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The Clinton New Era, 1912-06-06, Page 6Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTOFe1A o omportosoossioossommosoolotogoomoimmosowilimeil. arm era ekerderi THE SOY BEAN: Greatest Crop Ever Introduced," Says Enthusiastic Tennessee Farmer. Describing his success with soy beans for enriching the land and producing abundant nutritious feed, a Tennessee farmer writes thus to the Southern Field: "I grow the Mammoth Yellow varie- tY, planting in rows thirty-six inches apart and cultivating about the same as torn. I cut with a mower when ripe and allow them to lie on the ground for a couple of days, After be- ing in shock for ten days they are hau ed to the shed and thrashed. We con- Thoto by Long. island agricultural exper meat station, SOY StagS, eider the beau strave after the beans are thrashed as fully equal to timothy or redtop for a feed for cattle. "For late summer pasture 1 sow with a wheat drill about one and a half bushels to the acre. I am now feeding beef cattle and hogs on soy beaus, and. my dairy animals are producing niore milk than ever before on a bean ration. •Of course other feeds are mixed with the bean, as soys are rather rich when fed alone. "The Mammoth Yellow grows here from three to five -feet high, according to cultivation, and yields thirty bushels of seed per acre, which will bring around $3 to $3.50 per bushel. There fa no finer imerover of the soil than the soy bean. I have tried many other legumes, but none has given Buell uni- formly bigh quality of bay and reture- ed such large amounts of nitnegen to the soil. I consider the soy bean the greatest crop ever introduced pito this part of the country beta as a money erop and as a soil improver." About $100,000 worth of day bean oil ;was shipped in 1910 from Manchuria to the United States against almost none the year before. From Hull, England, sbipments in 1910 of soy bean oil to the United States amounted to -$140,000. This was crushed frone the Manchurian beans. Considerable ship- raents otesoy bean oil were also made an 1910 from Kobe, Japan, to the Units ed States. TWO SIDES OF ONE PROBLEM. It is not enough to raise crops and live stock. They must be marketed. When yOu come to doing this how much easier it is to sell if these crops or stock are of high quality and how much better prices are realized. It really casts but Little more to raise good stuff than it does" to raise peer,- and good stuff sells Itself. 00 • 000000000 Uncle SEIM Imports Potatoes. , It would seem Unit a great country elite the 'Malted States might be able to raise enough potatoes for its own else, but in 1910 our crop amounted to 888,811,000 bushels, auci we imported 1,632,081 bushed. Our crop of 1911 was only 73.8 per cent of tee crop of 2910, while the British isles have had a. very short crop, though Germany has had an abundence. • Condemned Cattle. More than 50,000,000 animals were Inspected in the last fiscal year by the United States bureau of animal in- dustry, and more than 1,000,000 car- casses or parts thereof were condemn - as unfit for food, according to the annual report of Dr. A. D. Melvin, head of the bureau. Tuberculosis was the cause of most of the condemna- tions. Ull Weekly Short Story • ••••0••••••••••••••••••••••06•••••oireses•3•4••••••••• F -- A HUSTLING TIME By M.. QUAD Copyright, 1911, by Associated Lit- erary Press. Where Cranberries Come ,From. The cranberry is a special crop that has been grown on 0 commercial scale • largely in three sections of the coun- try -tee Cape Cod district in Massa- • chusetts, the Neweeersey district and central Wisconsin. Small marshes in • ether sections have been reclaimed, but these three districts produce the major part of the commercial crop. .001i0440000000000o00o0 - THE WISE FARMER. _There was a man In our town, .And he was wondrous,. wise. Re knew that 11 he wanted, crops ,He'd have to fertilize, ' 004 0 0 0 0 €4,4*144.4i4t.vos:tc4c4ollto Five men sat around a supper. table ID a farmer's kiteben after a hard work in the cornfield. There was Motes Bright, the tether, fifty-five years old and a widower; there was Abraham, aged thirty; there was Leviticus, aged twenty- seven; there was Philetus, aged twen- ty-five; there was Aaron, agedteventy- two. Not a son had left home yet. "Abraham," said the father ass the. meal was finished, "there's a widder woman named Parsons bought the Taelor place. She brought with her a span of hosses, four cows, sixty sheep, eight hogs and fifty hens, ‘.11e's a hustler. She can mow and plow add chop wood." "What of it?" asked Abraharo. "You wash up, grease your boots and eair and go down and ask her to mar- ry you. You are thirty years old, and it's time you wermmarried." 'Abraham got ready and departed. Moses Bright was boss around- that house. The young man arrived as the widow was straining the last pail of milk. 'He. sat down on the doorsteps with his back toward her and said never a word. He was in greater fear than as if a bull had been chasing him across the meadow. The widow took notice of him at once and then ignored him for a long ten minutes. Then she stopped singing to say to him: "'Get out!" Those were blessed words to .bra. ham. He got. IFefairly flew for the first forty rods. When he reached home he found his father sitting in the door, pipe in mouth, and sat down on the nearby wash bench. His broth- ers had gone to bed. It was five min- utes before the father took the pipe from bis mouth to query: "What'd she say" " `Get out!'" - That was all. There was more corn planting next day, but half an laour be- fore quitting time the father said to Leviticus, who was working next to "Abraham doe't know enough to crawl under a haystack when it's rain. • ing pitchforks. You go over there to. night and spark that widder," After supper Leviticus Went. It weal either suicide or go. He found the widow milking- the' last of her four COWS Sbe looked up as he entered the barnyard, but neither spoke. The young man stood with his back to the fence and chewed on a straw, and she hummed the air of a. hymn as she milk- ed. When she bad finished she rose up and asked; etssyselereelvee41..".: "Any more idiots in this neighbor- • Children Cry FOR FLETcHE,a's CASTORIA steoe "Yes--no---yee!" stammered the young man as he made for the highway and It was potato planting next day. At the supper table the father reached for a third slice of fried pork and said; "Philetue, ile up Ind grease up. Four cows, sixty sheep, eight hogs." Philetus turned pale and lost his ap- petite, but he obeyed. fle found the widow uprooting burdocks in the Praia yard, and before he could say anything she asked: "Ain't -there another kid narned Aaroe?" y .41 "Then run home and send him along and I'll start au infant asylum with him:" Aaron went and came back to shake his head and hear hie father call him a dinged idiot, Thet night the four sons entered into a conspiracy, and it was at the breakfast table that Abra- ham said: "Father, the Widder Parsons is a hus- tling wielder woman; Two hosses, four cows, sixty sheep, eight hogs and fifty hens." "Waal, what of it?" was asked. "It's yoUr turn to go sparking." "Boy, don't gimme any sass:" "No use to bluff, father. You either go sparking or we quit the farm." The old mtm was given the day to consider the matter. Wimp supper Was overand without a word to any one he slicked up a bit and tOOk the highway. The widow sat on her doorsteps, smok- ing her pipe. She bowed and made room beside het -.Not a werd was said for a long minute: Then Aloses clear: ed his throat and remarked!" "Them four dough' headedsons of mine seem to think I'd better get mar - /*lee ag'in. And being as you appear to be alone` in the world and being I think I'd be happier" - "Oh, T don't know," interrupted the widow, drawing away a bit. "I'm alone in the world, but I seem to be having a purty good time." 'But them fool sons o' Miner' "Yes, I know. It's dreadful to have a lot- oeldlots around. You don't gay It' s love at first sight, do you?" "N -o -o, not skassly, but I'm a hus- tling aan, and you are a hustling wo- man, and -and"- • "And you think we ougbt to bustle In this case?" "That's about it." "Then you come along three days from now, after I finish planting my taters." And when the father got home and found his tour sons *waiting and grin- ning he said; • "Two bosses, four cows, sixty sheep, eight hogs" - "But what of the wieder?" was ask- ed. "She's mine, and as she don't like children every last one of you can pree pare to hustle out o' this and take care SF,c1111ITY. Centtirte, Carter's Little Lliba Pills% Must Bear Signature id See Par. -Simile Wrapper Below. retry emelt end as eau' t le Wu) es migazi 0.'1""---, F a HEAIIIICH11. eARTER8 FON HIZZINLSS. iTnE RR SILICIIISNES1 IvER lFTiUVL, CONSTIPATION PI Lk% FOR FOR SALLOW saui. FOS THE COMPLEXION al% Pni:erTIV=t;;Z:Zr:‘, CIURE SICK His Heroic Story of the Capture and Release of Napoleon. In the first half of the • ninCteenth century there lived at Szegszard, in FIungary, a veteran of the war of in- dependence waged by Hungary against Napoleon in 1800. His name was John Huy. He was a carPenter, doctor and artist all rolled into one, but above all .he was an admirable teller of stories. -Ills stories of the war in particular had won him an im- mense reputation, and he was fre- quently invited to wedding feasts and vintage jollities to amuse the com- pany. ' As soon as the wine got into his head he would recite his glorious -ex- ploits as a hussar. True', he had never served in a cavalry regiment and had never even been astride a • horse, but the hussars were the ad- miration of Europe, so John Hary was a inisar. Provincial nobles, pea- sants in their great cloaks, all would Bit listening to his tales in the inn cf Szegszard, smoking their pipes, open- ing wide their eyes or ensiling under • their mighty mustaches. One Of the most faithful 'listeners. was a poet- named Jean Garay; and ha one day took it into, his head to note dowel and. put into verse one of John Hary's most' notable exploits. This poem has become a classic in Hungary; the childeen in the schools learn it by heart and the heroism of as an every moutn. This is the story: "At one Wile. I cannot exactly say where, Napoleon nine against us with 200,000 soldiers. We elegant and beautiful hussars numbered only 200 all told, but those 200 were flames of lire. At their head I galloped against Napoleon's army. The Frenchmen fell like grass. The sun stood still to observe the marvelous onslaught; 200,000 put to flight y' 200, w at. "The Frenchmen fled like chicory flowers scattered by the wind, pur- sued by the hussars, • and I, Hary, recognizing their commander by his golden stirrups, captured him at the edge of a wood. I seized him by the neck. 'Confess" you are Napoleon!' I shouted. 'It is only too true,' he replied, 'but spare 'ray life .and I will reward you handsomely.' "As I was taking my prisoner back to camp a beautiful carriage stopped in front. In it there sat a noble dame, whose dress was heavy with geld and diamonds. It was Marie Louise, and she shrieked out at seeing her hus- band a. prisoner and promised me that they would be under an eternal obligation to me if I released him. "'7 know what honor is, madam,' I replied. 'For a beautiful woman a real Hungarian is ready to g,o through anything, death itself. filant1.caperoy0r, you are free; give me lir ' He gave me his hand and presented me with two golden watches." Such is the poem which all little Hungarians religiously • learn while they am at school. -Paris Journal des 1/epats. • Memory, rear. Onr notion of a wonderful memory Is that possessed by a' man who can tell how many days there are in a given month without going through the ,"thirty slays hath SePtembeet thing. Suffered With Nerve Trouble oints ehamberlin In recent yeansMi, Edson ,Toseph, Chamberlin, ,o,1' Winnipeg, 111e new nres1d e nit of the Grand,Trunk, has one of 1.t1ce best known ,railA. ay, men tin - Canada.' In easteam ..lanada lie wan host known qua eon, eetIOn With 1110 0:1 an a da A tl sotir Hallway, built from Parry Sound to Lake Cliamplarn 'through the in- fluence of Booth interests, and told: a f &NV yea r,F, ago to the Grand Trunk When Mr. J. le. Booth , the multi- rnWiona ire lumberman; decided to have this Tdacl built, with the rare shrewdness ancl business skill Inc? halalwayS eh aet er ized! him, says the 'Montreal Star, be picked out Alr, Chamberlin to ,auPerintend the eon struetton lof the road' and TO manage it. Many eminent rail- road men 1)4 dieted that!' the new :road-, with:tent any feedeee to speak of ,reterremg foe muele of Ile resin/leo throne:1s the unsure -eyed hush, and with lin well clinposed ecinnections at eitinar end, was, lore- do ow eff. tcfeller es ' But Mr. Chan-lin:slim •Cooled them Ho secured( the consteuction of the road at a eoet much below he es-, tens/tee oI rival systems, arranged exceptionally isatisfactoxy con - • For. Two Tears WAS IMPOSSIBLE FOR HIM TO MR. F.,. J. .HAMBERLIN, nectione some by friendly arrange- ment, otb.ere by process °flaw ; and -organized an operating Mai( which conducted the business of the.road ith 'such !success that when th21 Canada Atlantic was sold as a run- ning concern to the Grand 'bunk( Mr. Booth and his colleagues monk a handsome Ming out of the trans-. nation, Incidentally Mr. Booth got the connection he wanted with his 1. ant inland lumber limits but that is a cliff erect ory. Alt the time tne Canada AtIlantlic was transferred to (the ,Grguid Trunk, Mr Hays tried 'to rtstain Mr. Chamberlens services ECM: the !Company, but 'there was no vacant elite° worth whilegeast then, and Mr. Chtunberlaii went to 1VIexaco to supervise {some extensive railway contracts he Secuured in that coun- try For four years 1-1,.1 tvas pensi- dent of the Morelia and Tacambara Railway in !the Southern Republic. Mr. 'Jaya had always been impress- ed with the honorable and busi- nens-like way in which Mr. Cham,- iierlin had handed .overithe Canada Atlantic and when the coustruc- Jinn .oethe Grand Trunk Pacific placed a first-class position at his di,sposal, he selected Mr. Chamber- lin tto fill it. Mr. Chas W Wood, 34 Torrance Street, Montreal, Que., write;s:--"Por two years I suffered with nerve trouble, and it wag impossible for me to sleep. ' It did not matter what time I went to bed, in the morning I was even worse than the night before. I consulted a doctor, and he geve me a tonic to take a half hoar before going In bed. It was all right for a time, but the old trouble leturned wiTogreater force • than before. " "One of the boys, who works with me, gave me half a box of Mdburn s Heart and Nerve Pills. I took them atid I got such satisfaction that I got another box, • and before I finished it I could enjoy sleep from 10 p.m. until 6 a.m., and now feel good." , The price of Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pillseis 50 emits per box, or 3 boxes for $1.25. • they are for - talet at all • dealers, or will be mailed direct on receipt of price by The 'I'. Milburn Co,, Limited, Te_tonto, Ont. _ road business, ancl at lite time he eame to Canada' he 'held 'the posi- iti,on of ,superintendent of ,i,the Og- teonisb tura. ancl,Lake 'Champlain Rail .i.vey and tIaCentral Vermont Line .0.l'etuners :running 'not:we:tin - 116'11,Sb-in:a' and Chlcago, uvijAy SelibOL. Lesson X.—Second Quarter, For June 9, 1912. THE INTERNATIONAL SERIES. Text Of tho Lesson, Luke vi, 39-49. ' Memory Verses 47.49 --Golden Text, Jos, i, 22 -Commentary Prepared by Rev. D. M. Stearns. Railwayman generally !consider that ono of the !strongest points'. about Mr. !Chamberlin ishis re- markable faculty for picking out and training good man to iido his work. The ' :efficiency throughout ten staff of the old .Catinfia 'antic was proverbial, and the oof- that ihe character seas de- served was found in the fact that all the leading men of Mr. Cliagn.- berlain'5 old staff were iramedinte- ly after the purchase of the C.A.R, aPpolleted tO very important offices in the Grand Trunk. ' • Aceoecling to all accounts, Mr. Chamberlain's eunncing has not de- serted him, fox the staff he has or- ganized Lost the Grand 'Trunk Paci- fic wesit of Winnipeg, is said to be exceptionally effective. Before as- suming !the t`position of !general manager' 'of fthe Canadian All ratio Railway m1886, • Mr. Chambc slain had been filleen years in the rail - This seems to be our last study for the present from the sermons on the mount and on the plain and remind us of one of our Lord's.sayings on the night of His betrayal, "If ye know these things, haPPY are ye if ye do them" (John xiii, 17). See also Ylis words in Luke vill, 21, "My mother and my brethren are these which hear the word of God and 60 11." In verse 46 of our lesson His words, "Why call ye me Lord, Lord, and do not the things which I say?". are very similar to Matt. vil, 21, "Not every one that saith unto me, Lord, Lord, shall enter into the kingdom of heaven, but he that doeth the will of my Father which is ID heaven?' There is no conflict be- tween all similar sayings such words as these: "Being justified freely by His grace." "To Mm that worketh not, but -believetia on Elm that justi- fieth the ungodly, his faith is counted for rightdbusneSs," "By grace are ye saved through faith, v "" not of works." "Not by works of rIghteouS- ness which we have done" (Rom. /11, 24; iv, 5; TAph. 11, 8, 9; Tit. 111, 5). The former teats refer to the life and works of saved people as an evidence before men of their salvation by the finished work of Christ, with an awful warning that no mere "say so" on our part will suffice. There will be many who profess to be the Lord's, but who are not sincere, not born from above, to whom He will say in that day, "I never knew you; depart from me ye that work iniquity" (Mattvii,28). Mem- bers of churches who are satisfied to be such and rest on the fact of their baptism in infancy or confirmation or standing in the church or the cones munity, but do not know the forgive- ness of gins, having never been re- deemed by the precious blood of Christ, and while in their place in church once a week are wholly in the world and live only for this present world, how tearful their future in Use outer darkness, where there shall be weep- ing and gnashing of teeth (Matt, 12; xill, 42, 50; exit, 18; xxiv, 51; uv, 80, 41). ' While this will be the doom of many, it is not for us to judge any one, but to see to it that we ourselves are truly the Lord's and live to help others to be truly Eis and to let Him work in us to will and to do of Ilis good pleas- ure (verses 37, 88; Phil. 11, 13). If we do not see clearly ourselves we cannot lead others,' and in Matt. vii, 15, we ere told of false prophets who out- wardly seem to be sheep, but inwardly are ravening wolves, not living to help the sheep, but to devour them. These are more fully described it/ Jer. /exile 14-26, as speaking a vision of their own heart, propeesying deceit, making people vain, encouraging evildoers and, telling them that no evil would come upon them, perverting the words or the living God. Such people wantece to kill Jeremiah because he spoke only what the Lord told him s(.er. xvi, 7-11). The word of the Lord is not acceptable to the world and especially to the worldly part of the church, which cannot endure sound doctrine, Our Lord so taught bis disciples and INAS C FIRMED DYSPEPTIC tiow Haus it a Pleasure to Heals evorawaxeseemeamemewernalsciam..-4=1111.16139E.A960.1133, -5555555.5=5... "ilmond r if Daddy las any 0-Pee-Chee Gam' itra his pocket?" That's what matntna and the little ones say every nig- twine Daddy gets home front work. And Daily never disappoints them. He • knowo that 0-Pee-Chee Gum is good for them, aed no matter how busy he -- is, he always finds -- time to get a paek- ag0eh Ih°e-rocree- gaing hoine. -Pee-Chee Gum Limitedi LONDON - CAlsTADA, 43. Dere is a case whiel, seemed as bad aucl as hopeless as yours con pbssibly he. This is the experience of Mr. I-1, 3. Brown, 384 Bathurst St., Toronto, in his 0001 words : ' have much pleasure in mentioning to you the benefits received from your Na-Dru-Co Dyspepsia Tablets and con cheerfully recommend therm I simply had confirmed dyspepsia with all ils wretched symptoms, and tried about all the advertised cures with no success. icion have in Na-Dru-Co Dyspepsia Tablets the best curative agent I could end. It 10 10)' such a pleasure to enjoy meals with their consequent nourish- ment that I want to mention this for the benefit of 'others.'' The fact that a lot of prescriptions or so-called "cures" have failed to help you 18 to sign that Yon have got to ga og suffering. Try Na-Dra-Co DysPepsia Tablets and see how cmickly Oita sterling remedy will give you relief ancl start your stomach working properly. If it doesn't help you, you get your money back. 500 a box at yciur 'druggist's. Compounded by the National Drug and Chemical Co. of Canada, Limited, Moutreal. 141 Kitrift.0$08;. Liverpool and Chicago Wheat Future Close Lower --Live Stock-- • Latest- quotations, CHICAGO, Juno 1.--A sellingstatn- Pede In wheat resulted to-dei y rom general, rams thrueut Kansas and" Nebraska where drought and heat held,: mare the crop sitiklation critical. Pricee broke as much as 3 6-8c and closed tmsottlecl, 1 7-8c. under last night' Corn suffered a sdtback o1 le and dn. ished with a net kiss of 3-4c to 2 3-8e,, The outcoMe for cots WaS LI decline of 8-4e to .1 1-80, .sand for provisions a standing range from yesterday's final' level tp le below. the Liverpool market closed to -day on. wheat %d to lada loWer than yesterdaY, and op corn %d to Mei higher. Toronto Grain Market migen wire His rattier aocan it (lohu ay. 18, 19; xvII, 14). The margin --oil lesson, verse 40, says that every dis- ciple shall be perfected as his Master, and Ileb. U, 10, says that tbe captain of our salvation was made perfect through sufferings. Re was alvvaye :desolately' perfect, but as our High Prieet, able to sympathize, He had to be tried (Fielt. 11, 17, 18) and to learn obedience by the things which He suf- fered (Heb. v, 8, 9). According to our Lord's heart search - 'lug teaching, when we thine: teat we see failings in Others we must re- member that, while there may be a trifle wrong with the other party, the probability is that the greatest trouble . is at our own end. We are not there- fore to judge one another any more, but endeavor not to be a stumbling block in another's way (leqm. xiv, 18). A.mbitious to be quiet and to mind one's own business (I Thess. iv, 11, R. V margin, and Weymouth) Mad so to abide as branches- that the vine may bear the desired fruit unhindered. The last clause of lesson, verse '45, says, "Of the abundance of the heart the mouth spetiketh." Compare Matt. xii, 84. "The mouth of fools poureth out foolishness; a wholesome tongue is a tree of life" (Prove XT, 2, 4). I have just received a letter concerning one who was filled with pity for two oth- ers behind wbom she walked whose conversation was • wholly concerning dress and the fashions. Soon she found tereele in the shopping district and"soniewhat fascinated by the very things she had condemned in others. Is she passed on the wordseheld her, "As her thinketh in bleheart, so Is he" (Prey. xxili, 7). Being ashamedeshe determined to ell berself with the words of Sesus that her thoughts might be controlled and that she might be more like Him. -She found it a splen- did remedy and hes since been greatly blessed In the use of Etis words thus laid up in her heart. This is a prac- tical illustration of Prov. =11, 18,-21, which .1, too, have for many years proeeden my life and teaching. It is possible to be a well of living water springing up for the benefit of others. Burdock Bloosi itters CURES ALL SKIN DISEASES. Any one troubled with any itching, burning, irritating skin disease can place full 'reliance on Burdock Blood Bitters to effect a Cure, no matter what other remedies have failed. It always builds up the health and strength on the foundation of pure, rich blood, and in consequence the cures it makes are of a permanent and lasting nature. • Mrs. Richard Coutine, White Head, Que., writes :---" I have been bothered with salt rheum on my hands for two years, and it itched so I did not know what to do. I tried three doctors and even went to Montreal to the hospital without getting any relief. I was adveeeci to try Burdock Blood Bitters, so I got three bottles, and before I had the slcond used I found a big change; now to -day I am cured." ' ' Burdock Blood Bitters is manufactured only by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. Both Wronged. ")2 au hays cleceiyed me,",, she com- plained. "Yeiu gave me to under- stand that you were rich." "Well, you deeeived me, too," he replied. 'You caused me to believe that, you weuld be brave and cheer- ful if it ever became necessary for us to get along on a small income." Law Points For the Farmer. The district court of Weld county, Colo., has decided that reservoirs le- , cated on government or railroad land cannot be held by mere entry and used without filings or condemnation. Reservoir owners will be obliged to buy their present sites outright er con- demn them , The time te read contracts far dear life is before you sign them. If. „toles took half tbe pains to keep out of trouble that they- do .to gee out after they are in knee deep they would ben lot happier, lecher •and wiser. It is'ea good plan never to sign papers that are brought along by strangers. • The degree of care required of rail- road conapanies toward their passen- geese according to a recent Arkansas deasion, 18 elle highest degree of care wIfich a prudent end cautious mao would exercise and which Is reason- ably -Consistent with their mode aeon, veyanee and the practical operation of their roads, and they are not bound to exercise the utmost diligence, hu- man skill and foresight consistent with the mode of conveyance' or liable for the seghteee omission In tills respect. -St.'Lonte, ete., R. storms kurifoy, Wheat, fall, bushel 31 05 to l057 Wheat, goose, bushel 0 00 Rye, bushel 0 01 Oats, bushel 0 00 Barleyl'fuostf h '.3SO 1 cod . , 00 6.;:a Peas, bushel , 1 25 Toronto Dairy Market. Buckwheat, bushel 0 63 0 e5 Putter; ereamerY, lb, rolls0 27 023 utter, creamery, eollese 027 Dutter, separator, dairy, lb. 0 75 Hotter, store kits 0 23 • Eggs, nowalald .- 0 24 Cheese, rICNV, 8 0 15 ' Cheese, old, lb 0 73 Honey,. extracted , 0 13 Winnipeg Grain Market. •••• • WINNIPEG, June 1.-Tliere was a gem, eral break in wheat prices this morning and no improvement in the demaed. The eeereee was to %c lower with a wealt undertone. Closing prices were 1/2c loweti for Sply and 1/4e lOwer fer .0etober. Cash demand was very quiet and of- ferings liberal. Coarse grains were also much weaker in sympathy with wheat. Oats NVOr0 Tee dOWEI and dun for straight, grades fax july delivery and 131c for ex- tra No. 1 reed. There were 250 cars in eight for inspection to -day. Cash grain: SiTheat-No. 1 northern, 51.0334; No, d $1.0031; NO. 3, 95350; No, 4, 550; No, 5, 71c; 100. 6, 0013; feed, 55c; No. 1 reJected seeds, 03530; No, 2, 9244e; No. 2, 684.0; No, 4, Ole; No, 4 tough, 70c; No. 6, 62e; No, 6, 510; feed, tough, 46e; NO. 2 red winter, 82e; No. 3, 04%c; No. 4, 85c; No. 5, 710, Oats -No. 2 Canadian western, 480; NO: 8, 40e; extra No. 1 feed, 4131c. Plax-No. 1 11.W., 51.96; Manitoba, $1.91; • rejected, $1.77. Inspections: Spring wheat -No. 1 north. ern, 6; Xo, 2, 39; No. 3,64; No. 4, 37; feed, 13; no grade, 27; rejected, 3; condemned, 1; No. 5, 21.1 No, 6, 22. Winter wheat -No. 3 Alberta red, 2; No. 4 red winter, 1. - Oats -NO. 2 Canadian western, 22; No: 8; 9; extra No. 1 feed, 18; No. 1 feed, 16; No. 2 feed, 4; rejected, 5; no grade, 1. Barley -No, 3, 6; feed, 1. Flaxseed -No. 1 N.W.,.M5ultoba, 1; No. 1. Manitoba,..,34-reiected, 14; condemned, a. Liverpool Provisions. LierSIBPOOL, June L -Beef, extra In. dia mess, 112s 86. Pork, prime 10550, western, 96s; hams, short cut, 11 to 16 lbs., 60s; bacon, Cumberland cut, 26 to SO lbs.? 56s; short ribs, 16 to 24 lbs.. 57s; cleat. bellies, 14 to 15 lbs„ 55s 611; long demi middles, light. 25 to 34 lbs., 565 511; long clear middles, heavy, 95 to 40 lbs., 665; short clear basks, 10 to 20 tbs., 61s; shoul- ders, square, 11. to 13 lbs., 40s; lard, primes, western, in tierces 52s; American refined; 5415 3d. Cheese, Canadian finest' white, new, 698 06; colored, 695 Gd; American finest white, 68s. Tallow, prime city, 320 90. Turpentine, spirits, 94s Gd. Rosin, common, 1.6s 11/20. Petroleum, reigned, 9146. Linseed ou, 47s ed, Montreal Grain and Produce. MONTREAL, June I. -Following were the prices here to -day: Corn --American, No. 2 yellow, 570. Oats -Canadian western, No. 2, 550 110 Eblia; do., No, 8, 5034e to 51c; extra Nip. 1 feed, 51340 to 52c, Barle5--Manitobet feed, 65e to 660; malt.. ing, 31.09 to 51.07. 131ackwheat--,Igo. 2, 74o to 750. Flout -Manitoba spring wheat patents, firsts, OM; seconds, 55.30; strong bakerse 00,10; winter patents, choice, 55.28 to 96.35; • straight rollers, 54.80; clo., bags, 52.10 to $2.40. nulled oats -Barrels, 55.35; bag, 90 lbs., 53.65. Milifeed-Bran, $25; shorts, 537; midi dlings, $29; mouillle, 00 to 534. Hay -No. 2, per ton, car lots, 520.50 00 $21.130i cheese -Finest westerns, 14e to 1434e; finest eaeterns, 13310 to 13510. Butter -Choicest creamery, 201/40 to 204011 seconds, 2052,9 to 20%c. Eggs -Fresh, 25c to 260, Potatoes -Per bag, car lots, 51.70 • td Dressed aogs-A.bettoir killed, • Bs tot 013.25. • Pork -Heavy Canada sliort out wesso barrels, 95 to 46 pieces, 526,• Canada short. out backs, barrels, 45 to 65 pieces. $25.50. • Lard -Compound tierces, 876 115., 103453, wood pails 20 lbs. net, Be; pure, tierces, 5 lbs., 141110; pure, wood pans, 25 lbsi net, Mc. Beef -Plate, barrels, 200 lbs., $171 clod tierceS SOO lbs $25 CATTLE MARKETS. East Buffalo Cattle Market, EAST BUFFALO, June 1.--00ttlee-Re- celets, 100 head; steady. Veals--Etecelpte, 400 head; SION'S, and 25c. lower, 54.50 to 510. liogs--Recelpts, 7200 head; fairly active and steady; heavy, 57.05 to 57.70; mixed,. 57.60 to 57.70; yorkers, 57 to 57.65; pigs, 50,7o to 57; roughs, 5060 to 56.70; stags, 15 to 58; dairies, e7.40 to sem Sheep and Lambs -Receipts, 4000 head; steady; dry fed, active; others, slow: latubte 54 to $8,75; a feWi OA. Chicago Live Stock. C1-1/101AGO, Juno I. -Cattle -Receipts 200; market, slow and steady; beeves, 55.90 to 59.35; Texas: Meows, 56 to 58; western, steers, $6.16 to $8.10; stockers and feeders, 54.25 to 3545; cows and heifers, $2.80 to 58; calves, 55.60 to 59. Hogs -Receipts, 6000; Market, So higher.i but ceased weak; light, 57,05 to 57,55; mix- ed, 57.15 to Mee heavy, Pas to SIM; rough, 57.10 to 5730; pigs, 55,15 to 57.10; bulk of sales, 55.40 to 57.55. sheep -Receipts, 1500; market, qinet and -weak''native, 94.50 to 56.40; western, 31 to $5,35; .yearlings, $5.50 to $7.75; lambs, native, 85 to PA; western, $5.75 to 59,25. Cheese Markets. WATBRTOWN, 20Y., Jung 1. -Cheese sales 10,000, at 180. ST. ±-1TACINTII55, Que., Seine 1.-Buei ter sold at tree; cheese, ssee. BELLEVILLE, June 2. -The boarding of cheese Weli the largest thus far for this season, namely 2285 boxes, all whitc4 Thirty...Pty.° factories were ,representeGi Nearly all .boartletl were sold on the board and the. prices paid were 13910, 1523-183 end 1.37/50. COWANSVILLB, Que., June 1. -At the regular meeting of the Bastern Town. ships' • Dairymen's Association held here "Dthalsok6agfe.terns o?obun.tteir8 ainthac t8b1rItoosx. ebos oafr deli% e s53e8, Nine hundred and eight packages' of but- ter Bolet at 500 and 90 packages at 28340. The cheese ail soicl at 1331o.• - LONDON, Jun.e1.-The offerings 012 the London Cheese Board to -day were ae? '&?.11°BtelianSVille' ,'Phlet_e°17061t,°°1810;atN3olft etteet, Se; ii5:116ers' 1.11110Na ; Blanchard W,.itssoourtail 9 large,ii4 flat; T:311=t ,165:(2)111 Branch 89; DunboYne 200, Ballymote 80, Where tenrec. 1211.brut.es..offered; 193 geld as aboee. Bidding from ieese to 13eie. WOCIef3 rti.0319h0d4110- ItenesthanerigivEn'iligorTth'estlalTeervh"Zolli; nervous esaitein, makes new Blood in old. Veins. Owes .2Verv ous Debiliti, Alental and Brain Worry, Des- pondency, ,Sexual Weakness, Emissions, Sper. matorrhxea, and ,Farects of Abuse or 1Veeces$(40 PACO 81 per box, sixfor $5.One et:1111516as° str medicare. Sold hi, all -aeiggista or 1115.1151 la plain ,*r. on RCCC t of 00000. /skas .po457 rrh oe. O GO c Med c no _ Efoinderly Whulser) TO, Icr. on