HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1905-03-02, Page 5tek
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The Blue Frot Store News.
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We have had a splendid Stock -taking Sale, which has far sur-
passed our anticipation, and which is now drawing to a close. But
to make it a SALE to be RE.IENISERED, we will close it with
some extra bargains—prices will be LOW, cost will not be taken into
consideration at all. These are good goods, but quantities are small
and we are not able to repeat the lines,
So Come Early and
Get First Choice.
• OVERCOAT SPECIAL $5.50.
24 Men's and Youths' Overcoats, all kinds, short and long lengths, sizes
31 to 40 chest, regular price $7.50, $8.50, $10.00—Sale price $5.50
0 only Boys' Black Frieze Raglan Overcoats, sizes 22 to 28, regular price
$5.00, $5.75—Sale price $g 75
$I.75 PANTS $L25
21 Pairs Men's Tweed Pants, broken lines, no two pars alike, all sizes in
it •
the lot, regular price $1.50, $1.75—Salo price $1.25
' 1 43 Pairs Boys' Knickers, all sizes, 22 to 33, Blue Serges, Tweeds, Mole,
•f etc., regular prices 50c, 65c, 75e—Sale price 39ets.
65c. KNICKERS 39c.
SUIT SPECIAL $2.50.
27 Boys' 3 -piece Suits, sizes 22 to 33, regular•$1 to $0 each—Sale price... $2,50
MEN'S $I.00 MOLE PANTS 75c.
$5.50 MEN'S PEA JACKETS $3.50
SUITS SPECIAL, MEN'S, ' $6.00.
11 only Tweed Suits, sizes 35 to 41 chest, in good strong Tweeds, regular
prices $8.00, $0.50—Salo price
SHOES AT BARGAIN PRICES.
Another lot of empty Packing Boxes for sale.
'600
The R. H. Crowder Co.
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WINGFIAM
MACHINE SHOP.
Having purchased the above
business, I am now prepared to at-
tend to the wants of the public in
all kinds of machine repairing,
steam fitting, etc.
W. S. ESTES
• MACHINIST
Successors to W. G. Paton.
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NEW SHIRTS
A number of desirable resi-
dential properties, in Wing-
ham, for sale on reasonable
terms.
ABNER COSENS
NOTIcE.—I have arranged with the
Dominion Bank to manage my busi-
ness and all owing me on Notes or
Mortgages can pay principal or interest
at any time, After fallmg due, rem-
ember you need not pay until you are
requested to do so by nie. I thank
all those who have done business with
me, and wish you every prosperity,
Rover. MCINDOo.
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'•'° SA
or
hatches and Jewellery
For the Month of
... MARCH ONLY ...
In order to ' make room in my cases for new
stock I have ordered, I will sell at
EXACTLY COST FOR
SPOT CASH
for one month only. This is an excellent oppor-
tunity to buy genuine Jewellery cheaper than ever
you have bought before. We have a very large
stock of Ladies' and Gent's Watches to choose from.
• DON'T MISS THIS CHANCE.
W. G . Patterson
The Watch Doctor, Wingham
Nis •MMO OM 01111111111111110
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THE WiNQHAM ADVANCE, THURSDAY, MARCH 2, 1905,
The Stratford Herald says; --"The
,f', LlWl"1 if 4.,s t t, 0. P. R'•, surveyors al'Lo said to be at
lrwvw .-,.vwwvvv ...rntv n/
---Tho keep of Bruce House of Re
fug() inmates is still cts., a meal
--During the year 1001 there wer
in Walkerton .52 births, 20 marriage
and 54 deaths.
--There are now 21 prisoners in th
Tombs at New York awaiting trial o
the charge of murder in the first de
gree,
---The Mitchell Advocate says OaMr, Monteith has received no les
than 37 applications for the positio
of license inspector for South Perth.
_It is estimated that live stock to
the value of $197,000 was shipped from
the Paisley station in 1004 as follows :
cattle, $120,000 ; horses, $1.3,000 ; hogs,
$27,000 ; sheep, $17,000.
—S. S. Cole, the well known sawmil-
ler, of Ethel, has purchased the brick
and tile yard and business of S.
Wright, who has run it snccessfully
for the past 10 years.
—A measure is pending in the Okla-
homa Legislature which makes it a
misdemeanor, punishable by fine, to
curse and abuse any female relation
in the presence of others.
—S. C. T. Todd, who has resigned
.as general solicitor of the Standard
Oil Company, probably drew the
largest annual salary of any individu-
al in the United States, $250,000.
— Editor Bremner, 'who gave evi-
dence in the recent bogus ballot box
trial, which made hint very unpopular
with the friends of Byron 0. Lott of
West Hastings, is trying to sell out
his paper, the Bancroft Reporter, and
announces his intention of going to
the North-west.
— B. Gunn, M.P., for South ,Huron,
made an urgent appeal to the Govern-
ment to make a grant to erect a post
office in. Seaforth at an outlay of $10,-
000 or thereabouts. The Government
promised to give the matter every
consideration but thought that Huron
county had already fared fairly well.
—Kennedy, who narrowly escaped
condemnation for the inurder of little
Irene Cole at Brantford, and whose
escape is believed by many to have
been due to perjury, is to be tried on
another charge connected with that
shocking crime, if a magistrate will
commit him. He is now in Brantford
jail. If the evidence shows him to he
guilty, the law provides no punish-
ment too severe for him.
—The plant of the Cramp Steel Co.;
at Collingwood, has been taken over
by a new corporation, known as the
Northern Iron and Steel Company.
It consists of open hearth steel con-
verting furnaces, together with large
rolling mills to roll the product into
such shapes and materials as the
market demands. The furnaces are
of stationary type, and are of twenty
ton capacity each. They are installed
in a structural- steel building 100x120
feet.
work on e.. route through Ellice, going
by way of Ratzburg, Gtulsblll and Se-
bringville, which would take the Paul
clear of Stratford altogether. Just
where the road would go if these
e places are included, it is hard to say,
$ but if the original design of connect-
ing with Thamesville were carried
e out, St, Marys might he included, A
n number of prominent Ellice people
have expressed a desire to have the
road and will offer a substantial
t bonus,
s —M. G. Dippel tells the Walkerton
11 Telescope that eggs of the Tussock
moth, are discernible on the dead
leaves, in sutl)eient quantities to justi-
fy the fear that we are in for another
plague during the coming saunter, as
bad, or worse, than the caterpillar
plague of three years ago. This Tus-
sock moth resembles the forest eater -
pillar in appearance, but is not quite
as large. They have a voracious ap-
petite, and when they attack the fol-
iage of a tree, they make short work
of it. Last summer they wrought
great havoc among the shade trees in
Toronto. The only- remedy is the
spray, and Mr. Dippel thinks that
people who wish to save their trees,
should not omit to get them sprayed
early in the spring.
'--Joseph, eldest son of Mr. Saul
Nicholson, of Amabel, who 'went to
Cockburn Island last fall to work in
the bush met with to fatal and peculiar
accident last Thursday. In prosecut-
ing his work he slashed off a small
sapling that was in his way, about a
foot above the snow. A few minutes
after he slipped, and falling across the
sharp stump, it penetrated his back to
a considerable depth and caused a
wound from which he bled to death in
a short time.
Stratford, Feb. 24. --While out walk-
ing in the dark, Miss Edith Sarvis,
one of the most estimable young
ladies of the city, was encountered by
a woman and girl whose identity are
unknown, and who threw carbolic
acid on her person. By good fortune
Miss Sarvis' eyes, escaped, though her
neck and side of her face were severe-
ly burned. The police are investigat-
ing the case. It is generally surmised
that Miss Sarvis was mistaken for
some one else.
•
—John Lynch, of Eastnor Town-
ship, was tried in Walkerton for the
seduction of a girl under 16 years, be-
fore Judge Barrett on Friday last.
He pleaded guilty and was sentenced
to a term of three months imprison -
anent in the county jail. This seems a
pretty light sentence for a crime of
this kind, but Lynch took it very hard
and cried like. a child. What wound-
ed him most of all was the reflection
that he wouldn't be able to get any
tobacco during this long period of in-
carceration.—[Telescope.
—How simply the eye may be de-
stroyed has been demonstrated in the
instances of two persons in Paisley.
Last year Mr. A. Armstrong, Queen
St., north, lost the sight of one. The
ball was injured by contact with the
end of a piece of fetree wire. After
enduring a good deal of suffering he
went to Toronto and ,at
it removed
by specialists there, Mr. H. Sellers
had one of his optics injured by a fly-
ing piece of wood as he ivas splitting
kindling one day about five months
ago. Ho wets also obliged to have the
eye -ball removed, The operation was
successfully performed by local physi-
Cians.
Try To Prevent Lung Trouble.
It's the dried. sputum floating
around in the air that gets into your
lungs and causes consumption. A
sure preventive is fragrant healing
CtatLltz•hozotte which
isinhaled right
into the lungs, kills every genu, heals
the sore membranes and thoroeghly
cures every type of catarrh, bronchitis,
asthma and lung trouble. "I caught
a severe cold winds developed into ca-
tarrh and finally settled on my lungs."
,
writes Ml. A. Northrop of Bedford.
Catarrhozone relieved quickly and
cured ane. I recommend C'aturtho-
zotto highly. Two months treatment
$1.011; trial size gee.
—The last portion of the Auditor -
General's report gives the payments
to the favored organs of the Govern
anent the last year. The Yukon Sun
got $3,122, and the Yukon World, $1,-
218; Halifax Recorder, $3,78;) ; Halifax
Chronicle, $10,672 ; Hamilton Times,
$879 ; London Advertiser, $859 ; Monc-
ton Transcript, $10,654 ; Montreal Le
Canada, $2,886; Montreal Herald, $10,-
466; Perrault Printing Co., Montreal,
$12,120; Montreal Witness, $1,812 ;
Ottawa Free Press, $2,651; Ottawa
Journal, $2,055 ; Quebec Soleil, $3,730 ;
Quebec Telegraph, $6,639; St. John
Gazette, $8,115 ; St. John Globe. $5,-
962 ; St. John Telegraph, :$19,236 ; To-
ronto Globe, $4,222; Toronto Star, $2,-
021 ; Vancouver Province, $1,186 ;
Winnipeg Free Press, $1,893.
Chicago Alderman Owes His Election
To Chamberlain's Cough Remedy.
"I can heartily and conscientiously
recommend Chamberlain's Cough
Remedy for affections of the throat
and lungs," says Hon. John Shenick,
220 So. Peoria St., Chicago. "Two
years ago during a political campaign,
I caught cold after being overheated,
which irritated my throat and I was
finally compelled to stop, as I could
not speak aloud. In my extremity a
friend "advised me to use Chamber-
lain's Cough Remedy. I took two
doses that afternoon and could not
believe my senses when I found the
next morning the inflammation had
largely subsided. I took several doses
that day, kept right on talking
through the campaign, and I thank
this medicine that I won my seat in
the Council." This remedy is for sale
by A. I. McCall & Co.
FARM FOR SALE.
To close up the estate of the late
Janes Wilson, the undersigned Execu-
tors offer for sale the South part of
Lot 35, in the 14th Con. of East Wa-
wanosh, containing 87 acres ; three
miles from Wingham. On the pre-
mises are a good bank barn 40x56 and
straw shed, also root house 10x20, a
good orchard, a limestone quarry and
lime kiln, about 20 acres of good hard-
wood and hemlock bash. The farm
all been under grass for a number of
years and is well watered. To the
right man this property is a money-
maker, and must be sold at once.
' Price and terms on application to Ro-
bert Currie, Winghain, box 184, or
Gavin Wilson, on Boundary, three
miles west of,. Wingham, or box 66,
Wingluun P. 0.
Mortgage Sale.
Under and by virtue of the powers con-
tained in a certain Mortgage which will he
produced at the time of sale, there will be
offered for sale by Public Auction, on
Wednesday, the Fifteenth day of March
et the hour of Two o'clock in the afternoon, at
the Queen's Hotel, in the Town of Wingham,
by W. A. Currie. Auctioneer, the following
property, namely:—Tho
in Northo Ninth Half of Lot
Number Twenty seven rhConces-
sion ofountthey of Huron. Ton'nship of .vest Wawanesh in
rho C
The property is in a good stale of cultiva-
tion and has a fair' class of buildings.
TERMS:—Tho property will bo sold sub-
ject to a Mortg;tge of $250000, Ten per cent
of the pnrchaso money to be paid down at the
time of sale, the balance as agreed upon with
the undersigned, Solicitor for the Mortgagee.
For further partioulars and tendinous of
Sale, apply to
DUDLEY HOr.1MEs
of the Town of Wingham
W. A. Ounnrs Solicitor for Mortgagee
Auctioneor
Dated 21st day of Feb. A.D, 1005.
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P. TANSLEY,
Loess Mftnnget •_•
is about to issue
A NEW
SUBSCRIBERS'
DIRECTORY
For the District of Western
Ontario, including the Town
of Wingham.
Orders for new eonnec-
tionschanges
of firm
names,
s
changes. Cif Street addresses or
ft.r duplicata entries in the
List should be handed in
AT ONCE.
RAISING THE CALF.
when Proved. D it )<i a M°4.7
Alakintr Operation.
The market value of a cow raisedpu
the farm does not represent the whole
profit of the Operation, Bays a corre-
spondent of Ainerlcan. Cultivator, The
home raised cow if properly cared for
is likely to give better satisfaction than
one which has come out by chance and
Which bas been Bold by its owner for
some good reason, but I reckon that
calf raising is also a fairly good money
snaking operation. I estimate the value
of the young calf fit to raise at 14, milk
for ten days $2,60, oilmeal and other
grains 12.50, Hay 11,25, grass six to
eight months 17.50, calf meal for four
months $4, labor ;1.25, total about $25,
bringing the calf to a year of age, at
Which. time, if she is of the proper
stock, the value should be about 130,
leaving a clear margin of about $5
profit.
My calves are weaned at four months
old, having used up to that time about
14 worth of milk. Some calves would,
of course, be worth more at twelve
months old, but none of proper stock
and breeding Should be worth less than
the amount I have stated.
Calf raising gives no more trouble
and costs no more than production of
other farm specialties. It requires, say,
four months' careful attention on the
part of somebody, but the final results
repay all the bother attending the early
stages.
Th. $iia a Money' saver.
"With very many farmers," says
Professor Beal, who compiles most of
the farm experiment bulletins of the
department of agriculture, "cornstalks
form a large part of the roughage fed
to stock during the winter, and the
greater portion of the stalk below the
ear is wasted. In an experiment at the
New Jersey station it was found that
of 200 pounds of stalks fed to a cow
during ten days sixty pounds, or 80 per
cent, remained uneaten.
"Shredding would no doubt result in
more complete consumption of the
stalks, and, according to the New Jer-
sey station, 'at least five -sixths of the
80 per cent waste in the experiments
could be prevented by using a well
built silo; besides, 12 per cent more
milk could be produced from the silage
than from the dried stalks: "
Temperature For Churning,
The churning temperature for cream
with ,a Babcock test of 80 per cent
will vary between 50 and 55 degrees.
Thin cream will require to be churned
at a higher temperature. Churning at
too high a temperature means quick
churning, a loss of fat in the butter-
milk, lumpy butter that will not wash
properly and greasy butter, with a
poor grain and body. On the other
hand, churning at too low a tempera-
ture means a great loss of time and ei-
ther very fine or smooth, rounded
granules and is not to be recommended.
The Dairy Calf.
Although good cows can be found in
all communities they are comparative-
ly scarce, and the heifer calves from
them should certainly be raised. Where
the whole milk is disposed of and no
skim milk is available this is not so
easily done, but it will pay to feed the
best calves whole milk for tL few days
and then gradually substitute some
other calf food. In this way, if a little
care is exercised, excellent dairy calves
may be raised on a small quantity of
milk.
i
FEEDING FOR MILK
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Chemical analysis and digestion ex
periments indicate but very—little dif
ference'in the nutritive values of th
linseed oil meal and cottonseed meal
but American experience tends to she
that the former may be safely fed wit
greater liberality than the latter an
continued for a longer term, say
Hoard's Dairyman. Heavy feeding o
cottonseed meal to steers can be safes
continued for not more than two o
three months, and for milk cows, espe
cially where highest quality of produc
is required, we consider two pound
per day about the limit.
Cabbage For Cow..
I feed cabbage every year to m
cows. We sell the butter to our neigh
hors, and we never have had any faul
found. I always feed right after milk
ing and never before. I should judge
that I feed fifteen or twenty pounds
apiece at a time with any kind of grain
or without any grain. Titis makes
splendid feed. Cows give lots of milk
on it. We use the milk on'the table
and never see any difference in it.—
Cor. Rural New Yorker.
Feeding the Sire.
Money and time spent in finding an
excellent sire will prove a remunera-
tive investment even to the average
dairyman if he will stick to one breed.
The Ignorant Feeder.
Many a good cow, individually capa-
ble of high production, is rendered al-
most useless because her owner has
not applied himself to the problem of
feeds and feeding, does not know how
to feed her and has no idea' of the com-
position of milk and cow feeds.—Hol-
stein-Friesian Register.
Shredder and Silo.
The shredder and the silo are two im-
plements which are coming more and
more to be recognized as money pro-
ducers on the farm.
Silage Versus Grain.
Experiments conducted at the Ohio
station Seem to justify the conclusion
that silage can be made to take the
place of a considerable portion of the
grain ration, It Is believed that by
growing more of the feeds rich in pro-
tein—clover, alfalfa, soy beans, cow -
peas, field peas and vetches—and en-
siloing them, or feeding them as hay, it
Will be possible to further reduce the
amount of grain tea.. -..._.... _
A Dead Tired Peeling
And utter weariness tare clue to the
blood
being weakened ,al.E ucc. all '< t
x It 11 fault.
g Y
action of the kidneys and LnC111Vt1. It's a
surplus of energy, lots of red vitaliz-
ing blood you need and it can be ac-
(rired quickly by using h'errozone,
the greatest strengthening tonic
made. "No tonic equals 11`el'rozone,'
writes H 1' . Jennings of Westport."Last .spring I was tired and depress-
ed, hail backache and lacked strength.
Ferrozone soon brought Ints to good
health and made sue well." Price 50c.
at druggists.
Isard's The Leading Store Isard's
--N W
Spring Goods
JUST RECEIVED—New Suitings, New Dress Goods,
New Shirt Waists, New Laces and Trimmings, New Car-
pets, Curtains, Oilcloths and Linoleums, New Waterproof
Coats, New Draperies, New Boots and Shoes, .etc,, and
more SHIPMENTS to arrive this 'month. We invite you
to call and inspect our New Spring Stock --we're sure to
please you in VARIETY, VALUES and PRICES,
Alteration Sale.
We've planned for the thirty feet extension to the
store and must sell out the balance of our CLOTHING
regardless of COST, in order to have it out of the way.
So come along for all kinds of MEN's AND BOYS' CLOTHING
and help us clear out the Basement.
Sweeping reductions in other departments will be con-
tinued. We're slitting off the profits.
••••:•••••••••••:•••:.:.•••.:4•.:÷:÷:-:-)••••• •••••:÷x4:
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Subscribe for
The Advance
$1.00 TIZT
•=i :•
BETTER THAN GOLD
to a young man or woman
is n course in the
Three Courses — Commercial, Shorthand
and Typewriting, and Telegraphy. Students
may enter any time. College re -opens Jan.
3rd, 1905. Send for Journal.
A. L. Mc,NTYRE, Mgr,
W. A. CURRIE
WING HAM'S AUCTIONEER.
Why go • out of Town for an
Auctioneer, when your wants can
besupplied at home.
The Popular
Grocery Store.
CROCKERY and CHINA,
FLOUR and FEED,
of all kinds,
Cash for Butter and Eggs.
Phone 61.
W. F. VanStone
Cook's Cotton Root Compound.
Ladies" Favorite,
Is the only safe, reliable
regulator on which woman
can depend "in the (hour,
and time of need."
Prepared in two degrees of
strength. No. 1 and No. 2,
No. 1.—For ordinary cases
is by far the belt dollar
medicine known.
No. 2—For special cases -10 degrees
stronger—three dollars per box.
Ladies—ask your druggist for Cook's
Cotton Root Compound. Take no other
as all pills, mixtures and imitations are
dangerous. No. 1 and No. 2 are sold and
recommended by all druggists in the 1)0•
miinion of Canada. Mailed to any address
on receipt of_'prtce and four 2 -cent postage
gtamp$a trite Cook Company, ,
Windsor, Ont.
Sold in Wingham by A. T. Skeen & Co.,
A. L. Hamilton, W. McKtbbon--Druggists
50 YEARS'
EXPERIENCE
ATENTS
TRADE MARKS
DESIGNS
COPYRIGHTS &C.
Anyone sending a sketch And ilescriintion may
mums, ascertain our opinion free whether an
invention is probably patentable., Communion,
thous strictlyeonadontfal. HAND Bola on Patens
sent free. Oldest naoney for necurtng,patents.
Patents taken tltrouah Munn k to. receive
special notice, without charge, in the
i
Scien iii t American.
1 •
A handsomely illustrated Weekly. Largest sir,
cnlatton of any scientlOO journal. Terms, $3 a
Hart fou{'tn thA, $14 field byal newsdealer,.
p o $tRroidwery.1ew York
Cum et, 't' 141 Wslbingtos, b,
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We're right in the Hard-
ware business again, and are
pleased to greet our custom-
ers once more.
Our stock will be found
full and complete in every
line, of which you shall hear
from time to time.
Tillsmithillg
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We have secured the 0.
services of a first-class tin-
smith, and all work in this
line shall receive our close
attention.
Call on us at an early O
date—we'll use you right. •
Alox. Young
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Hardware Merchant :
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=COAL
1
;i; We are sole agents for4.
•
• • the celebrated Scranton Coal,
:. which has no equal. ..
;: Also the best grades of
•••' Smithing, Cannel and Do -
• !nestle Coal and Wood of :r
all kinds, always on hand. 1:
-- We carry a full stock of 14
:: Lumber (dressed or undres-
.;
;sed), Shingles, Lath, Cedar
• Posts, 13arrels, etc.
•• • Highest Price Paid for all
..1
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kinds of Logs.
Residence Phone, No. Lia
Office " No. 01
Mill " No.41
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