HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1904-04-21, Page 5Thursday, April 21, 1904
The Newest in Men's bats at Crowder's.
A Few Pointers
on the
Clothing
-� Question
IS IT PRICE
Then its Crowder's Clothing
IS IT QUALITY
Again its Crowder's Clothing
IS IT FIT
Assuredly its Crowder's Clothing
We have now in stock for spring
wear, every saleable style, thor-
oughly well made, and artistically
designed, at popular prices.
Spring Showerproof Coats. -
The new grey and green shades
in showerproof cloth, trade up in
swell style, 33 in, long. Box coat,
Prices—$10 50 and $13,50.
Gents' Black, Grey and Bronze Cravenette Showerproof Coats, body
lined, 50 inches long, with velvet or cloth collar, Sizes — 33 to 48 chest.
Prices—$10.00, $12.00, $15.00.
GUARANTEED WATERPROOF. — Men's Black Cloth Waterproof
Coate, guaranteed waterproof. Sizes -30 to 52 cheat, Prices—$7.75, $8.75,
MEN'S AND YOUTHS' SPRING SUITS. — Just arrived,a beautiful
range of Men's and Youths' Suits in all the latest fabrics, cuin the most
up-to-date ,tyles known. Sizes in each line -32 to 40 chest, Prices—$4,00,
$5.00, $0.00, $8 00, $10.00, $12.00.
BOYS' TWO AND THREE POE. SUITS.—In the new square cornered
Norfolk with kelt attachment. and 1 he new round cut Norfolk with loose belt;
Sizes -22 to 28. Prices—$4 25 and $5.00,
Boys' School Suits in Serges, Tweeds, etc. Sizes -22 to 30. Prices—
$1.75, $2.25, $3.00, $3 50.
LION BRAND BOYS' CLOTHING.—DOUBLE SEATS AND KNEES. Just
to hand, 100 pairs Boys' Lion Brand Pants ; sizes 22 to 33 ; in checks, stripes
and all wool Halifax Tweeds ; these Punts have double seats and knees.
Prices -05e, 75e, 85e, $L00.
HAT DEPARTMENT.—Oar Hat department is flowing over with all the
new ideas and shapes in Men's Hard and Soft Felt Hats. Prices -50c to $5.
GENTS' FURNISHINGS. —Newest SHIRTS, COLLARS, TIES, HDRFS.,
UMBRELLAS, GLOVES, ETC., ETC.
The RAI Crowder Co.
SHOES AT RIGHT PRICER.
•
ti
s• set's •core ••M^r"ie•`G••••
Frost Wire Fence
•
•
•
II •
III
Purpose Farm Fence •
•
II It •
will turn Stock without •
li II injury— beautify the Farm — e
I II does not need constant patching o
I aed with reasonable usage will s
1 ( 1r last a life -tinge. Booklet and •
11 D 1 full particulars given on request. .))S
.w..•'wJ,4.....w....a..w.Y..,.....�-.ewn.w.:.}..,....-�c�. FOR SALE BY
•3
J. W. MOWBRAY, Whl echure e o
••o••o••oecosec•�w• o,�w.,ww•wv:;vavp,,,,,,.awono�w.,0e
iI
Has no equal as General
MASSE' = HARRIS
you
Have a Cutter? If not, call )
and examine our stock before hiv-
ing elsewhere.
Tf you will he needing anything
in t e line of Farming Implernents
or Machinery for the coming sea-
son, place your order early and
get the best.
Massey -Harris goods are leaders
everywhere.
Agent for the Kemp Manure
Distributor.
We also handle the Wm. Gray
& Son's Buggies and Cotters—
universally acknowledged to be the
best and most durable to be had.
ALF. GLOVER
AGENT WINGHAM
8.20
W. A. CURRIE
Wingham's Auctioneer.
Sales attended in any part of
Huron county'. Orders Ileit at
tilts A •V.ANCE Ottfice will re-
ciriye • erotiept • attention,
Money For Farmers1
4.ny amount of money
to loan at 5 per cent, on
good farm property.
Abner :Cosens.
Wood's Pholsphodine,
eke Great Eugtish Remedy,
is an old, well estnb•
lashed and reliable
preparation. Has been
proscribed ped used
over 40 yes s.'All drug.
• glide in• the Dominion
�►r'j of Canada sell and
regenmend its beim
fo l do of,, X1}4 bele: taicis° p
IFn, at ale and
ref*lyra alis tell entisfgetiRat It remetl}YY_and
Peres all forme P. t'vepus Cad'
esu, winfaslons, d'itel'»latarr ere, rtit p.aaetip3h
and tenetsofabuseoroxeeeseet theelrcesetve
UK* Tabasco, Opium p ;simulants, Mental
gn .B rain.Worr,,,allot whichlead to Inflrmlty,
insanity, Conaumption and an Early Grave.
Price 51 per package or six for 36. One will
please,
fMataedet of six
Send orfree mphlt, Apty dress
Thaw ndsor Ont,, Canada,
"fV oods Phosphodino is sold in wingham
by C. A. Campbell, W. Moliibbon, A. L,
Hamilton and 1t. A, Douglass, Druggists.
OMPTLY SECURED
Wr,'ttE f r oa'interesting Weiss t' Inyyeppt,
fir.* !.Ii 't ani n Ho you ore pwindicd."
lea fis a rough sketch or model of your stn•
yatltion or 1plprovement and we will tell yen
tree our opinion as to whether it Is probably
patentable. Rejected applications have often
-been successfully prosecuted by us. we
conduct fully equipped offices in Montreal
land Washington ; this quail nes us to prompt -
ey dispatch work end quickly secure Patents
as hi -on d as the invention. Highest references
furnished.
Patents procured through Marion & Ma•
tion rotative *peeled notice wltkout.ehafgtis
over too newhpaperfailelfilitite4 tlfteAen9u
tlll'AcsiTYA t,
a�poeia -->~atent balsineer of Manutai!.
Wont and Engineers,
MARION St MARION
Patent Exporti arid Solicitor's.
Oftie+rst AU td Walithle ti nthrC.
V,ave
Vat Ittatereals.
Lots of them — do your own
choosing. We know the
styles. We know exactly
how they should be cut—how
they should fit—and its our
business to put all these
" knows " together, and fit
you nut in the best that your
money can buy — no aietter
what price yogi p,ay.
would please us to
have you drop in.
Robt. Maxwell
High Art Taller - Wlugham
WANTED
SPECIAL REPRESENTATIVE in this
county and adjoining territories, to
represent and advertise an old estab-
lished business house of solid financial
standing. Salary $21 weekly, with
expenses advanced each Monday by
check direct from headquarters. Ad-
dress, Blew Bros. & Co., Monon Bldg.,
Chicago,
dross?
Poor man! He can't help it.
He gets bilious. He needs a
Tcod liver pill--Ayer's Pills.
hey act directly on the liver,
cure biliousness. L W, rsc.,
Want your moustache or beard
a beautiful brown or rich black? Use
BUCKINGHAM'S DYE
real ere, a.1'. mita COI. NAenNA. NAT. 1
RO YEARS'
r XPRIRNQR
TRADE MARKS
DESIGNS
COPYRIGHTS�,�&#f�C.
Anyone sending a sketch and mistrittettng
ose'ipt cant t
quickly aerertrohaqb1t,rrr opint�l11aayr�lqd11'aq �CC�idIi DDtro ••
invention Is prnpeeRrsiai1yi. IAllinookon redoing
0, fent: i frde'rt agenefar sour nit -p5
tenni. takenHannah Alcune o. reoet,I
WO i no Ice, w thous ohat'me, la the
merle an.
scientific
A handsomely Illustrated weekly. Largest Mr.
creation of any acientlae lournat. Terns, he a
Dart four months, el. Sod by ail newsdealera.
•
Mius Vents
—Honsall Band has disbanded—went
of fuuds the Cause.
—Six car loads of settlors' offecte left
the Lucknow station ou Tuesday for the
West.
—Robert Wigle, of Leamington, sold
two mama, for which he received $1,000
—$0Q0 and $400.
—Medical health officers of Montreal
report that 1,200 calves recently shipped
to the city for food consumption have
been destroyed as unfit for food.
—One of the largest briok-making
concerns in the north of England will
erect a $50,000 plant at an early date
either in VVinnipeg or Edmonton.
'—Mr. Brouzel, a young man about 22
years old, who is deaf and dumb, was
killed on tho traok neer Elmwood by
the mail train Tuesday afternoon.
—Meetings which decided enthustas-
tioally iu favor of anion o1 the church-
es have been held in various parts of
Canada, notably in Halifax and Win-
nipeg.
—Prof. Macoun says that last winter,
the most severe known for many years,
has affected the fruit trees all the way
from points in Quebec to Leamington
in Western Ontario.
—"Fully 15,000 immigrants landed in
Ontario last year, and we place at least
5,000 of these as farm laborers in this
Province," Said Thomas Southworth,
Director of Colonization.
—The Woodstock Lumber Mfg., Co..
have commenced work on their new
planing mill and sash and door' factory.
Tho plans call for the construction of a
two-story building with basement, 50x
100 ft.
—Tete harvest of this year's wheat
orop in Australia is nearly over, the
yield being estimated at 11,000,000
bushels above the best previous record;
17,000,000 bushels are now ready to be
exported.
—Eastern Ontario has again shown
that it is a good place in which to live
long and die old. The deaths are an-
nounced of Mrs. Donald Macdonell, of
Glengarry, 107, and Mr. Kenneth Mc-
Gillivray, of Moose Creek, aged 101.
—Tho stock losses in the ranches of
Montana have been heavy the past win-
ter. A crnst formed on the top of the
snow preventing cattle from reaching
the grass. A rancher recently returned
says that in one baud of 4000 head, 600
had perished before he left.
—On the night previous to Good Fri-
day four burglaries were committed in
Attwood. The premises entered were
those of Mr. Marshall, hardware; Mr.
Bricker, tailor; Mr. Watson, grocer,
and Milhausen's hotel, The booty
taken from each plane was not large.
—W. W. Ferran, of 011uton, who
owns fifty acres of• orchard, is a heavy
loser by the ravages of tho ground mice,
which have stripped the branches as
well as the trucks of hundreds of has
trees. A large number of tho trees de-
stroyed have been planted a dozen
years.
—There is a potato famine in parts of
Michigan, with practically no potatoes
on the market. Farmers in uncovering
the large store of potatoes which they
had buried during the wiuter found them
frozen in every case, and the price has
advanced from 40 cents to $1.50 a
bushel.
—Senator Butler, of Kansas, a mem-
ber of the United States Senate, has
been sentenced to six months in jail and
made to pay a fine of $2,500 for accept-
ing money from a corporetipb fey Con-
gressional seryipes, It disqualifies him
Prom ever after holding office in Feder-
al affairs:
—An eight-year-old, three -parts -bred
black ewe, belonging to Mr. David
Douglas, Ohatton, Northumberland,
Euglaod, has had nineteen Iambs in
seven years, having had four on one
occasion, all of which. lived. One of
the four has had twin lambs on two
occasions.
—The. Canadian Consolidated Oil Co.,
with a capital stook of $1,000,000, has
been incorporated to take over tho busi-
ness of The Grant Hamilton Oil Co.,
the Canadian Oil Refining Co., and The
Sun Oil Manufacturing Co. Their head
office will be in Toronto. It is stated
that other oil companies will 3oin the
amalgamation at an eerie' date.
Says the Attwood Bee:e-The other
day a farmer, anxious for a horse trade,
came to town and soon a deal was made
with some horse dealers who have lived
here all winter. The farmer was to
give $17 to boot, paid over the money
and hitched up the horse, purposing to
go home, Ho had gone only a few rods
when the brute dropped dead. Of
course the farmer was mad and de-
manded his own horse, This was re-
fused him, so he returned homo and
oaino back next day with a nand, er of I
Ms friends. Some o,,f them hrglte the
lock (4 0,0 Om nesse trader's
stable q{jd tAgk oat the farmer's horse.
And npw interesting developments are
expected,
Thousands Acquiring The Dope Habit.
The dope habit is being acquired by
thousands of Canadians through using
so-called cures for Catarrh etalltaining
an excessive nutmeat of aloohol and
Other dangc' 40e drugs. Doctors claim
these hi only ono safe and certain cure
fOr Catarrh ---fragrant healing catart'ho-
zone Which extra by medicated vapor
that is breathed direct to the very
sent of the disease. The balsamic) vapor
of CAtarrhozono kills the germs, henles
Noce spots, stops dropping in the throat,
keeps the nose blear gest, permanently
erradieates every trim of catarrh from
the Ill°steal, tiatarrlroeono can't fail;
itta guaranteed. Two mouths treat-
ment $1,00; trial size 250,
THE IVINGITAN WING.ADVANCE.
ers
Impure blood always shows
somewhere, If the skin, then
. boils, pimples, rashes, If the
nerves, then neuralgia, nerv-
ousness, depression. If the
Sarsaparilla
stomach, then dyspepsia,
biliousness, loss of aPpetite.
Your doctor knows the
remedy, used for 60 years.
"Returningc Mm tbhleooCduwns waadr, fI ws
a
hraflectwwgcone. Butw nLems
6arsaparllla completely cured ma."
tt. O, DOsaLan, Scranton, Psi;
$100 a bottle. J, 0, Anne CO.,
All drugaleU, for Lowell. Maes.
Impure Mood
DEMAND FOR CHICKENS.
Bulletin Prone i)opertwont of AgvIcu1•
tura at Ottawa On the Sub,jeot--
The Problem of Supply,
The present time is dost favorable
for the production, fattening and
marketing of farm chickens. There
hasbeen such a substantial increase
in the consumption of chickens and
eggs within the last few years that
- it is not possible to rear a greater
number of suitable market chickens
Aid the Sarsaparilla by keeeing the
bowels regular with Ayer s Pilise
—The first of tho water -softening iI
planta to be erected throughout the
West by the Canadian Pacific Railway
will be in operation within a month.
It is estimated that the company will
soon have expended between $300,000
and $400,000 for fighting alkali between
Winnipeg and Moose Jaw alone.
—A postcard, posted in Swindon, on
April 16, 1872, has just reached the ad-
dressoe's son, having taken thirty-two
years to arrive at its destination, which
is considerably less than a mile from tl-e
place where it was posted. Both sende r
and the man to whom the letter was
addressed have been dead for many
years.
—Tho Police Magistrate at Berlin has
deoided that the making of sugar from
beets in tho factory of the Ontario
Sugar Company in the township of
Waterloo is a continuous one and that
keeping the factory going on the Lord's
Day.is a work of necessity. The action
of the Lord's Day Alliance against the
Co., is therefore dismissed with costs.
—The Northern Elevator Company,
of Winnipeg, has issued a writ against
the Lake Huron Manitoba Milling Com-
pany of Goderich, claiming $10,000
damages for the alleged wrongful con-
version 01 10,000 bushels of wheat. The
wheat, it is declared, was consigned to
defendants to be held to order of plain-
tiff, but converted to defendants' own
use.
— The remains of the late Harvey Hall,
who was killed iu a collision on tl e
railway near Guelph on Saturday last,
arrived at the Lucknow station on Mon-
day and 'were oonveyed to the Duugau-
non cemetery for interment. Mr. Hall
who was 21 years of age, was the oldest
son of the late Rev. Hall, a former
Methodist minister on the Ashfield cir-
cuit, and for three years a resident of
Luoknow.
—While three young men were driv-
ing from Attwood, the water having
risen and revising over the road at the
bridge ou the 12th con., a piece of ice
came in contact with the cotter, upsett-
ing it and its occupants into the water.
One young man had a hard struggle to
keep from being carried under the ice,
the current being so strong. Besides
the loss of an umbrella and a fiw
parcels, the young nien were none the
worse for their ducking.
— S. M. Shoemaker of Stevenson, Md.,
has a Guernsey cow which last year
producted 14,158 lbs, of milk testing 4%
per cent. and giving 590 lbs, butter
fat. This, says Hoard's Dairyman, is
the best yearly milk record of any Gu-
erusey cow to date, and is the fourth
bast butter -fat record among Advanced
Register cows, It should be mentioned
that this record was commenced when
Sultana, the cow, was 11 yoars, 2
months old.
—D, M. Redden, veterinary surgeon,
living at 557 Elmwood avenue, Detroit,
was bitten March 21st by a horse believ-
ed to be suffering from rabies. and
which subsequently died. Ho went to
Auu Arbor for treatment, but discon-
tinued it a few days ago when his
health became impaired. The other
day ho was adviatod that one of the
guinea pigs inoculated with virus from
the horse's brain, ,had died of hydro-
phobia, Redden will return to Ann
Arbor to continue treatment.
—Last fall Mr. Peter Todd was ship-
ping apples from the Walkerton station
and after fllliug all the cars to be
shipped he had eight barrels of apples
left: They wore put along side the car
and the first snow storm of tho season
hid them from view and tiny were
soon forgotten. A few days ago the
barrels wore noticed and opened and
the apples were found to be as good as
in tho fall, the quantity oaf snow having
protected theta from the frost. Mr.
'iter Todd vouches for the truth of
this story,
—Mr. E. J. Zavitz of the Yale School
of Forestry, has been engaged to so-
poxiutond the experimental nursery of
forest trees on the grounds set apart for
that purpose close to the Macdonald
Tnstitttto. Thirty thousand seedlings
have been ordered from the States, con-
aistiug of Norway Spruce, 'White Pine,
White Ash, Basswood, and Hard Maple.
Mr. Zavitz is now getting the laud
ready, and Will be prepared, it is ;toped,
to make the first distribution of seed-
lings to formes for their wood lots in
the spring of 1005. It is stated that
suitub,le seedlings for the nursery could
not be obtained in Canada. In the -
spring and fall the seeds will be gather•
ed from the elm, soft maple, etc., and
grown at tilt) alurSery. The seedling's
have been chosen with a duo. regard to
climatic conditions,
than can be sold with profit, Last
Year there were not sufficient chick
ens sold in Canada to supply the
home markets. As a result of the
shortage of chickens the trade with
Groat Britain was lessened, This is
unfortunate on account of the great
demand for Canadian chickens in
Great Britain and the good prices'
that are paid.
The Chief of the Poultry Division,
Mr. F. 0, liare, states that numer-
ous letters have been received from
produce merchants, poulterers and
commission merchants who desire to
learn its what localities chickens can
bo bought in great numbers and at
reasonable pyrites, From several Ca-
nadian e1tio ; and especially from
Montreal, produce firms have asked
to bo informed where market chick-
ens suitable for shipping to Great
Britain could be obtained in the
greatest numbers. British poulterers
and commission merchants have re-
peatedly asked for the same informa-
tion. The letter of a well established
produce house in London, England,
was received last weelc. This firm
wished to "start an undertaking for
the purpose of importing Canadian
poultry to Great Britain." They de-
sired information as to the probable
success of such a project and the
possibility of obtaining poultry (es-
pecially fowls), in large quantities,
and the best districts for the collec-
tion, &c., of them. Last fall a firm
in Cape Colony wished a poultry
trade developed with that Colony.
Ono shipment of Canadian chickens
was made to Cape Colony which ar-
rived in satisfactory condition and
pleased the trade. A New York firm
wrote that -they desired to import
Canadian chickens and were recom-
mended by the Department to a firm
in the Maritime Provinces, from
whom they purchased chickens and
were impressed favorably by them.
The above and similar requests are
difficult of solution even by one in
touch with the Canadian produce
firma and packing houses that are
buying and marketing chickens. The
majority of our established firms are
equipped with a complete plant for
marketing in Canada or Great Bri-
tain several times more chickens than
they can buy. Their profits are di-
minished through scarcity of chick-
ens. Nevertheless merchants in Great
Britain, Cape Colony, the United
States and even in Australia are
looking to a supply of Canadian
chickens to satisfy their growing
trade.
Tho problem of supplying this won-
derfully increased demand for chick-
ens can be solved by the farmers
alone. Instead of the farmer rearing
fifty or a hundred chickens that re-
ceive little attention or feed, he
should rear from 200 to 1,000 chick-
ens annually. These should be of a
utility type, such as can be found in
the popular breeds Plymouth hock
and Wyandottes. The chickens should
be hatched and reared by incubators
and brooders, and when ready for
market the cockerels should be placed
in fattening crates and fatted. The
equipment required to do this work
is not an expensive one; 5200 to
5250 is the cost, of incubators, brood-
ers, houses and fattening crates for
finishing 1,000 chickens. It is as
necessary for realizing the greatest
profits from the poultry business as
threshing and mowing machinery is
for general farming. The work con.
nccted with finishing 1,000 chickens
with the proper appliances is no more
than is necessary for rearing 200
chickens by the natural means. Poul-
try farming is a business that re.
quires to be developed in the same
manner as the butter, cheese and
fruit branches. A substantial profit
can be made from the poultry busi-
ness, when it is carried on as an ad-
junct to farming, and with the same
careful attention and financing.
Tho Dominion Department of Agri-
culture is endeavoring to increase the
poultry trade of Canada; to encour-
age the growing of the greatest num-
ber of high class chickens, and to as-
sist in the marketing of them. A
revised edition of the bulletin "Profit-
able Poultry Farming," has just
been issued, and will bo mailed with-
out charge on application to the
Commissioner of Agriculture and
Dairying, Ottawa. The information
it contains is of great value in the
poultry work, and it should be in
the hands of every interested poultry
man in Canada.
The Live Stock Instinct.
There is no occupation followed by
man that is more ennobling in its ef-
fect upon character than the breed-
ing and feeding of live stock. Al-
though there is a common law that
like begets like, yet running parallel
with this is another which is appar-
ently contradictory—namely, that
nature never reproduces herself. The
law of like, producing like is illus-
trated in our breeds of live stock,
where the Shorthorn, for example, of
pure breeding will present the form
of the Shorthorn, this being true al-
so in the case of the Hereford, An-
gus and indeed all breeds. On the
other hand, says Livestock Indicat-
or, it is strictly impossible to fore-
tell the outcome of any line of
breeding, meaning by this, of course,
the finer points that make ono ani-
mal more meritorious than another.
It is right here where the fascination
of the breeding business comes in.
Potatoes and the Blight.
There seems to bo considerable dif-
foronco in different varieties of po-
tatoes as to tho susceptibility to
blight. After consultation with
practical growers twelve varieties,
six being considered blight resistant
and six nonresistant, have been seg-
eeted and will be grown at the
Maine station with and without bor-
deaux mixture.
A Two Minute Cramp Cure
That isn't equalled the world over
it Nervilino, the greatest relief for
cramps and stomach pains ever discover-
ecl. Nervilino now promptly and is very
pleasant to take. "I think Norviline is
the finest remedy in the World for colic
and cramps" Writes W. B. Wilton of
Toledo. "When I tnko Nervilino I
know it's going to relieve quickly and
for that reason T ant never without it.
1 have found Nervilino good for tick
headecho and stomach troubles and re-
commend it for strength and sureness.
Excellent for inward use—good to rub
otx. Prioe 26e.
1
1
Opp, Bank Hamilton Highest Price Paid for Produce
AsamasammeamimusammarAmsammismosmenmin
Slim Prices,
Stout Values
The Leading Store
Small Profits
Quick Returns
Carpet!llgs For Spring.
Our Carpets, Oilcloths, Linoleums, Mattings and
Rugs are here, and you are cordially invited to in-
spect them. The new season's goods are handsomer
than ever—many are our own private patterns and
are exclusive. And while accepting our invitation to
this beautiful Carpet display, don't forget that you can
save as much money buying your Floor Coverings here
as in the city. It will pay to come to us for all kinds
of, New Spring Goods, even if you're miles away.
BRUSSELS. TAPESTRY.
The very Latest Patterns in
choice colorings and shadings.
good
Are dhay close weave. The
90c f? $L00
- 15 Patterns, to choose from.
Elegant variety of patterns.
giving soft rich effect. The
best makers' goods. All prices
—25o, 36e, 45c, SOo, Ole, 75o.
INGRAINS.—The Ingrains of to -day take rank with the finest
grades of Carpet in color combinations and effect. Our stock
embraces the beat makes. Price begins at 25c per yard.
STAIR CAIIPET.—We are showing a large range of patterns its
Stair Carpet, all widths. Price begins at 121c per yard.
JAPAN MATTINGS.-10 pcs. Matting to choose from, ail new
patterns and choice colorings. Price begins at 121e.
LACE CURTAINS.—We're showing a larger and better stock
of Curtains and Curtain materials than ever. Price begins
at 25c per pair.
OILCLOTHS AND LINOLEUMS. — In all the latest designs;
Width from 18 inches to 12 feet.
H. E. Isard & Co.
A it
rdwamitivwwwfitivwiwaPoiwommiWilitilfirWiliiiqr
THE ROYAL GROCERY
................. ......................
it ▪ -
BROOMS.
e it
XS We have something very special to offer in or
et
a• . Brooms. Well made, well sewn, with four strings, 06
OK
Jiii and weigh 30 lbs. to the doz.—try one..25c eachWIL
70
HOUSECLEANING.
32 This is the season of the year when the thriftyo▪ r
3• 0
house keeper does her 3Iahousecleaning, and we wouldsr
3• 11 remind you that we are Headquarters for Wash Tubs,
Wash Boards, Scrub Brushes, Starches, and the wonse
-
M• g
derful cleaning soap, Nova... 5c and lOc per cake we
oe
311I esi
XI
it
TEAS.
lo 311 sk We have been appointed agent for the sale ofet
-
▪ Lipton's Teas. These teas have the largest sale of
It
any tea in the world. Sold in tin cans—from.... or
se
om
.25c to 60c per Ib.se
NO VOL,
JO, RC
:„,,.. 3111 me
at Griffin's..,
,..c.
iiie
1
Homuth
ros.
TAILORS and GENTS' FURNISHERS
The Weather doesn't say so, but the Calendar
does. Its Spring time—renewing time. Now
is the right time to buy, and this is the right
place to buy at --
We needn't go into any long argument as to why this
is the right place to buy at either. Most folks know u?,
as our customers, or have heard of us through these self-
same customers. We only claim what we believe is the
fact, and that is, that we've got the biggest and best
stoke of Tweeds, Hats, Caps, Shirts, Collars, Gioves,
Hosiery, etc., in the county. We've the newest of every-
thing,
verything, and we've values that court comparisons, no matter
where youevo a mind to Funke them. Be sure you see our
goods before baying elsewhere, A pleasure to Show goods
tai
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