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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Herald, 1901-04-05, Page 5-` ..-�..�..���=.—_i _. .._.�_______ '..-rr..ny+M•-,.nw.WV.r4nr+�'--r�.l.hi LPRIL21.1 90 ys i a,m CsP rj Ir �',. 0 O Els ULY 11 tQ Iat To rectuce my stock 1 will give you reductions o several lines to clew-. It will be to your in= terest to call and purchase your Spring and Summer goods while this sale is on a : : :: . r Dress Goods, Silks, Trimmings, Laces, Em- broideries, all to be i cleared out. L 1 Millinery stock com- plete in all the newest and leading lines, and managed by practical ]iauds. All millinery stock to bo cleared. 'IMMIWPErVakTha 4,4 A heavy stock of "'ready=to=wear Clothing, Boots and Shoes, Slip= pers, yJal E .t,�; be cleared ort dur= ing this sale : • iltafalleatiaNIMM tan Alesiy:.i '.14":4~Bt;; Ya. tbi. 0 : rate FARM PRODUCE TAKEN IN EXCHANGE-. riginFMMang s- 3,7i?f'db17?a' WPWR ',l` S 777- a' : SeSESI? fele ht 111 I'S 10 2;, ashwood E 1r t d,5tfJa 11. i t a'sTi�a OR TI -IAT TIRED FEELING TRY Our Job Department is fully equipped, and when. you need a "business tonic" don't fail to give us a trial. RESULTS ARE CERTAIN. THE ` iERA.LD pydatememelORE THE ZURICH HERALD t'le house at the time appointee., find in the severe ere weather of our Canadian winter those who remain wafting etre liable to take cold, Let arrangements be made before- hand too that the service may be concluded and the hearse ready to leave at the hour announced. An- other suggestion : As a rule mien - ton is made in the churches of those who died in the preceding week, and in many cases services are held in their memory. This can be done in warmth and shelter, and renders unnecessary long' ser- vices on the clay of the funeral. It would be well if an earnest effort were made by all religious bodies and lodges to shorten, if possible, ell arms of service for the dead on the day of the funeral, remember- ing that the weather is no respec- ter of persons, and that many cases of serious illness; may bo traeed to the victims having Caught cold while waiting for a funeral to start, LXTTL4 FE *IININTE FXXIN'G•a.. • The Pretty Odds and Ends that Give . Distinction to a Costume. Among the pretty odds and ends - d,l,.'tfi with shirt -waists be worn wt �. white shitt i4 are ties of half-inch black velvet ribbon finished at each end with a gilt pendant. The ribbon is cut a yard and a half Tong, and passes around the neck once, and ties in the front with two even .loops and ends. Narrow four -in• hancl scarfs have the ends slightly gathered and fin- ished with wide fiat pendants. Ribbon collars have the ends gathered and thrust into the open top of a gilt spike, The newest thing in the way of a beltfastener is a buckle in the form of a brooch which pins the ribbon or velvet belt in place in the front. The rage for dangling ornaments seems to be upon us, and bolts of velvet, silk and ribbons are finish- ed with rosettes, of, narrow velvet ribbon with from two to eight ends from fifteen to twenty-five inches long finished off with gilt pendants. Black velvet ribbon continues to be popular, and where a quantity of it is used even the most fashion- able dressmakers use the cotton - backed. The new and pretty trimming used so much on evening gowns and silk bodices cannot be purchas- ed read.ymacle, but fortunately it is not difficult to make. It is used to finish collars, revers. yokes, etc., and is really a tucked ruche of mousseline.—April „ Ladies Home Journal. G A funny story connected with a couple not a million miles from Zurich is going the rounds, to the effect that a married lady had a birthday a short time ago upon which her husband presented her with a pretty piano lamp. He was much flattered when told she in- tended to give it his name, until he asked her the reasons for such a peculiar proceeding. "Weil" she said, you know dear, that it has a good deal of brass about it, it is handsome to look at, it is not re- markably brilliant, requires a good deal of attention, is somewhat un- steady on its feet, liable to explode when half full, flares up occasion- ally, as always out at bed time, and is bound to smoke Level Headed. A correspondent in the Brus'ivls Post writes as follows :—Your cor- respondent world like to suggest the need of reform in the manner of conducting funerals, in regard to which it is the frequent ground of co nplaint that they do not leave YOU CAN MAKE THIS TEST You can find out if the kidneys are clogged, deranged and diseased. Have you backache or a weak,larne• back? Do you have pain or dif- ficulty in urinating or a too fre- quent desire to urinate. Are there deposits like brick dust in the urine, after it has stood for 24 hours? If you have any of these sylntoins not a moment should be lost in obtain- ing Dr Chase's Kidney -Liver Pills, the world's greatest kidney cure. On pill a dose, 25 cents a box. There is only one way in which a plant can be forced to branch, and that is by cutting off the stalk. The plant thus interfered with will make an effort to grow, and either a new shoot will bo sent up to take the place of the lost top, or several shoots will bo sent out along the stalk. If but one starts cut it back. Keep up this cutting back process until you have obliged as many branches as you think aria needed. Persistency and patience will ob- lige the plant to do as you would like to have it do. April Ladies' Home Journal. A word to the young. man from the country when he comes to town —don't make a guy of yourself by, cocking your hat on one side, wear- ing the highest collar and the loud- est necktie you can: find, by talking big and loud and puffing cigar smoke into the faces of passers-by, by swearing and bragging and as- serting an offensive brutal individu- ality. The town breeds:enough of this type and the attempt to ape them is to belittle you, and your community. The Bronco buster style will make you no friends nor command for you any respect. Be a gentleman when y o n come to town, k:! RACY L. ' RAOYOLE In the name "Racycle" Racycle" you have all ------------ -n__ Tm.�.�_� . ----- — that implies good In a bicycle==one "5 d,vs AMEA OF THEM NEW,. EDITION JUST ISSUED NEW PLATES THROUGHOUT Now Added 25,000 NEW WORDS; Phrases, Etc. Rich Bindings 2364 Pages at 3000 Illustrations Prepared under the supervision of W. T. Harris, Ph.D., p.,L.D., United States Commissioner of!Education, assisted by alarge corps of competent specialists. BETTER THAN EVER FOR'iGENERAL USE Also 'Webster's Collegiate Dictionary with Scottish Glossary, etc. t" First class in quality, second class in size." .tp°Ofhten pdg6 EPC' n/dotk enoks sent oil dyplr Ytlidn 'i �,. & C MEF'E'ttIAIV CO , Fsubl Piers, $pringf seld; lttlast , 1 'i DR5. slj Ito other Medical b'irm in the world has the establ shod reputation for curing Alen and Women that Drs. K. & lf. en•ioy. 'their Now iMdetlnoc1 Trout - meat, discovered and perfected by these i:uninent Specialiste, has brought joy, bappiuess and comfort to thousands of homes. With 30 years experience in the treatment of these diseases they can Guarantee to Cure or no 1• 'ay—Lmis•• c one, Nervous Debility, Syphilis, Varie..ccic, Stricture, Gleet, Secret Drains, Impotency, bext°ai sand Nitentral Wcakuetoo, r ul- nae ands Bladder Diseases. Their guarantees are backed by Bank Bonds. MEN F You may have a secret drain through tho urine --that's the reason you feel tired out in the morning. Yon are not rested. your kidneys ache. you feel desponde-t nd have no ambition. Don't let your Life Mood be drained' away. Drs, i , 114 i?. guarantee to Cure or no Pay. Syphlli, is the scourge of mankind. It tray not be a crime to have it for it may be inherited, but it is a crime to allow it to regnant in the system. Like father— like son. Beware of Mercury and Potosi/ treatment. Drs, K. & K, positively cure the worst cases or no Pay. The Now Method Treatment cures these diseases safely and surely. No pain—no suffering—no detention from business. Don't risk operation ttnd ruin your sexual organs. The stricture tissue's absorbed aad can never return' Drs. I:, elt 3L guarantee Cures. Kid,eys tx Don't neglect your lcidneya. Yoar acting boa tells the talo. Don't lot Doctors experiment on you. Drs. K. & K. can cure you if you are not beyond huma.t ald. They guarantee to Cure or No Pay. CURIES GUARANTEED. iso clams NO PAN': Cortauitrttion nooks, sent (sealed.) Write itooticss Blank for iomao Trca6eont.lavr�hiaitlConfidential. DRS: KENNEDY & KEl$GAN, 14S SHS I.alfmot rE ri;Cly A p 'x �W 7dd, ,, .. ��„ " �1iti „l:] <tbl"C as that is ,AtiP tL 091 NELMS THE NA ME We also handle o Berlins Cleve= lands Crescents Which we can sell to y o u cheaper than any other agent. RACYRACYCLE IMPLIES A CLE �r BICYCLE TriE' 400"--- NARROW TREAD -SEND D FOit\ CAT 419.6aft OUR CRAN HANGER Does IT. ;WHAT? 3AVE5 ;OVER 20% , PRESSURE ON . :,The i eARINAs, DUST PROOF CRANK HAM All our wheel° cJiAIN AND SPROCKET are guaranteed BETWEEN THE BEARiNG5, for one Season. OF 1NFRING MENT3. COVE US A CALL AND PE CONviNCED. That is t h e easiest running wheel on the market. That runs 50 per cent. easier than any other wheel in the world. That sells to the same peo- ple eo-ple year after year, for Ra - cycle riders never change their mounts. Give us a call for your re- pairs and re- pairing. • N. . Cook's Blyclee Shop HENSA L, ON A RiO .Senor bixto Loper Suggests that .guinalclo should be brought to the United State to tell the people the Filipino side of the story. 'No I the do is never broken, the chain is only lengthened ; For death alone can break the tie That binds the heart to home." Col. Dent, the British army agent, will purchase 1,000 horses here and ship them to England. as soon as possible, He will also recommend the establishment of reinuunt depots in the Dominion. "So I'" said Mr. Upjohn, in his most witheringly sa,rcast'e manner. "Johnny gets all his good qualities from you, and all his bad. one from me, sloes he?" "Certainly," answered Mrs. Up- john,triuuiphiant but calla. Doesn't the Bible expressly say that the sins of the fathers are visited upon the children?"—Chicago Tribune. "I expect that before very long the congregation will be in a place where it will not require so much effort to keep warm," announced a clergymam from the pulpit of a church down east recently when the temperature was near zero. Whereat there was a titter through the congregation. What the good pian meant was that he trusted the new church now building, would soon be ready for oecumpaney by the congregation. A scheme to catch farmers" is the way abont three-forths of the newspaper articles that are intend- ed to expose some swindling game are headed. As a matter of course the farmer is liable to get caught occasionally on games that are peculiar, but not more so than a great many people who live in town. In proof of this statement just keep your eyes open when some snide game strikes town and ,,you Cold Settles on theKidneys Exposure to cold and damp atmos- phere and sudden changes in the weath- er close the pores of the skin and thls throws the waste matter which should escape through the skin back on the kidneys. The effect upon these over- burdened organs is what is known as "cold on the kidneys," which usually develops into regular kidney disease or Bright's disease. The earliest symptoms of ailing kid- neys are backache, painful and scald- ing sensations when passing water and deposits In the urine. Immediately on the appearance of any of these indica- tions resort should be made to Dr. Chase's Kidney -Liver Pills, which will in a surprisingly short time set the kidneys and bowels in order and in- sure the return of health. Dr. Chase's Kidney -Liver Pills can be absolutely relied upon as a cure for every form of kidney and liver derange- ment. One pill a dose ; 25 cents a box. Dr. Chase's Kidney -Leiner Pills. will be surprised at the number of real smart people who will gather around and swallow the bait thrown out to them like a young robin at feeding time. It is the duty of newspapers to expose all swindling games, but the thing of trying to make it appear that the farmer is the only sucker is fast becoming a wormy chestnut. NOTICE All pers ins who are indebted to the late firm of Appel & Zeller, are hereby requested to call and settle their accounts as early as licssible. 19tf E..A PPEL, Zurich 1111•01111•111101•0•MON11114.M. 41111011111110•1.111•111111 THOROUGH BRED BERKSHIRE Boar for service, on Lot 16, Con. 15, Hay, j,114 miles south of Zur. ich road.] Terms $1.00, payable at the time of service, with the privilege of returning, if neces- sary. Wits, BEAVER, 27tf Zurich P. 0. FARM FOR SALE. S% Lot 14 L. R. E. Stanley 60J acres, is offered for sale by the un- dersigned. The farming land along this line is good and splendid gravel roads. Convenient to school, post office, &c. Apply to E. ZELLER, Zurich. CARM FOR SALE -200 acres of choice land, consisting of Lot i3, Con. 11, Hay, and Lot 19, South Boundary, Hay. Good bank bans, 44 x 82 fund 40 x GO, and frame dwellings on each lot. Plenty of gosd spring water. On one farm there is an overflowing well. On good gravel road,' and convenient to school, post office and churches, 6 miles to Exeter station. Will give purchaser easy terms of pay- ment, Wind power, equipped for pumping, chopping, straw cutting, etc. All buildings in good state of repair, with good large driving shed and other outbuildings. On lot 3 there is 12 acres of good bush, and on each farm one acre of orchard. For terms apply to P>tILTP HAitT- 1ttAN, Saropta, P. 0, 32-6no. RAILROAD SPOT THE SECRET SERVICE THAT QNE l SYSTEM MAINTAINS, Members of It In Every Department ),trout Yardmen Up—Curious Coat..: plications When Spotters 'Uul+rnowan to One Another Cross lathes, "Probably the most perfect spotter system achieved by any private cor- poration," says S. H. Adams in Ains- lee's, "is that of one of the big eastern railroads, which is to some extent modeled oa the secret service systern of some of the eastern governments, though by no means so complex, "So farreaching and so direct, bRw- ever, are its lines of communication that the president of the organization is himself kept constantly informed of the trend of affairs and the changes of sentiment among the employees of every division and subdivision of the whole railway system, and that with- out the knowledge of any other persons but his own special corps of clerks and secretaries. "Nobody but himself knows the en- tire personnel of the wonderful service that he has perfected. His agents are drawn from every branch of the road's operating staff. They are engineers, freight brakemen, passenger trainmen. conductors, signalmen, yardmen, sta- tion agents, track walkers and even division officials. Should that. road have a strike—and strikes are far less likely to occur than they were before the present system was put into op- eratipn—the president will have de- tailed warnings of it from all the storm centers long before the first mut- terings utterings find cautious utterance in the newspapers. "While it also acts as a defense against thefts by employees, this sys- tem is intended primarily to prepare. so to speak, a diary of the disposition, character, working efficiency and.senti- ments toward the road of the men who coustitute the vast human machinery of the corporation. The feeling which culminates in a general strike is not the result of one act alone, but a slow growth made up of many grlevances, real or fancied. "To keep track of the shifting mental attitude of his employees is the aim of this railroad president. If a; certain division superintendent has made him- self unpopular with his subordinates, information to that effect comes 'by underground wire' to the central office, and the matter is taken under advise- ment. If the newest fireman on the road attempts to stir up discontent by inflammatory talk, his views soon reach the official ear. Every leading spirit in the employees' organization is known to the president, who also knows whether, In case of trouble, the man is to be reckoned upon as a con- servative or a radical. "Sometimes this works out the man's career in a manner quite incomprehen- sible to him. For instance, Night Watchman Brown is shifted without cause that be can fathom from one di- vision to another. How should he know that rumors of trouble in tiia.t di- vision have reached the presidential ear and that he himself, being down in the president's little book as a. speaker of weight and a counselor of conserva- tive methods, has been shifted over to act as unconscious agent in checking a dangerous tendency? "Some of the admiring coworkers of the head of this system declare that in two minutes' reference to his collected. funds of information he can unroll the family history of the woman who washes the windows of car No. 41144X and tell whether, in her estimation, he himself is an oppressor of the down- trodden or a perfect gentleman. "Where so many invisible lines radi- ate from the same office it is inevitable that some of them should cross. Curi- ous complications result from contact between spotters as unknown to each other as they are to those whom they w. "Seveatchral years ago at a time of gen- eral labor troubles a certain railroad got no less than five reports from its confidential men informing them that an employee who was several degrees higher in the secret service of the road than any of them, had they but known it, had been making incendiary speech- es. "This was true. Matters had so shaped themselves that the man ac- cused had to appear as a radical in or- der to gain admittance to inner coun- cils where the important questions would be finally decided. To the cha- grin of the authorities they were oblig- ed bliged to transfer him. Had they not done so the suspicions of the men who make the reports would have been aroused. That spotters should know each other as such is held to be highly undesira- ble. There is always the chance that they might work in conjunction instead of acting as checks on each other." Tho Plight of Time. .4: masked man confronted me with a pistol in a lonely spot bn the dark road. "Cough up your chronometer." he de- manded gruffly. I fumbled for my 18 carat timepiece, thinking that my last hour was at hand. When I dared to look up, he had vanished with his plunder., Even then, such is the incongruity of the human mind, though rejoiced that my time bad not yet come, I regretted 1n my, heart that it had gone. Profits of Ignorance. °Why don't you. bookstore clerks know more about books?' "Madam, -we don't dare be Intake-. tuai, for customers would ask us so many questions that we couldn't make any sales." To a youth of 20 middle age Is froth 40 to 45. To a. young man of 40 laid -.- die age is from. 55 to 60,--Somervilkil Iowa), . 1