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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1919-12-12, Page 5FOR RENT Frame ballaingi 25x40, and 16 feet high, in good eondition. Suit- able for traw lewd or driving lied Apply to W. 'L. Seb:ert, Zurich. FOR SALE Ome good cItriiVing mare. Ap- ply to Herbert Hey, Babylon Line FOR SALE Good frame barn, 40x60, suitable either for bane of shed. Appy to M. C. Talbot, Bronson Line, 2 miles north of lBlake. Zurich. Meet MARKET Fresh and Salt Meats 'Bologna ,9,,ausages, etc Highest Cash Price for Wool CASH FOR SKINS & 'HIDES Tui & Deichert szt €17 Dr. E. S. Hardie DENTIST .At ZURICH EVERY WEDNESDAY DASHWOOD EVERY THURSDAY MAIN OFFICR HF.n7 ALL. .M.111•11011•11MR111•1111110111111.11101111.11.111•6•111.11.111111.11.' Salesman Wanted To Represent THE OLD RELIABLE FONT - HIL NUSERIES The ugreatest demand for Nursery Stock in Years. British and European Markets a- gain open for Canadian Fruit. Largeet l'st of Fruit and Ornamen- tal Stock, Seed Potatoes, etc., grown in Canada Write for Particulars Stone & Wellington Establiahed 18;7 NOTLCE CREDITORS In the Estate of Frederick .H. s, Sr, late of the Villa.t, of Zurich, in the County of Huron, Gentleman Deceased. NOTICE is hereby given pursu- ant to the Statute in that behalf, that all pereons having any claims against the estate of Frederick Hess, Sr., who died on the 12th Nov ember, 1918, are requ:red on canbe-' fore the 15th Deeelraber, 19t9, to! aenci by Post or deliver to the un- dersigned Anna Louisa Hess and; ,rerd:mand M. Hese, Executors of the Will of the .said deceased, full particulers of their claims; and I that after the said December 15, 1919, the said Executors will distr-' lleate the assets ot said deceased! among the persons entitled theret3 having regard only to the claims of which they shall then have and notice, and that the said Exeeat- WS will not be liable for the said meets or any part thereof to any person of whose elahnnotice shall mot then have been received. Dated at •Zurich the 18th day of November, 1919. Anna Louisa Hess, Ferdinand M. Hese. Executors. TORONTO, ONT. GRANDMA USED SAGE TEA TO DARKEN DAM She mixed Sulphur with it to Restore Color, Gloss, Youthfulness. Common garden sage brewed into a heavy tea with sulphur added, will turn gray, streaked and faded hair beautifully dark and luxuriant. Just tt few applications will prove a revela- tion if your hair is fading, streaked or gray. Mixing the Sage Tea and Sul- phur recipe at home, though, is trim- biesome. An easier way is to get a bottle of Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound at any drug store all ready for use. This is the old-time recipe improved by the addition of other in- gredients, While wispy, gray, faded hair is not sinful, we all desire to retain our youthful appearance and attractive- ness. By darkening your hair with Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound, no one Can tell, because it does it so naturally, so evenly. You just dampen a sponge or soft brush with It and draw this through your hair, taking one small strand at a time; by morning all gray hairs have disappeared, and, atter another applitation or two, your hair becomes beautifully dark, glosses soft and luxuriant. Ting preparation is a, delightful toilet irequisite and is not Intended for the Cure, rrilttgation or prevention of WA - CO). ITEMS OF LOCAL INTEREST It pays to advertise in the Her- ald. For a mice Xmas. Gift ha ,re a 1:xl.x of calling Cards printed at the 'Herald °Mee. We have pir chased some Cover hotney from Eastern Ontario to sup ply customers at home, as we had 'none in this district. Price 30 cents per ib. We have a small quantity of buckwheat honey at 20 cents per lb. J. Haberer & Sons. Discussed county road system. at length, with no definite result. With regular whiskey at $15 a quart demand for rasi,n whiskey has increased to such an extent that there is practically a aaian famine in Detroit,. Despite ef- forts of Gtoverniments operatiives the var:tous stills are tiurning this out in great quantities and the pedlars are disposing it at $5 a quart. 3O RN Doerr—In Exeter, on Nov. 82th, to Mn, and Mrs. H. W. Doerr, a son, (Jack Vivanal Masse—At Bronson Line on Nov. 27th, to Mr. and Mrs. Paul Mass3 a son. DOINGS OF THE COUNTY COUNCIL Received and accepted resigna- tion of Donald Patterson, county engineers, and appointed his son, T. Roe Patterson, in his place. Postponed definite action with reference to proposed hospital grants. Refused to take action for the formation of 'a new school insp- ectorate, refused grant to muntcipaities towards war memorials. .W C. T. U. NOTES A Timely word was uttered by one or the speakers at the Conven-. tion of Women's Institutes in Toronto last week upon the pre- vailing immodesty in female dress The matter s a serious one, the more serious because many of the offenders against good taste and good morals are unconscious of their fault. Innocent at heart, they have simply 'followed ,fashion blindly and unthinkingly and are not aware that their painted faces and suggestive garb are an offence to everyone whose good opinion is North possessing. The remedy is hard to fend. Fashion is an inex- orbalo tyrant from. whose bondage it is all but impossible to break away. Our best hope is in the mothers. They only can speak with the plainness that the case requites,. But if they want to know how real the need for a,ct- ion is any man can tell them. Pres byterian and Westminster. ill KILLOSA. nes a K4 CRE ENDED BUSINESS CARDS .1 ^I, SUIICII,Or • , e.tries, Pete,: Offiee, oi, ane sloe, ifamiiter, neteli stsvei n,.1$ to lotto at la ...,tes W Fitottortaer, K. 0. J. --:••• J. D. Onyx,: Mr, Cooke win be in lieue t „easy arid AaLarclay of ea.cl. OSCAR KLOPP Licensed AuctiOneer for Lhe Co 'Linty of Huron, Sales conducted any part of the county. Charges moderate and satisfactiou guar- amteed Address Zurich, R. 2, or phone. Zurich. ANDREW P. HESS, Notary Public Com missioner, Coeveyancing, Fire and Lae Insurance. Agent Corporation and Canad4 Trust Co Herald Office. Zurich. VE POU LT RY WANTED TAKEN EVERY SATURDAY FORENOON Do not feed fowl same morning when brought in. Highest Cash Prices --CASH FOR -- Cream and Eggs W. O'Brien Phone 94. Zurich Delaware & Hudson Co.'s LACK sr's- COAL Also soft coal. Our terms are cash on delivery. its,v l !Isl, ,t, HENSALL ONT. FOUND Found --A. men's vest, on .. Zuitich Road near Hensall. Same can ob- tain it at Herald Office by 'pay- ing for this ad. . +—+ CABINET MINISTERS' SALARY The salarres of the different cab- , miet Ministers in Ontario are as follows; Prem.7er gets $12,000 a 1 year. and the other ministers $6,- 900 each, and the leader of the Op- posStion $5,030. In addit'on they receive the sessional indemnity of $1,400 paid. all mernbers. Ron. .1 , B. Lucas, late Attorney -General, I as rezeived $4;000 as a member of the Hydro -Electric Com. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children In Use ForOver301(ears Always bears the Signature of tnet9,e1-9 ----I.-- WHAT A NURSE FOUND. • While making her visiting rounds one morning a nurse of the Muskoka Free Hospital for Consumptives dis- covered a particularly sad case. On a, dingy street, in a hovel which they called "home" she found a mother dying of consumption. The house was in. a filthy con- dition, soiled garments., unwashed dishes, and food, ]ay about, even in the bedroom itself there stood a loaf of bread and an uncovered bottle of milk. Amidst lt all two children p/ayed, both too young to help or to realize that they would soon be left alone. The mother died before an eartbu- lance could be summoned. This is but typical of the wastage of consumption; the poor are its especial victims. Too ill to work they are unable to supply even the neees- sides of life. You will wish to help. This can best be done by assisting our Hospital work. Contributions may be sent to Sir William Gage, 84 Spading avenue, or George A. Reid, 228 College street. Toronto. NOTICE Subscribers of lime Hay Teleph- one Sys:ern would do well to reme miner that when a non -subscriber uses their telephone a charge of ten scents a message is made at the central office against such subscriber's phone. . a G. HESS, Manager &witch Central MUCH TO BE THANKFUL FOR At a church conference a speak er began a tirade against the un- iversities and education, e,s.press- ing thankfulness that he had never been corrupted by contact with a college, • 1 1 After proceeding for a few rain- utes, the bishop, who was in the chaise interrupted with the ques- tion ;.( "DO I understand that Mr. Dob son is thankful for his ignoraneen "Well, yen,"was the answer ;you can put it that way if you like) "Well, all I have to say," said theprelate, in sweet and musical tones—al II Have to say is that he has much to be thankful for.' One humorous woman, writing to her father, declared that already there had been ap great impro- vement in farm conditions, since the women got the vote. The cowa were giving more and rich- er milk the hens were laying lar* ger eggs, the pigs were cutting I down the squeal and adding to. their avoirdupois, the hired man I was acquiring the habit of getting up at the first call instead of sie-,; eping half morning away and not being on deek until 4 eats, the rata in the bin were sorting over teh grain and eating only the mill stuff, the windmill runs with a less, amount of wind; itt akes few- er ',sponse to make a barrel of eider, listeners on the rural tele-: phone finnd gossip juicier, the water in the creek doesn't get so muddy after a. rain, and so on ght through one concession after .4 another. OLD MALEDICTION ItIrl'TEROD AGAINST HAP1HIRGS. It Has /Icon Fulfilled to the Last Item During the Past Seventy Years and Grandson of tho 4'Cuming • Countess" Now Orcupies Place at Honor Among Hungarian Stated - men. IT is just seyPnty years since Countess Karolel„ Htnsgarian noblewoman, whose son's life had been taken because he was one of the Hungarian rebels in the uprising against the Hapsburgs ir 1848, cursed Emperor Francis Jos. eph in words which have been re- called over and over again by the whole world as one borror after an- other has befallen the House of Hapsburg. Now her grandson, Count Michael Karolyn president of the Hungarian National Council, is lead- ing the ancient Hungarian national movement at last to victory, and la telling the world that a successful revolution has been waged in Buda- pest and that the government is in the hands of the National Council. Evidently the long, long fight of the Karolyi fatnily has not been in vain, and with the years the ancient, nega- tive curse has passed into a positive and constructive warfare, not for the defeat of the royal family so much as for the final independence of the Hungarian people. "May heaven and hell blast his happiness! May his family be exter- minated! May he be smitten in the persons of those he loves! May his life be wrecked, and may his chil- dren be brought to ruin" were the words of the Countess Karolyi. Em- peror Francis Joseph was only eigh- teen years old then and had just been made emperor with the abdi- cation of Emperor Ferdinand, and perhaps the boy was too young to deserve so harsh a curse for the poli- cies and traditions of his lino. And perhaps it was Rot the curse, but rather the Hapsburg tyrannies which had inspired the curse, which brought on the long series of scan- dals and sorrows and sudden deaths visiting the Hapsburg house. At any rate, the long series came, lasting all through the long, seamed life of Francis Joseph, and going on until now, after he himself had raercifully been taken away. The elder Karolyi, uncle of the present count Michael, lost his life to the same fight which Michael is winning now. He was the brother osf Count Aloys, the famous Austro- THirtigarian diplontatist, and of Count Stephen, father of Count Michael. Their mother, "the cursing coun- tess, was a Karolyt only by mar- riage, but she was fiercely loyal to the traditions of her husband and her sons, and rebelled with them in the uprisings of '48. It Was the same light for a Hungarian national inde- pendence in particular and for lib- eral ideas in. general. In 1830, there had been mutter- ings of the storm, but the storm it- self had been delayed. Historians call it the age of transition, when til over the earth nationalities and in- dividuals began to assert themselves as separate and individual entities. The people wanted a constitution, and they wanted freedom of thought and speech, and a country of their own. The Hapsburgs had no minct for understanding these new things. They were, as may be seen from Princess Melanie Metternich's diary, naively surprised at the new ideas. They had married and intermarried among themselves until there was no room or chance for the glimmering of a new mentality. They had grown to be a little insane themselves, and so they thought the people had gone mad. The old emperor was kind, lett weak, a little feeble, so he did the easy thing- and turned it all over to young Francis Joseph. And all that Francis Joseph and the men he had around him knew to do was to hang and shoot and take the heads off the rebels. Statutes of 1723, it seems, had said that Hungary was indepeits dent. But the Hapsburgs had for- gotten. One entegral state—was the Hapsburg idea, reiterated- madden- ingly. And the people reiterated al- so maddeningly, that they would re- cognize no Hapsburg emperor until he had been crowned by their arch- bishop of Pesth, and sworn to obey the laws of the kingdora of St. Ste- phen. They didn't talk the same language at all. "It is one of those forgetter. -wars," says a historian, writing before this war. But it is a forgotten war no longer. And the Karolyis never diel forget. A Vienna paper, when announeing the assassination of Francis Joseph's wife, the Empress Elizabeth, re- coursted baldly and boldly the mis- fortunes which had eome upon the royal line since the countess sponts her maledictions. "On Jan. 30, 1889," says this terse sh',et, "Crown Prince Francis Ru- dolpli took his own life in his hunt- ing -box at Meyerling. In May, 1807, Sophie, Duchess d'Alencon, al one time the affianced bride of Lvelwie 11 ef Bavaria, was burned to death In Paris. On June 16, 1867, the len- peror 'Maximilian of Mexieo, the ene neror's brother-in-law, was shot by n tiring party at Queretaro. His con- sort, the 13elgian princess, Marie - Charlotte, lost her reason, and has been for the last thirty years under restraint at the Chateau of Bouchout. 1.re1m duke William Francis Charlea died in .tho ansaraer or I se& id, . .1•?.n.st•SsOne . Children Cry for Fletcher's Fletcher's Castoria is strictly a femedrfor Infants and Children. Foods are specially prepared for babies. A baby's medicine is even more essential for Baby. Remedies primarily prepared for grown-ups are not interchangeable. It was the need of a remedy for the common ailments of Infants and Children that brought Castoria before the public after years of research, and no claim has been made for it that its use for over 30 years has not proven. What is CASTORIA? Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. For more than thirty years it has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhoea ; allaying Feverishness arising therefrom, and by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Comfort—The Mother's Friend. GENUINE CASTO IA ALWAYS Bears the Signature • ••••.i r ; In Use For Over 30 Years THE CENTAUR COMPANY. NEW YORK CITY tases,,,..sasesesse, sre ssees ens; tenessientinfatlOiennesniscnaltnes7ntreS The Prince of Wales A 1Lrge photo of the popu'ar neir to th.t, Throne for all Herald read- ers. The Family Herald and Weakly Star or Moniraall:ave se u.e.1 tke clusiVe rights for all Canada tor a real good photo, 16x22 inches, of the PrInce of Wales. It is by VanDyke, the celebrated London, England photographer, taken on the eve of the Frince's departure for Canada, Tho Herald has made arrangements with the Family Herald and Weekly Star whereby we are permitted to include the Prince's photo in a clubbing offer. We now make the forowing offer, good only until December 31st,1919 The Fam'ly Herald and Weekly Star one year, cost $1.25. The ZurSch Herald one year, $1.25. We offer both papers for one year each, and an outographed copy of the Prince of Wales portrait, size 16x22 inches, all for $2.35. All orders to be sent to this office, HERALD Printong Co. Zurich. WARNING—Thi.s offer is good only until 31st 1919, when it is -ann- ounced the price of The Family Herald wIll be $1.59 a year. vimmoleY01•01111.141 ANNOUNCEMENT I have taken the contract to handle Ford parts and will stock a complete lime of genuine Fora repairs. Bring your Motor car troub:es to us. We specialize on any make All repairing guaranteed. We repair not experiment. 11. Mousseau Zurich GARAGE STAND AT T. JOHNSON 'S FORMER ,FURNITUeE STOoE Baden, near Vienna, from injuries sustained through a tall from his horse. Archduke John of Tuscany, who hag. resigned his rank and taken the tame of John Orth, disappeared on the high seas off the coast of South America. King Ludwig II of Bavaria, the erapress's cousin, coat- snitted suicide on June 13, 1 885, Sy drowning himself in the lake of Sternberg in a fit of insanitt Coant. 'Ludwig of Train, Prince of mime Iwo Sicilles. husband of Duches.e, Matilda. m Bavaria, the sister of the (quell se, crennsitted nuiride at Zurich, Arch - ALMOST A WHOLE FAMILI. PERISH. Two sisters, sole survivors of a once happy family, greeted us plats- antly„ as we visited in a sunny 'Ivard at the Muskoka Free Hospital. • The mother and several other members of the family had died cf consumption, and the plague had 'marked these two girls also for its own; but fortunately they were, found in time. One of them said: "I feel the Hos- pital has done me at great deal of good; evetything is. lovely, and I like it awful well." The other: "I have gained twelve .pounds, end think 't will be able to go home for good in six menthe." Sueh i he work of the Ittentolut Free Itospitel for Com -tempt ivrs. Thousands of grateful patients van testify to the leap they have received therein. It costm a great deal of money to carry on the work. Will you help? Contrinutions may be sent to Sir 'William Gage, 84 Spading avenue, or George A. Reid, 228 College street, ';,"oronte. 1.1.foRt.0-41,E.1.4.4,..0.•••11..E.,4•••••••••••*•••••......1.0.1.4 MINE HOT TEA FOR A 13AD COLD Get a small package of Hamburg Breast Tea at any pharmacy. Take a tablespoonful of the tea, put a Cup of boiling water upon it, pour through a sieve and drink a teacup full at any time during the day or before retiring. It is the most effective way to break a cold and cure grip, as it opens the pores of the skin, relieving congestion. Also loosens the bowels, thus driving a cold from the system. Try it the next time you suffer from a cold or the grip. It is inexpensive and entirely vegetable, therefore safe end harmless. HUB BACKACHE AND LUMBACO RIBFIT OUT Rub Pain and Stiffness away with a small bottle of old honest St. Tabobs Liniment When your back is sore and lame or lumbago, sciatica, or rheumatism has you stiffened up, don't suffe.ri Get. a, 30 emit bottle of old, honest "St. Jambe Liniment" at any drug store, peer a little in your tenet and rub it right into the pain or eche, and by the time you count fifty, the soreness and ;Ally crirplisal This soothing, penetrating. oil needs to be used only once. It takes the ache and pain right out of yore, back and ends the misery. It is meeisal, yet absolutely haleness weal deesen levet Ileo sntin. Nothing else eieirs lumbago, -seiatioa and lame back. reiscre so 1iromptly1