HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1910-03-31, Page 2It is all very well to talk abut the
folly of giving up So Ulna. thne And
thought to the question of clothes and
to assert that one should rise superior
to anything so mundane as mere dress.
The man who so voices his sentiments
le the ono who falls easiest victim to
the charm of a perfectly gowned woman.
The woman who so "drools" (there is no
other expression so suitable) is either
hopelessly unattractive, madly jealous or
utterly laekiug in any taste or cultiva-
tion. The clothes question is an allani-
portant ono, and never more so than to-
day, when it seems as thbugh every de -
arguer, manufacturer and dressmaker
had combined to provide such a quan-
tity of fascinating fabrics and =art
styles that it is impossible to ignore
their allurements.
As is always the case when Easter
falls so early as this year -March 27 -
spring • and summer clothes have to be
reckoned with much, earlier Oran when
Aish Wednesday comes so much later
than this year and when winter clothes
are correct until the end of Lent, For-
tunately the laws of fashion aro not,
however, so unalterable. and should the
weather prove inclement and cold -women
will wear their winter costumes until
.the days are warm enough to make
heavy clothes uncomfortable. The first
spring. gowns are those inteuded for
street wear ,and although in this cli-
mate late spring has a way of follow-
ing so closely upon the heels a winter
that often there are only a few days
when a cloth costume is possible, none
the less must it be provided, for just as
unexpectedly as did the warm weather
follow the cold will cones cool days just
whenit has ;seemed as though settled
summer weather had arrived.
Waists for Tailor Suits.
Quite a problem has to be faced this
spring in regard to the street eostume.
with coat to match, se absolutely all,
gatory where comfort and health alike
are (to be considered. White shirt waists
will not be fashionable with ekirts and
coats in dark colors; a waist of the ma-
terial of the skirt is too warm, and yet
faehion decrees that the one piece gown
in effect if not in 'reality as the latest
style. The lightest weight of cloth or
serge is far too heavy a material to be
worn under a. eoat of the same, but it
is the fashion What more can be said?
Chiffon waists of the same color, chif-
fon sleeves with only a cape of the 3na.,
terial to mstteh the rest of the gown,
sleeveless et:raze-these are all modifica-
, tions of the original model. In the strict-
ly tailor made costume the waist can
be of chiffon, the same color ,made over
white, silver or gold cloth, or, if intend-
ed for travelling or serviceable wear
only, it ean be of crepe de Chine or soft
taffeta.
Voile de sole is a material that this
season apparentlyis scheduled ae the
foremost of all fabrics, and there are so
many different varieties and grades that
it would be easily possible to, have a
most thorough outfit with every gown
made of it. Iu the heavier qualities it
is extremely practical, closely woven en-
ough to have sufficient weight for a
street costume, the one piece gown with
coat to match.
Embroidery in gold, eilver, crystal
and jet all are worked on the voile de
sole, white the heevy silke embroidery
in color is to be noticed on many of the
white gowns. An exceptionally pretty
model of a cream white voile de soie
gown has an elaborate design around
the skirt, while the same design Is re -
A STYLISH SPRING SUIT.
Meek and white cheek is still in
high fever with fashion, and there
is nettling prettier for spring eoses
tand suits.
Theo snit has long revere and high
cuffs c,f white eerge, braided or em-
broidered in black.
The turban is made of black net
trimmed with white inarabou, and a
little Tuff ef the white inarab n •about
the throat completes this eharining
euetunta
The GoinseAWay Orem
Brown chiffon velvet is the meterial
1 deism for the bride's going -away toil-
ette. The skirt le quite plain, with a
panel at the front and back, while the
bodice le saftly draped to the figure
under a yoke of brown chiffon to tone,
mei einhellisacil with tie:ekes of braid
venial cut in the same color. The long
setavet moulded to the arms are in
brown chiffon, and the high miller, with
tioy vest attached. is of (wearily lama
finished at the dividing line between
the Itwe anti the ehiffon with an'odging
of gold.
Among the many dainty trousseau
gowns made for Miss Ricardo there le a -
charming everting toilette of the softest
of piiik moire, This gown is swathed
to the figure, an4 half of the comp
eovercil with glistening crystal em-
broideries. The alcoves are cf the em-
broidcry, and a long scarf of bawls tulle
falling from the decolletage gives the
finishing toneh of color,
peatea in an ornament on the .froot of
the waist, and o; the sleeves; thie des
sign is worked in rose oiuk silk, and
the workmanship is exquisite in detail.
The mime, model in two tones of gray is
AISO most ettraotives and while appal:-
eutly there ie nothing strikinoly novel
in this model it is radically slifferent
from the styles of last Wee% Voile de
sole over a .eontrastina color can be
mado up effectively, but there is to the
woman of couservative taste it better of-
fect in,combining of two shades of eolor,•.
the gown and the liningsdiffereet, and
the only trimming the bands of the eame
material or of silk cm satin. All black
voile do sole gems can be lightened by
the contrasting linings, and then a noto
of tho same can be introduced alto tho
Wimraings..
Oteloon OS the. winter that is repeat.
ed in spring Ines Is le ex:re:n(41y pseoos
and becoming; the lana or bands of elik
are tied AM 004 the bust, a beeorebea,
miler being selected. Rose pink and pet-
tier blue are the two favorites, and, w: t14
it yoke and collar of gold and silver net,
thisis an extremely smart combinatiou;
it is a model shown in a chiffon waist,
to be worn with skiit and eaat of light
weight clothor cashmere de sole, but es
part of an entire gown of voile de sole it
is also satisfactory. •
Serge is a material that has been imp-
ulse for the last two years _both for win
Ler and summer, 904 15 fashionable agrin
this sming, bat the weave is very intle:1
finer and softer than last sermon. lt is
it material that W011t8 wonderfully well.
.idinart. too well, tor it serge gown will
stand the hardest kind of usage anti vele
still present a rod appearence Ion? .afsei
the style in which it is made Is tamped.
A. good model for A whit e serge is shown
in the severely plain One-piece gown, but
the band of embroidery aronna the skin
prevents it being too plain. This em-
broidery is in heavy silk or in fancy
braidieg and is worked on the material
itself. It can be imitatedeby A band of
mbrcidered trimming, an the trimming;
of this spring are marvellously effective.
if it is desired to introduce a nota of
color this can .easily be done by thq.
colored embroidery band, the cashmere
shawl colorings being very charming ter
this. purpose.•
Cashmere de sole and crepe. de Chine
are heavier fabrics than the voile de sole,
turd both are fashionalam They can be
made up into any etyle of gown, plain
or trimmed, draped or with straight lines.
and are utilized both for day and oven -
EFFECTIVE EMBROIDERIES.
.Crepe de Chine is a material that is
;arms populer and practical and may be
saki to be universally beloved, for the
woman who glories in spending liege
sums of money on her clothes can choose
from the expeneice qualities, while she
who hes to economize finds a quality
that costs wonderfelly little and is dur-
able arid .effective. It cam be washed,
it ,eleans beautifully and eau be eaeily
draped. Caelunere de sole is a more ex-
pensive material, and Arbil° there are
inexpensive qualities, .they do not meke
up satisfactorily .according to the stan-
dard of to -day. -Embroidery on the ma-
terial itself is wonderfully effective in
cashmere de sole, end braid is- equally
satisfactorily, so that braided cashmere
de sole gowns are to be included among
the .smart styles of the spring, especially
in light end unusual colorings.
To -day the tulle embroidered tunics
worn with the voile de soie gawns are
exhibited as though they were ant the
new fashion. They wae, as i. will be
remembered, introduced mahy months
ago, and are now simply feebionable,not
the very latest thing; hitt as they will
undoubtedly- be in style all seminar they
must be included in the rimming al the
complete wardrobe:
In the lighter quality itis comfortable
for midsummer, and many charming
gowns intended for the eurnmer seas.ori
are being mow made of it. Then for the
more elaborate style of dress, for be
dinner gown and for the bail gown, it
is also used, but for the two latter styles
it appeals art entirety different inateriel,
so soft and silky and With so nitiMi sh?on
that it aenity totefl1s. ilke the stme ba-
rks an.d in truth it wonlil be quite lire
possible to recognize it under the same
mune.There are as many different
style.s in which it ia made up as theta
Are different grades ie weight end finish
ral both severely plain and most deb-
orately trimmed .effecte are fesidonable.
- A. T. Minima,
MISS RICARDO'S WEDDING
GOWN.
London. -A notable feature of the
wedding gown worn the other day by
Miss Constance Ricardo was the revival
of the fiche. and shoulder epaulettes.
Miss Ricardo, who is -a daughter of Fran-
cis Rjeardo, of the Friary, Old Windsor,
married Clive payky, H, 11, M. Consul
at Warserm son of the late Sir Edward
Clive Bayley, and the ceremony took
piece at St. Thomas' Church, Portman
Square.
Soft white satin"charincuse was used
in tlw make-up of the wedding gown,
end the fiche, which draped the shoul-
ders gracefully, was an exquisite %re -
Harr point lace. The fiche, as shown
in our illustration, mime tether low in
front, and was caught np at the
side with a pieturesque knot worked
in erystal. The high collar 4104 vest was
of tucked net, end epaulettes of satin,
with knot e of erystal, gave a. pretty
finish to the shoulders, The skirt WAS
00111, with a panel of Venetian point,
inset from the fielni on hoelee down the
side to the Item. The pawl, as it
widened out on the skirt. is taught at
intervals with knots of the melte]
vreighttel with tassels, and the train was
mit mime,
COurt Train of Chiffon Melte.
A full court train of ellifent mire
WAS WOtn With the wetblins,v gown, to -
:tether with a Mee veil, over 11 wreath
of amigo blessoms. The bath hung
from knots of crystal on the shoeldere,
and wee cauget up tit the side toward
the square, hem with it large Louis
Seize knet of the crystal. Chiffon moire,
by the vice, is one of the :season's new.
est materials, It it rnuelt softer hi
teeture then the silk moire, is duller of
el/teeter, sine the 'metered design is melt
larger.
The four bridemealtle wore elutrining
dresess in pale blue eilk, veiled in
mammy ret, and picture hits ef pale
blue cleffell,
AFTERNOON DRESS.
Overskirts in all possible shapes
are right in style. This charming
gown IS made with a drapery of ens
tirely new design. It is made of hello -
trope chiffon cloth with white lace
yoke and cuffs, Large buckles cov-
ered with heliotrope stain are used te
confine the draperies at the waist and
just above the knees in the back, The
sleeves are made in the favorite three-
quarter length.
••••••••,...••••
ALL NEW ENOUGH TO TALK
ABOUT.
Mohair is the latest material to be
"rubberized." or made rain proof by some
of the many processes which makers
now use. This is good news to the many
wonihh who arm so fond of wearing this
old, at fashionable, material.
There are ench number's of good points
about mohair -its light weight, sturdy
wearing qualities and ability to shed
dust ell make it admirable for outdoor
wear or travelling. Then, too, it always
looks well 4104 has a little air of distinc-
tion about it -that is, of course, provide
ing the quality is good.
Tire models shown are in black, severe-
ly made with semi -fitting backs and
collars drat may be worn fastened high
or opened -jest as Milady wishes.
They are not extremely expensive,
either, and will be at possibility to ma-
dame of the slender income who wishes
to look trim and trigwhen driving, mo-
toring or trampini
g n dry or stormy
weather.
Serviceable, everyday pettioaats for
girls are those of strong and slirrable
black setine. They are prettily but sim-
ply made, and one may choose several
styles at $1 each,
Spring gloves for women are of soft
lustrous silk in the new shades and with
embroidered backs, They cost 75 cents it
pair for the short lengths,
Smart -looking men's shirts with black
stripes or two-tened stripes in colors of
white percale grounds are $1.50 each.
Irish linen.shirt waists -pure flax, too
-made tailor style with the addition of
a bit of hand embroidery down the front
cost $2.50 each and will make a strong
appeal to the woman who is starting to
fill het summer shirt waist box.
Ruszian mesh veilings at 25 cents at
yard irre inexpensive enough for a WO -
man to always have at fresh one in her
veil case.
Imported diagonal serges at $1 a yard
come in many colors anal will tailor well
for spring suits.
Now that the season for them is al-
most over flannelette night gowns are
selling for 50 cents efich. Women who
wear these during the winter will be
sensible to buy next waiter's supplies
now and ley them awa:y.
SMART SPRING SM,
dee of the prettieet suite of the
veaeon is the one in the Adele Tho
line of large buttons and button..
holes et the front of the Wien, the
slight Mimeses at the elbow of the but.
ton -trimmed Peeves, and the plain,
rather Close skirt, are all distinctive
Stutday S.ettool.
LESSON I. APRIL 0, 1910.
The Power ef FeltbseeNtetts 1844,
Canimentera.--1. The ruler'a faith (ve,
la, Its) 18. While he sprite these things
esthete. mid his disciplee were gill at
Matthew's house, Jesuit le tweaking with
the disciplea of John ebout fading in re-
ply to their 'jovial= recorded in Matt.
0: le, Behold -The word Introductie a
IleW subject of unusual interest, 4 tier -
tato name was dairus (Luke
41),- aial ati a ruler of the synagogue,
he Afield probably bave been among the
elders of the Jews who came aa a depu-
tation to our Lord in belialf of the coo
Writes servant (Luke 7: 2-0), and
weed thus harm been impressed with his
power to hetil in cases which eeemea
hopeless. -Ellicott. Aires may have
been one of the rulers of tbe synagogue
in Cepernitunt that the Roman eenturion
built. Mol worshipped lane Mark and
Luke tell us that he fell et Jesus' feet.
This Wen an itOt Of reY4F42144, but not
uteesserily an act of religioue worship.
saying, ,My Daughter -Tho ruler was
not slow ru making known his request,
for it was an urgent one, Luke says,
Jairua 'hail one only daughter, about
12 years ef age. Is even now dead-Stie
had been given over when her father left
hem and aetuelly was dead before he
coulil return. He might, therefore, when
he applied to ,Christ, fear that elle was
at this Oita dead, aria express Ms be-
lief of it.--Doddridge. Mark says, "1.17
1111116 slaughter Roth at the point
of death." ' Luke says, she "lay
a dying?' There no contra-
aietion between thee ` records
when 'we take into account all the state -
:nate made by the three evangelists.
rArt
some -end lay thy hand upon her -
Chi iste couldheal as well without cone
tug into actual account with the afflict-
ed One, but usually he touched the one
diseesed. Unlit seems to have thought
tiutt power would be applied to the sick
erre by laying on of eanda, His anxiety
was for the recovery of hits daughter.
She shall live -There was not wily desire
on the ruler's; pert, but faith also. He
believed thet, if Jesus would cOMO into
ritaewith the child, she would be re-
stored,ILThe sick womases faith, (vs. 29-20).
20.. And, behold -Another remarkable
event is introduced, another rairecte
sandwiched between the parts of the
first. A woman, who was dieeased-We
know nothing more of her than what is
recorded in connection with her heeling.
Eusebius records at tradition that she
was a Gentile. Twelve years --This shows
the incurable nature of the iliersitse. She
had exhausted every resource' during
that tim to find a cure, but was still
growing worse. Came behind him -She
was tirnid and shrank- from publicity.
She came beettuee "she had heard of
Jesus" (Mark 5; 27), and believed he
had power to heal her. Touched the hem
of Ins garment -The border of his loose
flowing outer- garment, or cloak. She
felt that, if she could simply come in
contact with Jesus, the healing power
would be applied, and the least she
could do would be to touch the border
of his garment. 21. She said within her-
self ---The form of the Greek verb, the
imperfect tense, indicates that s,he said
reepatedly, or kept saying. 11 „
shall be whole -Jesus could have healed
her without the touch, yet he waited me
til she met the conditions upon which
her faith became effective. She believed
that Jesus' power would effect a cure.
She was ready to do her part in bringing
the longed -for healing. 22. Jesus turned
him about ----Because he' was conscious
within himself that Imaling power had
gone forth from elm (Mark 5: 30.) He
knew what was done because he willed
it. --Morison. He showed his apprecia-
tion of her faith by turning to cell at-
tention to her. "His act of healing was
an overflow, not an effort, a work so un-
conscious tine so utterly passive that it
seems like a miracle spilt over from the
fuluess of his divine life, rollick than a
miracle put forth." -A. J. Gordon. Saw
her -Mark and Luke tell of Jesus' ques-
tion as.to who touched him, and the wo-
man's confession and testimony. Daugh-
ter, be of good comfort -A very tender
and encouraging expression, showing
hearty approvalrather than displeasure.
nr. The child raised from the dead (vs,
23-261.
23. When jasus came -While Jesus
was still speaking with the woman, Word
dame from the tiller's house that the
ehild was already dead and there was no
ilea of the Mater's eoming; but Jane
eaid, "Fear not; believe only, and she
shall be made whole" (Luke 8, 50). Min-
strels--Elute-players. who .assisted with
mournful music In mourning for the
dede. Burial in the East usually took
piste° a few hours after death. 24. Glive
plate -The mourners, were ne Imager
needed. Not dead, but sieepetii-She19
not dead se aci to continue under the
power of death, but shall be raised front
it as a person from natural sleep. -
Clarke. It is common emerge many 05 -
tions to speak of death as a sleep.
Laughed him td- scorn -They did not
share Ore faith of Alma 25. The people
were put forth -Those who scorned the
Lord and His benefits were not deemed
worthy to witness the mireele.-Lenge.
Peter, James and John were. admitted.
Ile went in -Into an inner room. Took
her by the hand -There again is the di-
vine touch. To the raising of the son of
the widow of Nein .Jesus touched the
bier. The maid arose -Mark and Luke
add that Jesus bade her to arise. She.
thathad been dead, felt the touch of IBS
hand, heard the words Re spoke, obeyed
instantly eta walked, to the astoniele
meat of all present.
IV. The Pettit of tho JlhinJ Men (tall
2741).
• 27. Departed thence ---From the !oust
of Saitus, very likely to His own home.
1!WO mina men -Blindness it eonunon in
the East ad i.t thought to be occasioned
by flying particles of and, and the hot
sun, together with the itnetnitaro ors
toms that prevail there. One writer
mays tbat in Mire out of one litin4red
persons met, twenty were blind, There
were two together to be of mutual 119.
sistance. Son of Davida-They eonfessiee
�fs Messiahship, sinee that was the tale
given to the Messiah. Have MUT Oh
ns -They presented their need, expressed
their faith it IBM, and 11i:tribute4 to
Hire the quality of merce and kindeess.
211. Believes ye that am able -alley
sliown faith both by oiling Him
Son of bavid etal following Him into the
house, but the Lard mewed; still fur.
ther to draw out their faith. Cenfes.
sion eoefirms 'kith. They trintt cotifess,
and they will doubly profit by the mit-
aele.----Wheeme They were gniek to de.
elate their faith, 20. Then toucher -1 He
their eyet-To indleete the application 0'
divine power. Aecording to yottr faiths -
Their Nth claimed 0 ported mire. Their
blinchmee was 4.enlovett ileStentle. A titre
by helium means, 11 that owe poii.lb't,
would have been a show and gredurl
profest; but now their °fee trethi he -
mediately name th ligiti. althoueli
they Ilea been Meg Mind.
/
20. See that no men knew tea -
soga for this were; 1. That he might 1
nrutklaftgetr "enngiatirtur 80=41'4' Iili
Interleave 3. Clarietht mirsehe were in.
tenth* to *id, not te 44411040de ,faith,
4. Ile desired to makel
e ieciplee, and
dircet the people to Hie teaching. IS.
It might excite their earnal arid selfish
expectations. It was not His miraciek
but Ifintself that they needed. 3L They
epread ebread Ms fame -They did uo.,
obey the Weer, but we can oYerlook
their sot, bee:sine of the wonderful cure
wrought, and heeeelse thee' wished to
magnify their benefactor.
V. Healing the dumb demoniac (ys.
3e-84),
313. They -Alia friends. A dumb man
posseseed with A devil -The demeeepoo
eeesion rendered the, man dumb, If the
evil spirit could be east out, the man
would be relieved pltykically and morally
So Also Lesson 11 of preceding ipleeter,
03. Cast on -esus eeperieneed no dif-
ficulty in deli'vering' the poor man, so
that he was able to speak. Marvelled-
Amazed, and well they might be. The
power of God was manifest on earth in
the person of Jeents Christ, 04. The Phar-
iseca said -They were the haters of
Jesus, lie had shown them tile eMptinese
of their eeligione Profession, Through
the Prince cif the deeils-A. most lemon,
sisteut statemeut Christie answer to a
similar statement is found iu Matt. 12.
24.30.
Questions. -Who came to Jesus? What
request did be make? How did he
show his faith in Jesus? What was tak,.
ing oleo. at the ruler's house when
Jesus arrived? What 31411101e did Ile limo
form after his arriyal? Deseribe the
miracle performed by Jens while on the
way to the ruler's house, Ilow was faith
shown by the woman?
PRAOTIC4/4 APPLICA.TIONfe.
POO, for roeurreetion, Faith is the
foundation of +spiritual building (1 pet.
2. 5,7). "He that buildeth thin , eot
flee away," is one translation of Isa,
Faith is to "believe God, that
28, 16, F
it ehall be even as it was tole me"
(Aecte 97. 25; Mark 11. 22). "Faith,"
says John TroPP, 'believes €tod upon His
bare word; against sense, in things in-
visible; against reason, in things incra-
diele," Faith is "the door" through
which _God's supplice ebine to us (Acts
14, 27), Faith is calling "those things
which be not as though they were;
cu'erieateirnettoh tetelieteninsese.
a(Rondni-Puttel7i.treattfhut
sent," Faith is "the substance of things
hoped for" (1Ieb, 11. 1). Not the stied-
ow, but the actual, real thing. What
we believe for is ours, Faith is the "evi-
deuce ef things not seen" (Heb. 11. 1).
John Wesley translates this as "the
divine conviction Of thing's not seen,"
Faith is riot dependent on evidence, but
is itself the evidence. "Faith is a sle-
mend on the treasury of liesieen. The
size of the demand determines the ana,
omit of the supply."
Faith etesteil, "My daughter is even
now deed" (v. 18). Pain is meant to
prove ue. Sorrows, ate servants.
Through diffieulties we reach higher
altitudes. Two men, travelling, came
to a mountain. One says, "I can go 110
farther"; the other says, "This es here
that / may climb." The greater the
trial the pester the triumph. Heaven
is extetustiess. We reach our best
through overwhelming difficulties. God
will take these and glorify himself
through them Trials show God's re-
emcee. Trials develop strength. Trials
are compliments. If severely tested,
praise God for the honor conferred, for
God never tests end Sarin never tempts
a wrthless soul. But God puts his choke
est into bhe crucible, and -Satan does his
utmost to defeat the holy soul,
Faith exeteised, The father believed.
What others have done Should eneour-
age us, Let us remember that by faith
Emelt was translated (Heb. 11: 5); by
faith Noah built the ark (Heb, 11: 7);
by faith Moue forsook Egypt (Heb.
11: 27); by faith David elew Goliath
(1 Sean. 17: 49); by faith the Hebrew
children walked titnicorched through the
fire (Dan. 3: 17 27). In Russia ie Jew-
ieh father become iingry with his little
girl for greeting bim with these words,
"I do love Jesus; he loved little chil-
dre." Soon the ehild was taken ill with
marlet fever, and, there being no hope
to recovery, the father offered the
deatlebed prayer of the Jews. Little
Deborah then opened her eyes and re-
mated aceurately the story of Jaime'
daughter. When she finished, her head
fell back, and to all appearance she was
eone In agony of, mind the father then
e .
tv,sought Jesus to restore his daughter.
is ery wife heard, the child was rallied
up, and the whole family was converted.
A. 0. if.
Faith rewarded, The child was raised
• up. In the story we ;see, 1. Jesus' sim-
plieity. "The maid is not dead, but
sleepeth" (v. 24). Jay suggests that
enothee would have said, "Come, e. -cam-
Inc the patient. See, there are no re-
MAIM of life. You will witness before
I begin that there is nothing to aid rny
operations." But Jesus woule not mag-
nify the notion he wee about to per-
form, for he sought not his own glory.
2 Jesus' sympathy. "'realm mini'T
(Mark 5; 41). Only two life-giving
words, but There ie a tendereess in
them not tvanslatable into English.
°Met did not raise the elect to life,
111 and feeble, but strong, healthy and
hungry. Truly it niay be 'mid, "As for
God, hie way is perfect" Pea. 18: 30).
"His tender merciee are over all his
Work*" (Pea, 145: 9),
''-
The
market
by
urgent
there
the
ery
from
exporters.
Mend
climbed
seasou.
fleet
mained
a
deyis
was
awe
porters
Kennedy
,a
leleaed
light
It
reeeived
February.
for
bulk
scatee.
there
in
eontinent.
Union
Union
a
ment
Northwest
couple
CM.
to
the
lent,
reported
heavy
emit,
aettedfl'ellows:
general
exporters,
up
100
unchanged.
of
ing
going
25e
firm,
Good
pound.
selling
and
Straw
quotations
Wheat,
Oats,
Peas,
Barley,
Rye,
Hay,
Straw,
Dressed
Butter,
Doe
Eggs,
Chickens,
Turkey.,
Fowl,
Apples,
Potatoes,
Onions,
Celery,
Cabbage,
Beef,
Mutton,
Veal,
Lamb,
, „
"St,
fellowe:•
barrels;
barrels;
These
lots
.6c
quote
13.
frigelbrator
per
eee
se
northern
$1.16
1
Bittley-Standard
$1D1.5uht
$1.15
to
0.14
July
May
dash
Oals-Lash
450,
84;
$1,14,
$1.15
$1,15
$1.13
$1.08
el
!ear
r entifill
prevailing
25e
pair;
$1.50
ed
Army,
petatecs
rig
.
ide
Peterboroi.
es
66;
420;
tio
36e
hindquarters,
Le/aloft-Ail
Merket
buyers
':'\:\.....,,,,_,.....ef,"rolla
1,62'4
Eitnle
was
As
good
Co,
Was
exporters,
Ontario,
tr.
fairly
Inany
city
to
each..
Grain
offerings.
at
Eggs
down
Hay
at
Dressed
Do.,
Do.,
Do.,
Do.,
Do,,
Do.,
less,
BRITISH
London.-Teverpool
1-2
WINNIPEG
Wheat
jelly
Oats
3.ge.
LEADING
Milwaukee.
79
SIAS
Detrolt.-Wheat
Toledo.
St.
Mieneapolis.-
Bellevillee-There
ket
to
$11
were:
baled
to
to
1 0,0
Icg r ' *,_
1. roryirac? 1,151.3riy-Alioqi_;
I4WW4111 Wkiii-Vkil -40
'
TORONTO MARKETS
. ,.
14IVE STOC.K.
-
rcelpts Of cattle et the
were not as large at last yeeltaIr
cattle. In the fact of a very
denuoue but at tho thtion yards
,,
were 1,486 eattle more then ior
week laet year, and still the
"More *little," "elere eattle,e
the it:sealable American lmyers
a logical result cf. thin extra 4c.
&OW the Anierkete dealers, prices
to the highest euinielt of the
Competiti•on was, keen from the
Start co. Monday mer»lite lied te-
ken all the week, There waa
enquiry from all over, and each
eontribution at the two maricrte
quickly cleaned up. And. even
wristey a, fonggroment of 118 ee.
to. the Union yerds by IL
waa readily bought by Morris
The wbole market this week eves
up 35 or 40e, with some pi
p
steers not more tban 25e higher.
the highest boost the market has
since it started to go up
Pekes ndvanced up to $7,.25
and from $0,50 to $7, the
of the export cattle irperenvtaonvsertibtlaiet
The impreseion
is a sliortage in cattle, not. only
but all over the American
UNION HOUSE EXCHANGE,
Herbert Smith, manager of the
Horee Exehange at. 'West Toronto
Stock Yards, mats having litul
good trade. There was a ship
of four ear loads of horses, to
early in the week, and
of loade to the same place lister
Several minor shipments were made
different points in Ontario, and
and farmers' trade was excel-
Prices wore much the same
last week. MTV extra quality
dragghters, 1,700 to 1,800 lbs,
sold up to $250 and even $265
but the general run of prices. wore
Draughtere $180 to $226;
purpose horses, $140 to $200;
$175 to $215; drivers, $100
$210; serviceably sound, en'
FARMERS' MARKET.
in limited supply, with prices
Wheat nominal in absence
Oats easy, 200 bushels sell-
43e. Barley dull, with 100 bushels
at 58e,
hi plentiful &tipple*, selling
to 22c pe rdozen retail. Butter
with only moderate offerings.
to choice bought 27 to 30e .per
,
in moderate suppiy, with 18 loads
at $18 to $21 a ton for timothy,
$13 to $16 for mixed and clover,
steady, at $14 a ton for bundled,
hogs were firm to -day, with
ruling at $12.50 to $13..
white, new .. ..$1 10 $ a
red, new .. .. .. 1 10 000
goose .. , . .. .... 1 05 0
bush .. - .. .. ,. 0 43 0
busk - - .. .. .. 0.81 0
bush „ .. .... 0 58 0
bush .. - .. .. - 0 68 ' 0
timothy, ton .. .. 18 00 21
mixed, ton - .... 13 00 16
per ton .. ,. .. 14 00 15
hogs - .. .. .. l2 50 13
dairy .. , . .. .. 0 25 0
inferior .. .. .. .. 0 20 0
dozen .. .. .. .... 0 `22 0
lb .. . „ . .. 0 18 0
le.. .. ,. .. , . 0 20 0
lb.. , . .. .. .... 0 13 0
bbl„ , „ , . .. ,. 1 410 2
bag, by load.. 0 50 0
bag .. , . • „ . 1 10 1
per dozen .. .... 0 30 0
dozen .. .. ..., 0 00 0
hinclquerters . . .e. 0 00 11
forequarters . . . 0 50 • 8
choice, careess .. 9 00. 9
medium, carcass.. 7 00 8
per cwt. .. .. 9 00 11
prime, pere wt... 10 00 11
lb..•.. .. .. ... 0 15 0
SUGAR MARKET.
Lawrenee sugars are quoted
Granulatee, $5.20 per cwt.,
No. 1 golden, $4.80 per cwt.,
13eaver, $4.90 per cwt., in bags.
prices are for delivery here.
5e less. In 100 -Ib. bage prices
• •
OTHER MARKETS.
CATTLE MARKETS.
.
and London eablea
11 ye stook (American) higher,
theist 3.-4e,. dressed weight;
. beet, firm, at 11 te , 11 1-20
•
WHEAT MARKET.
-March $1.05 1-8, May $1.00
$1.07 1-2,
-March 33 1-2e, May 35 1 -Se July
WHEAT MARKETS.
-Wheat &mesh No
$1.17 to $1.18, No. 2 northern
to $1.17, July• 007 7-8. Rye -No.
1-2 to 80e. Corn -July 64 5-8e.
70 1-2 to 710,
to J1;16,008;10: N1 o. noir tlhieatrnd
1-2 to $1.16, No. 2 northern $1.13
1-2, Aray $1.14 1-2 bid, July
1-2 bid.
closed: Net 1 White
No, 2 red:, cash awl May, 111.28;
$1.00 1-2.
-Wheat dosed: Cash $1.17 3-4,
$1.1* 1-2, July $1.00 1-8. Gore-
413 1-4e May 64 2-4e July 65 3-4
.. ' o '
4o 1-2e, Mae 46 3-8e, Jele
.
Louis. -Wheat elosed: May $1,11
MY 81.85 5'8'
Wheat closed: Mey
July $1.14 3-8, cash, N. 1 hilted,
3-4 to $1.10 3-4; No, 1 northern
1-4 to $1.10 1.4, No. P, notthetn
1-4 to 015 1-4, No, 3 northern
1-4 to $1.12 1-4.
PROVINCIAL MA.RKETS.
Wits a '-ery into
here to -day. :Fresh ergs wee°
- - • . • -e•
At DO to 224, the fotaler Price
neer the elose, Better wits
27ehik6t
; tcens, ec o $1.76 per
large quantity of simple syrup
per,gallori; live hogs, $9.26, lettere
to $11.60; liey, $10 to $10; loose
$4 per load, baled $7 per ton;
down to 40o per hag, and beg.
at that; teats 40e to 43e per buena;
riot 'remain stationary.
--On the market tee eerie-
Masked hogs, $12.60, live, $0.-
hay, $17 to $18, loose $18
farmers' hides, Sic to De, butcher?
00; potatoet, 40e to 80e; butter,
30e; ogle, leo to 20e; spring lamb-
$1.80 per quarter to $2.
eveilable Ainted in did
equare was isectipled to -day;
were oorreemandinelv enmeshes.
or
an
F.
oln
gin
in
-
the
a
as
to
at
oo
00
44
00
00
70
00
00
00
00
30
28
23
20
28'
14
50
55
25
40
85
„e
”
00
50
00
00.
50
17
as
in
in
Car
are
atwhen
re-
1
,
•
-
at
to
drop, Se to tet off • r
h.oge were 600 lower, 13 beiug h -
7;totplutros.;sliialoh. offlititiy$00.760;r1.4 40•t;
reaching $14; straw, $7 to $7.150; butter
ecarce, ei:eamery at 28o to 20e per pelted,
At 470 to 27c; eggs by crate, lio
to 10e eer tiozen, tenth laid 20e per dee-
eu,
Stretforde-Ilogs, $9.65 to $9.10; (P.
demisted, to lete to 1.3. 1-2e, Cows, 4o to
4 1,24 • do dressed Be to 13 1-ec Stem
41044. .111.44elinfebrss 'IP tio6odi*r‘leaoseddret"13.0 6,14?
we 4.i. $' °I pe't 04.?.d '
1010 et$'11.4rVIC61 0 $1°041 '' G P"k°434
el -*,, e*. e te ;, ; etandard. Oate,
b‘anuart4. marcey, 450 to 4$e ream,
ee: t 780 Bran, eei„ peewee, ;pie, Kay
ere too ele3H, chickens, 00e to eeo eaeh„
Butter, 23e to etio. Eggs, 25o,
essChelthtatiren-sfeallt etdotztyseNvaassitebett14ttrig,d.
ltle Co Lii
t•-• ' el ' e . II,' err) Beare° at 23e
0 e5a oerT ens. coo ,e to 75e. to
r .11 o $$81 tr: t8.' a g PI) o $1.
MIZInee'syrtiugp,, paten°, 411°1141.25* G.°toto$1,7,55CO:
eon. eeellee tee. No other grain
eloin'ges Ilet; live, t S
',lee -Zee: ele-see00), "heel -8.5e5e.' de
iv-wle-4 eee, "8 1 '''.4e; Mrt*
• -et. leholeee_Eastee =ewe /Lindy
attended. Eggs dropped to Ille and 20c
dome Butter stayed at 0743. Live hop,
lit. y60, ;01d2o; ddioesbeeadle,d,$1031.3.13.weefh,ea7to, t4o1. 09
7°:
Maple syrup $1 gallon ekong
$1 20 Pair. ' • .. -25 ' M ;
- ' -
Owen .. q ound-.The Easter marketing
was lteevy to -day. Produce was plentiful
and prices took a perceptible drop. Geea
freeli eggs. sold at 17e, Butter, 21e to
23e. Potatoes, 50e bag. Hay, $15.00 to
,
06Hoes, dressed, light, $12.25; no
heavy offered; buyers are offering eve
hogs for Tuesday's deliveryat $9.50.
Chatworti buyers are offering AAMO.
.
I
HAP MG IT
MT.I.V.I.W 41
u
Illi ngarian Villagers Fear%
Comet Would End all Ti
And They Spent the Night
and Drinking and Rev(
.
Now York, Xitroll 27. -The
reeeived the following from 1
coreepondent •
110 fear of an impending
between the earth ami Ilan(
gave else to extraordinary 1
lest week at Nessy kiairit lifik:
lege in Hungary. The word,
reund that the day of Wenn
hand, and when a, night wee
the early hours of the morr
eeleee a rea glow in the tiq
oi:ebigilsibiotorirtinl
hegavegnavefirae blast on
the terrifying message that ti
ants newt prepare for the us
Men, svomen awl, children
out elf bed int° the opee, a:
Xiistoffaky, the old, village
ter scannnig the firmatoent;
to the eonclusion that the 1
canting, to an end. Ife com.
'flock and exhorted all to a:
fate wall rosigoation. 8 'Iva
only u matter of a few hour
The people were seenewhe
and with. one word deeided
might as well finish off were
drink they possessed. .A
great fires were lit on t 1
fronting the church and a f
gen, Afew lamented, others
S i
the vast majority were lute
Mg a good time while it lastei
As the dread moment ,
the revelry beeame an orgy
denee was thrown to theee
fiery wine of the country (1!
and, soon there was not it s
among them. They sang ai
till they dropped end sle t I
1 - P
ay,
Tbe sleepers awoke in b
shine, and, finding the old.
willies on as usual, they u
cursed the comet for not dolt
especially when they realized
fi de d 11
rr rs am ea ars were enq
•
MR. ROOSVELT
...„
,
-ram44,eu .1
i to• Cairo Students and Got
Good Reception.
-----
Cairo, Egypt, afroll 28. -Col. Roose-
velt delivered an address before the stu-
dents of the Universit of Egypt to-dey.
y, .
He was eordially received- and tie tie
conclusion of bis remarks there'
MAS
much applause. Mr. Roosevelt upon. en•
tering the hall of the i eisi .they • 1 y found it
crowded with Egyptians, officers, stn.
eents and women. Prince Ahmed Emma,
.President of the University, d
„ an uncle
of the Khedive, introduced 1an Mr. Rooeecelt
with a brief speech, apeken in French.
- It d' t
espon mg o the welcome, Mr. Roose-
velt expressed his thanks, but said that
his address was intended only for the
students of the University. As a man
who spoke frequently, he warned' his
audience to ha.ve nothing to do with:the
man who .did not make good his words
by acts. The speaker referred to the
assassination by it student Met Month of
Boutres Pasha, Gh r
a a Premier and Min-
ister of ForeignAffairs,1 '
as a ea ainity to
d I • 4 ' t'
Egypt, an us ennuis. ion of the es -
SASSill Wee received with great applause.
le •
WANTSwi
--
A Black War Cloud Loom
Among the Balkan;
. ..--_,
.
Bulgaria Anxious to Wrest I
From the Hands of Tu
4 •0.
-
CANADIAN PACIFIC
Paris, March 27.- Anothe
ous crisis in the Balkans :
narrowly but perhaps one
arily averted, according to
in well-informed diplomat
here, where for mouths it
an open secret that Bulgari,
termined se try conclusions
• -- -
key over the question of
either to win tne province 01
at least to secure autonon
reet of huropean Turkey.
Bulgaria for years has
inendous sacrifices to equip
the models army she tiow o
.
with the f the •13
ways ' e idea * - Inv
Turkey
garian people have gradual.
inabued ipvith the beliefthatt
is invincible and the acq
their OWn inide ndence has
dissatisfied that13etheir •
Christ
ors in Maoedouia should rem
the domination of Turkey.
- e , . ,
eel y also realize that te
, ,
Long sustain the rburden of te
its. pr nt footing For the
a successful war .ould mess
lei t• is f thoposition of t
r I a 1° * ' ' -4P1 - '
ime
nosed on the Bulgarian pec
Dowers. For both the Xing ax
-
Die therefore, it appears to 1
never.
le last 1 f K' F *
leehope o mg Per
the Bulgarian Goveennient c
the Ring recently 'Viniti
ersburg and found that Rue
to give either sympathy or
an appeal to amiss at this tin
-
ia. has yielded, but as undex
only to what diplomacy cat r
'
C. P. R. Buying Up Road and Short-
ening Its Ocean to Ocean Route,
ChicagoeMarch 28. -New railway coin-
binatioi is to shorten the Canadian Paci-
„..,
' les through route from ocean to oc ean
and place that road in the field for Am.
erieen business -were reported yesterday
to be inproyiess, Milwaukee becomes a
,
pivetal point in ehe Canadian Prier„
Soo line, it appears. 1 •-•
The reported aale f tl Ann Arbor
roa 1 t N. Erb 'cl le'
t 4. o 1 ewmanis believed to be in
he interest of the Canadian Pacifie, Mr.
Erb was tho intermediary in the sale of
the_Wisconsin Central to the Soo line,
a uana. cli!tn Pacific subsidiary, which
gave the later entrance to Chicago. The
purchase of the Green Bay and Western
and allied lines by Mr. Erb also is re-
ported. The line connects with the Michi-
gan lines of the .Ann Arbor railway by
three big car ferries,
Another link in the projected through
line is to be secueed by building in Mil -
waukee a d,owntown terminal to be
reached by a subway two miles long.
This will give the Cenadian Paeifie an
outlet to Lake Michigan, The Ann Ar-
bet and Green Bay and Western lines
will give the Canadian Pacific a short
line from St. Paul to Detroit, greatly re-
teeing presen routes,
d ' ' t
. 4 • •
SHOW RAIDED.
.
1,,,,...,,A,
WO Hundred Men and Women
Trapped, Try to Escape.
4IP 0
FIRST AID
•
. ..............
Chicago, III., March 27. -Surrounded
by detectives and trapped in a hall
where it was charged they were giving
an improper performance, 200 men and
women lest niglit attempted ic evade
ariest by climbing down fire escapes and
poraccre roofsofowf elsitoussie,sie. iTtahit awtfrtrit: took
o
blocks of a police station,
Plain elothee men had paid admission
to the hell. .M a signal while the per
formance Was on all the doors were shut
end locked, end annoeneement was made
that everybody was under arrest.
A panic followed. Some of the wo-
men screamed and crawled wider the
st6. • age, Seores of men equated out of
windows and retreated over distant
mote Many teethed the street, three
storeys below, by way of fire escapes.
Finally, the windows were shut and all
the peisonere were foreee to Stand in
Hee,
Seven women and 172 men were are
„gee.
- e•
St. John Ambulance Centre:
Whole bf Dominion
________
of Otthtettwcaa, nMaiaaenb. c2e7n,t-raTil
oiot
St. John Ambulant° Associa
completed on Saturday, when
. ,, . . ,
lens of the inovlsronat carom
Pointed at the geneeal nu
!eolith, met in the office of :
zanibert, Director-Gencral o
Health.
The constitution prepared
committee appointed at the
meeting was eonsideved and
It provides for the creatiol
vincial, local and . railwa
Limit centres will be. Subsi,
provieciel centres, where s
but in miorgenizee dfetriets
be under the jurisdiction of
Oat body et Ottawa. Rawl
will be sell -governing, repo
timely to the &Meal council.
the C. P. R. has shown its i
this work by treating a
branch in eouneetion with
t i i d ' ''
lea e tops, an it ts tow
tion of the company to a
work over its entire systeme,
T. 11. and Canadian Norther;
kemily Interested, and the lt!
Railways has undertaken to 1
Intereolonial into. line.
The officer% of the terarti
were elected tie follows: P,
Governor-General; Patroness
Os Grey; Vice Patrons, thi
aut.Govevuore of the Provi
the Commbetioner of the Yula
President, Sir Wilfrid reetnie
dent et the esemeil, Dr. .1
bert, Direetoreleneral of Publi
Vite-Prceidente leteesre, W. e
Toroeto, surd deo. II Drumm°
rent, tante oareestages Ti'.. tun
DEAN HOUSTON.
...ea.*
Fiftgirst Anniversary of His Priest-
hood.$1,18;
•
a....
leriagin•a. Fails, mareh 27,- To -day
was the 61st Easter Sunday that Very
Bev. Stewart Houston, 3.1. A., D. a IA,
rectr of Christ Chitral. .and Dean of
the Diocese of Niagara, has offieittee
as a priest of the Char& of England.
For the mute 31 years he hae been reetor
of the tame church. Dean Houston was
born in Cerleton Place in 1834, and the
tl years of Ms ministre'have been. M
the Diocese of Niagara. Attester 1859,
he was ordairred "'Hest by Right' Rev.
John Stracban, first Bishop of Toronto.
After ids ordinatipe Dean Haagen was
sent as travelling missionary, minister-
leg to the epiriture needs of six WWII*
ships lying inicheay hetweeli Guelph end
Owen Sound. After this ardonous srork
for seven rinds. halfeyears he was pro.
ranted to a parish in the vicinity of
Hamilton, eonsisting of Grace Church,
Waterdown end Burlington Heights,
and St, hatthew'e on .the plaitie below,
near Burlington Bey, In October, 1878,
Detin itonston Wes appointed reetor of
Chrieb Climate Niagara. rethe At the
ef
jubilee lebration of his time nutter
i1008 the eortvoeittion eoeferred upon
n
hint the degree of D. a L. The dote
reedeea many gifts and ,00figratu1e,.
iions from hie eongtagetion to -lay.
-
•
. . , . , .
GEN.. FRENCH.
.
see -s --s
r B..hSails r ..n,
Famous ritis Soldier or us
Country on May 13,
ese-ese
Ottawa 11 r h '1, ' "
-Cameral Sir ,Tol n
„ . ; 1 It e . , k i
L ieetem, the famous British soldier, will
sail from Liverpool for Canada on May
. „
, 13. Though bit visit, Wilt be somewhat
rif it private nature, he will inspect, as
far tie possible, Ole militia fortes ot the
Dominion, tole Ids reessu.ks theteon. will
let addressed to Rio Freaerlek Bailee,
Minister of Militia.
As trimly troops as possible, especialay
erivelry Ana artillery, will be estemblede
at Petswawa temp, and General Freneh
will be preeetit for is temple of days at
lenge After that be will preeeed to
Witersten. tendon. Nitieerti and ether
4.4 •
A mieny of five hundred That& in-
tetosive farmers Will be established on
the irrigated letele of the 0, P. It., near
Calgary, thisi yont,
and take br.
. tat tio1cft deoided pointe.
Halley'*
Inge.
in Eating
lry,
BIM bee
Is 1,ondon
eollieion
y'e comet
appeninge
om, a via
had gone
nt woe at
Innen in
Mg per -
y.' -caused
Tillage -
and, cried
0 inhabit -
ret.
tumbled
d Father
stew, af.
also came
orld was
forted his
wait their
s, he said,
eow.
LI pecifiea
het they
food and
ceordingly,
to square
eating be -
rayed, but
t on hays
approached
; all pre -
Inds; the
d the rest
ober man
d danced
vhere they
met sun,
world still
mnimously
g its duty.
that their
ty.
ng Again
acedonia
rkey,
✓ danger -
as been
temper -
the belief
o circles
has beau
i. Wail de -
with Tur-
aoedonia,
tright or
y for the
made tre-
and train
sesses al-
itable war
The Bul-
ly 'become
uisieirtioanrmoye
left them
ian broth --
in under
ey cannot
e ariny on
King also,
the con-
e dynasty
pia by the
d the p00-
40 or
Mend and
isappeared
ad Ste Pet-
ia eefueed
support to
o. Bulger -
stood here
e.
For the
ganization
eil of the
tion was
the mem-
ittee, ele-
cting last
r. Monti-
Publie
by at sub-
ineugural
approved.
of pro -
centres
diary to
ich exist,
they wilt
the een-
y -centres
ting an -
Already
nterest
first aid
1E9 Aloe.
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