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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1923-03-01, Page 6Pour 11 THE HERALD 'I wad Wedoeadey uoon from the lag HERALD pRilwriN, O 'E :C:E rlllative ,after Jan, tet. 1920 fitlraieription Tertns; $1,25 per year advannee; $2.00 may be charged alt riot eo pail, 17. S. esabserinti- alalic 11,75 stmietly to sdva,nce. No Panes' discontinued 'anti' all a.r- rrs are paid unless at the option Of the publisher, ''lie elate to arhieh every subscription ie paid. W. demoted on the label. A:DVI1RTISINO RATES :Display Advertisng: Made known application. Stray Animals -One insertion 50e reb insertions $1,00. ram or • Real Estate for sale $2 dor first month; $t or each sub: isequent insertion. Professional Cards not exceeding 41. inch, $5 per year. AUCTION . SALES -$2 per single inseertionb if not over five inches in %etigth, Local and Legal advertising not - toes, reading matter, 10e a line for *rat insertion and 5c per line for each subsequent insertion. ard of Thanks, In Memoriam, 50e, Mitseallarneous articles of not Shore than five lines, For Sale, To ':mat, or Waccited, Lost Found, etc., ., sea& insertion 25a, 'Address all communications to THE HERALD ZURICH, ONT. HENSALL. T. R TRAIN CONNECTIONS MORNING Stage leave Zurich .. 7.00 a.m' • South, No. 162 __ 8.58 a.m. North, No. 163 ... _.- -,.10.33 a.m. AFTERNOON Stage leave ,Zurich -:. ,3.00 p.m. South, leo. 164 4.50p.m. North, No, 165 ._ , 6.14 p.m; Bow to Bathe. Swimming is an art -a physical 5iuCeomplishment. Sea -bashing is a science. Sea -bathing rules seen to be liinit- e$ to-Don'tbathe just after a imeal; Zien't stop in the water when you 'a4iiv'er; don't get out of your depth. ;But -well, here's the science of the tiling. Undress. put an ywn' costume, aging something over your shoulders, .and sit on the beach for ten minutes. When half the ten has passed throw -idtf the "something" and sit without It. That is to establish, in two stages, stye aeclimatiiation of your body to the air temperature. The run from The bathing ,machine and plunge into the water -dubbed correct -is quite wrong! Wrong, also, after that ten-minute adjustment to bury yourself , beneath *he waves. Paddle for a couple of stninutes. Then in up to your knees, Then thigh -deep, waist -deep, and, fin - Tally, immerse yourself. You won't nay "Ouch! It's colds" because you 'won't feel cold. Cold is but a con- trast to heat, and if you have by ages adjusted ;a our body to thejotw asr air and water temperature -well, the contrast has gone! And when in the water keep wet! Drying, you see, means . evaporation, tend that abstracts heat. 'fi'eep wet! 'inlet is why swimmers, as distinct Isom bathers, are much warmer. It's mot the exercise; it's the water coy - taring. . Then there's the shivery feeling. Out, says the rule. Yes, out; but 'only for three minutes. Don't -with sa horrid feeling that your .bathe has been horribly short -go and dress. Sit on the beach, and put a thick -towel round your body. Cast it off latter two minutes, wait another two, and then return to the sea. No shiv ?rs then! „- Oriental Crowds. To occidental travellers the most ertyid impression produced by a first ruontaot with the Near East is the tsurprise of being hi a country where the human element increases instead at diminishes the delight of the,. eye, ways Edith Wharton in the 'Yale Re- iraeer. After all, then, the intimate harmony between nature and mere- -lecture and the human body that le *metaled in Greek art was not tan 'artist's counsel of perfection, but on Shortest rendering of reality; there alrere, there still are, privileged scenes where the fall of a green -grocer's • iraperies or a milkman's cloak er beggar's rags are part of the corn- losition, distinctly related to it in line and color, and where the natut:al. atnetudied altitudes of the J einttn %oder are correspondingly harmon- ious, however huuidrum the at•is it 1 engaged in. The discovery, to the .traveller returning from the Eitel, 'robs the most romantic s,ieenes of `western Europe of half their chant: In the Piazza of San Marco, ,in the s aarket-j lace of Siena, where a,t least the robes` of the procurators of the way tights of P.iiituricci'iio's striplings 'nee justified man's presence among Ade works, one can sec:, at first, mile the ouira,ge inflicted on beauty by 'Ute ':plentiful strutting manikins" of isle modern world, _Moroccan crowds .are always 'a feast to the eye. The •sittil'tiuet of skilful drapery, the smote of color subdued by custom, but % eeking out ie s''htle llinpsets un- ease, n- eas the universal ashy tints, make oie.hum blest assemblageat daukey min and water -carriers an ever-re- tilewed delight: Jade. The world's ,i.. s pilncipal jade mine is tltarnta, where the privilege of en'inhig the stone has been in the -giossiussion of title tribe for Iuany gtrn. entitiOnat - STEDY OF UFE Who Knows Where It Comewv From or What 6t !et Marked Difference Between Meakin i' and the Wild Things, in Their View of Death. - Lewer AnimalsLit- tle " Impressed. Some folks talk about "the mystery sof life," and it is as good a way as any to -;peals :of it, icor, truth is, nobody seems to know anything about life, Yet everything pays more attention to living than to anything else. Trite, tieall�' every motive e in the world, among the wild things, is to Bye. 'Not even roan, with all his knrnvl- edge, knows where life comes I'om, or what it is, George I', Barba writes in the Columbus Dispatch, It just the opposite of death, he will tell you; one either lives or dies. It he is living, the hotly is in a certain condition. Tile blood flows through the veins. The heart beats. The body. is warts. (Me is .conscious of that which goes on about hitn. The very opposite is true wizen a thing is. dead, whether the thing is a man or dog ora bird or a fish. But the why of it all -nobody understands that, The wild things strive with all their might to escape dearth, but they pay little attention to the dead things about them. It doesn't seem to make any impression upon an animal to run up- on another animal that is dead, out in the woods. They fear death, but they do not respect the dead, nor show any emotion in the presence of death. They do not know what it is -that is, they do not knowthat the dead crea- ture they. encounter in the woods is' dead and clone foe. If it is something they want to devour, they devour it; if it Is not, they pass on without pay- ing much attention to it. Death is more of a mystery to Until, That is, it impresses. him to a great- er extent. He thinks more of it. He tries no harder to live than do the wild things, but there is something in con- nection with the presence of a dead creature that impresses a Inmate be- ing. This is especially true if one en- counters death out in the fields or woods. Tramping through a forest, and coming suddenly upon a dead aniniai,. one pauses in contemplation' of the mystery before him. Yesterday a splenilid stag, let us say, roaming the woods in triumph; strong and swift and beautiful conscious of his strength and fleetness; living -breathing, see- ing, feeling. . Today --there he lies. His coat roughened by the winds or rain, his eyes sightless, his limbs with- out motion -unconscious he lies there like a log rotting in the elements. Can this be the stag of yesterday? Is the thing called life all he needs today to aronse him from the • slumber -to smooth his splendid coat, to bring the gleam of light into the eye, to give speed to the limbs? Tien, whence the thing called life? Or, from whence did it come' in the ,beginning?: Thus. do we meditate and marvel at the mystery of life and death when we are in the presence of death-espe- choly if we encounter it in the great shadows of the forest -out where there is nothing to interrupt us, out where reigns that which gives life and which rmeans is t Few Reminders of malas. Studious lovers of London will not fail .to notice how swiftly, true to her marvelous gift of eternal youth, she is obliterating every trace of the air raid period as if it had never been. Some' of the sears • made by enemy bombs still remain, as in the wholesale mar- ket arket in Covent Garden, but they might pass as unaoticed as the effects of re- cent fires which are always to be found in the great city. Melees of the air raid shelters are, however, already hard to find; an odd one tnay'be dis- covered on. a letup post in Tottenham Court road, or at Gresham college, which had not found leisure to tear, down the shabby poster about its use as an • air raid shelter; while in Southampton row the 'New Zealand record office has not yet demolished its sandbag revetment. Speaking general- ly, .however, all signs of the reign of terror by night have "vanished like the baseless fabric of a dream, leaving not a wrack behind:' -London Globe.' Paper Underclothing. An excellent and durable quality of underclothing has been made of n fine- grained paper by Japanese manufac- turers. After the paper has been Cut to a pattern the different` parts are sewn together and hemmed, and the places where the buttonholes are to be fortned are strengthened with calico or linen. The paper is very strong and at the same time very flexible. After a garment has been worn` a few bouts. it will interfere with the perspiration of the body no snore than do' 'germente made of cotton fabric. The paper is' not sited, nor is it impermeable. After becoming wet the paper is difficult to tear. When an endeavor is made to tear it -by hand it presents almost as much re;ttatance as the thin skin used. for making gloves. Use for "War Materials. The British ministry of reconstruc- tion, nccor•diug to the Daily Mail, is embarking upon a ecltetneof rural de- velopment by the ennstruction of a p large number (if_ilght railways to con neat the centavo, districts with the main railways. Tile cost will he shared by county authorities and the govern mint. The lines will bo leased to op emitini companies underadequat guny'atnte'es. Piaorntoes quantities of metet'ittl used by the British army 'hi, i'rauee wilt ub u iwuM+L a AUCTION SALES AUCTION SALE Of Farm Stock, Iiaplernents end. household e2,feets will bo held.' on ;Lot 8, Coni '9, Goshen Line Stanley Tp., 4 toque ' north ` of Zurich on TUESDAY MARCH 13th, 1923 Commencing et 1 'o'clock, ps the following articles; LIVE STOCK -2 General Purpose, geldings rising 01 -yrs. old; ` 1 (aen- eral Purpose gelding rising nine; 1 driving mate 8 -yrs, ,old; 1 Per- che'roe filly ri'sing;'2-yrs. old, 1 cow 9 -yrs;, dor in April; 1 eow 7 - yore due April; 1 cow 5 -yrs, dale in May; '1 eow 7 -yes. due in Nay; 1 caw 61-y' . due in. May; 11 cow 3 - yrs, date April '1st 1 farrow ;eow 6,yrs. old; 2 good healers due an May; .3 2 -yr. old heifers; 2 year- ling heifers, 2 yearling steers; 2 calves; about 250 hens, motsly pule- lets, all pure breds. IMPLEMENTS, ETC. -M. -H, bin- der 6 -ft. cut; M: -H. mondre topic-: ader nearly new; Peter Hamilton spring tooth cultivator nearly new set disk. harrows, drill, sot 4 -see- tion diamond harrows nearly non-; doubletree's for 3 -section harrow, set 4 -horse doubletrees; 2 lumber wagons, set bob -sleighs, hay and stock rack combined b ned nearly ntaw, 2 hand corn 'scuffiers, walling plow, cutter, top Buggy nearly new, open buggy, democrat, foad cart, fanning mill, 2 oogd setts ;Q.f heavy double harness, set single harness, about 15 ton of good, sweet clover hay, 5 ton 'timothy hay, Magnet cream 'separator ne- arly new, wood. heater,, cook stove kitchenchairs, couch, some beds, cupboard; 'sideboard, wheelbarrow rakes, chains, spades, hoes, fork and numerous other articles. , TERMS -$10 and under cash. Over that amount 8 months' credit will be given on furnishing appro- ved joint 'notes.. 4% discount off for cash on credit" amounts. Hay _and ch'c.e a t chickens ns c sl. George Elliott, Auctioneer. Ed. Dimmick, Proprietor. AUCTION SALE The undersigned (Auctioneers have been instructed to sell by Public. A.uctionn Lot 12, Confp it, Goshen Line, 2 :miles south of Zurich on MONDAY MARCH 12th, 1923 LIVE STOCK. -Horses -:a1 • mat- ched teams black, 0 -yrs. old;1 mat- che.d team of cheestnu•ts, 7- and: 8 years old; 1 Percheron colt risieg 2 -yrs. old. Cattle -2 .roan fresh cowa, .1 cow due in May; 1 cow due, in(June; 1 cow dytel in' April,, 1 calf ; 1 cow 'n1 April; 2 hei foe . t•ib- ing: 2ayrs:. haling he fifers, •-6 calves. igs-3 sows du° in April; 18' stocker pigs, weigh ing 125 lb's.. Geese -Two laying geese. ts IiMMPLEMENTS, ETC:. M. -H. bili der 7 -ft. cut nearly near; M. -H. bin- der 7 -ft. cut M. -H. hay. loader; -Deering mower .5 -ft, cut; M. -H. 13 -- disk drill nearly new; Zvi. -H. cult- ivator; Massey iron :2 drum roller, Noxon disc; M. -H. ,bean cultivator with puller. attachment; Cockshut riding •plow; Cockshutt double :pl- ow; M. -H. <valking plow; Fleiiry walking plow; 12 -ft M,-lt hay rake new; Deering hand. 'smaller, wal- king plow; Maxwell root !seeder; 3 section harrows; 4 section har- rows; cutting box; 2000-1b. cap- acity scales; fanning mill with bag gar attachment; hely rack new~; 2 hay racks; 2 wagons, wagon box, pig rack; 2 top buggle's, 2 cutters bob sleighs;,, 3 gravel boxes; hand power emery; grindstone, corn •shelter extension ladder, 10 lad- ders from'S to 2.1 feet long; wagon jack, onion 'seeder, cradle, . scythe, onion son/flee, 10 eveners and. ` 10 whiffletrees all hand made, neck - yokes hand made;; 509 feet new lum ber; 8 .bushels of •lean clover seed block andr tacle and wire stretcher combined; 2 wheelbarrows; hag: truck, 1 good heavy double 'sett of harness, double sett of plow harness, single harness, 2 stone bo- ats new, ,all kinds of logging chains hay forks, shovels;, single bed: with spring and mattress, bed with 'sp ring and mattress, bed, big fern plant, meat barrel, 2 cruel 'stands, water set, and numerous other .art- icles. Positively no reserve as pxoprieter is retiring Roti the fa:rtni.ng. TERMS OF SALE -$10 and under cash; Over that amount 10 months credit will be given on furnieliing approved joint notes. 4% off for cash oncredit aniou,'nt$4• 1 t Arthur Weber, Frank Taylor A ue- tioneesx. • Wm;, St -Johnston; Clerk. Jacob Brown, Proprietor. •rietor. coin 'supposed to be due in,, June, 1 cow heifers coming. 2-y ing 4 -yrs:; 5 .ste 5 ., yearling steers; AUCTION SALE Of Farni Stock and Implementr3 Theundersigned auctioneer h_as received instructions to sell by public auction on Lot 12 conces-. sion 12, ,Stanley Township on Wed nesday March 14th, 1923, cotnmen at' on o'clock k sh ' cin,,.e o'cc c urpy the follotwttg; LIVE STOCK -Horses -1 horse 10 -yrs. old; 1 horse 15 -yrs. old; 1 horse 10 -yrs. old:. Cattle --1 Mw 10 -yrs. old calved 4 months and. d again;1 cow- 1 w' h bru 8 yrs. o d• }t 'calf at foot; 1 cow 6 -yrs. old cal- ved 2 months; 1 calf 10 months gild 1 calf 4 months- old, 1 calf 2 months old; Pigs -5 pigs 5 mon the oldl: ;ions -50 pure bred, Rock hent', IMPLEMENTS, Ef,CC--1YIeCotin leis hinder 6-11.' cut with truck, and 'sheaf carrier; McCormick mower 5 -It, cut, New Ideal manure 'sere- ader ; 'McCormick' rake 1Q -ft. Deer- ing millivatorr Cock'shutl 11 -;date disk, 12 -hoed drill; MX: plow ^,No. 16, 4 -section harrows; top buggy, Wagon, wagon box, 'spring seat; Chatham fanning mill with bagger 15 -ft. hay rack, pig rack*,' pig 'crate, gravel box, 'set bob sleighs, weigh scales 2,000 cape pea harvester, atone boat,; 2 set team hapless, set single harness, pair horse collar's, bag truck, grain bags and. sacks, grain,'scoop, 2 hay 'fork ropes and, pulleys, pair slings, leggin); chain haze, 'saw On frame; e -h. p. gasoline Renfrew engine on trucks, 8 -lin Jolliette grinder, eet . of rollers, 1 grindstone on frame, it -in. rubber belt, Standard cream 'separator 600 lb's, cap.; -ladder, 'crow bar,, wagon jack, coil barb wire,, l4 -ft.. blow pipe, 70 feet Si-ing, water pipe, 2 wagonn bolsters, gasoline tank, 5 - gal. oil tanit;, Wilder whip, fork's and numerous other article's".,. ti TERMS -All 'sums' of $10 and un- der cash,'. Over that amount 9 months credit will be given on fur- nishiStg approved joint notes.. 4% straight off for cash ,o`at credit a- mounts. Oscar R1opp, Audios-11*o , W. a. Tough, Clerk. David Tough, Proprietor. AUCTION SAI.iF Of Farm Stock and Iinplenients, The undersigned Auctioneer has been instructed: to sell by Public Auctions at Lot 27 N.B., Hay Town ship, 1 lone west of Blake, on THURSDAY, MARCH 8, 1923 Commencing at 1.00 o'clock, p'. m. 'sharp, the follow;Ting; LIVE STOCK -1 horse 12 -yrs. old mare 12 -yrs. old a well matched les,- 1 d'elvi'ng horse 17 -yrs. old .co .cert tiny 10 months . l d; , ...tlu -1 froth.. cow 8 -yrs. old; 1 fresh heifer 3 -yrs. old; 1 cow due in July; 1 heifer due in April; 3 3 heifers- rising 2; 1 steer rising 1, 2 calves 6 weeks old.' IMPLEMENTS•,'•RITC-M.-H..bin- der• 6 -ft. cut; M. -H. mower 5 -ft cut 11 -disk Deering fertilizer drill ne.- .arly new, Mann cultivator; M .11, hay rake, land roller, wagon, wa- gon box, p;agvei box, hay rack,ho'. 'sleigh, cutting box, root pulper, 2 - furrow plow, Fleury walking plow No;. 21; 1200-1b. cap. 'scales,' fani- ning mill, 2 'sett double harness,'set single harness, 2 horse blankets, a quantity of timothy hay •altso clo- ver hay, some potatoes, DeLaval cream separator No. 12, heating ato:ve; vinegar barrel, about 300 new -eke, f:orks, shovels, ` chaies,,hoes• :.s and numerous other. articles;, +$'ERMS 'OF ' SALE -$10 and. under c., sh. Over that amount 9. months' credit will be given on furnishing approved joint notes. 4% off for cash on, credit amounts. Potatoes and hay cas'ht.. Sas. Denomy, Auctioneer. W. S. Johnston, Clerk. a es. Allan, Proprietor. AUCTION SALE MORTGAGE SALE Of 96 -Acre waning in Stanley To- wnship. Under and by Virtue of the pow- ers cortta.ined in a certain mort- gaeg which will be produced at the time of sale, there will be offered fox sale by public auction 'at the Commercial Hotel in Zurich, Ont. on. Monday, the 19th day of March A.D. 119%3• at t•hr'.hour of one o'e'ock in the afternoon, the following pro- perty;- Lot number Twenty-two (22) in the south Boundary Concession of the Township of Stanley- its the County of Huron, containing 96 acres, more or less. On the farm are a .1g, story frame house with kitchen& a harp and straw shed, both onl,walls, and a driving shed. The 'sail is a clay loam'. This is TERMS -10% on day? of sale and balance in 30 days, without inter- est. FURTHER 'Terms an;cl condit- ions will be• made known on day' of sale' and May be hacl on applicat- ion to the undersigned. DATLD at Exeter, Ont. this 27th. day'. of February A. D: 1023 OSCAR KLOPP, Esq., Zurich; Ont., Auctioneer. (''L' A, M-. N & TANBU R Y hair' t- ., D �,S R , .s ers, etc., Exeter, • Ont., Vendor's' Solicitors - AUCTION SALE Of. Valuable Farm Property, Ito- useholcl effects and Chattels. M the matter of the Estate of William Heckman, late of the Totvnship ell Hay in the County of Huron, Yoeman, deceased, and of The DeVolution of Estates Acta There will be offered for 'sale by Public Auction on the property of the deceased, namely ESS Lot 5, Con cessioyt 17, Tp. Hay, on iFriday,, March 16th4 1923 at 1 o'clock 'sharp, the following property, namely-- Elt Lot 5, eon; 17, Township of Hay, County of Huron, containing 50 acres more or less. Upon this land are erected a good Veneered. house, and Bank barn with toner- to foundation, 36x50. HORSES -•1 matched team (horse 4 -yrs. old and horse 10 -yrs. old); 1 bay carriage mare 7 -yrs. old; 1 1 horse rising 3 -yrs. CATTLE- 2 'ATTTLE-2 cow's, due in April; 1 'cow due in Thdi'davu 1st, Spri�a g S� its And Overeoats NOW, IS THE "1'TME TO ORDE.l;t YOUR EA,STPR SUIT AN1) QVJ R-4. COA.i. I'I•to:nx US, YOU CANS- NOT BETTER YOURSELF' IN' f3[7'$' INC+ ELSEWiIIERE, a TAE'S! WILL BE HAND ,TAIL -s. ORED TO YOUR. INDIVIDUAL. MEASURES, MADE IN ANY S,1.YLR YOU WISH, HUNDREDS. OF PATRONS 1TO CHOOSE'PROD/I' • Yea Will Like Our Work:. 1 Wuerth, T MII 11111111NINIH11111IIIIIINIINN111HIIIHI11111111NIII1111NNIIIIIIIIIINIII11111111111111111111IINIIIII111NIII111111111111111113111II111111 IN 1111NIIIII11111111111111NiNI11111111111111111111111111111111111i1i1111111111NNii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiu111111ii►iiiiiiuiu1111111 The Hera c • 1921.: 8 Iu.bg List Herald and Daily Globe 6.00 Herald and Kitchener ' Daily Telegraph ... .: $$510 ,Herald and Daily Mail and Empire ... ... ... .... __-6.00 Herald and Saturday Mail and Empire 3,75 Herald and Daily Star ......... 6.00 ' Herald and Weekly Star .-- •=• -•• --. 3.75 Herald and Daily News -._ --- ••- --- 6.00 Herald and Free Press, evening edition 6:00 Herald atnd Free Press mo rning edition .: __ 6.00 Herald and Advertiser, mo ruing edition -:_ 6.00 Herald and Advertiser, evening edition .. _ 6.00 Herald" and Farmers Advocate ... ......... ... .........2.75 Herald and Farm and Dai ry` 2.15 Herald and Farmers Sun $3 00 Herald andFamily Herald and Weekly Star -:. --:$2.75 'Herald and Canadian Countryman $2.25 Herald and Weekly . Witness' • 2..75 Herald and Farmer's' Magazine 2 50 'Herald and Youth's ' LemP anion -• $3:75 Renew your papers with us and save ropey The HERALD Zurich , • I I VII II INTI NI Bill INN IHINNIIiHIe NI ell IIIIUgN NHN IIIIIIIII,VIIIIII,��INililllllllillllllllVllllllltlllllHfllllllllllllillllllll6r,lllilllllllillllllilllllllll11111111iIIIV ;�lillNiIIIINNIII N I I I I i N S I f�Nl May; 2milk cows; 1 heifer rising 3 -yrs.; 2 heifers rising 2" -yrs; 3 yearling heifers, and. 2 yearling steers. Hens -Six dozen heirs. IMPLEIMIENTS-6-ft, Deering bin 'der; M. -H... 5g• -ft. mower; Noxon drill 10 -hoe; M. -H. cultiv'ator; 2 hayrakes, smaller; 3 -section har- rows; disc; 2 walking piows;road cart; light wagon; buggy po1e, open buggy, new buggy, harrow; cart; fanning mill; two dozen raing bags; about 75 bus. of t.uckwheat; 60 bus, oats; wagon; 'lob sle ,gh ; gravel' box; pig .rack; peat., hay rack; neciyo ices ; whiffletrees: chains, forks, shovels, cedar :poles, 5 ton timothy hay, cutter, pails, 15 ton of yellow 'street clover hay', new double set of heavy harness; hevy 'set of harness; new 'set of single harness; :singe set of har- ness; cutting box; pulp r;.grind- stone, 22 coeds of short wood. HOUSEHOLD EF!FECTS,-:Home 'Comfort Range; 'stove; glass cup- board-; 'sink, kitchen table; couch; 12 chairs, leaf table; sideboard; box 'stove; sewing machine; spin- ning wheel; dresser; dressing stand Queen 'sewing machine; -parlor ta- ble; 5 bedsteads and springs,cel- lar table; 50 gal. `,bal ; a0 gal, cel,' 10 bags of apples; 50 -bush or pot- atoes; otatoes; Empire cream sep.rator; 5 dozen' 'sealers, crocks, apple butter, canned fruit, dishes, mir- rors, lamps, lanterns, fire extingu uisher. and numerous other artic- les. TERMS OF SALE -Land, will be sold subject to a reserved bid fixed, by the Official Guardian of Infants for the Province of Ont- ario. 10 per cent of purchasemon ey to be paid on day of 'sale,; the, balanceito be paid to Canadian .hank of Commerce to the joint credit of the Administrator and the Official, Guardian with 30 days there ,after. In all other respects the terms will be the standing condit- ion's' of the Supreme Court of On- tario. Chattels -$10 and under, cash. Balance to be secured' by, approved joint notes due in 7 months. 4% off in lieu notes, Hay, grain and hens; Cash, ' For further' partieelars .a l to, F. W,. Harcourt,K. C, Official Gu- ardian, Toronto; H. .Either & Son,;' • Crediton.; . The Admieistrator,Johre Becker or I: R;. Carling, Vendor's: Solicitor, Exeter, Ont. , .Arthur Wtrebor, Auctioneer, Dashes wood, Ont. COUNTY NEWS Wm. McEvers, 71 years old, t Winghamj, dropped dead on Sate urday last while dressing, the day previous he had 'appare'ntly4 been in' good. health and w'aswore. king around the house, He is Welt .known throughout Western Ontart. do as, a `hoi'sernari. 'Wellington Howey, aged. eixtya,.. fell down an outside entra ee tee the cellar of his home at.Winglia a last Thursday night and broke his, neck. • He died several hours late er, The accident victim had: eve; idently been walking around the- house and fell into the snow -filled° ce.larway,. , Itis not known' how long he lay in the death trap bei: fore he was found by a child nee tiled Reid, living in the House, Mr. Chas. Garrow, K.C, of 00E14- exact' ,sod - exich has been appointed 'Mester of the Supreme Court of Ontarics The acceptance of this now posy. G0derich to ition will call for hiss reinoval.frins; Toronto. Fire of unknown origin badly datuaged the P'a'nlgey clo'thing stere at Listowell last week. This. firemen hfought � the flames in a b •.r r• ,arcs: a, nclcsevcd the bustn ss . e. ., ... district, Loss is estimated ` a ! t. $12,000.