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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Herald, 1908-01-10, Page 64 OD ORMalxa ©Oo>ORDaD .r Established. 1855 Assets $33,759,242. C' a The Zurich Herald. (33:10E) MED 1D ({D(111111D(1DMED C3© 9 e Csultal $3,360,170 Surplus $3,360,170 A Prosperous Year-.. will be yours if you will start a Savings Account with. us this month, Interest will be added to prin- cipal every three months, and with our Large Reserve ` to rely on, you need not worry about the safety of your earnings, -We heartily welcome your hilliness— beit large or small. (cze H. J, BILLINGS, Manager. HENSALL BIZA.,NCH: MOLSONS DANK ceD 93 (1Dc aID a (iD (lnt ➢(110 LEGAL CARDS. a., a.1). COOLE, BARRISTER AND SO- licdtoe, Notary Public, Hensall, Ontario. eat Zurich (Zeller's office) every Mon- d'ay. PROUI)FOOT, HAYS & BLAIR, BAR- ristors, Solicitors, Notaries Public, etc., Goderich, Canada. W. Proudfoot. K.C. R. 0. Hays. G. F. Blair. BUSINESS CARDS. IL 0- DOAN, V. S., AS I HAVE PUlt- chased back my business from E. W. Stoskopf, 1 am in a position to attend to all business as formerly. Calls at Rat's Hotel. DR. E. W. STOSKOPF, VETERINARY Surgeon and Dentist, Zurich, Ontario. Office over T. & M. Johnson's Store. Night calls at T. Johnson's residence. S. HARDY, EXETER, ONT.. LICENS-' ed Auctioneer for Huron and Perth. My rates are reasonable and I will guarantee the best of satisfaction. For the con- venience of niy friends in Hay and Stanley, dates and terms may be ar- ranged atT; HERALD Office, Zurich, P. S. PH1L1JPS, LICENSED AUC- tioneer for t::e Counties of Huron and Perth, Farm stock sales a specialty. Satisfaction guaranteed or no pay. All orders left at Lot 23, Con. 2, Hay, or addressed to Hensall P. 0. will be promptly attended to. OR. F. A. SELLERY, DENTIST, GRA- Auate of the Royal College of Dental Surgeons, Toronto, also honor gradu- ate of Department of Dentistry, To- ronto Ill Ivey sity• Painless extraction of teeth. Plate work a speciality. At Dominion House, Zurich, every Mon- day. 1-36 Lumber For Sale, After Nov. 20th, 1 will be in a position to all all orders for Maple, Beech, Hemlock, Basswood, Soft and Rock Elm Lumber. SAMUEL MOORE, 18-8 Bayfield. NOTICE. Notice hg hereby given that the 33rd Annual Ileetiag of the members of the Hay Township Farmers' Mutual Fire In- surance Company , will be held at the Town Hall, Zurich, on Tuesday, January 14th, 1908,.at one o,cloek p. m. Business- Receivin�* the Directors' Auditors' and Treasure 's Reports, Election of Directors and such othe_• business as may be neces- sary for the good and welfare of the com- pany. All are ret.:;ested to attend. Christian Stade, Esq., Henry EiI:her, President. Secretary, NOTICE. Notice that the annual meeting of .the Hay Branch, Agriculture Society, will be held in the Town Hall, Zurich, on Friday the 24th ray of Jan.ary 1908, at one o'clook p. 11). W. T. Caldwell, Pres D. S. Faust, Secy. Zurich Jan. 8 1908. BLAKE Mr. Robt, J. Drysdale of Hensall, spent a few days in the ne ighber. hood last week, Mr. Jas. Allan disposed of a valuable piece of horse flesh, to Mr. Wm. Douglas. Jas. is becoming famous as a speculator. The annual meeting of the con- gregation was held in the church on friday of last week. The finan- cial report shows the church to be. on solid footing, Ja1 Our neighborhood is becoming far -fanned for the number of teach- ers found in it. There are nine and these. All began their duties on Monday last. We congratulate Mr. E Esler, en his election by acclamation, to the office• of councillor, in Stanley Township, Mrs. Routley of Winchelsea, spent a few weeks visiting friends n this community. "lam-, C�.+ Yi ...... '.4 :i, ..•...V PUBLISHED BY E. ZELLEtt. FRIDAY JAN.. 10th 1908 The Manitoba wheat bugaboo has about run its course, It has done incalculable injury to the Ontario farmer. It threatened to destroy the market for Ontario wheat. Thanks to the gallant eff- orts of our millers, and the sane reasoning of many of the people, Ontario's wheat is coming into its own again. In one of the leading agricultural journals (none other than The Far- mer's Advocate) there recently ap- peared a letter from the McCorm- ick Manufacturing Company, one of the oldest and best known makers of biscuits, etc. in Canada. In this commumication, the Mc- Cormick Company state that "Man- itoba hard wheat flour is not satis- factory for our use. We much pre- fer Ontario fall red and white wheat, which give us good satis- faction." There is no doubt that Ontario wheat flour makes the best pastry. The process of blending, by which the millers add a small quantity of Manitoba wheat, adds strength, making a perfect bread flour. Thus, the blended flours are better than Ontario or Manitoba wheat flours alone. Repeated tests have proved this true. With people us ing blended flours, which contain a large precentage of Ontario wheat, there is a growing demand for this grain. Our farmers should care- fully study the question and make their plans to plant wheat. They can help the good work along, too, by buying blended flours for home use. Tho Mail and Empire of Monday, commenting on the vacancy in the Commons, of this Riding, among other things says :— "The sudden death of Mr. B. B. Bunn, the res- pected member for South Huron, and the remarkable promptitude with which the bye -election has been decided upon, have taken the people somewhat at a disadvantage for the Ottawa politicians have had their candidate in the field for months, while the people have not made any such provision for a con- test. Nevertheless, the opponents of graft are to the fore, and are hoping to keep the constituency in Iine with the great movement looking to the inauguration of an honest regime at Ottawa. An ex- cellent candidate, in the person of Mr. Henry Horton, of Hensall, has been placed in the field, and pre- parations have been trade for a successful campaign." If this is the stuff this Journal publishes in every constituency where an elec- tion occurs. it is a wonder that the party for which it stands,, should be successful in any bye -election. THE HERALD has personal know- ledge regarding. the selection of Mr. M. Y. McLean as the Reform candidate, and for the Mail and Empire to say or insinuate that he is the choice of Ottawa politicians is very unfair. We venture to say that the gentlemen who chose Mr. McLean as their candidate, were as honorable a body of men as ever met in Con venti on- —unenfluenced by any outside interference, if there was any, and the Mail and Empire's slur on the majority of the electors of South Huron will not tend to assist the election of Mr. Henry Horton the Conserva- tive candidate, who, we under- stand is a gentleman in every re- spect, and who, if defeated, can, at least partially blame it on such attacks on honorable citizens. To check aleo d quickly, get from your druggist some little Candy Cold Tablets called Pre ventics. Druggists everywhere are now dig. sing Preventics, for they are t only safe, but decidedly effec- t and prompt. Preventics con- n no quinine, no laxative, noth- harsh nor sickening. Taken at e."sneeze stage" :Preventics will eve.'. t Pneumonia. Bronchitis, La ippe, etc. Hence the name, Pre- ntic.s. Good for feverish child- 11, t Preventics 25 cents. Trial oxes 5 cts. Sold by All Dealers. Press : despatches from British Columbia have stated e Japanese quarter, of Vancouver has been au armed camp ever since the race riots of last year. An in. cident that occurred last week seems to boar out the statements whiobleave been made. Two or three Vancouver firemen wore staggering along a street in the Japanese quarter when one of them fell against aglass front and smashed it in. The firemen were at once set upon by the occupants of the shop and one of them had his nose sliced off with a knife in the melee whioh followed. Similar 'incidents are liable to occur at :any moment nso long as this alien popn]ation is allowed to remain armed ; whenever a white man strays into the camp of the yellows there will be clanger of knives being drawn and pistols used. As a means of removing an immediate danger there should be a prompt disarmament of the in- vaders, coupled with an effective _protection of the same, so long as they remain here, against mob at. tack. But then Js, in the Vancouver situation as, it exists, a subject for much more serious consideration than is involved in the preserva- tion of civic peace. The readiness of the Japanese to fly to arms, and to unite together with the, steadi- ness of a disciplined army, at least partially justifies the position of those who contend that unrestrict- ed Japanese immigration constitu- tes a national danger. In the event of diffi.nities arising between Japan and Canada. this country would be at a serious disadvantage if a Jap- anese colony stood ready to seize and hold a strategic post on the Pacific coast. The easiest way to prevent an occurrence of this kind is to insist on the total exclusion of these aggressive Orientals. We have sufficient race and other com- plications already without adding a Japanese question. —Weekly Sun. There was an article in the V, innipeg Tribune of December 30. which ought to go the rounds. It shows that out of 309 members of the House of Commons there are only 20 farmers, of whom two are merely owners, not cultivators of farms. The composition of our House of Commons is a question to which little attention is paid, but which -is exceedingly import- ant. In ,the: same article the Winnipeg • 9 ubtenc quotes with appro"bu.tLor ;;.ertatenient : of •Mr. A. E. hemp • in the House of Commons on December :10, 1907, to the effect that from 80 per cent t o 90 per cent, of the money sub- soribed for election purposes comes from interested people ; from con tractors who want to get their bill of extras allowed ; from cor- porations which -want legislation on favorable attention from the Goverment; or from private in- dividuals who are sueing to the Government for favors. What is to be done? How can we get an adeguate representation of great interest like that of the farm? How can we secure that members shall go to Parliatnont in the:interests of thoir const.tuencies and the county, not their own. HURON FRUIT MEN At a meeting held recently in Exeter Mr. L. G. Tinckelpaugh, of Toronto, organized. "The Huron County Fruit Growers," to supple- ment the work of the`Ontario Fruit Grower's Association. The officers of the newly -organ- ized association to serve for the next three years are: Mr. Henry E. Huston, horticulturist and insur- ance broker,' president; Mr. John W. Ratcliff, secret ary ; .kir. S. M. Sanders, manager of the preserving company, assistant secretary; Mr. N. Dyer Hnrdon, manager Molsons Bank, treasurer; also several vice- presidents and directors. A •om- mittee was appointed to draft by- laws and regulations. .1'he organ- ization was an impromptu affair, seme of the members only receiv- ing cceiving three hours notice. I tr. Tinck- lepaugh was heartily congratulat- ed by the reeve of Exeter on the successful organization. All the farmers of Huron county are invit- ed to join, either by snail addressed to the president or in person, • HENSALL J. G, Petty was elected Reeve of the Village by a Majority of 25 over Lis. opponent J. W. Ortwein, It was a hot election. Mrs. William Moir is visiting her daughter Mrs. Case, in Toronto. T. Murray of Owen Sound, principle of the Collegiate there, visited with his father and sistes, last week, Mr. Janes Delgaty of Stanley was a visiter last . week, with his former neighbor, . Mr. Alex. Thong= Son, • ZELLEI3, CONVEYANCER AND Notary 1'ublie. Deeds, Mortgages, Wills and other Legal Documents care - Lilly and promptly, prepared. Office— Zeiler block, Zurich, Ont. rgans, Pianos & Sewing Machines OUR STOCK AND PRICES ARE RIGHT. H. WELL ZURICH • ONT 1 he Old and Reliable Kalbfleisch's Saw & Planing Hills.... Shingles! dt,i,hiiig1es! Parties needing any shingles would do well to see my stock They are the B. C. SHINGLES, the best kind, and the price is right. Como at once if you need any as they are going fast. BUILDING MATERIAL of all kinds. Contracts taken and satisfaction guaranteed. It will be to your interest to see me before you build, as my motto is good work and good material at a reasonable price. Custom Sawing and Planing. Chopping done every Tuesday and Friday. Fr C. KALBFLEISCH, / ZSRlIOH y� y� y.�� yc�� y� y.��_x- � yt� y,� y�,� ,�.� y,� y�.� y�.� y�,� y.� �.t y , ******?ic*** ******* ° **�rC�iF °** yc o International Harvester ...11implemerits. We keep in stock a full line of the above celebrated make of Farm Im- plements. They, are used in every civilized country in the world and are giving universal satisfaction. -Buy o no other. We handle the Magnet Cream Separa- the best on the market. Metal Pig Troughs, last much longer] than wooden ones, in fact we handle e eery- thing in the line of binders, mowers, plows, etc., etc., and repairs of all kinds. amt_ 0 * 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 When. in need of a new O o o Buggy, Carriage, Wagon. or 0 Cutter, see our lines before you o buy. They will please you. o FRED. HESSµ& SON, ,��Rickbeil's.Old. Stand ZURR�ICH.�s� * ********'**3•ci° '�i'� *****' ° o *****�� a 6REAT COMBINAIION (BY SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT) the jantirie lbetatb & `i eeIt %tar the Canada 1Reb kook . ..ANn.•.. tthe Zurich lberatb The Canadian Red Book is just the book that has long been wanted. A book on Canada, all about Canda and Things all Canadians should know --260 pages of reliable facts, figures and information of all kinds about Canada, The Family Herald and Weekly Star is the favorite paper of Canada. It is found in almost every home. It has no equal as a family and farm paper. By special arrangements • we can offer the Canadian Red Book (Price 50e) rrheFatnilp Herald and Weekly Star (Price•one dollar). and the HERALD (Price $1.000 All for $1.85, if renewed this month. Send your orders to The Herald, Zurich United States subsoribers add $1.00 for pcetage