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Zurich Herald, 1919-03-28, Page 4
Tag HERS.leD 1 +iesugd Thursday afternoons from the DASHWOOD A ,1d� : Y TOWNSHIP, Devitt Johnston has sold ilia A 541001 Faii' 15 to be heli in sear 1 farm, on the 1 abylon Line to John villa;a this fail. Five schools ,Heid, who gets possession at once. 1 RAILD PRINTING OFFICE have )(Linea and are. sparing in Miss Diary Stugdill of Chathaixi leer= of subscription 0i.e5per year t.luorte to make it a lied Letter is 'visiting at her Hoare liege, In advaince; $2.0,0 may he charged! Dai, for the community. Reiff Li Ste:11v, chi 1v1arch. 25th, 'f 1 so aid. U. S. wubscripti- Air, kl. ,ii.owar'd anti sister, Mrs., to Me, amt Airs. Jas. M. Reed, Parr Lane, a son•. BEAV> R' RLADOW On the evening of March ?0th a number of the neighbors and fri- ends mat at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph c�asclto i-ttkz con., to. spend a social evening, previous J,•• I edicut church last Sabbath, Ad-{ g to their removal to their new home Effective after Jan 1st, 1919, i dresses were given by (.T. S, (low reeheh, ` Display Advert°sing-Ma.de known ai°et on Temperance, Ree-. W. .J The i PO p , 1 your $1.75 strictly ie advance.. No • English, of Drysdale called rm Lri- ,paper discontinued crani all a:1 enue in the village 'we: Saturday, rears are paid unless at the option Mr. - J. l,ellermian made a busin of the publisher. ,The date to ess trip to London one day last which every subscription is paid weelc, ;s denoted on the label. 1 T ntperance: Day and Pledge,l Signing was observed in the elven- ADVERTISING 1V 1 �.� Signing AD% L+i,TISIN`1 RA' isp ay '' evening was spent in games pea application. i Yage,: on Tobacco, and -Sup. Oes- rine music and during the comas Stray Animals—One insertion 50e treicher on Profanity. A number i of the evening •the host and host - three insertions {;1.00• signed the pledge. The annual; ess were presented With a •beant- Farm or Real Estate for sale ; business meeting of the Congreg Olen mahogany parlor table and 50c each insertion for one month ation will be held on Wednesday of l the following address was read; • of four insertions, 25e. for each; to nooMr. 1jnApril dCallfas has retur- subsequent insertion. Miscellaneous articles of not nod after visiting his sister in Thed more than five lines, Far Sale, To ford. gathered here this evening to ex-{ Rent, or Wanted, Lost, Found, etc.,1 Mr, Alfred Zimmer left last week press to you our high esteem for' eott and your family, and to -show our deep -appreciation of your good wel and fellowship among us. Woe - are indeed sorry that you ase so soon to leave us and ,we feel that your removal from us - will be a distinct loss to hte neighborhood and community. We are certainly clad to know that you are not gee Dear Friends;— We, the ;neighbor and friends on the 14th con., have] '(UST USE SPADE CAREFULLY old Battlefields Will Have to Bd Worked With CatoSheila. Count.* less Unexploded A great deal of careful spade worlt will be required en the northern part of France. Old battlefields covered with wild ilowers,`•as 1 have seen them, ob- tierves' a .Paris correspondent, are in wide stretches a slumbering menace. Months after the war Is over, naval men have told me, mines will still make voyages 'perilous in 'certain sea areas. For perhaps mane months more it would be equally as perilous for a fernier to plow these once fertile fields to the great war's battle swept areas. Here and there are danger signals indicating unexploded mines. And the immense power of these neves is eas- ily gauged by looking at 'the enormous craters where some of them have been "blown." The war has gone •on its way and left these souvenbse of its Intensity and deadliness. (Jere, there } and everywhere are unexploded shells, German "'ninnies," or Boche "jam. pots." What tau a "jain pot" doe I was talking with an officer who wes in a first line trench early in the war when one of these infernal mnchlues was lobbed over from the German lines. It stuck its nose in smue soft mud and di,I not explode. It was per- mitted to rest in peace by the battalion Hien in that part of the line. Another battalion came, and one man decided to fire into it with his pistol to explode it and thus remove the ever present menace. The bullet pierced it, but it did not explode. He moved closer and fired another shot, and they found nothing of him after the second shot each insertion 25a.. i for Detiolt. Local Reading notices, etc., iOc.1 Mr. Cleo. Kellerman has installed per line per insertion. No notice; a new boiler in his 'planing mill less than 25c. Card of Thanks 50c.1 anti is now about ready to supply Legal advertis eg 10e. and 5c. a f all lines of building material. - li'ne. • Set eral new phones aro being in Auction Sales, $1 for one inser stalled in town. tion and $1.50 for two insertions Rev. W.. J. Yager has exchanged if enoaerate size. Profes'sionai Carols not exceeding 1 new Chevrolet. i;ng so far from us, and that our 1 inch, $6 per year. Miss Mildred Schroeder of Lon-� iriendship need not be severed. Address all communications to dotis visiting her parents. Asa token of our love and ee Mrs. Wm. Schroeder and laugh -1y THE HERALD PRINTING CO. ter of Detroit are visiting Wahl teem for you, we sats ntothat sept this gift, as somethingg ZURICH, ONTARIO. relatives. .cars with Mr. E. Tiernan for' a wild help you to remember, that A prize of Ten Dollars is offered 1 ort 1 the old 14th Con., where you by the teachers of the West Huron •' have spent so many happy 'Years, A FARMER WAS CONVERTED to the section making the most friends tried and frac, You have • improvements to the property BY Twho dearly love you and �.vhose botlil village and country in the, prayers will follow you and yours, THEZi'ACT' '" so that when our workiters is way a. levelling and seeding ro ;A farmer drove into town the edsides, cleating up generally a-` ended we will meet in the Great Other day to get an old-fashioned round orchards, house and bards„ cededBeyond where there will be no article' —a buggy— and the sales- replacing road railfences with wire ' parting man at the implement store show- planting trees along road, etc. I Signed. ed him r • ' at i00. Le' '"Tall. .out the high cost of lit•- or her property is not an eye -sore ing," the farm: grumbled. `°I to the others, Let us all join and can remember teat my tether bou- see whet we can do, you will add ght a buggy exactly like that for' toA the�r. Ke value th of your property. t y.ur- $60 twenty years ago.'`; The salesman remembered the ich is visiting with freinds in town aj:e too, and he responded quick- Mr. W. Graybiel of Woodstock, mecca to the farm he purchased iy3 spent a few days with his par frena Mr..Schrag. "Your rather turned in 300 bush- 'lits, t t, els of hen to pay for it. Now, Mr. the Neighbors and at Pvv nroverts owner that his Friends. BLAKEMr. C. Schrag moved last week to his mew home on the Goshen Leine which he purchased from Mr. W. Fee, and Mr. Ross Johnston 1 t 1 ' You P11 c o better Mr. Wilbur Ehlers of De.ror Mrs. Jake Kennel and childteri are at present visiting friends ars than I olid spent the week -end in town. ,jp. by 'our rat:: You bring in Clara 1 Misses Grau nee, Martha Croupier and Clara Kuntz have returned home after spending -two weeks with friends and relatives in Elmira and Kitchener. your 300 bushels of corn and I'll let you pick out this list.” .rind the salesman wrote down; One $90 buggy. One $50 wagon One $20 suit of clothes. One $20 dress. One $5 baby dress. One $5 •crib, One $3 box of eig,aes. $2 worth of sugar. $1,5u worth of coffee. $l worth of tea. $40 worth of gasol' n �. $2,50 worth of lubricating oil• a bakery in our village. The total figured $210, the value Rev. J. A. McConnell, who has Of the 300 bushels of corn it had been i11 for some weeks, is rec- takerr to buy a $90 buggy twenty overing. eara before. The farmer climb -1 Mr. F. Datars has purchased three ed back into his mntoe car. ' lots at the -east end of the village "I guess I haven't got any kick from F. Bengough. - icominr on the high cost of living lie said. "Send out that $90 bug- HENSALL. Mrs. E. S. Ilardie hats returned from a months visit With relati- ves in Guelph and Toronto. T. J. Berry has sold his. Perch- -ero'n horse, Nerd, to R. Graham, of Renfrew Mr. .A.. Heist intends opening up EAT IESS ANC TAKE SATS FOR KftNEYS 'Take a glass of Salts before breakfast if your Back hurts or Bladder bothers you. CREDITON. 1-111G 0143 OF ALL KIN S HEST CASH P ICE PA1 3 ', I �. 1 I12urieh'. The inew list of publications of the Department of .Agriculture at Ottawa contains titles of about three hundred bulletins. circulars, and other pamplets that deal with agreeultura.l a!nd.hortieultural pur- suits, including dairying, field crops; iii stock, orchard and gar- den cm; s, poultry, insects and plant de. :ase, farm building con- struction, farm machinery and many otter topics. The subjects ares arraseeed alphabetically under general titles. Not only are the lists themselves available from the Publications Branch of the Dep- artment but any of the publicati ons therin contained. �„. New Hamburg. �tl}'z}�an,sideliem+eYat: tile are as good as clay Mist; Marion Douglas, w -i( Wast -til cif• Well made. Cement Rile visiting friends in this vicinity re- I ,should be made of one part of ce turned to her home near IIycle Park. Mr. Abraham Zapfe had' a wood bee on Monday. Quite a 'number in this vicinity are making Maple syrup and re- port a good run. Mr. J. Masse has moved to his new home recently vacated by Mr. R. Jobnstont. Miss Gladys Douglas spent a few days last week with friends in Hensalle A1r. .W J. Stevens of Brueefield called on friends in this vicinity on Monday. Mr. Clarence Parke is visiting friends in Bayfield. Mrs. Thos. Meyers is visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Meyers in the village. FARM FOR SALE 100 acres, in good state of cul - 4.—»b tivation and well drained, two. Mrs. Hy. Either is visiting re- good barns, one new; pig pen latives as Ubiy, Mich., at present, and chicken house. Good location 1 • el:ss Pearl .Holtzman,' of Cedar 1 beiing two and a half miles southl Falls, Ind., is visiting her parents here. Mrs H. L. Brown, of the Stand- ard .Bank staff, Calgary, Alta, re- cently visited his 'home 'here. meint and three parts of coarse well -graded sand screened through a sieve with meshes measuring one half the thieleness of the wall of the tile, They should be cnred slowly and thoroughly. (Cement tile made poorly or from •poor materials tend to go to -pie- ces in acid or strong alkali soils. Good tile give a clear metallic ring when lightly tapped with a hammer They should be dense hard and non -porous. Buy your tile of a reliable firm. - The Ameriean men and women frust i,rd constantly against Kidney trouble, because we eat too much and all our food 5s rich. Our blood is filled with nrie yaeicl which the kidneys strive to filter telt, they weaken from overwork, become sluggish; the eliminative tissues clog and '1hs result is kidney trouble, bleelder est d ess and a general decline in health. • .else, your kidneys feel like lumps 44. let t: your bark hurts or the urine is lee , fuli of sediment or you are ob .ed to seek relief two or three times xlu in; the night; if you suffer with sick headache or dizzy, nervous spells, acid 'stomach, or you have rheumatism when the weather is bad, get from your Phar-. anaciet about four ounces of lad Salts; Make a tablespoonful in a glass of •coater before breakfast for a few days rand your kidneys will then act fine. `This famous salts is made from the acid ref grapes and lemon juice, combined with elitism, and has been'usee for generations to flush and stimulate clogged 1'dneys; to neutralize the wide in the urine so it trio longer is a source of irritation, thus reading bladder disorders. *lad Salta le inexpensive; . cannot in. Ore, makes a delightful effervescent 3lithiawater beverage, and belongs in ieVery home, because nobody can make sa mistakeq,by h v'i>Itp 0 go1J4 N, obs 111,14P IOW attl. t14 EXL.,TER Mrs. Susan Davis passed away on March Pith after a short ill- ness. W. M. Clarke, organist and choir leader of the James St.Met- hodist church hasresigned and will accept a .similiar position, at Leamington, At Exeter, on March 19th, by Rev, J. W. Baird, Rhoda Jane, ich, has been placed in my hands Iiersiake was quietly united in marfor, sale. On the premises is a riage to Mr. Robert George Reid ,+ -good 2 -story modern brick rest of Varna. The bride is the third donee and -also a large brick st. daughter of Mr. John Kerslake off able, all In good repair. Plenty Mailn St. Mr. and Mrs. Reid left of good drinking water. For for their home where a grand.particulars apply to A F. Hess, reception was tendered them an :Zurich. ,£ lelnsall and two and a half • miles from Exeter, and .half a mile from London Road. Reasonable terms. For particulars apply to Herald Office. FARM FOR SALE Consisting of 150 acres, n1,6 lot 3 and 4, icon 16, Hay. All in first class - condition. Two good houses and large stables. Large driving shed. Plenty of good water. Good hard wood bush on premises. For patriculars apply to owner, Chas. Kellar, R. R. No. 1, Dashwood. • HOUSE FOR.. SALE Fine residental property in Zur their arrival. :Corp. S. 5. V, Cann, who recently returned from overseas, was a- . warded the Military Medal for bravery wh:,le im action. Mr. Harry Palmer, of Stephen, 1 and good bank barn, 42x66, new 1 last week delivered to Mr. L R. ly shingled, with cement stables !Armstrong one o f the largest hogs! and in first class repair. Land o g ever shipped front the Exeter sta- all improved. For particulars tip- tion, The animal }Weighed 740 lbs 1 ply, on premises, . E. Hendrick, The price paid was 15140 amounting proprietor. to $114.70. FARM FOR SALE 320 acres on Sauble Line, L. R. E. con , Hay, 2e miles south of St. Joseph. Good 2 -story brick house j.9- at, WHEN YOU WAKE- UP DRINK GLASS OF HOT WATER Wash the poisons and toxins from system before putting more food into stomach. Says inside -bathing makes any- one look and 'feel clean, sweet and refreshed. col 32 Volts, Semi -Automatic r ELECTRICITY APPEALS T:O YOU TO -DAY BECAUSE IT IS . USEFUL, ECONOMICAL, SAFE, CONVENIENT AND RELIABLE. ELECTRICITY WHICH HAS RIE!VOLUTI?ONItZE D 'WORKING. CITIES AND LIVING CONDITIONS IN THE SAME INFLUENCE IN THE COUNTRY ONTHE FARM. THE`:. A Northern Electric Power and Light Plant on your farm Will light your house, stable anddairy. Will run a separator or churn. Will wash the clothes and clo the ironing. 'Will run the 'sewing machine. Will operate. a toaster - Will operate a vacum cleaner Will pump water for your house and barns Will charge automobile batteries. It will make wife's work easy and reduce household expenses. The most complete plant on the market to -day. Not a :siingle plant but a line of plaints. A .size for every prospect. Wash yourself on the inside before breakfast like you do on the outside. This is vastly more important because the skin pores do not absorb impuri- ties into the blocel, causing illness, while the bowel pe: e , do. -•l+or every our .,' of food and drink taken into the ko tch, nearly an. Game of was' • 'vial must be ,r:eied out of tee ' If this waste Tial is not !.1, .,. •`d day by day .uicicly ft r td generates earses s+ which. are • bcd or 'o the blood :;m, t?trout l e•.. e (mets which rl see1: r •e vont to sus- the body. splendid h ai'i treasure is to before greet I, each day, a .,.•s of real hat weter with a tea- epoonful of limesto! ,. ehesphate in it, which is a h:arntic :::; way to wash these poisons, gases and toxins from the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels; thus cleansing, sweetening and freshening the entire alimentary canal before puttins; more food into tree stomach. • A quarter .pound of limestone phos- phate costs but very little at the dreg at ire but is sufficient, to make anyone an enthusiast on in ,,le-batbine, Men. aid women who aro menustomed tr svelte up with a dull. arching head o, l e t'nrrert tongue, tee tar tr. east'. 1 ieat'l, PPllow cone" ion, th re wiz( 1..11,. "Ity,c ver ed + r. 'nese nth ev.',• eppenran.oe Wee ;. Agent H. G. Bess Zurich lll Iii uiillinnnIIIIIIIIIIIIi1i1011I111O tUP170011UhIIIIMIIIII01IIIi I ullllm1I n y FIRST SERIES 0919) COST DURING —1919 — JAN.4.©0 FEB. i 4.01 AR. $x•.02: AP 8.$ 4.03 MAY$4.04 JUNE ,4.0 JULY$4• UG. e sc m tlttis `I i11e ',sat—[i�i'ia r t40,4,100mtc, -, OPTS 1' 1111111111111111P 1115 IPa 4005(0 01oi01t11111 m f'�PTI' the tEgt4tres Notice how the cost—and the cash value—of the stamp ad- vances each anosxth until, on the 1st day of January, 1924, the Dominion of.Canada is pledged to pay $5,00 for each W-S.S. soczawm,-,mommgazgasmseasontrassisan 101," ,,-c., . rriji cSIZE OP leffebilleemeineeeseessesesseete 25 FOR SALE Good 8 -roomed brick dwelling -with kitchen, in !Zurich. Also gar- den with plenty fruit trees. Apply to Mrs. V. isoohems, Zurich, Ont. 4t33 Dr. E. S. Hardie DENTIST At ZURICH EVERY WEDNESDAY DASHWOOD EVERY TTIURSD.A''lt`, NI AIN OFFIC1 11E0ALL