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The Herald, 1912-09-19, Page 5e, D. b. t +. ++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++4.++++++++++++++++ • THE MOLSONS BANK Incorporated 1855 RECORD OF PROGRESS FOR FIVE ¥ EARS -1900-I911 Has 83 Branches in Canada, anal Agents and Correspondents in all rho,3 -Principal Cities in the World. 1906 1911 ital $ 3,000,000 S 4,000,000 dap Reserve 3,000,000 4,600,000 Deposits 23,677,730 35,042,311 Loans and Investments 27,457,090 38,854,801 Total Assets 33,090,192 48,237,284 A General Banking Business Transacted SAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT HENT at ail Branches. Interest allowed at highest current rate. Zurich Branch - J. A. CONSTANTINE, Mgr. +++,++++++++++++++44+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++.:4++ 'The Best Clothes Possible' THAT'S OUR MOTTO There is nothing that means so much as "Quality" as applied to Clothes. • It means everything that makes for style and service, richness of cloth, in cut, in tailoring, - and in finish. By making such "Clothes" we are making our customers life-long friends. Can't we make you one of them? We are anxious to, and if Quality appeals to you, we can—so let us get acquainted Now. J. H.:IOLTZ] EANN, _ Merchant Tailor. CREDITON, - ONTARIO W. C. T. UM BOB'S TABLE MANNERS We are to leave the city at si o'clock to -morrow 'evening, and can easi1A' inotor to "'the club . house in an hour. You will bring the little boy, of course. Bob was glad to hear his father accept the invitation, and his heart fairly jumped at the thought of a real banquet. How the boys in Prattville would stare when he told them of this honor! He and his father were ready the next evening when the automobile stopped in front of the hotel. Mr. Kaufman sat on the front seat with the chauffeur an d invited Bob to sit between them. Fust as they were about to start a messenger boy handed. Mr. Kaufman. a telegram. He read it with an anx- ious face. I must leave for New York on the one o'clock train tonight, he said. It is a matter of great im- portance. Perhaps it would be better for me to ask to be excused from at- tending the banquet. I might miss my train. No, no, we cannot excuse you, insisted the gentleman on the back seat with Mr Barton. You are to be toastmaster this evening: You tali easily return in time. Your ab- sence. would mean too great. a disap- • pointment to all of us. Mr Kaufman reluctantly consented to go. There were only gentlemen at the banquet, but they were so'pleasant and friend- ly Bob did not feel out of place. He enjoyed the music, the jokes and funny stories, and above all the. deep interest in all seemed to feel in him- the only boy present. When they sat down at the beautiful table, which sparkled with cut glass and silver, and was decorated with rare flowers, one of the colored waiters took especial care of the little boy guest. How carefully Bob used the various forks and spoons. He anxiously watched Mr Kaufman, who sat opposite, and never made a blunder—until the wai- ter brought a decanter and started to pour something into a small, up -turn - ed glass. , Is that wine? asked Bo b sickly. Yes sah, replied the smiling g alter:, '1 can't drink it" and Bob wurned. downhis glass with a decided tthump. Then he looked at -his father Mr Barton was frowning and looked displeased: Had he made a mistake? Bob wondered. He hadtried to be so %refill and not put his father to shame! He would explain platters. In shrill, boyish voice, he began; That's what Miss Ray told as to do if offered hie or strong drink at parties. She Old as all about it when we had Bel- hazzar's Feast for the lesson. Jim ohnson said he wouldn't know, how b act at a (linnet, if they had. wine— Bob stopped suddenly, for the . club- men seemed much amused, and his father's face wes red. "I'm disgrac- ing him' thought Bob. He is ashamed of me—and I don't know what I said that .was wrong. That's a good idea, Young man, cried Mr Raufman hearti- ly; as he . nioticecl' flu .. 6tir seal: ;. .er chan't's, embarrassment. "Here goes- my oesmy glass 'down,We'll drink asci' toasts in water" To be continued E. M, W. Press Supt, • TALL STORY OF TALL CORN The prospect of a big corn yield in Kansas this fall recalls the story of big Kansas corn at the Philadel- phia centennial Among the Kan- sas agricultural exhibits at that Fair was some Dorn on the stalks grown'in the Neosho river bottoms It was 20 feet high and the ears looked as long as stove wood Aa old lady from Vermont gazed at it and declared that the stalks were spliced Then she took an. other look and changed her mind. "But," she said, "it didn't grow that big in one year: It must have grown for two seasons" The man in charge of the Kansas. exhibit was somewhat of a prevari- cator himself. "Lady," said he in great solemnity, we are almost ashamed to exhibit this corn. This has been a hot, dry year in Kansas and we have not been able to raise very large corn. But we felt that it wouldn't do. to have a Kansas exhibit without corn, so we brong. ht this little stuff along- In a really good year the corn grows so high in Kansas that eagles build their nests in the tassels, knowing fall well that they are out of range of the farmers' guns—Kansas City Journal. OVER ee WBAS> EXPERIENCz. TRADE MARKIi DE9it1N8 COPYRIGHTS &C. Anyone sending a sketch and description may quick y ascertain our opinion free Whether an invention is probably patentable. Comrdunloa. tions strlctlyconfidentlal• HAND800K on Patents sent free. Oldest agency for securingatents. Patents taken through Minn & Co. reoelvq apecia notice, wltbout charge,. In the Scientific .lnmeriean,. A .handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest air. Canada, $8.7any year, postage prepaid. Terms by ail' newsdealleraa. MUNN& CO s1Broadwav, New'J!' 13r.30 arm, 6 F Y"fir,. +b'gwhi i • Never leave home on a journey without a, bottle of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy It is almost certain to be needed and cannot be.obtained when on board the cars or steamships.. li or sale by all dealers. THE IMPERIAL ��I :Jill H , The :disposition 0j er nvtia the Exhibition. atrLoxa to to al the means of a politicttil Prof44ai in favor" of protec.tion.Wee stl' w„l duly exercised this year. luncheons the advocates of lea, of restrictedruatkets and.,of poured forth at declamation.i ed but one in its whole e political object, of tli Gaff o, blage is not to doubt. If the farmers Witltclresv ti port, as some allege';, ' it til` natural. They had.heels ` ti treated and lavished into tllt,;il way corners. It was net'islet Bear their causes reviled nnd::eit dustrialism exalting in its Alj�v" and indecently` olaniorin, kol.'• while their 'crops were i.ortin• i fields: Weekly Sun. year's crop has tli lliflloulties, but the e et het rt or �t to Ge, ti lAis from the feed r+ iii n 'twho' overcome$ the Hies as they; present them. be 41b puolall lyin blie bray. h1i looksidy wias: if holidays put upon the. 1,0 above„is demanded by ' 411 wwrk and no play o ';adult boy” is an old xequently: quoted, but all d up work snakes Jack a: and ]eaves himpossibly in position. 'fire active life is inaeut to the acquirement of chess, sharpness and content t, Every man; and woman Id be thankful for health and tit to put into a goodly share d work. It has in it the elixir fa as compared with the vvsigess of a ,dfone. An occas - 1 holiday ._ is all right but the stands a chance of being better. v sled for the winter time than butterfly. PREPARE FOR WET CRA The chances aro that ';a,; deal of the cereal grain will season be harvested prem ttui This, together with the •erg. for feed, will oause much "o grain to be thrashed%in a"':dein ously wet condition, as wet "g. in the bin is almost sure to;he . to become musty. Hence the portance of providing against plight by having an abundano; room for storing the grain 1n o that it may readily bo dried'o winnowing. The barn floor shA": be carefully gone overand sins, grain -proof. If the clamp grail:ill spread out on this fluor and tb barn doors thrown open the a:noun of improvement made in a fp hours will be astonishing It espeoially important to care for seed grain, as it is quite easy allow a little fermentation to unnoticed that will consider lower its germinating powers, .0 RUN 1MIEDICAL ASSOCIATION he .Huron Medical Society held aiir,'quarterl.y meeting in the Court te, Goderich on Wednesday, t, 11, There were. present Drs. rp ody, Redmond, Adams, Tanilyn, i Ingham; Dr. Gillies, Teeswater; lieKenzie, • Moncton; Dr. Weir, Dr. Gunn Clinton; Dr. Bur- sSeafortli, and all the medical i,-ofession of Goderich attended. The Deters sat down to a luncheon at the edford Hotel et 1 p.m. and at 2 p.m. a oourned to the court room. Drs. star, Taylor and Macklin present - interesting cases to the Society. Gunn showed a number of curious hologieal specimens, and Dr. Me- nzie read papers, the former au ex- eelleut one on. Tetaiinj, arid, flZe latter on Medical Heresy. The,, meetieg broke up at 4.30 The other day a pathetic story was put, on the cables, telling of the in- ability of Lord Wenlock's' heiress to liye in the ancestral home, because the death duties took so much of the es- tate. English papers just received state the gross value of the estate is 115519,487,, and that after the death duties are deducued 11"1452,000 will remain. Poor heiress! • POET MEETS POET—A North Missouri fanner whose hog was killed bya.train wrote- to 'the company's claim agent for settlement, as follows, ---Dear sir,—My razor -back strolled down your track a week ago today. Your •twenty.nine came down the line and snuffed his lift away. You can't blame me, the hog, you see, slipped through a cattle ;ate, so kindly pen a cheque for ten, the debt to liquidate,; He received the following reply. — "Old twenty-nine came down the line and killed your hog, we know; but razor -backs on railway tracks quite often meet with woe. Therefore, my friend we cannot send the cheque for which you pine. gust plant the dead, place o'er his head, "Here lies a foolish swine." For the third time this season all previous records for one month's traffic through the canals at Sault Ste Marie have been broken. • The voluinn of freight carried through the waterways in August was 10,852,852 short tons. It is also the 'third month • this season that freight traffic through the canals have exceeded 10,000,000 tons, a mark never attaiced in any previous season, R. T. P. MaLAIJG1JLIN, form- erly Assistant Surgeon at1 'a or- 1ield s (Royal London Opthalmie} Eye Hospital and Golden ,Square Nose and Throat Hospital, London,.:;:' England. Also spent tine at Berlin and other" Continental Hospitals, General Practice with special •attent- ion to Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat: Eyes tested (Retinoscope and Op- tlralmosoope' used) and glasses sop - plied .: a and properly adjusted. . Office, Dashwood, Ontario, a, ■ ■ ZURICH r a■ MEAT MARKET E keep in stock a full line of fresh meats, hams, etc. etc Our cuts are. noted for their tenderness and wholesomeness. Our aim is to keep nothing but the best. We snake our own sausages. . Give us a call.' YRJNtBLUT - E 1Ct1ERT Dr. de Van' Pernalk Pills A reliable French regulator; never faits. These pills are exceedingly powerful in regulating the generative portion of the female system. Refuse all cheap imitations. Dr. de van's are sold at gP � Seobeid Drug �o., Oram tboarfnes, Ont. The above res " a picture of " Chief. Little Bow," who was probably the first inhabitant. of CARMANGAY, where once the savage roamed at will, NOW the farmer tills the land. Railways, Wheat, Coal anx•' Water !! CARMANGAY is a NATURAL RAILWAY CENTRE on account of the topography of the country. It is situated on the Little Bow River, and has an UNLIMITED SUPPLY OF PURE WATER. It has VAST QUANTITIES OF COAL close to the town. OUR PROPERTY is WITHIN the TOWN LIMITS and ONLY TWO BLOCKS from the centre of business Send for our illustrated booklet describing the property we have to sell in Work for your Money in the East, but invest it in the West CUT OUT THE COtJpt�N AND SEND IT '1"t S NOWT V !II Western Canad . Estate Company Head Office :--502 BUILDING, Toronto) Ont. NIONTRI.AL, QUE. - 14A'NHtL: 35 Sun Life Aarax SO2' Listq • LONDON, ONT. 11 1?ominion Bank Chamber* WESTERN CANADA REAL ESTATE CO: 502 Temple Building, Toronto, Ont. Please send me without obligation on my part, literature containing facts, figures and views Of CARMANGAY. Name Address