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The Wingham Advance, 1902-10-30, Page 44 THE WINGITAM ADVANCE, October 30, 1902 Ritchie Campbell Dress foods. New Dress Goods arriving daily until our coun- ters and shelves are overflowing with the newest pat- terns and weaves that money can buy. All the lead- ing shades are represented here. Did you see our special lines of Homespuns at 25c and 50c a yd. Silks For Waists Just received, a full range of Tamaline Silks at 50 as., and Louisine Silks at 75 cents. They are the newest Silks for Waists. French Flannels 25 patterns Fancy French Flannels, new goods, worth 45, 50 and GO cts.—your choice now for 35c a yd. Readymade Clothing We need more room and in order to get it, we must reduce our large stock of Readymade . Clothing ; we are offering" special prices for the re- mainder of the month. Nothing in stock but first- class goods. Buying from us will save you money. Men's Suits worth $8.00, for • $5.50 " " 6 50, for 4.50 " 5.00, for 2.75 These lines range in sizes from 3G to 42. WANTED.—Butter, Eggs and Poultry, for which the highest prices will be paid. —'-1•5515— Richie & Campbell essrosmaisilssisimgmaasma successors to M. H. McINDOO. PALL BROS. FOR BUSINESS Our store has been an exceptionally busy spot during the past few weeks—having exactly what you want in the very newest designs, and yet not out of your reach in price. Those $8 Sideboards which we offered last were fast sellers (a few still in stock) but we have a half-dozen No. 152 at $14 which we con- sider onsider still better value for the difference in price ; to see these Sideboards is to buy. Others forless money with a good range to select from up to $45. In Bedroom Suites, its a settled question that we have the assortment, and prices astonishingly low. Wire .Springs—the kind that gives satisfaction— $2.50, $2.75, $3.00. Mattresses—extra heavy ticking, $2.50 up to $19.50. See them. UNDERTAKING Residence—Patrick Street, S. Oracey'a Amer residence, where night calls receive prompt at- tention. Window Shades, all Prices. Goose Feathers Always in Stock. Ball Bros. Phone 51 The People's Furniture Store GET READY - There never was such a demand for Ladies and Gentlemen having a thorough knowledge of Com- mercial and Shorthand work. LONDON - ONT. Has assisted mere students to profitable positions during the past year than any School in the West. We would be pleased to assist you. Particulars for a postal. 51-24 • J. W. IVESTERVELT, Principal. Kent lock, Wingham, LE Starting to cut deep — we are pushing Fall and Winter Goods and will make special prices in Ladies' Fur Coats, Capes, Gauntlets, Collar- ettes, Caperines, and in Men's Fur Caps, Gloves, Mitts, Overcoats and Suits. Boys' Clothing is still being sold at half price. In general Dry Goods our goods tire -up-to-date and were well bought ----choice lot of Dress Goods, Silks, Gloves, Trim- mings and Fancy Goods, on which much cash can be saved by the buyer. Try us first, you can't bother us, and we can't be undersold. Butter, Eggs, ggs, DIeseed Poultry and Wood wanted. A. DULMAG13 bllarial Bola —So vigorous is the opposition in the British house of Commons to the Government's Education Bill, that after seven days' debate, only eleven lines of the Bill passed. * —The petition against the return of Dr. Jessop, Conservative mem- ber elect for Lincoln, has been dis- missed with costs ; not a fragment of evidence was offered in support of the charges. * * * It is, says the Breeders' Gazette, the -purpose of Great Britain im- mediately to establish in the Transvaal Colony in South Africa, an immense horse breeding ranch where remounts for the army may be bred. Two thousand mares have been selected from the stock, on band, and have been divided up into bands of 200 each, located on ten different ranges. —A. W. Campbell, Deputy -Com. missioner of Public Works, is keeping up the good roads agita- tation. He has just returned from Wiarton, where the adjoining townships and the Council of Wiarton and Southampton are contemplating macdamizing the the road between the two towns ; it is also proposed to run a macadam road right through to Tobermory, a distance of fifty miles. The ne- cessary by-laws will be submitted to the people for endorsation. * * —Here is the opinion of the Hamilton Spectator ;—"Mr. Tarte'-s going will be bad for Laurier and his aggregation of little politicians. There's not a large idea among them. They are all petty party men, unable to see the future of Canada, and unwilling to get out of the rut. They will endeavor to keep themselves in power by small tricks and intrigues. Tarte was the brains of the cabinet : Laurier is the handsome figure head, and the rest are, to a man, too small to be good county councillors. * * * —That the United Kingdom ap- preciates Canadian cheese is prov- ed by the fact that while in 1871, $5,471,362 worth, and in 1891, $9,481,373, last year Canada's cheese bill to the motherland. amounted to $20,696,951, or over $15,000,000 more than thirty years ago, and more than double that of ten years ago. In 1901, Great Britain imported a total of 289,- 731,120 pounds, imported at a cost of $30,305,081. 'Canada c`ontr'ib- uted of that total 195,926,397 pounds, valued at $20,696,951, or more than two thirds ' the total imports. * * —It is gratifying to hear that leading Liberals of South Oxford are also emphatic in their condem- nation of the plot to unseat Mr. Sutherland M. P. P., by trumping up false evidence from jail birds. The Express says :—Everybody is dazed at the magnitude of it all, and those who are strongest in their denunciation of the filthy work are leading Reformers. Among those who have given ex- pressions to the severest condem- nation -are well known Liberals like Dr. McKay, Geo. Smith,K. C. ; Ald. P. Irving, James Hous- ton and dozens of others who could be mentioned." —The exports of cheese from the United States during the year end- ing June 30th last were, says the Official Crop Reporter, issued by the United States Department of Agriculture, less than for any year in the last thirty years. The United States exports of butter are also declining. For year ending June they totalled a little over six- teen million pounds, valued at $2,885,000, as compared, with twenty-three and one quarter mil- lion pounds, for the previous year, valued at a little over four million dollars. Twenty-two years ago United States butter exports amounted to thirty-nine and one- quarter million pounds, valued at $6,690,000. ROOM WARMED BEFORE YOU RISE. (Weekly Sun.) One Brunet got six months for rigging ballot boxes in the by-elec- tion in St. James' division of Mon- treal. Along came Minister of Justice Fitzpatrick and set the rogue free after doing ten weeks of his sentence. Brunet's pal, Hetti, who had been packed off to Boston, return- ed to Montreal as soon as "the friends" tired of paying his hotel bills, and the judge sent him clown for sixteen months. The jailer put Hetu into the reg- ulation canvas suit and at honest work. A few minutes later along came an order, this time not to set the rogue free, but to fix him up as a parlor bonder. From the canvas suit Hetu slip- ped li- ped back into his Boston clothes and was led to a carpeted room snugly furnished. There he gets the morning anti evening papers, receives "the friends," passes round the cigars, has them take something while they smoke—at the expense of those who paid fur Ws keep in the States. The parlor is kept at an even temperature and the coal famine does not worry him. For thousands of the Sun's read- ers the first job of the day is to kindle the kitchen fire. Where coal is not used, when the cold is near zero, it would be nice to have somebody else drive the chill out of the house on winter mornings. Stuff a, ballot box or swear to a false return and on getting out of bed you, like Hetu, will find the parlor warm with coffee and pork chops to follow. PRODUCTS OF A STEER. A. 1,200 -pound steer, when dres- sed according to modern packing- house conditions, will yield, says the National Provisioner, of Chica- go, as follows ; Ribs, 165 lbs. loins, 115 ; rounds, 165 ; chucks, 150 ; plates, 113 ; shanks, 45 ; flanks, 24 ; suet 28 ; kidneys, 2 ; tongue, 5 ; hide 65 ; oleo oil, 25 ; oleo stearine, 13.20 ; tallow, 5.21; hair, 12 ; glue, 1.55 ; cheek, 5 : brains10.; 5 ; lips, 1 ; heart, 3.5 ; liver, 10 tail, 1,25 ; sweetbreads, 2 ; medicinal gland's, 6 ; tripe, 8 ; casings, 507 ; fertilizer, 24.75 ; hoofs, 1.75 ; shins, 1.5 ; neat's- foot oil, 1 ; butter stock, 1.25 ; raw bone, 13,; horns, 75 ; blood, 1.20 ; total, 881.56 lbs. These figures are said by independent packers to be extremely conserva- tive, The uses of the several parts are ;—Hides, leather. From tal- low, soap, glycerine, butterine, lubricator and candles ; ; froth the blood, albumen, fertilizer and stock food ; from the tankage, which includes all manner of "re- fuse," fertilizer and stock food ; buttons, hairpins, fertilizer, glue and fancy goods ; from oleo, oil, butterine and compound lard ; from the intestines, sausage casings gutskins for goldbeating purposes ; from the weasands, sausage cas- ings, brewer's hose and snuff pack- ages ; from the bladder, casings and packages, for putty, lard, snuff ; from the tail, chair for' mat- tresses and upholstering ; from the bones, buttons, glue, handles and fancy goods ; from the neat's-foot oil, polish, leather dressing, lubri- cant and illuminant ; from the bones meal, stock food, fertilizer, material for tempering steel, anhydrous ammonia and glue•. The tongue, cheek, brain, lips, heart, liver, tail, sweetbreads and tripe are all sold for meat. There is nothing wasted but the water in the carcass. `Infringement of a Trade Mark. In an notion in The High Court of Justice for Ontario recently tried before Chancellor Boyd at Toronto, The Slater Co., and Chas. E. Slater, President, of Montreal, makers of the famous Slater Shoe, obtained a judgment forever restraining F. G. Wilkinson, a boot & shoe dealer of Owen Sound, from adver- tising, offering, exposing for sale or sell- ing boots or shoes not made by the Slat- er Shoe Co., as "Slitter Shoes," "Slater Goods" or "The Slater Shoe." The Chancellor also ordered Wilkinson to pay the heavy costs of the action. It seems Wilkinson was offering for sale, shoes made by a manufacturer iu Mont- real whose name was somewhat similar to The Slater Shoe Co. This maker came up from Montreal and gave evidence at the trial and appeared to he looking after the defence for Wilkinson, but the Chancellor after hearing the evidence decided that no one, except the Slater Shoe Co., had a right to use the name "Slater Shoe," "Slater Goods," "The Slater Shoe" or any similar names in connection with boots and shoes, and that Wilkinson had no right to use any name or names in connection with boots and shoes which might enable him to pass off a Shoe not of the Company's make, as being of their make, nor in any way to reap the benefit of the reputation which the Slater Shoe has acquired throughout the Dominion of Canada. MONEY TO LOAN—At 4; per cent. on improved farina. Easy terms of re- ppayment; expenses light. Apply A. Dnlmage, Real Estate and Loan Agent, Kent Block. f I 1 and ACME MAGAZINC contains the cream of agricultural thought, as tactical When coat o to red i Not I1owCheap Ballow Good The most successful farmers in Canada read the FARMER'S ADVOCATE: they think about their work, they act upon its teachings, and they are its greatest admirers. Its editors and contributors are specialists. The FARMER'S ADVOCATE l. be- cause pays them and because they want the best. We want thousands of new sub. xscribers who will appreciate something good. The sooner you subscribe, the more you will get, Eor $r.00 we Will send to new subscribers every issue of the FARMER'S ADVOCATE from now till the end of 19O3, including the beautiful Christmas Number for both years. Thee is money, Read think! act! Send for a free sample, copy if you want to see a practical, up-to-date farmer's paper. It will please you. ADDRESS the Wiliiam Weld go.,Etd. LONDON, ONTARIO. Coughs "I had a bad cough for six weeks and Gould find no relief until I tried Ayer's Cherry Pecto- ral. Only one-fourth of the bottle cured me." L. Hawn, Newington, Ont. Neglected colds always lead to something serious. They run into chronic bronchitis, pneumonia, asthma, or consumption. Don't wait, but take Ayer's Cherry Pectoral just as soon as your cough begins. A few doses will cure you then. Throe aloes: 25c., enou h for an ordinary cold; tie., jest right norbronohitis, hoarse - nese, hard colds, etc.i 51, most economical for chronic cases and to keepp on hand. J. C. AYER CO., Lowell, Mass.. THE BEST -IT PAYS. CENTRAL STSATFORD, ONT. Recent graduates have accepted good po- sitions at $40, $15, $50 and $00 per month, and a few days ago an application was re- ceived offering one of our graduates of last term a salary of $800 pet annum. This is the kind of evidence you aro looking for as to the best school to attend. Catalogue free. Enter this month if possible, L W. J. Elliott, Principal, IT PAYS TO 4."To 40411p 100 YOUNG MEN WANTED to qualify for positions as stenographers at THE CANADA BUSINESS COLLEGE CHATHAM, ONT. Positions at $50 and $60 per month are to -day going bogging for young men to fill them. We have now eleven unfilled calls for male stenographers alone, and the number keeps in- creasing. It offers tho best field we know of to -day for bright, capable young mon. Write for particulars and Catalogue. • D. McLachlan & Co., Chatham, Ont. . FALL TERM IN THE ILiTOWEL begins on MONDAY, SEPT. 1, 1902. Two Courses—Commercial and Shorthand. Terms reasonable. Send fof College Journal Students may enter at any time. C. A. FLEMING A. L. McINTYRE President Seo'y. Wanted. We want a few good Agents for Western and are prepared to pay liberally for the right kind of men. Where we have sold stock once, we tan sell again. Our goods are in demand. . We ask no deposit from representa- tives—Outfit is turn ished free. It, will pay any reliable man, want- ing a permanent, paying position, to correspond with us. STONE & WELLINGTON "Canada's Greatest Nurseries." TORONTO, ONT. Cement and Lime. Parties requiring Cement or Lime should give us a call. We are selling at a very low price. We keep only first-class brands of cement and lime, and you can always rely on getting a good fresh article at the WING'i3AM CEMENT AND TILE WORKS. F. GUTTERIDGE. A Timely Hint .. 0 tic' a. When Ordering Your FALL AND WINTER SUIT Remember— that a good .fit isas important as good material ; we make no misfits. An order for your winter Suit or Overcoat shall receive our careful attention. Give us a call. E. C. CLARKE UP -STAIRS IN SUAW :BLOCS:. 8tfbre. A.ne>'. 'w'ood's Ishosphodine, The Great BOOUsh Pcmcdy. Sold add recommended by 11,11 n ie a in Canada. Onlyroll. dr gg t able medicine discovered. ,91z packages guaranteed to cure all forms o Sexual weaknee5 all elltets of abuse or excess, Mental Worry, lixcessive tab of To- bacco, Opium or Stimulants, Mailed on receipt of pries, ono ppaokege $1, Mx, $6. One Suitt please, az will cure. Pamphlets free to any addreaa. The Wood Company, Windsor, Out. Wood's PhospinodlnC is sold inwinghlam by A. Hamilton, J. E. Davis, It. A. Douglass and 0, A. Campbell, Diwcalsms, itlgt gitltl1i11fii1111Y1i1It1111i111tI 11gt111tiI1i111i1Y6131111iIf IItR1111111t11E1t411ti1i1141i4l11iItt111111111i E. THE PEOPLE'S POPULAR STORE. —1 ' Ow 05505 JNO. & JAS. H. KERR. • ,dam E'4 Specials inl 1 FARMERS. 10 Specials 1 ..... .... IN---- For Fall. u..„..., We are paying ;' r Goods -2: for Reduced Prices for Big Prices . two weeks. Produce, etc. Scotch Fingering Yarn, reg- ular 75c, for 65c a lb. Ladies' Shoes Fine Doug. Kid Button, heavy solo, sizes 2 , to 7, regular $2.25—for Fine Box Calf Button or •""' Bal., up-to-date in style and finish, regular $2.25 Fresh laid Eggs i 7c. —for O 00 • We want large quantities of good Butter, 2.00 E Fine Dong. Kid Bal., wool We are paying for lined, regular $2.00—for..1.75 regular $1.50—for 1.25 C•••••.• e!•--• Felt Button and Bal., Doug. Kid foxed, wool lined, Dressed Turkeys.....10 to lie lb. Dressed Geese 6 to 7c lb. Ducks, per pair 60 to 80c Chickens, per pair. 30 to 50c • We want " car loads of 3 Specials in good Potatoes at once—will pay big prices. Don't pit • your potatoes this year— ; you won't have any in the spring if you do. Its risky 1.40 to hold potatoes at all this E Men's Overshoes • Snow Excluders, wool lined, regular $1.80—for idrz Snow Excluders, wool lined, season. 2 buckles, regular $2.75— for Arctics, wool lined, regular ems: $1.65—for 1 90 Way's Wool Mufflers for Men— Regular 75e line for 60o Regular 900 line for 75c La 4111 Ladies'.Tailor Made Skirts, perfect fitting, price $3.00 ...i„ Men's Tweed Suits, well made, good material, reg- ular $7.00, for $4.99 Men's Tweed Suits, heavy all wool tweed, regular $9.00, for $7.00 M -...s Men's Overcoats, heavy Canadian Frieze, regular $7.00, for $5.00 Men's Overcoats, Fine Blk. Beaver, regular $9, for$7.00 a • • • Flannelette Blankets, reg- ular $1.25, for......$1.00 a pair µ' We want loo bushels of Flannelette Blankets, reg - 1 40 White Beans, and will pay . ular $1.00, for 80c a pair $2.00 a bushel. 5 5•550 3 Specials inOats taken in exchange'. E for Oatmeal. Snag Proof Rubbers Men's Snag Proof Rubbers, ;La'emwante Cia quantity oftrons —will pay 4 ply canvas, 4 ply Rnb- good prices. ber, regular $2.10—for.....1.75 a Boys' Snag Proof. Rubbers, w regular $1.20—for 1:10: We want Good Winter Youths' Snag Proof Rub- Apples in barrels, carefully bers, regular $1.10—for...1.00 ; packed, No. I fruit. a .Ino. & Jas. II. Kerr I JAii1nh1o1d B1ok, Willglion Ask for Special prices on Fur Coats, Capes, Caperines, • Ruffs, etc. Jas. H. Kerr qq ldtiittttti ti fit t til itt,ifti i,6ttidi tti ff tltiladl fttfdt btttttlfdtfi<tli<ttjltdi€ ttlidd tltftiif fditjttt -.o Allman oA SAktakkons. We Sell Stanfield's Uushrinkable Underwear, Truro Brand. e5‘,11, 'Kols • We have it. Consisting of New Dress Goods, Wool and Cashmere Hosiery, Knitted Wool Shawls, all Wool and Flannelette Blankets, from 75 cts. up to $4.50 ; Ladies' Underwear, Wrapperetts ; Table Linens 20 cts. up to $1.25 a yd. Towels, Towelings. Greye,Flannels, 121.c up. MEN'S SUITS TO ORDER — $10 TO $20 A SUIT. Ready-made Clothing, Carpets, Boots and Shoes, Groceries, etc. B Sure U See Our Bargain Table. • 440 "avobsam e3vaokag Co. tklAkka SUCCESSORS TO T. A. MILLS, Wingham SPECIAL SALE Big Bargains in Watches in Rings in Silverware fi ii Si A very large stock to select from, and we -Fill sell very cheap. HALSEY PARK Headquarters For Repairs Jeweler and Optician t11111i119t11IYIR11tII11I111ilttti OW.. .,,,.• a -.-e e•.•- OW -a a mom.. a This is the season for acw.- .-.o SORE, TIRED AND 050.5 --.e 85,5 SWEATY FEET. a' 15115555 644444 If yob don't wish to have them, use ,A..,, «.-.- .....a, 11144+4. DAMPO ...VP -'-a *O .. .-,., 4w a- 14404. rara40 For Sale bywall Pr,. .....n a. Cohn A. Campbell THE DRUGGIST 1444,7 ttttttttitttttttttttlttttttttttti •