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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1889-06-12, Page 3Which is the fairest, a rose or a lily? Which is the sweetest, a peach nett pear? Merry's coquetish, and charming is Mllly ; Dora is gentle and fair. ler. Sweet as a flower was her face when I kissed (Love is the romance and glory of life,) Willy, my playmate, I love' like a sister," But Dora I choose for my wife. That's right, young man, marry the girl you love, by all means, if sho'l have you. Should her health become delicate and her beauty fade after marriage, remember that this is due to functional weaknesses irreg- ularities, rre -ularities, or painful disorders peculiar to her sex, inthe cure of which Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is guaranteed to give satisfaction, or money refunded. For overworked "worn-out,' "run- down," debilitated teachers, milliners, dressmakers, seamstresses, 'shop-girls' housekeepers, nursing mothers. and feeble women generally, Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is the greatest earthly boon being unequaled as an appetizing cordial and restorative tonic, or strength -giver. Copyright, I888, by WOnL»'s DreflifEnr-Ass' i. Dr. Pierce's, Pellets regulate and cleanse the livor, stomach and bowels. They are purely vegetable and perfectly harmless. Ono a (Dose. Sold by druggists. 25 cents a vial. The Herron News -Record 51.50 a Year -51.25 in Advance. ---- (NT The man does not do fuotice In h'o 6aniness who oper'•ts les:; in adve,tG,l,;;t than he does in rent.—A T. STatvn0T, the millionaire merchant r;! .New York. 1$'2ff-a(ivllay, Jlatte 11t1• 1889 • tOS;ASTHMS DAMS. Tho disaster last week in the State of Ponsylvania. caused by the breaking away of a darn on the North Fork river resulting in the washing away of Johnstown and adjoining villages containing about 40,000 souls is rho most appalling c•itasrtophe that over happened .on this continent. 1t is feared that the loss • of life will reach 12,000 It bus recalled PREVIOUS DAA! DISASTERS. There occureod a similar terrible occurrence; at East Lee, Berkshire Copoty, Mass., in April 1856, when fourteen nmol, woolen •and children were drowned and three fourths of the village destroyed, The town stood. on a small stream, the outlet of stud I'ogrl, which supplied sev- eral paper -mills with running power, The pond had an area of about 150 acres,aud was very deep, The dam which held the water back was 30 feet high and 22 feet wide. At 5 o'clock in t he morning of April 2') this dam broke, and the crashing and ' rushi'_ g UI water, rocks, trees, etc., was hoard four Miley away, warning the inlu,L.tlnts of Leo and Est Lee to fico for tltoir livos. The groat mass oc water, with its gathering debris of wrecked houses,. mills, bridges, other dams, etc., struck East Lee with such terrific force as to literally, carry everything bofore it, finally finding its level in a largo swamp below the town. People' of that vicinity still refer to the great disaster with a shudder. Then there was the bursting of the Mill river dam. It ;vas on tho 16th of May,in 1874, that the great reservoir in the upper part of the town of Williamsburg, in Hampshire County, Mass., suddenly forced down its confining walls and swept forward with a ruthless rush, de- stroying life and property. Tho reservoir contained a reserve water supply for the factories on Mill River in the busy villages of 1Villianlsburg, Skinnersville, Fiay- donville, Leeds and Florence, and covered 124 acres, with the average depths of 24 feot. It was three miles above the village of Williams- burg; on a level about 300 feet higher, and contained about 1,000,- 000,000 gallons of water. At about 7:30 o'clock in the morning the dam was discovered to be giving away, and before warning could be sufficiently spread in the • villages below an enormous flood rushed down the valley, carrying everything before it. A largo part of the village of Williamsburg was destroyed, including mills, factories, and dwellings, Skinnervillo lost her silk mill, with fifteen dwellings. At Haydenvillo extensive brass works were swept away and many dwellings; wore dashed to pieces. Tho village of Leeds was, almost entirely destroyed, including the Homobuck silk factory, and great •damage was done in Florence and Northampton; though ..the flood lost most of its force on the broad meadows above Flero'hce. The vall6y was st:etved with the debris of the destroyed villages and• desolution. A fierce battle could have loft hardly a more sorrowful scene than thou that which the paseing of the sudden flood produced. Peace, plenty, happiness; these were swept away, aud in their place stalked want and auguish and death. THE SURGING WATER SUBSIDED. only to discover here and there and everywhere ou the little river's outspread banks forlorn humanity bruised and lashed and lifeless. The grass of the wide meadows was dotted with the dead—man, woman and child, strength and helplessness brawn and beauty alike claimed for spoil. Housetops and wagons, heavy tuachinely from the wrecked mills, and household goods, all in indescribable confusion,were spread over the sad landscape. None had been expectant of the disaster or prepared for it. The ni in at work ltd the child at play all wore surprised. Yet the dire day was not without itshoro. Near by Ilaydenville lived a farmer's lad named Myron, Day, one whom few people wasted thoughts over There was no tinge of uuusual in the hint, a happy go -lucky chap, who sang at his work and was merry always; all lIaydenville would have laughed at any one so romantic as to dream that this boy had any of the sterner stuff of manliness in him or that he could be grown into a hero. Myron Day was close to the scone of tho breaking darn. He saw the first crack, the first trickle of the stream destined to doom the unsus- pecting valley. Hastily, and with never a thonght or caro for himself or his own safety, the boy sprang upon the baro back of a neighbor's horse and rode headlong, ahead of the threatening waters. And as hu went he heralded the coming destruction: "The reservoir is breaking! The flood is coming ! Fly !, fiy for your lives!" So ho rode recklessly, and so ho hailed every household on his way. Men laughed at hien for an idler, and the pretty maids in the door- ways thought they were witnessing but one more of the sporting antics of the popular and merry led. Quickly came the revelation of their mistake, and thanks to the boy's warning, many a one escaped who else would have been swept with less fortunate neighbors down with the stream to death. A later Paul Revere wes Myron Day. Groat trees were torn bodily from theirrugged beds in the rocky volley, aud, jammed in one compact Blase, they rode the flood like a gigantic battering ram, crushing down every obstacle that stood ite the path. The strongest buildings gave way like so many ogg shells. No force could stay the torrent till finally the last of the compact sea of the reservoirs had sped forward. Over $1,500,000 of property was. •destroyed and in the four villages 200 LIVES WERE LOST. The destitution' and suffering which might have followed were, averted by timely relief from people all over the country. A coroner's in- quest was held at Northampton to ascertain the cause of the disaster and a verdict was rendered which did not hesitate to place blame whore blame belotlge(l. In this the breaking away of the dam, ac- cording to the inquest's verdict, is said to have been the natural and inevitable result of the great and manifest delinquency of the several• parties who ' were concerned in originating, planning, constructing, and approving for use the dam and reservoir not excepting the State Legislatvre itself, under whose au- thority the reservoir company ac- quired its charter privileges. The proprietors are charged with having consulted far less for the safety and security of the lives and property of the inhabitants below the dam that reducing the cost of destruc- tion to the minimum figures. The jurors agreed that there was DO engineering connected with the work which did not reflect equal discredit on the party employing and the party employed. The con- tractors wore declared guilty of great and manifest delinquency in executing the work required of them even under the specifications as drafted. The County Commission- ers who examined and accepted the reservoir dam came in for their share of the blame also, for a super-' ficial discharge of a nost important duty. THE GREAT ILLINOIS TOR- NADO. Professor Magoun in Grinnell (Iowa) Herald :—" It proceeded from the southwest to the northeast, and crossed tho Mississippi about a mile below the mouth of the Merri- mack River. It was about three- fourths of a mile wide, and to that extent it destroyed every living creature, and prostrated every tree in its course. It swept the water out of the Mississippi and lakes on tbo American bottom and scattered the fish in every direction on the dry land. William Blair had a boat moored near it, and saw the water raised up into the air and dashed about with the greatest viol. once. It struck the bluff about the place where the line dividing the counties of St. Clair and Monroe crosses the bluff. Tho day before was clear and pleasant. The tem- pest passed over the country about 1 o'clock. Persons who Saw it in- formed no that it at first appeared a terrible, large black column Loov Ng high in the air, whirlelg around with groat violence. 1n the pissage of the tempest perfect and profound darkpoes prevailed. Dr. Carnes and family resided in the direct line : ile caught up his children and escaped. The estate of the Doctor was all destroyed. A bull was raised high in the air and dashed to pieces. A. rail was run through a horse iu his yard. It torn up the. sill of the house, and left not a stone ou the ground whore the stone chimney had stood." " Tor- nadoes," says a late scientific ac- count, " occur in Japan, India, China, and Southern Europe : but nowhere, as far as known, with such terrible frequency as in the United States. They occur ou any plains in the tropics where there is heat-accumlation, moisture, the pres- ence of cold winds, and freedom from mountain ranges that restrict the movements of air currents. Land cyclones or ocean storms eou- erally begin near the northern ranges of the Rocky Mountains, and make their way to Europe." Our Weekly Round Up. —The earl of Zealand has ac- cepted the viceroyship of Ireland. —Mr. C. H. Rose, of Stratford. was found dead in a bath room lit the Russell house, Ottawa. —Wal. Gilmour, of Pembroke, Ont., has been married seven times, aud has had 37 aitildrou, 31 being alive. He is 83 years old. —City of Mexico,May 30. 1-Ieavy storing of rain and hail at Huejutla have caused the river to inunuate that town, drowning many persons and cattle, and washing away many (louses and destroying crops. —Aloysiue !Webber, a fanner living near Neustadt, while driving along the highway with a load of hay was thrown off it by the team becoming unmanageable, and killed, all the ribs being crushed from the backbone. —Awful floods in Pennsylvania. Loss of life estimated anywhere from 8,000 to 10,000. The banks of the rivers are strewn with dead bodies. • Living men, women and children are seen in the streams battling with floating timbers, the irresistible flood and death. —Katie Dunbar, aged 20, died in Toronto from the effects of an alleged abortic... '!rr. Ellen Wright has been , • . • Thr: deceased girl is said to be very reapeetably connected, and carne to Toronto from Mildmay in the East Riding of Bruce County. —Danville, Va., May 30. J. G. Peon's 200 feet, six stories tobacco factory was blown down this after- noon. .Roll Pruitt, Wni. Young, Cr. 1:L Jon's, Buck Hooper and 1). N. Colli'; were killed. 11y. Oaks will die and six others were barfly injured. --A number of reports from South and a few from North Dako to say that frequent rains and cold, cloudy weather for the past ten days have been t .ar'lent fo, small grain crops, which ars' in a pe'otlll,- iug condition, especially in -South Dakota. Corn is somewhat retar- ded but uninjured. —111 the House of Cotnalone Sir James Ferguson,Parliantentary Sec• retary to the Foreign O'lice, denied the report from Victoria, 13. C., that three wuen•of-war in the Pacific bad been ordered to proceed to Behring Sea iu June to protect L'ri ash seal- ing vessels from interference by American men-of-war. —A. meeting was held in the Town hall St. Marys for the. pur- pose of forming a Board of Trade. Over 50 'names were recorded as members, and it was decided to for- ward an application for charter immediately to the Secretary' of State, Ottawa, Mr. W. K. Mee Leod was appointed secretary. —On Tuesday evening, as the G. T..' R, passenger train was leaya ing for Toronto, Dr, _;Norton Bradford, attempted to get on the train while it was in tnotion. He failed to grasp the railing of the car and fell between the train and the platform, three cars passing by him. But for his presence of wind in lying quite still lie would have been dragged under the wheels. His only Injury was a slight brnise on the nose. JUST FOR FUN. Landlady : 'That new hoarder needn't try to slake me think he is a bachelor. He's either married or a widower.' Millings: 'How can you tell 1' Landlady : 'He always turns his back to me when he Opens his pocket -book to pay his hoard.' —A ploughman in the east of Fife, being about to get married, went to the session Clerk for the pur- pose of putting in the 'cries.' Clie Clerk, putting the usual questions tb him, asked`if his intend ed wife was a.communicant. 'Na, na,' re• plied the ploughman alertly, she's / nestling 6 the (:ort, an'I'd like to ken wha tells ye that i she's jist a servant at Waster Kelly•' —A worthy man who was very sensitive and retiring, having lost tie IIer,Oeea9 Is Published Every Day of the Year, and is the LEADING REPUBLICAN PAPER OF THE NORT(IWEST. Price, exclusive of Sunday, by mats, postpaid 59.00 pe- yoar Price, Sunday included, by mall, postpaid 10.00 per year 'I H1l SMI-WEEICLY IIs/ TH' OC ITA N. Is published on MQNDAYS gad THURSDAYS, and besides the 11e51'6 condensed from the Daily, it contains many ;meoint faaturee,of great value to those so bloated that they enu secure the Daily every day. The A[cuday issue contains the sermons printed fu The Daily later Ocean or the saute date. - b TALO 4V1;ENLY INTER OCEAN. Is the Most Popular Family Newspaper published West of tho AllegY, any :,Lon eat- a1na. It owns its popularity to the fact that it is the BEST EDITED and h+.s the 81 .•L- EST LITERARY CHARACTER of any Western Publicatlou. It is CLEAN B1tIGli•r, and ih the able exponent of IDEAS and PRINCIPLES dear to the A:a.0 L•.: •1 people. while it Is broad fuIte phllauthropY, it is FOR AMERICA AGAINST •rt:i WORLD, mud broadly elaltuo that the best sorviec that can be done ('Olt M.LNEI51, ! TO[NC1tEtSEAND MAKE 1'l:LIMANENTTUE PROSPERITY OF OUR Gltl:.l'1' RV L'i't1LJC. Conscientious cervico in title patriotic hue of duty has given it an unusual hold upon the American people. Besides, no paver exeoleit as a disseminator of news. THE MARKET REPUR'PS ARE (RELIABLE AND CUM8'LET.E. Tit:; NEWS OF THE WORLD is found condensed In its continue, and the very L.. t etorise and ltte,raryproduotlons TILIT MONEY CAN PURCHASE are regularly fu.r..1 in its continue. Among the special family features are the departments—T111 FARM AND HOME, %YUMAN'S KINGDOM, and OUR CURIOSITY 51101'. O::l)o whole, it la A MODEL AMERICAN NEWSPAPER, and richly deserves wh lt't TIIE L.1.1tCEST C IRCItLA.'I'ION of any pablloatton of the hind iu America. It la the beet 'moor fur the home and for the workshop. The price of The Weekly is 5'1 00 per 5 cap The price of The Semi -Weekly is 52.00 Pc r r Por the accommodation of its patrons the management of THE INTt.IR OCEAN 1. made arrangements to club both these editions with THAT BRILLIANT AAb SUC- CESSFUL PUBLICATION, r$ SCRIBNER'S MAGAZINE, One of the best LiteraryMonthlres in America,. and which compare a favorably with any of the older Magazines in illustrations and literary matter. TIIE PRICE 01• T(1( 1.1.(i .- ZINE IS883,but wo will send THE WEEKLY INTER. OCEAN and SCRIBNER:'H MAGAZINE., both one year. for THREE DOLLARS. Both publications for the 1,ri,•e of one. TILE SEMI-WEEKLY INTER OCEAN; and SO1tIBNER'S 111AOA%(NIS, both one yoar, for FOUR DOLLARS. In the political campaign that ended in the election of HARRISON and III UrTON and THE TRIUMPH OF PROTECTION PRINCIPLES, no paper had more influence than THE INTER OCEAN. It has been first, last. and always Republican, and during the oampalgn name to be recognized as the LEADING REPUBLICAN PAPER OF Til E WEST. Itwill maintain thle position, and will give special attention to governmental and political affairs. rt Remittances may be made at our risk, either by draft, express.nostofllce order,exprees Wars, orregistered letter. Address THE INTER OCEAN' Chicago. FRESH -:- AND -:- REL/ABLE. 0 Eo. REMOVED ! REMOVED ! One O007' North of Young's Baker g, Albert Street 0 Our stock of Groceries and Provisions for spring and summer are very complete, and will be found lercoh and Reliable, embracing every line of Goods to be fo,i nl in a First - Class Grocery. Wu aim to give the iBest Possible Goods at the Lowest Possible Price, and to economical buyers we offer many advantages. PRODUCE TAIIEN. CANTELON BROS., Wholesale & Retail Grocers, Clinton. his wife, privately requested that he tuig;let he remembered in the mini- ster's morning prayer from the pulpit,but asked that his name might not bo inchiuucrl, On Suuuay morning tI ,jiood minister prayed most e!vq,,ently for 'our aged brother upon wheat the heavy hand of n'.:r, n!"i; t 1r.n h:tt), 50 lately fallen.' :\t ,bis i •,int 00 elderly man w•I,nnl the' I iui..ter !Ind marri- ed to a v,•ry. y't1Lty, wife during the week woke with a bounce and stamped down the aisle, uttering; loud enough to be heard half over the chap 1, 'Ir way 1 on affliction, but I'nl t,h,s,•ed if T want to be prayed for 1n Ihat, fas!sion 1' • • --Th. y',,,1 .,1,: (niui..ter of Blair - wally is no -tickler for etiquette, aud like, his ri tits to the members of his flock to h" as informal '. •' as homely as possible ; but ' 1• great regard for truth, and is :It- variably nvariably down ':n t.hnae whom ' detnc?s in oily (1,••. i ,1'00 tberefrot.,. lIecent1L ....klieg fie ap a:telly 011 a widow' Nli lir, ;ea e(tttage un the uut.skiris "f t;;r t fl nye I;.• surgerised her in 1!,I; Ilii•1 ! r .ashin,i ,t lot, of clothes. She Lu: lily hill behind a clothes horse and told her little boy to say that ho was out. The visitor knocked at the door. 'Drell, ,Jamie,' he said, 'aud where's your mother 1' 'My niotlles•'s in ; bile's doou the Street on a ineseage,' replied the lad, with pronlptners. 'Indeed,' replied the minister,witls a glance at the bot - torn of the screen, 'Well, tell her I called ; and say, that the next time she goes down to the village she might truce her feet with her.' —Two weeks ago a former resid- ent of Eganville, Abo Boland, had a close call with two boars in a swamp at the'head of Lake Nipiss• ing, and but for the unerring shot be made with his Winchester rifle this probably would bo an obituary notice. It appears that Abo, who is bush agent for J. R. Booth, was travelling through a largo swamp at the head of the lake, in nearly a foot of water, carrying a bag and a rifle. When about six miles in this lonely place he observed two large bears, male and female, mak ing for hint as fast as tho wild nature of the swamp would allow. Throw- ing down tho bag, Abe took aim with his rifle, which contained six cartridges, and fired. The shot missed. He fired again and wound- ed one of the boars, but the third shot had a fatal effect, killing the female annual. Tho male bear, re- cognising the injury inflicted upon his better half, got mad and bouud- ed over tiro dead carcase and made a spring at Abe, but his strong nerve stood to hint, and with quick aim he sent a bullet into his second antagonist, which staggered him. Quick as lightning the boar was upon his hind legs ,but but an oCher ball was sent home to his heart and he keeled over dead. Aftor this little adventure Abe resl.mcd his journey through the swamp, a distance of twelve miles, when he camp to his camp, and the next day ho, with several others. 1 nturr. ed and skinued ,rho animal.. The that boar was within twenty foot of hila when she received the fatal wound,' and the male was much closer. Abe con- siders this a close call, but his hair didn't turn gray. —Julia Ann Houghtaling, lives in a coal shed at Stanlfordville, N. Y., ;alone uud without the bare necessities of life, though past 90 years of ago, sternly resenting all proffered assistauco, and takiu'g a daily bath in brine, which she be- lieves to be the elixir of eternal life. She is the descendant of a family *hose personal oddities have be- come legendary. The first to gain a place in local chronicles calls Moses'1'almadge, wlio conceived the' strange notion that. there was no good reason for death. As a pre volitive of dissolution he instituted a system of brine bathing, which his decendants have religiously preserved. —Early on the Inol'Iling of Juno 1st., the P•lost severe thunderstorm that in the memory of tho oldest in- habitant ever deluged that district swept down the valley of theCobourg creek early in the morning. and do- luged the greater part of the west riding of Northumberland. It had rained steadily and heavily for two nights and one day, and about two o'clock ou Saturday rnol•niug a great thunderstorm swept down from the north-east and for two hours the rails fell in perfect sheets. Port Hnpo on tho west and Grafton on the east do not appear to have been included iu the path of the storm. Considerable damage to bridges and other property esti- mated at $500,000, but no lives lost. NEWSPAPER LAWS We call the special attention of Post pasters and subscribers to the following synopsis of the newspaper laws :- 1—A postmaster is required to give notice BY LETTER (returning a paper does aot answer the law) when a subscriber does not take his paper out of the office, and state the reason for its not being taken. Any neglect to do so makes the postmaster responsible to the publishers for payment. 2—If any person oilers his paper dis• .ontinued, ho must pay all arrearvges, of the publisher may continue to send it until paytnent is made, and collect the whole amount, whether it ho taken from' bhe 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 directed to his name or another, or whether lie has sub- scribed or not, is responsible for the pay. 4—If a subscriber oilers his paper to bt 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 he uses ler In the Division Court in Go(lerich at the November sitting a newspaper put• lusher sued for pay of paper. The defend • ant objected paying on the ground that he had ordered a former proprietor of the paper to discontinno it. The Judge held that that was not a valid defense. The plaintiff, the present proprietor, had no notile to discontinue and consequently could collect, although it was not denied that defendant had notified former pro- prietor to discontinue. In any event dofonant was bound to pay for the time he lead received the paper and until he had paid all arrears duo for subscription. !CORE FITS! When I say CURE I do not mean merely tt ;top them for a time, and then have them ro I have ;made the diseaseAofIOAL C[IItE, SITS, EPILEPSY or FALLING SICKNESS, l.lifelongstudy. I WARRANT myremedy tq CURE the worst cases. Because others havi Iailedia no reason for not now receivinga cu Send at once for a treatise and aFREEre Berm of my INFALLIBLE REMEDY. Give Express raid Post Office. It costs you nothing for 8 trial, and it will cure you. Address Dr )Z G. RQOT. 97 Yoage 131., Toronto, Ont. I 1 8!ik- . 1 , 3 -2.,1,• ;-i .oa.1Hi19.7.` ',''ti'''c if:l ti 't .'"".'FFP Ar! e?;.. lit•' ! :.n. ^r•':!•:iine.;•n defttruyer o. L'ei's. .1". (...u.... n or G.:.�:..,. BILL IIISADS, NOTE Heads, Letter (leads, 'rage Stiitetneiits, - ftircularx, ,usmess Cards, Envelopes, Programmes. etc., etc., printei in a workman like manner and at low rates, a THE NEWS-I1ECOI1D Mike. CARRIAGE AND WAGON FACTORY, Corner Huron and Orange Streets, Clinton. FIRST- CLASS MATERIAL and UNSt:2i'ASSED (lull! WORE. Repairing and Repainting. Itor ALL WORK WARRANTED/...SI; 521•y TO THE FARMERS. Study your own interest and go where you Can get Reliable 06 Harness. I manufacture .,one but tae BEET oe STOCK. Beware of shop„ that sell cheap, es they have 908 80 line.. Brrr Call and get prices. Orders by snail prompl5'attended to ttOTfN' HARNESS EAIPOIOUSl, IBLYT11, OYT. BUSINESS ANNOUNCEMENT. t;ORRE:4PONDENCE. lVe will ut all 1111308 be pleased to receive !/tons of .news from our sub- scribers. Ire (((38t Cl firma etwee8- pondent in every/ locality, lint alrwwdl/ rr1)rc,:eot,v?, /0,'•c ul 1l8 itELI ABLE 70'1/.5: lb, not receive their rui/,u''trly from the carrier or /11')11'/h /1ci1' loch post offices will confer a favor by reporting al this gllice at only. Subscriptions may commence at 011/, time. .'a Y)'iE ItTLME RS. Advertisers will please bear in tni/ol that all "changes" of advertisements, to ensure insertion, should be handed in not artier than MONDAY NOON of each wale. CIRCULATION. THE NEWS -RECORD has a lart/er circulation than any other, paper in this section, and as an advertising medium has few equals in Ontario. Our books are open to those who mean business. .9O11 PRINTING. The Job Department of this jour- nal is one of the best equipped in Western Ontario, and a superinr Glaris nj tv0rlr is guaranteed at vera tont prices. SOUND ADVICE.—Those having salol of any kind should consider that it ie just as important to have their postero properly displayed and ap- pear neat and attractive, as it le to have a good auetionler. Tae NEWS-itocORD makes a spoctalty of this cbtesof work, they have the material Mut experience to give you what you want at ver,f reasonable prices fes:,',; (TRAY STOCK ADVER- g -„7`..TISEMI(Nnstedn To News fi'coRD RtTS IOIWerrates. iThe lawre makes It compulenry to advertise stray tock. 1f you want env kind of advertlning you tent o better than call on 'ewe RccorI •