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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1914-01-15, Page 7„ a.• e'. "te, - ,Seee'eee....s.e..eseese- . aiNeeesseeeeeese eeesesese-----„eeeeesseeeeeee-e_eseess.,,e,,,,;„ - .7 LES UR LESSON NO, 111. the isit lel ill es wee at miX- ture et ease, The two esthete hed ao deal 1th teeth ethas. ' Irma eosepessioneeThe stehategetent :elate ehowed Itte eompeesione St Went to hiee -Inetead of eltanning bim, as ,the pelt* anti the Levite hail donee Oil and wine --Tliefie were recognized then ila deans - Mg and healing agents, An ime--A lodg- ing piece for people and beaets. 35. On january 18, 1914e -The Good Samarie the morrow -Jae Semariten bad tekeu ore of the wounded man over night, but tan ---Luke 10:: 25-27. he felt libt duty irate not yet done, He les earo 20e4 e ttle 1h® hoes CoMMENTAR d'es -I. How ta Obtain Must hel? hon through his trent*, Two eheep and if6ies 'La be 'eaggeg ''' ' timelier of the Alorale law, A lawyer est the wages of a lebering man fer two , The thud set ieholee 1,uttiogsl 1:14Ttledetree.eer ht.41850 to eS ell la the New l'estament souse .was nearly days. I will repay thee - the mune tis a eeribe. Both perfermei that showed that the. Samariten had and butchere' sneerer .. .. a 00 to e 21. the 5•ame (aces, yet, in strietneee, the compassion upon the victim 0 the Nes te'oe4litim beetchers• were ,. 7 25 tc) 7 ./47 smile gave sietial ateeettion to nrakiog bore. 30. Which ..,...,. wee neighbor caerteutiggre fell'eek.8' " I ler4. LI li ; eopiee of the law, end the emcees -Jesus had minutely and elearly set Cemmon butchere• heifers., 7 00. ta 7 '4 0114 duty stets _to. Interpret it. Stood ferth the charecter anti dispotaltioamtlayt , (c1:19111:70:-: -:• mei, and the lawyer could reae Caooe coa-e . „ ... ... .0 Go to 7 ea 000 te 053 up -••Front this' We conclude the t Jektus wad at tee time aaaressin.g. ea aseene. give but one <answer to Josue' Oheetileu. -FEEPthi'S -AN"b ...a.r.eu3selltst-L15t inly. Tempted Iting-it rs quite evi- Wt. He that shoWea merey on lom--.The 121any on sale, dent that the lawyees Attitude timard. . lawyer used this farm of expression to letligasigoefeig.. .., .. .. - $G50 to $700 at„mui was ..aut fogggly, agg owe ee , avoid. speeking the hated word "Smart- Stockers, 0001sto''806' nes... Ili e005 ro t N. MILKERS ANS) . Szeitusso-ERS-lie- wished, to alliW Lint IMO PA argument . ten!' He had eonderaned himself itt his szts ligiltict Ikea prices firm at e5t to Ph to enttap him. lle wished to test the enswer to ,jesue former euestion and be teachinse of jeme to see how they c(ntdeme himself Win lu this cumver. CAL'Ase-sale la viii,g, $1,';lereeaeoll' I would t gm, watt tea, eeeibeg wale:nee .GO, and do thou likewiee-Compare this and prices were very firm. u sit 8' tn 'NJ notor-llabbi, or Wall the advice and command of Jesus Cholee Vows. et') to $1.1.50; common to ,iii7tistaiteerer.of ti\i\htltw•lion. 1 tio_erhougli gie.en es v.-28. The conditions upon go,40,We°19.4tIS eseeISS-IteceIRts were whieli eternal life may be inherited were. moderate 003 and 'prtees very eli•m. the lawyer propnees Ole question ia clearly set ferth by. this convereation, aheep „. .„ .. ..... . $5 00 to e0 et the firet peneen singular, lie meana it pans end rame g. ... „„ 3 73 to 4 75 rather fin a, theoretical, than a praetie and the tenet's spirituel condition wite Limes, choice Ewes end Wethers, $8.75 cal, questioo. De le no sonvicted sin- revetlle(l. _ Questions. -In whet spirit did -the . iimgeou'xilegt. aotnis940•;77-tr .1•0 li:, 3.13.o f extra nor eskirg -the wav to eternal life. Wheden, tc oilierit eternel life-Etere lawyer approach Jesus? What wits thh sti.0-ipaGsst-eandeye.eints moderate and prices nal life can be obtained only from clod, office of a lawyer among the Jews: Selected, fed and watered, 'moo ana aria that by inheritanee or gift end How evere the conditionie upoo ethicli es,e5 faele cars, and $0.25 weigheo oft one might inherit eternal life set forth? cars. not by purehase. To itaierit eternal , FARMERS' MARKET. life le to be eaved fieln ain, and its How IS ell the low summed up? By what eigaer„i egasetieen,,„s. Tide gaeetten, queetion did the lawyer show a diembsi- Dressed. hogs, heavy pelted in the right spirit, is full of tiros tion to cayil? Describe the aets and dis. Dee 11,44., . .... ' :: :921 01 positions of the three men Avhe sew Butter, Dairy, lig .,. .. .. 0 30 nage to the iimuirer. ?IL what is writ. the woonded man. What is the teaching Ens, dozen „ „ _ Oaten:. ninet keep the eennuandmente ten in the law -The Jetes hot declared ... lawyer condemn himself? of the parable? In what waye did the Oniekene,. lb.. - - . 0 10 Fowls 44.. .,.. . , • • „ 0 ILI .... 0 00 and the trailitione of the ehh•rs, in PRACTIOA.L SURVEY. Ducks, lb- • . , . ..,. ... 0 10. order te inherit etermo life. Jesue at Topic. -Love's. demend. Turkeys, lb., . .... .„ . 0 22 onee referred the lawyer fie the law I, Of devotion to God. whielt he professed te hold in high ea- Tr g, .Apples, Mel . - , . .... • . "' 00 Geese, 10., It I." voos, 0 10 teem. 1,,,,,e, reeeeet, thrn,...,..1 t was gee a J.• ,..7 l service to man, I. Of devotion to God. The queetion Potatot bag - 1 00 enoustii to know what the law said, for it was alio impertant thet its interpre- o*f. thielelawyer is lu elf ages the potion Beef, forequartere, ewt... 11 50 t human heart everywhere, The Do., hindquarters, cwt.. 14 50 teflon should be right. "Jesus refer- t way of life ie. the highest question Of Do., choice sidee, owt.. 13 00 red him to tia• law as a stfe rule. mid Do., medium, owt..,. ,, asked hint what wits read there. ' The life and is satisfectorily answered ia 11 50 God'e word, The lawyer did hot lee' Do., common, ewt 9 50 lawyer was donbtlees endeavoring to justly himself by obeying the Jew. ne as ha ought, the seriousuese of the goes- Mutton, light, cwt.. .. 10 00 _ 11 50 tion lie proposed or his own personal Veal, conunon, cwt. - • trusted to his own works- To bring interest in it. He aeked it to teet , Do„ prime, cwt., 13 00 lain orf that ground, to make him feel Jesus rather than to get understanding Iamb, cwt..., ' • • • • ls 09 that it was an unsafe foundn tion, jesue for himself, It wan an honest geeetion, '' " ' ' ') &hewed him Meta the lam required, and thus would have showed. him that he and yet in the very wording of it the note of discord is heard. It was aeked needed a better righteousness than ids own. lids is the proper tee of the in the spirit of temptation, Jesue ans- law. By coinparieg ourselves 'trawl ,,,, wered according to the wisdom and the I hat, we see our defe,•ds. and •are thus goodnees of the question, though it was prepared to weleeme a better rigieteous. asked from a wrong motive. The lawyer nem than our own. that of the Lord came to catechize Christ, that he might Jesus Christ. Thus the law becomes a know Him: but Cerise catechized him, schoolnerster to lead us to Him (Gal. that he might. know 'Mole -elf. He bade 3;24)." --Barnes, him answer himself in order to turn 27. answering -The lawyer quoted his attention epon himself. By the (Ines - from Dent. 6:5 and Lev, I.9:18. It ,e tion, "How readest thou?" the Savior probable that Jewish teachere were very '' ascrived to the law absolute authority with this summary of the law, thou in the answer to the question proposed shalt love the Lord -To lore God is by the lawyer. The equity. of the divine the highest duty of which man is cap- rule made the lawyer the Judge of what able. To love him is to acknowledee he ought to do in this ease. lt impoeed fully and freely his authority, and to upon him no duty that he had net al - obey him implicitly, with all thy heart- ready acknowledge forshimeelf. He inti - The heart is the eentre of all spiritual meted that he had already fulfilled the life, the fountain and seat of the pas- requirements ot the taw, unless it were stens, desires, appetites, affections, pm- that Jesus might teach' some different poses and endeavors. soul -Soul. Is the meaning from. that which he held. The individual existence, the person himself, lawyer wee. first put to shame by the the seat of the will, dispositions and fact that Jesus introdueed no new dw- ell:trader. strength -The entire Wive is, trine, but held te that with which he to be wholly employed in lovine God eves familiar, ancepting his own defini- and exercised in harmony with that af. tion ef duty. Christ's words: "Thig do," made hiim aware that -.he had not yet !calm mind -The intellectual powers are brought into exercise in the act of done. w tat the law. required. He had yet loving God. thy neighbor as theuelf- to embrace love melts two great as- pects, upward toward God. 'and OutWard This embodies man'si duty to man. It is toward man, before he eould lay any the golden rule. in a different form, "He claim to eternal life. The lawyer'e con - that loveth another hatb fulfilled the science beeame uneasy. His mere for- lawe' (Rom. 13:8). 28. thou hest an- mai devotion could not even abide its swered right -a -The lawyer had a good own test; As though he were edger to theoretical knowledge of the way of sal- drop the 'first requirement of the law, vatio.n, and gave the only answer that touching his relating to God, he was an Internment Jew could give. Jesus ready th •seek refuge under another commendea him for his correct reply. question. Jesus determined to sillow him This do and thou shalt live -These that there Was no ineonsietency be - words of Jesus contin more than a bare tween loving God and his neighbor. approval of the lawyer's. It was at once 11. Of service to man. Pasenng feom a reproof and a condemnation, for Jesus reve's first great demand, Reim sought knew how greatly his questioner had to show the lawyer that He ,did not .failed, and the lawyer himself must have have the love he said was rightly dee' felt his own shortcomings. The condi- mended by the law. Ire sot before him ttions of inheriting eternal life, as here the nature of genuine and practical love set forth, involved faith in God. for the in the incident of the Samaritan in con - renewal of the heart. The way is open: thist v•ith a raerelY formal respect for ed. to spiritual life and eternal life. the law as illostrated by the priest I. Attempting to shun duty (v. 29.) end the Levite, ley this instructive , TO1401CTO illARKETO tavz ISTOCE.... uNIQN STOOK YARDS. rt t • • 008 Ovule Os. 23-28). 23. lawyer- .4 Peoee----A mut thirty .cente. It repreeente rif4E1M4lutilittrif Qat 41.WaetA? $11 50 102 350i ,0 55 0 18 0 14 0 18 0 23 0 18 4 50 0 00 13 00 10 00 115:20242 00500000: 14 50 . TORONTO SUGAR MARKET.1.0 50 Sugars are quoteein Toronto, fit: bags, per cwt., as follows:. Extra, granulated, St. Lawrence -84 31 Redpatles,. . , • . . • . • . 4 31 Beaver granulated- 4 21 Nee 1 yellow .. . . .... 3 91 In barrels, 5e per cwt. more; ear lots, 5c less. 20. willing --Wishing, (leaking. justify exemple of true eherity Jesus brought bimself-The lawyer realized that his lame the fret lito the lawyer's' comed- own answer had condemned him, and once, so net tre could not ehake it off. lie thought he must relieve himself of He gave him a graphic picture of hu - the weight of his guilt before Jesuse. He man need and rediery, a. sad illustration had told what one ought to do, but of man's indifference to his fellow men, Jesus told hint to do ik for he had fail- =eking him feel that neither the claim ed in the pest. who is my neighbor- of humanity nor of nationality nor of The lawyer's attempt was evidently to religion moved hint so much aa of set, hide behind a strained interpretation of fish desh•e for Ids Qom preservation. He a word of the law. He resorted to ar- had yet to uuderetand that the law gument, as has many,,a man since his aline high and demands the whole heart, time under similar entumstanees. To end that it is notgge rntieli the thing done as the spirit in which it is done, him a neighbor .WM4 a Jew and no one glee's god regards. Jesus sent the else, and he, without doubt, concluded that, if his interpretation proved to be lawyer to echool to a Sainatitan to learn his duty. The story answereth correct, he yet had hope of eternal life; the question, The Snmeriten alone for lie believed that he loved the mem- heel eeted according to the 'command - has of his own race. Jesus opened to The lawyer was forced to Wee him an interpretation of the scriptures. liliVe•eige the propriety ef Christ's in• that wee far richer than the one he haa terference end advice. Ile learned 'that yet admitted, III DAY made clear (vs. 30-3'le.ad36,0i ltoevr.c; ictsf rttaf )ilieteoesssiate-yri rNiveiel ielhiP i tthset)clIces etxo jeans answering-jesus had conuni ineet. lie learned that where loVe is the lawyee as far as he could, 0114 now tliere le en observant eye, a sensitive be proceeds to shoev him the flimeineee heart, abseme of •bigotry, ready of the foandetion upon whielt ho staed handt eelf-forgetfulness, oelf-denial, a The answer of JeiiMS Was not for ths° combination of wiedont and teederness, lawyer alone, but all who after hinei endeovor to into est others eonibined should cavil about aneWer with liberality and foresight. By vivid illustrationie sew .that eold and for- ' mat eceiesiesticient dens not fulfil the law of love to God and than. The lawser learned Out it 15 love that-rnaltes man eseighbor to man, and that love is the fulfilling of the Jew, Until he emild emulate the exempla elf the Samaritan he could. mot boast himself of hnving :conformed lo the great eonnimanneent of loving Ids neighbor as; himeelf Or Of mrosebing unto the experience Of loV• mg God with his whole SW. What- ever he sought in•his interview, he cer- thinly found it impoegible thereafter to plead ignoreinee concerning his duty. T. R. A. ..evresteseoressincing and overwhelming. A '"'" certain enan-tIndoubtedlv a Jew, al- dose' though that is not speeffically stated, eate but the entire setting of the parable shows that he was a Jew. Went down -Tile road from Jerusalem to Jericho, ethout eighteen inhere was meetly down graile, It lay for some dista.nee through deep eavine, between rough and eaverit- ous Mlle, where robbers abounded. The oad through We wilderness was called by Jerome "the bloody way." Thieves --Robbers, those who would us6 violent° to eeetire booty. Stripped hint --The rob. berm took. from him all liis beloriginge. Wounded him -They beat him so eevere ly that lie wee neerly dead. They would riot 'Imitate to conuelt murder if by that crime their purpoec had been better eerved. 31. By eliance-At the sante time, This worst "chiatee" doee not pro. perly express the idea. Priest -It is --eeeseal that several thousend priests dwelt at Jericho n,t that tline, and it wee a conottori oeeurreriee for them to pass to and from jeruselem, Passed bv on the ether side -The priest negleeted hie plain duty to the wounded man, bream it would require time and labor, and queen., Ily lie might become Ceremonially defiled. 32. Levite- member of the -tribe Levi. Levitee were employed stesut the secular work of the temple, and were euppose4I to be obelient to Vie Taw Ptteeed by on the other sib -1101,11 the seieet and the Levite fiteled to perform their duty tOW.tril a lrealiiir MAP WIllOn rt.fOgill7.0a as their neighbor. The lawyer was convinced that what Jesus NVIIS saving ileerrilied either an actual or s eseveible re•eurrenee. 33. Semigratin --An inhabitant RIAU rho The Satmaritane were probably in so way related ha rare tri the Pave After • A OCEAN GARD SHARPS BEATEN. Plymouth, Jan. 11.e -Two men ao tused of eard-sharping were roughly handled by passengers aboard the North °Ottani LlOyd liner tleorge Washirigten, Whieh attived here this morning front New York. Ass the ship was drateing near the English coast Otte ef the victima of the inert realized that he had been swindled, and pummeled the ganibler to whom lie had given his cheque for $500 until the Card sharp returned the cheque. The gamblers are said to bei neither Anteritans hor British, Their names are not known here. • INDIAN COMMISSIONER ILL. Ottawa, Zan. 11. --Hon. David Laird, Indian Corronissioner, is seriously ill at his home here. Mr. Laird Was at hie office on Tuesday morning, and during the afternooti wee teelzed With ter, dairy 26e, eretunery 30e. Chiekene ehill. He has since been confined 12e per pound. Cleene 13e per pound.] to hIS bed with a serious attack Of Ihreks steree, No turkeys. Hese bronchitis, VA per ton. fitraew, ;"fl per ton. Hogs, OTHER MARKETS. WIN'IsilPECr GRAIN' OPTIONS. Open. High. Low. Chose. Wheat - Jan .. ,..„ 847/8 May., 00. 90% 90 .90% jel.(14 . , . . 91% 91% 91% 91% Jen., .. • 32% May .. 36% 36% 30% 30% July.. .. 38 88% 38 38% Flax., 1 35% 1 35• 4 1 3514 1 35%. MINNEAPOLIS WHEAT. Minneapolis.- Ologe: Wheat-- May, 87 1-2 to 87' 5-8e asked; duly; 89 1-8 to 89 1.4e asked; No. 1 bard,. 89 1-2e; No. 1 northern, 8g fo 88 1-2e; No. 2 north- ern, 83 1-2 to 85 1-20; No. 3 wheat, 81 1-2 to 83 1-2e, Corn -No. 3 yellow, 58'3-4 to 59e. Oats -No. 3 white, 35 1-2 to 30e. Flour and bran, unchanged. • DULTH GRAIN MARKET, Dulittle-'Wheat-eNo. 1 hard, 87e; No. 1 northern Ne; No. 2 do., 84e; NO. 2 hard Moneana, 84 to 84 1-20; May, 88 to 98 1-4c; july, 80 7.8e. • LIVERPOOL PRODUCE. Wheat, spot, firm, No. 2 red westera winter 7s 4%d: No. '1 lefanitoba-7s ld. • No.,.2 Manitoba -7s, NO. 3 Manitoba -6s 11(1. Futures -Dull -March, 78 1i/ed. May, 7s 3.46..Juliy, 78 7-86. American mixed -tis 8d. Futures-Laplata, firm, Jan., 4s 7 7-8d. Feb, 4s 8 7-8d. Moore winter pa,tents-28a Hops in London (Paeific Coast) £5, Es to £0 15s. • Beef, extra India mess -122s 0d. Pork, prime mess, western -110e. Hams, short cut, 14 to 16 the..686 dd. Bacon, Cumberland eut, 26' to 30 -The., 04s. Short ribs, 16 te 24 lbs, 67s. Clear tellies, 14 to 16 lbs -1398 66. Long. elear middlee, light, 28 to 34 lbs., 07s W. Long clear middles, light, 28 to 34 lbs., 87s 6d. lbsL„onogasel6eaa.r middles, heavy, 35 to 40 Short clear backs, 10 to 20 lbs. -65s 6d. Shouldene, settler°, 11 to 13 lbs.- Lardeprime western, in tierces -56e Amencan, refined-5ft del. Cheese, Canadian, fittest white -07s Gia Colored -Oft 0d. Tallow, ptirne eity-338 Australlati London -34e 06, Turpentine, spirits -33s 6d. Resin, rommon-Os 6d, Petroleum. refined -9 3-86. Linseed 0i1-275 Od. Cotton 'Seed Oil, hull refined, spot - 30e Od. PROVINCIAL MARKETS., "Guelph.-rresh eggs could be bought to -day as low as 35 cents a citizen, al- thoUgh.the predominating price Waa 38e to 40c. Butter Was plentiful at 28e to 32e. There was a good supply of pout-, try offered, iticluding some of the finest chickens ever seen on the Guelph mar- ket, They ranged in priee front Ine to 18e a pound. Ducks were 60e to 00c 'each. Geese were seethe at $1.50 to $1.73 each. There were no turkeys of- fered, Vegetablee are beginning to get scarce, but there were lots of potatoes and apples. The former sold at 81 to 81,10 a bag, and the latter front 25e basket to $3 ti barrel. St. Thomas. -Eggs were easier on the loud market to -day, selling at 38e, its ttealuet 40c a week ago, Butter remains steady at 28e to 30e; turkeys are geared at 20e to 23e; geese arid ducks et 17e; ebiekees plentiful at 100. potatoes bring 00e bushel; wheat, '85e; oats, , 32e; hay, *1'2 to $15; baled hay, $10; hides, 91/4 to 11%e, and live hogs, $8.10. Brantford. -Butter at See, eggs 40e to 45e, ehlekens at $1,20 to 81.40 per pair, atil duelee at $1 each. Potatoes Weld at $1.10 per bag. The price of vegetables were unchatiged. Streetforti.--To-day's pricee te•Cre: Eggs, 40e per dozen; butter, 28e to 30e per pound; chickens, 50e to 70e eteli; dude, 50e to 75e Melt; pottitom, $1.25 per bag; wheat, 85e per buithel; oats, 32e per hothelt hay, loose, $15 per tont hoes, live, $8.50 to 08.05 per cwt.; wool, weshed, 22e tier pound; hides, Ile Per I pound; ettlfskins, 13e to 14e per mini. Harrieton.- -Eggs, new -laid, 30e. But - ' BABY PERED- WITH ECZEMA Could Not Sleep Day or Night, Itched and Burned Terribly, Ca- ticura Soap and Ointment Cured in Month, Also Cured Mother of Salt Rheum, Quarryville, N. V.-"Vorn, month e,fter my baby was born he could not elect) day or night 'with eczema, Ile was all covered with small watery pimples; whiele would breale in a day or two and leave hummer scab and would Itch andburaterriing.110 scratched tio much that ho made sores. ehs. skin burned 311 the time and when the scab canto off it left little marks like °Melton -pox. At lase I saw Outicura, Soap and. Ointment advertised. After the first ap- Idleatioa be rested easier. I applied the Outicura, Ointment ligittly and after an hour X would wash, him with oedema Soap. After a menties treatment he was cured. "1 was greatly troubied with salt rheum on my hands. They broke out in lime watery ,piniptes and would. be so itelty a could tear them to pieces. Then they would dry up and crack and bleed and when I put them In water the disease would. eat in to tee bones, They were so painful had to IsceP them tied up virith cotton rags. could not. aey work. One box of Outicura Oint- ment with the Onticura. Soap cured then2.1 (Signed) Mrs. Grattan, July 31, 1013. Cuticttra Soap and Cuticura Ointment aro sold by druggists and dealers' everywhere. Per a liberal free sample of each, with 32-p. hook, send pest -card to Potter Drug& Chem, Oerp., Dept. D, Boston, xr,gs. A, 4.1.4114., $8,00. Botcher cattle, $0.50 to $7. Mr. Wm. Dunnage, a local buyer, 'secured a splendid carlOad of export cattle at $8 Potetoes, $1 per bag, Peterboro.-'1'he priee of 'ire hogs has adeaneed to $8.75, baled hay $16 to 818, looie hay 818 0119, wheat 80e. to 87c, bittchere' hides lle, potatoes rather scarce, 81.15 bag; Northern Spies $2 per bag; Tallmans, $1.50 bag; 'beef quarters, 12e to 136 lb.; pork 13c to 14e lb.; lamb, 15e to 17e lb.• 'turkeys, 18e to 20e lb.; geese, $1.0d to $1,00 each; ducks, 60e each; chickeae, 81.10 to 81.25 pair; butter, 30c; eggs, 45e. Belleville.-Quotationse Hogs, dress. ed, $12.50; hogs, live, 89; wheat, 99e to $1 bushel; oats, 40e to '42e bash) ; buckwheat, 80e bueliel; chid:one, pair. 75e to $1; fowl, $1 to 81.50 oeir; but- ter, 320 lb.; egge, 40e to 42e dome; loose, $15 ton; potatoes, $1.21 bag; butchers' hides, 11%c; farmers' hilcs, 101/20; deakins, 75e; butchers' wool pelts, 00e, STOCK. Cat tleC, EnreeCeAlpats°-21.43,1001707 Market weak. Beeves „. .. . .. 6 65 to 0 30 Texas . steers... .,. 6 85 to 8 DO Steekers and feeders .. 5 00 to T 40 Cceovilv•seeaT.1. 3 40 to s 30 Hogs receipts 418,00(150 to 111 0° Market dull. Light . ... 8 05 to 8 ;to 11,1leed 10 to 8 40 Heavy . 10 to 8 40 Reugh 8 10 to 8 le Plgs .,. 6 75 to 8 LIO 131sIlilireeorf, sraelce4ie.. 4:3:000. .. 8 20 to 8 35 Market slow. Lamb, native... ... 6 70 to 8 46 8500 ttoe 7 Yearlings 6 05 BieFFAL0 LIVE STOCK, East Buffalo- despatch: Cattle -Receipts 4,000 head; fairly active; good to choice common 30 to 15o lower; prime steers 18.75 to 89.00;! shipping 88.00 to 0.0); butehers', $7.00 to 18.40; hettere 86.00 to 88.03; cows, $3.60 to $7.25; bulls, $5.00 to $7.30; stockers, and feeders, 0.60 to 8/.00; stuck heifers, $5.25 to 0.75; fresh cows and springers, 835.00 to 00.00. Veels-Recelpts 800 slow and 250 lower • 1, . A 0.00 to $12.00. Hogs, receipts 24,000; active and 100 lower; heavy, 'mixed and yorkers, 88.45 to 18.00; pigs $8.25 to $8.40; roughs, 87.50 to 87.65; stags, 0.00 to 36.75; datrieg, 88.3a to 050. Sheep and lamb, receipts 18,000; active; mixed, sheep, 150 higher; others steadY; lambs, 85.50 to $8.40; yearlings, 0.00 to $7.25; wethers, 85.50 to 025. THE HALF -SPEED MAN AND WOMAN What It Means When You Feel "All Out of Soft" Yon know what it means to feel "all out of sorte." Most peOple have felt this way at some thne, Nerves out of order, irritable, languid, depressed. An aching head, a fagged brain, appetite bad and digestion weak. With settle people this condition comes and goes; with others it is chronic; they catet shake it off; It interferes with busi ness, spoils recreation and. robs life of all its joys. These men and womert are only able to Jive and work at "half speed." Half speed people have lest that abonditut natural vitality which go - aides others to go "full -speed -ahead" through life, Their energy and terve power have evapgrated-they cannot work long without breaking down. The trouble ts nerve weakness find is caused by poor. watery Mood: You cen begin to improve your condition to•day lay taking Dr. 'Williams' Pink Pills. They make rich, red blood once more pulsate through your veins, „fold your nervee thrill with fresh mpg. Here is corn vincieg evidenee that now strength and full health can he had through the UM of Dr, Williams' Pink Pills. Mr. New- ton hlayhow, North Tryon, P.E 'S., says: "I am a fernier and neturally have to 'work very hard. The reStlit waa that I found myself very much tun down, My blood beceme thin and watery, aed my muaeles flabby. I tool. doctors' treat- ment but it did tot help me and I grew so weak that could scarcely work at all. As 1 found the medical treatineut was not helping the I 'decided to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and in theee 1 found the medicine needed, as le A 'short time 1 was eestored to my old health and vigor. Isbell always teem - mend these pills to sufferers." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are sold by ell medicine dealers, or will be mailed, post paid, at .60 cents ft box or six boxes for $2.50 by The //r. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville. Ont. - LOST LEG AT KNEE. Guelph, Jan. 11.-A very serious atc- Went befell Mr. Robert Short, of Pli- kington Township, Saturday after- noon. He was driving the horses on one of the old-fashioned power ma- chines. when his foot slipped, his heel being practically torn off and hie leg so badly fractured that the surgeons found it rieeeseary to amPUtatie It be. low the knee. The unfortunate man is very swede front eheek and ibex of blood, but the doetors have hopet thet he 'wilt pal! thr011gb. NEWS Of THE DAY IN BRIEF Mme. Lilian Nordica Is Seriously SIR ROHM. BOND OUT Twelve Killed in Alabama Mine Explosion. Sir Rob t Bo 1 his retire - Swift Curre hoe been incor- porated c Charles. Clime nancial worries led, to his s o anent from Newfoundland politics. The Cunard Liner Alunia, arrived at • Halifax on her maiden voyege, Mr. W. P. Gundy was elected Kest. dent of the Toronto Board of Trade. JereMiah Hallett, collector of cus- toms at Guelph, died at the age of 71. Manufacturers speak hopefully of to- r:1111731,1%1cl conditions in the immediate Nine horsee were cremated ha a stable near the Montreal Stock Yards; loss, S20,000. Rev. D, D. Rolston, of Walkerton, died, after ao illnese of two months, In Ids 05th year. Mr, Emerson Coatsworth, ma,y succeed Judge Morgan on the Teri: County Bench. The ;mine tragedies of 1913 were unusually heavy, the monetary loss to- talling $35,000,000. Mine. Lilian Neediest is critically ill as a result of exposure in' re-seeeent shipwreck in the, Antipodes. , Mrs. Adeline Proctor, a former Wind- sor resident, ,s under arrest at Winni- peg on a charge of bigamy. West Lambton Liberals' annual meet- ing was addressed by Hon." George P. Graham and Mr. Fred F. Pardee. The. Archbishop of Paris has con- demned "the tango" as an immoral dance. Patrick Brennan, 'aged .36, out of work, took his life with carbolic- acid in Toronto. George Bellinger, postmaster of Wellesley for fifteen years, died sud- denly at the age of 65, There are fifteen thousand unem- ployed men in Toronto, bnt no evi- dence as yet of desititution. The Provificial geologist confirms the reports of rich gold finds in the kirkland Lan distriet. Employees in the Toronto City Architect's Department made large tncomes drawing plans "on the side." The 'United States embargo on po- tatoes has diverted the Maritime pro- duct to Ontario and lowered the price. Sergt, Thomas Hewitt, R.C.H.A., has been missing from Kingston for ten days. His accounts are all right, Andrew Hulbert, of Guelph, was thrown off the seat of his cab while turning a corner and fatally injured. . The election of A. Z. Trudel as mayor of Cobalt is to be protested. There is abairleoCtoartnt" of the Sudbury mayoralty Charles -Kirk, a bachelor, who reeid- ed near Codrington, Ont., was burned to death in is fire that destroyed his 'dwelling. Twelve men, five whites and seven negroes, were killed in. an explosion in the Rockeastle Mine, in Tuscaloosa County, Lieut. Mary, a military aviator, while making a flight at'Sentiago, Chile, fell from a height of 3,000 feet and was dashed to pieces. Aeeording to the Loodon, Eng., Jew- ieh Chroniele, the number of Jews in the world now exceeds 13,000,000; to be exact, 13,052,840. • Mrs. Magy Gorman, Toronto, MIR SO seriously burned while cooking on a gas range at her home that she died OFF TO THE SOUTH at the Uenerta Hospital, Dellet, a barber, committed sub side in the 'Whitehouse Hotel bar room, Sudbury. He took carbolie acid, and the bottle was found in his 'pocket. Mary Hill, who. is described as a Ger- man, climbed the Gramons Mountain,. in the Alps, on New Year's Day, and. haa not been heard from since. It is feared she was killed. by an avalanche. Welter If'. Hyluite, eott Of the at* 11, 1.1314a4 Led 'treater et tits . C. S. Hymen, former Cauledlon later of Public 'Works, died at St, Joseph's IR:emits!, London, after an ill• nese, of some months' diare.tIon. Alex. 'Mine 14.0.R. yard conductor, while mining abeaa of some curs in the St. Thomas yard to make A cutting off Rome rnoviug care, plipped and fell, and was etrucic by the moving cars, oustaining injuriefa to hie lege. STORM IN EUROPIE Great Devastation in the Central Countries. -seeees- Paris, Jan. 12.--eCentral Europe is e.s.- periencing the tweet severe winter in generation, The blizzards of a fortitight ago, efter, abating eomewlett, seem to bieve returned. with renewed vigor. .. eaStera Russia 150 defeats. from the cele were 0013401y reported yesterderg Jo Bavaria and Alsace-Lorraine heavy anew etorme have blocked railroad traf- fie aud wrecked wires. In Switzerland snow has been failing continuottedy einee Friday. Tee 'delver aftsiestieraiovtakilanebes and floods is eegarded In Belgium the floods are receding, but the snowfall eontinues. Xoesliu Germanyedan. 12. -The water recedea ejlong the coisst of the Baltic to -day and ended fox. the present the Stengel, to, the villeges. Venice Eitel Friedrieh, as viceroy of Pomerania,' arrived at Koeslin to -day to take personal ebarge of the relief of the stricken fisherfolk. ;Nue; Germany, jan. 12.-A Ruesien consisting of Seven pereons„ who, had been emploYed in the vicinity of this. town, were frozen to death in. a blizzard to -day A DARING BANDIT Krafehenko Sends Winnipeg Chief Present of Rabbit To Prove Statement He Had Made 13efore, * Winuipeg, 'Mane Jan. 12. -john Kral- chenko .is still at large. The eonsenstis of police opinion is thee Krafehenko has not been able. to get out of the city, end secure with friends, who fear to betray him. Early reports that he fled in an eutomobile, that paased the police station About the time he is known to have down the rope, have not been verified. In fact, one well- defined rumor is that the ootlaw slept onlv two blocks. from the station all day Saturday and spent part of the time since his escape in the old Thome- tire, "Countess of Dufferin," which la located in a little park opposite the 0. P. R. station. .• During his confinement. Krafchenko openly boasted that he would be out shooting rabbits in the spring. Yester- day a rabbit was delivered to Chief of Police • MacPherson,. with the eompli- ments of John Krafehenko. Close scrutiny of the hand.writing proved be- yond (teat that it was that of the es- caped murderer, it is said in pollee . Rewards now offered for inforination leading to the arrest of the fugitive now total six thoneande and the City Council to -night evil' add another thou- sand to this. Percy Hegel, ,counsel for Krafehenko and. last Man to see him before his' escape with the exception of tile guards, has issued a statement declaring his opinion that the escape was the' result of "an inside job." Hegel declared he never took his client anything but a package of cigarettes and phiees the responsibility for the escape on the • The workmen of a Canadian construc- tion .company at Lerida, in Catalonia, Spain, spread a quantity of dynamite in front of a fire to dry. The dynamite exploded, four men being killed and six- teen injured. Albert Bailin, director-general of the Hamburg -American Line, insists that he will not attend the coining shipping conference hi Paris unlegs the North German Lloyd yields in the trans-Atlan- tic rate war now in progress. Skartsbeff, a popular Hubert, of Lodza, Southern Russia a fanatical mob on Saturday attaeked 'the jews and pillaged their shops and houses. Six- teen Jews and three Jewesses were sev- erely injured. Troops who were sunt- monea suppressed the disorders . Mrs, Christina Easterman, living on the Forks road, Wainfleet, died at the age of one hundred years and nearly nine months, Premier Asquith denied in London that his forthcoming visit to Prance is political. He says he is merely p- ing with Mrs. Asquith to the Riviera. Fire destroyed the Napanete opera house and badly damaged the Iliscoe Hotel. The loss is estirnated $20,. 000. 13otit buildings aro owned by Mr. Mack. 3. S. Deitch, of the Electrie Power CoMpany, Trenton, a prominent resi- dent of Trenton, died at noon. He was at the office Attending to business in the morning, A teduction of practiAlly $200,000 in total net revenue ite the result of the operations of the Timiskareing & Northern. Ontario Ralloay for the fis- cal year ended Oct, 31, 1913. Wm Petereoti, a ruitaway boy from Malone, N.Y., died in Cobourg Hos- pital, while awaiting extradition, from typhoid, pneumonia and meningitle, brought oft by subsisting on frozen applee, ete, At the exhibition of the New York Horticultural Assochttion now being held In Rochester an exhibit of On- tario ttpplee has been awarded the Sweepstakee Prize in a eompetition open to all the world. The the geological and the chemical laboratories of St. Paul's Trainine School, Cheltenlutm, Eng., were destroyed by at fire which the police believe was set by Suffragettes, The loam is estimated at $30,000. Villa Prepares to Strike A Dictator Huerta. presidia Texas, Jan. 12. -Believing the retreat of the Federal ,army from Ojinaga, Mexico, had completely crush- ed the Huerta Government in the north of 'Mexico, General Eraneieeo Villa to- day said he would begin to -morrow to move his army to Chihuahua, prepar- atory to his campaign southward. Sinee nearly *all the Federate who were in Ojinaga have fled to the United States, GeneritI Villa said he would leave only a few soldiers on the border near here. At Chihuahua he expecte to have a Ora% of 10,000 from which -to draw in attacks on Zacatecas, Aguascal- ientes and Guadalajara, "The defeat of the northern division of the Federal army leaves us concerned only with the south," said. General Villa. "The few remaining redersal gar- risons on the weet and east c0a6t6 will he driven out by the rebel foreee now eurrounding them. Maxie° City has al- ways been my destination." The little *village of Ojinagie is a wreck from ite reeent bombardment, but Gen- eva Villa, hae ordered it put in condi- tion. According to General Ortega, no military execntions have mama, Only 1,000 rehele oceupy the holism, Others are scattered over the countty on forag- ing expeditione, About 3,000 have al- ready been sent toward Chihuahua. Major McNamee, commanding. the Un- ited Steam troops, having received or- ders' from Brigadier -General 13lites at San Antonio to remove to the nefteeet Tan - road statiOn all the Federal soldiers and civilians now being held in Presidio, the etowd of more than 4,000 refugees awl 'soldiers will probably march 'mon for Marfa, Texas, 67 miles, over et moun- tain road. All the telitgees are to be pitt to work preparing their own ftinps. PINED $3 FOR KILLING. Windeor, Jan. 11, ---In steaming sen- tence yesterday upon Stanley Craig, the fourteen -year-old colored boy who by Wantonly diseharging .22-ealibre rifle in an open field two week* ago &aimed the death of George Flett, agod nine, Police 1Vlagistrate Leggett expressed his regret that he was not able under the law to order Craig whipped. The coroneres jury having rendered a vordiet of death by accidental shoot - Ing, young Craig got off with a $3 fine and coatis. Ite will be obliged to report to the probation °niter each Week. tlialAfeie A, • t u in BASINS leOWSSS *SE THAT ALL INEIREDUENTB ARE PLAINLY PRINTED ON THE LAMEL,ANDTHAT ALUM OR SULPHATE 714 Al.UMINA OR SODIC ALUMINIO Slito PHATE 11$ NOT ONE OP THEM. THE WORDS "NO ALUM" WITHOUT THZ GREDIENTS 10 NOT StIFFI., CtENT. MAGIC BARI NG ,POWDER 0081$ NO MORE THAN THE ORDINARY KINDS. FOR ECONOMY, BUY THE ONg PoUND Tuve, W•-GILLETT COMPANY LIMITED WINNIPEG TORONTO* ONT. MONTREAL. !mot iivitvelinionrcumicrosiomullivi 'TM?, TURNIP FOR CATTLE FEED, . Tim then's), to do its best, Mud have highly-enrictied, eiendee• graVelly nr light loamy soil. From the last day of July until Sept, 1 sowings may be made or the fah and main crops. The seed Is usually sown in drills a foot avert, titlet8ithinteidie ortattw,carly to six or e'ght The rutauaga euruip Is extbusively grown for a farm erop, ae the roote are close -grained, very hard and. will endure considerable cold Witheut. injerY. In order to get the la.nd. in a fine tiltli it ie plowed level, end harrowed crosswise and leugthevise. Shallow fur- rows two and a• half feet apart exe then plowed, and in theee furrowe inantire or fertilizer is Spread, The seed drill should be o adjnsted as not to sow lase than three pounds of seed to the aere, if in rowe mentioned above. The deed should be mixed. with ashes. Should rain come so as to moisten the ground, and the young plants get a vig- orous growth, they will be apt te escape itslievericyvages of the fly. When the ground poor plaster should be sewn on it after the seed is harrowed in. Weed- ing should begin in about two weeks alter the plants come up, and thinning sheuld at the same time be performed. When fed on turnips cows give a mtleh kilter quantity of milk than evnen fed on They or corn, hut it is necessary to give some bay, Cattle may be fed during the winter end even fattened on turnips, but when fed to cattle or cows it is neceesary to eut them in 'elices with a hatchet or. some other instru- ment, ae inatancee are known pf cattle' swallowing tuinips whole', and thefeby getting choked. Turnips are also largely used by poultrymen in feeding to the towels. Turnips are halved and. the fowle allowed to melt them to pieces. If at- taeked by the fly sow dry ashes on thou while the dew is on. Fresh slaked rise pourrpsooseo, is also recommended for One of the most important' esee.ntials in growing a root crop of any kind lath prepare a good seed. bed. The. lend should be rich id potash and lime, veith largo guentities of available nitrogen. With the. exception of the suger beet, this holds good. with all root crops, Cub tivation should begin. with the plowing. No furrow shouldbbe thrown . over flat, Turnip seed should be sown before the ground gets too dry. Force the growth by cultivation tint thereby avoid attacks of ,lice end. weedy mots. Land. that is set aside for the ieu•nip field should. be cultivated frequently be- fore planting; no as -to 00110i:ire. nidis tura ancl give the seed quick • genuine, - tion and the growing plant plenty of moieture. For turnips for stock the fol. lowirig plan is a good one: Sow the seed- in drills thirty inches apart on good, fertile soil, using two pounds of seed per acre, covering to ea ,depth of one inch. Where fertilizers are applied they ahould be well worked into the soil. (lover the seed with a epring- teethed harrow turned wrong side up. This will spread the seed in the row and permit of thinning later. Harrow a couple of times before the plants are up, alwaye harrowiug in the direction of the row and not across; then roll hard. On bettyy land.„ rolling should. not be done, Cultivate thoroughly to save the moieture. When plants have the third leaf they are ready to be thinned. Do tide with a sharp hoe; avoid injor- ing roots; this so that the plants Veil he- fourteen incite...8 ..part. PRESERVING SOIL FERTILITY. It is claimed that a 50-bu'shel crop of corn will remove front the soil 82 potnds of nitrogen, 31 pounds of pota.s- slum. What does not draw so heavily on the eon for the simple reasos that it doee not yield large troPs nailer ordinary circumstances as corn. A 25 - bushel Crop of wheat wiikramove from the soil 53 pounds of nitrogen, 15 pounds of phosphorus and 23 pounds of potassium. Two tons of clover removes 83 pounds of nitrogen, 15 pounds of phosphorus and 23 Pinnies of potassium. Two tons of clover removes S3 pounds of nitrogen, 10. pounds PhoSphorus and 88 pounds of potash, while a mixed eroe of clover and timo- thy, amounting to 1 1-2 tons per acre, re- Inove.s 50 pounds of nitrogen, 14 pounds of phospliorusoofarpnoadtlat4:tipieosuendesro.vos1 one ton of thnothy removes 20 pounds of nitrogen 10 1-2 pounds of phosphoras and Itn8A070cuY30112;sce ounds of nitrogen, 86 pounds of phosphorus and 242 pounds of potash. These figures are given by Professor Burkett, of the Itanso.s resperiment Sta. tion He states that, according to this rate of soil exhattstion, the hiaitraugcenticyoli Mined in the surface foot of average corn, wheat or cotton sons would be exhausted 1)11:erzulso sa unPtellY- teh af to otth ew to) huol Yinnealts11,51-eNNy•eshuailrresta;the potash wOuld be entire- 15tx fr.ematovueide cite:02;51a yt teoa•nr 80.2 the tioned, soils los.e their productive power absoitttely, it follows that between this time and the nerloa of complete exhaus- tion there will be a gradual lessening of production. This is absolutely what hap - Pens tinlese sonic, special precaution fe taken to prevent the depletion of the fertility supplyf. • But how prevent it and slaeignuemtietsneacroontglerouNevntoorneiniaolvIde-slaargye, crens year Dy year? in the first place, aWtstvilote;ifths of the time, Which actually ought to he the case -the nitrogen supply Is maintained. /11 the secohd Plftee the • Wiling of the crops omen on the sante tarot and the eloper care of the farm. yule:. manure togetaer with ita return us tee ulna means that only sum fertilizing ingrediente compoee the anitsiai body and tile Ingredients in such other pre - ()Mete as wool cheese and butter .13,6 are so'd from the farm are ectually lost for- evee to the soll. This perrnanent it must he yernembered, is in pliosphorua and pc tassiunt compounds, and these eau be mailed from three sources only. They only ee purcbased in the form of feeaing stuffs for farm animals and 1itul tlaelr way to the soil through the manure. or, in the second jphtee, they may be put:- ettased directly in the form of commercial fertilizers. The third muce or sup- ply Is from the sub -soil, running down to e depth,Of three or even tour 1000 from the surface. Roots of au crops pentrate the • soli -to the depth of twO, three, four and even as far. as six feet. They take ae. rattly the ingredient* from the sub-soll, aoa upon their decay tend to increase its porosity. This facilitates. the mina,- • inry movement of water, which reacts as an agent to convey fertilizing ingred- lente au they become soluble in the lower soils UP to near the surface, where they are readily available to the feeding roots of succeeding, crops. Whitt,. therefore, it is in theory possible to completely exhaust a soil In it hundred cr more years. in practice; it is possible to maintain its productive power and to even increase it by the sensible use of legutnes, by the generous use of farm- yard manure, and by wisely purchasing, fr nn time to time, those ash. ingredients, like tiotash and phosphortic.acid, that are of the greatest importance to Plant growth. It can be said without fear of contradle. tion, that farmers of the wheat, corn and cotton belt have not yet learned to appre- ciate tho value of fertility in commer- sial form, At seine .4 our etstions It has been shown that on certata..soits ..• exceedingly profitable Investment may be made in commercial fertility. If it Is profitable at the time,.whieh is the thing that more of us are interested in, it is surely a wise policy to make such invest- innets so as to keep our soils up to the ppint ot maximum productiveness. The nride that we now feel over the rldtmess of qur wheat, corn and cotton Soils will eosin disappear if we are net wise enough to put hack a goodly part of the ingred- ients that we are so busily engaged in ra- tite:Ting. FARM NEWS AND VIEWS, • 4 point that als fruit grOWera ShOuld iivnnirn stet otrhatigte tannc dm:701%00BI kiveinut phaa; much higher prices in proportion or good fruit in smolt packages: than ordinerY tient larg,e packages. Careful experiments how that. the honey bee is ouite as essential or the •Perlect pollination of our fruits as the liumblye Is la the cover fields. In Germany. the bumble bee is protected by legal enactment% With us every pest is destroyed at onee after its diecovery. Hoge to be slaughtered for pork should be liberally fed at this senson of the year, They should have sanitary pens so that .the animals will be reduced, The fe ding the danger a disease and discomfoit of . troughs should.be kept clean, as elect the drinking vesset. A good plan is to hale, a cc.nerete floor where the feed is givn, This prevents a muddy a.na unsanitary &Oft. pen. liege require considerable grain, but this does not mean grain alone, '.1.'hey should Intve some suecutent feria and protein sufficient to maintain nor- ral I ognrofwl etshl as well as carbohydrates to A fruit grower who believes in *thin- ning fruit and practices what ht believes, rcrhoves arm -half Of the emit of an ex - tit inely heavy setting of Reiter peara and allowed it ta go to waste on the ground. ThW portion that tnatured was fine and sold at high prices. ' In the grower's opin- ion the yield was larger than if all fruit had remained on the tree: The question of cooking and grinding hes food has many advocates on both Wes; but from all the information that can be gathered from reliable sources the predcminanco of evidence is in favor or feeding grain whole and uncooked. There are exceptions whert• cooking or grinding, 01 both. will pay tor the extra expease. Wally instances •ar known where hogs Me given whole, uncooked grain, that are actually making boter gains than others that aro getting cooked grain, either ground or whole, that it is hardly' 0011-: sidered wise to advocate waking or gried- ing except In cases of sickness or for sows just after farrowing. It takes 11 -pounds of milk to add one Pound of live weight to a calf and an oa.' net weighs 1,300 pounds will consume 2:1 pounds of hay in 24 hours, to keep front losing weight. If he Is fattening he must have twice that quantity. when ho gain two pounds a day. Thus one pound of live weight to 11 pounds of good haY. To obtain 50 cents per 100 pounds for hie hay a farmer must sen fat steers at $5.50 nel\rre1e00y Droaurtmdesr. s who never think of giv- ing their horses or COWS moee than they will eat up clean will, when it comes ta feeding the Pig. elves thern more than they will eat. overfeeding is not good feeding. A pig fed in this manner soon loses its appetite, and thereafter wilt not do its best A Safe rule is never to give more than the animal will eat up clean and, quickly, Peed will be saved 'by this method. It is 1100 the amount of food an animal takes into its storhach that causee a gain in weight, but the amouet that Is assimilated, and when we overfeed w iniure the stomach and a large part what is eaten is not assimilated. Ti excess food Is worse than wasted, for . gives the animal a setbaek from wh' does not specil*Ily 4,recover. NEW HAVEN COMES TO TER Washington, D Ce Jan, •41. --Art agreenient between the Department of justice and the NeweeYork, New Haven & Hartford Railroad that pro- vides for a reorganization of the road lea. conformity with the Administra- tion's interpretation. of the Sherman anti-trust law was reached in a con- ference held here late Saturday after- noon. As a roma the Department a Jus- tice wilt abandon the suit for a dis- solution of the New Haven system that was prepared for filing in the courts in the 'event that those outlier- ized to speak for the road found them- selves unable or unwilling to .com- ply with the demands .of the Govern- ment. D NEWS TO ALL WITH BAD COLDS INSTANT RELIEF -FEW HOURS FOR CURE NOTHING KNOWN TO SCIENCE IS SO INVARIABLY SURE TO CURE •AS "CATARRHOZONE." ;Just 'Breathe dateerhozonel •14.4*1•41a.e...•-•••• The ()zonated Air Cure, better knowu at 'Catarrliozone" is death to colder. Its heelth laden fumee eontain the leading balsante of the pine woods. Soothing and anthieptie, it gives in- etant --sitops gagging, he -wising ana sneezing. !Citreous and. phlegm are (leered away breathing made nay, and Catarrh wino toms entirely disappear. Delightful and pleasant ha Catarrhozone, simple to use • 1 ""- became° you breathe it --sure to ture eolds and catarrh beeause it deetroys the caitee. Doctors say nothing is more scientifie, nothing poseeeses suelt might of merit in winter Mee "To dear a (Iola Out of your imetvils sna to be able heat mimite .or two to breathe freely again, I can't eonceive .of aelvtilina beine better than Cittarrine zone, wii es ;le it. Galvin, ef rat Limon, C.11, Foe any sort of Catarrh throat tt•ouble or Bronellitie, Catarrhn• zone is a speeifie. I know meoreet of peo- ple who nee attarrhozone and all speak wonders; Of itg went." Get the 'complete $1.00 outfit it does . 1 tile Worle suite .4inall nitil :Ake wimple, or trial size, Pele, Sold by &Mere every- where. ,