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Zurich Herald, 1919-09-05, Page 4.87 ''d Ml, tri''} � S.J •�Ips.r b,l ;. �..:b. Baking Always In Sight HF clear glass door is only one of the modern features of this dependable range. Its baking qualities you know. The cooking top will take the boiler either across or lengthwise, making it easy to cook the regular dinner on wash -day. Grates work smoothly. Hot water reservoir is enamel, and may be removed for cleaning. A dependable ther- mometer takes all guess -work out of baking. No other range will quite satisfy you once you see the Pandora. 13 FOR SA.LE BY D. Tiernan, Dashw4Od ciaupwinselesEsEz= THE .HERALD detailed Thursday afternoons from the THE HERALD PRINTING CO. i'erans of subscription ;`51.25 per year In advance; $.2.00 may be charged if not so paid, U. S. eu.bscrieti- ons $1.75 strictly i13 advance. No paper discontinued Nentil all ar- rears are paid unless at the option of the publisher. The date to 'which every subscription is paid is denoted on the label. ADVERTISING• RATES Effective after Jan 1st, 1919. Display Adve: casing -Made known on application. Stray Animals—One insertion 50c three insertions $1.00. Farm or ]deal Estate for sale 50c. each insertion for one month of four insertions, 25c. for each subsequent insertion. Miscellaneous articles of not amore than five lines, For Sale, To Rent, or W _..ted, Lost, Found, etc., earl: insertion 25a. Local Reading notices, etc., 10c. per line per insertion. No notice' less than 25e. Card of Thanks 50c. Legal advertising 10c. and 5c. a I thee. Auction Sales, $1 for one inser- tion and $1.50 for two insertions if moderate size. Professional Cards not exceeding 1 inch, $6 per year, Address all communications to HERALD PRINTING CO. ZURICH. ONTARIO. MUNE „Ear.WATER RCM COMPLEMOR Says we can't help but look better and feel better after an inside bath. ,To look one's best and feel one's best is to enjoy an inside bath each morns ing to flush from the system the pre- vious day's waste, sour fermentations and poisonous toxins before it ab- sorbed into the blood. Just as coal; ,when it burns, leaves behind a`cer- `tain amount of incombustible material in the form of ashes, so the food and drink taken each day leave in the ali- mentary organs a certain amount of indigestible material, which if not ;eliminated, form toxins and poisons which are then sucked into the blood through the very ducts which are in-) tended to suck in only nourishment; to sustain the body. If you want to see the glow -of, healthy bloom in your cheeks, to see; your skin get clearer and clearer, you are told to drink every morning upon arising, a glass of hot Water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in it, which is a harmless means of wash- ings the waste material and •'"toxins' from the stomach, liver, kidneys ands bowels, thus cleansing, sweetening and purifying the entire alimentary tract,' before putting more food into the stonde 'rich. Men and women with sallow skins; ,liver spots, pimples or pallid con- 'piexion, also those who wake up with a coated tongue, bad taste, nasty }breath, others who are bothered with !headaches, bilious spells, acid stomach or constipation should begin this phos- 'phated hot water drinking and aro assured of very pronounced results in one or two weeks. • A quarter pound of limestone phos- phate coats very little at the drug store but is sufficient to demonstrate that just as soap and hot water cleanses, 'pprifies and freshens the skin on the outside, so het water and litnestone phosphate act on the inside organs. We must always consider that, ;,internal sanitation is vastly more im- portant than outside cleanliness, be- cause the skin pores do not absorb impurities into the blood, while the 44°\ 444 0.,.- c� DASHWOOD Ourchoo1 Fair has been setior Oetobe.' '2. Sixty—six entries are listed besides sports. About $150 is to be .distributed in prizes. Wo are looking for a good time Mr. Arthur Graupn:r of .Fort Waynt•' spent a few days with his parents here. Mr. and Mrs, E, Bender of Blyth visited wtih friends here aver the week -end. Miss Dora Kraft of London vis- ited with her parents over Labor Day,. Mr. Milton Oestreicher of Nap - 'elevate is spending a few weeks at hes home. Mrs. Norman Kellerman and da- ughter, Kathleen, of Ki•tcheeer, visited here last week. Mrs Carnie and children of Bay- field visited with her sister, Mrs, G C, Howard. • I1 ss Euloins Guenther has retu- rned from a visit with friends in St. Jacobs. School opened on Tuesday with, a good attendance. The teaching staff consists of G. S. Howard, Principal; Miss Edmeston of Blyth and Mss Tiernan assistants. Mr and Mrs. Parison of Royal Oak visited with Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Held. 11?r. Loran Taylor of London was a vnsitor in town over the week- end. Miss Clara Graupner is visiting in Monroe Mich. at present. , Mrs. Hamacher has returned from al visit with relatives in Detroit. Miss Clara Brown of Kanloop, B. C. is Visiting her mother this week. EXETER • Mr. A. Kuhn has resumed his duties as manager of the Hank of of Commerce here after an absen- ce of three months owing to ill health. Jos. Hunter, 8 yeers old, of TJs- borne, was kicked in the face by a colt the other day and is critical'y ill, owing to the kick affecting a nerve in the head.. P. Dauncey's barn near Clande- boye Was destroyed by firs the other day when a spark from the threshing engine blew into.the mow. The loss is about $7,000 with $2500 insurance, Mr. Dann- ' cey's house was burned about two years ago. j CREDITON HENSALL. The other night thieves stole a�n i farm tools from Dry. Marlsfarm, west of here, to the value of about $100. An auto was seen •neat the place that night an'l itis thought that the parties who done the stealing were in it. Ed Scheffer sustained a number of broken ribs when he was hit by the •lianb of a falling tree in the bush the other day. Alf. Clark has bought the house recently ocupied by D. Nicol. ICaok Bros. have made large shipments of fruit from this stat- ion. Rev, Mr: Neely, of Victoria Har- bor, who has been supplying for Rev. Mr. McColnnell, has returned t'o hits homie. W. M. Harburn and sons have re- turned from Flint, 1Vlich. He has } purchased a house lin that city. 1 eue TRI(: SITUATION OF THE. TRAMP.SMALLISMALL DEEDS Red clover 'seeds will be very and high in price, Farmers e v erywherc ,should be interested in the situation Of small seeds. The price of alsike, alfalfa, esti*est clo- ver and timothy seed will be rel- atively high with red. sea what the Toledo market,. Ono of the main world markets ate�s on Aunt, 25 for Decemberdeliveries. For red clover $30 for alsiko $25.05 for timothy $5.70 per bushel. It seem. to bad this year to see cattle eating off fair to good red clover seed prospects in Central and Eastern Ontario. Be sure there is little or no seed in the second growth clover before tur- Inint' stock in it. Eliminate as far as possible the weed seed clan- ger by cutting. pulling or picking, them out of the seed crop when practical Don't cu, the kil:ed out or !thin spots, where foxtail, rag- weed, mustlyd and other weeds common ar�.d noxious are most pre- valent. Tleresh a lot of the hay which matured timothy seed and in many cases alsike and red clover seed as well, throughout Eastern and Northern Ontario where alsike grew like a weed this year. The fodder will not be injured for fe- eding and good money may be made from the sale of the seed as well. Where ox -eye daisy is a prevalent weed da not thresh out seed. Most ()thee weed seeds may be separeted.' Soni provision will be made for getting the threshing done by properly fitted machines that will do tho work satisfactorily where there is enough seed worth while and tar•? weeks or one monthis I threshing would be worth while. The Ontario Department of Ag- riculture will, I understand, send free of 'charge, an application., ex - pests to fit the ordinary threshing Zurich ... ... ... ... ... _Sept. „17e18 machines for threshing the small Ailsa Craig ... ... ... ... Sept. 23-24 seeds and will locate where second Blyth .'dSept. 22-23 hand hullers are availableavailableExeter .ept. 15-16 0. Fort • Oct. 1-2 Goderich ......... ... ... :Sept 15-17 Sirktdn • Oct. 2-3 Londor. .. • ... ... ... ... ...Sept :6-13 Good 3 -seated carriage, also two Parkhill ...Sept 18-19 good second-hand cream separ- St. Marys ... ... ... ... ...Sept X8-19 ators. Louis Prang, Zurich. S:eaforth Sept8 19 Thedford Toronto ... ... ._. .__ Aug 23 -Sep 6 Winngham ... .. ... ...Oct. 8-9 FALL FAIRS Mi.ss Sambrook, of Liverpool, E. is visiting her brother, W. A. Sam- rorook, at present. Mrs, Gordon Murray of Ham'lton addressed se veral large audiences inn the uinterests of the W. C. P, IJ„ recently, She is an eloquent spe-` aker. • Dr, and Mrs. Orme., Miss C., Beaver, and Mr, and Mrs. Herb K. Eilber attended Toronto exhib- ition this week. P Flanagan and Thos. Chamb- ers have left for a trip to the Pae ific coast. August Mil is laid up with an aback of sciatic. BEAVER MEADOW Thi rotes' list of poll No. 5, Hav for the roma* vote on the r:�fee- rndum will be posted up at the School Hous', S. S. No 12. ':Chis Still mak' it convenient for ever v.- one interested to sea if his or her nem - has been pleee•.i thereoo, W H. Ptile, Enumerator. WANTED Live Poultry taken every Satur- `"" 1.;..;; Fix:noon,--J, Gas:ho & Sona FOR SALE Salesman Wanted To Represent THE OLD RELIABLE FONT- RIL NUSERIES The greatest demand for Nursery (Stock in Years. (British and European Markets a- gain open for Canadian Fruit. Largest 1'st of Fruit and Ornamen- tal Stock, Seed Potatoes, etc., grown in Canada Write for Particulars Stene & Wellington to Established 1837 TORONTO, ONT. SALTS If BACKACHY AND KIBNEYS HURT Drink lots of water and stop eating meat for a while if your Bladder troubles you, When you wake up with baelfaelie MMd du]1 misery in the kidney region it gen- erally means you have been eating too much meat, says a well-known authority. Meat forms uric acid which overworks the kidneys in their effort to filter it from the blood and they become sort of paralyzed and loggy. When your kidneys get sluggish aald clog you must relieve them, like you relieve your bowels; re- moving all the body's urinous waste, else you have backache, sick headache, dizzy epees; your stomach sours, tongue is coated, and 'when the weather is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine is cloudy, full of sediment, channels often get sore, water scalds and you are obliged to seek aeiief two or three times during the night. Either consult a good, reliable physi- cian at once dr get from your pharmacist about four ounces of .lad Salts; take a tablespoonful in .a glass of water before breakfast for a. few days and your kidneys will then act fine.- This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to Clean and stimulate sluggish kidneys, also to neutralize acids in the urine so it to longer irritates, •thus ending bladder eveakeese. Jad Salts is a life saver for regular meat eaters. It is inexpensive, cannot injure and makes a delightful, gee - Towed lithia-wafter drink, �y gytr�' �T��,5��9�7��. ICN t.4.t� '04,,Yip#s4fit' f� c �stf�pf iF are farmers' best friends. When the old wind- mill fails to "water the cows" be prepared with a UNITED to pump water. And for scores of other jobs your UNITED will save you hund- reds of dollars. Run the washing machine, the cream separator, churn, grindstone and many other machines with this Handy, Reliable Power Plant. United 13A H. P. Specifications are Unequaled 33/4 M. Bore. 5 M. Stroke, 18 in. Fly Wheels weigh 40 lbs. each. Total approximate weight 350 pounds. 'Air Valve" fuel -saver carbur• a tor, Quick Speed Changing Device. Ask Us for Prices on All Sire Rngines ova" L. PRANG, Sole Agent ZURICH YOUR ATTENTION Our Stock of PLEAE Fall S s and bers is here. Coma in and let us show you our -line's. We can save you money - as wo sell at a close margin be- cause oar expense is. small. - 305. 5. BEDARD tI 1 DRYSDAL1 i I I I • ine SHE withstood everything in the field and above all was, and still is, the last and only car to survive until the cessation of hostilities"—Extract from letter received by Ford Motor Company from a British Soldier, in Africa. Over shell -torn roads, through water soaked fields, second only to the tanks in its power to climb debris and crater holes, the Ford car made a world famous record in the fighting area of the great war. In press despatches, in field reports, in letters, in rhyme and song the praises of the Ford were sounded. In France - 700 cars out of 1,000 were Fords In Italy - 850 cars out of 1,000 were Fords In Egypt 996 cars out of 1,000 were Fords In Mesopotamia 999 cars out of 1,000 were Fords The Ford e powerofp dant that established this world-wide record will every theatre the war remains the same. It will be in the Ford you buy. + Ford Runabout, $660. Touring, $690. On open models the Electric Starting andLighting Equipment is $100 extra. Coupe, $975. Sedan, $1,175 (closed model prices include Electric Starting and Lighting Equipment). Demountable rims, tire -carrier and non-skid tires on rear as optional equipment on closed cars only at $25 extra, These prices are f. o. b, 'Ford, Ont., and do not include War Tax. • Buy only Genuine Ford Parts. 700 Canadian Dealers and over 2,000 Service Garages supply them. 11! COOK BIROS., Dealers, Hensali