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The Herald, 1910-11-18, Page 5
FIRST CLASS TILE I have a large supply of the very best tile on hand, from 2.4 in, to six inch. If you need any call, write or telephone to John Foster, Zur- ich, Brick and Tile yards. 11 tf. Moved! ' ova. SHOP AND STOOK MAIN STREET directly West of Dominion House Ready to snppiy you with jest t —little bit the Nicest— JEWELLERY for HOLIDAY GIFTS. Rings, Silver Thimbles, Fobs, N ecklets, Watches Brooches, Bracelets, Veil Pins, Collar Pins. Everything in this Line COME ALONG, We will try to PLEASE 1,011. F. W. HESS, JEWELLER G. R. HESS, Assistant, ,,rg•}°D®aDMIETAIN00590aD6DT.DaDeSSDIOGESI aD®a TE TAKE this opportu- nity of wishing our Customers a ; Happy and Prosperous New Year, and thank each and all fur having made the past year our most prosperous year since we have been t'1 busi- ness. We ask you again for your hearty e;t11'•port for 1910, and we will do our best to merit it, by giving you value for your money. Nd DOJL A. IGeneral Merchant, 13 L A K E. 9 6 TESTING HER LOVE. •'What," she asked, with fervor, "can I do. Horace, to prove that I lova yon u ith all my heart?" Their honeymoon was waning, and he replied without emotion to her appeal. "Yu might give nie back all the foolish letters I have written you, so that I might destroy them." EXETER John Taylor was elected reeve by acclamation, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of the late William Bawden. Special meetings are being held in James st Methodist church. Miss Vina Fisher is leaving town and will reside with her sister Mrs Davis, at Hamilton. The four Usborne boys who were committed on a charge of theft, appeared before Judge Doyle last week, and after receiving a good lecture, were allowed their liberty. R,,DeO CDa09DaDOWELIC„ODZIMIDad39a DaeT:11061IDart ZURICH . ® ; PAL' �n E keep in stock a full line of fresh meats, halms, etc. etc Our cuts are noted for their tenderness and WhOlor. O1nelie; S. Our aim is to keep nothing but the best. We drake our own sausages. Give us a call. YUNCBLIII • HENSA1 L George Perkin, brother of W m Perkin of the Uonlirercial Hotel died at Regina, last Wednesday. Miss Melvina Koehler of Zurich was a guest at J. W. Ortwein's last week. -George Sterling has rented Alex. Thompson's house, on Richmond st. South. 1 Il CROP CENSUS Ottawa, Nov. 11. The . Oensns Office issues today a bulletin on tbe crops of Canada as prepared from eeports made up to the end of October. The closing months of the year give good reports for nearly all of the field crops of the Dominion. Potatoes alone indicate partial failure, and in all the .provinces there are complaints of rot in the fields and in the heaps for winter storage The azea is 503,262 acres and the estimated yield 74,048,000 bushels, being an average of about 147 bushels per acre, which is near- ly uniform for all the provinces. The quality is 84.42 per cent. Turnips and other field roots show a quality of 88 57, a yield per acre of 402 bushels and a total yield of 95,207,000 bushels for a crop of 236,622 acres. Hay and clover are computed for 8,515,400' acres and a yield per acre of 1.82 tons. The quality is 90 45 per cent and the total yield 15,497.000 tons. Fodder corn has an estimated yield per acre of 9.38 tons, which upon an area of 271,960 acres gives a product of 2,551,000 tons. Sugar beets are grown most extensively in Ontario and Alberta, where they supply roots for three sugar factories. The area in crop this year is 16,000 acres which is a substantial increase upon last year. The yield per acre is 9 69 tons, the total yield 1.55,000 tons and the quality 93.15 per cent. The roots supplied to the Berlin factory are testing 17 per cent of sugar and at the Wallaceburg factory t6 per cent ; but a product of 5000 acres in Ontario is being shipped to factories in Michigan. The product of 8,200 acres in that province is marketed at Wallace - burg and Berlin where the average price is about $5 86 per ton or bet- ter than $57 SO per acre. Comput- ed at the average local prices the market value of potatoes this year is $33,4.46,000, of turnips and other roots $21,444,000, of hay and clover $149,716,000 of fodder corn $11,957,- 000, and of sugar beets $887,000. The report on fall wheat sown this years shows an area of 790,300 acr- es, whereof 683,500 acres are in Ontario and 107,800 acres in Al- berta. Last year the area was 609,- 200 acres for Ontario and 98,000 in Alberta. The condition of the crop is reported at 98.40 per oent as compared with 93.60 last year. The per cent of fall ploughing completed this year compared with the area planned for i8 less than last year, but the'.i•eoii' made for a period one month earlier, The per cent of summer fallowing com- pared in the same way is some, what lower, but increases are shown for Saskatchewan and Al. berta. s CoiiO, Cholera am Chamuer1a1h.'I 5 Diarrhoea Remedi+: Never fails. Buy it now. It may save life The new betel is rapidly nearing completion and will be ready for business early in January. Walter McBeath of Stanley has rented a house here and will be- come a resident shortly. The stormy weather of the past week has made business quiet in town. � M A 'irrt R .q • Y (471, I can cure the worst caro of Rupture from infancy to old age, without operation qr loss of time. ACT AT ONCE and remove the daily clan- ger of strangulation. Fill in coupon and send to Retera to J. S. Smarr, 88 Caledonia St. Stratford Dept. R. Ont. Name Address Age...e,,..,TimeRup Single or double Satisfaction guaranteed %�,aIDYDaD®Da�t7®aDtY1DQD�DQDf�DaD•�aDgIR940lRIYJODQ®aDarDaDl1�'9aD@WDaDI�BilUa9C:T➢tlDQ�iDQDQIHWILI ylr; During the present year Canada has borrowed in England to the extent of £32,241,472, or about $161,207,360. This would seem to hear out the stotereent that the developmeat of this country looms large in tl,e minds of English finan- ciers as a means of safe and pro- fitable in vestment. Why !s it that people in small towns especially can find no better employment than prying into other people's business and then exag- gerating the truth in regard to the same? People who pretend to be Christians, who attend church re- gularly, who in the sight of "their neighbors are generous 'and charit- able yet who without the slightest provocation pick up some little mistake, or more often at nothing, will so scandalize one as to ruin his or her reputation for life. V hile they would not steal from them worldly goods, yet they rob him or her of what is more precious than gold a good reputation, Why can't people practice the good Christianity that they preach and "Do unto others as you would have them do unto von." If a brother or sister folio, don't jump on to )lhcm Leeoese they Ie -•e eic,wn, hurl lrec ;rc" .on, do net t•xta,n(1 a 'AVIA, do not, lite It dot; in the retainer, 'taud in the ray of others. ive all and you will find out that we will use you right. Come and take your choice in FLOUR==Milverton, Exeter, liensall, Parkhill and Royal Household. We take eggs, cash or any kind of grain in exchange for flour or anything we sell. All kinds of Feed and Grain always on hand. Oil Cake, Bibby cream equiv= alent, Flax Seed, whole and ground. M. & J.6ASCIIO, ZURICEI 1 DIEINDtlD®CID®aDa!®aD111MINID®aDOINDaD®ODdifaDiap®YCaDl7®DD0IE6aD®DDS®aD®iJaOa111111111a0 MARSc.ET Rhil?ORT —The fol- .lowiTi,x is the report of Zurich innrktt corrected up to Thursday, 45 to 415 70 20.00 22 00 22.00 ;il 32 81 82 3.00 :3.00 2.00 2.7:1 6.00 7.00 5 5 ,.,,.• • 8.00 9.00 Barley Peas Bran Shorts Celts Wheat Five Roses flour Purity .... Royal Household, c'hoce family Hay Driest apples (`lover seed 25 25 ▪ 20 20 24 24 c,;4elc. ,.-.t b. 55 IIENSALL MARKETS Cook's Best Flour. e Wheat Oats . Barley Peas Hogs liveweight 2.75 1.08 32 32 48 58 80 80 6.55 leteuLICCIMODErn ive o!try l�' N T E ) k Highest Prices Every Tuesd .# y forenoon NOVEMBER ROD AND GWT. 5 is the number of new names we want to add to our subscription list, and to accomplish this we will send The Herald to any address in Canada, to the end of the year, F EF OLP ri TRY Open to all readers of The Her.., ld The 'Family Herald and Weekly Star, of Montreal, is going to send three or more of their readers to the Ok]. Country next Juno at the time of the Coronation, with all expenses paid from any part of Canada and a liberal allowance for spending money. We have completed arrangements with the Family Herald pub- lishers by which our readers can enter the competition for this prize trip and it certainly will be a trip to be remembered. While big game hunting supplies the dominant note in the November cumber of Rod and Gan in Canada, published by W. J. Taylor, Limit- ed, Woodstock, Ont., there is in the salve issue, plenty of material for sportsmen who are not able, for various reasons, to gn after moose, deer or bear. In tbe opening article, Mr. Bonnycastle Dale tells how Indian boys make clever, hunters, trappers and fishermen and with what skill they decimate the inhabitants of the forest, Exploration in the Nepifion country, fishing and mountaineer. ing topics, with many other papers and some fine verses, fill a number which should find its way into all hunting camps Sportsmen, where- 'er they may be found, can enjoy some pleasant half hours by dipp- ing into its contents, assured that from beginning to end they will find much to attract and interest them. The completeness of the issue in covering the whole wide e itin sport lyes it an,L 1 field of G g distinction and goes for to account for the standing the Magazine has won and continues to deserve. A N A REPRESENTATIVE For Zurich This is the time to sell nursery stock. Wo pay lib' rally and offer steady employment. Our list of Specialties embraces a rare and choice list of ready Fellers in both fruit and Ornamental stook. Seed. Potatoes, Etc, Write for terms and catalogue. Here Are The Conditions The Issue of The Family Herald and Weekly Star of September 15th, 1910, had 6566,370 readers based on an average of five readers to each paid subscription. How many readers will the issue of March 15, 1911, on the same basis? We offer Toni,; BERALn) aril The Family Herold end Weekly Star for one year each at $1.75, and every person accepting this offer has the right to make an estimate and The Fafniry Uerelri and Veelz] Star will send the first three of its rearlers who mike the eorreet r. Ile'a;ast to correct estimate to Englund with all oe sea n 1 1 trine tone pert et Canada Anil a liberal allowance for standing TTV.,t Nis. Estitnste enupons can be hart at this: c°iiien. ;‘,al eh nnst be Illicit in and aeCOnlpany your sats r'i,'11`oit To the, +e,. r, 1 , ; r: i.l't r ,oire Il 1ie 'filo 1 urlilj, Herald and \ti i a ]taper on this C.,.ltinent a r t ,. ' j': Family and Farm upon to carry nit tine unique competition 'en,e rt Woe. We .r•l a,.. t(7 see some of stir readers win the trip, See:, in eat - al)eetril7riou in now. STOKE el WELLINoToN The Ifunthili N'arscriei, lisp, 1837 Toroil fo . - Ontario No-- .,tl •• 9 ..i E 1 1 A 't n, HOW Ie 1'0 DONE? It is really wonderful how the Editors of tho Foully Herald and 'Weekly Star of Montreal can go rn week after week issuing tt.enty! eight and thirty two pages of eight big columns each, real al•, yrsr. h i something new anti iateresti lY fee their readers. Every department; of that great parer is edited by men and women l '% lona. experience. and there is not it dry lie 1 ti' light in the whole paper. Anv i.erson who is not familiar witti the Family' Herald should give it aL trial. Those who know it wemld not be without it. Every snbseriber for 1911 has an opportnnity to tin a free trip to the Old Conntay next June. Particulars may be had at this office. ATHLETIC WORLD The November number of the At. HLETIC WORLD, published by W. J. Taylor, Limited. Woodstock. Ontario, which) has just reached this otl'ice, is an exceptionally good one, and scows to indicate that the policy of steady improvement which this mage ins 1108 so far carried out so well, will continue in the future. The veriou , (weer ronces of interoai, in tufo Canadian in sporting world are well deserib• ed and attention is also paid ft) events in other countries, while practically every Itrancil of sport is covered, Lovers of .it::lel c -;i rill d„ ,Cell to get tis ... amber, 1:. ,,which ;vill be im,..d stenetlline try interest everyone. w' utc::ver iiaat of sport he paaticalaely a,versa The (nen'", Colleen rxl i iinbtler: have it _ r e are. pared. Tt 15 np•i.'I a'.r 1 in evf ry respect ;To-.. now 11101 - ,l '..1' i�5tlecl is ? � k. ..,, :iaf•e, ?• I'1 T,: 1,1 the frnii industry ie tho lee elite arc,nild4;; o rniTle nt hnsinet•'4 men of filo towel have purche•,erll farms with the in tentinn ref growing frnit. These? include J. z i.tvir; st'.ne, intens ;.. er of the M i1sons bank, G M. Van Valkenhurg and Dr. J. P. Hubbard. One salesinan alone in Forest h.n 1 orders booked for over 3;t000 pea.{ill trees, A movement is now Olt foot '11 Toronto ro make the sale of 1 ad engs a criminal offence. Tho : ©a tion is being taken by the produoe and commis-sinn men, who form a secti on of filo Board. of nestle, and it is their intention to have the matter brought rip at the neat ser_.sirm of the Dominion 1P,tri'a- nlent. when they hope to bo ala'.) to have an amendment made to the pure food law prohibiting the sale of such eggs. This action 4.a tare o,iten mo of the many com- pla.ints made against farmer's con- signments nmonts of eggs, and it is hoped by this means the frauds 'will bee prevented