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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 14 Jan 1915, p. 6

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V- _* v --' Cr-..- 'f-- -• - ' -: ' >•: • ' r 'r- ; -- *Lv.ry ' •cb"■>* xt.t r".-..<i- 'U±;-J - /' - ./r^V-r •:'v~ •-..-t : ;;■- y -r-r;-*iK»v'-;r « §f K K ►>- x . ie Tonic is jane that assists Natnre. Regular and. natural action of the; stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels will keep you well and fit,andthisactionispromotedby A Tm Lufcst Sala al Aay Metidae k(k Werii. Sold everywhere. In boxes. 25 eenta Wood's Fhosphodiae. The. G rra*. .English Remedy. Tones and invigorates the whole nervous system, makes new Blood in old Veins, ("■urea Nervous Debility, Mental and Brain Worry, Despondency, Despondency, Loss of Energy, Palpitation of the Heart, Failing Memory. Price SI per box, six for $5. One will please, six will cure. Sold by all druggist* or mailed in plain pkg. onreceipt of price. New pamphlet mailed free. THE WwOu MEDICINE col.TORONTO, ONT. (Fereed* Wliiw.) Noon in Marbach, a village, near the Black Forest, Germany. A churchbell drones twelve, very, sleepily. Sleepy sun-haze lies on the fields. Bees hum.- The orderly village, the orderly fields, the orderly orderly line of distant woods and blue hills .are hushed in the peace of passing summer--a peace so utter that it might have lain on the land for a thousand years. There is no sign of war--except one. Ther men who are returning from the fields few, and there are no young In the village it hear the ÎB Kl PROMPTLY SEC In all countries. Ask for our 1NYEN» TOP.'S ADVISER, which will be sent free. MARION & MARION. 364 University St., Montréal. Constipation ~ ths Lace cl cid age is not to be cured by harsh purgatives; purgatives; they rather aggravate the trouble: Frr a gentle, but sure laxative, use Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets. They stir up the liver, tone the nerves ar.d freshen the stomach and bowels just like an internal bath. CHAMBERLAIN'S . TABLETS . Woman's best friend. From girlhood to old age, these little red health restorers restorers are an unfailing guide to an active liver and a clean, healthy, normal stomach. Take a Chamberlain's Stomach Tablet at night and the sour stomach and fermentation, fermentation, and the headache, have all gone by morning. All druggists, 25c., or by mail from Chamberlain Medicine Company, Tarante 12 CANADIAN NORTHERN BOWMAN VILLE TIME TABLE Œffective Dec. 34th) TRAINS LEAVE ! » i T c 1 r.Titoaml Interme.liabe 1 ", lTid 11 l.CL'a.ni. fr.37p.m. 1 i ; 'J 11111 ci;, Belleville, Yarker, Tweed, Harrow- smith, ÿxdenlrem. Kingston, Brockviile, jjuiuh's 1'alls, Ottawa and intermediate stations. 11.53 a.m. ] ( 1 C cc- Bill aril Intermediate Station - 11.53a. m. For Tori. [lope, Cobourg, Trenton, Picton and intermediate points 0.38 p. m. TRAINS ARRIVE T if îr Toirntoand Intermediate Station 11.55 a.m. G.3S p. m. 1 u 11 Belleville, Trenton an l Intermediate ] omit: also Picton and 0.0. R. , J 1. m 1.( f m f7.37 p. m. 1 10111 MaynoothfC. O. R.) ff.37 3. m. 1 ilu. S; denhamr Tweed, Yarltar, ere. f .'.37 p. m. Ï" 1 om Ottawa, Smiths Falls, Brockviile, King ston. Yarker, Deseronto. Napanee, Picton, Trenton and intermediate points, f 7,?7 p.m. r j 1 r i> inn daily except Sunday unies i other m ise '.narked. 1 11 iuill ei particulars see other advertIsement appearing in this paper, or apply f--Gag si op XV. G. GIFFLER, Depot Agent Next Branch. Young lady--How is it 3'on don't come to Sunday school, Katie ? Katie--Oh, please, miss, learning French and music now, and mother doesn't wish me to take Bp religion till later. are men among them, is so still that one can _ footsteps of the women in all the little houses, and the clattering of pots and dishes. In Michel Huber's house, Frau Huber, a little old woman, is stirring stirring a pot. She is very busy, very active. She is bright-eyed, too ; she wipes the bright' eyes often with a corner of her apron. Michel enters. He is about GO years, gray, stooping heavily. He sits down at the table. "Well, old one !" he says. "The work went not so badly. Am not an aged man 3 r et ! Shall bring in the haryest, even without help," he stretches his arms, proudly. His wife nods%at him. "Thou art strong, thou. And how hungry thou must be ! One eye wink, and the eating shall be ready. Something Something that thou lovest, man. A potato potato soup !" . "Donner wetter ! That is good!" says Michel. "Dear God! Ach, thou dear God !" Frau Huber sighs and speaks to herself. "If only I knew that our Hans at this moment such a good soup has to eat ! Where he may be ! Such a silence--like the grave!" Now at the word grave the little old woman loses all her bravery. She sobs. "Woman!" Michel strikes the table with his hard fist.- "Must I again preach to thee that this is no time for German women to weep ! Proud ! Proud thou sha.lt be that thou hast a son for the Father- land !" "Y r es, y T es ! Proud am I !" Frau Huber's voice trembles. But our Hans ! Our handsome, good Hans ! He is so brave ! He will not fear danger !" "Danger !" Michel pounds the table again. "It is danger to the Fatherland! And the German man who would fear to look it in the face, he would be coward ! He would be without honor ! And furthermore, furthermore, our Hans is in the advance advance cavalry 7 . See you, mother ! That is a great thing, to go ahead of the army !" "To go ahead !" The old woman sobs again. "Yes, ahead in a strange country, all alone aniong enemies. Perhaps, this very moment moment " Michel springs up. "Enough, mother mother !" With a great voice he sings : Dear Fatherland ! Untroubled be ! Faithful we guard the Rhine for thee ! . He sits down suddenly, and drops his head, on his arms. "And we are growing old, you and I, mother ! My Hans ; my son!" Children Cfcy for Fletcher's The Eind You Have Always Bought, and which has keen: in use for over 30 ycai-s, has borne the signature of and has been made under hia personal personal supervision since its infancy. Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and 6< Just-as-good " are hut Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children--Experience against Experiment. fv. r What is Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotie substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys "Worms and allays Feverishness. For more than thirty years it has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Côlic, all Teething Troubles and Diarrhoea, It regulates the Stomach and Bowels, assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea--The Mother's Friend. r • J n ir High Priest of Mussulman Faith Declaring a Holy War. This photo which has just been received from Constantinople, shows the Turkish High Priest Sheik-Ul- Islan proclaiming the Holy War in front of the Mosque of Faith. The head of the Mussulman faith is shown reading the declaration of war, surrounded by Mussulman dignitaries. GËNtmiÈ CASTORIA 1 Bears the Signature ALWAYS great thing ! And if he should--if he does not come back to us-^--" he stops, and turns away. Then he whirls around. He puts his hand on the girl's shoulders. "Attention !" he says, and lifts his right hand. "For honor ! For glory ! For the F atherland 1" • With shining eyes he sings : "La Marseillaise." Marseillaise." One p.m. in Marston Park, Kent, England. The broad lawn is richly green under a silver mist of rain. Great gardens expand around the house, stately, imposing. Oaks surround the place, . ancient, mighty, controlled. Everything is beautiful, unemotional, proud. The French windows of the sombre, rich dining-room are wide open. A butler butler and two servants move about impassively. Lady Harwood and her two daughters enter, followed by Sir George Harwood, evidently" just arrived. They 7 take their places. "Did you have a comfortable journey journey F ' asks Lady Harwood. He answers, telling little details of his trip from London. They are all trivial. The ladies, also, speak of nothing, but trifles. Unhurried they eat luncheon. It is near its Blest be the-tongue that speaks no ill Half a dozen German light cavalry cavalry canter into view. They approach almost within carbine shot of the sunken road. But in that moment a German catches sight of something something in the ambush. A horse in there has tossed its head. The German German pulls up his mount and cries out a warning; The French party breaks cover instantly instantly and charges. The Germans, picked for desperate service, meet them as instantly, headlong. They are into each other. Saddle to saddle ! Eyes staring into eyes ! Sabres and shortened spears ! .Revolvers, .Revolvers, shouts and gasping breaths ! Horses scream ! Hack, thrust, stab, strike, weapon, hands, fists! It is a knot like a ball of lashing snakes. ' It is swift and short. Two o'clock in Marbach, in Trévoux, Trévoux, in Kent, in the sunken road. Trodden into mud lie ugly objects. Three of them were, a quarter of an hour ago, a trooper of Germany, a dragoon of France, and a lancer of England. DO A KINDLY DEED. PRES E FARM PRODUCTS tr-oitTs rïftu two r,r. At>rx» C£UTB£} or Breadstuff*. - Toronto.. Jan. 12.--Flour--Manitoba first patents. $6.60. in jute bags; second patents. $6.10; strong bakers, $5.90; Ontario wheat flour. 90 per cent, patents, patents, $4.90 to $5. seaboard. AVheat--Manitoba No. 1 Northern, $1.38; No. 2 at $1.35, and No. 3 at $1.31. Ontario wheat. No. 2. $1.21 to $1.23. at outside points. Oats--CDntario, 50 to 51c. outside, and at 53 to 54c on track. Toronto. Western Canada. No. 2. at 64c. and No. 3 at 61c. Barley--64 to 68c. outside. Rye--$1 to $1.05. outside. Peas--No. 2 quoted at $1.60 to $1.70, outside. Corn--No. 3 new American. 79c, all rail, Toronto, freight. Buckwheat--No. 2 at 76 to 77 Sc. outside. outside. Bran and shorts--Bran. $25 to $26 a ton, and shorts at $27 ■ - $28. Rolled oats--Car lots, per bag of 90 lbs. $3 to $3.15. In Use For Over -1MPANV new yobk city. I'm Aches and pains would not be so bad if they didn't get busy at the wrong time and in the wrong place. Genuine Carter's Little Liver Pills. Must Bear Signature of A half an hour after noon in Trévoux, Trévoux, on the river Rhine, France. It is a laughing land. The sun, pale yellow, burning, laughs on vineyards vineyards whose crop! hangs heavy, already already purpling. Tidy gardens laugh with late bloom. The houses are as gay in the bright heat as if the village were a stage-scene set for a pastoral play. But there are none of the "laughing girls of France." There is no laughter in the fields, because there are no young men to laugh with. . Jules La-salle stands in his doorway7, doorway 7 , as a pretty girl passes. "Mignon "Mignon !" he says, sharply. She turns to him. "Thou goest about with a face of the most intolerable! Art thou a coward, then? And thou a Frenchwoman ! And not only 7 a woman woman of France, our glorious, but one whose ancestor was decorated by the emperor himself ! The emperor, emperor, Mignon ! The emperor ! Whose spirit is on us now !" "Oh, Father Jules!" Mignon stands before him, clasping her hands. "See ! Gladly, gladlv, I let him go ! Did not I help him, that he might be among the first?" "Then wear a face accordingly !" Jules speaks roughly. "Alas ! I fear so for him ! Alas ! I love him so!" The girl puts her arms around the old man's neck and hides her face against his breast. "And when I think that he is among: the scouts, he that is so brave,' so Ireadilong !' ' Lasalle embraces her with one arm. With his free hand he taps his chest. "And I, little Mignon ? Do not I love him--my brave son ? For what do I labor, but for him ? See ! have enough, I ! A pipe in the sun, a little to eat, a mouthful of wine--it is all that I need. For whàtî is all this* then ?" Hé indicates indicates the vineyard with a sweeping arm. "For him ! And what do I desire? To see thee and him in the pretty house that I shall build,,and the little ones that shall come and call tae/ < gratvti»w. ? Thus,; then», my little one, he is all that I think of, my good,. haudaoma, heave eon. Yet look upon roe i Loot, I say/ irl I Dost thou eee me sorrowing ? ay 1 I am proud, I ! I am happy as a king, ! ! That T have given a ■on 1 to end when Sir George says, às if just remembering something : "Oh, I was at the war office before I left London." Lady Harwood straightens herself herself a tiny 7 bit. Two girls look quietly quietly at their father. The servants move, undisturbed, about their duties. "The armies are in pilose touch," says Sir George, looking carefully at a bit of bread that he is crumbling. crumbling. "But no details, of course. Except--only that some of our officers officers of lancers are working far forward forward in co-operation with French dragoon scouts." He looks at his wife for permission permission to rise. She makes a sign to the girls, and they pass him. "I have told the gardeners," says Lady Harwood, turning for an instant instant in the door-way, "to .change the walk through the rose-garden, as you wished. ! ' He nods his head. "Henry 7 ," he says to thé butler, after they have gone, "Bronson will send some port. I ordered it in London." He lights a cigarette and stands at the window, gazing into the park. The cigarette goes out. The butler approaches with a light, but stands before him without offering it. He coughs behind his hand. "I beg your pardon, Sir George. But Master Master George, sir? Is he one of the officers that have been sent forward forward ? I'm sure I beg your pardon, Sir George. "Yes, Henry 7 ," says Sir George, 'and goes out. In the drawing-room he finds Lady Harwood and the girls. They are standing before a portrait. It is that of a y r oung man, blond, blueeyed, blueeyed, finely English, in the uniform of the lancers. "He looks very much like you, George," says Lady Harwood. Sir George stares at the picture. He lays an arm over bis wife's shoulders. "For the land of his'fathers !" he says softly. Whose words are always true, That keeps the law of kindness still, Whatever others do. Blest be the hands that toil to aid, The great worlds ceaseless need-- The hands that never are afraid To do a kindly deed. A DISAPPEARING LAKE. An Ancient Legend of the Little Lake of Canterno. Country Pro luce. Butter--Choice dairy. 24 to 25c; inferior, inferior, 20 to 21c; creamery "prints. 30 to 31c; do., solids. 28$ to 2Dc; farmers' separator. 26 to 27c. Eggs--New-laid, in cartons. 45 to 50c; selects. 32 to 34c; storage. 29 to 30c. Honey--12 to 13c per lb. for strained; No. 1 honeycomb, $2.75 per dozen; No. 2. $2.25. Poultr)---Chickens, dressed. 13 to 15c; ducks, dressed, lb., 14 to 16; fowl. 10 to 11c; gee-e, 14 to 15c; turkeys, dressed, 18 to 20c. Cheése-- New large; 16$c; twins. 16 Jc. Beans--Prime, bushel. $2.50 to $2.70f hand-picked. $2.75 to $2.85.' Potatoes--Ontarios, 65 to 70c per bag. out of store. 55 to 60c in car -lots. New Brunswlcks. car lots, 60 to 65c per bag; Fashion Hints 3ok's Cotton Root Compound. A safe, reliable rein-.iating medicine. Sold in three degrees degrees of strength--No. 1, SI ; No. 2, $3; No. 3, S5 per box. Sold by all druggists, or sent prepaid on receipt of price. Free pamphlet, çj) Address : THE COOK MEDICINE CO, TORONTO. ONT. (Formerly Wieher.) Provisions. Bacon--Long clear. 13$ to 14$c per lb. in case lots. Hams--Medium, 16 to 17c; do., heavy, 14$ to 15c; rolls. 14 to 14$c; breakfast bacon, 17$ to ISc; backs. 20 to 21c; boneless backs, 22 to 23c. Lard--11 to ll$c for tierces, and at 11$ to 12c for tubs and pails. Compound, Compound, 9$ to 9$c. An unusual occurrence that has much interested the scientific men recently happened at Fumone, Italy. The picturesque little lake of Canterno suddenly disappeared. All the water retreated into à bottomless bottomless pit in the middle of the lake.; and left the whole area, absolutely absolutely dry. It appears that this same phenomenon phenomenon has occurred several times in the history of the place ; the last time was about 220 years ago. At that ti&e the farmers had begun to till the bed oi the lake, and had brought it to a high state of cultivation, cultivation, when suddenly the water returned returned ; and as if to recompense the people for the loss of their crops, the fish came back also. There is an ancient legend that , the lake disappears whenever its waters claim the life of a human being. being. That was the case at the last- previous disappearance of the water. water. On a certain Shrove Tuesday^/ nine young boys were drowned in Canterno Lake. Their distracted parents cursed the waters of z Ihe lake, and then a crater fifteenTeefc in diameter swallowed up the water water with fearful and unearthly gurgling. gurgling. Fire spouted from the hole, and from the depths of the earth came a mysterious rumbling. The entire lake bed was strewn with fish, and the boat which had gone down with the boys was swallowed up bv the crater. Baled Hay and Straw. Dealers are paying as follows for car lot deliveries on track here:-- Straw is $7.50 to $8 a ton, in car lots, on track here. Hay--No. 1 new hay, $16.50 to $17, on track here; No. 2 at $15 to $15.50, and No. 3 at $13 to $13.50. Montreal Markets. Montreal. Jan. 12.-- : Corn--American No. 2 yellow. 89 to 81c. Oats--Canadian western. No. 2, 62$c; do.. No. 3. 61$c; extra No. 1 feed. 62c; No. 2 local white. 65$c; No. 3 do., 54$c-; No. 4 do., 53c. Barley--Man. Barley--Man. feed. 68 to 70c; malting. 76 to 78c. Flour--Man. Spring wheat patents, patents, firsts, $7.20; seconds, $6.70; strong bakers'. $6.50: Winter patents, choice. $6; straight rollers. $5.50 to $5.60; do., bags, $2.65 to $2.75. Rolled oats, barrels. $6.40 to $6.50; do., bags, ! 90 lbs. $3 to $3.10. Bran, $25. Shorts. $27. Middlings $30." Mouillie. $34 to $36. Hay, No. 2, per ton car lots, $19 to $20. Cheese--Finest westerns. 15$ to 16c; do., easterns, 15$ to 15|. Butter --Choicest creamery. 29 to 29$c; seconds, seconds, 28. to 28$c. Eggs--Fresh, 55 to 60c: selected. 31 to 32c; No. 1 stock, 28 to 29c; No. 2 stock, 25 to 26c. Potatoes, per bag. car lots, 70c. The Classifying Sleeve. By 7 their sleeves y r ou may know them. That has been true of the frocks of to-day. For several years sleeves have not been of especial importance. Most of them have been cut on kimona lines--and so they were no sleeves at all, and perhaps that is why they were not important. But this year we have a eut-and-dried sleeve to dea-l with again. To be sure, the new evening gowns have no sleeves. But this absence absence of sleeves is as characteristic of the style as any other sleeve detail detail would be. The new evening bodices bodices are cut in two points that clasp on the shoulder under a, jewelled jewelled bivckly or clasp or under an artificial flower ; or, else they are cut square and held over the shoulders shoulders with jewelled bands or strands of artificial flowers. But in the day time the sleeve is a regulation sleeve set into a regulation armhold. And it is long and rather snug and usually reaches reaches well over the hand. Sometimes a bishop sleeve is used--one full above the wrist, gathered into a little wristband. Sometimes, too, of course, the kimona arrangement of the bodice is followed. It has been brought so nearly 7 to perfection that it is too bad to discard it entirely. For it is both comfortable and attractive attractive in appearance. OVER 65 YEARS EXPERIENCE vs Trade Marks Designs Copyrights Ac. Anyone sending a sketch and doscfMt-l° n mav Quickly ascertain our opinion free y^EtUcr an Invention is probably patentable. Cornmu jica- tlons strictly confidential. HANDBOOK ou Patents Bent free. Oldest aponcy for securing patenta. Patents taken through Munn & Co. recels special notice, without charge, lathe Scientific Hmricasi A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest circulation circulation of any scientific journal. Terms for Canada, $11.75 a year, postage prepaid. Sold by 'll newsdealers. ^INN 8 Co. 3638 ™"" 1 '- New York 'nch Office. 635 F St^ Washington, D. C One p.m. near Epennay, river Marne, France. In long lines thé rain drives before a beating wind over gray country. The long roads gleam "with wet. The, fields, are. like shallow ®eias. Struggling through the weather'are people--people on foot, people on horse-back, people in carriages,: people in ox-oarts. Childrenare, tugging, at, little: wagons wagons loaded ' with poor possessions. Everybody bests A burdene. * All - these people, black, mournful, silent silent in. thé radii and wind and mud» are^prè^skijg toward Paris; - y In :.a?t^Bpcen - read, masked by trees, sit four riders. Three are in the uniforms of French Dragoons. The fourth, is an officer of British lancers. "Back !" whispers a Frenchman. "Germans!" They pull their horsee back.; fut> tner into cover. Winnipeg- Grain. Winnipeg. Jan. 12.--Cash: Wheat-- No. 1 northern, $1.27$; No. 2 northern, $1.243; No. 3 northern, $1.203; No. 4, $1.163; No. 5. $1.12$; No. 6, SI.08; feed. $1x04. Oats--No. 2 C.W.. 56ic; No. 3. GfW., 53c; extra No. 1 feed. 53c: No. 1 /feedt 52c; No. 2 feed, 51c. Barley--No. 2. 63c; No. 3, 63c; feed, 59c. Flax--No. 1 N.W.C.. $1.39$. Subscribers' to a War Loan. The . British Government in the view of the London Statist, "has provided itself, through the great loan, with the means of financing the war until Midsummer, at all events. Perhaps in no respect is the loan more satisfactory than that so many small . people have brought forth their savings, to pay for their allotments ; very many, indeed, indeed, paying for them, not by t cheque, .but in actual cash." . United States Markets. Minneapolis, Jan. 12.--Wheat--No. 1 hard, $1.343; No. 1 Northern, $1.293 to $1.34$; No. 2 Northern. $1.263 to $1.32$; May. $1.311 to $1.313. Corn -- No. 3 yellow, 65$ to 653c. Oats--No. 3 white, 483 to 49$c. Flour and bran unchanged. unchanged. Duluth. Jan. 12.--Wheat--No. 1 hard. $1.32|; No. 1 Northern. $1.311; No. 2 Northern, $1.288 to $1.293; May. $1.331. Linseed, $1.68$; May, $1.69$. Fads and Fancies. In an -operetta- popular severa.1 seasons ago there were many Quaker Quaker maidens, and every one who saw it commented on the beauty of their gowns--modified, to be sure, but still, .modelled on the frock of the Quaker maid. Now that w:de-skivt- ed frocks, with narrow bodices sevra to be coming gradually in fashion, perhaps the Quaker costum? will receive some consideration. One designer has already featured it. Have you. seen the drum muff ? There is one. It is small and drum shaped, and it is worn about Vue neck on a chain of go'd gallo. n. It should be worn with a military, braided costume. The ne arc some interesting imported' imported' coats made of big shawls -- r steamer rugs, with fringe nr the bottom and edging the cap ' tion that falls over the s- eeve sometimes edging the wide u-vi;ar instead. •vn-d sev- o; Many a man gets trying to .settle troubles. into trouble- other peopd?' "à THE ALL • "Spohn's" a,nd thy Horsemen. For -twenty-one years _tne.v have waged a successful campaign aga-ita.t the army of D.s- ease. D-S-temper, Influenza, Catarrhal and Shipping _ Fever disastrously defeated 'by "Spohn'e " Aucolv.teiy safe for all agee. Beet preventive. Sold by all _ druggists, turf goods houses or the manufacturers. pohn Medical Co., Goshen, Ind., U.S.A. 1 ifib' ffll m Boh?--"That boy of yours is a fiqe, tall lad, Jack} y cu should be proud of hini." jarok-""I' ain't, though. Bob--"No,-how's ?" Jim*-- "Why* he is 18 inches tailler tiriwvl AO)*, Juki his mother insists on cutting cutting his trousers down to fit me." Bive Stock Markets. Toronto, Jan. 12.--Butcher steers. $7.75, $7.60, and $7.50. Good" brought $7.25 to $7.50; medium, $6.75 to $7.25, ] and common, $6.25 to $6 ; 75. Fat cows, I $6.25 to ,$7; for good to choice, $5.75 to ! $6.25 for medium, and $5 to $5.50 for; common. Good to choice bulls ranged !" from $6 to $.7. Good breedy- brought $6 ] to $6.60, with medium at $5.75 to $6,; and common at $5.25 to $5.75. v Milk- j ers from $50 to $90. Good calves, $8 to $10, with medium" between $6 and $8 and common at $5 to ,$6. Lambs, $8.50, a shade heavier going at $8 to $8.25. Other heavier, weights changed hands ! at- $7.50 .to $8. Sheep were steady. $5! to $7.25 being paid for light ewes, $.4 1 to $5 for heavy, and $2.50 to $4 for, bucks Swine, $7.90 off carr. $7.65 fed and watered, and $7.40 f.o.b. country points. Montreal. Jan. 12.--Prime beeves. 7$cr medium. 51- to To; common. 41 . to v,5|c; cows. $30 to $85. Calves. 6 to 8c. Sheep, 4Î to Sc. Lambs, 71c. Hogs. 8$c. $500 FOR A NAM His Ambition. "Young man, what- profession do you expect to follow when you, .grow upl" 'I'm going a doôtos, " ' answered answered the young nttfctKtakint out notebook^ amdepspsiifiek 6 >Msgr. I count on yôtf to save yotlr appendix for me t" - A Priit- a This is the beautiful new perfume, made Canada, endorsed and used exclusively by Pauline Donalda. the famous Canadian Donna. . We want a suitable name for it, a-nii so > C1VC ' $500 IN CASH PRIZES ac follows :-- $400.00 for -the best name. 50.00 for the beef description of the verxumv. 25.00 for the second best name. 10.00 for the second best- desertpt-on. 5.00 for t-'he third -best description. and ten 81.00 prizes for the next best u;>:-vrations. u;>:-vrations. r rhe winner of -the con to;t wai Ik- <ivc:aea bj a commlt-tee of Montreal'^ leading advertising men and" their decision will be final. Should two or more contestants send in the winning name tko prize will he equally divided, and an add: t- on a! prize -to the value of 85.00 will be given each su.-- ccsefuil contestant. No employee or in cm her ot this firm shall enter the contest. The contest contest closes at midnight, March 31st, 1915. HOW TO ENTERTo enable every contestant to try the r.cw -perfume before rubra - "!ting their suggestion for a name, we make the follow.ng Special.Offer «--For one dime, t en cents, we will send one of our Special Souvenir Bottles of the Perfùme --regular 25 ce life size^-together wit-h Free Contest Sflip. and One Premium Coupon. All .for 10 cents. It is ineceseary to have the Free Cotiteet Slip ito enter. Write to-day. Yau will be delighteil -with the ocorfume, and have a chance to win the big prize. I! 3 RODGERS. GRAY & STEWART, PERPUMBRS Dept. W;l. 331 BLEURY ST., MONTREAL.

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