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Zurich Herald, 1919-07-11, Page 7\LOCAL MARKETS (Correeted e'Very Thierailteert) Beittan 440 LOCAL NEWS '11111TS O haude Old tarns, seneelly it J. PlimP- ed, tate torage tank in the attic of the hotise or loft of barn, and from. L these gravitates to the various plumb - fixtures In the house and the N CO DUNG M 06 . iss 41oesie Hartaelb apeet ---e- troughs and drinking basins in the Dried AppleS .„ atablee If you are particularly in - Potatoes per bag '1,e25 ./iVleat Oats Barley _. ... ... . -. - - lig.000 'Buckwheat - .._.. - ... Bran.... ... ..-.. ,_ .._ ........ Shorts ...„ ... „..„ _ _, '44M1 Tr ° Hoge fob Hensel ... 21.00 ••••••1•0001•MmerimemeSweammeso • omemserimmenaornareramegm.rogrosio •••••rimonersporona..........pwommamammemmiermegsva. Zurich Meat MARKET F'resh and Salt Meats 13ologna Sausages, etc Highest Cash Prioe for Wool CASH FOR SKINS & II1DES l'unblut 86t1 IDOIChat esday London. Mr. and Mrs. R. Stade eipent Sun- day in Dashwood, Mr. John Fausg and family Pontiac, Mich., vieited at the home of Miss L. Faust on. Sunday. Mr, and Mrs, Ross Johnston of near Blake, spent the past week vita:king tit Pigeon and Yale, Mich Mrs. Pauline Faust of Chicago is visiting at the home of Miss L. Faust and Yth.er relatives at. pre.sent Mts. Maggie MeCormiek end two I $ John and Albert, of leeiroit three Essentials in Cooling Wrested in this subject of the farm spring and how to make it more servieeable write the Departineut Agriculture, Toronto, for a copy or Make elleae ream irarni a Bulletin 267, which tells you all irrolit question —It Should De about it. It costs you nothing for Aikla attedinaforiiwnaot_icoenniexceoplitilaspossit,ati eard -Enlarged, Cleaned Out Cribbed In IFIXIcielit ' R. Graham, B,SP.A., ‘0g, A. C.olni?e•ge, octeatributed outario Department et Guelph. Agricuiture, Toronto.) WHY jrOFF ;JAILED. ACTERIA lo Larger or timelier numbers are aleiva.ys' present Leader of Best Element Among the between 60, Prince George E. Lyoff has Come to America to convince the people of temperatures (blood heat) this continent that Russia's revolu- tion is about spent and that Russia is about ready to return to the aims and ideals that animated the first Provisional Government, of which he was Premier. It was his Government which on the overthrow of the Czar and the pro -German Protopopoff by the rab- blekend soldiers in Petrograd gave sane' semblance of order to the revo- lution and some promise that the Russian middle class would master the chaos that threatened. Its defi- nite failure found Lvoff in Siberia maintaining the fight for the cause of Russian republicanism. Prince Lvolf, as Prime Minister of the Provisional Government. under- taken by the Duma until such time as the constituent assembly should be called, strove vainly to re-estab- in freshly drawn inilitt. M . Russian Reformers. visited relalvies and fr.ends dur- deg. F., and SS deg. F. ling the past week.1 they grow and Multiply rapidly, The teachers and choir of tha I causing the milk to become quickie, Lutheran church attended the an- spoiled. As the temperature falls nue!. .Snnday• School held in Ellice below 60 deg. S., the bacteria become. township this yeara less active, the changes caused lei them are less %narked, so the milk The retuens to the Reg:tstrar- keeps sweet and in good condition General of the births, deaths and for a longer time. marriages for the sezond quarter I Growth of bacteria in milk in 24. for Hay township are as follows;hours (13 6,000 per c.c. When freshly Births 24, 17 males and 7 females; t, arawn): Baeteria Per C.C. 6 marriages. , 1 Temp held. (20 drops) after 24 hours. deaths 5, 4 males and 1 f emales d , , The Zur:ch Women's institute. 1 40 deg. F. ....... . 280,000 met at the home of Mrs, W . 60 deg. F. ...... . . 1,170.000 Siebert on Saturday June re8th. The% 60 deg. F. ... a.... '24,600,000 meeting wes in charge of*lass The above table shows how low. Gilholra of Bright, who on ' the, temperatures check bacterial multi - "Canadian Boy and Girl." This tifie fact upon which the practice of plication in milk. This is the scien- was a very instructive and educe.- milk cooling is founded. tive topic, espedially for the mot -1 in practice a dairyman should bear hers, and commanded much atten-: in mind three things in connection bon, The meeting was cloned in with. the cooling of milk. First IthE.., usual way, after Wet lunch cool maiflticerwiitth aausmleitqtlef rudicIll.aythaes rpuos: was 'served, Second—cool milk to as low a tem - LATE J. :C. KALBFLEISCH perature as possible., say sornewbere Another of the well-known cit.- between 40 deg. F. and 50'. deg. F. izens of this section passed sude Tt hird—cool milk with as little con- aminaha t i osnu a as psdust,ossibditty te l e dfizreM uountsZ elenly away at his home heee on sources, June 30th in the person of John.' water splashings, etc. If tbese three C. KalbfleSs2h. The deceased was points were regularly attended to by nssieting to clean out the soft all dairies a marked improvement ln wate.r well when he was strlcke...a the general quality of our milk sun- - pliTeshwould be noticeable right away. ; to . run eclituiucykeerstsuwmaey ftuormeo 01 milki tubularis with heart disease and. died soon eharacter and was one of the orsurface'I • * cooler, pat by pail, im- .after. Be was a man of sterlin pioneers of this section, He came mediately it is drawn from the co. to Hay Trtnenship when still a In this way milk may be rapidly young lad and hae lived here cooled to within two or three degrees ever sane.. He conducted a s____ of the temperature of the water used. ''.'w i The objections to this method are mill on the 14th con. for many ye- , the extra work involved in washing ars and when he d'sposed of it .the cooler twice a day, the difficulty iZur:eli. to reside, where he has Ar c keeping it properly clean, and the sindanger of ontaminating the millce resided. He was twice mariZ 1 with dust, barn odours, etc., unless ried. 0Z the first union rive sons t the cooler is used in a clean and ' h and WANTED Cream, Eggs, Butter and. roaltry Ilighest Cash Price PeAd. POULTRY TAKEN EVERY 1SAT- URDAY. VT. O'BIIIEN Phone 94 Zurich Delaware & Hudson Co.'s LACKWANA COAL Also soft coal. Our terms are cash on delivery D.As Cant elon HENSALL Phone House or GRAD BEND SUMMER RESORT Bring your picnic parties to the Pavilion on the Beach. Special attention 'is being paid to picnic parties. Free tables and free hot water supply . Enjoy the breezes right off the water. Drop us a card; E.C.ECCLEST0N. NOTICE, On and after this date 1 Mr, E. D. !Squirea will not be held resp- onsible for debts innurred Dy my wife, Mrs. E. D. Squires. E. D. SQUIRES. Dated July 2nd, 1919. m4.44.4.0440.04.14.14.444.6.10.4.1.1........4444.440.41.444444414.4,04 NOTICE. A. meeting of all interested in the Temperance cause will be held in the Town Hall, Zurh, on Tuesday •everting Tule- 15th at 8 o'clock tor the purpose of organizing the Township of Hay for the corning referendum/. .1.•••••••••11••••••••••• FOR SALE 1917 model Chevrolet tour:ng car I ngood running condition and good repair. Apply to • Herald Office. for particulars. ONT. Of fice-No. tfL lump from Bed in Morning and Drink Hot Water Tells why everyone should drink hot water each morning before breakfast. Why is man and woman, half the time, feeling nervous, despondent, :worried; some days headachy, dull and unstrung; some days really incapaci- tated by illness. If we all would practice inside -bath- ing, what a gratifying change would take place. Instead of thousands of half-slck, anaemic -looking souls with pasty, muddy complexions we should see crowds of happy, heahhn rosy- 4roheeked people everywhere. The rea- aeon is that the human system does not ,-Itid itself each day of all the waste .'which it accumulates under our pres- Ant mode of living. For every ounce .,of food and drink taken into the system ,ucarly an ounce of waste material nlitist be carried out, else it ferments and forms ptomaine -like poisons which streoi,bsorbed into the blood. ,46Just as necessary as it is to clean the ashes from the furnace each day, beton° the fire will burn bright and lhot,,,so we must each morning clear thegside organs of the previous day's *immolation of indigestible waste and body toxins. Men and women, whether Sieltrormell, are advised to drink each znorning,thefore breakfast, a glass of real hot .water with a teaspoonful of Binestene 'obosphate in it, as a harm- ,)esn ,mea* set washing out of the stomach, Jiver, kidneys and bowels the 4ndigeetible material, waste, sour bile 4344 toxins; ;thus cleansing, sweeten - Ing And purifning the entire alimete PAM nanal !bnfoxn. putting more food All Pe.)4041.A.q1 INI,Eoms ,ot ,peoale-w.h0 had their turn • „1St conetipetirtee, abillinee attacks, acid IstormiA, J0,97.0118 days ,and sleepless inights haece ,b,eqoaks .1..es 1 teranks about 'the moing Inside-1mA. A quarter pound of lieeneettme plieetelfal0 will t of • ipost miteb. et Me drug stet% hut is ufficient te deroonstrate to anyOne 1 ts cleansing, sweetening a44 iFf,tS11101 til g.l.cct uP,All tik0 OVI,Vanh lislr authority in the land. His Gov - eminent, however, from the begin- ning was under the thumb of the soldiers. and workmen's committee, and, lacking even the shadow of authority, was helpless to check the drift toward peace with Germany and ,social disintegration within ill e mighty empire. ' When Lvoff finally turned over the semblance of responsibility to Alex- ander Kerensky the revolution had passed beyond the control of demo- crats and into the hands of the ex. terve radicals. There have not been wanting accusers to maintain that the first Provisional Government, formed by Premier Lvoff, failed to recognize the scope of its responsi- bilities to the country and that by neglecting to take firm hold while .there was yet time made itself an- swerable for the failures and crimes of Bolshevism. • Lvoff is an aristocrat of the aris- tocrats by birth, tracing his ancestry to Rurik, the prince who created in the ninth century the kernel of fu- ture Muscovy. He is a Slav of blood uncrossed with German and during his" whole life has displayed the typi- cal Slav tendency toward democracy. I. -Vett kept aloof from the court as etuch as his father, the composer of aterssimee national anthem, sought the court'. favor. His career is a story of progress in. democratic practice. After graduation from the univer- sity he settled on his estate in the province of Tula, and soon was tak- ing a conspicuous part in the work of the local Zemstvo, those orga.niza- tions which kept a mild democracy alive in Russia during the darkest periods of reactionarism. In 1893 he was chosen head of the Tula Zem- stvo, and by his work, reforms and liberal views thenceforward he won unstinted love of the masses. He opened schools and established hospitals and accomplished much to promote the welfare of the peasants, and his -work became so active in these directions as to earn for him the suspicious disapproval of the Government. During the Russo- Japanese War Lvoff organized sani- tary and feeding stations for the army. After the war the Czar offer- ed him preferment, but he refused, not oaring to give up his social work for such a career as was at the dis- posal of the autocrat. He is acquainted with Anierica. Following the ending of the war with Japan he made a trip through Eu• rope and through this country. He d of the conditions of life strati's, Fred C., o Charles, Adolph, Edmund and George of Detroit. These with hi second wife mourn a loving eparate milk room. • The other alternative is o iva the cans of milk in a tank of running cold water at the earliest opportunity, n insulated tank of water into or in father and good husband. - which some chopped -up ice as thrown. funeral was held last Thursday and If the milk is stirred once every ten I r ely attended. intermetr:. minutes during the first hour, col- • will take place more rapidly than where milk is left unstirred. I c oId running water is not available all summer, ,enough ice should be put up during the winter to ensure the milk being brought to a sufficiently low temperature during the warmer portions of the year. The importance of prompt and thorough cooling of milk is still in- sufficiently appreciated by many milk There is no cheaper and The ZURICH LIBRARY Is Now Open. Hours: Wednesday and Saturday Afternoon and Evening 2 to 5 and 7 tog o'clock. Library at Miss Lydia Faust's home. BUSINESS CARDS orams444.4444444.44040444•14.4P444.440.444.44444444,44444444444.4 0111).FOO'r, KILLORAN, & COOKE- Barrieters Solicitors, Notaries Public atc. 'Office, on the Sqar, 2nd door from Hamilton St, Goderila. Private funds to loan at lowest rates PROUD,FOOT, K. 0, J. L, Kietegies. IL J. D. COOISH. 14r. Cooke will be in Hensel' on Friday and Saturday nf each week. taking plane in the Lutheran cern- etery. Rev. H. Rembe, officiat- ed FIELD SPORTS The Field Sports neld recently on the Fair Grounds were a gr- eat auccess. A. good program of sports was put on and the large . crowd was deeply interested in every event. The revi. al of the pto .. good old sports is a move in the simpler method by which milk (mal- ign 1 ity may be improved. ----T. H. Lund, right direction and when of1 B.S.A., 0. A. College, Guelph. Fritz holds another evening ..------_ sports he will have a still Larger' Making the Farm Spring More crowd. The matched. foot race Serviceable. between S. Hey and M. 'McDougall - rortunately a great many farD1CTS was won iby the latter and Mr. of Canada can boast of a good spring Deeh.er's horse won the horse race , of water on their farms. In some The hall mile foot race was keen- cases it is the only reliable and pe - 1 rennial source of water, and when ly contested and Clarence, Hoff - this is the case it usually receiveS man won be a - feet The propercare. Probably, however, in boxing in barrels created much. general, the spring is a secondary amusement. We have no detailed consideration as a water supply, par -1 m y list of the winners of the various, ticularly domestic, and consequently of the working people in this coun- I , events, but the jumping, shot is let "run wild" more or less, and trybut he came and carried on his putting. etc., NITeVE" all keenly con- is not, therefore, rendering the ser- I stuelies so quietly as to attract no vice it might if it were properly attention here. In 1913 he was elected Mayor of d The object of this short MoscoW bUt tlae Government, on ac - ANDREW P. HESS, Notary Public Com missioner, Conveyancing, Fire and Life Insurance. Agent Corporation and Canada Trust Co. Herald Of fice, Zurich, OSCAR KLOPP Licensed Auctioneer for the Co- unty of Huron, Sales conducted in atny part of the county. 'Charges moderate and satisfaction guar- anteed Address Zurich, R. R. No. 2, or phone Zurich. TO ADVERTISERS During June, July and August the Herald will go to press Wed- ada afternoon. All copies for change of advertsements must be in our office by Monday noon to insure insertion. go.s.* voeweern.ffl waSsage•IslIMM110. aca Dr. E. S. Hardie DENTIST At ZURICH EVERY WEDNESDAY DASHWOOD EVERY THURSDAY, MAIN OFFICTa - HENo %LC. Masser-- Harris Implements Announce ent WE HAVE BEEN APPOINTED LOCAL AGENTS FOP THE CELEBRATED MASSEY-HARRIS IMPLEMENTS AND BEG TO AN- NOUNCE THAT WE CAN SUPPLY ALL YOUR WANTS IN THE LINE OF FARM IMPLEMENTS • : i ALSO REPAIRS FOR MAOHINERY, PLOW POINTS, GIVE US A CALL, ETC. Cas er Wal urich NT to SAW LOGS OF ALL KINDS HIGHEST CASH PRICE PAID F. C. Kalbileis Zurich tested. TRUWORTHY article is to make a few suggestions , count of his strong democratic lean 4 for the improvement of springs in I ings, refused to recognize the elec. tbreak of the world Bay horse, foaled 1816, standardtwkeur'Atter tne the Zebstvos united for the pur- Mnrolled and Inspected) general. he 1.thegilert placethespring cleanedoul1 . and registered, Vol, XXII, Bred out well and then cribbed up in some i Doge of aiding Great Russia to vic- by the late John L. Snyder, ' at: efficient way. Probably the best tory and Lvoff was chosen to head this war organization. As the leader Park Farm, Springfield, Ohio. Si-: method is to get a large concrete or of the Zemstvo Union he found him - old record 2.97X; Dam, 'Trussoca, feet in diameter, and put them down ! rtheXisliti existed t I p o itw el 14. - red by Ortolan Axworthy, 3 year sewer pipe tile or two, about 23/4 elf furaesleadingthoant euvouf 2.07 by Moko. Dam of Trujalla 2 111 the e psuptrinahg, ucveunirlaingiptehzhrjoultintist In•L , sia under autocracy. Thus uPrinit;e- year 00. record 2,20% raced in 2.07 the wall of the upper pipe close -to Lvoff, then about 50 years old, wide - at three years. Last season as a the high water mark of the spring, ly known and admired by the massen , two • year old, Truworthy trotted and connect the overflow piof Russiawas deemed the hest fitted pe to a to bring order out of chaos when the the farm half mile track in 2.27, tile drain that leads down to a good firSt Provisional Government was Truworthy was broken to harness outlet some distance away. If it is in May in his yearling form and not chonnledethed to a drain the open trotted a quarter in 38 seconds!, be ins the paestt crreeeint eshuIuflitillespfreinnag- otneeeighth in 18, With no intention ed in and the overflow pipe referred . - of searching him. Be is gaited to to extended horizontally to a trough - -' go very fast and he has the inclin- outside the fence. The top should be provided with a tight cover made The Fulmar. ation to stay on the trot and do of concrete or heavy plank, The fulmar, a sea bird common on the right thing at all times. Be The spring becomes particularly. • St. ' the Island of Kilda is so oily that wheni the natives kill one they slut - Ortolan Axworthy 3 years, 207, on an elevation considerably greater PusyePlaisassa awiicaltinthroltniglhlhioddy it is One of the first crop of foals by serviceable if it happens to be located and considered by many the best than the house and barns, tor then legal to kill thePfulmars only :llirings individual son of his sire, Axwor the water can be piped down under one week in the year, but during that thy 3 years Loy,. Remember the the btiurnstslinFe From storagettanks in the week from 18,000 to 20,000 birda AxWorthy Moko tross produced flovs gy. gralvimty hteotathes the Tater are destroyed. the World's champion the Real service, Or"1 the supply11?' la s 04 ' • ------------- i . 1 e is great Lady 3 eeare, 2,03. Don't miss enough and a fall of a few feet can I .., Seeing Parliament. seeing Truworthy as I cannot say be secured within a short distance, i 4 0" Berns has escorted 50,0a0 too Much 1ot. hitt, TERMS-NiVill Sae' 30 or 40 feet of the spring, a Persons over the houses of Perlihydraulic ram may be installed for ment hi London. n,- This has entailed stand at his WWII Stable at Hills pateepenee Green at SA to insure a liVing atee rater of a nring•to the hiti delivering lectures four hours a I eday. 124-4,14);V:14 R., Vt.00Y1.131;1103.): 1 in / • War Savings Stamps can bc bought wher- ever Ws sign is displayckl. Perhaps you have never been strong or saving. You COULD save a little, but— If you knew you could get 41/2 % on every $4.00 you saved, wouldn't thai tempt you? Well, then—that is what Wer Savings Stamps will enable you to do. If you find it hard to save $4.00 at a time because the quarters slip away un- awares, Thrift Stamps will help you. You can buy a Thrift Stamp for 25 cents, and when you have sixteen, you can exchange them for a War Savings Stamp, for which you will be paid back $5.00 in 1924. By doing this you will have become an investor! And you can go on building up that investment every time you save another $4.00. The odd cents pay the accrued interest. Invest that "wasted five per cent." in War Savings Stamps. You Will never regret it. 4 A 4 4 4