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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 28 Oct 1915, p. 6

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a--'"-ij.-.- ,V SnuK*V .. . ., .L.. ?, -..*• ^@9a®ài®S&ss®*^as$ey^d^8B!ti^sS^6Éi8à6^6E^6^8i msp ËK& Of course, * 'Crown Bfaud* * is yotir ; favorité Table Syrup. Of course, you enjoy its delicious, appetizing flavor with £tread, Pancakes and Hot Biscuits, ^ But what about "Crown Brand" in : the kitchen ? - Do you usé ' EOWARitSBURO •/.-• for Gingerbread, Cookies, Cakes, Pies and Sweet Sauces for all- kinds of Puddings ? Do you always use ft for Candy-making^ Try it in all these ways. You'll find "Crown Brand Corn Syrup handy, convenient, economical, economical, dependable, good. "LILY WHITE" is just what its name implies--a clear corn syrup--more delicate in flavor than ' 'Crown Brand' f . that is equally good for the table and for candy-making, ABK YOUR GROCER--IN 2, 6, lO AND 20 POUND TINS^ Thé Canada Starch Co. Limited, MontreaL • WE P AY HIGHEST PRICES FOR RAW FREE "Hallaun'c Trswtr* Qdde" English or French, 66 pages tells how and whero to trap and other valuable Information Information for tha trapper tlW For Pile# ttr^Yw Style Beek" cf beautiful fur sets &nd£*r> menta, also "Tracers sei St»rttoiee , « Supply tatalei" ®5 n «. **P«. Animal Balt, Fish liete, etc. at lowest Prices, all illustrated. 8enfc JTBEE. Address, JOK?j HAtLAM uwfrEpfTOROffe ] FEATS OF AIR MECHANICS. The Work Requires Steady Nerves, for It Entails Gréât Risks. The tragic death of a naval air ' mechanic at Hoc aerodrome, in England, recently, who, after being lifted to a height of 700 feet by a trailer rope of an airship, lost his grip and fell to the ground, calls attention to the dangerous work daily carried out by the men. -behind the air services.. services.. The safety of the aéroplanes and airships used by the. Royal Flying Corps and the Naval Air Service are dependent upon the conscientious work of the mechanics. Pilots themselves themselves have not the time to personally examine every strut wire or bolt on their machines before taking them over the enemy's, lines, and this important important task is left to the "A. M.'s," as they are termed. The work of the air mechanic requires steady nerves, for it entails daily risks. When airships start on voyages the mechanics, by means of numerous trailer ropes, hold the staying vessel to earth until the • signal is given to let go. In a wind a lighter-than-air machine is a difficult -monster to man- age. It plunges and rears in the air with the unexpectedness ■ of a broncho, and the mechanics are continually being being lifted off their feet as the airship wrenches at the trailer ropes. Woe betide the unfortunate mechanic who becomes entangled in a rope as the airship rises in the air. Hé is likely to -be lifted to a height of several hundred feet, and to save'his neck, he must cling to the rope for ten or fifteen minutes while the - airship is maneuvered back to earth. 'Starting up the powerful aeroplane engines used in military machines is an important task of the-air mechanic. He has to swing the 8 r foot. propeller in the front or r.ear of an aeroplane and jump to safety before it gets into its stride. The "slightest slip would mean disaster, for the large blades of an aeroplane propeller turn at a speéd of over a ,thousand revolutions -a min ute and they will cut through any obstruction obstruction with the ease that a razor severs a bar of soap. In the large type of military or naval aeroplanes, which weigh over a ton, air mechanics oftèn have to ascend with the pilot to tend the engine. engine. If the latter proves refractory a descent is made and the "A. M." has to get to work with his tools, often within range of the enemy's guns. The air mechanic, as many may imagine, imagine, does not keep out of danger well in the rear of the firing line. There are times when they have to make venturesome dashes on a motor repair repair lorry to assist an aviator who has landed close to the. enemy's lines. If the aeroplane on such occasions is beyond repair, the mechanics have to pull it to pieces and pack it on a lorry, dodging as best they can the shells directed at them from hostile artillery. Most naval air mechanics are accomplished accomplished swimmers, and possess a constitution of iron. When the navy's great seaplanes are launched the mechanics mechanics generally have to" wade up to their necks into the water to maneuver maneuver the machine from the shore. To plunge into icy-cold water in the half light of dawn is not a pleasant task, -spoon cinnamon yet it is one which the sailor mechàn- ics have to carry out almost daily. In rough seas the waves break over their heads, and the seaplane Dainty Dishes. iPried Veal.--Take a cheap cut tif veal and have it eut in thin slices. Take one slice of fat salt pork apd cut into slices and fry . until- crisp. Put the yeal in fat and fry until dark brovro.:. Season and .f cpyer, put in ? r_ ozi McKSrai^ FPûr or longer. Before covering put on a cupful of boiling:, water. Latnb Stew With Turnips.--Cut into pieces two pounds of shoulder of Iamb, cover with boiling water and cook slowly one hour,. Have ready one quart of tender turnips, cut into quarters. Season with teaspoonfuls of salt and saltspoonful of white pepper. pepper. Cook .until turnips are tender. Move meat to platter, surround with turnips and, after thickening gravy, put it over meat and turnips. A nice steamed rice pudding is made as follows: One cup steam rice, one cup scalded milk, one-half tablespoon tablespoon butter, one egg, two tablespoons tablespoons sugar, one-half saltspodn salt, one-quarter "cup stoned raisins. Scald milk and add butter. Beat egg, add" sugar and salt and pour on slowly the scalding milk. Put in pudding dish with rice and raisins. Bake in a moderate oven until custard is set. Serve with hard . sauce. Beanpot Roast.--Two pounds . of chuck steak, one cup each of * carrots and potatoes cut into - small pieces, one-fourth cup sliced onion. Cover meat With boiling water, place cover on beanpot and Jet meat cook in moderate moderate oven for two hours; add vege tables, season to taste and cook until Î thoroughly. To vegetables a*re soft, about one hour longer. Serve with sauce poured over meat made of one cup of liquid in which meat was cooked, thickened with two tablespoons of flour mixed with a little water. To make peanut fruit cookies one requires one-half of a cup of butter, one cup of light brown sugar, two eggs, two teaspoonfuls of baking powder, powder, one teaspoonful of cinnamon, one-half of a teaspoonful of nutmeg and cloves, a pinch of salt, one-half of a cup of raisins chopped and, a cup of chopped peanuts. First cream the butter, add the sugar and eggs, then add the flour, baking powder and longer go into crevices and corners, should have. an .inch oi. more of wood sawn off from the head, and it will then do good service oncè . more. ■ * . To. keep • bread fresh soak a- small new pPQnge in cold water, place it in a. saucer, arid stand thé saucer in the breàdpàiri ; ' .T^ie bread ^ Will ' remain and moist for several days.- .5 >■' When scrubbing linoleum or the kitchen boards add. a little paraffin to the jypater. it takes - out dirt and grease, and gives linoleum a "beautiful gloss, without the "trouble of polish- irig. Cayenne pepper is excellent to rid cupboards of mice. The floor should be gone over carefully, and each hole stopped tip with a piecç of rag dipped m water and then in cayenne pepper. A carpet that has seen a fair amount of usage is sometimes discard- ed on account of it showing wear in certain .parts, but dyeing in another shade, which is not too" difficult to be carried out at hoirie, ought to inake it still good for further wear. To cure squeaking^ shoes take a large plate and pour~just~ enough oil on it to cover the bottom. Then stand the shoes, with their heels propped, so that the soles rest in the oil. Let them stand overnight, and in the morning wipe off any .excess of oil there may be. ? Linen of any kind may be whitened by adding to the washing water a little little pipeclay, dissolved in cold water. This method saves a good deal of labor, and cleanses the dirtiest linen remove grass stains ruh the marks well with lard before washing. With the aid of some good petrol any girl can become her own dry cleaner. Chiffon blouses, gloves, ribbons, ribbons, and all kinds of vanities that soil easily, are quickly cleaned if immersed immersed in petrol, which, however, must be used with the utmost care in a room in which there is neither a light nor a fire, as it is very inflammable. inflammable. Do not open an umbrella to dry it, nor yet stand it on its ferrule. Either method is destructive, the former because because the ribs will become warped, and neat, tight rolling impossible for J'.; -- Breadstuffs. : Toronto, Oct.' 26.--Manitoba wheat --New crop--No. 1 Northern, $1.09%; No. 2 Northern, $1.07%, on track lake ports, immediate shipment. Manitoba oats--No. 2 C.W., 52c, all rail, delivered Ontario points. American corn--No. 2- yellow, 72c, on track lake ports. ... Canadian corn--No. 2 yellow, 72c, on track Torqnto. . .Ontario pats--New. crop---No. .2 white, 39 to 40c;. No. 3 white, 37 to 39c ; # commercial oâtâi; : 35 to 37c, ae- corditig to freights outside.. Ontario wheat--No. . 2 ; Winter, per car lot, 93 to 95c; wheat slightly tough, 87 to 91c; sprouted or smutty, 70 to 86c, according to samples and freights outside. Peas--No. 2, nominal, per car lots, $1.60 to $1.80, according to freights outside. Barley--Good, malting barley, 53 to 56c; feed barley, 40 to 48c, according to freights outside. Buckwheat--Nominal, car lots, 78c, according to freights outside. Rye--No. 1 coirimercial rye, 80c; No. 2, nominal, 87c; tough rye, 70 to 75c, according to samples and freights outside. Manitoba flour--First patents, in jute bags, $5.75; second paténts, in jiite bags, $5.25; strong bakers', in jute bags, $5,05, Toronto. Ontario flour--New, Winter, $3.60 to $4, according to sample, seaboard or Toronto freights in bags, for prompt shipment. Millfeed--Car lots--delivered Montreal Montreal freights. Bran, $22 per ton; shorts, $24 per ton; middlings, $25 per ton; Vgood feed flour, $1.50 per bag. :*s a Subtle Charm about the delicious flavour of II BIMf. is unique and never found in cneap, ordinary teas. Let us mail you a sample. Black, Mixed or Green. The Great Question of Life . • / ' It Is a Motive of Right Conduct as Well as Being" a Preventive of Wrong. . " Every one therefore that heareth diese my words and doth them shall ae likened to a wise man that built lis house upon a rock. And thè rain fell and-the floods came and the winds blew and they beat upon that house, and it fell not, for it was founded on a rock.--St. Matthew vii., 24, 25. spices together. Lastly, add the rais- ! a short time; and the second because ins and the nuts. Chill, roll, cut and the water collecting about the top will bake in a brisk oven. " rot the covering. Leave the umbrella Oatmeal Cakes.--One-half cup lard, closed, but not rolled, and turn it one-half cup butter, one cup sugar, handle downwards, then when the silk Country Produce. Butter---Fresh dairy, 27 to 28c; inferior, inferior, 22 to 23c; creamery prints, 32 to 33c; do., solids, 30 to 31%c. Eggs--Storage, 30 to 31c per dozen; dozen; selects, 32 to 33c; new-laid, 36 to 37c, case lots. Honey--No. 1 light (wholesale), 10 to ll%c; do., retail, 12% to 15c; j combs (wholesale), per dozen, No. 1, $2.40; No. 2, $1.50 to $2. PouItry-^-Chickens, 15 to 17c; fowls, 13 to 14c; ducklings, 15 to 17c; geese, 16 to 18c; turkeys, 20 to 22c. Cheese--Large, 16c; twins, 16 %c. Potatoes--The market is strong, with car lots quoted at $1.10 to $1.15 per bag, on track. they are maneuvering is tossed about and sugar, thçn add sour milk and two eggs, one-half cup sour milk, one-half cup water, one-half tea- one and three-quarters three-quarters cups flour, two cups rolled oats, one cup raisins. Cream lard and add butter, add sugar and beat together, l^éat eggs, until light, add to butter and like a cork. Yet in true naval spirit the" mechanics of the Naval -Air Service Service carry out their hazardous duties cheerfully, happy in the knowledge that they are doing their bit toward crushing out the might of the Germans. Germans. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of for A Long-Lost Cousin. An. old Chinese scholar came treatment to a hospital that Was under under the. charge of a "certain Doctor Woods. The doctor - asked the new patient his honorable name. The old gentleman réplied that his unworthy name was Ling, and added that he desired desired to know the - doctor's exalted name. With a smile, the doctor said that his mean name was Ling (which is Chinese for Woods). "Why!" exclaimed . the Chinaman with fervor. "The same name! Now I recall that in the'Han dynasty [B. C. 200] there was a big famine, and a part of our clan left China and were said to have crossed over the great eastern sea. They were never heard of again, but now I see they reached America." ' And greatly to the good doctor's amusement, he was greeted as one of water in which soda has been dissolved. dissolved. Finish" with cinnamon, rolled oats, flour and lastly raisins. Mix lightly together, put in greased muffin pan and bake for twenty minutes or until brown. Boiled Dinner.--Four pounds corned corned beef, one-half small cabbage, two small turnips, four potatoes, bunch each of small carrots and small beets. If beef is very salty put it on to cook in cold water; otherwise cover with boiling water. Boil five minutes, then let simmer three or four hours, time depending on how long it takes meat to get tender. Quarter cabbage, after after removing outside leaves and core. Pare turnip and cut into slices. Scrapè carrots and wash beets. Cook beets in boiling water one hour. Drain, drop into cold water and remove skin. One hour before meat is done take enough water from meat kettle to cover cabbage, carrots, turnips in another another kettle and boil them one-half hour, then add potatoes and cook another another half hour. When everything is cookëd dish meat, garnish with cabbage, cabbage, carrots and turnips. Serve potatoes potatoes and beets in separate dishes. By cooking dinner this way meat is not .flavored with vegetables, but- vegetables are flavored with meat. If vegetables are not young, longer time will be required for cooking them. is perfectly dry rub it with a woollen cloth to restore the gloss. --* An Easy Pill to .Take --Some per ons hate repugnane to pills because of their nauseating taste. Parmelee's Vegetable Pills are so prepared as to make them agreeable to the most fastidious. The most delicate can take take: them.without them.without feeling the revulsion that follows the taking of ordinary pris. This is one reason for the popularity of these celt br^ted pills, but the main reason is their high tonical quality as a medicine for the stomach. RUSSIA FAR FROM "DRY." Useful Hints. Sugar should not be eaten by those who suffer from rheumatism. Sugar added to over-salted etc., will remove the saltness. soup ., , .. . > ,. .. , - - , Sugar--a lump of--dropped into the family, and cordially welcomed in- milk will prevent its turning sour. to the clan of Ling ------* Of British peers of the 'realm no fewer than 177 are, or have been, serving in his Majesty's forces during the war. When your head is dull and heavy, your tongue furred, and you feel done-üp âud good .for- nothing,- without - knowing what is really the : FFdte?! V^h you, probably all that, is needed to restore you.to health and ;.*. v-w'ia-". : ?rgMer : - V-n • vigour is a few doses of a reliable .a v : ~ r ' - digestiyq-tomGarid'Stomachic rem- - STOMACH AND " LIVER cdy such as Mother Seigel's Syrup. ; - ~ ' ; _ Take if after each meal for a few Fays and note how beneficial is its action upon the stomach, liver and bowels-- hôw it restores tone and healthy activity to these important organs, and by -60 doing enables you to gain new stores of vigour, vitality, and health. , Sugar--a couple of lumps--on the floor of the oven, will make pastry- brown nicely. . .. To peel potatoes properly have a sharp knife and run it around between the skin arid the jpotato. Occasionally a little amirionia the water in which glass is "washed will give good results. It cleanses the glass thoroughly without injuring injuring it. - To tint discolored lace curtains mix corn starch with an equal quantity of the ordinary, stirch; boil. and use in the same-way as white starch.!, v The . secret of cleaning paint is first of ntod^^sh^î^th^ dust ioff,V ànd Substitutes for Vodka Said to Be Plentiful and Harmful. In introducing its drastic prohibition prohibition law the Russian Government has not solved finally the great problem of drink in Russia. According to the Novoe Vremya of Petrograd, illicit drinking is still going on throughout Russia. In rural districts the peasants get frequently drunk on various vodka substitutes, in the mariufacture of which with* most primitive, means local local amateur distillers show greàt ingenuity. ingenuity. Our .vocabulary, says the journal, is already enriched by a string of new words, such as "samo- sidka" ("home made"), "brashka" ("brewery"), "khanzhâ" ("hypocrite"), ("hypocrite"), etc., all of which -denote drinks more harmful than the original vodka. In towns and cities inveterate drinkers manage .to get spirits from dispensing chemists on the strength of a doctor's prescription. A result of this is that five Kieff doctors have just brought on themselves the penalty penalty of the law in the shape of fines varying from $100 to $250 for encouraging encouraging their patients to drink by means of suitable prescriptions. In many cities arid towns local authorities authorities forbid apothecaries keeping any spirits. " _ Both the public and the authorities in Russia are beginning to ' realize that prohibition alone, without a corresponding corresponding effort to increase facilities facilities for healthy recreation, is insufficient insufficient to cope with the great evil of in | drink. Such an effort is already being made in many places, but owing to the exigencies of the war it is necessarily necessarily restricted. > -r; Provisions. Bacon--Long clear, 14 to 14 %c per lb. in case lots. Hams--Medium, 18% to 19c; do., heavy, 14% to 15c; rolls, 15 to 15%c; breakfast bacon, 20 to 23c; backs, plain, 23 to 24c; boneless backs, 25 to 25%c. Lard--The market is easier; pure lard, tubs, 12% to 13c; do., pails, 14 to 14%c; compound, tubs, 11c; do., pails, 11 %c. Business in Montreal. Montreal, Oct. 26.--Oats--No. 2 local white, 47c; No. 3 local white, 46c; No. 4 local white, 45c. Barley-- Malting, 66% to 67c. Flour--Manitoba Flour--Manitoba Spring wheat patents, firsts, $5.85; seconds, $5.35; strong bakers', $5.15; JWinter patents, choice, $5.60; straight rollers, $4.90 to $5; do., bags, $2.30 to $2.40. Rolled oats--Bbls., $5.15 to $5.20; do., bags, 90 lbs., $2.45 to'$2.50. Bran, $22. Shorts, $25. Middlings, $30 to $31. Mouillie, $30 to $33. Hay--No. 2, per ton, $17 to $18. Cheese--Finest westerns, 15% to 16c; finest easterns, 15 to 15%c. Butter---Choicest creamery, 32% to 33c; seconds, 32 to 32 %c. Eggs--Fresh, 40c; selected, 32c; No. 1 stock, 28c; No. 2 stock, 25c. Potatoes--Per Potatoes--Per bag, car lots, 95c to $1.10. Dressed hogs--Abattoir killed, $13.75 to $14.00. Pork---Heavy Canada short mess, bbls., 35 to 45 pieces, $28 to $28.50; Canada short-cut back, bbls., 45 to 55 pieces, $27 to Supernatural religion is as house built on the rock. It rests upon a few basic truths that are well established, established, and come within the scope of human reason. It is particularly important. important. to realize this, that these fundamental truths are knowable by reason unaided, though they are confirmed confirmed by Revelation. For many men, whose sole guide is reason, often make the claim that faith and religion are unreasonable and therefore outside the pale of their acceptance. The truths underlying all religious belief and practice are, briefly--First, the existence of a Supreme Being to whom belong sovereignty and power over the world; second, the dual nature nature of man, in whom the vitalizing principle, the soul, is non-material, contains within itself the germ of immorality, and therefore calls for future future and continued existence after its exit from the world; third,. The Accountability of Man for his" moral acts because of freedom of will, and finally the great law of retribution whereby one is rewarded for right and punishable for wrongdoing. wrongdoing. As to the existence of a Supreme Being, no other attempt of philosophic speculation comes so near satisfying men's curiosity or giving an adequate solution of the world's origin and conservation conservation as the story of creation. That the human soul is immortal and demands future existence is a claim made and proved satisfactorily in the science of psychology, and not the weakest of the arguments advanced advanced is the need of such future existence existence in order that universal justice that be done, because early life often fails to do justice to individuals. . Then, again, if men , and nations are not accountable for their moral acts all human law ceases further to have a. proper subject for application. For human law . postulates as its first principle responsibility for such acts. Finally the law of reward or punishment punishment obtains throughout all departments departments of human activity. The Basis of Civilization. Through the ages men of every grade of intelligence have accepted these truths and found in them the solution of the great question of life, its origin and destiny. The world generaly has made them its constitution, constitution, which has guided its progress through its most successful stages. Reject this philosophy and what adequate adequate substitute can be found for it? It is the basis of civilization as well as of supernatural religion, whether that religion be the Hebrew, the Protestant Protestant or the Roman Catholic. It is the duty of thinking -men to investigate investigate this teaching according to their ability, as it is the province of every religious organization to emphasize and defend these fundamental truths if religion will retain its influence and fulfil its supreme purpose of directing men to future society with the Eternal God.--Rev. Thomas • B. Cotter, Ph. D. ^ FREE UNTIL 1916. Have you subscribed yet for The Youth's Companion for 1916? Now is the time'to do it, if you are not already already a subscriber, for you will get all the issues for the remaining weeks SURGEON READY FOR AIR RAID. Operated With Lamp When Bomb Wrecked Electric Plant. Air raids are becoming so frequent that inhabitants of small towns on i the east coast of England are getting of 1915 free from the time your sub- [ used to them. The London Lancet scription with $2.25 is received The fifty-two issues of 1916 will be crowded with good reading for young and old. Reading that is entertaining, hut not "wishy-washy." Reading that leaves you, when you lay the paper down, better informed, with keener $27.50. j aspirations, with a broader outlook on ïrfi/rï ^9 m P° und ». ' ^ e - The Companion is a good paper 10%c; wood pails, 20 lbs. net. 10% c* U pure, tierces, 875 lbs., 12 to 12%^ ! to t! = *?■>? 5™ u ha , ve a growing family pure, wood pails, 20 lbs. net, 13 to 1 -- and - f or general reading, as Justice 13 %c. United States Markets. Minneapolis, Oct. 26.--Wheat--No. 1 hard, $1.04% ; No. 1 Northern, $1.00% to $1.03%; No. 2 Northern 97% to $1.00% ; December, 97c"; May, $1.01%.- Corn--No. 3 yellow, 69 to 70c. Oats--No. 3 white, 33% to 34c. Flour declined; fancy patents, $6.45; first clears, $4.85; second clears, $3. Bran $19. Duluth, Oct. 26.--Wheat--Noi 1 hard, $1.03% ; No. i Northern, $1.02%; No. 2 Northern, 98%c; Montana, Montana, No. 2 hard, 99%c; December, 98%c; May, $l'.01%c. Linseed- Cash, $1.88% to $1.89%; December, $1.82%; May, $1.87%. Brewer once said, no other is necessary. necessary. tells the following story of an operation. operation. performed during one of the German raids: "During one of the recent air raids ~0n the east coast a well-known surgeon surgeon was performing an operation of tracheotomy at a nursing home when the Gel-man aircraft came over the place at night. The town electric current current was at once cut off. All the lights went out suddenly, and this too at the very moment when the surgeon in question vyas opening the windpipe. If you wish to know more of the Fortunately it was not the first attack brilliant list of contributors, British as well as American, who will .write fçr. the new volume in 1916, and if you wish to know something of the new stories for 1916, let us send you free the Forecast for 1916. Every new subscriber who serids $2.25 for 1916 will receive, in addition addition to this year's free issues, The Companion Home Calendar for 1916. The Youth's Companion, Boston, Mass. New subscriptions Received at this Office. a Joker, Too. in' circulation The new 1.00 size contains, three times .as much as the trial 'size 'b-. r ^ ? sold at 50c- per. bottle. ^ ' n • " . then to. wash it, drying each v little piece as prié goes/ Afterwards rinse and - dry Agimediately. ï , v: : ' -. • v When a ^hoqt Or .shoe pinches wring a cltith- out .-Iri very hofc waterf "arid place it ovèr-thcÿilace while :the boot is pri "the : fpdt;^ 4TW "expands ;the leather èirifl*;Wilî give rëlief. y ; ^ jWhep 'ûsirigr velvet remeiriber'-,that it must priver be" pressed flat - on a tablé withyèri iroi^- ; It shotrlâ be held • i, L in thé hand^ arid^ the . irpn - passed sots* f ; ;%jg^ntly WM ^ ÿ " A shabbÿ^haridp^miy^i^ ho O'Leary Is There is a new about Michael O'Leary, the jrish V.C During his visit, to. London a compa- t ttiot ' greeted ^ him-' enthusiastically ana begged a singly button from his coat. O'Leary, without a smile, answered: answered: "I'll do better.than tlÆf. A single button is too little fori you. Just go across the street there and tell the man inside that I -sent you and. he will giye you" ari entire set." The plâce was a recruiting. office. vChildren., dry R6# f---- CAS Live Stock Markets. Toronto, Oct. 26.---Best heavy steers, $8.25 to $8.60; good heavy steers, $8 to.$8.15; butchers' cattle, choice, $7.60 to $7.75; do., good, $7.10 to $7.50; do., medium, $6.50 to $7; do., common, $5 to $5.40; butch- ep' bulls, choice, $6.25 to $6.75; do., good bulls, $5.75 to $6; do., rough bulls, $4.75 to $5.25; butchers' cows, choice, $6.45 to $6.75 do., good, $6 to $6.25; do., medium, $5.25 to $5.75; do., common, $4.50 to $5; feeders, good, $6;60 to $6.75 stockers, 700 to 900 lbs;, $6.25 to $6.50; canriers and cutters, $3 to $4.50; milkers, choice, each, $65 to $100; do., common and medium, each," $35 to : $60'4' springers, $50 to $95; light ewes, $5.25 to $6.60; sheep, heavy, $4.26 to $4.75; do., bucks, $3.50 to $4.50; yearling lambs, $7 to,$7.50; spring Iambs, cwt., $8.60 to $8.90; calves', medium to' choice, $7.25 to $10.75; hogs, off cars, $9.65 to $9.90; do/, fed and watered, $9.50; do., f.o.b., $9.-15.- v - Montreal, Oct. 26.--Sales of choice steers were made at $7.25 to $7,50, good at $6.75 to $7, and the lower grades from that down to $4.50 to $5, while butchers' cows brought from $4.50 to $6.50, and bulls from $4.50 to $6.25 per cwt. The trade' in canning canning stock was active at prices ranging ranging from $3 to $4.25 per cwt. Lambs, Ontario stock, sold at $8 to $8.25 and Quebec at: $7.50 to $7.75, while sheep brought from $4.25 to $5.25 per cwt. Milk-fed stock, 8"to 9c and grass-fed, #W 7c per • lb.ÿ :Hqgs,v selected lots, $3. 25 to $9, 7^„pér cWt; , weighed off cars." ~ •• Cats for Food in Hungary. The Paris Figaro quotes the Budapest Budapest correspondent of the Frankfurter Frankfurter Zeitung as follows : "The official extent of land devoted to the cultiva- organ of the central Hungarian slaughter houses, states that in the Biharkenszteser district, where all the Italian residents of Hungary are interned, a great number of cats are killed and dressed daily. The demand has been such that the prige of cats rose to a prohibitive figure, hence the local authorities stepped in and fixed the maximum price at three crowns I the kilo." . ( About 25 cents a pound). J delivered against this place, a fishing and sea bathing resort. "Taught by experience, the operator had made it a matter of habit to warn his nurses and other assistants that lamps should be kept ready for use during all opérations which had to be undertaken at night. This preca&tion may have saved the small patient's life. With but a trifling delay the tracheotomy was completed and the child is now doing well. "To have performed so delicate an operation in such circumstances is a considerable feat, for the raid was a serious one, a good many bombs were dropped, several persons were killed and injured and the feeling at the moment moment was naturally one of intense apprehension. apprehension. Some of the bombs hit a house in the neighborhood, the residence residence of another well-known practitioner. practitioner. Luckily no one was at home at the time and the medical practitioner practitioner got off with the destruction of a certain amount of property. The experience recorded will no doubt ip- sure the taking by medical men generally generally of the precautions which in this case had been fortunately observed." observed." mi .h Hi 4 D. D. D. There is a way, a simple, speedy, pleasant way, to rid yourself of that distressing itch and those uneomfortahle sores and rashes. With the D. D. D. Prescription,, a mild, soothing liquid, yori can wash ont the gnawing germs without bother and muss--leaving no greasy stain upon the skin. ' D. D. D. is a scient "flo cbm pound of oil of Ayintergreen, thymol, glycerin and other well: known; healing ingredients. F«>r 15 years,it has been, tlip standard skin remedy. . !. v.*" Just a few drops of this soothing wash applied to the sore will give instant relief relief from all suffering. A generous trial bottle for only 25 k offer 3-on the first toll size.bottle on the gnarantee that it O'y* 1 oese or your money T? f v^?î d " . us about D. D. D. Soap. It keèpS your skin always healthy. P Jury&Loyel!, Druggists, Bowmanville. D-D. 9. is Made in Canada. "V ' , M eg ■ ■ 8 m || . • ■ .-.J:. ' •> ' :

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