HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1917-08-10, Page 71.111C L, 41W....••••••
EVANGELICAL CHURCH
SER'V'ICES
141As7, German .-+ ...... 9.45 a. m.
" Sunday School 11.00 a. m.
Service English .. 7.30 pan,
Tuesday Jr. Y. P. A. ... '7.30 p.m:
'1uesda1, V, P. A. 8.15 p. m.
Thursday Prayer Meeting 7.30 p.m.
Friday, Choir Practice 8 30p. m.
Ladies' Aid, first ,Wednesday ev-
ening of each month 8.p.m.
LUTHERAN CHURCH
Sunday S
c'o'ol - ..A .....t 9 a. m,..
German Services, Sunday 16
p.m
English Service, unay .
78. p. m.
Luther League, Friday
Ladies' Aid meets first Tuesday of
each month at 2.30 p. m.
Zurich Meat
MARKET,'
' Fresh and Salt Meats
Bologna Sausages,
c
Highest Cash Price for Wool
CASH FOR SKINS & 111DES
l'imeblvat &Deichert
Andrew F. Hess
CONVEYANCING, ETC.
FIRE INSURANCE
PLATE GLASS INSURANCE
AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE.
PRIVATE FUNDS TO LOAN
AGENT FOR GREAT WEST
PERMANENT LOAN CO.
ACCOUNTS COLLECTED
ACCIDENT INSURANCE
Herald Office Zurich
LOCAL NEWS
EFF
1
Mr. C. Fritz and son Ward, vis-
ited Port Franks on Sunday .
Miss Olive Harland of Toronto
is visiting at the home of Mr. C.
Hartleib.
(Zurich and Crediton baseball te-
ams played on the local diamond
last night.
Mr. Jacob Weido has exchanged
his Studebaker auto for a Mc-
Laughlin "Six."
Hydro Inspector Leggett, of
London, was a business visitor in
town on Monday.
The Home
Insuarnce Co.
Paid-up Capital $6,000,000
,SUI[ lus iko . ullcyhoiders
Insures yOur barn against'damage
by wind or tornado for •40 cents -
per $101)Tr"3 years, and$100 forur
house for 80 cents per
S years. No premium note and
no extra assessment guaranteed.
G. HOLTZMAN
Agent - Zurich
Dealer in Lightning Rods
If you are going to have your
house painted this year, I can
ave you money. -
ON THE JoB
Estimates cheerfully given on new
Or old work.
NEW WORK A SPECIALTY
H. H. LITTLE
Hensall
PAINTING, GRAINING, PAPER
HANGING 1
iAlso carry a hill line of up -to
date wall papers.
UNDERTAKING
Prompt Service
Moderate Charges
Tailor Shop
Issuer of
Marriage Licenses
W. H. HOFFMAN
Zurich, - Ontario
Messrs Jacob land John Deichert
and their mother visited relatives in
PirtElgin over ;knday.
Mr. Orland Johnston, bank
clerk of Kirkton, is spending his
ho:idays at his home here.
Miss Alveda ,Weseloh of London
,attended the funeral of her grand-
mother, Mrs. Hy. Weseloh, Sr.
Funny, isn't: it, that the highest
prices for goods are generally
found -at the stores that do not use
newspaper advertising?
Messrs. Alb. Gies, J. Fuss, S.
Faust and Lennis Collies, all
Kitchener, spent the week -end
their respective homes here.
Mr. W. 0. Knechtel of Kitchener
spent Sunday at he home of Mr.
J. Preeter, Mrs. Knechtel and fam-
ily, who had spent the past week
here accompanied him home.
E
of
at
Prices on all .farm, machinery
will advance' arom, 20 to 303/4 shortly
I have on hand •a few low down•.
spreaders, wagon, several bugglesi;
one mower, etc., an which I can
give good prices while they last.
Louis Prang, Zurich.
ssl ie
I''ood Controller Hanna has pro-
mised that the price of fish Will be
reduced, but he has not yet an-
nounced that Canadian meats are
to be sold as cheaply in Canada as
they are in Britain. Why is eit
that after paying freight to Eng-
land these meats are cheaper there
than is Canada. --Mitchell Record,.
er.
As an exa•m,ple of the boldness
of blackbirds, a Sarnia citizens re
ports that one of them that had
a nest iln a tree close by, flew
down, and p:laking the hat from
his young sdn's head flew up in-
to the tree, where the hat be,camel
lodged in the brwanches, and .it
was necessary to climb the tree
to secure the hat.
Twenty-three years ago it re-
quired $5.00 to send a missionary.
to Uganda, and it was a journey
of front eight to ten months. To
day the journey is made in twenty
four days, at a cost of $175. Then
there was one church, one native
preacher and 200 converts. Now.
there are 2,000 churches scattered
all over that land, 3,000 native pre-
achers and converts numbering
over 100,000.
4.0QAx:.''dillatis
w
UDF.00T, 1KILLORAN, & COOKE.
�Sarrasters, Solicitors, Notaries
ublic.&o, Office, on the Square, 2nd
(eor from Hamilton St. Goderich,
Private funds bo loan at lowest rates
enea)r00T, K. C. J. L. KILLORAN,
H. J. 1). Cooxe.
. Cooke will be in Hensall on Friday
and Saturday of each week.
Mr. and Mrs. August Weseloh, of
Kitchener., Mr. and Mrs. John
Weseloh and daughhter Luella of
T, aterloo attended the funeral of
the late Mrs. Hy. Weseloh, Sr.
Rev. and MrsStrempfer of Elmira
and Rev. and Mrs. W. Kennedy, of
Alliance, 0., visited friends here
during the week. Rev. Struemp-
fer recently refused a call front
the 'Walkerton Lutheran congreg-
ation.
Rev. A. D. G:schler, of Tavistock,
renewed old acquaintances in Zur
ich and an the 14th con., last week.
He also spent some days at Grand
Bend. 0•n Sunday he conducted
the services in James St. Meth-
odist church, Exeter.
Fa' -doers in this eect'oa l a. a start
ed cutting wheat and barley. Rye..
has already been cut and the oats
are corning in fast. All the
Bron h it.l> • v''ill Fad
�.;t
pa!+
hay crop yielde.el' "much heavier
than was expected.
A large importer states that
there has been a big demand for
,Canadian cheese in England since
the Government took the monopo
Iyof this commodity over. The
retail price to the consumer is 32c
a pound, while English cheese cos-
ts the consumer 44 cents a pound.
A person' to be of any use should
have enough initiative to do dome
thing. A fel ow you have to tell hove
watch him do it, see him do it,and
then do it yourself, is a mighty
poor article on any kind of a job.
Rather than have him around you
would be money- ahead to roll
A THIN SLICE
A story from Negro Land, with,
which there will be much sy
thy in all other lands, is to'I
a commercial traveller, who
nessed an effort of a negro t
chase a quantity of cheese ek.
,mensurate tzith his purse. "Bos`',
asked the negro, "how much is er
nickel's worth of dat er cheeses?"
"Can't sell youu a nickel's worth,
Sam; ot's too high." "All' right
gi';Ine for a dime's worth;' c t-
tain." The storekeeper cut athin
slice, and Sambo remarked; "Oh,
oh— You all pretty near missed it
idid'nt you captain?"
EARLY-RLSING FARMER.
.
Farmer •A boasted that he was
the earliest riser in the neighb'ar-
hood. Farmer B• thought he was
lying and set out to prove it...14e
rose at 2 ,olcloak next rao ning and
went and rapped on Falmer' '`4's
I cloy ti %tI•kala 1.
was ale s'#;red, 4.1
r13. Hess & Co.
JEWELLERS
AND
OPTICIANS
Re airi7ig a Sjeczal&
THE CELEBRATED DELEWARE
AND HUDSON CO'S.
L ACKAWAN A
��. GOAL
il 'ie 's''.to7iI. usbanYd?'' lie
ked, expecting to. find the boastea
Still in bed.
"Si .,was around here early this
morning," answered the wife,"tutu
I don't know where he is now."
s4
_ISTANDARD ANTHRACITE
,A. Cantelon
Hensall
TELEPHONE
Office NO. 10.
House No. 10, B
White Shoes
FOR SUMMER WEAR, RUNN
SHOES, YATOHING SHOES,
Harvest Shoes.
The BEST in the WORLD
It is the most ,popu"lar and easiest running loader on the market
Simple, light draft and ;one man can easily operate it, No twisted
or crossed -chains, cogs or gears or long crooked crank shafts to
use power and get out of order, Make haying a pleasure by buy,
ing a RAIN LOADER. • I : 4 �) ,' 1 i 1 '►
Famous Fleury
PlOWS
that ARE PLOWS
te.
For men alnd boys. A number
of lines Heft at reduced .prices.
VO' TERS' LIST, 1917
•
MUNICIPALITY OF THE TOWN..
SHIP OF HAY
COUNTY OF HURON
Notice ,;s hereby given that I.
have transmitted or delivered to'
the persons mentioned in Section
9 of the "Voters List" Act the cop
ies required in the said section to,
be Asa transmitted or delivered of
up your sleeves, spit on your the listan'ade pursuant to said art`
hands, wade in and do the ;ob
from the start,. There are peo-
ple who can never see past the end
of their own nose, unless it be the
clock at quitting time. If such
people expe,t to rise in the world
they'll have to get up and shake
themselves. There are lots of
them
A farm laborer over in the Un-
ited States recently wrote a let-
ter to one of that country's wid-
ely circulated periodicals in which
he stated that in nine years work-
ing on a farm, during which time
he had received from. $30 to $35
per month, he saved upwards of
$2;700, besides paying the premiums
on a three thousand-dcl tar endow-
ment insurance policy, which will
mature in six years. He estim-
ates that in six years time he will
be worth something more than
$6.000, with which he intends buy-
ing a farm, paying cash. :He
thinks he has none Weil, and he
has, but has fooled away very lit -
tie on baseball and 'moving ptear
es. Any man can get ahe•id in th
world if he sets himself early to
the task. The time to work and
save is while . young and able.
At least a part of each year's
earnings should be savings at the
end of the year. Many a young
man making Much higher wages
has little to show for the year's
work when the erns of December
;draws near. He may have had
What he calls a "good time,"
but what about the time to come?
If there ever was a time in the
history of the world that demands•
ed saving anis serving it is now.
of ;alt persons appearing bysr,
last revised Assessment Ro110.
said Municipality to be enti.,
vote an the said Municipal;(
Elections for members of th
islative Assembly and at Mulnicip.
Elections, and that said list was
first posted up ;at my office at
Zurich, 'on ;the nth Day of July,
1917, and tremaims there for in-,
spection. ; l • ,
And I hereby call upon all vot,
ers to take immediate proceedings
to have any errors or oman.issio'ns
corrected according to law.
Dated at Zurich this 7th day of
July, ,1917.
FRED HESS, Sr.
Clerk of Hay 'Township.
FRUIT TREES
From us. It kills bugs.
bur store closes every Tuesday
and Friday evening at 6 ,o'clock.
LOUIS BRISSON
Drysdale
Registered
Yorkshire tiMaIe
FOR SERVICE.
oved a great sire. ' Is of
1por ted stock, and is of
the long deep bacon type so
much in demand now.
H. KRUEGER
No other plow RUNS SO SMOOTHLY—has such EASE for HORS-
ES and COMFORT for the PLOWMAN as the FAMOUS FLEURY
PLOWS. We handle the origin al No. 21, the flight, draught No.
13, and the hest one-hoh•se plow in Canada, lt.be No. 15a.
Buy only the ORIGINAL and BIEST,
20,000 TONS
RAGS WANTED
Also
all kinds of junk.
HIGHEST CASH PRICES
Will call s0oon
Phone No, 35
lWe have establiCed a lasting
reputation for fair and square
dealing and are n 'ow prepared to
meet existing conditions by offer- A.
ing our high grade trees and
plants direct to customers at
ROCK BOTTOM Prices. Don%
delay planting fruit trees and
plants, as there is nothing pays
better. Send for our illustrated
circulars of hardy varieties which
you can order direct and get the
benefit of agent's commission.
Our prices will be sure to interest
you. •
THE CHASE BROTHERS CO. OF
ONTARIO LTD. NURSERYMEN,
ESTABLISHED 185.7.
COLBORNE, ONT.
We handle pumps, piping, etc
L. PRANG ZURICH
Mittelholtz Zurich
L. O O K
Why not use the best coal?
BORN S
Beaver—At Zurich. on Aug, 71h, to
Mr. and Mrs Ed Beaver, a daughter.
Flax pulling has started in this
district The crop promises to
be a fairly good one.
'The French are rebuilding the
area devasted by the German re-
treat, and civil life is gradually
being resumed. Soldiers are help-
ing in every way possible.
Although Serbia's nearest point
to the sea is fully eighty miles,yet
that plucky 'little country has re-
cently acquired a "navy" for the
first time in its history. A destr-
oyer has been purchased, which is
being used for the purpose of es-
corting troop ships carrying Ser-
bian forces.
Says Professor Irving Fisher,
President of the. Committee of
$i .ty ; "Prohibition Willi divert
enough foodstuff from the waste
of the liquor traffic into its legit-
imate use' to give every one of
the 12,000,000 men in the armies of
our Ji urope to alt:ea a pound loaf
of bread every day.
• A raise' has been made In the
rice, o f� al AToizorrtli.. papers' The
Globe •and Mail +�tnplr°e'`h�v
been •increased. -in. -price. to residen-
ts of Toronto and Hamilton deliv-
ered to $5.00 per year and to res-
idents outside of Toronto to $4.00
per year. the evening papers have
been increased to $5.40 to residents
of Toronto and to $3.00 per year
'to subscribers outside of Toronto.
The big jump in the price of pap-
er is the cause of the increase.
SCRANTON COAL
Chestnut, Furnace, Black`
smith and soft coal.
Sorrow.
Sorrow is not an incident occurring
now and then. It is the woof which
is woven into the warp of life, and he
who has not discerned the divine sa-
credness of sorrow and the profound
meaning which is concealed in pain
has Set to learn what life is.—F. W.
Robertson.
Sample.
"George didn't keep his engagement
with me last night." said the girl who
was betrothed to him.
"l'd give hint a piece of my mind,"
said her mother.
"Just a little sample of married lite,"
nugc'sted father,—Cleveland Leader.
Not So Far Wrong.
"Have you written all the invita-
tions to my party, mamma?" queried
little Eva.
"Yes, dear," answered her mother.
"They are all written and mailed."
"And how soon will the acceptions
and deceptions begin to come in?" --
Chicago News.
Work of a Beacon.
There is a flashing beacon ou Rich-
ardson rock, a wave swept spot west of
the Santa Barbara islands, California,
which, without attention, will flash its
warnings every three seconds for seven
months, or over 6,000,000 dashes, before
It requires recharging with gas.—Ar-
gonaut. N
AH Sorts.
"How's this—seven different styles
of plug hats?"
"The line officers of our lodge. Erna
bought a plug hat the year he 'WO
elected."—Kansas City Journal,
C. F. CASE & SON a is no eye and to suspect no
tongue is the greatest prerogat t
Innocence. Dr. Johnson.
PHONE 35 H E N S A L L
Cross Fertilizer Co.
BASIC SLAG
I will have large shipments of
Basic Slag in for fall use. Part-
ies wanting any should notify ane
at an early .date.
Ask your neighbor about re-
sults from using tthe Basic Slag.
PRICES MUCH LOWER THAN
ORDINARY FERTILIZER.
Ontario Ferlilizer
I also sell the above brand of
h'ertilizer made by one of the larg-
est Canadian Companies. Agency
for Commercial Fertilizers for
every purpose.
JOSEPH RAO
R R. N ). 2. Zurich.
CLUBBING LIST
Herald
1/
it
and Daily Globe $4 75
" Weekly Globe 1 75
" Daily Mail and Em-
pire 8 75
Weekly Mail and
Empire 1 75
Toronto Daily Star 8 25
Daily News 3 25
Weekly Star.. 1 75
London Free Press
Morning Edition
Evening Edition
Weekly Edition.....
London Advertiser
Morning Edition
Evening Edition
\ Teelily Edition.....
Farm & Dairy
Weekly Sun
Farmers Advocate...
Montreal Family
Herald and Weekly
Star
Weekly Montreal
Witness
Canadian Country-
man
1/
11
Ii
/1
11
''
li
i,
11
11
1
3 60
3 60
1 85
8 60
3 60
1 75
1 75
1.80
2 40
1 85
1 85
1 50
LOCAL AGENT WANTED
—for—
ZURICH
and district
—to sell .ior—
",THE OLD RELIABLE FONT -
HILL NURSERIES"
Splendid (list of Stock .
For Fall plantiing, 1917
;amid
Spring planth g 1918
Includiing ntany new varieties
which we lalone control.
Send for new illustrated cats(
•alog•ue, also Agent's Proposition.
Handsome free outfit; Exelusive
Territory_ Liberal Commissions.
Stone & Wellington
The Fonthill Nuseries
(Established 1837)
'T' 1RONTC'