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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1906-06-14, Page 5• ♦♦♦•••••••♦♦♦♦♦•••••i• nee 2 i O 2 Z I USE THE LONG DISTANCE LINES TO Walkerton Iiarriston Listowel Clinton Stratford ♦ ••••••••••••••••••••••♦•o• Rates may be obtained from the Long Distance Operator The Bell Telephone Company of Canada LIMITED THE WINGHANM ADVANCE -- THURSDAY, JUNE Z4, 1906 •••••••44•+4.4••04040.444 N0000040NN04444N00004 New Wash Vests Ask to see the New Collar Popular Priced Smart Suits. TROUSERS To convince you of the better- ness of this lino over all others, a five-minute look would do more than a page of talk. To the man who, for a moderato figure, wants not only quality, but clever style in his Clothes, our range is a revelation. See the splendid garments and big variety we offer at these prices The new stripe and broken check effects, the always popular blues and blacks, as well as all other wanted colors, are hero shown in the latest single and double-breasted coat models. $7.50, $8.50, $10 00, $12.00. Boys' Clothes That Satisfy. The biggest Boys' Clothing busi- ness we ever enjoyed proves the claim that we sell the smartest styles in town at popular prices. We're ready with new patterns for Saturday. 2 -Piece Suits in smart single or double-breasted Norfolks in a splendid range of good pat- terns and colors $2.50 to $4.50 3 -Piece Suits in clever new de- signs and models, in all the new colors, single or double- breasted styles, $3.50 to $7.50 AND RAIN COATS. Very special Trousers in Worsteds, Surges, Tweeds and English Whipcord, cut iii both conservative and peg -top shapes, in popular shades, etc $2.00, $3.00, $5.00 SPRING RAIN COATS. - Short or long lengths, in gray, Black or Olive. Perfect fitting in every respect. Special values at $8.50, $10.00, $12.00 GENTS' WARM WEATHER FIXINGS. Men's New Negligee Shirts, all sizes Men's New Leather Belts 25o, 50o, 75c, $1.00 Men's New Wash Vests $1.00 to $2.75 Men's New Wash Ties 15c and 20c Men's Soft bosom Shirts, sizes 12 to 181- $1.00 and $1.50 ,. Men c Balbriggan Underwear, sizes 34 to46 50e Men's Euglish natural wool Underwear $1.00 to $1.50 Men's New Gray Mocha Gloves, unlined $1.50 $1.00 and $1.25 Boys' Wash 'Suits, all sizes $ Loo to $I.75 STRAW HATS FOR COMFORT. We have just received a now range of Men's Straw Hats in fancy shapes, also the popular Boater. Prices 250 to $3.00 FRIDAY AND SATURDAY FLYERS. O ♦ I 20 Pairs' Boys' 60c Tweed Pants 40o 12 Men's Odd Tweed Suits, regular price $10, Friday and Saturday $7.50 14 Pairs' Men's Patent Leather Shoes, all sizes, worth $4.50, Friday and Saturday $3.50 The R. H. Crowder Co. O ♦•N••NN•N••N•••O•00•0 ♦♦00.t0.•••••NN•••♦♦N•OA 1906 EIGHTH ANNUAL 3 -DAY EXCURSION GODERICH-- DETROIT THE BIG NEW STEEL STEAMER. GREYHOUND OF THE WHITE STAR LINE WILL LEAVE DETROIT, MONDAY, JUNE 18TH, 8 A. M. ARRIVE IN GODERIOH 5 P. M. FROM GODERIOH FOR DETROIT LEAVE TUESDAY, 8.30 A. M., JIINE 1OTH (CANADA. TZS.,EI) Stopping only at Port Huron, arrive in Detroit 4.00 p. m. A Special Excursion Train will leave Stratford the morn- ing of Juno 19th, stopping at Mitchell, Dublin, Seaforth, Clinton and Holmesville, and arrive in Goderich 8.15 a.m. From Wingham, 0.40 a. m., Blyth, Etc., the morning train, Juno 10th, connects at Clinton, 7.40 a.m., with Special Train for Goderich. RETURNING: LEAVE DETROIT (e u•rnAL mut) THURSDAY. JUNE 21$T, 1.00 P. M., PORT HURON 5.30 P. M. SHARP. THIURSDAY NIGIIT SPECIAL TRAIN LEAVE'S GODERICH AT 11 P. M. FOR CLINTON AND WAY STATIONS TO WINGIIAM AND STRATFORD, ON ARRIVAL OF STEAMER. A 50 cont Dinner will be served in the beautiful dining room for this Excursion. Other meals A la Carte. A good lunch can be had at the lunch counter. LEAVE GoDERICH ON LAST TRIP FOR DETROIT, FRIDAY, JUNE 22ND, AT 8.80 A, M. (Canada tinie). Round -Trip Fare, either way, with hand baggage, $1.00. One way with trunk, $1.00. Goderich Band Moonlight Excursion at Goderich, Eight O'clock Monday Evening, 25 Cents. -An epidemid of smallpox at Sene- ca, near Caledonia, is reported, The district is in quarantine. -Statistics just issued show that the number of emigrants from Ire- land in 1005 to the United States was 21,181, and to Canada 2,360. Two hundred and eighty-five went to Australia. What Causes Snoring. When asleep, people that snore breathe through the mouth instead of the nostrils which are choked with ca- tarrh. Just use "Caterrhozono" be- fore retiring and you will quickly cure the snoring habit. 13y destroying the cause of catarrh and healing the mem- branes, Caterrhozone makes a com- plete cure in every ease ; it cleans the nostrils, stops the discharge and pre- vents dropping in the throat in a few minutes. Nothing so pleasant or cer- tain to cure snoring, catarrh or colds as Catarrhozonethat's worth rem- embering. ellnton. N. 13. Henry has sold his Photo busi- ness to Mr, Roberts, of Paisley. Mr. J. Taylor has sold his residence on Ritttenbury street to D. Tiplady, who gets possession next fall, The business of the Jackson Manu- facturing Co„ has increased so much, that it is absolutely necessary for them to extend their manufacturing facilities, or else curtail their orders. Mr. David Patton, Bluevale, was brought to the hospital on Wednes- day and underwent an operation for appendicitis ; the operation was sue- cessful, and he is doing well. Mr. Bennett, of Bennett & Nichol- son, contractors,. Wingham, was in town this week securing men to help in building the new High School, for which they have the contract; Mr. Bennett is an old Tuelcersmith boy, being born there about 47 years ago. The remains of Rev, Geo. M, Kitty arrived from Granton on the 10.15 a. nl. train on Friday hast and were met at the station by a very large number of friends, including members of the Orange Order from Seaforth, Londes- boro, Auburn and the Goderich town- ship lodges. Mr. J. Sibley, Clinton, is the inven- tor and manufacturer of what is known as perforated music, similar to the Pianola music, It has become very popular in the Old Country, and Sir Thomas Lipton was so much im- pressed with it that he recently or- dered a special quantity of it, and had it forwarded as his wedding present to the Princess of Battenburg, now the Queen of Spain. The local branch of the Sovereign Bank has now an adding machine, a truly wonderful piece of mechanism which weighs forty pounds, is said to consist of 2200 distinct pieces and cost $350. It reduces addition to a mere matter of touching a key board - touch the button and presto, the ques- tion in addition, no matter of what length, is at once solved for you and set down in black and white. The loud barking of a neighbor's dog awakened Mr. George Thompson of near Londesboro at daybreak on Monday only to find that his house was on fire. The flames had then made such headway that the house was doomed and only a small portion of the contents was saved. There was a r insurance on h hot se of $700 and , x the r on the contents a like amount. The origin of the fire is unknown. Goderich. . The steamer Ding Edward of the Algoma Central line made her first call for the season last Friday morn- ing, bound down. No. 1 company is getting into shape to go to camp at London on the 18th. There is still room for a few recruits. Mr. E. P. Paulin has secured the Acheson property on Bruce street, and expects to move his family here in the course of a week or so. At the meeting of the London con- ference of the Methodist church which has just closed at Windsor, the joint invitation of the North street and Victoria street churches to hold the 1907 meeting here was accepted. After an illness of less than a week of pneumonia, Mrs. Wm. Wilson, Bayfield road, passed to the world be- yond, last Wednesday morning. Mrs. Wilson was a native df Goderich, be- ing born here sixty-five years ago, and had lived here all her life. Mrs. Edward Robertson, the one- hundredth anniversary of whose birth we mentioned in these columns a fort- night ago, did not long survive the attaining of that patriarchal age, her death coming last Sunday morning, just twelve days after she bad com- pleted the century. The case against Jasper Brindley for bigamy came up again on Satur- day last, when His Honor Judge Holt held that adivorce granted the defen- dant's wife in Detroit did not set him at liberty to marry again. The case was reserved for a decision from the Appeal Court, however, and Brindley was released on giving bail, pending such decision. A short time since, six of the men who were working for Battle & Co. on the breakwater here last year, were working at a dam and through some part of it giving way, they were washed into the river and drowned. A pathetic thought in connection with the fatality is that one of the drowned is said to have been engaged to a young lady of this town and that the marriage was to have taken place June 1st. -In Ottawa the other day appeared Jim Hill, the railway king, and these are some of the remarks he made "You have in the Northwest all that is left of the unoccupied land where a man can make a comfortable bone for himself and family, There is no difti- culty hi settling your Northwest. Do not be in too great a hurry to settle it. Select the population. Wherever the sun shines, population without hind is a mob, and land without population is a wilderness. You want both. The quality of the soil is of less corse- ' quence than the quality of the man who lives on the soli. As far as you have gone in Canada, your educational institutions, the general standard of business integrity, are such that you have no apologies to make. Keep that clean. Held your standard up. Preserve your unoccupied land for those who will make intelligent use of it," St. Catharines, Ont., June 7.-G. W. McLean of Port Dalhousie has a grape vine growing on his farm which is known to be at least 125 years old. It measures over 18 inches around the trunk, and some of the branches are 8, 10, and even 12 inches around. The great vine climbs a tree over 50 feet high, even to the topmost branch, Besides embracing the entire great tree, the vine covers a quarter of an acre of ground. Palmerston, June 7. -One of the oldest residents of Palmerston passed away Tuesday evening in the person of Freeborn ICee. Many years ago, when the town was only beginning to be settled, Mr. Kee took up his resi- dence here, and for nearly thirty years was identified with Palmerston, both in business and tis tax. collector, which office he gave up on account of advancing age. Mr. Kee in early days kept store and in later years fol- lowed the conveyancing anti notary pttblie work, NEWS ITEMS. -One-third of the earth is ed by the Anglo-Saxon race. -•--An experimental station to in- vestigate sewage disposal systems is to be established in Toronto. The On- tario Government will contribute $0,- 000 for the purpose,. London, June 7. -Mr. Thomas Mc- Cormick, head of the McCormick Manufacturing Company, died in Chi - cage this morning while on his way home from California, where he had been visiting his son-in-law, Mr, McCormick had been prominent in business circles for forty years, and had accumulated a fortune estimated at fully a million dollars. -'.Che weekly reports, dated June 0, on the crops throughout the West, are are again encouraging. Mone nearly all stations come the reports that prospects are bright. While last week a growth of four to six inches was generally the highest obtained in the great majority of districts, the report for the week ending June Oth shows a six-inch growth to be usual, In more than one district the wheat has at- tained a height of 18 inches. -A cluster of six townships has been set apart by the Hon. F. Coch- rane, Minister of Lands, Forests and Mines, in Algona district, above Chapleau, a divisional point on the C. P. R., west of Sudbury, for the filling of veterans' land grants. The town- ships are D'Arcy, Chewett, McGee, Cochrane, Borden and Gameq. Laura, a new municipality in Nipissing, near the north channel of Lake Huron, is also set apart for the same purpose. -Last year, according to the Peter- boro Examiner, J. C. Brown, school inspector, introduced the half-day system in the rural schools of the county. By this system the school is divided into two parts, the senior and junior classes. The former attend during the morning of each school day from 8 o'clock until 11, and thus the teacher has three hours at her dis- posal to look after the educational in- terests of the seniors, without being hampered by the necessity of main- taining order among the remainder of the school, Then, in the afternoon, the junior classes attend from 1 o'clock until the usual hour of closing; and they, in their turn, receive the undividedio of the teacher. attend n Under this system, the discipline is y p said to be improved, and senior pupils are able to spend half of each day at work on the farm, and, at the same time, keep pretty well up with their school work, All the pupils from the half-day schools who tried the entrance examination last year suc- ceeded. It is expected that the system will be adopted all over Peter- boro County this year. Teeswater. Miss Minnie Fessant of Wingham ie ontroll- spending the week in town, the guest of Mrs, J. 3, Reid. Those Annoying Blackheads. External applications will never re- move pimples or blackheads, Only by stimulating circulation and purifying the blood can it be done. For quick sure release from these pests use Fer- rezone ; it drives all humors from the blood, makes the skin healthy, tones up the system. With the pure nutri- tious blood made by Ferrozone it's im- possible to suffer from any skin disease. You'll have a smooth de- lightful skin, healthy color, and beautiful complexion by using Ferro - zone -and you'll feel immensely bet- ter as well. Fifty cents buys a box of 50 chocolate coated tablets at any drug store. ARE YOU MAKING $2,003.22 YEAR ? It is being done with our goods Work is pleasant, permanent and profitable Goods used in every house, every day. No fake and no need to create the demand. Legitimate reputable business. You can start without a cent of capital. Write to day. G, MARSHALL 4 Co. Wholesale Teas, and Coffees, London, Ont. For Neat, Tasty Job Printing of every descrip- tion, at Prices to suit you, call at The ADVANCE Office . `i4 ♦!. The annual meeting of South Bruce Farmers' Institute will be held at the home of Mr. Thos, Malcolm, Kin - lough, Saturday, June loth, commenc- ing at 11 o'clock a,m. Mr. Andrew Porter, manager of the Sovereign Bank here, received word on Tuesday that he would shortly be transferred to the branch of the bank opened about two months ago at Goderich. Owing to ill health Miss Louise Tuck has temporarily given up her position as teacher in the Teeswater P. S., and on Friday last went to her home at Mount 13rydges. She expects to again take up her work here after the summer vacation. Miss Kate Mc- Donald, of con.,hasbeen en- gaged,the 8th n gaged by the School Board to take her place for the month of June. The four year old son of Mr. Albert Rivers had an interesting experience on Saturday evening last. The little fellow had wished to go for a walk up town hut becoming sleepy was instead put to bed upstairs where his mother left him asleep. A few minutes later Mrs. R. Arscott, a neighbor, caught him starting up town half asleep and in his night clothes, He had got out of bed and went out through the win- dow, which was open, and dropped about 1.4 feet to the ground. Fortun- ately he was not hurt further than a few scratches about the face. LIFE FIRE INSURANCE Lowest rates consistent with absolute security. All claims promptly settled Abner Cosens ACCIDENT PLATE GLASS I I I Stand -Opp. Skating Rink ••••••♦N♦00NNN♦N♦♦♦O You Make A Mistake If you buy a Piano with- out seeing our stock, comparing prices and taking into account theoft quality the instrument. All the best makes always in stock - Heintzman, Newcombe, Dominion, and others. Also Organs, and best Sewing Machines. the very WINCiHAM .our PRICE LIST : Star Flour, per iz bbl$2.00 to $2.25 Man. Flour, per bbl2.10 to 2.40 Cream Pastry Flour 2.00 to 2.25 Bran, per ton ,18 00 to 20.00 Shorts, per ton 20.00 to 22.00 Low Grade Flour, ton -24.00 to 26.00 Chop, per ton 17.00 to 25.00 Goods delivered promptly to all parts of the town. WHEAT HIGHER We want Wheat and will pay from 75c to 80c per bus. for any quantity delivered at the mill. Bring your gristing and get highest grade of Flour and good yields. Chopping done fine and promptly every day. HOWSON, HARVEY & BROCKLEBANK. Tinsrnitliing 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 hand. Our prices are very reasonable. When in need of anything in our line, give us a call. We'll treat yon right. 44444414044iI00ad0 0 4x031 oo o t Most anything that is WHITE looks 0AN• 1 AU flours LOOK clean. ili 1 Jewel Flour m 18 clean. All our barreled /lour is shipped in NEW Al barrels made from sound, OLEAN stock. Oar cotton and paper sacks are ALWAYS new. And we take NO empty bags back; opus• quently, our mills are FREE from insects. Ntook for Recipe. Booklet In the Bag. PFEFFER BROS. Milverton, Ont. sfee.E.*te al.:[E.tocesiim4Q:EIDE!4E:E :F4 04**fcft'4-' 414* :*4001114 .s 1r The SUCCESS PREADER • -7 41, .4111 ,i1Y1 4� v��e•� _-=sem -.- ti r±.►^yi`i�,��• =•:sem-- �... c OLDEST NICEST WORKiNQ BEST WORK 'aint*. LIGHTEST DRAFT -egoMOST DURABLE 1,0111 •, The "Success', has the largest rear axle and strongest drive -chain of any Spreader made. It is the only machine with Boater freeing -device and many other nointe covered by strong patents. Our catalogue tells all about it and gives much valuable Information for farmers. Write for it. mArtuFAOTpBED mr THE PARIS PLOW C01,LTOI, PARIS. ONT. WINNIPEG. MAN. Also manufacturers of High Grade Walking and Riding Plows ; Thorns Blower and Grinder. For Sale by J. J. Fryfogle, Wingham. Thos. Armstrong General Agent, Wingham. OUR TURN NOW. In the last eight years, you've heard of great cut prices in Furniture, and clearingsales Now,ifyou want Sale, to see and experience a real Clearing Sa e, 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 stook 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 Suites, Couches, Dining Chairs, Sideboards, Extension Tables, Buffets, Hall Racks, Iron Beds, Springs, Mattresses, in fact anything needed in a house. Thanks for past favors; a continuance of your patronage solicited. Undertaking promptly and care- fully attended to. Robt. Mooney Walker Bros. & Button Furniture Dealers and Undertakers ale Cia-leO 0- JetlClle, $5,000 WORTH OF First =Class Jewelry MUST BE SOLD DURING JUNE AT W. G. Patterson's Think for a minute. Don't you want a GOOD Watch at the price of a cheap one ? A large stock to choose from, and they must be sold. Tiffany and English Wedding Rings. Diamond Rings from $15 to $250. Beautiful stock of Pearl and Diamond Pendants and Brooches. Swell line of Clocks and Silverware. June is the month for Weddings, and Presents will be needed. We have a large stock of the choicest Wedding Gifts, and they must be cleared out also. W. G. Patterson The Great Watch Doctor, Wingham.