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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Herald, 1908-11-20, Page 5for the balance this month. Every Ring Solid Gold. Watch and Clock Repairing My 5peciaity F. W. HESS, JEWELLER of YOU - GAN SAVE M Nty By bnying your PRINTS, MUSL1NS, DRESSGOODS, GROCERIES, H A R D - WARE, WALL PAPERS and SI•IOES from us. A Large a n d Up-to-date .Stock to 'select from. HIGHEST PRICES Paid For Farm Produce R. N. Douglas, BLAKE EEt 1 That New , Winter Suit. When looking for your new Winter Suit, do not forget to give us a call. We have a fine range of Tweeds, Worsteds, etc., to choose from. Our prices are as cheap as any. Suits made at short notice. We also have a large member of Samples to select from. Laundry in connection. BEAT A KE 1 E. keep in stock a full line o fresh meats, hazes, etc. etc Our cuts . are noted for their tenderness and wholesomeness. .Our aim is to keep nothing but the best. We snake our own sausages. Give us a call. li UN6LU,T BEICHERT. call! Ol,�- , A. Edighoffer TONSORIAL ARTIST Successor to Fred. Manns Fora Quieli and Easy r8have, or an Up-to-date Hair -cut, ',Opposite .Commercial Hotel The Zurich 9 :-I ENSALL George Petty Sr., is slowly re- covering from his. recent severe illness. The foundry.is 'turning out large quantities of cast iron pip e. A. Sohlender has gone to Berlin, and the photo studio is again clos- ed. Mr. Sellers of Kincardine is visit- ing his son, Dr. i'. A. Seilery. Miss Ethel Murdock of London, visited her parents .fere, on Sun- day last. Mr. Sterling returned from the West, last week. Thomas Hudson's eldest daught- er, Mrs. McAllister died of typhoid toyer, in Michigan., last week. Miss Emma Johnston is visiting her sister, Mrs. B. Shortt, in Woodstock. It isn't so difficult to strengthen a, weak stomach if one goes at it correctly.. And this is true of the heart and kidneys, The old fash- ioned way of closing the stomach or stimulating the heart or kidneys is surely wrong ! Dr Shoop first pointed out this error. "Go to the weak or ailing nerves of these or- gans” said he. Each inside organ has its controlling or "inside ner- ve:" When these nerves fail then those organs mrst surely. falter. This vital truth is leading druggists everywhere to dispense and recom- mend Dr Shoop's Restorative A few clays test will surely tell 1 Sold by J J. Merner. EXETER. Mr. and Mrs. John Jarrett, left on a trip for Winnipeg and Seattle, Wabh., to spend the winter with their daughters. T. E. Handford has taken an- other car of horses to the West. W. J. Carling is back from a hunting trip to Muskoka, and re- ports deer very scarce, William Berry and Walter Magiure, left on Monday to spend the winter in England. Charles Clark, editor of the Com- ber Herald, was in town last week. Thanksgiving Day was quietly celebrated in Exeter this year, There were'many visitors in• town who spent the day with relatives and acquaintances. A shooting tournament under the auspices of the proprietor of the Manion House Wag held at the Gun Club grounds and afforded considerable sport for the lovers of the gun. a.. More Dread in a Barra.. That ext cost per barrel which your groceryou for r. doesn't go into anybody's pocket. It cornei lack to you. it is the cif 1F.rence in honey between flour you are ,,u -e of and flour you are not. It co'i =-s the cost of inspecting the entire wheat crop of the country, and scleIting the choicest grain. It pays for advanced milling methods, for cleanlin .s,, for purity and tor scientific flour -making. it comes back to you in the shape of light, bread and pastry. .A bari:J,l Jf Jgilvie's Royal Household Flour ;zoos Erth :r fawn 1. barrel of any other flour. It 111ake.3 more br'ewci and better bread. You aze not really spending that extra amount —you art investing it. Do not law it stand between your family and good baking. Go to your grocer and say « Royal Household." Flo .r II/ ]s Co.,Lin2112,d 1 kntreal. DRYSDALE Mrs. Latimer, wife ofLati- mer brakeman oil the B d L ]I railway, is at present. the. guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrsa Peter Durand Sr., of this place. A number from this vicinity at- tended the anniversary services,. held in connection with the Pres- byterian church, in Varna on Sun- day last, which were conducted by the Rev. W. J. West M. A., of Bluevale. Mr. West is a speaker with unparalleled theological at- tainments and possesses an intense interest in the development, ex- tension and progression of ehurch work in Canada. R. J. Howard, an old Drysdale boy, who has spent the summer operating a large hardware store for a joint stock company in Souris Manitoba, has returned home, and. is at present recuperating under the parental roof. James is a young man of exceptional ability and enterprise, and these qualities combined with the commercial knowledge, which he has already acquired enables him to prove him- self a proficient hardware man. In speaking of times in the West Mr. Howard says, that owing to the general commercial depression pre- vailing in the cities business has become considerably retarded. A spell of excessive dry weather extending from September last i'fn- til the present tine„has devastated this section of country. absorbing the moisture from the ground., thereby decreasing the water sup- ply, cutting short the fall plough- ing and leaving things in general in a precarious condition Should winter set in under such distressing circumstances as are herein above described, a famine for water for the maintenance of live stock un- precedented in the annals of history will be sure to follow. To guard against : uoh an uniileasant situa- tion, farmers would do well to, fill their wells while water can be ob- tained, and before the streams which form the sole supply of this precious fluid become coated with ice. The services in the Union church situated on the lake shore road, in the township of Stanley, about two miles due north of the village of Drysdale, have been re -arranged, and hereafter a servioe will be held at 10,30 a. m. each sabbath, to which all are cordially invited. The present prices paid for farm stock, more particularly cattle. which are adapted to meet with the approval of Torontobiiyers, are exceptionally good. Fanners in this vicinity find out that the rear- ing of stook, tonna a very import. ect all their energies and exertions. The following problem will amu- se our rnathanaaticians and assist in developing their mental faculties A fish was caught whose tail weig- hed nine pounds, .his head weighed as much as his tail and half his body and his body weighed as much as his head and tail. together. Find the weight of the fish. THE HER- ALD of next week, will contain an. answer to this problem. One of the most interesting and pretty weddings probably ever witnessed in this section, occurred at St. Peter's church Drysdale, on Thursday Nov., 12th, when Miss Sarah Lenoway, youngest daughter of Mrs. 0. Ducliarme, a resident of the village, was united in marriage to Mr. John McPhail, who is em- ployed as motorman on an electric street car lino in the city of Sagi- naw. At 9 a. in. on the above mention- ed date the groom, assietec. by Mr. Peter Lenoway, brother of the bride and tho bride, who was handsomely gowned in a beautiful navy travelling costume accompan- ied by Miss Mario Gelinas, a popu- lar young lady of this village, who was also becomingly attired, enter- ed the church to the strains of the wedding march, played by the organist, and took their positions at the altar. where the matrimonial ceremony was performed by the Rev. Father Stroecler, pastor of the Roman Catholic church, in the vil- lage of Zurich, After the core- mony was performed and congratu- lations tendered the bridal party accompanied by the immediate re- latives of the contracting parties drove to the home of the bride, where a very dainty wedding din. ner consisting of all the delicacies of the season and carefully prepar- ed by the ladies present was spread and to which all did ample justice. A very enjoyable afternoon, con- sisting of amusements admirably adapted for the occasion, was spent and in which all heartily participa- ted. In the evening a goodly num- ber oflyonng friends and acquaint- ances assembled to do honor to the bride, who is a young lady of ster- ling qualities, and whose exemp- lary conduct and friendly disposi- tion, no doubt fully merit the numerous tributes of respect paid to her on this occasion. The pre, sents were both numerous and costly, showing the esteem in which the groom and bride are held by their numerous friends. The grooms present to the bride was a beautiful gold brooch, set with opals and rabies., The. young,00uple left on the 8.15 train for their home in SaginaW, on Friday last. The writer joins with • their numerous friends in wishin : theta a ha A& SMITH'S SALVE, IS A SUPE CURE FOR Guts, praises, Burns, Scalds, Chapped Hands, Cold Sores, Chilblains, Boils, Ulcers, Pimples, Running Sores, Poisoned Wounds, Sores, Ringworm, Strain, Swol- len ICneas, inflamed and all diseased, in. lured and irritated conditions of the skin. Mr. Matthias Worm of Zurich Ont, says. "1: was bothered for some time with nrun- ning sore on my jaw, nobody knows how rninful it was. 1 doctored for some time till I tried a sample of Joseph Smith's Salve, and the result was so pleasing that I secured a good supply. Joseph Smith's Salve eased the pain for the first time. I am cured. I am thankful indeed for my eure and gladly give you permission to publish my ease." • Mrs. Andrew Thiel of Zurich, saysi-- "For six months I suffered arutoly from sore breasts and doctored all that time. I tried a sample of Joseph Snaith Salve. It Was different to everything else I had tried and it cured me.. I am grateful for the euro, as nave nover been tronbled with it since." Price 50 cents per box, 3 boxes for $1.50 Obtained from W. H. BENni;n Zurich, Ont o•. Paper Hanger and Painter. All work promptly and neatly done. Now is the time to have.your home brightened and fixed up for the Spring and Sum- mer menthe. Charges �IModeratge� r Qty N. BOCK, aur ich MACE—CARLING. A very pretty wedding took place in Exeter on Wednesday, Nov. 11th, at the home of the late Isaac Carling, Esq., "The Maples.' Huron St„ when bis third daughter Florence. was united in the holy bonds of matrimony to Mr. W. D_ Mace, of Winnipeg. At high noon the bride, becomingly attired in a travelling suit of navy blue broad- cloth and carrying a white prayer book, entered the drawing room on the arm of her brother, Mr. Isaac R. Carling, to the strains of Men- delssohn's wedding march played by Mies Pauline Elliott, of Norwich a niece of the bride. The ceremony was performed by Rev. Walter Collins, of the Trivitt Memorial church, under an arch. of Chrysan- themums and American Beauty roses in the presence of the im- mediate relatives of the contract- ing parties. During the signing of the register Miss Nina Carling sang in beaatiful voice "Beloved it is Morn." After the ceremony the guests proceeded to the spacious dining -room which was most pro- fusely decorated with pink and white Chrysanthemums and bridal roses, where a dainty wedding breakfast was served. With the best wishes and congratulations of their many friends, Mr. and Mrs. Mace left on the evening train for it tour of the continent, Tho groom's gift to the bride was a sunburst of pearls and amethysts while the bride presented each of her nieces with handsome pearl brooches. The presents were both numerous and costly including cut glass, china and silver.— Times. The charge against J. W. Mc- Laren, of Chatham, for selling liquor on Sunday, was dismissed, and the accused honorably acquit- ted. The whiskey -informers did not tell a straight story, and the drug clerk swore positively that no liquor was sold. oamcama aeo home ez mmaamunim usaram® wq ctr n i1$ u"hs,to1ds, U oopiitgCougli This remedy can Agri It depended upon sad is pleasant to take. 1t costal,* no china or other harmful dreg u4 may thea u uslir dead te