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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1905-11-23, Page 5TIE WINGHAM ADVANCE -. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2$, 1905 SOME OF THE B RGAINS AT Crowder s Anniversary Sale. For the Balance of November Boys' Hudson Bay Overcoats, sizes 22 to 28, with Copeau, regular price $5.00 -Anniversary Sale ........$3.90 Boys' Raglan Overcoats, dark grey and black, belt and cuffs at- tached, sizes 22 to 28, regular $5.50 -Anniversary Sale $1,25 Youths' Raglan Overcoats, sizes 29 to 33, regular prices $6.50 and $7.00 -Anniversary Sale $5.00 Men'e Grey Rain Coats, sizes 36 to 46 chest -Anniversary Sale $2.50 Bargains In Men's Cloth Overcoats, 19 Sample Coats, sizes 35 to 44. chest, regular prices $9.00 and $9.50 -Anniversary Sale $6.00 Men's heavy Chesterfield and Tourist Overcoats, long lengths, sizes 35 to 44 chest, regular price $8.50 -Anniversary Sale $6.90 See Our Swell Overcoats at Popular Prices. Suit Bargains Here for Man or Boy. 26 Men's Tweed Suits, sizes 34 to 44, regular $6.75 to $7.50 -Anniversary Sale $5.50 Men's $3.50 Colored Worsted Pants -Anniversary Sale $2.25 ] 6 only, Odd Tweed Sacque Coats, sizes 34 to 44, worth $4.00 and $5.00 -Anniversary Sale $3.00 Mothers, it Will Pay You to Come Here This Week. Bargains in Boys' Two-piece Suits. Boys' Tweed Knicker Pants, double seats and knees, sizes 22 to 33, regular 75c and 85c -Anniversary Sale .60 Boys' S Piece Suits, sizes. -26 to 33, regular $4.50 and $5.00 -Anniversary Sale $3.50 Youths' Long Pant Suits, sizes 31 to 35, $6.00 and 6.50 - Anniversary Sale $4.50 Boys' Corduroy Kuieker Pants, sizes 26 to 33 $1.00 Men's Leather Coats, Corduroy lined $6.00 48 Men's Colored Shirts, hard and soft bosom, sizes 14 to 18, regular 75c and $1.00 each --Sale Boys' Colored Shirts, collar attached, sizes 12 to 14, regular 50c -Sale • Boys' All -wool Navy Blue Sweaters Men's Red Undershirts and Drawers, all wool, regular 85c and $1.00 each -Sale Men's heavy wool and fleece -lined Shirts and Drawers, all sizes, a Snit for Bargains in Shoes This Week. .59 .39 .40 .65 .90 It will pay_ you to see us before buying your Men's Furs -Coon Coats, Fur -lined Coats, Etc. The R. I-1. CROWDER CO. WINGHAM, ONTARIO. No Time Like The Present For buying Furniture; we have and up-to-date stock, consisting of Buffets, Sideboards, Bedroom Suites, Parlor Suites, Music Cabinets, Etc., all at money -saving Call and inspect our Mattresses, from made of the best filling and ticking. Our references are every man, woman has had any dealings with us, Undertaking promptly and care- fully attended to. a large, choice China Cabinets, Writing Desks, prices. $3.00 to $5.00, and child, that Walker Bros. & Button Furniture Dealers and Undertakers 4' TRADE MARK Ree. are made only from the best "Para" rubber. Made to fit every style and shape of men's shoes, ladies' shoes and shoes for the little ones. Ill ladies' shapes they are neat, light, perfect fitting and lasting. Insist on the " Maple Leaf" Brand --• it's on every rubber. Sold by all dealers. aplc Lei: f rubbers 1Rews Items ..,-�...,.,,......�.��-.n ....,.....v -.-Mr. Blanc!, M,R, of Kincardine, is on the road to recovery. -A Stallion worth $2,000 belonging to A. W. Rully V,S., of Grand Valley, was , poisoned last week ; some evil Minded person fed it Paris Green.. -The Ministerial association, of Walkerton, intend petitioning the town council to cut off three hotel licenses in that town next year, and to raise the license fee. -Geo. Sturgeon of Bayfield was drowned last week. The young man had been fishing at Port Burwell for the past few months and on Saturday he was washed overboard off a tug. Hamilton, Ont„ Nov, 10. -Hillhouse Brown, the defaulting manager of the Bank of Hamilton city branch, at the police court this morning, pleaded guilty and was sentenced to seven years at Kingston. -A G. T. R. official in conversation with a prominent Hanover man stated that the new G,T.R. depot to be built there will surpass all others up this northern way for beauty and style. It is to be built entirely of cement, the work to be commenced next spring. -Henry Coleman, Kincardine, pro- poses spending $8,000 on his pork packing establishment to increase the output. It is said the outlay will give work to ten extra men. Mr. Coleman asks the town for free water, free taxes and the interest on $1,000 for ten years. - By an arrangement recently en- tered into, connection has been made between the private telephone line ex- tending from Arthur to Conn, Monti- cello, Damascus, Gordonville, Kenil- worth, Riverbank, Goldstone, Parker, Cumnock, Dracan and Metz, and the lines of the 'Bell Telephone Com- pany. - One of the most carious institu tions in the United States is the Apple Consumers' League. Every member agrees to eat daily during the apple season two apples, raw or cooked, to have the fruit on his table daily and to ask for it in some form when ever he eats a meal at a hotel or restau- rant. -The Canadian Northern Railway will be in Edmonton next week. The steel is now about ten miles out of the city. Trains are following the con- struction closely, and the first train to Edmonton will likely arrive by the end of next week. The construction company is at present operating the line west of Battleford. -A wild elan who has been starring in a circus for the past eighteen months, turns out to be a big Georgia negro. The horns were fastened to a silver plate underneath his scalp, and the tusks were from the dentist who had sawed off the good teeth and finished the stumps with gold crowns, into which the tusks were screwed. -In the country about Erin, pota- toes are very largely grown for market purposes. Potatoes there were fairly good, although the quanti- ty in each drill was not so great as in some previous years, but the individ- ual potatoes are very large. The turnip crop is good, lice not having caused damage of any account. Many are behind with their fall work. The Atwood Bee says -"Work at the cement factory here is progressing slowly but surely. It is expected that the new boilers will soon be on hand and they will be placed in position and bricked in, ready to begin opera- tion in the spring. The company is paying cash for everything as it goes along and if the stockholders, who are tardy, would pay up protnptly, the work would advance more rapidly. -A humorous story comes from the Lesser Slave lake country. In a re- mote section all of the people have moved out of a school district except- ing one family. The father and two sons have elected themselves as direc- tors and employed the mother, who holds a certificate to teach. The only pupil is a little girl in the family home and the teacher receives $40 a month wages, The property of the district is taxed to pay the cost. -Last week, an immense concrete column, weighing about 200 tons, was thrown into tbe Niagara River about 600 feet above the falls, to stake a dam at the joint intake of the city waterworks and Niagara Falls Park and River Railway. By this dam the depth of water in the intake has been increased 101--2 inches. This depth is believed to be sufficient to give water enough for a first-class supply for the city and the electric railway. Stratford, Nov. 11. -This year has been a busy one in the building line in Stratford, especially in private resi- dences. Upwards of 170 have been erected or are in course of construc- tion, also a few stores. A Roman Catholic Church and a Church of Eng- land are being built, the former cost- ing $20,000, and the latter $10,000. The new armory is about ready for roofing. When completed it will cost from $50,000 to $75,000. The total value of new buildings is estimated at about $350,000. In addition $100,000 has been spent upon asphalt and briek pavements, granolithic sidewalks, etc. Dwellings are still scarce. I Be Done With Catarrh ! 'Why allow this filthy disease to poison your system P It drains your strength, ruins digestion, pollutes the breath, snakes you repulsive. The one certain euro is Gatarrhozone, it cures because it destroys the cause of the trouble, cures thoroughly because it goes wherever the catarrh is, cures every case because its vapor destroys the catarrh germ instantly. To get well and stay free from catarrh get Catarrhozone and use it ; satisfaction guaranteed. Luckrlow. PETER THE GREAT, Mr. Angus. Cameron left on Wed- nesday for Los Angeles, California, where he will spend the winter. Mr, John Alexander left on Wed- nesday for Paris, France, where he goes In the interest of the Henderson Boller Bearing Company.. The Official Board of the Ashfield Circuit of the Methodist Church has extended a unanimous invitation to the Rev. W. Smith to remain their pastor for the fourth year. The anniversary services of the Lueknow Methodist Church, will be held on Sunday, Dec. 3rd, when ser- mons will be preached both morning and evening by the Rev. Dr. Dougald, of Walkerton. On the following Monday evening a tea -meeting will be held. About half -past eleven on Wednes- day night four young men broke into the Chinese Laundry here through a large pane of glass in the front door. They assaulted the owner, Jim Lee and robbed the till of some two or three dollars. This is an outrage and it is said the parties are known. Mr. Geo. A. Siddall, who this week sold his bank building to the Molsons Bank, has been in business here for twenty-three years during which time he has conducted one of the most suc- cessful private banking houses in the Province, and his many patrons of the bank will be sorry to see him retire from business. Culross. Council met on Nov. 7 ; members all present. The engineers award re drain at lot 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, and 22, cons. 4 and 5 and also appeal of Lachlan Pringle against said drain Was laid before the Board. The By-law relating to the drainage work between the townships of Turn - berry and Culross was given the third reading and finally passed. A grant of $30 was made for grading on the 10th sideroad, con. 15. As the well-known sink hole on the 10th con. at lot 28 is reported to be in a bad condition, the Reeve and S. Purvis were authorized to have it re- paired. The salve councillors were requested to see as to the advisability of erecting a snow fence at that point by moving one now on the same con. at lot 28 and if deemed expedient to have the same carried out. A number of accounts passed for payment and the Council adjourned to meet Nov. 25th. No Poison in Chamberlain's Cough Remedy. From Napier, New Zealand, Herald : Two years ago the Pharmacy Board of New South Wales, Australia, had an analysis made of all the cough medicines that were sold in that mar- ket, Out of the entire list they found only one that they declared was en- tirely free from alt poisons. This ex- ception was Chamberlain's Cough Remedy, made by the Chamberlain Medicine Company, Des Moines, Iowa, U. S. A. The absence of all narcotics makes this remedy the safest and best that can be haus ; and it is with a feel- ing of security that any mother can give it to her little ones. Chamber- lain's Cough Remedy is especially re- commended by its makers for coughs, colds, croup and whooping cough. This remedy is for sale by all drug- gists. ADVANCE CLUBBING RATES. DAILY Advance and Globe $4.50 Advance and Mail -Empire 4.50 Advance and World 310 Advance and Toronto News 1.90 Advance and Toronto Star 1.85 WEEKLY. Advance and Globe $1.75 Advance and Mail -Empire 1.75 Advance and Family Herald 1.75 Advance and Montreal Witness1.75 Advance and Montreal Herald1.50 Advance and London Free Press 1.80 Advance and Farmers' Sun 1.80 Advance and Farmers' Advocate 2.35 MONTIILY. Advance and Farming World....$1.60 Bitter Tea Is Not flood Tea People who don't like tea know only the kind that is just bitter, the low- land tea that has more tannin in the leaf than you can kill with any amount of sugar. q Grand Mogul is a High- land tea, grown on the mountains of Ceylon, up near the sun. q Balmy breezes and light soil produce the mellow flavor that makes Grand Mogul a distinctive produet. High in theine (tea -tone) and low in tannin (bitters) it appeals to the palate and tones up the nerves Grand Mogul Tea q Sold only in patdaages lined with paper, never in poisonous lead Mogul premiums are sirnpiy part of the advertisins appropriation wand do not detru4 front the quality tea. A coupon In every PAW. tiletor>, t;bone That the Oils Malde et Unto* Waw .a Aton.ter, Tears ago, when a low standard e ►corals prevailed, the epithet "Qrgat'► was bestowed upon any monarch whe won battles and enlarged the territory and resources of his kingdom. itmatter• ed little then to the historian what might be a king's private eharacter, provided be made his nation formidable by its brute strength and full treasury. Even if he was a bad man they eulogised him as a good ruler. Peter 1. of Bus. sin is called Peter the Great be- cause he transformed a barbarous into a semlbarbarous nation, But no one can now read the following summary of ills eharacter without a feeling of disgust. Voltaire, in his "Philosoph- ical Dictionary," says that "Peter was half hero and half tiger." Macaulay declares, that "to the end of his life he lived in his palace like a hog in a sty, :utd when he was entertained by other sovereigns never failed to leave un- equivocal proof that a savage had been there." Peter, when the fit was on him, lit. crally caned everybody -from his cook to his counselor, from the meanest peasant to the highest noble -sparing neither age nor sex. He would get up from the table and flog the host who was entertaining him. He would stand at the door of the senate house and flog each senator that went in. Lefort was an intimate and trusted friend, yet on slight provocation he was knocked down and brutally kicked by his Imperial master. But all this flog- ging was in the way of recreation. When Peter "meant bushman," it was a More serious matter. Incredible as it may seem, It is nevertheless well authenticated that one of his own sis- ters -it is said more than one -received 100 strokes of the whip on her back in the presence of the whole court. In 1713 Alexis, his only son who out- lived infancy, was for some offense of no great seriousness several times tor- tured In the presence of the diabolical father and in the end died either from the effect of the torture or by assassi- nation. For sympathizing with Alexis the Princess Golitsyn, the bosom com- panion of the Empress Catherine, was publicly whipped by soldiers. For the saute reason the brother of his first wife, Eudoxia-whom he had thrown lute prison -was tortured and then torn In pieces on the wheel. Nothing ever told of Nero is more horribly gro- tesque than this, yet this man, or mon- ster rather, is paraded before the world as Peter the Great. SUCCESS THOUGHTS. The best In others will only come out to meet the best in you. The man with an idea has ever changed the face of the world. One reason why we do not make the most of the winning material in our- selves is because of a magnified idea of the groat superiority of others who do things in the world, As a rule no good comes from eral. cuing others. Anybody can do that, but the man who can accept his own honest estimate of himself and resolve to profit by it has achieved something. No matter what you are doing, think your way. Don't go without thinking. Think everything out. Don't run with- out a schedule. Have a programme and go by it. Think! Think! Think! -Success. 2afr. Noble's Promise Given, In the early' stages of his ministry the Rev. Mr. Noble preached for some time in a village in Maine. One day a committee called upon him to settle with flim for his services, and, after stammering awhile, signified to him that his further services were not de- sired. "What does this mean, gentlemen?" asked the parson. "Why," replied the spokesman, with some hesitation, "the people have got the impression that you are inclining to universal salvation." "Gentlemen," answered Mr. Noble, "I never have preached that doctrine, but if I ever should I promise to make the people of thls town an exception," Women and Pin.. It seemed as It it would take a whole paper of pins to mend that torn dress. The wearer appealed to her car neigh. bor. "FIave you any pins?" she asked. The woman had none, but passed the query on, and In a little while every passenger was feeling along concealed edges and turning back lapels. At last sixteen pins were produced. Fourteen of them were contributed by men. "We never need them a5 much as the women, but somehow we carry them and they don't," said one of the latter. Early nnilroading. In the pioneer days of railroading it was sometimes necessary for the freight conductor to run forward over the roofs of the cars to shout orders to the engineer. Traveling at night was generally avoided, though • one road adopted the expedient of running ahead of the locomotive a eat car loaded with sand, on which a bonfire was kept burning as a headlight. Seeing Double. "You brute!" exclaimed Mrs. Lush - ley. "It makes my blood boll to see you come home in this condition." "M' dear," saki Lashley, "you look beautiful when y'r angry." "Indeed?" "Mesh. Anyhow, you shert'n'ly look doubly beautiful to me jusht now." A Simple Tenth. Reporter -Well, to make a. long story short- Editor -A good copy reader la necessary. Sprained Her Ankle. "I slipped on nn icy step and sprain- ed my right ankle very badly, writes Miss Minnie Burgoyne of Glenwood. It swelled to a tremendous size and caused intense pain, 1 applied Poi- son's Nerviline and got pronmpt, relief ; the swelling was reduced, and before long I was able to use my foot." Por s,l)rains, swelling and muscular pains Nerviline is the one sore remedy, Strong, penetrating, swift to destroy pain -that's Poison's I' crviliue, rifty years in use. bard The Leading , Store Isard's Wingham's Brightest and Best Two Floors and Basement Two. Hundred and Twenty -Five Feet Selling Space. FIFTEEN DEPARTMENTS FIRST FLOOR Dress Goods, Silks and Trimmings, Smallwares and Ribbons, J Hosiery and Gloves, Corsets, Underwear, Waists, Wrappers, Staples, Mats and Caps, Gents' Furnishings, Boots and Shoes, Groceries. SECOND FLOOR Ready -to -Wear Clothing, Furs and Mantles, Raincoats and Skirts, Cur- tains and Roller Blinds, Carpets, Oil- cloths, Linoleums and Rugs. BASEMENT Groceries and Farm Produce. One Price to all. Right Goods at Right Prices . 111 .u'i.0.1 .II 1 .11....1 lu H. E. ISAIH i (0. �=-_-• ,d'ri�iiy.Q;� •�'t'�x•,�'F >�' -. r�-en3scz:,:::�oi,� A'c',!r5••�._�-ag'' Shorr ctOP1 tt tti9 AS FcS-•J k1i•0 There is none -if you would succeed you must work. Some colleges claim to give a complete course in less time than the .a; The Forest City Business and Shorthand College teaches the different courses in the time found by long experience by the best colleges, to be necessary -no more and no less. If the work is done in less time it cannot be done thoroughly. After you leave the F. C. P. C. you waste no time in learning what you should have been taught in the C,a'ege. Our free booklet tells all al)caL pian,, systems, charges, positions after graduating, etc. W ;te fir it. School terra---S.'ptembcr till June inclusive. J. W. WESTERV EL T , t , NI. C. A. Principal LONDON. N. N.r. Clinton. The question of n canning factory is still being discussed. It is hoped to have the IKnitting factory' plant in operation at an early date. The Clinton Thresher Company has been incorporated with a capital of $.10,000. At the nnnivei' ally of Ontario Street Church last Sabbath, $751) was asked for, and $000 was contributed. Professor Campbell is recovering from the attack of pneumonia wllieh has kept hien indoors for the past month. The representative of the Berlin Sugar Co: says that 240 carloads of beets have been sent to the factory from the district and 200 are yet to go. IIe has blade a suggestion to the Com- pany that a bonus of twenty-five cents per ton ln' given to growers who will pit, tidy half, their beets. That is a farmer who has four carloads will shit: two as soon as pulled and pit the balau:•e until later in the season, and urns prevent, 0 congestion at the factory. Pat's Testimony. "Now, Pat," said the magistrate to an old offender. ''\Vhat, brought you here again 'r" ''Two policemen, S()P,'was tile. laconic reply. "Drunk, I suppose " queried the magistrate, "Yes, sur," said Pat, "both of thin." (PRONOUNCED SI -KEEN) LACRI i� One of the worst of Bron- chial Diseases, because it has the worst after-effects. The first symptoms are Chills and Fever, Cough, Sore and Inflamed Nose and Throat, Pains in the. Limbs, Side and Chest, severe Head- aches, Night Sweats, lassitude -should not be neglected. PSYCHINE prevents and positively cures La Grippe, Pneumonia and Bronchitis. TRIAL BOTTLE FREE Per orale by and druggists at $1.00 per bottle. Por further advice and information *vita er oall at Dr, '. A, Slocum, Limited, 170 Xing Street West,Toronto, Canute.