-
ble is conquered by a few doses. One
25c bottle of Nerviline always con-
vinces. Sold everywhere for the past
fifty years.
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, Ill., U. S. A.
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to
n Good Wheat is only HALF the battle. w
f The OTHER half Is skilful milling. w
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Jewel Flour
fi w
m has tlto two halves, With our long experience, we KNOW how is
Pe to make GOOD FLOUR, and we give our mills our PERSONAL
IA attention. Onr machinery -there is NONE better made; if there gi
!awere, wo would BUY it. w
m Is
Look for Recipe Booklet in the Bag. Y
PFEFFER BROS, - Milverton Ont.
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limpocottoreettimotoettiomieeteoitottotowitteowietemmitir
We aro always told that a cow will
bring the most money if *he comer
fresh in the fall, and she will it we
have a good, warm, clean place to keep
her in and give her good feed, Auch as
clover hay,oatswheat and w eat bran, with
enough barley or corn to valance the
ration, keep her quiet, never chasing
her or getting her excited, especially at
milking time, and not letting her stand
out d
9 eo
el.
It was so cold in my barn a few days
last winter that it froze a little, and
one of my cows that was giving over
thirty pounds of milk a day went al-
.tnost down to twenty pounds, and all
the other cows dropped off in propor-
tion. It I had turned them outdoors
and left them out for some time, or,
worse yet, sent them out to hunt for
cornstalks and some time about dark
or maybe y after let them into a cold,
damp, dirty barn and fed them a little
wire grass for desert and touched them
up a little with a pitchfork or the milk-
ing stool, just to show them who was
"running the establishment, you know,"
why, I don't think it would have paid
me very well to have my cows come
fresh in the fall.
The way I look at the question is
this: If you have the feed and can
and are willing to give the cows the
proper care you can make money if
they drop their calves in the fall. But
if you are going to feed them a ration
composed of dry cornstalks, straw and
wire grass, with plenty of northwest
wind as an appetizer, you had better
let them have their calves in the spring,
but I am afraid your returns will be
small in either case. -C. Skaar in Kim-
ball's Dairy Farmer.
The Ayrshire Cattle.
The Ayrshire breed of cattle receives
much less consideration from Ameri-
can dairyman than it merits, says
Hoard's Dairyman. This is largely
due to the fact, in our opinion, that
some years ago Ayrshire breeders as a
class surrendered to show yard stand-
ards and bred and handled their ani-
mals more with a view to winning
show ring prizes than to producing
cows that could show large profit as
milkers.
Happily there was a remnant both
in America and Scotland who did not
"crook the pregnant hinges of the
•AYRSHIRE BULL GOLD FOX.
knee" before the imperial dame "that
thrift might follow fawning," but, ig-
noring the show ring and Its tempta-
tions, kept on with the old fashioned
dairy Ayrshire, with the result that
this breed is coming again into pos-
session of its historical prominence as
a worthy competitor of the other dis-
tinctively dairy breeds. The bull
Gold Fox is a grandson of Lady Fox,
'whose milk record for a year was
12,299 pounds of milk, yielding 62.1
pounds of butter.
Washing the Separator.
The practice of washing the hand
separator bowls, milk pails and other
utensils with the dishcloth or even
with a cloth kept for that purpose is to
be condemned and always leaves a bad
odor which is transmitted to the cream
which is sure to creep out as a disa-
greeable flavor in the
h
butter.Brushes
should alone be used, and after wash-
ing them they should be rinsed off
with boiling water, which will Impart
sufficient heat, so that they will dry
themselves without the necessity of
wiping with a cloth. The bowls should
not be set squarely down on the table
or shelf, but should be laid over in a
slanting position, so that the air can
circulate in and around them. - Pro-
fessor Moore, Wisconsin Station.
The Dairy Thermometer.
The time of the year is again at hand
when the housewife as well as an occa-
sional creamery buttermaker becomes
quite impatient and all out of sorts be-
cause it takes so long to churn the but-
ter and for the simple reason re sou t h
at they
continually insist upon guessing at the
temperature of the cream instead of
using a dairy thermometer, which is
one of the most essential instruments
in the ripening of cream and churning
at all times of the year. It costs but
30 or 40 cents and will save you many
hours of unnecessary labor and impa-
tience,
Mistakes In Cow Feeding.
There are two common mistakes made
in feeding cows -first, not feeding liber-
ally enough; second, feeding a ration
not properly balanced -says Professor
Eckles of the Missouri station. It has
been found by experiments that about
00 per cent of what a cow can eat is
necessary to merely maintain her with•
out producing any milk or gaining in
weight. This being true, it is evident
that it is not economy to feed only a lit-
tle more than this 60 per cent needed
to keep up the cow's body.
Improving. the nerd.
No matter how poor a herd a dairy-
man may have, the first crop of calves
from a pure bred sire will be half
bloods or better and the next genera.
tion three-fourths or better,
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ruI$T S. TM t)Itton l'enre has 1. ,,i alnre 1 nc;' '1 •
t1' rxtbrinlAntal ante. on'., you Rot a Dillon
Forme ymt aro, set idled, ,ted will a not ntnre. nine ,
traced Catalogue fres--live agents wnntrd.
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WINGHAM
Four f E
s
PRICE LIST
Star Flour, $1.90 to $2.15 per % bbl.
Man. Flour, $2.00 to $2.25 per z 'bbl.
Bran, 1
s , $ 8.00 to $20.00 per ton,
Shorts, $20.00 to $21.00 per top.
Low Grade Flour, $23 to $25 per ton,.
0hop, $17.00 to $25 per ton.
Goods delivered promptly to
all parts of the town.
We 'want 12,000 bushels of
Wheat this month, and will pay
the highest market prices in cash
for any quantity delivered at the
.mill.
'HOWSON HARVEY &
s
BROCKLEBANR,
Tinsmithiiu
In all its branches done
neatly, promptly and at
reasonable rates. Good
stock of TINWARE on
hand. Try us for your
Jobbing and
Eavetroughing
STOVES and RANGES
of the best makes on
band. Our prices are
very reasonable.
When in need of anything
our line, give us a call.
We'll treat you right.
in
Robt. Mooney
The best place to buy a Piano
or Organ, is right here; we have
the best makes, and prices are
right.
SEWING MACHINES.
In these we handle the White,
Canadian, and New Williams;
these are among the best on the
market.
David Bell 1
• Stand -Opp. Skating Rink 0
500000000000000000000••00
$1.00
ROUND TRIP
GODERICH TO
IIETROIT
TUESDAY, JUNE 19
RETURNING JUNE 21
Sl'r GREYHOUND
2 Days In Detroit
WRITE E. H. AYER, AGT., DETROIT
FOR PARTICULARS,
HAVE YOU A BOSS? or ere you hide.
pendent? If you are making money for some one
else, quit and make money for yourself. Get out
of slavery and be free. write G. htanStrAtt
Co,, London. They will show you the way. Tiley
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,
.....................
•:...
For Neat, Tasty ❖
_: Job Printing of '4.
._. every deserip- _:
_: tion, at Prices :
_: to suit you, call
* at The AUvANcx :
_: Office t
s•_.