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The Herald, 1907-07-19, Page 5The Zurich Herald, HOTELS. 404$0********************* .�s $ * i;} b 03 THE 4 f$ * $ Elk 0 COMMERCI ‘L HOTEL • i)I * ZURICH fit f' era go $ e .0 Strictly up-to-date in modern im • provements. Dining rooms is sup- * plied with only the very best. ¶ ¶ • Bar contains choice liquors o,nd 0 3 O J. P. RAU, PROPRIETOR. al A®'3teq$$ a*C@ES+Q:9'•.!' era*00,* }3**$$$ cigars. ¶ ¶ ¶ ¶ ¶ Excellent Sample 'Rooms for Commercial Men. the 7ominion bonze. This House b.as recently changed hands, and is now one of the most orderly and best con- ducted Houses in the Province. o tietter' able in the pominion. R. R.J ohnston &Son, PItoPRITTORS. HI LLSOREEN. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Troyer were the guests of J. Horner of Drysdale last Sunday. James Logan and wife are visit- ing friends in the vicinity. Geo. Troyer purchased a fine horse last week, ' We congratulate IVIr. W. E. Jar- rot, on passing his Normal exami nation with success,. Mrs. Robt. Love is on the sick list this week. Wo are pleased to say that 3Mrs.' James Jarrott is recovering'. nicely, from her long illness. Bad. Burn Quickly Healed. "I am so delighted with what Chamberlain's Salve has done' for mks that I feel bound to write and tell . you so," says Mrs. Robert Mytton, 457 John St., Hamilton, Ontario. "My little daughter had a bad burn on her knee. I applied Chamberlain's Salve and it healed beautifully." This Salve allays' the pain of a burn almost instant'''. It is for sale by J J Merner. -. •w -a• r". ,. €REDITON The Popular Store for 1907. The people have shown by their, increasing patron age during the past year that they fully realize that this is place to buy their Dry Goods, Groceries, Boots and Shoes, Hard. ware, Paints and Oils, Etc., at the right price, .and. also the right quality. Thanking.our 1 .many orals omens for past favors", We ask for a continuance of the same. R. N. Douglas, BLAKE. Clubbing rates., Miss Ina Andrews, who is at tending Parkhill High School d. home for the holidays. E M. Trechsell of Regnia pen a few days here in the inter ests of his real estate business i the West. The Epworth League were ante tained by the Exeter League o Monday evening -last. Mr. and Mrs. John Finkbeine visited Cleveland relatives for week, recently. Sam Brown and family visite friends at Zurich on Sunday. Seven bus lords besides nume oils private conveyances were r. quired to accommodate the larg crowd who attended the Annual S. picnic to Grand Bend on the 3r inst. All report a pleasant day. Miss Martha Eilber of Buffalo on a visit to her parents at presen ,.gWe have made arrangements to offer the following low clubbing rates with THE H'RALu : Daily Globe . . $ 4.25 Mail & Empire 4.25 Weekly Globe . 1.75 „ Mail & Empire 1.60 Berliner Journal (German) 2.50 Family Herald & Star 1.50 2.25 1.50 :1.75 2,25 1.25 1.25 Daily Advertiser Weekly Advertiser Weekly Sun Farlxter's Advocate Farming World Weekly Montreal Herald All GOOD THINGS must win upon their merits. The International Dictionary has won a greater distinction upon its merits and is in more general use than any other work of its kind in the .English language. A. H. sayce,Y L.D., D.D., of Oxford (University, England, bus' recently said of it : It is indeed a marvelous work ; it is difficult to conceive of a dictionary more exhaustive and complete. ilverythingis in it—not only what we might expect to find in such a work, but also what few of us would ever have thought of lookingfor. A. supplement to the new edition has brought it fully up to date. I have been looking through the latter with a feeling of astonishment at its completeness, and the amount of labor that has been put into it. THE GRAND PRIZE (the highest award as given to the In- ternational at the Wworld's Fair, St. Louis. REE—.,A Tait in Pronulioiation,e in- structive and entertaining for the whole family. also illustrated pamphlet. G. & G. MERRIAM CO., PUDLIWHEfS. SPRINGFIELD, MAaa HENSALL Our Civic Holiday is to be o Tuesday next, the 23rd inst. and a usual, the Methodist Sunday Soho( picnic will be held on that day a Grand "'end. W. Wilson will soon open a gena furnishing store in the Bell blocs in. the store lately rented by Palmer. No, old stock-: forget hint. On Wednesday of this week there was a picnic at Grand Bend cif those engeged in the growth ,af onions. The perfume of the onion is a new bond. F: W. Small.acombe 'has the honor of being Hon. Pres., of this new organization and as the order is very strong the at- tendance was large. Miss Swan and Miss Reynolds, A. Chesney, M. Brown, W. Phillips and W. Bengough are home from Toronto for their holidays. The Missess McEwen, who have been teaching in British Columbia arrived home one evening last week, but no one met them at the station as they wanted to surprise their parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Mc- Ewen. Mrs. Charlesworth of Petrous is visiting her parents. J. McArthur and family are spending the summer at their cot - tare at Maple Grove. Dr, Cawthorpe is again visiting friends in the village. Last week we had a number of visitors from Toronto who took advantage of the Huron Old Boys excursion. On Wednesday of last week Miss Jessie McEwen became the bride of Mr. R. A. Fowler of Woolsley, Sask., formerly of this plate. They took the evening train for their distant hotne. Mr. McKay is putting down some Dement sidewalks and 'rill build the cement shed for the.;• . Methodist church. Miss Maud' Petty, who has bee i' attending the London Business College, left last week for Winni- peg, where she has a good situation. On Friday St. Paul Stindilyl School held their annual picnic at.: Bayfield. municipality : T. S. Carling, Pres., L, Dickson, Vice.pres„ 'fir. G. Bissett, 2nd vice ; Joseph Davis, Treas. ; C. H. Sanders, Secretary. Miss Lou Eacrett bas returned to Toronto after -a month's visit in town. A large number of otic citizens spent Orangemen's Day at Blyth, Mr. T. Handford recently pur- chased a heavy teach from the Doherty's of Clintonfor $450,00, Eli Snell and Jos. ,Sutton had a narrow escape from serious injury on Thursday last at the Canning factory. They bad:just stepped on to a scaffold which bad been in position against the' building for some time and had not noticed that one of the props had been under- mined. Their combined weights caused the scaffold to give way Mr. Sutton who was near a window grasped the sill and saved himself from falling. Mr. Snell was not so fortunate and he fell to the ground a distance of eighteen feet, light. Tommy drove thither in his rubber - tired buggy behind bis Occident mare, and he had Tootsie Sookdo- loger with him, Oh, hut Tootsie Was happy ! They could bear her laugh clear across the sand strip, and she cavorted around like a peacock. Tommy played the true lover to the queen's taste. He took her out in a canoe, and you could hear her squeal and shriek with'terror and delight even when the frail craft was almost out of sight, He put her in a swing for ten minutes, and ho fed her ice cream tIU she had to beg for mercy Arid 'she had ten bottles of pop and two bottles of sassyparell 1 And Phoebe and Esau t Well. they got there in the big. hot. dusty van. Esau is a steadv.going fellow, and he steered. Phoebe away front the. water and the pleasure boatA-dangerous! and the swings —also dangerous ! And the ice cream Par Ior—labeled very,danger- ous ! ` And out of the corner of her eye Phoe'be'saw what a swell time Tootsie was having with that dar- ling Tommy Teeple. When she got thirsty Esau bought her a tin cup full of ice water, and, of course, they had a lunch with them. Phoebo began to feel that they were becoming conspicuous, and no really nice girl likes to be conspic- uous. So she put her hand into her bosom just over her aching heart and fished out a handkerchief And she untied a knot in :the cor- ner' of it, and out rolled two quart- ers and five ten -cent pieces—total one dollar. She handed the coin to Esau Spulpin. "See here, you—yon cheap jay ; here's some money. I want you to take me in and buy me all the ice cream I can eat, and cake, and sassyparell. I want you to give me a swing, and take me out on the bay in that there boat yonder. Get busy, yon. miserly little animal— you ain't agoin' to make a show and a laughing -stock out of me. And the next time I go anywhere with you, my pions freak—you'll know it !" And Phoebe had a pretty time, after all, but she was clear through all the time. Tootsie Sockdologer had one per- fect, heavenly day with the hand- somest young acquaintance in the country—the envied of all the girls. She will never have another and her heart will nearly break next Tuesday, when Tommy takes Phoebe to the second picnic of the seastZn.. ForJ.hat night a whip -poor -will ,-.,.lower orchard, and Phoeb, `SIipped out noiselessly ; and they"M,ade it up under the Northern Spy. Phoebe is far too good for either of them. -The Khan, Toronto Star. i': TOO MUCH Olt A GOOD THING. On Tuesday afternoon Jailyies Sutherland passed on to hise. ward, having passed the four score; term. EX ET eR John Bartner, who was arrested recentlyin Winnipeg on 'a charge of theft preferred by Alex Buchan- an, was brought to Goderich, and admitting the charge and return- ing the goods he was allowed to go on suspeRded sentence. The brass band has 'reorganized and we expect weekly- open-air concerts during the summer months. The Conservatives here are get- ting down to business, The follow- ing officers were chosen Or the "I wouldn't go to the picnic with that there Tommy Teeple," said Old Twilight to Phoebo. "I jest wouldn't, if I was you. He ain't a bad. feller, but he span's too much money, an' he's kinds wild. Now, tiler's Esau Spulpin ; he's hot -foot after you, an be'sthe proper caper. He takes keer of his money, an' he doesn't swear, an' he doesn't do nothin'—that's the kind uv a feller to git along nowadays." Poor Pheobe ! All day long she was distraught ; and that evening at dusk she slipped like a shadow or a low-flying night bird. through the orchard, and when she rapped on the top rail of the fence along the concession a handsome young fellow came hastily forward from the willows. "See here, Tommy Teeple," she said, breathing short and avoiding an embrace, "the folks is down on you an' I can't go with you to the picnic, I'm gain' to go with' Esau Spulpin. Yiv gotta turn over a new leaf, Thomas, or you can't git me, Now, you stay on the other side of the fence, Smarty," or I'll skip—and what good'll that do you? Now, if you were like Esau Spulpin—" "If I was like Esau Spulpin," in. terrupted Tommy, "I'd take a tablespoonful of paras green and get off the earth, You don't love me—that's what." Note—As if she'd been there if she didn't." No, ;you don't love ane. It's all off be- tween us. There's a few girls left, Phoebe, and—" • rr But Phoebe was gone to cry her eyes out under the Northern Spy, The picnic was a great success, nice mad Stop That Cold To cheek early colds er Gibes with "Preventive" Means sure defeat for Pneumonia. To stop a cold with Preventics is safer than to let it run and be obliged to cure it afterwards. To be sure, Pre- ventics will cure oven a deeefY seated cold, but taken early—at the sneeze stage they break, or 7'ead off h t'swhy the es,aro galled Prevent-les.ly colds. That's surely better. Preventics are little Candy Cold Cures. NO Quin- ine, no physic, nothing sickening. Nice for the children—and thoroughly safe too. If you feel chilly, if you sneeze, if you ache all over, think of I'roventics. Promptness may also save half your usual sickness. And don't forget your Child, if there is feverishness, nightor day'. Herein prob- ably lies Preventics' greatest egleieiicY.. 5015 in 5c boxes for the pocket,' also in 5.50 boxes of 45 Preventics. Insist on your drugtiists giving port Preventics "ALL DEALERS" The Sovereign Bank: of Canada HEAD OFFICE 1 -TORONTO. f►Rid Up Capitals i a. .$3.000,oOQa1 'BOARD 0I' DIRECTORS: XMILrt7s JARVIS, ISaq,, o Presilrendy 1,t}NDOLPR MACDONALD, Usq. is! Vice.Presfdenb 46 Ai ALLAN, 1 age., - - and r'ice.Presiden0 MON. D. McMILLAI$, Agent. CAMPSHLL, Esq.. et. A. Fi. ttY1 11i T. Esq., M.P. Hex. Parrot Mcl.auax, W. Ir. McNAVOIIT, nsq., M2. ALES. BILUCn,.Esq..'IC.C. F. G. JaMMMz'x, r . .ti - GenerabManager, jt. CAsa1Ls, r � Ass!, Gerperal•Managelj r,. Savings Bank Department t Ioter�et at beat current rates paid quarterly, ZURICH BRANCH Jos. Snell, _ Manager We have an. extra fine line of toilet setts. bought at. very low prices. It will pay you to see these goods. J. Preeter. pIAM BERLAI A NsP,4%-'c> errsP• 4 ` /J of A few doses of this remedy will in- variably cure an ordinary attack of diarrhoea. It can always be depended upon, even in the more severe attacks of cramp colic and cholera morbus. It is equally successful for summer diarrhasa and cholera infantutn in children, and is the means of saving the lives of many children each year. When reduced with water and sweetened itis pleasant to take. Leery man of a family should keep this remedy in his home. e;ar;Szz it h5ow PRIDE , 25c. K ester e a a ZUE G CH MEAT MARKET E keep in stock a full line o fr esh meats, hams, ete. etc Our cuts are noted for their tenderness and wholesomeness. Our aim is to keep nothing but the best. We make our own sausages. a a Give us a call. 'MUT BEICHERT. LOCAL SALESMAN —WANTED FOR— zTT R I 0 II and adjoining country to represent Canada's fireatest Nurseries A permanent situation for the right elan, for whom tTie territory Will be' resar: red. Pay Weekly. Free Equipment. WRITE FOR PARTICULARS Stone 8, Wellington Fonthill Nurseries. Over 800 acres. TORONTO - ONTARIO TNIL.. IlL For the balance of the year to New Subscrib- ers in Canada for.... 25 Gents If you have sons or daughters at distant points, how could you please them more than by sending them their HONE PA'LRP Send the y,s and addreses and we will do the rest. if The Exhibition the People all like to Attend EXHIBITORS AND VISITORS FIND IT PROFITABLE TO GO ICNABENSERIE'S AIRSHIP daily and a full list of Attractions, with plenty of Music. Fireworks after program each evening, con- cluding on- cdu d iEtSgrand lay, THthat GIBRALTAR" -LCAR" REDUCED RATES ON ALL RAILROADS Rend to the tlaoretary for Prize Lista, Programmes and all information W. J. REID, Presidetat A- M. HUNT, 6scretary LONDON, SEPT. 6 TO 14