The Herald, 1910-05-13, Page 4.4D a<3ilC ;f{iMM1VttDCi fPF3 9®DE OD Qin 030
IT e 1' S NS ANIiii
to
a
Irieorpofated. 1855
CIXIPITAL - ., $3,500,000
a REST F(117,3D - $3,1600,000 Ga
va
Has 65 Branchns in Canada, sad Agents and Correspondents in ali
w
the Principal Cities in the World.
G BUSINESS TRANSACTED, ti
A GENERAL, BANKING
q SAVINGS BANK D P TM .6 "
at all Branches. Interest allowed at highest current rate.
Zurich Branch -•
j. A-< CONS';.`A1°4ii'INE, .Agent
CDC 3elD t3ae7M nC4 OCeSI DCSE3 rsnssR•e3m 9d3IDOtLVIDQee
E
La AL CARDS. k
SI. J. D. COOI%E, BARRISTER AND SO-
lieitc*r,Notary Public, Hensai ,Ontario,
at Zevich (Zelier's offaee) every Mon-
day.
• PROUDPOOT, IiAti S & BLAIR, BAlt-
ristors, Solicitors, Notaries Public, etc.,
Goaarich, Canada W. Proud£oot,
R. O. gays. G. F. Blair.
MEDICAL.
DR. T. P. MOLAUGHLIN, for•
merly with Drs. Jansen
Halle and Biers, of Berlin, Ger-
inany ; also assistant surgeon at
Moorefields' (Royal London Opthal-
mic) eye Hospital and Golden
Square ; Nose and Throat Hospital,
London England, etc. General
practice, with special attention to
eye, ear, nose and throat. Eyes
tested (Retinoscope used) and
glasses supplied.
OFFICE DASIIWOOD, ON T.
BUSINESS CARDS.
B. S. Com'HILLOPS9
AUCTIONEER, Exeter.
Sales eondneted in all parts. Satis-
faction guaranteed or no pay. Terms
-easonable. Orders left at this office
r+ri11 be promptly attended to.
ANDREW F. HESS, FIRE INSURAN-
ce agent, representing the London,
Economical, Waterloo, etonareb, Stand-
ard, Wellington and Guardian. Every-
thing in fire insurance.
E'UBLISIIED BY E. ZELLER.
FRIDAY. MAY 13th, 1914.
Tho splendid work of Chamber-
lain's Stomach and Liver Tablets is
daily coming to light. No such
grand remedy for liver and bowel
troubles was ever known before.
Thousands bless them for curing
constipation, sick headache. bil-
liousress. jaundice and indigestion
Sold by J. J. Merner.
DR. Ir. A. SELLERY, DENTIST, GRA -
dilate of the Royal College of Dental
Surgeons, Toronto, also honorgradu-
ate of Department of Dentistry, To-
mato 'University. Painless extraction
of teeth. Plate work a speeiality. At
Dominion House, Zurich, every fMof�n-
day.
E. ZELLER, CONVEYANCER AND
Notary Pnblic. Do e d s , Mortgages,
Wills and other Legal Documents caro
fully and promptly prepared. Office—
Zeller block, Zurich, Ont.
LQDCE MEETINGS
W. c. T. U.
THE CRY OF THE TWO-THIRDS
But we will learn the truth of
what is affirmed for ourselves,
manna, you utid L we cannot afford
to be ignorant If Miss Myers and
others are right we are wrong, and
it is time to frti.5 about, it is better
to sin the sere side anyway ; better
be dubbed,fanatio thein knave. The
summer was over and gone. At
mountain reso,et?!.and seaside hotels
Mrs 1Veswick and her son had
rnaxittg•ed to pass it. and it bad been
like othei;_'.aeasons with Keith, with
this differean e ; that the fashionab-
le folly about frim seemed well-
nigh unbealkble, and that tow
hours, exce'(tbose passed in sleep,
had brongbt ,him any relief from
the restiessi#kt1s, that had seized his
life, His new principles had been
put to a test; been laughed at and
sneered at anti exclaimed over. He
had laughed, at ahem himself at
times and Wondered if he was not
making a pi
self, but he
through it ei
In many places of older Canada
the early settlers still linger and
tell how things have changed since
early days. Money was scarce but
food was plenty and cheap. Now
it is adulterated and dear. Clothing
was then made from wool of sheep
raised by the spinners on the farm
itself. Now the cloth is made
from what the cloth -makers alone
knows. Then the sheltering of the
people were log cabins and the
heating was by wood cut from the
forest. Now the sheltering of the
people depends upon whether they
aro workers on wages or the ex-
ploiters of wage workers, The
former live crowded together while
the latter lives in two or three
palaces, choosing their residence
according to the season. The old
inhabitants complain that we are
fallen on evil clays and they are.
right.
C(1 ��y Court Zurich No. 1240
J. . meets ever v 1st and 3rd
Thursday of each month at 8 o'clock p. re.
in the A. 0. U. 'G`T. Ball.
J. J. Meneems, C. R.
o �• • ^r No. Ricit3heii93, Lodge
VV,'''YY mcot.5
the 3en1 and 4th friday of every month,
:,t 8 o'clock, in their Hall, Merger Plock,
WIxwmt ,111. W
Getthufinto the Home
'Women buy more than
two-thirds the merchan-
dise sold 1¢e retail stores
and every woman reads
the Classified Want Ads.
Our paper goes.into the
homes and fheWant
Ads. wiILreach, the
Spenders.
Jv+,nen. IM by 9 4 McCue,
1,?Zrtie-
After many years experience it
is found, according to Bradstreets,
that there are eight leading causes
for the failures of business con-
cerns. They are lack of sufficient
capital, unwise granting of credits,
inexperience, incompetence, specie:
lation outside of regular business,
neglect of business due to bad.
habits. personal extravagance and
fraudulent disposition of property.
Eighty-one per cent, of the failures
are due to one or other of these
causes, the remainder being caused
by the failure of others apparently
solvent, by competition, or by dis-
asters such as fire. The making of
a business nation brings out the
question of men. Other things
being equal, the competent business
man, of business integrity always
succeeds as he deserves to do, MI
the shifty incompetent main fails
A Kansas City preacher is ad-
vocating the holding of separate
Prayer meetings for men and
women. You see, he's married,
and he dosn't feel free to unburden
his mind to the Lord with his
better half within ear shot : "I
want the Lord to change my wife's
disposition. She nags and is ex-
travgant, and is always watching
me. if I were to tale such a
prayer to the throne of heavenly
grace, with her kneeling beside me
to hear, there would shake the
mottoes off the walls. I would also
like to ask for a lot of
things I want no woman to near
about. I have noticed that if a
man at prayer meeting sidesteps in
hisd asks f anything
lagions fool of hiln-
tzoI to his abstinence
,,; from sheer stub-
borness, his.pe other declared, and
he was nota ere that she was not
re were becoming his
abject. Occasionally
ntleman who was like
abstainer, and who
generally o ;ratuiated him on Iris
wisdom and "ourage and -claimed'
hint as one of the blue ribbon fra-
ternity.. But truth to tell, Keith
hardly relished such greetings or
encomiums and denied all atffiinity
with those tenets. A queer fellow
they called hide and so he began to
call himself. Oold weather was
nearing, andhome, Keith manifest-
ed no particular interest in either,
or in the gay season in prospect
"Cold weather or warm," ho said
to his mother, "what difference
can it make to driftwood? It is not
its own what *:clatter whether it
float with the tide nowliither or
freezed fast.in a place it by no
moans prefers. I am a puppet of
circumstances, mama dear ; you
may do with Ine es you please.
your will Is mine." The lady sigh-
ed as she replied that she wished
she had barb the son she missed,
and in hersecret soul she deter-
mined that 'Carmen'Royden should
bring him to her feet and his son
sex, it she could by any means
bring it to pass. But his first after
noon in the city brought him a
glimpse of a face that wonderfully
stirred lies interest in thione mun-
dane. It w to none other than: that
of Eleanor, shyers, • as, with her
father, slims- ,°a'i 'ry in alittle pony
carriage, the fruit of her years.
teaching and dedicated to her
father's enjoyment. Never were
cheeks rosier or eyes brighter, but
her fascination was not the result
of either or both of these facts,
Keith calcite) himself as he found
himself lingering on the street
corner looking after the pair, It
was something beyond them both,
yet' something that gave them both
singular Bower over all who ap
proaohed her. They helped to en,
Outsize the healthy soul that gave
them both value, There was a
tenderness about her toward. all
life.. even the weakest and lowest,
an interest in the slightest •wi h or
thee -gilt of another ; ai, contagious
right, so vi
ideas on the
he founds g
wise a tot
had caught of their . faces ; that it
WAS wholesome he never doubted,
since they were beth so markedly
so. He determined, then and
there, to see all of them be could
and surprised his mother that even-
ing by his gayety and spirits. 4'ft
has done you gnocl to get home
after all, .Keit'," she said, he as-
sented cordially, • She would have
been.astonishcd, had she 'seen his
whereabouts that very night, for
he sought Eleanor's Monte as be
had determined, Ho met her at
the door jesting starting for a walk
and refused to let her go in again,
begging permission rather to; ac
company he'r,if it would not be in.
trading. "Not at all," she said,
looking at him a little dubionsly,
nevertheless; "1 should like •your
eninpany ti ery. niticb, if you mire
for my destination ; I aur going: to
a down -town mission," Ile looked
surprised, yet said ; "I shall be
most happy to be your escort any-
where, and he meant it:" -He was
much amused and somewhat dis-
mayed later when he found himself
crowded into a seat with risen and
women of the lowest class, but the
lady beside hien seemed in no way
disconcerted, greeting familiarly
those about her. The half reverent
air with which these people regard-
ed her did not escape this gentle
man, neither their curious glances
at himself. A strange place for a
Weswick I Keith laughed inwardly
as he imagined his mother's horror
had she seen him wedged in beside.
a fat Irishman. - Be was wholly in-
different to the service except as
his companion took part in it. He
wondered what she found to enjoy
in the remarks of the leader or the
unique testimonies of those about
her, The singing, too ! much of it supported by 2,433,245 poles. These
was of the jig hind ; it was lusty companies bought a total of
and stirring, but lacked reverence.
Indeed. to him this was the great
lack of the whole service ; ho who
had never before in his life attend-
ed anything religious outside of an
Episcopal church.
(To be continued)
Ethel M. Veilliams,
Pres. Supt.
LATHS.
In the mannfantnt'e of laths
Ontario takes first place with
263.241,000 to her credit, valued at
$612,856 Little more than half
that number, viz , 138,991,000, is
made by her nearest competitor,
New Brunswick, the value of
whose product is $280.088.
Quebec made 92,914.000 lath:,
worth $189,076 British Columbia,
86,802,000, worth $$208,255 ; Nova,
Scotia, 62,638,000, worth $136,893;.
Saskatchewan, 1.8,477,000, valued.
at $10.173; Manitoba, 7,370,000, at
a value of $10.200 and Alberta
1,009,000, worth .;33,584,
The tetal. number of laths
manufactured was 671,562,000, of
the value of ;;1,487,125
RAILWAY TIES.
During the year the railways.
purchased. 13,078,410 Gross -tier for
whit.% they paid $51281,685. Of
these the steam railways (47 in
number end having a total of
25,rr7e miles of track) bought
13,738,157, paying therefore $5,189-
674, and the electric roads
(numbering 32 and having 818
miles of track) purchased 240,25e
ties costing $92,011 Cedar (in-
cluding under this term both the
eastern and the western oedars) is
easily the favorite wood for ties.
twice as many ties being of this
species as of env other, while
hemlock and tamarack in about
equal numbers take next place. "
POLES USED
Reports as to the poles purchas-
ed were received from 46 telegraph
and telephone companies, 151
electric light, power and railway
companies and 19 steam railways
owning their pole lines. These
represent 60,544 miles of lino,
FORESTRY BRANCH, DEPT. OF
THE INTERIOR PRESS
BULLETIN NO 9.
The lack of accurate, reliable and
frequent returns concerning the
production in Canada of lumber,
pulpwood, lath, shingles, poles and
other wood products has for some-
time been felt and with increasing
closeness of manufacture promises
to be more and more in demand
In order to meet ' this a: j t'hes
Forestry .13ranola ofthe Department
of the Interior has taken up the
collection of statistics on the
subject and has lately published
the result of the first year's work
in this line as their Bulletin No, 8,
entitled "Forest Products of Can-
ada. 1008" Messrs, I3 R. MacMillan
and 0. A. Gutches h•tve °emptied
the figures.
Tho statistCs have been mad:) up
185,807 poles, paying for these, at
the point of purchase, $284,549. Of
these 185,807 polos 162,211 were of
cedar, other woods used being
tamarack. spruce and Douglas fir.
John D. Rockefeller would go
broke if he should spend his en-
tire income trying to prepare a
better medicine than Chamberlain's
Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea.
Remedy for diarrhoea, dysentery
or bowel complaints. It is simply
impossible, and so says every one
that used it. Sold by J. J. Merner.
Synopsis of Canadian Northwest Land
Regulations.
person who 1.
family, or any male ove
may homestead a quarter -section of. av
able Dominion land in Manitoba, Sask-
atchewan or Alberta. The applicant must
appear in person at the Dominion Lands
Agency or Sub -Agency for the district.
Entry by proxy rainy be made at any
agency, on certain conditions, by father,
mother, son, daughter, brother or sister of
intending; homesteader.
Duties.—Six months' residence upon and
from the ,replies returned to cultivation of the land in each of three
cirmulerh sent h, the branch to years. A homesteader may live within nine
Y res of his homestead on a farm of at least
nittnufaCtnrers tend producers in 80 ae_e solely owuccl and occupied by hint
the various wood indu .tries. The or ley his f ttlier, mother, son, daughter,
accuracy of such results necessavi- brother or :ei�ster.
ly depends on the proportion of In certain dbatrietsa homesteader iu
ratan ufacturers returning the good standinir -rciv pre-empt a quarter sec-
schedules sent. The returns pub tion alongside his'homestead, Price $3.00
joy in every moment's passage and Iisltecl in the bulletin do not profess per acre. 1)uties—�ltut reside sig months
in every little thing those moments in each of six years from Hato of homestead
brought her, that glade her unlike to be complete. It would, indeed' entry (including; the time requirec1 to earn
be remarkable if in this, the first homestead patent) and cultivate fifty tierce
anybody else Keith had ever met. year in which the st.-tti tics were extra.
She seemed never 'weary, never collected, they had been so. A homeetendler who has exhausted his
sated ; had none of the languor The total value of the production homestead] right and cannot obtain a pre-
supposed to be a part' of a fine of lumber, lath, shingles, erossties, etnption.nay take a purchased homestead -
lacty's role ; yet there was no bustle
about her. The worn soul felt
rested byjust being in her presence
She was always and in all things
so natural; unaffected, sunny, that
he envied her. She had noticed
hint and wafted him one of her
happy smiles with a nod of her
bright head, Keith wished he could
poles and pulpwood wads ,67, 4.25.041.
The production of sawn lumber
is shown by the figures to be in the
neighborhood of 3,348,170,000 ft.,
board measure, per annum, valued
at $54,388,03... In this Ontario
leads with a production of 1,294,-
794,000 ft., valued itt 4:24,398,077,
Quebec• being'" se0Ond with 690,135,-
000 ft., of the value of *10.838 60.3 eve; ,:• ani. roti t
in certain disi:riets. Price 83.00 per acre.
Duties --Must reside six months in each of
three years, enitivato fiftL acres and erect
a house worth 3300.00.
W. r. W. COR -Sr,
Deputy of the Minister of the Interior.
N. B.—Unauthorized publication of this
adverti,emont will not bo paid for.
•
prayer, an for get into the pony -earrings beside A touch of rheumatism, or a
material the women talk about his 1 a t ca whatever the
u
Idly ambition nett day. I the two stul listen to t) ;t Tn^� �'. d al t,; (1, ,
.. i c
laVtl a notion that a lot tl: n:,.. .• , �• ' .•1'. '+ ,• ,n t OP1C.�i alit.
want things we don'e giant the it was ''. re Truax the • t) ,,,,,it ea ,t'a1. • . ' t° t'T.. e.,it 'ease
women to know about. t,:ci,>i :- -w. t>, . ! Hold by
From reports which have come valued at $' 1,081, 4(12, , v `dJ, ,l'. R,1erner.
to hand it would a.ppeax that the Far'fllers 000 ft., of the value of32,873,730;
Royal Commission on trade vela,
tions between Canada and the West Wanda e e
Indies has reason to be well satis-
fied with the results of the recent pairs for Spri 3.
ly completed tour through the
West Indies. The final impression
produced by the inquiries of the
Commission is that a preferrential
agreement between Canada and
Vint
oval y t tl t 1 ° of s • ^n et, , ti c'lyn° d l Cat. , k lc i
Saskatchewan, 91,16.6,000 ft.,
valued at 61 0; Menitoba,
56,447,000 ft , velem, 007,069 ;
Alberta, 41,382,000 rt , valued at
*503,244. The total production of
please order now. Anyone t'ed pulp 3,o, made
fr000m 48x3,777is cordi63s070 of twoadnsaucl
wishing New or Second hand
Machinery, eall and see if I valved at $2,031,6e3.
cau't fill your wants. SHIN C1LES.
B
'. C.east 1 Id'rtds in tl)c it
the West Indies as a whole is en- y plc.
tinily practicable, and there would I Also Agent for duction of shingles, producing
appear to bo little difficulty in lend 524,652,000 of the value of $1,391,-
t. ing it cerumen ground.
far such an Fairbanks Gasoline 306. Its nearest competitor is
Clubbing r 'a n arrangement. It is stated the Ei-ig nes wee, h Scales,
Quebec, which produced 405,440,000
basis of such an arrangement will valued at $810,787, and then follow
presumably be a tariff in favor of Feed Grinders. in their order. Ontario with at
lig We grave made arrangements goods of British origin of about All kkinds , of prnritu)tfnn of 224, 333,000 valued at
to offer the following low clubbing twenty per cent, on a list of ,,d(i1,] 53 ; N, 13,, 10:),913.000 worth
rates with Tein lz uAtn : . specified articles, and, an the cart $325,805; N 5 , making 33,141,000,
Daily Globe '� 4.25 of Canada, they will demand at zaWlfl1 .'t c"'1c�3ii1e
vatluecl at 369,370 •illtt:iitoba, turn -
Mail eh Empire 4,25 medifieation of the present twenty inn out 1,125,000, worth 4,3 150 and '-
.6
Weakly Globe, 3
„ Mail ea Empire 1
Berliner journal (Gorman)I� airily }Ieratl•l c�: izta.r 1
!)grit;'•" Advertiser
tiY e.' ly 1Advsr4.r;'or
1ti,oehly Sivat.7
a: .,,.,e . ,{t. t:'a'4iit•e 2 2
0 per cent, license to the Canadian
.00 sugar refiners. Throughout the
,l'a0 1 West Indies more importance is
..75' ' attached to the institution of an
2.73 increased steamship service with
1.130 ( Ian adian ports than anytiain�r tit tt
can In dorm by Pul u'ln on` ,f
tar fft,
Car
ria' -OS riaand ,
ggi s, c
BAIN WAGo>,'l, 592,00o, worth 63,150, and Sash- c, ',mogly;t
00,
yCS tkwhich rce:i
7asat:aheivatn, 1)odu
ANTD
E
A REPRESENTATIVE
For Zurich
This is the time to sell
nursery stools.
'We pay libt ally and. offer
steady employment. Our
list of Specialties embraces
-a rare and choice list of
ieady sellers in both fruit
and Ornan)ental stook.
Beed Potatoes, Etc.
Write for terns and catalogue.
attCliewaii, which 1)roduees 592,0
valued at $1,303.
W�
The total production for the Tae , )Ithili
%C ' '. Dominion eves 1,409,396,000 slitnn-.
•i g res, the aggregisb) value of 'tvhich
r.,
CO, •,yaws', Via!{,101,')l ,
M ASSES'.0
fI ,•t Tt,t%•I;3
Nurserie'', Est. 1837
Ontario