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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Herald, 1904-06-17, Page 5• Mr. (;leo. Trott, of Hensa11, is per- manently located in his gallery again for the winter and will be open for business every day Tuesdays excepted. Gno. TROTT, 13.tf Photographer. CEDAR POSTS FOR SALE:, --We have `vv a large number of First Class Posts at the Lake Front, St. Joseph, which will be sold ab reasonable prices. For particu- lars apply to ' 48-tf MAOEL & BEnwat, Zurich. Farm for Sate. Containing 100 acres; about 20 acres good hardwood bush, frame house, bank barn and other outbuildings. Good water. Price $4000.00. .Apply at once to E. ZELLER, Zurich. Farms for Sale. I have a number of farms for sale as 1ollows:-100 acres, 2li wiles from Zurich, price :$4000; 50 acres, 1+ miles from Zurich for $2,400; 25 acres, 3h miles from Zurich, price $950. These farms are in .good neighborhoods and are worth the money. Apply to E. ZELLER, Zurich, Notice. THE HENSALL BRASS BAND, COM - posed of about 20 pieces, are now open for engagement. Applications for this purpose should be addressed to Mr. CHAS. LINNDER, leader, or Mr. A. McKAr, Secy., Hansa'', Ont. ?,. man to represent "C.tNADA'S GREATEST NURSERIES" in town of Zurich and stir, rounding Country, and take orders for Our Hardy Specialties in Fruit Trees, Small Fruits, Orna- mentals, Shrubs, Roses, Vines, —Seed Potatoes, Etc.— Stock true to name and free from San Tose Scale A permanent position to the right Juan on either salary or commission. Stone & Wellington FONTHILL NURSERIES, Ov}:It 800 ACRES. Toronto, Ont. Clubbing races. ivo have made arrangements to offer the following low clubbing rates with THE Hy.it.LD : Daily Globe . $ 4.25 Mail & Empire 4.25 Weekly Globe . 1.75 „ Mail & Empire 1.75 'Berliner Journal (German) 2.50 1.75 3.25 1.75 2.40 1.50 1.75 2.25 Family Herald & Star Daily Free Press Weekly Free Press Daily Advertiser Weekly Advertiser Weekly Sun Farmer's Advocate Sold by All Newsdealers Furnishes Monthly to all lovers of Song and Music a vast volume of New, Choice Copyright Compositions by the most pop- ular authors. 64 Pages of Piano Music, half Vocal, half Instrumental—at Complete 'Pieces for Piano—Once a Month for a5 Cents. Yearly Subscription, $a.00. If you will send us the name and address of Prva performers on the Plano or Organ, we will send Sou a copy of the Magazine Free. J. W. PEPPER, Publisher, Eighth a Locust Sts.. Philadelphia. Pa. 50 YEARS' EXPERIENCE_' TRADE MARKS DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS S.C. Anyone sendt'1g a sketch and description may 'quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention Is probably patentable. Communica• tions atrial, confidential. Handbook on Patents sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents. Patents taken through Nunn & Co. receive epeciatnotice, without charge, lune Scientific American. A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest cin culation of any scientific Journal. 4 erms.' 3 a year; four months, $1. Sold hymnnewstlealers. MUNN & CO 36lBroadway, New York Branch Office. ht;'::' st.. Washington. D. C. Hoffman's J1, bilee Laundry . 0 vol We use no Chemicals to destroy or injure your Clothing, and we Guarantee our Work, TAILORING IN W. N. CONNECTION N®FFMAN The Zurich Herald. COUNTY NEWS. Ten barrels of salt are shipped from the salt works at Seaforth each week on the average. A bad accident happened at the Clinton organ factory on Wednes- day last. James Mair was working at the rip saw, sawing up some basswood lumber, when his hand came in contact with the saw, with the result that the first finger was divided into two pieces. In jerking his hand away he received" another cat into the palm of the hand which made matters worse. It is thought that his finger will have to be am- putated. Another of the early settlers of Hay Township departed this life on Tuesday, June 7th, at her' home on the 6th Con.,. Hay. Mrs. Thomas Blackwell whose maiden name was Corbett was well known and high- ly respected and her death is great- ly deplored. She was in her 68th ,year and had survived her husband some years. The deceased was a devoted member of St. Paul's Church. The funeral took place last Thursday afternoon to the Exeter cemetery. The other day Melville Ransford of Clinton, accidently shot himself in the foot. Ono toe was taken off. The other day while Bert Piper was speeding the valuable pasting mare owned by John Snell on the track at Exeter, the harness broke, throwing the horse and driver to the „round. Bert was slightly in- jured and received a good. shaking up, but the horse was nearly killed. It is suffering from concussion of the brain and paralysis of the optic nerve and its recovery is doubtful. The horse is valued at about $400. In the first shoot for the Hovey trophy, which is held in Clinton every Thursday, John Ireland won with. the score of 23 out of 25. Ot- her scores were :Holmes 21, Graham 20, Hovey 19, Cantelon 17, Downs 15, Doherty 15, East 18. Mr. Robt. McMordie brought a carload of stockers from Toronto last week. W. R. Elliott has sold his 1::10 -acre farm in Stephen Townshop to Wes- ley Jones, of the same 'Township.. The price obtained was $11,000. The Sutherland -Linos Co. have purchased the soft ehn timber on the fare. of Albert Ford in Stephen. The price paid is $325. The timber will be cut and shipped to Denfield to the Company's saw mill there. Henry Horton has purchased the 100 -acre farm in Tuckersmith, near Hensall, from D. B. McLean for $5,000. Mr, Horton gets possession in the fall. J. W. Elder, veterinary surgeon, who lived. near Roclgo.rville for many years and at one time prac- ticed his profession in Sotiforth, died at Red Deer, N. W . T. on June 5th. The Seaforth bancl have made arrangements for a moonlight ex- cursion on the lake from Goderich on June 21st. Mr Francis Scott, one of Huron's pioneers, died at Seaforth on Sun- day, June 5th, at the advanced age of 92 years. He came to Huron County 57 years ago and settled on a farm near Seaforth. His wife pre -deceased him two years ago. Out of a family of twelve children nine are still living. A. Hugill, who lives on the Hur- on road, west of Seaforth, has had hard luck of late. On a recent Friday he was binding down a load of hay with a pole, when the pole broke and be fell off the load, break- ing a bone in his shoulder. A week later and also on a Friday he was in Seaforth and while there lost a roll of bills amounting to $120. 1VIr. Hugill should beware of Fridays. GENERAL. NEWS. Licking postage stamps has cost iliiss Myra Sylvernalo, assistant postmaster at Norfolk, Conn., part of her tongue. B] ood poisoning set in duo to the mucilage on the stamps and an operation was per- formed removing nearly half of her tongue. James F. Turner, a telephone linesman, fell from the top of a telephone pole in London and was killed. The little 2 -Year-old child of Geo. Foster, Collingwood, was playing around the yard where a tub of water was standing and falling backwards into the tub,was drown- ed before the mother noticed the accident, The steamer Gauss recently pour cb.asecl by the Dominion Govern- ment for use in the Artie region, arrived at Quebec this week. Mr. T. Bigford, a farmer nearly 80 years old, was killed on a rail- way crossing at Iroquois. Ernest Zoeller, the 15 -year-old son of Bandmaster Zoeller of the Berlin Band, was drowned at Bridgeport on Tuesday. Folly of Collingwood's most pop- ular young hien, Harvey Stephens, Harry Andrews, Edmond Carroll and Gerald Mussen are supposed to have been drowned in . eorgian Bay. They left the harbor in a 16 - foot dingy and some time after the boat was found with the occupants missing and half full of water. During April and May nearly 5,000 emigrants left Scotland for Canada. STANLEY TOWNSHIP. Special 'to THE XI!i A.LD, In the.absence of Rev`. R. A. Mil- ler, who was attending conference at London. Mr. Andrew Reid took charge of the services in the Goshen Methodist church last Sunday. Mrs. Andrew Keys is improving rapidly from the effects of a recent fall. Among those who are attending the Walker -Keys re -union at Mar- lette, Michigan. are : Mrs, W. L Keys and Mrs. Nelson Keys, of the Babylon line. Mrs. David Armstrong, of the Babylon, is ill at present. Mrs. G. W. Anderson, of Wyom- ing, is visiting at the home of her father, Mr. Joseph Richardson, at present. Miss Celina Durand, of Drysdale, is the guest of her friend, Miss Emma Peck, at present. County Council, The Juno session of the county council opened itt Goderieh. on Tues- day of last week and by the follow- ing morning all the members were in attendance with the exception of Councillor Patterson, who was detained by family bereavement. The estimated expenditure for re- pairs on roads and bridges, the Warden said in opening the ses- sion, was unusually large, caused by the damage done by the heavy spring freshets ; $21,000 was retluir- ed to be spent according to the commissioner's estimates. The equalisation of the assessment was another spatter to come before the council at this session. Among the communications placed before the council was a letter trom the coon- cil of Ontario county, stating that they had passed a resolution in favor of the appointment of a corn - mission as an inquiry branch in connection with the department of Agricultural to investigate the best methods of road and bridge con- struction, and asking for co-oper- ation ; a letter from W. Proudfoot with reference to the recent flood at Port Albert; stating that Mr. 1 Schoenhalz thought that the coun- ty was responsible for the damage done and that the flood Was caused - by the present bridge being thir- teen feet narrower than the old one (Commissioner Ausley said he did not think that the bridge was any narrower than the olcl one and final that was not responsible for the damage) ; claims from Parkhill, Walkerton and Harriston high schools for the expense of Huron county pupils attending these in- stitutions (the last named claim amounting to 328.19) ; a notice from Listowel high school that they intended to charge this coun- ty for Huron county pupils ; a let- ter from Seaforth high school stat- ing that the expenses for twelve pupils from Perth County hacl been collected last year ; one from Olin-, ton to the effect that only two non- resident pupils were attending the- C.C.I. -40- FT; I-44, In Swede Turnip Seeds • We have Halls Westbury, Bartley's Bronze, East Lothian, Elephant or Monarch, also Grey- stones, ' at 20 cents per 1b, In Seed Corn We have the following varieties • Comptons Early, .,Angel of Midnight, Abun- dance, Early bun- dance,Early Butler, Bailey's Favorite and Mammoth Southern Sweet. Call and see before purchasing elsewhere. PRICES RIGHT. z rich = _ = Ontario. oa..,,a.. m,°0/_ • ai`m"Nin1 EAL WE Gardener—This here is a tobacco plant in full flower. Lady — How very interesting ! And how long will it be before` the cigars are ripe?—New Yorker' FarmersFavorite the world over. They are equipped with. roller and ball bearings and containing every modern improvement, these mowers are Light Draught Ideal Machines. Drills, Cultivators, Discs, Magnet Cream Separator, Woodstock Windmills. Cheapest and Best. Call on me before you buy. F. Deering Agency Z U b V A C • Just Listen, my Farmer Friends 1 If you want a good Plough Shoe, dV e have them—just what you want. We have, also, just the shoe for the Ladies in the garden and don't think we haven't got th.em for Sundays too Did you ever give the war a thought how it will effect the Give us a call while the old prices last, Price rice of Tea. 40 et. tea for 33,t ets. per lb. Greatest valve ever offered. If you try it you will be delighted with its flavor. WE ARE ALWAYS WITH YOU IN HIGHEST PRICES FOR PRODUCE. BLAKE, R. G. Mal a s L9 - ONTARIO. toff nqeun,,:qmy abIl fhTfun, a ,4 We know of rte offer we could make that would more thor- andfaith prove j our' confidence without one cent of cash from you until Oct., 1904 and faith Mit. If the Chat- ham Incubator is not all we claim for it you aro not out one cent. Chatham Incubators are made just as good as money and skill van make them. We haven't stinted in anything. Tho hidden parts are as strongly mado and as well dost Of se vice parts ey embody odyy''every realliml,roveiment knowho hardest in Otho manufacnd of ture of nd lo very Incu- bators. Cut out the coupon in the corner of this ad„ or write your name and address t" al :, en a postal card and mail it to us for full particulars of our oiler. Do it today. h There is big w!? profit in raising poultry if you go about it in the right way. Haif- 'f only half•preeaS fits. is f mean wN ar1t would get the full profit: out of this fruitful department of your bo. •.': ' farm you. must work under the best conditions: You can do this only when you use a Chatham Incubator and Brooder. We positively guarantee it to be a good hatcher and we sell It on the most liberal terms ever offered by any manufacturer. We will ship you—freight prepaid by us—a 'd'r qt "ti, up tan /lieu ator Mention this M. CAMPBELL FANNING MILL CO., Limited paper. DEPT. Into CHATHAM, OMT. - Y Manufacturers of Chatham Incubators and Brooders. -ryy, nlarihuting warehouses at Montreal; Qua; ,1:.•.1nc& Braudnn Etna.; Calgary, Alta,: Vaurovvor, .0 Halifax, r13 I'nelnries at Chatham, elft., and Detroit, Mieh. Also Mannrnetmers or the j1 ' ! . famous Campbell Fanning Mills. 101 lir. CG ¢" P • M. 1v, CAMPBELle FANNING MILL CO. Limited G$ATtiAltita MITE. DEPT. trio lease send your tlescrip. ttve Catalogue of the Chatham. •' Incuba'tor,together with allinfor- tnatIon about your special offer, whereby no Cash will be paid until October, 3904, O P.O. Adelnaa,., ...e it.. ,iV'artat ,P a lway Station Address all letters to Chiitaam, .ti