Flesherton Advance, 12 May 1910, p. 4

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

'^ii<^fw"wy w>^^-- V -ii-^A ,»••>â- ) May 12 1910 THE F I, E S H E K T O N ADVANCE ^r. r » ' F. T. HILL & Co. - Harkdale An Immense Purchase Of Fine Cashmere, Cotton and Lisle Hosiery on sale this week. Ladies , Boys', Girls' and Children's sizes selling at 1 -4 to 1 -3 less than you regularly pay. THIS IS HOSIERY WEEK. W e made an inimense purchiute of HoHisry from one of the leading mills iii Canada, having bought the balance of their KtocU in ull lines, and the reduction in price was so liberal that wn arc able to 6etl the best known make? of hosiery away below their regular market value. Having three .stores makcN it pos.'ible for UK to handle the quantity and put within your reacli the liest Hosiery values that you have seen for many a day. You can aflurd to buy ninoy |Miirsat these price*. I e^dipc* Pin^ &ilk LiqI^ Ho^^ regular SOc and eOc pair, this week To the lady who wears a very fne iiuality of Silk or Lisle Hose this is a preat buying opportunity to purch;ise a beautiful fine 'luality, '•-. all sizes %i\ 00 Penman's Pen Angle Brand of Cashmere Hose. Only 19c a pair, Regular Value 25c. Ladies' sizes only. Penman is one of the Vest and moat reliable makers of Hosiery in Canada, and we are selling these 1 Qp 25c qtuilify thia week for , XOCf. gg S gSggga>V !! ggg ! 5y . gg^ S JSSggg^ Chatham waggons Tolton Harrows Also for sale one new Mc- CoRMicK Cultivator worth looking at, and one new National Cream Separator for sale cheap. ONE GANG PLOW, second hand, a bargain. Call and Examine These Goods S. HEMPHILL - Ceylon, Ont. WANTED! a representative for Flcsli- crtoa. This if the time to bell nursery stuck. We pay lil>criilly and offer stoady employment. ' *ur list of 8i>ecialtles embraces a rare and choice list of ready sellerH in both fruit and ornamental stock, oeed po- tatoes, etc. Write for t^rtns and catalog. STONE k WELLINGTON The Fonthill Nurseries (Established 1837) Toronto, • Ontario Ijun J»M^W^ ^ I I '^ W W â-  fc â€" â€" â€" ^ iTonsorlal Parlors Now a-d»y» a man in not satisfied to go around with a week's growth of whiskers on his faci'. To avoid this try Janiicson's barber shop for a clean, easy shave, also for good hair cult. Come once, come always. Agency for Markdale Chinese laundry. Basket loaves Tuesday, returns Fiiday. BLOOD DISEASES CURED Dn. K. & K. Established 20 Yean ^T»JO NAMES USED WITH- OUT WRITTEN CONSENT H* was aurprlaAi at how th« â- ores hsalMlâ€" "I took your New Method TasATHCKT for a serious blood disease with wbicb I bod b«en inncted for twelre jrears. I had consulted > score , of pbysidans taken all kinds of blood' mealclne, visited Hot KpriD);^ and other mineral water resorts, but only got tern- Iporary relief. They would help me for a tinie, but after discootinuine the tncdi- icines the symptoms moulu brrnk out apainâ€" running sores, blotches, rlieum- Biic pains, looseness of the hair, swrlllnprs of the Klands, palms of the hands scaling, â- trosf THtsTSllHT l^J^"?*? "J '^'' "'''''• •'yspeptic. stomach, .„i„ T«f atmcht etc. I had given up In <lcspair when a f rlcni advised ma to consult yon, as you had cured him of a similar disease 8 years ago- 1 had no hoim, but tfjok his advice. In thrco weeks' time tli" sores commenced to heal up and 1 became encouraged, I continued the New M»ctiioi> Treatment for four months anil at the end of that time every symptfjm had dlstvppearttl. I was cured 7 years ago and no signs of any disease since. Sly boy, three years old. Is sound and healthy. I cer- tainly can recommend your treatment with all iny heart You cao refer any person to me privately, but you can use this testimonial as you wisb. <V. H. S. W« tr*at NERVOUS DEBILfTY, VARICOSE VEINS, VITAL WEAKNESS, BLOOD. SKIN .nd SECRET Dueuet, URINARY, BLADDER and KIDNEY complunU of Men and Women. * DCinCD Are you a victim? TIave you lost hope? Are you Intending to marry? Has nCnUCn your blood been diseased? Have you any weakness? Our New J.ethod InEArMiisr will cure jou. What it b.-t8 done for others it will do for you. Connilution Fre*. No matter uhn has treated you write for an honest opiniOQ Fr«» of Cbsrs*. Chari;es reiuuuablo. Books Pre*â€" (Illui>tratcd) on diseases of Men. NO NAMES USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT. Ererythint confideatUI, Question liit and co<t of Homo Treatment FREE. DrsKENNEDY&KENNEDY Cor. Michigan Ave., and Griswold St, Detroit, Mich. All letters from Canada must be addressed to our Cnna<lian Correspondence Depart- ment in Windsor, Ont. If you desire to ll I see us personally call at our Medical Institute in Detroit as we see and treat â-  no patients in our Windsor ofHces which are for Correspondence and I Laboratory for Canadian business only. Address all letters as follows I DRS. KENNEDY & KENNEDY, Windsor, Ont ^^Wrlte for cur private addreia. THE: 'r^nsc ^i n= Jr=Jr=Jr=i Tailor Shop 1 1 L For fine tailoring call on F. A. i3AKER, 2nd door .south of Ariii- strong's jewellery store, where we shall be pleased to show yuu all the latest designs of spring and summer suitings and overcoalings. Over 600 different patterns to choose from, at the most reasonable prices. Fit and workmanship guaranteed. P. A. BAKER HIGH CLASS TAILOR AR MSTRONG'S BLOCK. <r=ffr=fft=it I I i i i J Hii PERIGOE, <*-^ :::: Flesherton, {::i •••• •••• ' 1:1: ?•* Will buy your ledftor and all your Jj^ ..•• .•• notes or advance you inonev on lUHiirarice, ofevery clsaa written, placud III safe and liberal com- paiiiefi. Loans. Kuarantoo bonds, etc. Write tor KHEK KKI'OKT'oii your doubtful aooounts and DOteg, Telephone 19, "ADVANCE" ADS. PAY The season haa been held back by wtt, cold weather, and if ynu have not secured all your aeeds don't delay longer. Here we have a full atock of garden seeds, all kinds of field corn and rootaâ€" everything you could poaaibly wish to plant. Drop in and complete your seed purchasoa. A Kood lino of flour and feed, bran, »horl«, chop and low grade Hour ; Ogilvie's ttoyal Household flour aiwaya on hand. Always freah groceries at W. L. Wright's. ^i ^M^^i^i J •" CHILDHOOD has blighted many Uvea baoausa the pain oauaad tharaby produoasy an avaptlon ta study. The baekwani ohMd to* oftoq MooniMi th* unauoessaful man. W. A., Armstrong, Jeweler & Optician CANADIAN GREAT LAKES NAVIGATION NOW OPEN Regular Sailings a.s follows : Monday 5. 5. ••Athaba«ca" Tueoday S. S. ••Keewatin" Wednesday S, S. "Alberta" Thursday S. S. •Manitoba" Saturday S. S. ••Assiniboia" The most pleasant and cheap* est route to Winnipeg and west. HOMESEEKERS' EXCURSION . . . May 3 Througli Train to Wir nipen and West frtpm Toronto 2.00 p. m. on above date. S. Rands, Agent, Flesherton An iada)i«ndMit news|>aper, iiublislied every Tliuraday at the office, Coluiigwood Strtet, FItsherton. Hnbscription price ll \vtv annuni, whâ„¢ |>aid in advance; %\SyA wbcn not ho paid. Advcrtisiuft rates on ap|ilicatio!i. Circulation 1,030 weekly. '\V. H. TUuraton - Kdttor TRUTH BEFORE FAVOR- PRINCIPLES, NOT MEN A NATK^N MOURNS ITS LOSS The King is dead. The niourniog for a ruler of Great Britain ib happily an infrequent necessity. We are seldom called upon to i>erfortn thai melancholy task, T»ice only in over sixty years has the nation been plunged iiit) mouniine for its ruler. Possibly for this reason the death of King Edward was a greater shock to his subjects than it might otherwise have been. For over fifty yeara Queen Victor- ia occupied the throne, beloved of all peoples, and we regardetl the ruler as a fixture, unchangeable, but the blow fell, and after a short illness she passed away. Then caiue her sou, Edward the Sev- enth, at that time an old man, who ascended to the throne amidst the naourn- ings of a whole world. It was hoped that he might lont; be spared to rule over his great Empire ; but fate willed other- wise, and nine short years after his ascension he has answered the call to the Great Majority. Again the world weeps its sympathyâ€" but the atfaiis of the nation go on. Death cannot do away with the nation, tbou^'h its Head be called. We are founded on something on which death has no claim, and a new sovereign is ours. King George the Fifth. Insomuch as the new ruler is a son of our beloved King and a comparatively young man we trust that ha may be spared long to rule over his country and to guide its destinies. May the tact and wisdom of the father be embodie<l in the son, . and his rei^n be a splendid monument^to him whom the nations mourn. King George ascends to the throne at a time when the country is in need of a si long ruler. A crisis [is at hand in the Iiolitics of hit country in which he will re(|uire tact and "ood judgment far be- yond the ordinary man. May he be wisely guided, and may health and hap- piness be his. Ijoug live the king ! ont POOR ROADS MOVEMENT The time of year has come wh^n our country roaas receive their annual coat of gravel, or, ; if the community be especially aflluont and owns a stone crusher, their C"»t of broken stone. This coat, it may bi! explained, is dumped on llie road in putchi's, possibly raked down a little, and then left to the tender mer- cies of the elements. In so far as poj- siblu all rigs avuid the stone or gravel patches and taku to the ruadaides cr ditches, but by the following s])ring the roiid ha.s been jxiunded into as close an approach to decency as is possible. The Advance rises to ask why â€" why are Grey county's roads built and maiu- tnined in such a slip-shod inanuer ? Other counties have taken advantage of the Good Roads Act, while we continue to have our roads doctored by farmers, culled from the fields, who certainly have their ideas as to roadbuilding. Unfor- tunately these self-formed ideas vary,aod what one man d')es others complain of â€" and ou it goes. A decent system of toad- building is a crying neccetsity in our county, and we helplessly ask what is to he dune '/ Receiving no answer, we again ask what ? and sgaiu lapse into oareiesa- ness. It is about time a move was made to secure respectable roads for Grey, aa has been done in other counties. A patch- work road is bettor than none, but a good macadam road is belter than all others, and, in the end, cheaper. Macadam, maik yiiu, is not simply a few loads of crushed stones dropped onto the highway and left in its rough state to the eternal terror of motoiists and heavily loaded rigs â€" it must be scientifically handled to get reault.H and iu almost a useless expen- diture, as far ht permanency goes, unless it is so handled. The iiuesllon of improvement is fre- c|uunily raised but soems to receive scant attention at the hands of those whuse duty it is t( act in the matter. ROOSEVELT WANTS PEACE In Norway recently Theodore Roose- trelt entered upon the most difUcult field of Europoaii politics, in advocating an international agreement that would scrv* to check the growth of nrmamcuis, jspeoially naval armaments, and the for- mation by those great powers honestly hem on pence of a League of Peace. If such a plan could be effectually formulated it would do much for the welfare of this old world. Immenae sums are today spent in armaments by the great world powers for the purpose of assuring peace by force. A vasMy wiser means of pro- cedure would be to follow out a plan similar to that advocated by Roosevelt. It would bd cheaper and certainly mure effectual. Thib is, of course, based on the suppo- sition that the grtat world powers hon- estly desire peace and not war. If the supposition is not correct reform will not be possble. Do we desire peace ? Do we not rath- er glory in England's supreiuacy which has been won by sword and shell ? A far greater glory is that won by commerce and the Bible- and it is a blood-free glory. The time of universal and peri>et- uat peace is an ideal, but will assuredly be realiztd. Whether it will be in this day and generation or not depends entire- ly upon this feneration. Shelved until • later day, it will simply bob up a^ainâ€" to be shelved again or acted upon as best suits the peoples of that day. One potent fact is thii, that the true spirit of love and patriotism must exist before any such consummation is reached. Is it a lack of patriotism to wish the the navy abolished and wars done away with? We think not. True love of country should inspire a desire to see that country grow and prosper in the things that count, and to keep its annals unspotted by the blight of war. the suggested ! kpow of DO beast wliteh reaUy do«a bite with its tail. Kov friend, da«« the expl&DAtiou toit yer riTScenee. (It's very trying to lutTe to ei^laia oiie's pttsisntries tbaslj.) THROUGH THE BEAUTY GLASS It is a water and woodland scene. The sun ha* quietly dropped behind a wooded hill, and nothing remains of the day save the dull red glow in the western sky, reflected in the water below and broken by the black silhouettes of the still leafless trc«^s, through which it is struggling. Presently even the last of day has faded into nothingness and the water gives up only a reflection of the wr>oded shore aa a dense, unshapely mass, generously flecked with dancing lights as the stars twiukle in the oily ripples of the water. A far off light gives birth to a wavering mysterious path of shimmering brightness along the surface, and speaks of a distant haven. The water laps gently on the liost as it glides through the dark shadows. All is {leace â€" quietude. One longs to float on and dream forever, ban- ishing care and trouble ; a perfect rest scene which must end all too soonâ€" as most good things do, we are wont to say. Where ii it t Why right on the familiar, despised pond at Fleshertou. There are beauty spots all around us. Have you your spectacles on to find them ? Wear the " beauty glasses. " It pays. Hanover Band Will Wake the ficheea T'Ae July 1st committee have eMC^ged the Hanover Band for the mosioal pro* gram of the .July lat Celebratien here. This band is one of the best in Ontari<t, outside of the cities, and much better than many city bands. It is a ooatly feature, but is fully worth the price. The person who fails to hear the Han- over band will regret it, Students who have beea anxiously ex-* pecting the Legislature to nrake -the teat to get into an Ontario University ea<te will take cold comfort out of the positive reply by Sir Jas. Whitney to a recent deputation that the Govt, was going to raise the standard of matriculation so that the High Schools would have to do the work that is done in the first year of the University course. That would mean fewer atudents entering the colleges annually. Catarrh and Bronchitis We «re pleased that a Wa rebam friend Lat favored us witli^^^jjjJJ ^^ interesting biidget^,i^^^Ji^_ will QLUsffa" ToHow suit? The readers apprtciate it â€" and bo does the Editor, d^ A stone grazed a Toronto woman's hat as it was thrown through a street car window. The lady was in no personal danger as the stone only grazed the outer edge of the hat, about three feet from her head. A Boston professor claims that he can prove that this is 1914 i.D., in- stead of 1910. We trust he will not be listened to, for no one would care to lo.se a whole four years of his life for the sake of even a Boston profes- sor. The Humane Society has presented the author of " Chantecler " with a diploma of honor, on the ground that the play will have a tendency to lea- sen the cruelty to dumb animals. And yet there are " Chantecler " hats whose main adornment is a bird or sol Halioy's comet differs from most other comets we have bumped into in the number of tales there are attached to itâ€" generally for the purpose of shedding light on the matter. The effect of so many tales is to produce a dense mental fog on the part of those who observe them. Why do English firms doing busi- uess with Canada insist ou sending out catalogues with the prices out- lined as £, 8. and d.? If they wish to build up a Canadian trade they will meet with greater fuccess by translating their prices into dollars and cents. Anyway, it is about time the obsolete pounds, shillings and pence were relegated to the past, and the ^modern systen introduced. The old system served its purpose when nothing better offered, but its useful- ness ia done. - Ladt week to make a certain Irish "bull" more prominent we inserted the words " that's Irish, " An esteemed reader takes exception to the interpolation on the belief that a slur on the Irish race was intended . We simply will point out the absur- dity of anything turning tail and bit- ing the hand that fed it, to make the point clear to our bewildered friend. The small boy associates the snake's bite with its tail, but as he grows older his view changes, and so we The Bane of Thoosands, and has Difberto Baffled ftie Slutl of Medical Science. Catarrhozone Dry air treatment is the one treat- mant that will cure these diaeasea. What stomach medioina haa aver ba«n known to cure Catarrh or Bron- chitia? Catarrhozone Is not a stomach medi- cine, but an air medicine, that carriea to tti« remotest parts of the throafc tungs, and air cells Uttle drops of heal- ing so curative that whenever il touches germ life it kills and eradicate* them from the system. Thousands of doctors and patients have been disappointed by using stomach medicines for coughs and colds. Have }-ou not found it a rathet roundnbont wny to reach the diseased portion of the throat and lungs? Why not use Catarrhozone, which t? breathed to the very root of the dis- ease and heals so quickly and per- fectly that every spot is rebuilt with itew healthy tissue? ^^- . CatarrhezonaJj^JJur'only madiein* Think for a ntoment. la it net sensal Little drops of healing â€" ^the air car* riaa them juat whara diaeasa axista That is why Catarrhozone Cures Price. 25c, SOc, and Jl.OO, at al druggists, or by mail postpaid fron The Catarrhozone Co., Buffalo, N.Y. %nd Kingston, Ont The Wonderful Lower Canadian French Sire French Negro DESCRIPl'ION French Negro is a handsome black horse, weighing 1.500 lbs , ten ye.irs old. with strong bone and powerfully built, with excellent style and action that is found in h lower Canadian French horse, and will produce a cltss of burses that will bring the highest price on the mar- ket to-d«y. They have also the French blood which no horseman can contradict as the greatest const itutioned horses in the world. In IW French Negro's colts won 21 firsts at these places : Owen Sound, Chatsworlh, Kilsyth, Desboro, one at Meaford and one at Clarksburg. French Negro won first prize for stallion and five of his colts at Meafcrd. Terms â€" To insure a foal flO, payable Jst Jan., 1911. Season mares f8. single leap $6. ROUTE lOR 1910. Monday â€" Will leave Feversham hotel and proceed north to the 12th line, then west by Cooper's corner to R. McMuUeu's for noon ; then by way .if 4th line to En- i'enia at .3 o'clock for one hour, then to Richard Hoy's for night. Tuesdayâ€" By Flesherton to Markdale f'lr noon ; then by Berkeley to Holland Centre for night and VVedne8d»y49i'Bi<oon Wednesday â€" At 1 o'clock by 40tR^wde- roid to 10th line, Holland, then .south t(^- Wm. Lyons', to*n line, for night. Thursday â€" North on townline to Oor- inn sideroad to Rocklyn for noon ; then by Kpping east to H. Maxwell's for night, Fridayâ€" By Heathcoto through Clarks- burg to Guiiu'a hotel, fhombury, for noon ; then by 8th lino to Sheldon Mey- ers', Itavennit, for night. Saturdayâ€" Ea.st by Banks, then south to J. A. McLean's, Gibraltar ; then south to lowuline by Buckingham's sideroad to Feversham until Monday morning. JOHN PINDLAY, Prop, and Collector, Meaford, Ont. Custom Weavr The undersigned is now prepnire- all kinds of Custom Weaving. Twilled and Satinetle, Carpets, rugs and Hi|i Specialty. Hit and Miss Rags, Colored Vlwp found, 20 cents per yard. Striped ra»i extra. Wm. LEES, Fleshertotf, Ont r^ <- â€" â€" ir ""1* il i J. B. PATTON IWINTKR - PAPKR IIANGKR Swn I'sinting and lliRh-cliuis Decorating A Sprcmlty. Work tsken in any i>art^ the country. Office at . . . KLK311KR TON, ONT

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy