Northern Advance, 2 Jan 1908, p. 6

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Barriellndertaking Eslablishme Greatlubbing Offer You cannot ossibly have a better ocoa_thaI1 U1 Q. G. SMITH 3 co. S; S_. No. -- Thea; castles, of Newark, N.J., bought a horse-lamed with a Jack Spavin--for $100. He cured every_ sign of lameness with Kendall s ' Spavin Cure--A-won ve races with the horse-then sold the animal to his tonne: owner for $1 ,O00.00. \ ` Whether it is .fresh Bruise, Cat or Strain-or an old Spavin, Ringbone or $wel1ing_+-you can cure your horse with I}1d!l 3 Spavin Cure news of the County (weekly) and the general -news of the country (daily) for ONE YEAR at the price named. While this extraordinary offer. is available to Advance subscribers old and new-, it applies only to new World subscribers. Send along your order EARLY. Eggs` from the year-old hens- will generally produce better chicks than those from pullets, if the hens are of the right `sort; it is better therefore to depend largely on the pullets `for eggs during the winter rather than to push the year`-old hens too hard. Let the young hens lay well, of course, but plan to have them produce their best eggs .at breeding season; at that time they should be mated with the best male obtainable. l for `December, 3. vnsmu. Collier and Clapperton Streets (ADMITTEDL X BA RRIFS LEADING PAPER) I have foundjour Spavin Cure a very fine remed for all sort: 0 lameness in horses and I am never without xt." vv aauuuavsrsvn, LV.u., AVUV. ZIJU, '0 T ' W i=,'f}.' w'{z'`x:E.' Get Kendalifs Spavin C1'1re-the remedy used by two nations for two generations. $1. a bottle-6 for $5. Our - - book--Treati-.`e On The Horse --will save you mgmy a dollar if carefully read and acted upon. `Write today for a free copy. DR. 3. J. KENDALL CO., 27 Euoslunc FALLS. - Vznuon*r.U.s.A. ALWAYSI OPEN. -- AND THE -- ESTABLISHED 1870 LAMENEss ' 111$-.'. li:iU> r} JI\.'5"5a5.`.3 35" . =- ~ w ~ uamrmxuw , u, . ,- . can-Ant I I..lI.`I\ unt: . .- .... u. Auuclnln nu. Lrnuaw mrougn town and Wagszons; Morgue and Buriul Parlors. In- snuanfn On a" an-6.. -8 11.... __.._II 1!! I Wxu.nvG'_roN, N`.Z.,'Nov. end, `o5. |in- Qnnvin (`cum 1 ..-... 2-- .....--.I-- A .` A macadamlzed road between St. Louis and Kansas`City,will be com- pleted wlthln two years. jconstruction ;._work will be be$'I1n;next:prlng. The {Missouri legislature appxjoprlated $500.- Nevada seems destined to forge to the that place in the production of pre- cious metals. V. ` Colorado, Montana and Utah have. according to,,recent retnrns._ shown a decided decline In the p_ro_duction of %precious metals. The following received the highest conduct marks: Earl Carson, Annie Dobson; Mabel-Stone, ' Fgmny Stone. Howard Carson, Lilian McNeil, Dora Chappel, `Thomas Wallwin. George McDonald. May Campbell. Earl Carson, Mabel Stone, Charlie Degear, Andrew Wallwin, Jennie Wiggins, IF rank `Robinson.- Ir; II.--Violet. Martin. Pt. Ill.--Wa1tei' Wallwin, Evelyn Brett, Maggie Brett. , Pt.{_IIN.--Frankie Chappei, Leighton .Wigg1ns. / You get the local 5rIiiIR'DAY, JANUARY zd, Paid+up`Capitl, $10,000,000 LAI1fiD;00`Gnbr-10llnnhxerpv Rest`, - - 0-~ 5,000;000 08- IRE!-AND. 7 0 Total Assets, -. [1 13,000,000 throughout `canaaa, -and in the United -States and England `run. was vn vuv V! H "i=Hom-: a2. State Lines. transit: through town and . ....A D..-:..I n-_n-_- v, Lu gun:-an 1 cu Ulla. Lu` the world. Work of :1, `Splint. I It w `throng liitely 1' -.-..Z... hL% VI 1.; has ch ber. CV To Prevent Fires About the_ Barn. scsscd this \ knuwx young of all gan-t Of (`)1 house. be hi. 3?!-!-_~--- wh_is7t Int 11: H L` _ mm 1 'rokomd[`f AEggsV for Breeding. ROUND THE FARM A GENERAL. BAKKING BUSINESS 'rRANsAc'rEn tNG` RY M.'.AIL.-DeVp6sivtsA may be made or withdrawn mail. Out-qf-townaccounts zjec_ei_ve evgry attention BARRIEBRANCH { # ~HJ",GRA%SET'l`.% 1;`ARMERS'. BALNKING 5 W500 5,000,000 :S`t;gar Cand'y.-A-One cup of sugar} `one tablespoouful 'of vinegar, `small pinch of butter and nough water"t`o cov_er sugar. Stir until sugar .is_dis-' Vsolxfed, `and cook until` candy jis,b::it-' `tleijini water. % POur_ into .~_jbut5ercd 'dis}i es"`a-nd 3 11; * ' 4 ...- atac u_1_a walnut. _1_Jo not stir. When done it will `break 111 Cold wat- er. Pull and put on marble to cool. Nut Candy.--Two cups of brown sugar, one cupof-cream, one table: spoonful of butter, cook until done, stirring con'tan_t1y. Add- cup, of nuts (any kind or kinds),- stir briskly until` cimbdy sugars, and` pour out on marble.` isa.._. -. -- Molasses Candy.-"Two "ctipsv of -molasses, piece of butter the size of a walnut, half a ateaspoonful of vine- gar. Test by pout-ing:into a cup of cold "water. Just before removing candy from stove, avor with" vanilla, pour out on marble slab,.and`pu1l. - ,1 an . -- ..-__ I .---- Cream% Candy.- -Three cups of sug-. ar, one cup of water, one-half tea- spoonful of vanilla, piece of butter; the `size of 21' Walnut. Do stir. When dnma H mill I-.....`..I.':.. .~-1.I o+`++ I .Coc_oanut Candy. Two cups of sugag, one cup of water; When (`one stir__m agrated copoanut. ' _ I $+o+++io; \ \ L . ...- gnu u; a. wxuu`-swept street; 01' perhaps they are taken to the bush and kept standing whilea load or wood is ,A cut . The change is too great, and colds , and disorders are likely to occur._ V V Animals which are compelled to breath impure air absorb into their systems such an amount of poison that the digestion and general health is sure to be impaired. . The neglect to provide proper ven- tilation generally arises from a too great desire to keep -the stables| warm. When we come -to think of it, there is not any great need to maintain a high temperature in the stable if the animals are carefully protected from draughts. In fact, some classes of live stock thrive much. better in .a temperature not, too high. This is notably the case| with sheep,` but horescome `in as _a good second. Just imagine the folly of keeping a team locked up tightly one day in a close,` warm stable and taking them out the next to\to_wn, .leaving them standing, half anhour ;or more at a time, tied to a post at the side of a wind`-swept street; 0 ocrhans. their sum: flrnn H. 4.1-- L--_I- s: o,ooo,ooo` .-n....4.- ` R nnn. _ The need of ventilation in our buildings, says the North-West Farmer, is one that does not receive half as much attention in this count- ry as its importance deserves. It has been estimated that a horse of aver- age size eliminates about 8,000 or 9,- 000 pints of carbon dioxide in a day, and as the air is not awholesome when it contains more thanone per cent. of] lthis gas, it can be `readily seen that la liberal supply of fresh air is need- ied. in stables as well as in human 4 dwellings. I To obviate this, the best way is to get busy with -a feed cutter. The man who mixes one bushel of hay with eve.ry' peck of meal will have no grounds for complaint when he g- ures up his feedbill-and gains made. Even at all times, after months of grain feeding, cattle thrive best on a ration" where bulk and lightness are insured by addin-g nely cut hay or roots. This, and this only, insures perfect rumination, and, with cattle In least, no rumination, no gains. Winter Stabling. There are two extremes to avoid in the protection of animals during the winter. Quite frequently too warm and too close stabling 13 pro- vided, and the animals almost suito- cate by lack of ventilation or they are treated to such a measure of fresh air and exposure that they will be- `come long haired, hard feeders, and `part of' the prots will disappear. Again, cattle moved from a grass to a grain ration do- not at once malce satisfactory gains, until the stomach has contracted, the paunch disappeared, the lines straightened, and the digestive tract adjusted it- self to a less bulky and richer,- more nutritious ration." Prior to this,_ cat- tle accustomed to a daily ve.bush- els ll_ of grass will eat to their own discomfort; .Even though carefully fed and no losses are experienced, yet gains are unsatisfactory or lack- ing. . M ~ ooooo6oo9oooooooooooA Selected Recipes TnsfrAnL1_su"En1 1,301 `. M anager __ W ---3-- our. annual IA: 96659 sheckard says that uckers. `whole skill seemlto lie in perfect control. .3 L Eustace Miles," the British ex- ; f plongwmachallenge Jay Gouidot ` v-- -on-u u-vw V A western rltlc says that old heads are needed on big league teams. Cy 1 Young says that the game is now too fast for an old player. You can play J either tip. -V , Jun'myshecka1-d says ot gthe 0119 ;-'Of fe ipitchers lnithe I for them ` hnnlpqnul `--A 5].-` ' ' '1-u'..`.n.-~_-_ -.- `It no exaggefauon say that Jesse Lewlsohn. the famous race track plunger; lost over $1,000,000 in the bet- ting this within the last ve yearn. A Irv:-nan`--- L_.IL.I- -__._ no ,. cg . - Luthe} ? 'V.Vl;;1;r_l;>_1-., Eingchnmplon grocery- man of Kansas City and pitcher for the New York Giants. started his base- ball-career `gas a ato;:hef.. , John E; Madden has nomlgatedslx ` yearlings ol'- his own breeding tor the Grand Prjx de Paris of 1909. ' ` --;.|_-._ on I Locust - Trees. Farmers who are planting locust trees declare that there is no more protable way of utilizing cheap land. They figure in this way: `Two thousand four hundred trees canbe planted to an acre. In eight years these [trees will be large enough to `cut for fence posts. and each tree-will_y1eld two posts. At retail these dgosts will be worth 25.cents `each, or " cents a free. That means at retail.a crop worth $1.200. per acre at the end of eight years. or an average of $150 an acre a year.--Kansas City Journal. 1 I Says Irish Potatoes Are injurious. ! The Irish potato will breed malaria I j in one's system and will injure diges- ; tion to a serious extent," said Charles 3 T. Wilburn of Pittsburg. For years I suffered from attacks of malaria, in- digestion and liver complaint. I vis- ited some of the best physicians. in this country. They told me `many things. Finally one suggested that I stop eating Irish potatoes in any form. Before then I had always eaten them. for they were my favorite vegetable. .I stopped partaking of them, -however, S and in a little while I was getting bet- ' ter. In six months I was almost well. and today I am as healthy as anybody. I never eat Irish potatoes any more` and think them most injurious.- Nashville Tennessean. ' - ` ___v - - -v `.1. nnnaio VI Inlulibyo 1 ;," explained the woman further: :I learned in Pans to cross myaetti whenza funeral procession pamed. Ev- \ erybotiy does it there. I don t know. why unless It is because they haven't ans-r nnlIn&..-. 9! 115.... 1r._.I.. 1-5.... ` Imported From Paris. The woman was calling on her friend, who lives in East" Thirty-fourth street. It was a ground oor at. Every llt- 3 tle while she would raise her right` hand and cross herself. It was onl Sunday afternoon. ' What in the world are you doing that for?" asked her friend after she , had done it about seven times. I _..._ -v-v cw -o-cvu-v wvvvnn vannncwu 4 Funeral processionsff explained her friend, going down the street. _ It A .._ __--_ _ t\_Ln, , - 1 6xTa'bh51_iL7"a}'Eea her friend. I never knew that." % 1Asv_ u ` , Bundles: Regiments. Military music in the French army is getting into a` very low condition. The two years service system hit the regimental bands very hardin taking away from them one-half of their % strength every year. Eicient band-r masters. however, and hard work I might have counteracted this. but nowty the supply of bandmasters is threaten- ed. These were provided by means or annual competitions among army ; bandsmen for positions of master and I assistant master, but- for two years 4 now these examinations have not been held. and already there are more than fty regiments which, whatever they- may have in "the way of a band, have , certainly no recognized bandmaster. ` 3 The annual competitions used. it ap- i pears. to be conducted by the Conserva- I `toire, which since 1905 has made one plea or another for neglecting them.- London Globe. s Panca ke s .f'roin Porridge.---One and I one-half cups. of cold porridge, one. and one-hal]f cup's of. sour milk, our to make an ordinary pancake batter, one teaspoon soda. Or make with two cups sweet milk, omit the soda, and add two teaspoons baking pow- der to the our. - 3%-`milk; :;`otit-Tialf tablesprdonfui ` of but- L-ter, ,_ Stir constantly. add tbutter af-t `t*e`rA mixtufe hasfboiled- When done, bet until thick, and pour into but- ]ter`ed_ dishes. . ` `-S'teamed' Brown "Bread."--One cup white our, '2 of graham our, 2 of In'dianf mea l, I teaspoonful soda,'one cup molasses, 3.`/5 cups of-milk, salt. Beat all. together, steam or, boil 4 hours, leave in` the oven 15 minutes to crisp after being turned out. Eat fwarm. ' ' ` I Sour-cream Cake.-Sift- together` two cups flour, half teaspoo'r'i" soda, half. teaspoon salt, half teaspoon mace (nutmeg -or other spice may be used), and one cup sugar. Beat one egg. Add one cup thick sour cream, and stir into the `dry mixture. Add half a cup Sultana raisins` or currants, and beat well. Bake in ;small tins about twenty-ve minutes. , Bucklwheat_.Mu_`1ns.a--Sift togetherl [three times `one 'cup each of wheat, our andbuckwheat our, one-quart er cupv sugar, * four level teaspoons '-baking p0Wde_f, -and'half` a teaspoon salt. -Beat'o1ie`~egg.v Add to it near- ly a cup o,f-tsweet milk, and stir into the dry ing'red.ie`n.ts vxiith threeta-ble-i spoons me1te`d`butter. Bake 25 min- I utes inuhot butteredA mufn tins. ADVANCE PORTlNG Motss. ' I % .% facility: Lfdiv th ' b j Vnjverybusixiess. Sales Notes `cash`d- or ~ T _ for_Tco1lection ' u-nu nauvvuyvxv, 'u.I.l\IU1' 1.013115... I`. As it will be many yeags before small, scattered sections of an army can. carry` their own _ tele-x graphy `appuatn s,` a reason for litn-u niifhnpinn . TII III r gguuua r\UUll33(l. . For some reason as yet unexplain- ed the British War Department; yea abolished its.:~carrier,pigeons.- '- ` _ Many of the` birds were presented. by patriotic pigeon =o wi1ere,A and un- der` the direction,.of Capt. T terestfng. and v_ a.lua.ble= experiments have been carried on`.'~ The birds have now been sold _8i1d lofts det1'Oyed.` In Germany, and the `num-` ber of pigeonsj kept for `Put-` poses was never` ~greater~5;than_enow;- and the Engl-ish an ' at P]. ' and` Devong{>rt.. ] .t `V `An. it ~: ' The taking of the trarnwnys over I the bridges did more to` revolutionize the mind of the industrial people than twenty-five years of previous housing agitation. The development of that system must go on, until London owned 1,000 miles of tramways, and had a maximum universal fare of one penny, with halfpenny stages, and longer loan periods for"; borrow- ing purposes. Any Government or Congress that `put anything in the way of the London transit system was making a blow at the leisures, pleas- ures, and treasures, for which a sub- sequent generation would never for- give them. He hoped the West End of London would cease carping at the tramways, and lose their prejudice against that valuable adjunct to hous- ing. At the present moment they in the West End were suffering icted, costly, and deadly` retribution for the foolish way in which they had opposed the passage of the tramways over the bridges. ` Mr. Burns Ideal City.` He would like a city with the gaiety of Paris, the alignment of Ger- many, the comfort of England, the picturesqueness of Venice, the clean- liness of Amsterdam, and the cli- mate of Italy. He was pleased to see the excitement of town `life was be- mg that the day was `coming when peo- ple would prefer'30s'. .a week and life in the free country "air to 35s. a week for `a. town ,lif_e`.; pressing and mpafoi-tunate.l r=`-matter. That was one of. the` They had a tendencyI.tb;aucho1; men "to town life," with b;o.d1. c6ndit'iq'n`s.,Ke was inspired'- to -try his :- prer`1`til,1iiz`ild:~i . , t." he expr.essedthe* hope _'t:I,1"ax"a"4`-. -.t`HE- _'-:-\ir'n- on a _.Ho`nsing~u Bill_ `for next:_:y dividuali: movement*.;wou'ld' em_ '1-`hey -must stimulate. the-r ual`, ii1`jfs'e_- the. 7 .. .. ( /*'h. l. - r ~ 5.1,.- self-in-' revealed in its true i_ light, and y _'1*he"i immobiiityxfoi .' the unski1led;l;,borer was. a;`!1'108t,: d-3-~ , , r.e"aaons'._,3or""his- antipathy ` to relief works; .i,n ` er-i vans... . Fashions In Houses. London was more than suiciently supplied with lodging-houses for young men, the vast proportion of whom ought to be married, and he was glad to note that that class was diminishing. Out of 28,000 male beds provided only 21,000 were occupied last February. In England and Wales 1 there were now 500,000 empty houses, London having 50,000. That was due to the improved taste of the people which housing reformers had develop- ed. Modern suburbia would no longer live in basement houses. Thirteen thousand families left the inner ring for the outer ring of London per an- num. The greatest boon to London had been the City Council, with its parks, its housing, and, above all, its A cheap, popular, rapid tramway sys- fawn ` A rlalnanta `L V CK` L11 \J\}V' tages, was 5; in London it was 8; in New York, where they lived in tene- ments, 20; in Paris, where they lived in ats, 26; in Berlin, where they liv- \ed in barrack dwellings, there were Battersea, with one- LA\L,' vv Lnutka v..aI. 46 per house, tenth of the population of Berlin, ihad more houses than that German [city. In New York there were 350,- (000 dark rooms, and 2,300,000 persons lived in 82,000 tenement houses. It was possible with larger dwellings to have a better sanitary effect than in a small cottage, where there .was a lack of discipline, cleanliness, so- briety and no sense of order. The more people were multiplied on a [given area, the more did they in. crease phthisis, tuberculosis, personal uncleanliness, immorality, and were deprived of the amenities and com- ir;_rts which only a good home could o ter. I delegates who are attending the In- i Right Hon. John Burns, president of the Local Government Board, gave a number of very interesting facts. concerning the people s home life, so far as` it concerned the houses in which they lived, to the four hundred ternational Housing Congress, at the Caxton Hall, London. . . The Minister said :- ' Housing Statistics. Notwithstanding what the pessi- mists and J eremialis might say, Lon- don was making progress, and it had done more in that direction during the last decade than in the previous century.-. It was not true of London to-day, as Charles Dickens said of London sixty` years ago, that `the very crutches on which the ruins are propped are decaying, or that the poor of London lived in `brick boxes with slate lids. But at the present , time in London, 1 in 7 of the popula- 1 tion lived at the rate of two to a room. In Manchester, it was 1 to 6, Edinburgh, 1 in 3, and G1asgowl in 2. He could" not understand how so in- telligent a race as his countrymen, who, whilst leading in all the primal virtues _ and abor~7gin.al qualities, should be content with that condition of things. The population, per house, in England, where they lived in cot- wnnna Inna K: in 1.I\ -:4 Quinn 0. . Hum: LIFE IN mum FACTS LAID BEFORE THE INIER. NATIONAL HOUSING CONGRESS. ` Right Hon. John} Burns Gixn/es Sta- tistics--London Making Progrv-ess-- Advocates Larger DwelIings---l.-n- proved Public Taste -- Suggests `Ideal Gity-Gainty, Comfo and ,u up Lcuavu AUI DI ".-%""'?"`4`i`+ i Fires in barns during the winter A when lanterns will be carried about may be prevented by a little at_ten- tion to these` suggestions on the part of the Nor -West Farmer: Smoking aboutthe buildings should be strictly prohibited. A great deal -of losshas been occasioned by a neg- lect of this precaution, and the man who smokes can easily nd less dan- gerous spots to.indulge in his habit. Lanterns should be lled and trim- med in the houseior some outbuild- ing apart from the barn, and this duty should preferably be attended to during the daytime. In most fam- ilies the most convenient plan would be to keep the lanterns in the wood- shed and have them lled at the same rtime as the family lamps. Do not relight _extinguished lanterns _in plac- es where there is anything combust- ible. The owner of the buildings may always be careful enough to prevent / "trouble, but he must be exceedingly careful of his example, also. . Clover for Egg Producing. Clover has just the material in it, says Successful Farming, to form egg shell, and is an essential part of every ration for chickens. .There are nearly 30 lbs. of lime in each 1,000 lbs, of clover. Hens fed daily with clover will prove better egg-layers than those without. To induce them `to eat heavily it is sometimes desir- able to prepare in various ways. Cook and chop it up, cook and mix with .meal or other food. Cut up into .short lengths and mixed with the nnash, and fed only as fast as the chickens will clean it up, is the most economical way. `Of all green foods that can be raised on the farm for poultry clover is not only the best, but probably the cheapest- ` Value of a, Feed Cutter. i I I Cleanlinesis. Army P`igopng `AboIsshd;,% Ir. vI"I-`I.--Jean i'Iic` Doral Chappel, Wilfred.` Degevar, ~Harr '_ p[Chappel,' Jessie. Kirkup,_~Cassie Camy-W "1 Sr. IV.-`-,Li1i n McNeil,` Evelyn] 1i (_Ia.rson.-_ . `L V` ' Jr. IV.-Thomas Wallwin. 2 Sr. I_II.-`-Leolla .McDonaId, ,How- fard Carson; .Victor Brett `Lizzie `;Ca__ meron. . ` , ,,,Sr.. I1.;..;,yd;a -Dobson, Hazel Dob`-_ ` - LA`r`1n_/ye` 4' ]_J_o 13son? I-H Fauny) `Stone, 1 -.... .......n,...u5 UL uiuuuaucu Cattle 15 so prevalent. an old American cattle feeder, writing in the Live Stock World, gives some valuable sugges- tions on the feeding of live stock. In transferring cattle from a grass to a grain ration, says he, it is well to bear in mind the dierence be- tween a grass and a grain stomach. An animal moved from a grain to a grass ration does not thrive at once not till its stomach and digestive tract has stretched_ `to a size and capacity where it can carry enough to_-support the system and to make gains possible. ` ' 9 '3' - . + `I-'!'I-i!-I-4 -I"!-!-'1-'l'!-*!!-9!"!-'1-'3'-3'-I-4*-- "~i-'-'5`-~`!+`"'!-'!'"'--1-'-`P! !-~~--'--2~!~ i , I - - T T A delicious drink and a sustaining food. Fragrant, nutritious and economical. This excellent Cocoa maintains the system in robust health, and enables it to. resist winter's extreme cold. L T T T "T 1"` Sold fay Grocersand Storekeeper: " e in L-lbgeand ..}-lb Tins. `School report -vuv ~:o-:-s-5-z-:~~-+-a-+~:-+-:~+4---z-:-+4-+~:-o:-1-++ 5:-M--2--5--a---e--9.:--2-+-4:3:-_~:4--:~.:~~:~.;T:LTZ have allthe appliances for the care of funeral: in tru surrounding country .: Hearses and an terments inall cemeteries. or shipment: to all parts of undertaken promptly and properly cared for. P|-{ON E At this season of the year when the` marketing of unnishegi cattle is sn nrnuqlnnf an l'\`f` A..._.; --.,

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