Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1889-05-08, Page 3Tho only medicines sold by druggista, under a positive guarantee from their manufacturers,that they will do just what is claimed for tem -that is, benefit or cure in all cease of diaeaaes for which they are recommended or the money paid for them will be promptly refunded—are Dr. Pierce's world -famed specifics manufactured by World's Dispensary _Medical Association, of Buffalo, N. Y. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery cures all diseases arising from a torpid or deranged liver, or from impure blood, as Dyspepsia, or Indigestion, Pimples, Blotches, Eruptions, Salt -rheum, Totter Erysipelas, and Scrofulous Sores and Swellings. Consumption, or Lung -scrof- ula, is also cured by this wonderful rem- edy, if taken in time. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is the world -famed remedy for all those eiironio weaknesses and distressing derangements so common to American women. It is a most potent, invigorating, restorative ton - lo, or strength -giver, imparting tone and vigor to the whole system. As a soothing nervine it 1s unequaled. See guarantee printed on the bottle -wrapper and faith- fully carried out for many years. Copyright, 1888, by WORLD'S DEL MSD. A8s'A. $50 poFF_ for an incurable case of Catarrh In tho Head by the proprietors of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy. By its mild, soothing and heal- ing properties, it cures the worst eases, no matter of how long standing. By drug- gists, 50 cents. The Huron News -Record 81.50 a Year—$1.26 In Advance. Wcdnesdaa'. iUay, Silk 1.889 LAGER BEER. Lager beer, from its name, implies a heslr that has !teen kept for a cer- tain period. A year or six Months, at laser, in the time given by author- ities as that which should elapse before 3UJh beer is tapped. The German and Austrian Governments impose both tine and imprisonment for any infraction of this rule, be- cause of the deleterious effect of such drink before such lager or keeping shall have expired. There is not any much law here, and, as everybody knows who has had the tt1(�l�ie and inclination to ingestigate this 8Ubjecr, many of our brewers have greatly certailed this time of keeping and constantly. *eek -for ex- pedients and processes for cutting it down still more, so eager is the mar- ket, so uncritical the consumer. Iu• died, the American beer drinker has little regard for his liver and kid- neys, or he would have stoutly pros tested long ago. Ile takes his beer unsuspectingly, and without inquiry, till a time comes when, the liver being affected, or the kidneys, or both, nature pri1,tests, and the bev- erage (lice so pleasing to his lips is like to so touch acrd. A chemist recently investiga!intg this natter says :—"Brewers are uNing materials other than malted 1ted barley, such as corn and oats, etc., mixed with bar- ley and hops, by which they acceler- ate its manufacture, making a sweet- ish, pleasing, heady beverage, but alcoholic, and the using of this kind of beer in large quantities, with the idea that it is innocuous, has brought on a marked increase of renal coin plaints." If 'it can be shown the beer is injurious to health, the makers can be held and punished. SIR BOYLE ROCHE Perhaps a few particulars about Sir Boyle Roane, the high priest of Irish "bulla," Might be interesting to your readers. He was of the ancie,at family 1)e La Resew', of Fermoy, was member from Tralee from 1775, and was created baronet in 1782. He began one of him speeches in the Irish House of Ootn• mons as follows: "Mr. Speaker, it is the duty of every true lover of his country to give his lest guinea to .,ve the remainder of bis fortunes." And another began: "Sir, single misfortunes never come atone, and the greatest or all national calama- ties Is generally followed by one much greater." A letter of his is still preserved, supposed to have been written during the rebellion of '98, though' it is donhtfnl if he ever put so nlanv,"bulls" together on paper. It is as follows. "DEAR Sia:—Having now a little peace and quiet, I sit down to in- form you of the bustle and confusion we are in from the blood,'hirsty re, bels, many of whom are now, thank God, killed and dispersed. We are in a pretty mess, can get nothing to eat, and no wine to drink except whisky. When we sit down to dinner we are obliged to keep both bands armed. While I write this I have my sword in one (land and my pistol in the other. I conclud- ed from the beginning that this would be the end, and I am right., for it is not half over yet, A t pres ent there are Ruch goings on that' everything i's. at a st'tndstill. i should have) answered your letter a fortnight ago, but I only receiver it this morning, Indeed, hardly a until arrives aide witkiout beina robbed. No longer afro than yea- terday the mail coach from Dublin was robbed near this town; the bags had been very judiciously left beg hind, aud by great good luck there was nobody in the coach but two nuteide pauseng vtil 4 d nothing fors, the thieves to take Last Thursday au alarm was given, that a gang of rebels in full retreat from Drogheda were advancing une der the French standard; but they had no colors nor any drums except bagpipes. Immediately every man in the place, including women and children, run out to meet them. We Aron found our force too little, and and were far too near to think of retreating. Death was in every face, end to it we went. By the time half our party was killed we began to be all alive. Fortunately the rebels hail no guns except pis, tots, cutlasses and pikes, and we had plenty! of muskets and aunnunitioe. We put them all to the sword; not a soul of theta escaped except some that were drowned in an adjoining bog. In fact in a short time notbeng was beard but silence. Their uniforms were all different, chiefly green. After the action was over we wont to rumage their camp. All we found was few a pikes without heads, a parcel of empty bottles filled with welter, and a bundle of blank French commissions filled up with Irish rtatnes. Troops are now stationed round, which exactly squares with my idea of security. Adieull have only time to adi that I am, yours in great. haste. B. It. P. S.—If you do not receive this, of course it must have miscarried. Therefore I beg yeato write and let we know. HOW HE SEWS ON BUrfoNS. A CRUEL WOMAN DESCRIBES A IAN WITH A NEEDLE. Did you ever flee a man in the sol- itude and privacy of his titndy at- tempt to sew a button on by him. self? It is, in all its details, one of the nioet iutereating performances h the world. First he hunts for a button. Generally, to secure it he robs Pe. ter to pay Paul, ai.d cute one from other garment. This may be much large.; or much smaller than the one he is wearing. Next, he hunts for a needle. Probably be goes out and buys a paper of needles. He al- ways choosest the largest having a n- impreesion that lifrge needles will sew stronger than small needles. . As to.' the thread, he gets the coarsest he can find, and this he doubles. He takes the big needle in one hand and the coarse black thread in the otbtir; he bites off the thread to the desire'! length; then he tries to twist it to a fine point. Generally in this Ire suc- ceeds in making two and sometimes three points in one t.n& Of course he can't get all these points through the needle'e eye at once. He tries hard to make the needle and thread get un friendly terms with each oth- er. Sometimes it, is the needle that kicks, sometimes the thread, Sometimes he realy imagines he has threaded his needle. It is an n•, ular delusion; the thread hes missed the neeeIe'e eye by half an inch. It is ha'dt;r work than sawing wood. At last the needle is threaded. Now he tries to sew the button on without taking the trousers off. This proves a failure, He twists himself into an uncomfortable posi- tion, and ,so would sew. But he cannot sew so. He runs the needle into his finger, and makes an inaud ible exlcamation, Again the needle slips into the fleshypart of the hand, which induces a very audible dash from the 'operator. The rt - cording angel knows what is going on inside him, and debits him with every item. He sews hard. He has forgotten all about the necessity for a thimble. He jams his thumb down on the needle's heart, and it punctures the thunih or runs under the nail By-and-by he sews the button -eye full of threat'. Itis big needle does not pa*s through any more. He must stop. He ends by winding the thread as many times as it will go under the button and perhaps he leaves off with two or three inches of thread stitcking outside. A woman can, through many outward indications, tell when a man has been trying to sew on a button. He doesn't know the'shib- boleth of needle and thread, and it catches somewhere every time. At last the button is sewn on, and he is proud of his work. —It was not many years ago that the cottonwood tree was -con• sidered useless for the. purposes of lumber. To day it is crowding white pine out of the American Market for certain purposes, and large fortunes nee being made all ,fang the Misltissippi River out of this wood, which was once despised as much in that field RR a garfish alw•sys has been among fishermen. in New Orleans white pine is worth $„s35 st t.housand,whilr' yellow cotton- wood brings $65. • Our Weekly Round Up —.A. man passed through Fort Gaines, Ga., twat Sunday in an ox cart. He came from Western Texas, !sae been 12 weeks on the road, had travelled 1,800 miles, and spent only $21. Every bank of England note presented for redemption to the "old lady of Threadneedle street" in the century and more of her existence is on file cancelled, and so indexed and docketed that it can be found within ten minutes. —The authorities of Basle, Switzerland, prohibit the occupancy of houses it that city until four weeks after their cnnpletion. Jo the absence of official interference with individual acts in this cauntry it would be safe for people to adopt such a rule themselves. There is great danger in moving into a new- ly constructed house too soon after its completion, and much -of what appears to be mysterious sickness. can he traced unmistakably to this cause. —One day last week the Hon. Oliver 11lowet went to Albany to get some puints about spending money on the new provincial huiil- iugs ; and while Wilke a well mean ing but weak minded senator pro• posed to vote him the pt•ivileges of :he floor of the senate. Senator Murphy objected. He said under the rules a friend of hie from New York had been refuse'.! adtnission to the floor yesterday, and said besided that he objected to any courtesy be- ing extended to any 'dependant of the British Crown. Senator Erwin also thought the rules should be strictly observed. And Mr. Mowat bail to go. —A deplorable result of the re• cent tire at Listowetl was the death on Wednesday. Inorning afterward of Annie Delph, aged ten years, 9 months and 17 days, through fright. She was of a very nervous temperas mint, and when the alarm was rung, Wm. Delph, her father, who lives on Victoria street, tnld his family not to waken Annie as she might be frightened. "You don't need 'o waken me, I am awake already," was heard from her room and she was soon dressed and down stairs. She did not appear alarmed then, but when the flames broke out brightly she became excited and fell into a kind of nervous fit from which she never recovered consci- ousness. —Saturday a man well-known in Collingwood and also in Barrie, named Bob Fletcher, was -found hanging from a tree in a small bush a'few miles from the former town. A. week ago some boys saw the man from a distance and supposed that he was standing upright. Saturday it was discovered that the man was actually dead. He he'd' tied• the line which he used for the purposli of taking his life to a •low limb of the tree, then climbed the tree and put the line over another limb and let himself drop. \Vhen found decemposition had set in and the body 1'" : eTlt0-1 "-lest horrible spectacle. ---A man was arrested in St. Louis for passing a counterfeit coin. The principal witness could not speak English, He was a Me;icau who under stood Spanish. He brought a friend who could speak both Spanish and French. The trial 11roe laded in a curious way. The attorney asked his questions in English, and another gentleman repeated them in French to the Mexican's friend. The latter con- verted the French into Spanish, the witness replied in that tongue, and the answers were repeated 'n French and again in English. was a very roundabout way of get, ting at the facts, but the result was a complete understanding of what was said by ail parties interested. —At Orangeville the great Dob bin case, wield all its disgusting de. tails, carpe to an end at five o'clock in the morning. The finalinvestiga- tion into the charges against the Caledon East clergyiin, with which some of our readers are already familiar, commenced before the Presbytery at 2 p. m. on Tuesday. The accused, accompanied by his wife and child, was present. The Presbytery's first action was to pass a resolution excluding both the press and public, after which the work of taking evidence was conducted with closed doors... Dobbin looked after his own case, and was unsparing in his cross-examination of witnesses. A score or more of witnesses were examined on both Hides, the evidence clearly establishing the moral guilt of the accused. Others acts of int. morality, in which the accused was concerned, were also, it is said, brought to light. Daylight was breaking in the east next, morning when the preshytery, after an almost uninterrupted sitting of fifteen hours, finished taking the evidbnce, wound up the case by deposing Dobbin from the ministry. " What an odd echo this room has," said the Chicago girl, as she sipped her chocolate and looked about the large dining hall, "Don't you thiuk the acoustics bad Miit Cahokia1" "Toughest I ever struck," replied the young man from St. Louis, sawing away on his steak with great energy. ' fle Ir ter Oeea 1 Is Published Every Day of the Year, and is the LEADING REPUBLICAN PAPER OF TIIE NORTHWEST. Price. exclusive of Sunday. by mail, postpaid $8.00 per year Price, Sunday included, by uta%, postpaid ............. 10.00 per year THE; SEiVII-WEEKLY INTER OCEAN. Is published on MONDAYS and THURSDAYS, and besides the news condensed from the Daily. it contains mauy special features of great value to those so situated that they can not secure the Daily every day. The Monday issue contains the aormons printed In Tho Daily later Ocean of the same date. THE WEEI'CLYOCEAN. Is the Most Popular Faintly Newspaper published West of the Ailothany Mount- ains. 1t owns its popularity to thu fact that it la rho BEST EDITED and has the MC: EST LITERARY CHARACTER of any Western Publication. It is CLEAN aril BRIGHT. and is the able exponent of IDEAS and PRINCIPLES dear tothe Amerirr.0 People. While It is bread in its philanthropy, 11 is FOI{AMERICA AGAINST TI; r: WORLD, and broadly clatma that the beat service that can bo done FOR MANKIND) 1.' TO INCREASE AND MAKE PERMANENT TOE PItOSPERLTY OF OUR GIIE 4.'T R•'. 'iI!t1t0. Consc1euttoua service in this patriotic line of duty bas given it an unusual hal 1 ul.a7 the American people. Besides, no paver excels it as a (lissominator of news. T31E 61AR1iET REPORTS ARE RELIABLE AND COMPLETE. THE NEWS OF THE WORLD is found condensed to its columns, and the very b, et stories and literary productions THI:1T MONEY CAN PURCHASE are regularly fraud In its columns. Among the epeclal family features are the departments—TILE FARM AND HOME. WOMAN'S KINGDOM, and OUItCURIOSITY SHOP. On the whole. it is A MODEL AMERICAN NEWSPAPER, and richly deserver, what it has, THE L-•11I,:EST C IRCULATION or any publication of the kind In America. It is the best paper for the home and for the workshop. The price of The Weekly is... $1 00 per year The price of The Semi -Weekly is 82.00 per ye. r For the accommodation of its patrons the management of THE INTER OCEAN tom made arrangements to club both those editions vita THAT BRILLIANT AND SUC- CESSFUL PUBLICATION, �. SCRIBNER'S MAGAZINE, One of the beat Literary Monthlies in America. and which compares favorably with any of the older Magazines in illustrations and literary matter. THE PRICE OF THE HADA.. WANE 1S S3. but we will send THE WEEKLY INTER OCEAN and SCRIILNER'S MAGAZINE. both one year. for THREE DOLLARS. Both publications for the price of one. THE SEMI-WEEKLY INTER OCEAN' and SCRIBNER'S MAGAZINE. both one year, for FOUR DOLLARS, • In the political campaign that ended in the election of HARRISON and MORTON and THE TRIUMPH OFPROTECTION PRINCIPLES, no paper had more influence than THE INTER OCEAN. It has been firat, last. and always Republican, and during the campaign Dame to be recognized as the LEADING REPUBLICAN PAPER OP THE WEST. It will maintain this position, and will give special attention to governmental and political affairs. • Remittances may be made at our risk, Dither by draft, express. postoiflee order, express Wrdui, or registered letter. Address _.___.. THE INTER OCEAN, Chicago. FINE IN THE BIJSINESS. "Never let a customer go away without making a purchase," said Mr. l'hreads to a newly engaged clerk. 4"1;alk the goods up in a olevor,,foreible way, and you'll be certain to make a sale every tithe." "All right," replied W.' Fearless Gall, the now clerk, who had been au auctipneor for a year out West; "I think I know just wlpat you mean, 'sir, and you can rely upon rte. 1 know the dicks of the trade Ten minutes later he was going on in this fashion to Mrs. Marshalle- Neale, Dna of the wealthiest and Most aristocratic patrons of the house. "Damask towels, is it madam! Well, I should smile ! If you can't get damask towels hero, there's no place in this city where you can get 'am. Look at that towel, my friend! Doesu't it fairly warn your heart to look at it, oh? And just glance at this pair, marked down form four dollars to a dollar and ton cents 1i Doesn't it •fairly make you feel young again to gaze on a bargain Pike that? And supposing you• just concentrate your intellectual capacity on this towel for a second ! A -ha ! makes you fairly hold your breath • to gaze ou it, doesn't it t Did you ever see auythitg more perfectly it•rosistible since you was born iu this world of sin and sorrow? Of course, you never dill ! Oh; its a cold day when the firm gets left ou damask towels ! Look at this one—look at it woman; it won't bite you ; now tell me if you ever bought a towel like that for leas than two dollars? Of course you didn't ! You've paid" that ''or dish towels, and thanked heaven for the privilege of doing so, haven't you? Course you have, sWeot friend of my childhood days !" • Mr. Threads happened along just in time to have his blood curd - by this last remark, and also in time to assist the gaspinand livid Mrs. Ill•crshalle-Neale o her carriage, 'rilere she ba hien adieu forever, and two tt; tes later he was going throw same ceremoney with r. W, Fearless Gall. A FARMER WBIIOOY ROBBED HIS • Last spring a farnlcr found in his flock a lamb which the mother would not own. IID gave it to his son, a boy fifteen years old, who saved it and raised it. The boy called it his all summer, all the family called it his, and it was his. But in the fall,when the father sold the other lambs, he lot this ono go with them, and tak- ing the pay for ittucked it into his big wallet and carried it off to pay taxes or put in the bank. Now this farmer did not intend to do anything wrong. Least of all did he intend to wrong his boy. Probably he did not give the mat- ter much thought anyway; and if he did he considered the boy's o • t-, ship of the lamb a sort of pleasing fiction, or, reasoned that the boy, having all his needs supplied out of the family puree, did not need the pay for the lamb, and it was better to put it into the common fund. But for all that, taking •the lamb and selling it in that way, and pocketing the proceeds, was stealing. No, it was robbery; and, as between this boy and his father, one of the meanest robberies that could be per- petrated. Not only this,.but by robbing. the boy of that two dollars the farmer did more to melee the boy discontent and drivo him away from m home than he can undo with ten times the amount. A boy is a little man, and ii he has got any of the gather and grip to him which will make a suc- cessful man of' him when ho grows up, he begins at au early age to feel that desire to own something and to add to the property subject to his ownership, which is at once the in- centive to effective work and the motive which reconciles men to their r:oudition. • —Itt accordance with his own request Rev. Henry Truro Bray, of St. Louis, has been deposed from the Episcopal ministry by Bishop 'beetle. Dr. Bray's cases is celebra- ted. After serving several years in the ministry a spirit of disbelief took possession of hien, and he be- came an agnostic. He w• a rector of the church at Booneville, Mo. In an interview he asserted that disbelief was widespread in the pul- pit. BUSINESS .ANNOUNCEMENT. CORRESPONDENCE. We will at all times be pleased to receive items of news front our sub- scribers. We want a good corres- pondent in every locality, not already represented, to Bend us RELIABLE news: SUBSCRIBERS. Patrons who do not receive- their paper regularly front the carrier or thr)ugh their local post offices will confer a favor by reporting at this office at once. Subscriptions may commence at any tune. ADVE,RTiSERS. • Advertisers will please bear in mind that all, "changes" of advertisements, to ensure insertion, should be handed in not later than MONDAY NOON of each week. CIRCULATION. THE NEWS -RECORD has. a larger circulation than any other paper in this section, and as an advertising medium has few equals in Ontario. Our books are open to those tvh.o mean business. JOB -PRINTING. The Job Department of this jour- nal is one of the best equipped in Western Ontario, and a superior class of work is guaranteed at very lom prices. NEWSPAPER LAWS We call the special attention of Post nesters and subscribers to the following synopsis of the newspaper laws 1—A postmaster is required to give notice BY LL:TTER (returning a paper does c of answer the law) wh ^" a snh, 'riper does not take his paper out of the office, and state the reason for its not being taken. Any neglect to do so snakes the postmaster responsible to the publishers for payment. 2—If any person enters his paper dis- :ontinued, he must pay all arrcarPges, 01 the publisher may continue to send it until payment is made, and collect'tht whole amount, whether it be taken iron the office or not. There can be no legal discontinuance until the payment is made 3—Any person who takes a paper from the post -office, whether uirected to bit uame or another, or whether ho has sub. Scribed or not, is responsible for the pay. 4—If a subscriber orders his paper to In stopped at a certain time, and the publish er continues to send, It the subscriber 1 bound to pay for it if he takes it out of the post -office. This proceeds upon theground that a man must pay for what lie uses le -In the Division Court in Goderich at the November sitting a newspaper put - hailer shed for pay of patter. The defend- ant objected paying on the ground that he had ordered a former proprietor of the paper to discohtinue it. The Judge held that t at was 'not a valid defence. The plaintiff, the present proprietor, had no noti;e to discontinue and consequently could collect, 'although it was not denied that defendant had notified former pro- prietor to discontinue. In any event defoliant was bound to pay for the time he had received the paper and until he hall paid all arrears rine for luh'cription. FITS 1 ;tophtl emafoyr a�time ndntheWashavethem rj ;urn again. I Taman' A. Rs.DICIAIr COB& I have trade the Manua et FITS, EPILEPSY or FALLING 8ICNNE ditto long study, I wsatnA1Prlgyrelnedyte Oust$ the worst cases. Because others halll fatted's no reason for not now recent) gsours Bend at on ce f or a treatise and &Fate BOTTLI of mr INFALLIBLE REMEDY. Give Et prow and Post Olnce. It costs you nothing for t1 tria:, and it will cure you. address. Dr H. G. RMT. 9T Tonga 8t., Toronto, Ont, BURDQ,C K PIL S SUGAR COATED A SURE CURE FOR BILIOUSNESS, CONSTIPATION, INDIGESTION, DIZZINESS. SICK HEADACHE, AND DISEASES OF THE STOMACH. LIVER AND BOWELS. THEY ARE MILD.THOR0001I AND PROMPT 1N ACTION. AND FORM A VALUABLE AID TO Bun000s BLOOD BITTERS IN THE TREATMENT AND CURE OF CHRONIC AND OBSTINATE DISEASES. DESTROYS AND REMOVES WORMS OF ALL KINDS IN CHILDREN OR ADULTS SWEET AS SYRUP AND; CANNOT HARM THE MOST. OttLiCATC CHILD — 13ILI. HEADS, NOTE: 1� heads, Letter Heads, Tags Statements, Clrcu'ars, :•un'nr?7 Cards, Envelopes, Prograu-mes. r ., etc., printe.l hr a wuNcma like manner aeu at low rates, a THE NEWS-':d.COtt•., O,tire. L'I SUE'S CARRIAGE AND WAGON FACTORY, Corner Huron and Orange Streets, Clinton. FIRST - CLASS MATERIAL and L :SURFASRED I i:ON WORK. Repelril • and Repointing. BALL WORK WARRANTED. 621-7 TO THE FARMERS. Study your own interest and go where you can get Reliable Harness, I. manufacture none but tie Baer of STOCK. Beware of shops that tett cheap, as they have got to live. Ino' Call arid get prices. Orders by mail promply attended to 301-11\T CAR.'1 R2, HARNESS Ei.iPORIUM, BLYTII, QNT. DR. WASHINCTON Throat and Lung Surgeon, 01 Toronto. will be at the R1abbury (louse CLINTON. APRILIJTH Alt Day. A few of the itottd.0tfs eared by DR. WASIIINGTON'S New Method of Inhalation W. II. Storey. of Storey & Son, prominent glove manufacturers of Acton, Ont., curt.d by Dr. Washington of catarrh of the throat, bad form, end pronounced incurable by eudnen specialists in Canada and England. Write 111111 for particulars. • Chronic Broncblli. nod Asthma Curet! An English Church Clergyman speaks, litctory, Coonwall. ant DR. WAstrINOTON.— DKAR SIR, -1 a,» glad to be able to inform. you that our daughter is quite well again. `As this is the second time ,I•e has been cured. of grave bromide! troubles under the usual remedies' es' failed, 11 WI tour o to express when ess my gratitude. I'leaae accept my slneere thanks. Yours truly, C. B. PETTIT. Airs Jno Me iel,y, Kingston, Orit., Catarrh and Consumption. John Melelvy, Kingston, Ont, Catarrh. Mr A flopping, Iiiu;;ston, Ont, Oroncho Consump- tion. Mr. E. Scott, Kingston, Ont, Catarrh, head and th reat, Mrs Jiro Bertram, Ilarrowanlith, Ont, 0,..r King. stun, Catarrh, throat. Miss Vary A Rolubourg,Centreville, Oa, ..atarrh )load and throat. James Mathews, 1'. Master, Acton Ont. A rl4Fieh, Gents Furnishing, Belleville, Catarrh throat. John Phippcn, P. 0. Saudliu it, Out, (near Napa - nee), (Juts 'r6 head a w th ro.tt• Bad cess • SOUND AI/ViCE—Those hay:ng sales of any kind should consider that It is just es Important to have their posters properly displayed and lip- pear neat and attractive, as itis to nave a good auctioneer. Tug NRtys•RKcoan makes a specialty of this class of work, they have the material and experience to give you what you want at yen/ reasonable prices `TRAY STOCK ADVER- T ►lea TISESIENTS Inserted 1n Tnn Ngws Recoan at low rates. The law makes it compulsory to advertise stray tock. 11 you want any kind of advertising yqu trot o better than call on Tews-Cecor', O O O ga moa ty,3a 1A0 0• 11. rota" • n O 0 «l tn a a 0 co v o a.IC.7 0to