Clarington Digital Newspaper Collections

Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 2 Mar 1916, p. 6

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

■ rg*?- ..'■„ : : . v. - 7. - ' ~ * ; * : \ *^} • "• ; " : :* • ': r > ?v ; * ; 7"";':v* >'- w/ *' r "^'rf .^* .?' v :i> r '- \ ppp|p| A ;:>;.>>r^-- v > r- z V - .""" vV -7 ' ;^'-, ';>rNU;'; V'V : . "; • vl : /•;- ■• ■ '* . ' . r^' ' "-■ v v*V r " v' . r" v >"• ï&ï< Ssif- ' ./ B"- üévî, ■ r §£.../ syv- -7 E z Ai. - < ■ : 7 r__ I feS^sf tU,;. V Bïr-r S3 p£ B 8 S: W4r--V V L-i ■ -C ££> X-r, BBEgriK* r, - \ We desire to advise, our customers that although «.< if the pressure screw at the top is loosened after using. lien a little bi- we have- suffered a very large loss in Sunday's (Feby." 20th) fire, we have sufficient stocks stored at our ware- flrs, we have suf house at liong Branch and other warehouses in the city, „to enable us to fill orders complete and to take care of the coming season's. trade. We commenced shipping shipping Monday, 21st, at noon and orders will be handled in our usual prompt manner. RENNIE'S SEEDS HEAD OFFICE, TORONTO, CANADA All our branches have been supplied with théir season's requirements. .?• <>.; ; -■ -- -- - V " < ' ' - ■ ■ ■ t ■■■■■ • * --s: About the House ^ -- • ■ - - -- Useful Hints and Qeneral Information Information for the Busy Housewife *=--■ -- Ü A daily hath, into whic carbonate of soda is put,' mil allay the burning of the feet. ! /Tty to induce children :to eat . each at least one apple a day. -It will keep their systems in good condition. The end of the rib roast can be sawed off and corned. If boiled with cabbage it will make a good lunch, dish. To insure the creamy sauce being smooth, always rub the butter arid flour together until smooth and add to the hot milk. When a window is difficult to raise, pour melted lard between the frame and the casing and put a little also on the cord. ; Do not allow moths to brëed in your house. It can be prevented by! eliminating the garments that have had them in and- by keeping a watchful watchful eye on all closets and chests. Don'ts For Parents. Simple Facts About Cocoa. ! Cocoa which is really a corruption of the word "cacao," has become a permanent food supply. Not every one knows that the cocoa of powdery, familiar form is a residue from the manufacture of chocolate. Both cocoa cocoa and chocolate are taken from the bean or seed found in a pod in a most ' odd-shaped gourd-like pod which grows on the bark and trunk of the thick, in baking pan. Cover with milk --about two-cupfuls. Bake slowly, basting frequently and turning once or twice until ham is. tender, has absorbed absorbed most of the milk and is brown on top. This will take about one-half hour. Spanish Steak--Select piece of round of sirloin steak, cut about two inches thick, arid brown in little dripping dripping or bacon fat in frying pan. Add Don't always be saying "Don't!" It' is better to take a little more trouble to prevent trouble than always to be devising pains and penalties. Don't forget that your child must always be doing something. Breadstuffs. Toronto, Feb. 2d.--Manitoba wheat --■New crop, 'No. 1 Northern, $1.20%; No. 2, do., $1.18; No. 8, do., $1.15%, in store, Fort William. Manitoba oats--No. 2, C.W., 42% c; No. 3, do., 40 %c; extra No. 1 feed 40%ç; No. 1 feed; 39 %c., in store, Fort william. American corh--No* 3 yellow, 82 % c, track Toronto. _ Canadian corn--Feed 74 to • 75c, track, Toronto. Ontario oats--No. 3 white, 43 to 44c; commercial, 42 to 43c, according to freight outside. Ontario wheat--No. 2 Winter, car lot, $1.08 to $1.10; wheat slightly sprouted and tough, according to sample, $1,03 to $1.05; wheat sprouted, sprouted, smutty and tough, according to sample, 98 to $1.02; feed wheat, 85 to 90c, according to freights outside. Peas--No. 2, $1.70; according to satiiple, $1.25 to $1.50, according to freights outside. Barley-Malting, 64 to 66c; feed, Clean and Full of Aroma. F is blended from selected hill-grown teas, famed for their fine flavour/ qualities. Imitated yet never equalled. THE FAILURE OF AN ALLIANCE All Can Walk and Talk With God, if Their Hands are Only Pure and Unblemished en ,. , , . , , , When ye spread forth your hands, 57 tç 60c, according to freight out- T •„ . . J ' 1 will hide mine eyes from you; yea, side. Rye--No commercial, 90 uu *.10, _ t he rejected, according to sample, 83 to 1 „ T ' . , . 85c, according to freights outside. | blood - ~ Isalah ' 15 -Manitoba .flour--First cocoa tree. These huge pods arô I can tomatoes, two sliced or chop- cut from the bark and the bean taken ! P ed onions, two green or red peppers out ; The beans are then treated to various processes of sweating and X drying and roasting, and a final process process of grinding. This ground material material is full of oil. When this ground material is allowed to solidify at a proper temperature it forms the hitter hitter chocolate of commerce which we generally use for icings and candy. But in making cocoa a great deal of the oil is separated from the ground chopped small (with seeds and white fibers removed). Cover closely and let cook two hours. Season with pep- pér and salt and serve. Do not add water. Baked Cabbage--Trim medium sized head of cabbage, cut in two and put on to cook in cold water. After fifteen minutes' boiling, drain off water and cook for twenty miputes. Drain dry, chop fine, season with salt, Don't faü to find new outlets for f?* ow a b *^ °f wear near the end of their super-abundant energy. y 16 season, and such an addition will Don't let them grow "up thinking * re shen it and make it serve the seas- that they can't do wrong. Don't make a habit of, distrusting . The second suit illustrated is fash- your. boys. Distrust is often the 1( ? ned of dark blue gabardine. It is a cause of-deceit. simple, youthful model which could Don't forget the potent power of ea ®^y be made at home. The high suggestion. Keep on telling the child coIIar with turned-back revers, which z _ . . , , he is bad or wicked, and he will be- ma y a Iso be.closed if preferred, is a ! onto; $4.60 to $4.70, bulk, seaboard, come so. new touch which is becoming and ! prompt shipment, when ye make many prayers, I will 0 c > nnf Tioo-r. xron-P hands are full of patents, in jute bags, $7; second patents, $6.50; strong bakers, in jute bags, 6.30, Toronto. Prayer is the highest exercise of the religious life. It is the conversation conversation of the believing heart withits Ontario flour--Winter, according *? ake J' » is a talking with God and, s»mn% $4 «A vn fnonir t™- therefore, the engaging m a divme- human alliance for righteousness. v,a, 1± ,v xxxciii, This large purpose, unrealizable by X11C i MiÏÏfeed-- Carrots, delivered Mont- al ° ne ' Σ \ eas l ly accomplished by^h^ real freights--Bran, per ton, $25; God and man together. Prayer is the portion, and we thus have a dry sub- pepper and butter and put in buttered stance or powder which we call co coa. Thus cocoa is far less rich in fat than " chocolate, although it has the familiar chocolate flavor. It contains contains a property similar to the stimulating stimulating theo-bromine of tea and cof- . free, but its nutritive value is very high--an average bean containing 49 per cent, of oil, 18 per cent, of protein, protein, 10 per cent, of starch and other carbohydrates. x In Various Forms. In 1910 more than 115,000,000 pounds of cocoa beans were used in the United States. Besides the familiar familiar powdered cocoa, there is the so baking dish. Have ready two beaten eggs, mixed with four tablespoons cream. Pour over cabbage and set in dish in oven to cook for twenty minutes, minutes, or' until well browned over the top. Foamy Sauce--Beat yolk of one egg until thick and lemoivcolored and add three-fourths cup powdered sugar gradually, beating constantly. Mix one-fourth cup powdered sugar with one teaspoon corn starch and one- eighth teaspoon salt and pour on gradually one-half cup scalded milk. Cook in double boiler three minutes, stirring constantly until mixture « ., „ , . , . . thickens and occasionally afterward, called "cocoa mbs, which is merely n 7 * Combine mixtures, flavor with one- Ine cracked cocoa bean. This is often recommended, especially for children, because it gives the nutriment of the half teaspoon vanilla, grated rind of Don't treat all children alike. Don't s ™ ar ** forget that each child has an individ- ° ne °f the most effective suits is » -- , , , . , . n uality, each one keyed up- to a certain ° f dark bIue velvet, with a knee-deep ' shorts, per ton, $26;. middlings, per bond Y h ch unites Creator and créât pitch. - flounce, arid chin collar, and muff cuffs ton, $27; good feed flour, per bag, ^. ie in te un intimate fellowship of ac- When a child exhibits an irritating °f moleskin. A broadcloth or faille ?1.7B to $1.85. tlon * religion consists of walking trait, just pause and reflect about the costd me with flounce, cuffs and collar law of heredity before chastising him. Don't forget the bairn's origin. Don't forget a child needs persuasion; persuasion; an ounce of encouragement is worth a ton of birch-sticks. The Fashions FUR STILL IN EVIDENCE. one-fourth lemon and one tablespoon . .,, , lemon juice, and then add one egg coc°a bean without any oil or sweet- wMte beaten stiff . - . There is also the cocoa shell, which is the shell separated from the cracked bean. This naturally does For taffeta and the printed silks ( ^which are now so high in Fashion's ; favor, for the crisp organdies and daintily figured voiles and crepes, [ there is no more practical or effective trimming than cording, smocking or shirring. Many of our dance frocks for summer summer will be of organdy or net; an unusually pretty imported frock of net, shown recently in one of our. exclusive exclusive shops, made with an extrèmelÿ full skirt, gathered at the waist, equally wide top and bottom;-the skirt was hung over a . crinoline hip stiffening, and the entire dress was Fig Pudding--Run three ounces of beef suet and one-half pound figs not contain nutriment, only the cocoa separately three times through meat _ „ flavor. Both the nibs and the shell «hopper and work thoroughly with the trimmed effectively with quaint, pleat- hands afterward.. Have ready two, e d ruffles. Another effective summer and one-third cups stale breadcrumbs j evening gown displayed at the same which have been soaked in one-half time was of white Georgette crepe cup with milk thirty minutes, two ^ well-beaten eggs, one cup sugar and three-fourth teaspoon salt. Combine mixture. Butter individual molds, garnish bottom of each with four strips of figs radiating from center. can be made into very palatable beverage beverage by boiling for a short period and serving like tea or coffee. . . Although the -directions for different different makes of cocoa may vary, there is one general rule to be followed in making cocoa to which- milk is added --and that is, not to boil the milk. Boiling the milk makes the beverage Trtn ™ n + tv Vi i i ® j- t 1 vf bill molds two-thirds full, place on iai less digestible and prevents the .u. , . . ' ^ . , -n- j .. tuvet m kettle containing boiling milk and cocoa from blending *hor- -, , , , _ % , - , f. . water and let steam one and one-half ougnly. . the better way is to dissolve v . . . , . . X.T- _ „ -, , , nours. Water should reach two-thirds the sugar, cocoa and water together _ ,, - TP , , „n • j.!,* j. -i •] , . oi way up side on molds. If steamed ana allo\v this to boil to a syrup, then .. , . arin i , . „ . J t i' ln 0116 large mold time required is add the milk-and bring to a scald, but three hour6- 1 do not boil. A Healthy Winter Beverage. Fig Paste--Chop 1 pound figs coarsely and reduce to a pulp by boil- All cocoa is much improved by be- ' ing in 1 pint of water. When soft ing beaten with an egg-beater • for pass the whole through a fine sieve; several minutes before serving; also add to it 3 pounds powdered sugar ; most varities are improved by the ad- mix well and evaporate the whole dition of a pinch of salt, and .a . few over boiling water until the paste be- drops of vanilla extract, before serv- comes quite stiff. While evaporating ing. As a winter beverage, cocoa . process is going on make a mold that takes foremost place. The child com- will hold it by removing' the nails from ing home hungry from school, the the sides of a wooden box, tying the. grown person chilled from an " even- parts minus the bottom together with ing outdoors, the diet of " " a ' growing string. Stand this on the marble child will all be improved by the use slab or dish and pour the warm fig of good cocoa, properly made. ■ If the mass into it, letting it remain until digestion is rather weak or if the cold; then remove the strings and op- child is under five years of age, it, en the frame, leaving the paste in a. would be better .to use the drink of ' square mass. Now with a sharp, thin nibs or shells which contain less oil. I knife, cut. the mass into small pieces A by-product of cocoa, is cocoa but- ! and roll them round and thin into fine ter, which is the solid fat extracted j sugar. They may be packed in boxes, from the cocoa bean. This butter is j using plenty' of fine confectioners'- su- used extensively in making confec tionery dike chocolate creams---or for toilet preparations--or wherever a pure vegetable oil'is desirable. / Tested Recipes. Ham, Country Style-- Place one pound- slide of ham, cut one-third-mch gar between the pieces. Household Hints. Cook the cauliflower" entire ; the leaves and stem which surround it are delicious served with it. The clothes wringer will last twice Three vital questions Ton o^rty^al force, ind t«w«7l ■CXX^health ? Do yon know that MnnA .Arc yon ood health ? yon I the foo «dation erf good health ow that iood digestion ÂnffcR MEALS take »!«;, ?*Im end oo- 85 herb la- atweaefa and aheet. after eetinj, with dlatlneH, ere sure «line atidip. Mother Seirfej i Syrup, the rfresl y «ad tomc^wtll curt yog. with God, it must also be a talking Country Produce. . with God,* for friends do not walk to- ., r, . . . gether in silence. Butter--Fresh dairy, 27 to 30 ; in- 1 " ferior, 23 to 25c; creamery prints, 34 _ 7 ra ^ rei 1S an em P owerin ^ alliance, to 36c; solids, 32 to 31c. It is a drawing on the stored up re- Eggs--Storage, 25 to 26c per doz; sources of the Alm ig h ty, a supple- selects, 27 to 28c; new-laid, 30 to 31c, human deficiency by di case lots. Honey--Price, in 10 to 60-lb. tins, 12% to 13c. Comb--No. 1, $2.75 to $3; No. 2, $2.25 to, $2.40 Beans--$4.20 to $4.40. vine sufficiency. Do You Crave Holiness? Holiness is of the Lord, to be had terness in that oft repeated complaint. The alliance promised well, but some one had failed at the crucial moment. God never fails; a failing God would be no God at all. Perhaps we have failed. "When ye spread forth your hands, I will hide mine eyes from you." Why? "Those hands are soiled, dirty, contaminated, stained." Their disreputableness automatically breaks the binding power of the alliance. The True and Helpless Alliance. The most devastating of sins is self- The compelling power of prayer is its selflessness. Why pray for creature comforts only? Jesus never prayed for a roof to cover Him nor for soft beds and good meal^ His prayers were for spiritual gifts; then- clear object not Himself but others "I pray that they shall be with me where I am and that they shall know my glory." "Forgive us our trespasses trespasses as we forgive those that trespass trespass against us." An unforgiving heart need never expect to have its cry beard.. Such a cry is like a shout for help in mid-ocean, with no ship nearer than a thousand miles. of Him only for the asking. It can I ZT n TZT;' inntia ' , W ' hy Poultry--Spring chickens, 17 to 20c; n X r n e ? eVe ° P ® d ? f your ow ? p ° w " grudges, our hates and our enmities - - ' ers. Or do you desire success? You an( j t ^ en 163 fowls, 15 to 16c; ducks, 17 to 20c; , , , , . geese, 15 to 19c; turkeys, 23 to 27c. . posses ! talents and personal gifts of Cheese-Large, 19c; twins,19%c. : character. God's power directs these Potatoes--Car lots of Ontario quot- ' t^ts so that 'they may be realized ^ ^ 'v » vn rno nio*hocr Favivi o û-f-h zn/a» Lord ed at $1.70 to $1.75, and New Bruns wicks at $1.80 to $1.90 per bag, on track. Montreal Markets. Montreal, Feb. 29.--Corn--American 29.--Corn--American No. 2 yellow, 86 to 87c. Oats-- Canadian western, No. 2 53 %c; do., j No. 3, 51%c; No. 2 local white, ,48%c; i No. 3 do., '47%c; No. 4 do.> 46%c. J Barley--Man. feed, 62 to 63c ; malting, in the highest forms of efficiency and utility. A true alliance is never one sided; it is always reciprocal. Each ally performs performs his portion of the compact. Otherwise the association wandering why the seems deaf? The true and helpful alliance is habitual; it is not merely a last resort when all else seems to spell defeat. Its united strength prevents trouble where its isolated weakness would otherwise tempt the troubler. The complete indwelling of God with man fails. I will dissuade the evildoer and save Charging God with the failures and ! men from themselves. The way is losses which are of our own making | open. "Who shall ascend into the is one of the commonest and yet one i hill of the Lord ? or who shall stand of the most unworthy of our mental ! in his holy place? He that hath clean processes. Our prayers appear to hands and a pure heart."--Rev. Char- J 76 to 78c. Buckwheat----No. 2, 80 to be unanswei " ed i there is a sting of bit-j les J. Smith. 82c. Flour--Man. Spring wheat pat- ' --r-v: : ---~ -u---- ■ -- _________ firsts, ents, $7.10;. seconds, strone- bakers' «66 40- str ni >"hr -rfnfZ' light) $ 7 * 50 to $ 9 '® 0; Sheep ' heavy, swarming with German merchants, «r on'- u i 1 ' and bucks ' ? 6 ' 50 to ? 8 -°°î Ho ^ f ed agvnts and spies, trading freely 1-7 80 t !pSo ; S p a }f ht r °î ler l' bagS ' a * d watered, $9.75; do., f.o.b. $3.40; Dutch commerce is inextricably el $2.80 to $2.90. Roller oats, barras, do weighed at plant, $10.15. | tangled with German interests' and I £L 5; ^ t*?: coinn $8 â G $2 i?' Montreal, Feb. 29,-Butcher steers, ! Germau capita1 -" . Bian, $23.50 to $24.00. Shorts, $26. ij es f «7 f 0 «57 50* • trnnd «6R fn «7. I r-v 9 30 ' ^ ouilli ®' ^1 fair,'$6 to $6.50; medium, $5.75 to $6; WAR B00MS U - S - TOWNS. » 9f) ^ , c. 90 a Jn pr ' per J > . n> car lot ® , butcher bulls, best $5.75 to $6.25; med- ~~ $20 to $20.50. Cheese--Finest* west- ium> $5 . 25 to $5.75; canners, $4 to $5; >Var 0rders Have bought Big Popu- /022 eras, 18% 18% Serge Suit With Novel Collar. to 18%= 9C; BÏtteLchoLZst ?6 | i to e 32V ry ' to 5 4 ^ ; qn C + 0n o 9 S1 ^-ners, $3 to $3.50. Sheep, 5c to^?; ! : to 32%c. Eggs--Fresh, 30 to 32c; se- i„„t,„ . 01/ tt v ' ; lQnforl Of* 4-r\ OTs* • XTrx 1 L i 0 1 , lHITlDS, oC tO 9 • ÎÎO^S, selects, $10 , tected, Jb to Zic; No. 1 stock. 24 to ± a-m cn , . . , . y , 1 ok~. tvt„ 9 91 00 „ -r, \ . to $10.50; roughs and mixed lots, $9.25 much ^L"e°xpfn S te 0 . be ^ , «.H car lots, $1 80 to%l 8°5 ' f ° ?9 ' 5 ° : C0mm0n ' c ° ws > ^.60.' These patterns may be obtained .... { " . from your local McCall Dealer or from Winnipeg Gram. The McCall Company, Dept. W., 70 Winnipeg, Feb. 29.--Cash: No. 1 j Northern, $1.20; No. 2 Northern, I j $1.75%; No. 3 Northern, $1.15; No. 4, Holland is Aiding the Enemy With Bond "St., Toront;o Ont. the war boom : j to $7.75. Calves, milk-fed, 8c to 9%c; " City. I grass-fed, 4%c to 5%c •i- lation Increases. The following table shows how cities in the United States have grown, while quite respectable towns have sprung into existence through WAREHOUSE FOR GERMANY BURDEN OF THE WAR. Foodstuffs The London Daily Mail sent an in- Britain Can Finance a Debt Twenty-five BHlion Dollars. Even if Britain should end the war with a debt of £5,000,000,000 (approximately (approximately $25,000,000,000) the burden burden would hot be crushing according to Lord ' Inchcape, the English financier financier and statesman. Such a load, ; said his . lordship at a I Bridgeport, Conn. . . j Hopewell, Va j Penn's Grove, N.J.. . j City Point, Va j Du Pont City, Va. . . j Carney's Point, N.J.. Petersburg, Va. $1.11%; No. 5, $1.03%; No. 6, 97%c;i J feed, 91 %c. Oats--No. 2 C.W., 42%c,j of ' ^ C.W., 40%c; extra No. 1 feed, vestigator to Holland to ascertain the ! Wilmine-tbn Del i 40%C; No ' 1 feed ' fi? No. 2 feed, effect of the British blockade He ; Detroit, g JVIkh 600,000 3, 65c; No. 4, 59c; contributes a three-column article, the R pt hlehem 10 rq7 --No. 1 N.W.C., gist cf which is that after patient and ; F1 - lo'i-l 1 careful enquiry, he has come to the ; ilnt> Mich ^ • • *38,Oo0 conclusion that Holland is being used by the Germans as a warehouse from which goods are taken daily to the German factories, cities and troops. "The Dutch cities," he says, "are Before war. Now. . . . 90,000 140,000. 0 2,000 2 Op 0 0 25,000 87,411 37 % c. Barley--No. feed, 54c: Flax- No. 2 C.W., $2.03%. $2.06% United States Markets. Minneapolis, Feb. 29.--Wheat-^- May, $1.21% to $1.21% ; July, $1.20% ; to $1.20%; No. 1 hard, $1.26%; No. The New Umbrella Skirt. ■rich as the mi ell if. «eipt otpdce, 58c. and $1.00. The laifle bottle contains three tinea i A. 3. Whits AGo. Umitsd, CraU Street Wen, MoatreaT Watch Your Colts For Coughs, Colds and Distemper, and at the first svme- toms of any such ailment, give small doses of that wonderful wonderful remedy,, now the most used in existence SFOHlff'S DISTBMP8B bOMPOU»» Sold by any druggist, harness dealer, dr delivered bv . 8FOEN XEBZCA& CO;, Chemist» sad. Bacteriologists, Goshen, irid., .U.BJL beaded with opaque white heads. The bodice was cut in bolero effect, and the 1 • ■ • ; . . . .. 1 National Provincial Bank-Of England 1 Northern, $1.22 to $1,24%; No. 2 stockholders' meeting over which he Northern, $1.18% to- $1.22%. Corn presided recently, would mean an an- --No. 3 yellow, 76 to 77c. Oats--No. nual charge of only £300,000,000 3, white, .43% to 43 %c. Flour--Fancy (about $1,500,000,000) reckoning 5 ! patents 20c lower, $6.70; first clears per cent, interest with a 1 per cent. : 20c lower, $5.00; other grades unsinking unsinking fund. ' ... , changed. Shipments, 64,357 barrels. To this his lordship added an èsti- Bran, $19.00 to $21.00. mated £100,000,000 ($500,000,000). an- Duluth, Feb. 29.--Wheat--No. 1 nually ;in pensions. Before the war, hard, $1.23% ; No. 1 Northern, $1.21% he remarked the country's annual ex- to $1.23% ; No. 2 Northern, $1.18% penditures were>200,000,000 ($1,000,- to $1,20%. Linseed^ $2.31; May, $2.33; 18,000 5,000 5.000 3.000 3,500 •32 000 110,000 682,000 19,200 47,500 Men are just like children. Quite so; the daily work of one half of the women in this world is to make allowances allowances and excuses for some men. 000,000)- making the total Interest * and * sinking . fund £300,000,000 Estimated pensions 100,000,000 Fixed chargest on prewar prewar basis 200,000,000 £600,000,000 Present English taxation, continued skirt was à charming contrast to the Lord Inchcape, is bririging in nearly full skirt of the net dress, being £400,000,000 ($2,000,000,000) arinual- pleated to fall straight' and narrow-1 ly. He explained that this would mean looking from waist to ankles. A nàr- another £200,000,000 (T, 000,000,000) row beaded grrrdle encircled the waist: would have to be provided every year and caught up a straight panel in the and expressed the opinion that this July, $2.33. Live Stock Markets. Toronto, Feb 29.--Choice heavy back, to carry out the bolero effect. Fur Trimmed Costumes. could be done either by "additional taxes or by a reduction in extravri- The velvet suit, combine^ with faille F ant expenditures not only private or broadcloth, is a general favorite, arid fur is still its' trimming. The. nos tion of combining cloth arid; silk or velvet is a practidal and effective one; often, as iri our illustration; thé lower section of skirt is of broadcloth. This offers an ; unusually good' idea for" remodeling remodeling a; /skirt that has become but public." tiis Lordship appeared to think a $25,000,000,000 debt a possibility but about the maxirnum. The- Parsori (to loafer)--"Are you a 1 teetotaler ? " The Loafer--^Y es, sir; sure I'm--I've riever * been-;drrihk slightly worn 'about the lower edgy, tri my life. . . It gives me such a A "velvet dress or suit is quite apt to headache next day." - V steers, $7.65 to $7.75; Butcher steers, choice $7.25 to $7.50 ; do., good, $7.00 to $7.20; "do,, medium, $6.60 to $7.10; do., common, $5,50 to $5.60 ; -Heifers, good to. choice, $7.25 to $7.50; do., inedium, $6.50 to $6.75; Butcher cows, choice, $6.50 to $6.85; do., good, $5.75 to $6.75; Butcher bulls, choice,$6.00 to $7.00; do., good bulls, $5.50 to $6.007j do., medium, $5.00-to $5.50; do., rough bologna, $4.40 to $4.50 ; Feeders, 900 to 1,000 lbs, $o.40 to $6.80; do., hulls, $4.50 to $5.50; Stockers, 700 to 800 lbs. $6.00 to .$6.50; do., med., 650 to 750 lbs., $5.75 to $6.00; do., light, 500 to 650 lbs., $5.00 to $5.50; Canners, $3.50 to $4.25; Cutters, $4.25 to $4.50; Milkers,choice, each $60 00 to $85.00; Springers, $60.00 to $85.00; Calves, veal, choice/$9.00 to $11.00; do., medium, medium, $7.00 to $8.00; do., common $5.50 ! to $6.00;- Lambs, yearlings,- $7.00 to! $8.00; Culled lambs, $7.00 to $7.25; - Spring lambs, $10.00 to $12.50; Ewes,^ M Does Pain Interfere? There is a remedy S Liniment Read this unsolicited grateful . testimony-- Not long ago my left knee became became lame and sore. It pained ir.c- many restless nights. So serious serious did it become that I was forced to consider giving up my work when I chanced to think of Sloan's Liniment. Let me say-- less than one bottle fixed me up. Chas. C. Ciiiiiphel!, Florence, Te.e. % g]| Sh-X; ; "V k 4

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy