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The Huron News-Record, 1891-04-15, Page 711, R1181vEE IREaTORY ge'uttigt't. trs.�tis T, C. Bruce, L.D.S. Surgeon Dentist. Graduate Royal College of Dental Sergeone of Ontario. Coder Graduate University of Toronto. 1Reo—Keefer's old stand, Coats' Block, Clinton. • • N.B.--Will visit Blyth, professionally, every Monday. et Mason's Hotel. 676—y G. H. COCK, Licentiate of Dental Surgery, Honor Gra luate of the Toronto School of Dentistry. Nitrous Oxide Gas administered for the painless extraction teeth. s Office—Smith's Block, upstairs, opposite the Post Office, Clinton. tar Night Bell answered. S92y Vacated. DR. GUNN W. Gunn, 61. D. L. R. C. P. Edinburgh L. R. c. S. Edinburgh Liceneiate of the Midwifery, Edln. Office, on corner of Ontario and William Ste., Clinton. y. DR. TURNBULL• .1. L. Turnbull, M. 13, Toronto Univ. ; 51. D. ; C. M., Victoria Univ. M. C. 1'. d: S. Out, ; Fellow of the obstetrical society of Edinburgh. Late of London, Eng., and Edinburgh hospitals. Ofce:—Ilurr.y block, Rattenbury St. Night calls answered at Grand Union Hotel. Electric night bell at front entrance, DR. W. H. WRIGHT, BAYFIELD - ONT., (Successor to Da. Nicuot) graduate Victoria Uni- versity, 1885; College of Physicians and Surgeons, 1885; Now York Post Graduate. College and Hospital, 1890 Calls by by day yand night oniony attended. gegttl. MANNING & SCOTT, Barristers, Er,LIOTT's BLCCK, - CLINTON. Money to Loan. A. H. MANNING. JAS. SCOTT. DAVISON & JOHNSTON, Law, Chancory',and Conveyancing. Office—West Street, next door to Post Office, Goderich, Ont. 67. C. HAYS, Solicitor, hc. Office, corner of 81t,' Square and West Street, over Butler's Book Store, Goderich, Ont. 67. a' Money to lend at lowest rates of interest. rCAIIPION, Barrister,Attorney, Solicitor in U. Chancery, Conveyancer, &c. Office over Jordan's Drug Store, tho rooms formerly occu pled by Judge Doyle. tvr Any amount of money to loan at lowest ates of interest. 1-1y'• H. W. BALL, AUCTIONEER for Huron County. Sales at- tended to In any part of the County. Ad - Areas orders to GODRRIOU P 0, V-17. CHAS. HAMILTON, AUCTIONEER, land, loan and insurance agent Blyth. Sales attended in town and country, n reasonable terms. A list of farms and village for sale. Money to loan on real estate, at 'ow rates of interest. Insurance effected on all ;lasses of property. Notes and debts Collected. Goods appraised, and sold on commission. Bank- rupt stocks bought and sold. RI Ob. Dec. 16,18RA. Photographers cmc VQSIt° CAD CLINTON- Life Size Portraits a Specialty, Clinton Marble Works, HURON STREET, CLINTON, W. H. COOPER, Jr., Manufacturer of an dealer in al kinds of Marble & Granite for Cemetery Nor at figures that defy competition '401 to tflU 014l' to loo4 in largo or Mall strafe Q goad mortgtl,geo or personal aeeurity 8 the lowest current rates. II. 1IALIS, Hum et. Clinton. Clinton,Feb.26,180'1 ly MONEY. I,RIVATE FUNDS to lend on Town and farm property. Apply to 0. RIDOUT, Office, next News -Ruyan (up stairs)Albert-St 559.3rn 111111 ng. TRI EMs EAK. Incorporated by Act of Parliament, 1865, CAPITAL, • - - $1,000,000 REST, • - $1.000,000 Also manufacturer of the Celebrated ARTIFICIAL STONE tot' Building pur- poses and Cemetery Work, which must be\sseen to be appreciated.—All work warranted to give satisfaction. MONEY. A large amount of Private money to loan. Low. est rate of interest' " C. A, HART':, Solicitor &e. Office- - Perrin's Block. 1. 16e Meehan ..,1 p.,'. rlrcol,J : Fully iiir•1 Inas, 5. corer. I', is MUNN..I 0.• I '. . Head Offioe, - MONTREAL THOMAS WORKMAN, President. J. H. R. MOLSON, Vice•President.11 F. WOLFERSTAN THOMAS, General Maeager; SALE BILLS.—The News -Record has un- surpassed faili ties for turning out first-class work at low rates. A tree advertisement in The News Record with every set of sale bills. • .. •el c-nt.lae and • t Lae the largest �• 1,1 the world. ,.r wood Engrav- . forspecimen m1ha' trial, 11. Broadway, N.Y. ��ila' • t; J[;` II.DERQ Edition u • • ; t,ineriean. A green ;nr^ •- nthogr,lph,c t.i' cel, or puhlle be . and full pians : I • .ueh ns cool eft pl.,' •• 15 cts. u copy. .'1 Notes discounted, Collections made, Draft issued, Sterling and Anteriean ex- change bought and sold at low- est current rates, INTEREST AT 4 PER CENT. ALLOWED ioN DEPOSIT ARMERS- Money advanced to farmers on their own note with one or more endorsers. No mortgage re quired as security. February. 1884 11. C. BREWER, Manager, ULINTON A. O. U. W. The Clinton Lodge, No. 144, meets in Jackson's Hall, Victoria Block, the. let and 3rd Fridays in each month. V sitors cordially invited. R. STONEIIAM, M. W.; J. peMN, Recorder. 539y cnntaIns entered li r •' n Eli r• 11 v residen- t. estden- -- 1 0,04 t ngravings 1 r ti n nse of • i't ir,• 4'; 30 n year, l'i' it1.1(-nERa. '" ,�;' �^ •. s;ny be secur. '.,i cd by apply - to ll .... '� UI MANN ., h o ' n T'- IIad over 40 years' exec •^ mode over 100,000 aprpcntb•l,r. f. ;�� tmerlean and For- eign potent.. fn,:•l ' t'..•1. rlbook. Corres- fondence etri et l r 1'. ' "; I • : ! r 1. TRADE MARKS. le 0109 70111 mark is not re, Irlered In rho Pat. int Omae, apply ,n .'15'NN P t'n., and procure mmed',ateprotectlna. ,tun 11,1 t.w.dbook. COPYRI(41iTfd for bn, u., charts, maps. sta., quickly procured- A.: 'ries ISIUNN & CO., Pc,rent t+alichore. ,.-�vnmA� orrrcx r-Nl-nuuAut,V,fAX,.,>l•: Vit, L. 0. L. No. 710 CLINTON, Meets seCOND Monday of every month. Hall, 3x8 flat, Victoria block. Visiting brethren always made welcome, w. G. SMITH, W. M WM A ROSS, D. 51,1 1" CANTELON, Sec. (AXutht gut.gbto Jubilee Preccptory No, 161, (Blaclt Knights of Ireland) Meets in the Clinton Orange Hall, the second Wednesday of every month, at 7.80 o'clock in the evening. Visiting Sir Knights wilt always 7-ceive a hearty welcome, A. M. Tone, Worshipful Preceptor Gieolwi HANLEY, Deputy Preceptor PETER CANTELON, Registrar Royal Black Preccptory 3911 Black Knights of Ireland, Meets in the Orange Hall, Blyth, the Wedne day atter lull 111000 of every month. Royal Black Prcceptory 315, Blaen Knights of Ireland,;, ;.1; Meets in the Orange Bell, ooderich, the This Monday of every mouth. Visiting Knights alway niude. welcome. JAM ES WELLS, Preceptor, Saltforil P O W H i11.RNEY, Registrar, Goderich P 0 S. HURON ORANGE DIRECTORY. 1891 Names of the District Masters, Primary Lodge Mltstels, their post office ad- dresses and elate of meeting. I USINTON ''hedge, •No. 84, A..,1;. di A. V `tecta every Friday, on or atter the tel moon. VtaiLing brethren cordially malted. BLOB HEYWOOD, w. m. OWWENBALLA1tD, Ste Clinton Jan. 14, 1800. 1. 11IDDULPII DISTRICT. John Neil, W.D.M., Centralia P. U. 219—S. ilarlton Greenway, Friday ou or before full moon. 662—Thomas Coursey, LUcan, Saturday on or before full moon. 493—Richard Hodgins, Centralia, Wed• nestlu3 -mor before full moon. 826—Willi •; t Haggart, Grand Bend, Wedn• - 'ay on or before full moon. 890—W. E, aicltoberts, Maplegrove, W'edin' ' '. on or before full moon, 924-11enr:, •nhrook, Exeter, 1st Fri- day in 1:1. .1 month. 1071—John is Is, Elimville, Saturday on or bele• full moon. 1097—James i 1 hers, Sylvan, Monday on or befo lull moon. 1210—Jame 1 ?son, West McGillivray, Thursday on or hefore full moon. 1343—Robert Sims, Crediton, Tuesday on or hefore lull moon. G10—Joseph Huxtable, Centralia, Fri- day on or atter full moue. G01)E121011 DISTRICT. Geo. 13, Hanley, t\',D.\L, Clinton P. 0. 145—Willis Bell, Goderich, 1st Monday in each month. 153—Andrew Miliian, Auburn, Friday on or before full moon. 182—W. 11. Marney, Goderich, last Tuesday in each month. 189—Adam Cantelon, Holmesyille, Mon- day on or hefore full moon. 262—Jaynes Wells, `altford, 3rd Wed- nesday in each month. 306—George A. Cooper. Clinton, 1st Monday In each month. IiL'LI,ET"i' I1ISTRIC'T. A. M. Todd, W. 1'. M., Clinton P.O. 710—W. G. Smith, l,linton, 2nd Mon- day in each muni 1. 813—•3ames llorney, Winthrop, last Wednesday hefore cull moon. 928—Thomas Mcllveen, Summerhill, 1st Monday Wench month. 825—John Brintnel1, Chlselhurst, 1st Monday in each mouth. STANLEY DISTRICT. Joseph Foster, W.D.M., Varna P. O. 24—John Pollock, Bayfield, let Monday in each month, 308—James Keyes, Varna, 1st Tuesday in each month. 833—Robert Nicholson, Blake, 1st Wed- nesday in each month. 733—John Berry, Ilensnll,1st Thursday in each month. 1035—Wil1iam Rathwell, Varna, 1st Thursday in each month. 4S1-NnTE.--Any omissions or other errors wil ho promptly corrected on writing direct to th County -;Raster, Bro..Ow M=:T-gild` Clinton- 2.0.. 1 0 MII4C7P3E1. --.C'C7'R�7S—•—. HWMATASM, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago, ackache, Headache, Toothache, Sore Throat, Frost Bites, Sprains, Bruises, Burns, Etc. Sold by Druggists and Dealers evcryywh,re. Fifty Cents a bottle. Directions In 11 Languages. THE CHARLES A. VOGELER CO., Baltimore, Md. Canadian Depot: Toronto, Ont. The Huren News -Record $1.60 a Yeve—$1.281n Advance. Wednesday. April 15th, 1891. IIOW MANY ARE \VE. Ira•, P-put+tion. 180(1 455.889 1834 1 302,961 1844 ,..1,802 889 1851 2,547,158 1861 3 323.292 1871 3602.596 1881 4,324,810 The above table shows the popu- lation of what is now Canada in each of the years named. Fro,l a scant halt' million in 1806 our people increased to 4,324,810 in 1881. Ili other worse, within seventy- five years the population of this great Dominion multiplied almost ten -fold, AIiEAD OF THE UNITED STATES; Notwithstanding this evidence of rapid development, many look across the lines at the overflowing millions of the adjoining Republic and are discouraged. But these pessimists forget that our neighbors had a long way the start of us. When there were only half -a -million people in Canada there were eight millions in the United States, Since then our re- lative progress has been greater than theirs. While the Americans have multiplied lees than eight fold, the Multiple in our case has been nearer twelve. And this notwith- standing a prolific negro element down south, which increased by nearly 40 per cent. between 1870 and 1880, But in any case this country has started on a career of prosperity. During the last decade we have re- ceived over 1,000,000 immigrants from Europe against 324,000 during the previous ten years. The North- weat is becoming known abroad and will become better known as the years go by. As a result of the wise and energetic policy of the Government railroad communica- tion brings almost every part of it within reach of the seaboard. Immigrants going into those terri- tories are assured from the start almost all the convenirnces of civi- lization. It ie only reasonable, therefore, to expect a greater re- lative increase in immigration from 1891 to 1901 than took place be- tween 1881 and 1891. THE BISHOPS' MANIFESTO. chitdrttn, nt'a talfglit. 'that it is the Cllurdh'a bounden duty to dominate, but the schools of the nation. This control of the morel teaching of all the schools is, acourding to their Lordships' own definition, the mis- sion which they say their church cannot renouncer Having thus de- clared their divine right to educate everybody they claim the treaty right to educate their own children. Indeed, every claim they ever make' is based on an old promise of Hing George not to deprive them of free- dom to exercise the Roman Catholic religion. Their Lordships dwell largely on the clangour to morals of having children taught in "neutral" schools, where, they say, no morals are taught, and dwell very little on danger to the faith. It is the latter, however, about which they are, with good r'easou, moat solicitous. The murals of common school chis dren are quite as good, to say the least, as those of separate school children, while their education is, as a rule, far better. The danger of a broad eduoatirw from a Rowan Catholic point of view is not to Children's morale but to their faith., The bishops fear their faith \vitt nut hold its own unless it is enforced by a generation that is first and foremost taught to pay re- ligious homage to the clergy, and will not be as suoservient to ecclesiasti- cal guidance as it should be. ADAM'S POSTERITY. In a sermon, Rev. Dr. Howson, Baptist, Chicago, said :— "Do yo - naw 1 do not believe that Adam's Nu ie imputed to me 1 There is au old theory that I liked to have choked on when 1 was a young theologian, called the federal headship theory. Adam Was the federal head, whatever that means, and the theory was that Adam and the Lord entered into a treaty call- ed the Covenant of work, and Adam broke the treaty, and so not only he suffered the consequences, but all those whom he represeuted. Just like the United Senate. The Senate makes a treaty and the treaty hinds us. 1 trust that providence will save .me from being responsible for everything that the Unit_d States Senate does; [Laughter.] I sup• pose 1 will have to bear it as best I can, but I may not like it for all that. IF THEY WERE CONTEMPLATING some grave crime I should be dis posed vigorously to protest against being made to suffer for it unless I bad specially authorized the pro- ceeding. If there is a question up, if 1 vote on the issue, if by my vote I express my opinion and instruct my Senator to vote that way, then 1 ant not only legally bound—I sup- pose I should be that anyhow whe- ther I instructed him or not—but morally I should bo bound in such a case. But, do you know, I never gave Adam any instructions [laugh - tee], never elected him to represent me. This old theory of the federal headship is a theological fiction that has driven a great many thoughtful people into absolute in- fidelity, and is utterly absurd and unreasonable. Every man instinc- tively revolts at having the sin of a mau who lived 6,000 years ago sad- dled upon hill as if he had done it. "L ne go further, Ido not bo• li we are made responsible for that sin. But do you know the popular d`en`y is that the Lord made A, B, and C to the end of the alphabet and to the end of the world ; that every human being is a direct creation of almighty power, an el,tit.y, the product of a special creative act, end for the Lord to take flint roan that was made just forty years ago and put Adam's sin on him is agsiust all our sense of right. But the Lord did not do any such thing. THE LORD DID NOT snake you then ; He would have made a very different sort of a man. He never made Benedict Arnold or Jesse Pomeroy. The Lord never did any such work as that; Ile did not turn out such work as that. I ehould be amazed if God made a thing like that. God made Adam and never made anybody else. Ile made Ada in his own image and IIe made him free, and in the exercise of his freedom ho sinned, and then the rest was ruin. He begot a 8011 in his own likeness. God did not beget Cain, did not make Cain, was not responsible for Cain. He did make Adam, and Adam in the oxer• cise of his free agency, sinned and fell, and so the very fountain of humanity was poisoned, and that poisoned stream flows on to -day, I was in Adam, and the very nature that is in me was in my first father, and I am helpless and hopeless un- less God work a miracle, and that, blessed be his holy name, He has done, for He has sent his son to ra- tify the law LET ME NOT BE MISUNDERSTOOD. Let me n st represent God as a hor- rid Moloch that has to be appeased with blood. There isn't a word of truth in Ruch savage abominable re- presentation. Bnt the law had to be met in order that God might be just and the justifier of him that be- lieveth in Jesus. Somehow I must got God's image back again, for I .lost. ,it,. ,.Finast be ..,reinatatetl-..and. Their Lordships the Roman Catholic Bishops of the Province of Quebec evidently did not like to say that a man cannot be saved out- side the Church of Rome. This is the way they say it : "In the order "of things as at present established "by Providence •the Catholic "church is alone capable of making "him attain his ultimate destiny." This might mean anything, but if it means the above it is about time the Catholic Church started mis- sions to us poor Protestants, whom it is allowing to perish without effort to-savous, No effort—that is a mistake. There may be 110 mis- sions to Protestants, but that does not appear to be the method by which this "Catholic Church" is to do us good. Its plan is not to win us to the faith, but to gain control of no as a nation. "The Catholic "Church alone," say the bishops, "rias the mission to give the religi- ous and moral teaching to nations "as well as to individuals. Alone, "then, it has the mission to guide "the moral teaching iu the schools." It is evident then, that when this Catholic Church permits any other schools hut those in which the Church of Rome controls the moral teaching, it is against her conscience and only because she cannot help it. Mark well. it is not only N,liQuls, _\y}lel'0 . *man.-,,. (nthol;c, regr eted wox'ally. 4;Iow shall I be saved from the consequences of that sin that has been transmitted down and burin in every drop of wy blood in my body 1 How obeli I recover God's image. God, who commanded a light to shine out of darkness, hath shone in our hearts and given the Tight of the knowledge of his glory in the face of Jesus Christ, and be- holding, as in a mirror the glory of God, I am changed into the same image from glory to glory,,even by the spirit of the Lord. That is the divine photography. God grant that many who • are here to -night may behold this glory and experi ence this change." A CHICAGO TRAGEDY. Chicago, Ill., April 6.—A mur- derous fight, the result of a long- standing feud between two Italian wotneu, Jeese Gallio and Mrs. Con- getto Vallone, occurred last night in a State eteeet tenement house. Mr. Gallio sent a message to Mrs. Vallone inviting her to wake a• call and settle matters amicably. Mrs. Vallone on arriving was cordi- ally greeted, but while she was taking off her shawl and hat Mrs. Gallio locked the door, and plac- ing the key in her pocket went to a closet and secured a large butcher knife, the edge of which was as keen as a razor. She then informed Mrs. Vallone that she had invited her to her 'apartments for the purpose of settling the trouble in true Italian fashion, and proceeded to carve her according to the rules-, and regula- tions of the Mafia. Mrs. Vallone shrieked for help and attempted to make her escape, but her frenzied assailant pitilessly bore her down upon the floor. Fourteen times the Gallic, woman plunged the keen blade into her victim's face, neck and body, and only desisted from sheer exhaustion. The police at this juncture ,broke open the door. In one corner of the room lay the unconscious body of Mr's. Vallone, the blood pouring in streams from her wounds. Furniture was over turned and broken and the walls and ceiling spattered with blood. In another corner, panting with the exertion she had undergone, crouched Mrs.11Gallio, the bloody knife tightly clutched in her hand and a wild look in her eyes. Aa the officers approached she rushed upon them. A fierce etruggle en- sued fur possession of the knife, but the woman was overpowered and her victim taken to an hospital. Mrs. Vallone cannot recover. Mrs. Gallio was held without bail. IMPRISONED FOR LOVE. AN ALLEGED CONSPIRACY ON THE PART OF A \1ILLIONA1RE TO WRECK A MAN'S,LIFE. rill, thick in the loin, stout. iia ills thighs, short, itt the legs, long and. •q silky in the hair, This type of an- ileal should be aimed at, whether thorough-bred,balf-bred or common - bred are kept. Without question the large York• shire were sows ears ago being rapidly ruined by ignorant breeders, for the mere cake of dead we &1st of pork, including heavy shoulders and light halts. I am afraid that a - very large number of the pig breed- ing community seem to think that as long as a pig is tall, with plenty of daylight under him, he is the best farmer'e pig—than which there never was a greater popular error. The general run of bacon for London and other English markets, isobtained from hogs weighing one cwt, one qr. 13 lb. and one ctie. two ckr. 141b., dead weight, and the curing trade regard all pigs over the top weight as au inferior class of stuff. Now, as it coats much more to make one pound of bone in build- ing the frame work of a pig capable of carrying two or four hundred weight of flesh, the farmer wastes his substance in riotous leckless- ness. '\'hie improvidence is, snore— over, uuuecessary on au animal that for 100 pound of dry food will give an increase in weight ol'titenty- three pounds whereas a sheep gives but ten pounds and an ox nine pounds ; that is to say, rigs can in- crease in weight twice as much as sheep and thrice as much as cattle, CHICAGO, April 2.—Charges of a highly sensational character are made in a suit for $100,000 damages begun in the circuit court this morn- ing. The plaintiff is Eugene Dun- nivant, formerly a newsboy, who claims that his lifo has been wreck- ed as the result of a conspiracy be- tween Orrin W. P.Itter'the million- aire president of the Illinois steel company, and Tour Fox, James Hutchins and Frank Allen, who are also made defendants, In his declaration young Duunivaut avers that in April, 1885, he was a poor boy sixteen years of age, selling newspapers in the district in which the Potter mansion is situated. While pursuing this vocation he made the acquaintance of Mr. Pot- ter's daughter,' a beautiful and ac- complished girl. The acquaintance between the young people was dis- tasteful to the girl's father, and that in November he was induced t0 ac- company Frank Allen to South Chicago. Allen had a confederate, who was dressed so as to personate the plaintiff. Some clothing was stolen, presumably by Allen and his confederate, and Allen was ar- rested. As a part of the scheme to send the plaintiff to the peniten- tiary, it is alleged that Allen accus- ed the plaintiff of the theft and caus- ed his arrest. He and Allen were jointly indicted for burglary. At the trial in January, 1887, the daughter of Mr. Potter, knowing her lover's innocence, is said to have employed counsel to defend hitt. Dunnivant was convicted and sentenced to four years' imprison- ment. Dunnivant served his term in the penitentiary at hard labor, with the result that his health was broken completely, leaving him a physical wreck ; hence his suit. HOG RAISING. Large boned, coarse sows are almost invariably deficient in suck- ling properties and motherly in- stincts generally, and from their uncouthness and unwieldiuess they frequently overlay and crush their young. As size almost always comes from thedaw,it is very important that this factor should receive due con- sideration, and when this size is supported by only just the requisite amount of bone, we have of necessity the moat economical animal in every way. I believe that crossing with thoroughbred stuck will do much for this end, but I also believe it is a mistake to breed from a leggy, coarse sow, for the reasons already mentioned, that no amount of cross- ing will do permanent good, unless more care be used in the selection of the dams. In this matter of over production of bone I know I am traversing tho opinion of many fur - mere; buy my conclusions are the result of years of study in the unique position of a breeder, feeder,;„ and curtr u, 0,1,ot, with ample and special opportunities for gaining knowledge, Mr. Shaw enumerates the seven loading characteristics of a good pig, as follows : Neat in the bean; light in the nock and shoulders ; deek in the heart and around the rihs ; thick in the loin ; stout in the thighs and long and silky in the hair. He continues : Let the hair be long, and at the same time silky and of nice quality. These condi- tions of the hair indicate a happy union between thriftness and lean meat—a union which suits both the curer and producer. On the whole, I thing the hair is the moat certain sign of lean meat that:we have, and as the "bouts Sassenach" will have lean meat and plenty of it, no matter what it costs, he Must have it, whether the producer likes it or not; and an he is will'ng to put down his yellow geld for it, the producer must see that in breeding for lean meat profit the lies. We have fairly gauged the type of a pig to breed—the next stage in the dis- cussion necessary is how to produce it. The first consideration must, of course, be the hoar. It is said that the boar is half the herd ; but I am day by day beginning to thing that even this estimate undervalues his prepotency, or the poser of produc- ing his like. Let Isle choose the boars and you the sows, and I will back myself to produce any shape or style of pig in spite of the oppos- ing selection. The boar I regard as responsible in the largest degree for the shape, form, and quality of the litter ; whilst the sow supplies the frame, constitution and internal struetnre. If, theretore, wo are breeding for the form, it is all im- portant that a boar possessing those particular points should be obtain- ed. If there is one thing more difficult than another to procure it is a perfectly shaped boar. You may get twenty young sows of blameless form to one boar, but if you once get the boar, he will leave a perman- ent nark upon your herd, The Fanners' Gazette, Dublin, Ireland, publishes an interesting paper from Mr. A. W. Shaw, pro- prietor of a Limeriok bacon factory, on "The Improvement of Pige." He says : I think it better to start at the beginning, and before touoh- ing upon the subject of "rearing and feeding pigs," to show what is the best type of pig to rear and fend for marketable purposes. The following seven points of a pig I have frequently had to define for the publie : Neat in the head, light in the neck and shoulders, ..cl.es.p,iu_,the heart .and all -,arklatl.d-.tha. —A Nva Scotian named Archie Mc- Phail who has been trapping on Lake of the Woods, Man., and who has bet•:` missing since early in February, has hes n found frozen to death, On Fab.2 he vis- ited Keewatin and sold furs, returning with supplies. It 18 supposed he be- onmeeshnusted when within two tnileaof home, fell to the ice and was unable to rise again. PHYSICIANS MEET, with no more Common or dangerous ma/ edy than Catarrh. It begins with a cold in the head, often resists all forms of treatment,. and rune front simple irrita- tion of the mtihlus membrane to Chronic inflammation and destructive ulceration, Before Clark's Catarrh Cure was known the doctors adopted a long constitution- al treatment'with their patients, hut now they reoomm''6r)4l ..them to go to the drug- gist and get -a p'Arkage of Clark's Catarrh Care When the draggiet oannbt supply, the remedy will be sent by mail on re. neipt of 50 cents, Clark Chemical Qo, ,•- Tneentre --$ 'v ' Y6f1C t. it J•.