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c� spa ®Q alr3ua dl®weaenx Qc)Grio
g e tine ftr�rira, will gial•� accurately sense
I a nap ava¢^y n®nr1= Qhomfld 9"L - no time iii pautti'n in service the t a
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_' ll�f `1pH9$a n¢ mVfl �as�la¢a cmn�l
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>p $ sammis ae 90 �0a a
'ff � Iilfr'o Wi68iigrur�
ffi mcgicko Qom, 1Ba0CavIIflbe,
C�t3034crsb t 0 -DD Y
7
j S a
ne,edoq,�1 � sung s; in. ixhg� m•�oductioan
of suis herd.
With a en o i
t �, . e�sLA. pr dpnot o� of this
du o
I pump se $yp'®, tGl'ua breeders, of
li king• Shorthorns will furnish a
cow that will go far towarais holding
her lac®
4P the '..Byers
p
n, farm
against any of the breed$ now known¢
to American animal husbandry.
NOTOR, TRUCK TRANSPORT SPORT GIF
LIVESTOCK ..
-Last year evidenced an ever grow-
ing popularity of the motor truck as
a means of transporting all classes of
hytestock to market. Records of re-
ceipts at seventeen markets in' the
States, which in 1927 received a to-
tal of 8,393,101 cattle, hogs and sheep
by truck, received during the next
year 12,193,05$, an increase of forty-
six per cent. The total value of mo-
tor truck livestock shipments during
1928 wad estimated at over $350D
000,000, an average of more than
$1,00'0,000( worth of livestock coming
to these markets every day by motor
truck, It is further estimated that
these shipments, if made by railroad,
would have required more than 192 -
q ,
000 freight cars to handle them.
JE UD DJ
°ia ca®uactoaoe_m aawe.�a
tl
REFRIGERATOR CARE
Refrigerate only -those foods which '
will not keep equally well on a pantry
shelf.
Refrigerate only edible portions, dis-
carding vegetable tops, cooked soup i
bones, etc.
Have the food 'cooled to room tem- '
perature before placing in the food
compartment. !
Keep all moist food covered. '
Allow for air circulation around all '
.containers. '
Deep foods which spoil most easily '
in the coldest 'positions. '
Do not waste ice cubes.
Open the door only when necessary '
and close it promptly. '
Follow the manufacturer's instruc-
tions carefully with regard to defrost- '
ing, etc.
Defrost systematically.
Do not leave the refrigerator on a '
defrosting cycle longer than is nese.- i
nary to clear the coils of frost.
If you are going away for a num- ?
fiber of days, empty the refrigerator of
food, turn off the current, and leave '
the door ajar.
Purchase a large enough ,box but
snot too large for your needs.
Have it adjusted fora not -too -low
temperature.
Place the refrigerator where it will
]be as cool as possible.
If you get the slightest suspicion of
a. pungent gas odor, report it at once
to the service department for corre''-
tion.
NEW -ERA FOR DUAL PURPOSE
SHORTHORNS
The unusual interest, from far and
-sear, manifested in the Eastern sec-
tion of Milking Shorthorn activity
and the successful results of these
,events, leads to the conclusion that
this division of the breed is due for
a period of expansion that perhaps
➢ias had no parallel in the history of
the breed in America.
It is not in the values alone, that
were registered in these auctions, that
justifies such a prediction, although in
-most ipstances, particularly in the
mative bred stocks, values were quite
-satisfactory and in most cases beyond
,expectations, but it is the widespread
interest, the unusual distribution, in-
sofar as territory covered by pur-
chases is concerned, and the general'
feeling of optimism among the ad-
-nirers and adherents of the breed
that causes one to look to the future
with a feeling of justified enthusi-
asm.
The sale of English bred cattle at
Springfield, Massachusetts, q u i t e
clearly indicated that American breed-
ers are willing to pay fair prices, and
in some cases extreme prices, for
'good typical specimens of milk and
'beef types of quality provided their
pedigrees are made up of animals that
'have been consistent producers of
anilk. The plainer sorts lacking in
quality, type and breeding are not
wanted and it is not good business to
imeur the expense of sending that sort
from England.
The Western New York Breeders'
auction, made as it was of cattle
mf, exceptional merit, in dual quali-
ties, met wit marked appreciation
and it was the quite unanimous opin-
iosa of those who saw them that they
were the kind of cattle that quite
acceptably filled the eye as to what a
Milking Shorthorn should be.
The time, we believe, is past when
the upstanding coarse, slab sided, pool
feeding type of cow - will be accepted
as the right kind of 1Vi'ilking Short•
shorn and the breeder who recognizes
this fact and •shepcs his breeding play
to conform to the Produetion of tbo
cow that is a ZID-50 proposition In CIO
matter of -beef and milk Is going t(
enjoy the ,greatest, measuvo of pa,
tronage in the futwe. The o=c
tbiiig holds trae in the 'matter o:
atock bulls. The type 'which ' rmo�
nearly coliform916 the' 662 s d0d
dABELLE GIILMAN MAY BECOME
PRINCESS
Probably a good many of our read- .
Irs will remember having seen Me-
lelle Gilman in one of the several ,
nusical comedies in which she ap- i
reared as a star some 20 years or so i
Igo. She was a hit in "The Geisha" I
Ind also in "Dolly Vardon," which
lad its first production in Toronto, I
Bliss Gilman has been for a good
nany years Mrs. William E. Corey.
;he remains Mrs. William E. Corey, I
hough for several years she has beer.
livoreed from her husband. Oddly
nough, though she brought upon hiss I
;eneral contempt and ridicule, they s
emain good friends and Mr. Corey is ,
Inderstood to have acted as her confi- d
lential agent in' the negotiations
Irhich havre been proceeding for five
,r six years to the end that Mrs.
;orey may 'become the more or less
Inblushing bride of Prince Luis Ferd- i
nand de Bourbon, first cousin of King
Alphonso. There is nothing dubious ,
Lbout the prince's title. It is genuine
enough. That's what makes it hard
o get, for it appears that 'Mrs. Cor-
y's long and game efforts to annex
t for herself have failed. Last week
he Infanta Eulalia of Spain., the
nother of the prince, said flatly that
firs. Corey's fortune was not suffici-
:nt.
The princess was cold-blooded a-
wtit it. She did not speak of any
-oyal romance or real love affair. Shc
laid in fact, that while the income of
;he prince was sufficient for his bach-
:lor requirements, the combined ir-
.ome of the two parties to the pro-
)osed contract would not be sutlicient
;o conduct the sort of establishment
;hat would be expected of the prince
when he married. It is understood
:hat the income of Mrs. Corey is only
P,500 a month, which is obviously
small and does not look any larger
because 'Mrs. Corey happens to lir,
perhaps, 50 years or so old. Tie is,
indeed, old enough to be the mother
of the young prince. It has been sug-
gested that Mr. Corey might come to
the front with an increased allow-
ance for the woman upon whom he
has already lavished millions, but whe-
ther his own finances would permit
him to do so, or whether he would be
willing, remains undisclosed. It is
significant, however, that Mrs. Corev
has not abandoned hope but says that.
negotiations will be reopened.
Mabelle Gilman, as we have said,
was once one of the most charming
and popular . singing comediennes on
the American stage. She had beauty,
style and a voice that was more than
adequate for her roles. In addition
sbe'was a lot of fun, as all testified
who knew her. It was when she was
playing in "The Mocking Bird'? in
Pitts -burg that she was drawn to the
attention of William E. Corey. Mr..
Corey was at that time one of the
heads of the United States steel cor-
poration. He had begun life as an
iron puddler at $40 a month and re-
alized that he had missed a lot of
fun. He was enchanted with Miss Gil-
man and made every effort to meet
her. He was rewarded, 'because Miss
'Gilman was not hard to meet for
panting millionaires, and five days af-
ter the infatuated Corey had first
clapped eyes on her they met at a gay
swimming party which lasted until 4
o'clock.in the morning and scandaliz-
ed all moralists who heard about it.
Thereafter Mr. Corey was the all but
constant companion of Mies Gilman,
following her from one town to an-
other and entertaining her and her
friends with all the entbusiasm of a
man who remembered that he had
once been puddling iron for $40 a
month and now had all the money in
the world. Their association became
a scandal. Sermons were preached
about it, but to no visible detriment
to the swimming parties.
It soon became plain that Mr. Corey
intended to desert the wife who has
helped him in his upward climb ani
borne him children, but who, alis
lacked the chic and allure of La Gil'
man. His uncle, J. R. -Corey, wrote i
letter to Charles 'lib[. Schwab askin¢
him to make a public request to Corei
not to marry a "Mari who wantax
> only his money. Clergymen declare(
.they would not perform the marriage
I and bishops asserted that it would no
0L Tws
9.
a U l , . r..
MQUAW In
re uu. Ai p
,.� ,� FI
U
a d sl'
be flu if " : ' �; nee s
'e
eb 4�" j tq ku?tri bro.��a q, Xoro 4 . , e
Iso 'built wi .a. ma oton in New '� arlt,,
The Qorgyy bwo'. mmpptlly a-
br d nd, irn.1,91 Jr1 Vo m, a
o , Jr JA
app rc ; an 4 a Eio. winto algid war
:aeard of frllma various ppipits- 4ecsuusq.'
s'he gppeare4. in 5". coat of R003a,4a
sables costing . $7"x,000.' &aver slfiGo
-hd Coreys (became amicably divorced,
Yfrs. Coney has, remade no secret about
iter desire' to becoyme a princess. The,
.)r'inc s been non
e las co ittafl when'
mtisrs m
ntervie'vmd . but apparently is willing
m6u4h to ms; ry anybody with. euu•-
)u la. money. He seems to be some-
v'i an.dWeptatable;for he was expelled,
`torts 'ranee for'moral reasons "too
ieliOte to ' mention" as the, French
government says. Nor is he welcome
n Spain, ffiis cousin deprived him of
all his honors when he disgraced him-
self in France, and he has nemler ven-
ured to visit either England or the
Jnited States, in neither of which
:ountries would he be welcome. Sia
le continues to live in Portugal. He
s about five feet tall and has experi-
mced the humiliation of arrest on a
!harge of being implicated in the
raffle in narcotic drugs. But he is
undoubtedly a prince, and that is what
:ousts.
CASTAWAY KINGS OF SOUTH
93AS
There are thousands of islands dot-
ed about the Pacific ocean, far from
;he regular steamer routes.
Many of them are overgrown with
uxurious vegetation, aid natural gar • I
ands of flowers overhang the white
:oral cliffs until they touch the surf-
vashed sand beach far beneath them
When the Royal George set out to
Ixplore those islands her commander 'I
old .me that they were so widely scat- 1
ered and so numerous that only a
ew could be explored. 1
On one of the islands it was found
hat a white man had ruled as king l
or many years. On another island
if a large group a Norwegian sailor '
Lad 11wd ever since he was ship- 7
vrecked some thirty years ago.
Perfectly happy and contented with
Lis herds of goats, fowls, tame3
aountain pigs, he and his nearly -white
hildren knew nothing of the worries
Ind troubles of the outside world.
dature had provided for them.
With 'bows, arrows' and native
pears the castaway'and his sons pro'
'ided themselves with all the food
hey needed.
Turtles came ashore to lay their
Iggs in the warm sand; the lagoon
vas 'alive with fish ready to be spear -
!d; wild goats could be killed in the
•ugged hills, while in the undergrowth
If the woods there were numerous
vild pigs.
In certain months of the year seals
game ashore to mate; they provided
eather and oil, the latter being; ased
n the 'crude lamps of the little house -
)old.
One of the crew asked the man if
le would care to return to civiliza-
tion.
"Why should I?" he replied. 61f
should not be happy in civilized life.
here I can please myself without hav-
,ng to worry about restrictions, taxes
ind what not. Besides, my children
would never live in strange surruund-
mgs.
"I have no money—have not seen
money for years—and I don't want to.
It would be no use to me. The people
whom I knew are no doubt dead long
ago.
"Here the climate is never too hot
nor too cold. Bad weather comes with
the rainy season. We know when it
is coming and make provision for the
few weeks it lasts.
"When I die I am going to be bur
ied on the sandy beach down yonder
where I can hear the song of the surf
as it sings day and night through
the sea shells."
Thus spoke the logical old castaway
of Pamuoto islands, who rules his na-
tives more as a father than a non -
arch in this little known, far -away
spot in the Pacific.
Others who have gone to settle
down in these lonely islands have not
always found the happiness they
sought. This proved the case witl,
many who looked for solitude, with
their wives and families, after the
weariness of war.
TREASURE ISLANDS THAT
REALLY EXIST
Treasyyiire islands are not frauds ;
that is to say, they are really islands
in which great quantities of gold and
other valuables have been buried.
For hundreds of years corsairs 'and
pirates and privateers looted inoffen•
sive merchantmen. They do it, still
on the Chinese coast.
In the course of their activities,
these gentry accumulated huge stocks
of treasure, and since they had no
banks handy, their habit was to bury
the stuff until they could use it to
advantage.
But a pirate's life was uncertain.
So very often the treasure was never
recovered by the man who hid it
while even his marks would, in course
of time, be obliterated.
The West Indies, the great stamp-
ing -ground of buccaneers, are full of
treasures. There are millions burirc
in the little sandy caves, of whiel
there are so many they cannot N
counted.
Most of these treasures are losl
beyond hope of recovery, but not all
In the year 1902 an American engineer
turned up in the Bahamas in a smal
schooner and anchored off one of th(
small islands. He was supposed to b(
I after coral. He landed on the tin,
island with two niggers and stood ov
er them with a gun while they dug,
aing;lLo �:.It4iongay ' .IMn000. `�' li e cola..
r
e' t 4 4 do 111
Gy �G:a.'~r� �T� q l4aorut� 9.
th e h • life - i�
w Tmhe W
1l. , �lr� , � �1nR"" '.
�rer. t�afaop4 a lu 1, �` .the mint. �'
r� � . s :�
1m an '
o,• a ' s d i
� m eve
d "'•X
Th4 =4
f os la in the c:.
unu la �fii
s� �
54! m4leia I��rom VR% ', where the e
is good. ovIdepop l ^ a very' largp,.
Buym1 Qso�uetT�,in�' lu4e.;, ty Millioans)
w 'n r 1
as $u� i the y� 822. Fare:
than a do?een e=jedii,�g4s have search-
ed in. vain fop Qd ,trepsure•
'Next: egmel3 dpL4 a rocky meal's
In the 4�tl.uutic, o> �&n South Ameri- .
m n: coast, where it t;s believed that
Fit least a million ag pirate gold is
buried. The late Mr. E. F. Knight,
the well known onra limed war cor-
respondent, wentt vel' in a fifty-six
Lou yacht and ""dug'"'hard but unsuc-
mssfually4
(Others have gone since, the latest
axpedi'tion 'being in 1924. But Trini-
iad is eight square wallas of rock, and
It is ,doubtful if the treasure will ever
be found,
On Aesopus Island, in the Hudson
River, lies a cache . of 16,000,000 dol- {
Lars, hidden in six great iron pets by
)he famous Captain Xidd. Pretty near-
- 16,000,000' dollars' worth of dig-
;ing has been done, but without au:'-
:ess,
Z11H
Council. — The regular monthly
meeting of the Council ' of the Town -
(hip of Ray was held on Tuesday, July
md, in the Town Hall, Zurich. All
;he members were present. The min-
utes of the meetings, held on June 3rd
ted June 15th were adopted as read.
k: communication from the 'County
'lerk, of the County of Huron, %x as
aid before the council giving notice
;hat the sum of $17,684.45 be levied
ipon 'Hay township for county pur-
)oses for 1929, being $10,105.40 for
;eneral county purposes; $5,052.70 for
:ounty highways purposes, a n d
'2,526.30 for -provincial highway pur-
hoses. The following resolutions were
sassed: By-law, re Mud Creek drain,
)e read twice and provisionally adopt -
!d and that a Court of Revision be
geld on Tuesday, August 6th, 1929,
it three o'clock p.m. That accounts
overing payments for township roads,
telephone and general accounts be
sassed. Township roads—Burlington
heel co., steel for culverts, $83.48 ;
N. R., freight on steel, $15.30;
lawyer -Massey Co., repairs for grad -
,r and express, $14.78; John Ooesch,
say list, $253.65; E. Gabel, pay list,
;8.75; James Rannie, pay list, $212.95;
It. L. Sreenan, pay list, $133.95; C.
kldwortb, pay list $66.12; J. Parke,
say list, $183.60; M. Russell, pay list,
X110.70; J. Campbell, pay list, $44.57;
E. Jarrott, pay list, $202.50; T. 'Ay -
Ate, pay list, $247.55; S. Ropp, pav
ist. $5; R. Geiger, pay list, $90.9,5;
E. P. Datars, pay list, $35.40; S. Mar-
in, pay list, $191.41; J. M. Richard-
son, pay list, $271.25; W. Grenier, nay
list, $141.15; F. Corbett, pay list,
5285.80; A. Mousseau, pay list, $36.06;
E, Jarrett, pay list, tile, $10.25. Tele-
phone Accounts—Bell Telephone Co,,
Lolls April 21 to May 20, $86.71; F.
Thiel, account, $1.80; Northern Elec-
tric Co., material, $120.85; Stromberg
Carlson Tel. Mfg. Co., material,
540.59; Zurich Central, switching, $64;
M. G. Dietz, salary and car. $910: P
Mcisaac, salary and labor, $678, less
tolls $39.25, $638.75; F. R. Guenther,
cartage, $7.10. General Accounts—
Times-Advocate, advertising, $2.50;
Municipal World, supplies, $4.50; J.
Roger, assistance, `'Vest Branch drain,
$22:50; S. B. Beare, Ltd.. supplie,,
$12.15. Moved by David Duchanne,
seconded by Edmund Walper, that
council adjourn to meet again on
Tuesday, August 6th, at 1.30 o'clock
p.m.—A. F. Hess, Clerk.
TIME ONCE OVER
A young lady had an old admirer
who, having found her glove, return-
ed it with the following distich:
"If from your glove you take the let-
ter G,
Your glove is love, which I devote ti
thee."
The old gentleman's name was Papa
and he received the following unex-
pected epigrammatic reply, which cha-
:griped him so much that he left the
neighborhood:
"If from Page you take the letter P,
Your Page is age, and that won't do
for me."
c c c
Percy was a bird lover and was
trying hard to interest the girl of
his heart in the cardinal.
"I want you to sec the cardinal,"
he begs
"I'm n. a bit interested in the
clergy," etorted the young woman,
who was getting more and more bor•
ed as time went on.
"But this is a 'bird," protested poor
Percy despairingly.
The girl yawned behind a deli:at�
hand.
"Really," she murmured, "but I am
not interested in his private life,
either."
Old Lady: "I'm looking for ,a book
that will interest a girl of seventeen
or eighteen."
Bookseller: "I'm -terry, but we
haven't any of that type in stock iust
now. You seg, we've been raided
Wee this monthl"
Spring Training,
"Did you miss the train, sir?" ask-
ed the porter,
""Nos I didn't like the looks of it
ad I chased it out of the station."
A ]Forward Step.
"Stage manager: "Rove you has
an stage experience?"
Job seeker: "No, but I had my lel
in a cast once."
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The Vogue and Value Event of ° the Season.
As neva as the season! Individual . . . youth-
ful . . . the smartest ever shown, many styles exclusive
and the first time ever exhibited. You will need no urg-
ing to purchase one of these stylish dresses at $2.90' The
variety is tremendous in new styles, new materials, ne s
color combinations, short or sleeveless, new flare skirt.
Every dress features something entirely different than
you have ever seen. You will be delighted with thea-.,
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If you prefer Suits made to your individual
measure, we have a proposition of dollars and
cents interest to you. These Suits are made of
finest blue Serge, blue stripes and fancy Viforc-
steds, all handsomely lined, and substantially
made. We gauarantee the Suit in every way.
Colne in and see the big array of patterns to
choose from.
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