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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 8 Oct 1914, p. 6

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i I i " .--iV'WW 'ry'S w$m the property of quieting physical pain.--Youth's Companion. Self-Drugging. The pernicious habit of self-drugging self-drugging persists ; new preparations are everywhere advertised, and the old favorites still appear to hold their own. Although the habit is unfortunate, and grows upon its victim, like any other bad habit, it is a cojmfort to know that many of the most widely advertised patent patent medicines are at least harmless. harmless. They can do good only through the 1 power of suggestion, but the chief argument against them is the waste of money money that might, be spent for wholesome food and health-giving vacations. Some of these preparations, however, however, are not harmless. They often contain, under the guise of a "tonic" or "restorative," smoe- " tonic" or "restorative," something something that gives a temporary fillip to the nervous system, and conceals conceals symptoms that could be easily easily cured if they were recognized in time. Still others, and these are far more dangerous, contain some form of cheap alcohol, or worse yet, morphine or cocaine. Many a broken-down victim of morphine was betrayed by a little bottle of toothache relief or headache headache cure. The relief was so speedy and so complete that the sufferer could not resist the temptation temptation to work the miracle again and again. Presently he became unable or unwilling to bear the least physical physical discomfort, and now he doses himself at the first symptom, instead instead of seeking medical advice in order to remove the trouble "that causes the pain. Fortunately, many persons cannot cannot take morphine in any form without such disagreeable results as nausea, depression, and mental depression, and mental disturbance. disturbance. After the first dose, they will bear almost anything rather than repeat the experience. But most persons are not thus protect ed by nature ; the drug gives them a sensation of well-being. bot> physical and mental. That deal thinking and increased power d! imagination that opium at first causes has led many a noble intellect intellect down the terrible path of morphinism morphinism that leads to physical-, mental, and moral destruction. Nt man can safely administer drugs to himself ; above all, drugs that have ■ Health Notes. \ Celery is a, good nerve tonic, and it is isaid to ward off rheumatism. Burns.--The first thing to do is to exclude the air from the burn. For this a, thick paste made of bicarbonate bicarbonate of soda may _ be used. Equal parts of linseed oil and lime water (carron oil) should be used, if handy; if not use vaseline" or sweet oil. Buttermilk has, one characteristic which makes it a fine remedial agent in all ailments which arise from the sluggish excretion of waste matter, such as gout, rheumatism rheumatism and obesity. The lactic acid contained in it attacks and dissolves dissolves every kind of earthly deposit deposit in the blood vessels. Thus it keeps the veins and arteries so supple supple and free that they cannot get clogged, eliminating deposits of irritating calcerous matter around the joints and poisonous w T asfcq in the muscles. How's This ? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward Reward for any case of Oatarrh that cannot cannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Oure. F. J. Ghenby & Co., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe believe him perfectly honorable in all business business transations and financially able to carry out any obligations made by his firm. National Bank of Commerce, Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, GERMAN LOSS OF TRADE. Big Engineering Contracts Which Go to British Firms. Pte. J. J. Rosseau, Belgian Hero. Proclaimed as the greatest hero of the war for his daring capture of Count Von Buelow, the son of the ex-Chancellor, Private J. J. Ros- seau, of the 4th Regiment de Chaus-^ acting directly upon the blood and mu-1 seurs Cheval, Louvain, is wearing cous surfaces of the system. Teatimon- Military Gold Cross, presented ials sent free Price 75 cents per bottle, to him by ^ Belgian King in recog- Sold by all Druggis . nition of his valor, and is to be the Take Halls' Family Pills for constipa- 1 recipient of the Order of Leopold, equivalent to the British Victoria tion. PRICES OF FARM PRODUCTS ÜEPOXTS PBOM UABIK® XBASE CEVTBES OP AMBBIOA. Breadstuffs. Toronto, Oct. 6.--Flour--Manitoba, first patente, $6.60 in jute 'bags; second ^patents, ^patents, $6.10; strong bakers', $5.90; Ontario wheat flour, 90 per cent, patenta, $4.70 to $4.90, latter price bags included. Wheat--Manitoba No. 1 Northern,, old, at $1.16 1-2, and new at $1.14 1-2; No. 2 old, $1.14 1-2, and new, $1.11 1-2; Ontario Fall wheat, $1.06 to $1.08. Oats--45 and 46, outside; Western Canada, Canada, No. 2, at 64c, and No. 3 at 53c. Barley--Quoted at 63 to 65o, outside. Rye--Remains at 78 to 80c, outside. Peas--Quoted at $1.10 to $1.12. Buckwheat--Quoted at 70c. Bran and shorts--From $25 to $27 a ton. Corn--79c c.i.f. Collingwood or Port Colborne. x Cross. In his encounter with Count Von Buelow, M. Rosseau was severely severely injured by a nasty kick in the knee from Von Buelow's horse. Rosseau relieved the Count of his despatch case, his uniform, and 165,- 000 francs. The money he turned over to the Red Cross fund. THE JUBILEE STAMP ROOM. DRINK AND UNEMPLOYMENT HAND IN HAND When the test comes and the factory and office fore s have to be cut down, drinkers are the first to be let go. This falls hardest on their wives and families, for the man who has the whiskey or alcohol craving spends so much on it that there is usually nothing laid aside. Alcura stops the craving for drink and helps the man help himself in his desire to get away from the drink disease disease and keep his work. It is guaranteed guaranteed to give satisfaction or money is refunded. Alcupi No. 1 can be given secretly by wife or mother, and will render drink distasteful, even nauseous. Alcura No, 2 is the voluntary treatment. treatment. Country Produce. Butter--Choice dairy, 24 to 26c; inferior, 20 to 23c; creamery prints, 29 to 32c. Egge--New-laid, dozen, 30 to 32c, ordinary ordinary stock, 24 to 27c. Poultry--Spring chickens, dressed, 2j to 25c ; duckfl, dressed, lb., 15 to 17c; fowl, 18 to 20c; turkeys, dressed, 21 to 25c; hens, alive, 16 to 18c. Cheese--New large, 16 to 16 l-4c; twine, 15 1-4 to 16 l-2c ; old, large, 17 l-4c; twins, 17 1-Zc. Beans--Prime, bushel, $2.90 to $3; handpicked, handpicked, $3 to $3.25. Potatoes--Ontarios, 75 to 80c per bag, out of store, 60 to 65c in car lots. Baled Hay and Straw. Hay--Local dealers are buying on track here as follows:--No. 1 new hay, $15 to $16; No. 2 new hay, $13.50 to $14. Straw--Baled, $8 to $9. Can be had at our store, $1.00 per box. Ask for free Alcura booklet. Jury and Lovell, Druggists, Bowman- rille. 9 Have You Bilious Attacks? Chamberlain Tablets keep the liver right up to normal normal all the time--and that's why they are so effective in cure of Stomach Disorders, Fermentation, Indigestion, and all ailments which are the forerunners forerunners of biliousness. Try them. 25c. a bottle Druggists and Dealers or by Mail. Chamberlain Medicine Co. Toronto Montreal Markets. Montreal, Oct. 6.--Corn, American, No. 2 yellow, 88 to 89o. Oats, Canadian West ern, No. 2, 61 to 62c; Canadian Western, No. 3, 60 to 61c; No. 2 local white, 55c; No. 3 local white, 54c; No. 4 local white, 53c Barley. Man. feed, 63c; do., malting, 82 to 84c. Flour, Man. Spring wheat patents, firsts, $6.70; eeconde, $6.20; strong bakers', $6; Winter patente, choice, $6.50; straight rollers, $6 to $6.25 ; do., bags, $3 to $3.10. Rolled oate, barrels, $6.15; do., bags, 90 lbs., $2.95, Bran $25. Shorts $27. Middlings Middlings $30. Mouillie, $30 to $34. Hay, No. 2, per ton car lots, $18 to $19. Cheese, fin est westerns, 15 to 15 l-8c ; finest easterns, 14 3-4c. Butter, choicest creamery, 27 1-2 to 28c; seconds, 26 1-2 to 26 3-4c. Eggs, fresh, 32c; selected, 27c; No. 1 stock, 25c; No. 2 stock, 21 to 22c. Potatoes, per bag! | penny English^ stamps, car lots, 70 to 72 l-2c. Winnipeg Crain. Winnipeg, Oct. 6.--Cash :--No. 1 Northern, Northern, $1.07 3-4; No. 2 Northern, $1.04 1-2; No. 3 Northern. 90 l-2c; No. 4, 93 l-8c; No. 5, 87 l-8c; No. 6, 82 l-8c; feed, 75 6-8c. Oats C.W., 48 l-4c ; No. 3 C.W., 46 l-2c; An English Inn Is Covered With Postage Stamps. Within easy walking distance" of the old cathedral town of Chichester, Chichester, England, is the -"Rising Sun," in North Berated--a house of interest interest to all boys and girls who collect stamps. For the little inn contains a room that is covered, every inch of it, with postage stamps. Ceilings, walls, doors, chairs, tables, tables, picture frames, every part of the room except the floor, are thickly thickly covered, while from the ceiling hang long festoons and ropes, made of bundles of stamps for which there was no other room. There are fully two million stamps pasted up, and a million more in these festoons, while great bundle®, one of which holds sixty, thousand stamps, hang among the heavy loops. But it is not only the amazing number of stamps that attracts the visitor's attention. There is evidence evidence on all sides of great ingenuity. ingenuity. The pictures in side the stamp- covered frames are of stamps themselves themselves ; the ceiling is ornamented with a great star ; the arms of the neighboring town of Bognor are over the fireplace, and the tablecloth tablecloth shows the Eiffel Tower ! Queen Victoria is surprisingly lifelike in carefully chosen stamps of different colors. The Prince of Wales's feathers feathers and the crown are also represented. represented. Most of the stamps are but there are others from all over the world. One door is a bright yellow, covered entirely with the Swan River stamps of Western Australia. It is all the w r ork of the landlord, Mr. Richard Sharpe, who, already a Quarrels of lovers--renewals of lo vC. --P rover b. What a husband forbids, a wife desires.--Proverb. Folly always deserves its misfortunes.--A. misfortunes.--A. Presault. Men make laws ; • w omen make manners;-- De Segur. Woman lives "by sentiment, man by action.--Balzac. With women, friendship ends when rivalry begins.--Anon. One loves more the first time, better the second.--Rochepedre. There is something of woman in everything that pleases.--Dupaty. One could make a great book of what has not been said.--Rivarol. Circumstances do not make men ; they discover them.-- Lamennais. There is nio game of chance more hazardous than marriage.--J. David. David. Love is the beginning, the middle and the end of everything.--Lacor- daire. As we grow old we grow more foolish and more wise.--La Rochefoucauld. Rochefoucauld. The way to make friendships that will last long is to be long in making making them. We always find wit and merit in those who look at us with admiration admiration .--Anon. Philosophy teaches us to bear with calmness--the misfortunes of ôur friends. --Anon. Man thinks, and at once becomes the master of the beings that do not think.--Buffon. Do you wish a portrait that is not flattered 1 ? Ask a woman to make one of her rival.-- De Propriac. To swear to love always is to affirm affirm that two beings essentially changeable will never change.-- Arnon. Shallow men speak of the past, wise men of the present and fools of the future.-- Mme. du Deffand. Many consent to be virtuous only on condition that everybody will ; give them credit for it.-- De Finod. Men say more evil of women than they think ; it is the contrary with women towards men.--8. Dubay. A woman would be in despair if nature had formed her as fashion makes her appear.-- Mlle, de Lespi- nasse. It is always imprudent to marry a woman for love in whose bosom you inspire none.-- Mme. d'Arconville. Nothing is more difficult than to choose a good husband--unless it be to choose a good wife.--J. J. Rousseau. Rousseau. It is a misfortune for a woman never to be loved, but it is a humiliation humiliation to be loved no more.--Montesquieu. more.--Montesquieu. Men do not always love those they esteem ; women, on the contrary, esteem only those, they love.--8. Duba>. Great minds comprehend more in a word, a look, a pressure of the hand, than ordinary men in long conversations or the most elaborate co r re spondence. -- La va te r. The presence of a young girl is like the presence of a flower ; the one gives its perfume to all that approach approach it, the other her grace to all who surround her.--L. Desnoyêrs. The art of putting the right men in the right places is first in the science of government ; but that of finding places for the discontented is the most difficult.--Talleyrand. -- * Are You The trade war on Germany is proving a great success. The contract contract from the meanest penny top to a first-class locomotive originally placed with German companies are' being rapidly transferred to British British companies. In few trades has there been keener competition from the Germans than in the railway locomotive - and rolling stock industry. industry. Before the declaration of war, important orders for. British and overseas railways were in the hands of leading Gerrman companies. One of the most important contracts, contracts, comprising a large number of passenger carriages for new electrified electrified services around Buenos Ayres of the Central Argentine Railway Company originally placed in Hanover Hanover has now been awarded to the Metropolitan Amalgamated Railway Carriage Company of Birmingham. South Africa and New Zealand had large orders for locomotives in the Maffic Company of Munich. The Hanover Company were also building building 34 passenger carriages for the Union of South Africa Railways. Kerskel of Eassel had orders for 18 heavy main line engines for South India and some of Argentine railways. The Hanover machine factory of London, was building locomotives for the Bengal railway and Taff Vale,Railway, and the Ho- henzollem works, Dusseldorf, were building six powerful shunting locomotives locomotives for the Port of London authorities. authorities. All these contracts have now been cancelled and will shortly be divided amongst British and American engineers. The dictionary says that Autointoxication Autointoxication is "poisoning, or the state of being poisoned, from toxic, substances produced within the body." This is à condition due to the stomach, bowels, kidneys, liver, or pores of the body foiling to throw off the poisons. More than 50 % of adults are suffering from this trouble. This is probably why you are suffering from nervousness, headaches, loss of appetite, lack of ambition, and many other symptoms produced by Auto-Intoxication. Y our whole system needs stirring up. DR. PIERCE'S G OLDEN MED ÉGAL DISCOVERY (in Tmbint or Liquid Form) will remedy the trouble. It first aids the system to expel accumulated poisons. It acts as a tonic and finally enables the body to eliminate its own poisons without any outside aid. Obey Nature's warnings. Yoar dealer in medicines will supply you, or you may send 50c for a sample package of tablets by mail. Address Dr.R.V.Pierce, Buffalo,N.Y. Tho latest edition of Dr. Pierce's Common Sense Medical Adviser should be in every family No reason why you should be without it when it will be sent free to you if you will remit cost of wrapping: wrapping: and mailing--31 one- cent stamps--to Dr.R-V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y-, THINGS THAT HAPPEN IN WAR TIME Almost ev-çry big bottle has been HOMESEEKERS EXCURSION TO WESTERN CANADA. --No. 2 ... 1 , , . extra No. 1 feed. 46 3-4c; No. 1 feed, 46c; stamp collector, thought of this as \T _ n f ~ _ J D o-nlavT 111-1 zN-t-1 rx/1 Plo» I ^ , . an amusing way of disposing of No. 2 feed, 45c. Barley, unquoted No. 1 N.-W.C., $1.213-4; No. 2 $1.18 3-4. Flax, C.W. duplicates. He finished the room in celebration of the queen's jubilee. CHAMBERLAINS . TABLETS . rrmm ÉÜ CANADIAN NORTHERN ONTARIO RAILWAY BOWMANVILLE TIME TABLE (Effective Sspfc 11th? TRAINS LEAVE 1 r l Toronto anil Intermediate 3tition 8.03 a.m. 7.37 p.m. 1er Trenton, Belleville. Yarker, Kingston, Brockviile, Smith's Falls, Ottawa and intermediate stations. 30.16 a.m. 7.19 p.m. 1 ci Coe Bill and Intermediate Station! 10.56 a. m. For Yarker, Tweed, Harrowsmifch, Sydenivn and Inteimediate Stations on Bay o£ Qaiufce tty. 10.56 a. m. TRAINS ARRIVE From Toronto and Intermediate Station! 30.56 a.m. 7.19p.ra. United States Markets. Minneapolis, Oct. 6.--Wheat--No. 1 hard, $1.10; No. 1 Northern, $1.06 3-4 to $1.09; No. 2 Northern, $1.03 3-4 to $1.06 1-4; December, December, $1.08 1-4. Corn--No. 3 yellow, 691 . , i n oi j i to 70c. Oate--No. 3 white, 43 3-4 to 44. Flour | toes from going to sleep < tetudent unchanged. Bran, $2(L Duluth, Oct. 6.--Wheat--No. 1 hard, $1.09; No. i Northern, $1.08: No. 2 Northern, Northern, $1.05; December, $1.08. $1.43 1-2; December $1.47 1-4. Student A--How can I keep ies from going to sleep? B--Don't let them turn in. my The Grand^Trunk Railway System issue issue round trip Homeseekers's tickets at very low- fares from stations in Canada to points in Manitoba, Alberta and Saskatchewan, Saskatchewan, each TUESDAY until October 27th inclusive via Chicago, St. Paul or Duluth, and are good returning two months months from date of issue. Through Pullman Tourist Sleeping cars arc operated each Tuesday, leaving Toronto 11.45 p.m. and running through to Winnipeg without change. Reservations in Tourists Sleepers may be obtained at a* nominal charge on applicaiion to any Grand Trunk ticket office. The Grand Trunk Pacific Railway is the shortest and quickest route between Winnipeg, Saskatoon and Edmonton, with .smooth roadbed, electric lighted Sleeping cars, through the newest, most picturesque and most rapidly developing section of Western Canada. Before deciding on your trip ask Grand Trunk Agents for full particulars or. write C. E. Horning, District Passenger Agent, Union Station, Toronto, Ont. 38-4 is beot at sea, dark all, especially in the Worms, by the irrigation that they cause in the stomach and intestines, deprive infants of the nourishment that they should derive from food, and malnutrition malnutrition is the result. Miller's Worm Powders destroy worms and correct the morbid conditions in the stomach and bowels that are favorable to worms, so that the full nutriment of the child is assured and development in every way encouraged. We must never imagine that the poor and unfortunate alone require our services. We have some power for good over al : l with whom we mingle, and our .benevolent désires will multiply and strengthen in direct direct proportion as, they culminate in wise action. j Thoughts for Women. " "Love never knocks at the door of a woman's heart; he goes in, drives philosophy out, shows wisdom wisdom the door, and rules supreme." "To go without--and look as if you liked it--is one of the first things to be learned in this world." "A man never falls in love with the woman who studies him." "There are two kinds of women in the world--the one "who loves to manage, manage, and the one who loves to be managed--and all one has to do is to find out which is which." "A woman may not he able to recall just when her husband proposed ; but she can always remember what dress she had on at the time." Corns and warts disappear when treated with Holloways Corn Cure without leaving a scar. in A Professional Hardship. Maid--My brother is a cook the navy. Bridget--Shure it must be tur- hi-ble to be a cook where ye can't quit when ye feel like it. Peevish, pale, restless, and sickly children owe their condition to worms. Mother Graves' Worm Exterminator will relieve them and restore health. During the courtship a girl is often unable to- explain "her thoughts, but she makes up for lost time after marriage. fought on a Sunday. The electric light is cut off in frontier towns so as not to assist aviators in finding their way. "Vienna Bakeries" all over France have now changed their title to ' ' Parisian Bakeries. " Every military, train in Bosnia carries hostages, to be shot if the population tries - to wreck the train. Many educated men, who cannot fight, are volunteering as interpre ters with the British forces abroad The Hungarians bave decided to boycott French wines and English sauces. The existing stocks are be ing sent to the hospitals. The French knapsack weighs 49 Lbs. This is an enormous reduction since 1870, when soldiers were bent almost double by their great burdens. burdens. The French lost a big battle in 1870 through an indiscretion of the Paris Temps. So no one must grumble at the strictness of the censorship. censorship. German officers carry- doses of poison in their sword hi Its in case they should be mortally wounded and have to linger on battlefields in great suffering. In France all private correspondence correspondence is opened and read. In Switzerland you may only read postcards, postcards, which must be written in French, German or Italian. The smart Ladies of Brussels have been motoring out to watch battles in the cool of the afternoons as gaily and calmly as though they were going to the races. Ships captured from the enemy are not of immediate use as a rule. Differences of construction, machinery, machinery, etc., have to be mastered first by the sailors, and that takes time. With the aid of searchlights it' is possible to see thirty miles out to sea from a fort. And ship can be recognized far away by her silhouette, silhouette, and her name ascertained by consulting a book. . Nearly every French soldier has been supplied with a brand new uniform of stout blue cloth, very different from the worn, patched clothes he was accustomed to receive receive for manoeuvres. The French were amazed by the Completeness of the British equipment equipment when our troops • landed at Havre. They -were most impressed by the hundred typewriters provided provided for the general staff. Nelson wanted to signal "England "England trusts that every man will do hi-s duty," but- he was persuaded to change the second word because "expects" wa-s in the signal-book, whereas "trusts" would have had to be sent out letter by letter. Troops sleep in churches all over France. They prefer them to outhouses outhouses or stables, as there is more air. The floor is covered with a thick layer of straw, and ingenious soldiers make impromptu matresses and pillows with their cloaks and clothes. The Society of 'the Silver Cross in Austria is asking for wedding-rings, Light green blue best of mountains. , t German newspapers are forbidden in Austria, where the censorship is much more strict-. As a rule, an Austrian paper can only devote a quarter or half a column a day to the war. Sometimes an article appears appears without a title, sometimes a title without an article. It is even forbidden to report burglaries, lest the citizens should imagine their property was insecure. --fr it E SPONSIBLE ONLY TO GOD. Kaiser Looks On Himself as Ins! r liment liment of the Lord. Mr. J. M. Kepnedy, says the London Daily Express, has collected collected a series of illuminating quotations quotations from the Kaiser's speeches, and his little book "The War Lord," gives a. complete picture of the ruthless egomaniac who has plunged Europe into mourning. Here is what Wilhelm of Hohcnzul- lern says about himself : "Remember the maxim of an old Emperor, who said : 'The Emperor's word must not be twüsted or explained explained away.' " "Shame on, the man who abandons abandons his king !" "You wear the Emperor's uniform uniform ; you bçLve thereby received a preference over other" men." "I am the possessor of an inflexible inflexible determination to proceed fearlessly fearlessly in the path that has once been recognized as the right one, and this in spite of all opposition." "As I look upon myself as an instrument instrument of the Lord, I am indifferent indifferent to the point of view of the present present day." "The soldier must not have a will of his own--they must all have only one will, and that will is mine." - "A ruler may be very disagreeable, disagreeable, and I will be disagreeable if I think it necessary." "There is. only .one law--my law ; the law which I myself lay down." "The King holds Ills power by the grace of God, to whom alone he is responsible. He chooses his own path, and only decides his actions from this point of view." "There is only one master in this country. I am he, and I will not tole rate an ot-he r. " --* Another Crisis. "Well, madam, is your husband out of danger " "It isn't quite sure, the doctor is coining again." THE CHARM OF MOTHER Linseed, BRITISH TROOPS LEAVING DOVER. Live Stock Markets. Toronto, Oct-. 6.--Butcher cattle--Choice | weighty steere, $8.25 to $8.50; choice handy From Napar.ee, Belleville, Trenton aa.l Infctr- iisiePc" n edial e "Points: also Pict-on and G.O.Et. PoinS-o 9.08 a. m, 7.37 p. m. From Majnooth(C. O. R.) 7.37 p. m. I rom Sydenham, Tweed, Yarker, ou. 7.37 p. m. Tic ins inn daily except Sunday unless other "wise marked. Fci furtherparticnlarssee other advertisement -appearingin this paper, or apply W. G. GIFFLER, Depot Agent. butchers', $8.15 to $8.40; good butchers', $7.75 to $8.15; medium, $7.25 to $7.75; common, common, from $5.75 to $7.25. Heifers--Good to choice heifers, $7.75 to $8.25; medium, $7.25 to $7.70; common, $5.75 to $7.25. Butcher Gov/s--Choice, $6.75 to $7 .-25; good, $6.25 to $6.75; medium, from $5.50 to $6:25;. cutters, $4.50 to $5; common, $5 to $6; cannera from $3.50 to $4.50. Butcher Bulls.---Choice, $7 to $7.85; good, $6.50 to $7; medium, $6 to $6.50; common, $5 to $6. Stockers and Feeders -- Heavy selected feeders. $7.25; choice heavy stockera, $7 to $7.25; heavy good, $6.50 to $7; good medium stockera, $6 to $6.50: common, from $5.50 to $6.; grass cove, $4.75 to $5.50. Milkers and Springers -sold at $55 to $105 each for choice offerings, with good at $55 to $65, and common to medium at $40 to $50. Calves--Choice, *9 to $10.50; medium, from $7 to $9; common, from $6 to $7; rough grass calves, $5 to $6. Sheep and Lambs.--Light sheep ewes ranged from $5.50 to $6.25; heavy sheep and bucks, ■ from $4 to $5.25, culls, from $3 to '$4; yearling lambs brought $7 to $7.50, culls off; lambs, owfc., $6 to $7.65: Swine--Hogs went at $8.75 f.o.b., at $8.90 to $9 fed and watered, and at $9.25 off CI Montreal, Oct. 6.--Prime beeves, 8 1-4 to 8 3-4c; medium, 5 1-2 to 8c; common, 4 1-2 to 5c; bulls, 4 1-2 to 5c; lean cannera, 3 1-2 to 4c ; ÔOWS, $40 to $80 each : calves, 4~I-3 to 80. Sheep, 4 1-2 to So; lambs, 7 to 7 l-2o. Hogs, 9 l-4c. Enhanced By Perfect Physical Physical Health. The experience of Motherhood is a trying trying one to most women and marks distinctly distinctly an epoch in their lives. Not one woman in a hundred is prepared or understands understands how to properly care for herself. herself. Of course nearly every woman nowadays has medical treatment- at such times, but many approach the experience experience with an organism unfitted for tho trial of strength, and when it is over her system has received a shock from which it is hard to recover. Following of caring for the child, and & distinct change in the mother results. There is nothing more charming than a happy and healthy mother of children, and indeed child-birth under" the right conditions need be no hazard to health or beauty. The unexplainable thing" is that, with all the evidence of shattered nerves and broken health resulting from' an unprepared condition, and with ample ample time in which to prepare, women will persist in going blindly to the trial. Troops of the First British Contingent. for which iu gives iron ones in ex-j ^ghtupon this comes the nervous strain, change. On August 15 it ha-d a.l- 1 ... rea-dj- received 12,000. A similar movement is in progress in Germany, Germany, and $5,000,000 is expected from it for the wounded. The French military authorities are making great- efforts to ensure temperance among the troops, not only at" the front- but even in remote remote garrisons. The sale of absinthe absinthe iis utterly forbidden, even to civilians, and public houses are closed except- for about six. hours a- day. The word war comes from the old German werra, meaning confusion. 1 It has been adopted by all the Latin Latin nations (French guerre, Italian guerra, etc.) instead of derivatives from the Latin belilum,- which meant an ordered duel. This is significant of the change in hostilities since ancient ancient times. It is a common delusion that red uniforms are the most conspicuous on the field. They were in the days, when the British Army used them, but range® are much longer nowadays. nowadays. At. a distance of over 1,000 yards, red is leas easily seen than steel-grey or other light shades. Every woman at this time should rely upon Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, a most valuable tonic and in vigor ator of the female organism. In many homes once childless there are now children because because of the fact that Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound makes women normal, healthy and strong. 1 ïf yon want special advice write to Lydia E. Plnklumr Medicine Co. (confidential) (confidential) Lynn, Mass. Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence.

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