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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1916-10-06, Page 8._linery Openings Tuesday and Wednesday, Sept. 19th and 20th We have been fortunate in securing Miss Kline to take charge of our Millinery Department for the Fall Season We are showing a larger range of hats and trimmings than ever and assure the ladies of Zurich and vicinity that they will find here the smartest and newest creations in millinery fashions. We invite your inspection, kstel Fall Goods Our stock of Fall Dress Goods, Flannellettes, Wrapperettes, Underwear, Blankets, etc., now to hand and we invite your inspection of same, New irtings & Cottonades These goods are continually going up in price. You ;will save money by purchasing your supply now. Sweater Coats We have the famous Monarch Knit Sweater Coats again cin stock. They are guaranteed to give satisfaction. Waists and Corset Covers A few ladies waists and corset covers on hand which we are selling at greatly reduced prices. Rain Coats 3 dozen ladies Rain Coats just arrived in tan, navy and; black at the Special Price of $5.50 each. Also a new line of men's Balmaoan style coats at $LO 50. Fresh Groceries always onhan d RUBY arid GASCHO PHONE 17 8rE3tM ai3£3EiE#31011FsE031Si x+c3asea tsciskA IE3E3812i.sxt 0 i Cream land Eggs i WANTED I 1 ii PL HUDSON, Phone 5, ZURICH § 3f3'f313F7#8101P82:303F0/3431Z3e ilaIMi 3lE3FIE#3EifM #3k f Will pay highest cash price for Cream and Eggs delivered at my residence, Zurich, at any time during',the week. srr""'�•i. 0.0.011 Add -A -Link Bracelets . eel A fresh supply of Gold and Silver Add -a -Links just arrived. We engrave:them:to your order. GEORGE R. HESS & 001, JEWELLERS0 PM .ti 0 ZURICH ?. .R:,s'seeti eeeelleeii<�'.,•°�.et Xi'wsai' Ee;e: Ze ie s..!X?T: ..' atIKICK.st* 40.7ii 'iii�O..xOC' te' London Life Policies are GOOD AS GOLD" Why not protect yourself and family with a good life insurance policy. All the popular plans of insuranca written. For particulars apply to Andrew F. Hess, Local Agent lA1111111060•i•A•AIA0O.O0•da1® e.,.......,•..•••••••w6000 To new subscribers in Canada we will send The Herald from now until Jan. 1917, for only 25 cents. 1MAo..*...*.....A.M1AMl 4114110111410141011104101111111.0.111111.0411111.11, LOCAL iviARKen t; ,.rrectea every Butter , Eggs.. ... .. . ... Dried Apples Potatoes... ................ Wbeat 1.48 Oats Barley Buckwheat Flour Bran Shorts Low Grade Live Hogs fob Hensel]. 4;).,,v UZ (1:J 2 25 1.50 62 65 75 4.25 4.60 $28.00 82.00 40.00 11.45 Local News Carload of Dutch Setts wanted next week. 8 cents per .1b. T. L. `Viut'rm.. Mr. C. L. ,Scmith has moved into the residence he recently. purch•as9 ed frown Mrs. • M. Fritz. Mr. Thos. MMMMillany of Hullett, attended the sours of revision• of the voter's .is: held here last weee. Miss,Seisie emeth, of the ,Gcsuei Line, left on Tuesday for Kitchen- er, where she will remain for seine ume. Mr. Wm. •Stelek, of the 14th coin. recently presented his daugh:cr, Miss Ella, witii a handsome ivien.1el soden piano:. Messrs. Jos. Laporte of Detroit .amid Mr. A. Denorum.e of Windsor visited relatives ion the , Sauble Lime this week. • The household effects of Mrs. D. S. Faust were sold by auction on Saturday,. Mrs. Faust will move to Dashwood to reside. Messrs. George and David .Ben- der and families, who have been visiting re.•atives here, left for their homes in lllinioi3 on Monday. As . W H. Hoffpnan has -:iisco,n- tinued the laundry business: 1 secured the agency of the karisi, an Steam Laundry, London,. • All parcels left with me will.,bave.our nest attention. W. C. Wagner, Z.urieh. The frost is on the pumpkin, And minter is coming eig'ih, - ljm ti.iakiug now of nothing' e.a.e nu_ OL g Jou p_d, ,u-ciPus, 1 amp- knn! pie, Court of Revision: of ,ham oraotenit List of ,Hay Township was held in the town Hlail here on ri- day last. Judge L. ..J i)ickoinSe, of ,.eeter, presideu. A ,reamber of eha,nges and corrections were ola de. Ln Local Option .malnicipaatiea 1.11e minimum pe -realty for be:aag found drunk was $20. and costs, The new Ontario Temperance Act whi_h now srupereedes all previous legi.lation established a minimum penalty of $10., which must be im- posed on .anyone fou,nd drunk 14hether in a former Local Option muni-ipality or licensed territory. SWORN IN, District Deputy postmaster Mc- Lean of London, was in the 'villager on Monday, and looked anter the post office affairs. He found everything in the veay, best order. Intr. W„ L. Siebert was sworn i�nl as postmaster L,uriag tate Lay. SEE ,MILD WINTER Winnipeg, Ian., --Indiana as- sert that the coining winter will be,one of the ilniideric i!n recentye- :.rd, ii'i.ey base tneir aescralons on. the foiloWing signs;— The oak trees have ins acOiras. Squirrels are seldom seem. ,Muskrats have not started to build. v Fur. -bearing animals have 'thin eoa•ts. Bare on pop[,.ar trees, ]aj ,lease. lhlere are some ether signs. they go by for their assertion) that the winder will be mild and short. ,They are se.domu Wrong. LITTLE LOCALS Only eleven week's to Christmas, Do your shopping early. Send in your -news items and; send them earlyl. Now for a big autumn: , trader,, Mer_1i,41.a auvertise your goods, anu neeteh your business grow. ' Rev. F. ..J Snowden, who has I conwueted the Manitoulin Expos-' ,tor at Li.tie current for ten years has ,pu.cehased the :Seaforth News from uv 1r. R. D. Croft. (I`•he Free rPess and Advertiser, London, have raised their sub ---1 evription rates to $3. a year. Our clubb,ng rates with tiie above pap- ers e i,i hereafter be $3.60. I etre pleased at a,ll times to rat ceiere imon`.hly school report- from •the teaches in the various schools sectiones of Hay Towns•llip to publicatioh. Send thein early, I MUS,'. 7'1 1'iE TAW. It 1 ,ov.s Nis Like Axle Grease, la:i< Ma., a Worse Odor. Musk in tlre raw looks a good deal like axle grease and smells worse. Tlie popular notion that the musk of com- merce is obtained from the muskrat is a mistake. There is obtained a somewhat simi- lar perfume from the muskrat, but most of the supply comes from the musk deer, a creature that is carefully reared in India for the sake of the se- cretion. The secretion is shipped in the crude state and is used not only iu the manufacture of the liquid per- fume sold as musk, but also in very small quantities to give strength and staying power to many perfumes made from the essential oils of flowers. Curiously enough, the blossoms of two native plants have a noticeably musky odor. One is the sfliail yellow blossom of a creeping vine known as the musk plant. Its odor is marked and is counterfeited in the commercial perfume called musk.' The other is the bloodroot. The pure white blossom of that early spring plant has a distinct though delicate mucky odor. A bean known as the musk bean is n cheap substitute for animal musk.— London Standard Curious Church Architecture. The parish church of Ormskir"k, in Lancashire, England, has a tower and a spire side by side. The tower is built over the porch at the west end, and the spire is placed as closely as possible to it. The origin of this architectural freak has not been ascertained, but there is a tradition to the effect that when Orme, the Saxon pirate from whom the town derives its name, de- cided to construct a kirk, or church, RS an expiatory offering for his evil deeds his two daughters quarreled over the design for the structure. One de- termined to have a tower; the other was equally resolved to have a steeple. As neither of them would give way the pirate chief acceded to both their wishes, and the curious may see the tower and spire still keeping watch side by side on the surrounding coun-• try. Origin of the Hackney. The hackney horse has given quite a number of useful words to the lan- guage. He and his name came from Normandy originally—haquenee, really a corruption of the Latin for horse— and he was a riding horse. Being com- monly hired out, the name came to be associated with hiring and in course ot; time also with drudgery. Today there are tax more heelcney carriages, within the meaning of the act, with- out horses than with 'A literary hack is another form of the same name, and hackneyed is an obvious derivation from a common source. — London Chronicle. Tart Reception. Hoffman, the German physicist, ar- rived in Glasgow late one Saturday night and on Sunday morning went to call on Lord Kelvin. The doorbell was answered by a woman servant, whom Hoffman asked if Sir William was at home. The servant answered, "Sir, he moat certainly is not." Hoffman then asked, "Could you tell me where I could find him?" "Sir," she answered, "you will find him at church, where you ought to be!" Knocked Into a Cocked Hat. The expression "knocked into a cock- ed hat" is familiar to every one, but perhaps its origin is not so generally known. Cocked hat was a variety of the game of bowls in which only three pins were used, set up at the angles of a triangle. When in bowling tenpins all were knocked down except the three at the corners the set was said to be "knocked into a cocked bat," whence the popular expression for de- priving anything of its main body, character or purpose. Antiquity of Cricket. By the middle of the seventeenth century cricket, whose age seems caet in the shade of the unknown, had achieved for itself a recognized place. It was one of the sports which a writer of the times indignantly declared he had witnessed "openly and .publicly on the Lord's day." However, the real rise of cricket did not begin until the eighteenth century. Then men of qual- ity began to favor the game. They organized teams and matches, and even royalty took note of it and became its patrons. The Marylebone club, which was formed hi 1787, remains to this day the final court of appeal on all matters relating to cricket.—London Spectator. That Last Word. •'I can't understand 'why men should complain about their wives having the last word. 1 never objected to mine having the last word." "You don't?" °'?iot a bit. I'm always thankful Vbe', she gets to it." - Note this Bargain i Large Ranges, with reservoir, high closet, tiled back, scroll with mirrors on top, oven •tharmometer and is large oven, 20x22, Best Stove on this inarket, only $50. Full stock of •HEATING STOVES at knockout prices. Call and see before you buy. A11 stoves guar!aniteed or no sale. The Stove Question We were lucky once more In'hay- ing contracted for about 50 stoves of all kinds ;ayear ago', and since then stoves have greatly advanced in 'prices, We are still selling at the 'old :prices. Call and Nee the BIGSTOVE BARGAINS " SEE OUR Cook stove with resevoir for $20. " extended for $25. Ranges complete for $133; e. I-IARTLI3IB, zur"iicn HURON'SILAROESTWCOMBINAT1ON.,STORE lit:MSZ38E3EMESOCIIEW303101HC'.Jf3rk3E3EIO 3C38E3i3F3F3C Ei1113t 1 1 New Confectionery Store Dashwood Bread and Cakes.M tv Stratford Bread. Nezlson's Chocolates & Candies Choice Confectionery & Groceries Stationery of all kinds Picture Post Cards and Novelties California Toilet Preparations Agency for Parisian Steam Laundry. Parcols must be brought in before Tuesday evening of each week. Your Patronage Solicited W. C. Wagner - - - Zurich 1 �1 1 3t3E3E3E 3=3E3E3iiEMICiniCillE3 R4C3A3E3i3E3E3CMIC3f3EZVOI ENCIR3100 41•HIMIS•N•NNSSISNY••rI•••YNNSN/IS..ie011O ! • MILLINERY OPENINGS • Tuesday and Wednesday, Sept. 19th and 20th • and following days. Our Millinery Department will be in charge of Miss Bawden, who has just returned from the Millinery Open- ings in Toronto. She is prepared to show you all the latest in fall and winter hats. A special invitation is hereby extenned to the ladies of Zurich and vicinity. A big shipment of ladies' and children's Coats. Newest autumn and winter styles, Also ladies' Furs, etc., to arrive the beginning of next week, We are showing a big range of Velvets in corded and plain suitable for dresses and coats. Our stock of Dress Goods is complete, We are showing a his, range of Serges, Broadcloths, Gabardines, etc. . <,. • Beautiful range of Kimona cloth and Wrapperettes. New. est designs. Our lines of Hosiery, Underwear, Sweater Coats, etc., is complete. Dont fail to take a look at these goods. Special for Saturday:only. Ladies Underskirts in black, Breen [Mu h: and cerise only 50 cents. Broadway Clothing Our new Fall and Winter Sam- ples of the made-to-order Broadway Clothing are in. Over 500 samples for suits and overcoats. Fit guar- anteed. Our line of Hats, Caps, Shirts, Ties, Braces,. Socks, etc., are on display in our Men's Department, Come and see these lines. Special Next Week English Rain Coats. Regular value $6 to $8 for only $3.98 A. BARGAIN If in need of a Dinner Set, Toi- let or anything in the line of dishes dont forget that we have a big 3aortment. Ammenwomminsediosmomom Live Poultry We are in the market for Live Poultry for which we pay the high, ,t market prices. Taken every ' ..4.rsday'and Saturday forenoon Fresh - Groceres L. WURM at all times kApekl'see••••••►•N••MIM.fles! INiIC' ktte,oaA9(DoN!1FEli a se