HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1909-09-23, Page 5THE WINGIrAMVI .ADVANCE, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER ,,243, 1909.
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The Clothes With A
National Reputation
McGee & Campbell
Clothiers and Men's
Furnishers
The Weed Nuisance.
The Port EIgin Times says :—With-
in the past few weeks frequent com-
plaint has been heard from farmers
about the number 'of unfamiliar weeds
being found on their farms. In some
cases these weeds are easily killed,
while others have been found and clas-
sified as most dangerous. Most of
these weeds it is claimed, come
through seed imported. There are in-
stances where farmers have purchased
cheap seed and got not the slightest
guarantee that their purchase did not
contain the start of many weeds ex-
ceedingly difficult to eradicate. If
the weeds spread for a few more years
as they have done this season many
farms will be past redemption. It
may be that the scarcity of help has
kept the farmer from giving the
ground as thorough• cultivation as was
customary when there were fewer
weeds. Municipal Councils might
take up the question.
Lucknow.
Lucknow Fall Fair Sept. 23-2.1.
John Toynt is building a new foun-
dation under his houses near the G. T.
R. dpot.
Robert Johnston is looking after
John Joynt's apple interests up around
Port Elgin, Paisley and district.
Mr, J. D. Murdoch of Zealandia,,
Sask., who is well known in Lucknow
and vicinity, has been appointed sub-
agent of the Dominion Land Office
which has recently been established at
that place.
Mr. Garry Stewart of Gilbert Plaine,
Manitoba, former proprietor of the
Teeswater Newe, brought the remains
of ,his mother, the late Mrs. .Angus.
Stewart, home for burial midis spend-
ing a few days in this vicinity.
Teeswater.
The village rate this year is 18 trills.
The next big event will be Teeswater
Fall hair, Oct. 5 and 6.
The local Masonic lodge will attend
divine service at the Methodist church
on Sunday, Sept, 20th, at 3 o'clock.
Guh.oss raises $4,800.98 for county
rate, and P mills for township pur-
poses, and the various school monies.
Mr. G. G. Colvin, boot and shoe
merchant of town, made an assign-
ment last week. Messrs. R. Trench
and Robt. Ormiston have bought out
the whole stock of boots and shoes at
a rate on the dollar and will continue
the business.
While driving home from Teeswater
Saturday evening, Mr, Laughlin Mc-
Kenzie, of the 10th con., Kinloss, met
with an accident that will lay him up
for some time. Ile had a load of chop
on the wagon, and when a short dis-
tance north of town his team ran
away. They slid not go far before
colliding with a tree which broke a
front wheel .off the wagon. The axle
then trailed on the ground and soon
brought the runaways to a halt. Mr.
McKenzie was thrown from a high
spring -seat, and it would appear that
one of the wheels passed over his
head, inflicting a big gash over the
right ear and tearing loose a large
piece of the scalp. Nobody saw the
accident and Mr. McKenzie lay on the
road in an unconscious condition. for
some bine. A young fellow by the
name of Meyer driving to town picked
him up and took him to the King Ed-
ward hotel, where Dr. Gillies was
called in to dress the wound, 'It took
fifteen or sixteen stitches to close up
the ragged gash,
Dandruff Cured In Two Weeks Or
Money Back.
The above is the guarantee J. Wal-
ton McKibbon, the druggist, is offer-
ing for Parisian Sage, the. greatest of
all hair restorers.
If you have dandruff, take advan-
tage of this offer and kill the Tittle
dandruff germs that will surely steal
your hair from you if allowed to con-
tinue to persistently burrow into the
hair roots.
Parisian Sage is also guaranteed to
stop falling hair and itching of the
scalp.
Don't accept any substitute from
any druggist. Parisian Sage is the
original prescription of one of the
worlds greatest scientists, and is
manufactured only in this country by
Giroux Mfg. Co., ,Buffalo, N. Y., and
Fort Erie, Ont.
Parisian Sage is an exhilarating and
pleasant hair dressing ; it is not sticky
or greasy, and it makes the hair soft,
beautiful and luxuriant.
Price is 50 cents a bottle from J.
Walton McKibben or by express, all
charges prepaid, by Giroux Mfg, Co„
Fort Erie, Ont.
Done On Time
ets
In my Jewelry Store I have a special depart-
ment, " fenced off" so to speak, from the main
show room. In charge of this is an expert work-
Inan—a mechanic—a genius. You should call at
this dept. quite often, as your Watch should be
examined at least once a year. I never charge
for examinations, and alimork left in my store
will be fixed in a thorough, workmanlike man-
ner -- and will bo
DONE ON TIME
It is promised -Mand the prlce will be reasonable
and satisfactory. If your Watoh does not need
repairing, you may have a clock to fix or some
piece of jewelry.
Oar OPTICAL DEPARTMENT is equipped with the most modern
appliances for detecting and remedying defects of vision. Our
stook is large and varied.
We charge only when glasses are required, and recommend them
only when absolutely beneficial.
T
M c I N T 0 S 11 AND o TICIAN
SIGN OP THE RED ELEPHANT.
Going Out Of Men's
Furnishings.
The Entire $3040.00 Stock Dust Be Sold
by October the 4th.
THE SALE 15 IN PULL SWING
Remember, this is no fake sale. Everything goes at
cost and below cost.
There is no old stock, as you know we have only
been in the business a little over two years.
Come along and get the Bargains of your life.
Following is a partial list and a few prices :—
Collars and Shirts.
214 Men's and Boys' Rubber Collars, best
quality. Reg. price 250—Sale Price.. 18c
498 Linen Collars, W. G. & R. make.
Reg. 20o—Sale Price 12-io
546 Linen Collars. Reg. 15c—Sale Price 9c
6 doz.Linen Collars. Reg. 15c and
200—Sale Price 50
10 doz. Regatta Shirts, W. G. &R. make,
in white and colors. Rag. $1,00 and
$1.25—Sale Price 780
20 doz. Men's and Boys' Negilegee Shirts
with and without collars. Reg. 50c
and 75c—Sale Price 39e
16 doz. Men's Negligee Shirts, with
separate or attached cuffs. Reg. $1.00
and $1.25—Sale Price 780
6 doz. Negligee Shirts, best quality, with•
or without cuffs attached. Reg. $1,50
and $1.75—Sale Price $1.10
Fancy Flannel Shirts, with 2 separate
collars. Rog. $2.50—Sale Price $1.50
Fancy Flannel Shirts. Reg. $1.50 and
$1.25—Salo Price 98c
6 doz. Working Shirts in striped shirting
black sateen and fleece lined. Reg.
50c—Sale. Price 85c
6 doz. Working Shirts. Reg. $1.00 and
75c—Sale Price 550
Underwear.
Underwear both summer and winterweight
25035c Balbriggan, sale price 18303530 ., „
Extra fine spring needle underwear in white,
slate and blue. Reg. 75c—Sale Price403
Underwear, a few special lisle thread spring
needle. Reg. $1.25—Sala Price 75c
Light wool Underwear, finest quality. Reg
$1.25—Sale Price 75c
Winter weight fleece -lined Underwear, good
quality. Reg. 503 & 75c—Sale Price38c
Extra Fine gray and pink fleece -lined Un-
derwear. Reg. 75c & 85e—Sale Price.. , 55c
Fine Wool Underwear, Penman's, guaran-
teed unshrinkable. Reg. $L00 & $1.25
Sale Price 80c
Penman's Elastic Ribbed Underwear, extra -
fine. Reg. $1.50 & $1.75—Sale Price... , $1.12
Woolsey Underwear, the finest made, rang-
ing in price from $2.00 to $2.50 — Sale
price ....$1.80
Sweaters in Coats and Plain, all styles, Men's
and Boys' at ,COST PRIDE
•
Socks.
Heavy Gray Wool Socks, 2 pair for
Heavy Ribbed Wool Socks in Gray and
Heather. Reg. 25c and 35c—Sale Price.
Extra quality Socks, heavy Heather, Mani-
fold brand. Reg. 50c—Sale Price
Black and Fancy Ohasmere Socks. Reg. 25c
—Sale Price
Black and Fancy Cashmere Socks, extra
quality. Reg. 50c—Sale Price
Fancy Lisle Thread Socks, all patterns
Reg. 25c --Sale Price
Pants.
25c
18c
38c
19e
38c
15e
Good Tweed Pants. Reg. $1,50 and $1.05—
Sale Price $1.00
Reg. $1.75 Pants—Sale Price $1.15
Heavy Tweed Pants. Reg. $2.00—Sale Price$1.25
Fancy Worsted Pants. Reg. $2.25 — Sale
Price $1.75
Fine Flannel Pants, cream with green stripes
Reg. $3.50—Sale Price $2.25
White Duck Pants, Reg. $1,25—Sale Price75c
Overalls.
Blue Overalls with white stripes. Reg. 75c --
Sale Price 553
Black Overalls with or without bib. Reg
• $1,00—Sale Psice 680
Black, blue or gray Railroad Overalls, peer- /
less, Reg. $1.25—Sale Price 89c
Neckwear.
All the latest styles.
Reg. 25c—Sale Price 18c
"Reg. 50c—Sale Price 35c
Wash Ties in strings 100
Reg. 25c styles—Sale Price 15c
Hats and Caps.
3 doz. Linen Hats. Reg. 50c—Sale Price 20c
2 doz. Linen Hats, water proof. Reg. 75c—
Sale Price 40e
Latest styles in Hard Hats. Reg. $2.50—Sale
Price 050
•
A few Straws at aveay below cost.
All styles Felts in the latest shades at cost.
Caps of all descriptions in summer and winter
styles at cost and below.
GLOVES AND MITS—A very large range of
all kinds—Fall and Winter—lined and unlined
Kid, Mocho, Mocho dressed, Buck, Horse, Dog,
fur lined, wool lined, silk lined. All styles Gloves,
Mite and Gauntlets.
Scarfs, Handkerchiefs, Jewelry, &c., at the same rates.
nutter and Eggs taken as cash.
ROBT. MAXWELL
,Made ire anada
Stands Extremes of Heat and Gond
RUB1 14OIt is used on houses and barns at points
i,000 miles north of Edmonton, Alberta—and the
extreme cold has no effect on it.
FAJIIEitOID is used on buildings in the West tndies;
Soutar America and the Orient,—.where the ther-
mometer registers from 90 to zoo degrees for months
and the extreme bleat has no effect on it.
Could you ask fora mere satisfactory toofiiig for yotiir
Boase and barn? Write for samples and prices,
J. A. McLean Sole agent
Tailoring still carried on in the same place
Eastern Ontario Cheese.
Eastern Ontario, in 1008, made 89,-
230,812 pounds, of cheese, the cash.
value of which was $10,1125,005.00. Of
this, 4,401,854 pounds, worth $527,030.,
85, were made hi t' ince E 'ward
County, while the product of the
neighboring county of Hastings ran
up over a million and a quarter dol-
l.trs, rivalling Oxford, the banner
county of the West. The enact figures
for Hastings were 10,:381,21:3 pounds,
valaed at $1,227,018 21. The total
number of cheese factories in Eastern
Ontario is 045, and of creameries, 28.
tfave You Ugly Warts,
Cure them with i'utnatn's 'Painless
Corn and mart Extractor,. Fifty yearn
enecefls is a guarantee of its merit.
Beware of substitutes,
The Grate Pulls
Right Out
TrirAP is one of the
many bright features
found in the
IMPERIAL
OXFORD RANGE
EASILY CItANG11i5 for
coal or wood in short I.e,+
tete--- see our stock be•
fore you buy—you wilt be
interested in our fine disco
play and moderate prices.
ar+.,
1' f(III I iTIillfl�
Railway sines I icrease.
This autumn the length of the Oa,
radian Pacific Railway lines in Cana,
da will erose the ten thousand mile
mark. The road has 9,878 miles in the
Dominion, and Is bending 403 addi-
tional miles, most of which will be
completed this season. Including con.,
trolled roads in the United States, the
management operates 14,501 miles of
track.
Sowing The Whirlwind.
There is a good deal of truth in the
following paragraph from the Cathop
Ile Register :—A. most deplorable and
unfortunately not uncommon sight is
the crowd of young people on the
streets at night, It is bad enough to
have young men with cigarette adorn•
ed faces ogling and tramping up and
down as if they were in a tread mill,
but it blurs the eyes to see the boys
and girls taking a post graduate
course in the school -of the pavement.
One might as "well put them in a pest
house, The bloom of purity disap-
pears. Reserve and dignity perish in
contact with the familiarity of the
streets. Slang and worse, creep into
the vocabulary. Curfew bell ordi-
nance is invoked to put an end to the
nuisance, But the source of this is in
the home. If parents were not crim-
inally careless there would be fewer
scandals, fewer smirched reputations,
less sport and talk, and giggling fool-
ishness. If they took as much care of
their Children as they do of the
furniture in their homes or of their
animals, there would be less cause to
be pessimistic.
Medical Science Advancing Fast.
Formerly doctors prescribed stom-
ach treatment for Catarrh and Bron-
chitis, They seldom cured and ca-
tarrh has become a national disease.
To -day the advanced physician fights
catarrh by medicated air. He fills the
lungs, nose and throat with the anti-
septic vapor of Catarrhozone. Cure
then is certain. Easy for Catarrho-
zone to cure, It contains the essences
of pure pine balsams, reaches all the
germs and destroys the disease. Every
case of catarrh, bronchitis and sore
throat can be cured by Catarrhozone.
25c and $1 sizes sold everywhere. Get
it to -day.
Squaring Himself.
1N. IL BOYGE Solo Agent Wingham
There is (says the Bruce Times) a
man in Walkerton, who has braced up
after several years of riotous living,
and the Northern Lights are gradual-
ly fading out of his nose, and his
breath complies. with all sanitary
laws, Being a man of unusual ability,
he is earning a fat salary, and a good
many people wonder why he lives
frugally, and wears raiment that is al-
most seedy. Some suppose that he is
salting down large quantities of samo-
leons in the telt but he isn't. Being
aske.1., the other d y, what he was do-
ing with all his money, he replied :-
"I am paying for dead horses, I am
so unhappily constituted that I can't
enjoy life when I owe money, and
while I was in the red paint depart-
ment I was a great success as a pro-
gressive debtor. I usually paid cash
for my drinks, as the barkeeper had a
prejudice against the credit system,
and so I went into debt for grub and
clothes and other luxuries of that
nature. I am paying for meal tickets
that were punched out eight years
ago, and for suits of hand-me-downs
which went to the fathers of the pre-
sent generations of pawn brokers. I
am also paying livery bills, for the
use of driving horses that died of old
age long ago ; and the other day I
paid for a watch that I gave a girl
whose children are now going to the
high school. Next to having a million
dollar thirst, there is no greater handi-
cap than such a conscience as mine."
C`RATE'S
EASECURED
1Vfagistratc F. Rasmussen, of an,
Marquette Street, Montredi, Writes
to the Zatn•Buk Co. as follows s--
Gentlemen,—For many years I was
troubled with a serious eruption of the
akin, which WAS not only unsightly, bid
at times very painful. I fret tried Various
household remedies, but all these proved
altogether usele as.
" I then took medical advice. Not ono,
hut several doctors in turn were consulted,
but I was unable to get any permanent
relief. Sonic time back 1 noticed a report
from a Justice of the Peace who had been
cured of a chronic akin -disease by
Zero -Auk, and I determined to give this
balm a trial.
"After a thoroughly fair teat, I tan say
I am delighted with it. I have the beat
reasons for this conclusion ; because, while
everything else I tried --salves, embroca-
tions, washes, soaps, and doctors' pre-
parations- failed absolutely to relieve my
pain and rid vie of my trouble, three boxes
of Zam-Duk have worked n complete Cure.
"In my opinion Zam-Duk should be
even more widely known than it is, and
I have ao objection to you publishing this
letter."
For ecdema, eruptions. rashes, tetter,
Itch, ringworm and similar akin diseases,
Zam-Duk h without.equel. It ileo cures
cuts. burns, scalds, piles, ebdcessee
chronic sores, blood•pOlsening, etc, ii
druggists and stores *t $e tents a box, or
post free for price from the Zam-Sttk Co.,
Toronto.
LADIES', MISSES' AND CHILDREN
New Fall & Winter C
JUST ARRIVED..
Yon are cordially invited to inspect o
stock of New Fall and Winter Coats.
Never before have we shown such a 1
Ready-to-wear Garments.
We handle only the Best Makes
Skirts, and our Prices are in keeping wi
in all other Departments.
of Coats and
wit
s
oats
ur complete
la
range of
Low Prices
SAVE MONE
s
We carry a very large stock of Dress Materials
and can save you money on your New Fall Suit or
Dress. Be sure you see our stock before you buy.
New Idea Patterns only
�. E. Isard
Willgham Fall Fair
TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY
September 28 & 29, 1909
Wednesday Afternoon, Sept. 29th.
SPECIAL ATTRACTIONS.
GREEN RAGE.—Mile heats ; best three in five. Open to horses that have
never won public money. Horses to be attached to four -wheeled rig.
Competitors roust be members of the Society. Prizes—lst, $10.00;
2nd, $0.00 ; 3rd, $4.00.
FARMERS' HORSE RADE.—Halfmile heats ; best three in five. Horses to
be attached to four -wheeled rig and to be driven by a farmer or his
son. Competitors to be members of the Society. Prizes — 1st,
$10.00 ; 2nd, $0.00 ; 3rd, $4.00.
POTATO RAGE.—Competitors to stand to horse. Potatoes to be placed 100
yards from the starting point. Mount, ride to first potato, dismount
and pick up potato, remount, ride back to starting point, dismount
and put potato in pail, and so on with each potato. Horse any size.
Prizes -1st, $3.00 ; '2nd, $2.00..
DOUBLE HITCHING RACE,—Bitching team to lumber wagon, team
to walk quarter mile and go as you please quarter mile. Prizes
—1st, $3,00 ; 2nd, $2.00. •
DANCING COMPETITION.—Open to boys and girlsNo entrance fee :
Sailor's Hornpipe $3 $2 $1
Irish Jig $3 $2 $1
Highland. Fling . $3 $2 $1
ATHLETIC CONTESTS.—An interesting feature of this year's fair will be
three athletic contests as follows. No entrance fee :
Running broad jump $2 $1
One mile run $5 $ $2
mile run for boys under 14 years. $3$2$1
WINGHAM CITIZENS` BAND
Will furnish ft choice program of Innate in front of the grand stand.
Admission to Grounds Q - 25 Cents
Children, 10 Cents Vehicles, 25 Cents
Reduced Rates on Railways
CONCERT.September 29th.
A high-class concert will be given in the Opera House on the evening of
Wednesday, Sept, 29th. The oonoert is in charge of the Hewer Concert
0otnpany, and following well known artists will take part ;--Ernie Sanders,
the high•class comedian ; Elliott Webb, the boy soprano ; and the great
Thelma Female Impersonator ; putting on one of the best programs ever
given in Wingham. Admission 25c and 85o, with plan of hall at Mei tbbon's
drug store.
W. J. OURRIE IL Ise ELLIOTT
PltriSIDENT Sk1CloTRUASUBEI1