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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Herald, 1912-07-12, Page 54++I+++++4.+++++++SII++++++++++++4 +++++++ + +*k #++ ++dr✓o+l•++D+ ++ THE MOLSONS BANK Incorporated 1855 RECORD OF PROGRESS FOR FIVE YEARS -1906 -Du ]las .83 Branches in Canada, and Agents uicl Correspondents in all the 5 Principal Cities in the Woxlcd. Ca ata] 1906 1911 deserve $ 3,000,000 $ 4,000,000 3,000,000 4;600,000 Deposits 23,677,730 35,042,31. Loans and Investments 27,457,090 38,854,801 Total Assets 330919 48,237,284 A General Banking Business Transacted SAVINGS BANK DT1FARTMENT at all Branches. Interest allowed at highest current rate. Zurich Branch - J. A. CONSTANTINE, Mgr. ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Farmers That Want THE BEST Call at The Massey- -Harris assey-•Harris Shop. Our Machines spea for themselves. We alsc, handle Olds Gasoline Engine. Jas. Whyte, Ag't MASSEY-HARRIS CO .mss •■rBRIOH... MEAT MARKET WE keep in stock a full line of fresh meats, hams, etc. etc Our cuts are noted for their tenderness and 'wholesomeness. Our aim is to keep nothing but the best. We make our own sausages. . Give us a call. YDNfBLUT Sc DEICIIURT. Letter of Condolence At the last Directors' meeting of The Hay Township Farmers' Mut. Fire Ins. Co.,the manager was in- structed to forward the following letter of condolence to Mr. William Lamont, one of the Directors: To 11Ir. wlliam Lamont, Hillsgreon, Ont. Dear Sir: - " It is with with the 'deepest sorrow and regret that we ref'er.to your sudden beareavement in the loss of your wife. It is hard to lose our dear ones after a time of anxiety and suspense but the sorrow is much groater'when they are taken as Mrs. Lamont has been in the full vigor of health and strength. Yet it will be a consolation to you to know that she was shared a long and pain- ful suffering. we believe it will always be a 1, for yon to recall her tender love and perfect devotion, so frank aucl womaly in its expression.. God alone car, comfort such grief as yours and that such consolation may be yours in its fullest measure is the sincere prayer of this Board of Directors.' •4'L1:F 3� R�Ct,�...-' Line, g SYST ie, Only line reaching a l Summer 1 e- , sorts in Highlands of Ontario, in - eluding Muskoka Lakes Lake of Bays Algonquin Park Maganetawan River French River Temagami if awartha Lakes Full summer service now in effect Ito all of above resorts. Write for full particulars and illustrated folders to Cottle and i any Cxraucl Trunk Agent. Homeseekers' Excursions I July 9 and 23 August 6 and 30 get you September 3 and Via carnia or Chicago. 17 Winnipeg and Return - $34.00 Edmonton and Return . $42.00 eWTickets good for 60 days Suit ( No Change of Cars. At Zurich's Leading aiior Shop the only Place, here the Newest is always hown. first and satisfaction uaran.teed. Lanndr' in Connection W. H. HFFMAN ailor ZURICH-] TO OUR CANVASSERS 13y special arrangement we are le to offer to new subscribers then of our papers and your oice of the Weekly Globe or the eekly Mail and Empire for only .00 to Jan. 1st 1913, Each new bscription will count 1000 votes formerly, Add fifty -gents if I Pers' are to be mailed to United tes addresses. Farm for Sale or Bent.-- - f Goocl 50, e farm, cleared, well drained and good stats of enitivatian, on Lob 8 n. 4, Stephen, just east of Credit - East. On the property is a good. ser and barn, 1 acre of good oreh, , all ploughing done, 16 acres of 8s; goo wells spring 1 I Special train will leave Toronto 110.80 p. m. on above dates; via, Chi- cago and tit. Paul, carrying through coaches and Pullman Tourist sleeping ears. The Grand Trunk Pacific Railway is the shortest and quickest route be- tween Win nipeg,saskatoon, Edmonton New Fast Express service between Winnipeg and Regina. smooth road- bed, Electric lighted sleeping Cars, snl)berb Dining Car service. Leave Winnipeg 6 p. m. Arrive Regina, " Saskatoon 8.30 a. m. " Edmonton 9.00 p. m. Ask any Grand Trunk Agent for full information, or Write A. E. DUFF, D. P. A. Union station, Toronto, Ont. Ou'ER e5 }it..• EXPE:RIEN10 TRADE MARKS QEStaivs COPYRIGHTS &C. Anyone sending a sketch and desoripption may QUlckly ascertain our opinion tree Weethee an Invontion ie Probably Datentable, Comntunloa• ttoneetrlotlyconfdeutFal+ HAN9900K enPateatd Sent tree. Oldest alleboy Por securing ' atente. Patent's taken tt�roueeh Munn • k, 190giye crestas nattco, without ohargo, in the dentine Iimerkaa A. handsomely illnatrated tmekly: largest cite, eulation of any scientific, journal. Terms ter Canada. stos a year, postage prepaid, Sold 11 d sll netvedealer6 S, p g creek, „ arts Paints Varnishes v: Stains Enamels Colors best • quality c. product for every. kind of • surface ', or finish That's ni ice to you. You've seen it it Qra..or?yrindows. Now you see it here. It lh ns paint and varnish and everythi ;' hat makes the home bright--..oixtside,4nd inside. It ,means "Spring" and 4'cheerfulness" and "boost," and fit3,,,4113r SHERW�iv WILLrAMS PAINTS AND VARNISHES the real "Brighten -Up stuff. The Little Paint Juan. We want to help make easy much of your work of `cleaning and renovat- ing this Spring, We can save you much of the back -breaking labor of Spring cleaning and improve the ap- pearance of your property, both inside and out, at small expense. No matter what "-you want to "brighten up," we can supply you with a Sherwin-Williams specialty for that exact purpose. If you have not tried our way of "bright- ening up," there is a surprise in store for you. Come in and see us.We are pleased to talk' paint and varnish at any time, especially now. For Sale by 3. PREF.; TE IL Zurich. STORY OF A MEDAL. The King Did Not Know Col. Gra Was a Canadian. Col. Graham, of Boston, who visiting in Canada recently, tel good story of an- '85 medal. In early days, Graham was a bugler the 13th Reffinlent of Hamilton. T he moved to Toronto, joined Queen's Own, and 'was one of lucky one's chosen to go with regiment to the Northwt'st in 1 Hs served throughout the Rebel anis lived to wear a medal for his vice. Afterwards he went to Mont and served in the 'Victoria Rifles. er he went to BostGf andw was •ins i i11 od 0 on on wa eh it ria e es, ed he on a- er by ad ed ng ut ed e - r. as ice 11 d ey 1.a ham was Is'a his lir hen the the. that 385. Pr - ie' i Lot-. ter] e join the Ancient end. Honore Artillery Company. When this •b visited England during the reign Qoofueen those Victoria, tookrt eraham was trip. The tortainment was tremendous. It the first time England had ever h an n enc opportunity military mef n from the 8ta Un ed States, and from Queen Victo down the English people lavishly tertained. When the Company w inspected by the Prince of Wal afterwards Edward VII. he notie this medal on Mr. Graham. He sto ped and asked. Mr. Graham how came to wear "an English medal a United States uniform," and Gr ham had to tell him the story. Lat on, the Company was inspected Gen. Sir Garnet Wolseley, who is commanded the troops in • the R River Expedition. .As he passed ado the line he noticed the medal, b said nothing at the time. Short afterwards, en orderly approach Mr. Graham and said that Gen. Wols ey desired to speak et him. M raham went over to where he w tending, in company with the Dul Connaught, the Duke of Cornwa now King George V.), and other pe ons of rank. The general also aske 'm how be came to get the meds Mr. Graham suspected that Wolsele he had picked it up in second-hand store, but he erplaine s best he. could. The general ask im many questions about the reg ent in which he had served, th ame of his captain, his eommandin fflcer, the work done by his column e engagements he had been in, an on. But Graham was able to an er 'acct rattily and to convince th neral that he had a right to wea e decoration. Col. Graham is still a young man he hopes to wear that medal on any occasions yet. It is one of his udest possessions. And he is never ouder. than when wearing it at one the functions of the Canadian Club, which he is a(past president. When London, on the occasion referred he lost it one day on the street, Bu the.00lonel's good luck did not sert him. Next day, the medal was for him at the Hotel Cecil MAGIC GROWTH. The Development of a Western City nr rN t Fl. rti in +nl;asilter(+,. in o far a t i;r,+, cnts a 'tui t.lr and more dig- ntied. front to tile inenniing traveler. Up the ,�roa.i �ti'frillip.+g 2lain street, v32 feet wider than Broadway, New ork,,thi same traveler is carried, bustled and jostled by the hurrying throngs, busying themselves with the all important club's of the day. r the towering height the roft,thend Union Bank Bank Building, the voice of a newsboy, cand 'distant,daily minglingswith that dull,unds small settled roar of moving .traffic, char- acteristic of a great city. His precon- eoived p'eture of romantic western exis res place .to a realization `=tit the invest is but the 'eas t - .all. That ` h � . tat' is 5 end agoo.aiti h .. �clev'elopilrg Chicago which f , he now sees' e His initial 'impression contains no- - thing of "the colored glory, which a s Western poet flings over his pictures. as Winnipeg differs from Toronto, only _ as •an overgrown youth of six feet - differs from the man of years, Its la- tent possibilities are great in propor- n- tion as its ambitions and its vitality are apparent; Its very lack of tradi- tion, as the boy's lack of experience, explains its unballasted, headlong, impetuous advance. As our easterner is carried along by the bustling crowd up the broad Main street, he will come upon the proof that, mushroom -like, the city did not spring up in the night. Old Fort Gar. ry Gate, battered and weather -worn, but -till palpably a gate, it stands, all that. is left tf the fort, which for so mania' years stood as the ,emblem and sanction of authority in the great Canadian, West. Isere the Easterner pauses. Under the frowns of its still yawning musket "loop," he may rest upon a park - bench, provided for such wanderers by the city,. and in historical retro- speotion,.00k back,in imagination up- on what;, .if it is not a contradiction in terms, we may call "The Tradition of the Great Northwest," If he. does not prosaically insist upon dating the history of Winnipeg Irani the date of its incorporation, Deo, 3rd;, 1873, he may Iook back through it*o hundred years of turbu- lent development to find the stone which ached as perhaps the central foundation of the great metropolis. whose busy roar now fills his ears. When tracing the evolution back to 1736, it has been slow indeed, and metamorphosis -like in its aspect; but from the view -point of the Easterner regarding • all in wondering medita- tion under the crumbling walls of old Fort Garry Gate, it has been passing strange. ,•' In it he sees the western representation of the birth of a great people in history. What the future holds for . Canada; and for the Cana- dian West in particular, he hesitates to foret it; but as he retraces his pondering steps back to his hotel, he glair=or and the romance of Un- ending 'progress ,have in a minute reasserte.:'themselves, and in his Mitt i *e• shines "the vision splen - id" to e:gzle, all his dreams.-Mont- eal Eta,.srli. 1 G s s hi th a 'h m n 0 th so sw geI and m Pr o pr of 0f in B' de left d ed e g d r. Is an Alluring -Study. To the eastern man, living in an eastern city, surrounded by historic memories,• and the traditions of two hundred red years, the virgin freshness and youth of the Canadian West, seems strangely incompatible, with the advanced stage of civilization and de- velopment to which she has attained. Once those mystical western gates have opened to receive him, all his predilections will be swept away. •Vihen wearied by his journey over t� r�ndlers leagues of rail, he steps c 'he .train into the lofty and pre - t p -d r • ihiStled the Tune. Tho, .cls 'l'h, • at Snainton, Yorks, of Rev Vv it ; S &.]mon recalls a cur- ienti,erasr^ ,+i that Obtained in Elinton Pariah t.:` „ :.tell,. near Welback, Notts, En .. J'h .-Burch possessed no organ, an w11;'., til,+t: Psalm or hymn y was anneini c i .ilr'i parish clerk used to atxide: ;' pews to. the chancel, TSO SIGNS OF SPRING - The arrival• of the songsters and the ar •ivar of Holtz- manns New Spring Suitings. The little Songters are ready to build their.. spring and swnmui homes, we ready are ready to build you a Spring and Stu/liner Suits, with Goods that will meet your utmost. ap- proval. If you anticipate buying a spring suit you will do well to come and see our Fancy Suitiugs they are different than odder tailors are showing. Different because they are Holtzmanns Holtzmanns bacause they are different Smart Spring Suits to order $15.00 J. H. HOLTZMANN, o blerchaut Tailor BUSINESS CARDS. B. S. PHILLIPS, AUCTIONEUR, .Exeter. Sales conducted in all parts. Satis- faction guaranteed or" uo pay. Terms •easonable. Orders left at this of&ee mill be promptly attended to. ANDREW P. I.IESS, FIRE INSURAN- ce agent, representing the London, Economical, Waterloo, Monarch, Stand - arca, Wellington and Guardian. Every- I ' thing -in fire insurance. LODGE MEETINGS i f .1 0 J Court Zurich No. 1240 r '• • meets every 1st and- 3rd Conveyancers, General Insurance Thursday of each month at 8 o'clock p. m.1 Agents in the A. 0. U. W. Hall. J. J. a11sR.;LR, C. R. I Telephone -Office la, House Ib. DR' T. P. McLATJGLTLIN, for n only Assistant Surgeon at Moor - field's (Royal London Opthalmic) Eye Hospital and Golders Square.. Nose anct Throat Hospital, London., England. Also spent time at Berlin and other Continental Hospitals. General Practice with special attent- ion to Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat. Eyes 'tested (Retinoscope and Op- thalmoscope used) and glasses sup- plied and properly adjusted. Offiee Dashwood, Ontario. +++++++++++++++++++++++++4. 7�. EILBER - SON Crediton, - Ontario A.0.11. Rick bell Lodge • No. 3 the 2nd and 4th Friday of every 3�moths at 8 o'clock, in their Ball, Merrier Block: FRED. WiTwls'R ,lid, W 13. W. F. BEAVEIIS • EXETER Licensed Auctioneer for Comity of --------- _.._. Huron. ,Sales conducted in the most LEG AL CARDS. - , approved manner. Satisfaction guar- anteed. Dates can be made at the Crediton Star or at th(. rediton + .'ROUD1 o0T HAYS & RILLORAN, Bargain Store, Exeter. Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries Public, etc. Godnricb, Canada W. Proudfoot. K. C. R. G. Hays.. J. L. Killoran, • LIflrfO T F. 4 • SELItEitl*, 1)1114414"r-rfaJe`+� eluate of the Royal College of Dennta 1►� •!COIF j burgeons, 'Toronto, also honor gradu- ate of Department of Dentistry, To- ronto University. Painless extraction of teeth. Plate work a speciality. At Dominion House, Zurich, every Mon- day. 7-26 E. ZELLER, CONVEYANCER AND Notary Public. De e d s, Mortgages, Wills and other Legal Documents care fully and promptly prepared. Office- our sausage. Zeller block, Zurich, Ont. We keep 31: stock a ful' lino of fix trh meats, etc, 0,Z. Our cuts are not. ed for thcir tenderness and wholesomness. Our aim is to keep nothing but the best. We°make MARKET REPORT MARKET REPORTS -The following is the .market report, corrected t Wednesday noon of each week, CREDITON Oats58c a bush - Barley 75e a bush Wheat 1.08 a bush Shorts $28 a ton Bran $26 a ton White Rose Flour $2.70 Feed Flour $1+70 Butter 20cts Eggs 19 cts a doz. Potatoes $1.75 a bag Dried apples 7c. Beans $1.50-•$2.00 a bushel Timothy $ 9.00 a bush Red Clover $12 to 14.00 Alsyke $10 to 14.00 Alfalfa $12.00 IIENSALL Wheat 1.08 ots. a bus Barley 80 to 80 cts. `a Oats 48 to 48 cts. a bus Man. Seed Oats 65 cts. a bus Ground Corn $30.00 per ton EXETER Oats 50e a bush Barley 65 to 70c a bush Wheat, Standard, 1.03 a bush Shorts $25.00 per ton l3ran $22,00 a ton Family flour $2.70 Peed flour $1.65 Hay $1G to $17 a ton Hogs live weight, $7.80 Peas 90c to $1,10. DAS}IWOOD Oats 50e a bush Barley, 80c a bush Whea,ti1.02 to 1.03 a bush Shorts $28 a ton Bran $26 a ton Feed flour $1,65 Butter 20c a lb Eggs 19c a doz Give us a call. �ric11,01sOn t�a,Wson CREDITON. 0 Crediton Flour Mills 'Manufacturer of all grades of Roller Flour. We also"sell the Five Roses Flour G1listing and Chopping prom. ptly done Oats Rolled and Chopping done at 5 cents a bag. IL SWEITZER HOMESE E KERS' EXCURSIONS TO Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta Special Train, leave Toronto 2.00 p.m, on APRIL 2,18, 30 MAY 14, 28 JUNE 11, 26 JULY 9, 23 AUC. 0, 20 8EPl'.8, 17 Second clow tickets from Ontario station to principal Northwcrt Pont* at LOW ROUND-TRIP RATES winniptg and return $04,00; Edmonton and return $42.00 and to other points in ptopottion. Tic!"` to good to return within 60 days from Boma dale�e'� TOURIST SLEEPING CAR through to Edmanton'via Sgikatoon, alto to Winnipeg and Calgary' vie Main Liao o all osoottip� ,. Cont, festal:4 bertha. fully equipp ivi�, bedding, tan b.. remade! naodnre ' tee lhro gt Earl a yl t o gene made. Y Pp cotton must be made. ASK ran HOIMESEEKERe` PAMPHI iE containing ratoe and full information, Apply to seared C.