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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1893-06-07, Page 21.1 That ,it io »ot wise to 42/Apedovolti with Qbetpoorppoun,de purporting to boblotxl.•llurifiors. but whieb, have 00 Teal Eleablinal value. To make sa0. of.; *fly other than: the old start - "dant AY I':S. Sarsaparilla. -4110 Su - porter simply to • (Wilke lose of t10191 tttoney• and health. If you are atliioted with.Scrofula, tCatarrh, Rheumatism, Dyspepsia, .Eczema, Running $ores. Tumors, ;or any other blood disease, be oscura(' It Pays to Us EA, EE'S Sarsaparilla, and AYER'S only. AYER'S Sarsaparilla can al. -ways bo depended upon. It dons not Rery. It is always the same in quality, quantity, and effect. It is inwerior in combination, proportion, appearance, and in all that goes to build up the system weakened by disease and pain. It searches out all Impurities in the blood awl es- eela;them by the natural channels.* AYE Sarsaparilla Prepared -b Dr. J. 0. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Masa Bold by,,t11Druggists. Price e1; six bottles, 85, 9 Cures ethers,will euro you The Huron News -Record 81.50 a Yeat—$1.25 in Advance. Wednesday. June 7tIi, 1893. THE HURON NEWS -RECORD. A Live Local and Family Weekly Journal, Issued Wednesday Mornings. OFFICE. --Brick Block, Albert Street, North, Clinton, Ont, TERM, -;1.50 a year, $1.25 in advanoe. No paper discontinued, except at option of publisher, until all arrearages are settled, The month and year to which all subscriptions are paid will be found on the address label. - • TRANSIENT ADVERTISING. -=Ten cents a line (non• paneltneasure)for first insertion and three rents a ltpo for each subsequent insertion, eos•rlAOT ADVBarf4INO. -Special position 10 to 25 per cent above regular rates. The table below gives contract rates fur run of paper for definite periods: strias. 11 vit. l 6 Mo. 13 no. 1 t mut/ One column Half -column 1 35 00 quarter column 20 00 One eighth columnI 12 00 One inch i 6 00 660 00 835 00 820 00 87 00 20 00 12 00 4 50 12 00 7 00 2 00 7 00 400 200 3 50 2 00 1 00 Servants wanted, for sale, lost or found, advertise- ments, not exceeding three lines, 25 cents each in• sertion; not exceeding seven lines, 50 cents for first insertion and 25 cents for each follo,wing insertion, Farms, houses or town' property, for sale or to rent, stray stock and similar advertisements not exceeding eightlines, 81 fes first month and 50 gents fur cacti following month. Advertisements without definite instructions in- variably inserted until forbid and charged accord- ingly. Transient advertisements in all cases to be paid in advance. All contract changes must be received at tho office not later than SATURDAY NOON every week. A. M. TODD, Publisher. CANADA'S BIG CHEESE. IT WEIGHS ELEVEN TONS, AND REPRE- SENTS A DAY'S MILKING FROM TEN THOUSAND COWS. From the Chicago Times. Perhaps you think green things won't grow in Canada. If you do go around to the Ontario pavilion in the Agricultural building and learn other wise. Ontario has a great display of grains and grasses—and peas. Especi• ally strong on peas is the Canadian exhibit. But the pride of Ontario is not in the Ontario section at all. The big cheese, the biggest cheese of them all, is right across the aisle to the west. It is an Ontario cheese, though made at the dominion experimental station in Perth, Lanark County. A good deal has been said about this cheese, how much it weighs, and how it broke the floor down while it was being put in place. Everybody ought to know by this time that it weighs 11 tons, but it is not so easy to understand just how him. thing eleven tons of cheese all in oneacake may be. Ten thousand cows collaborated on that cheese. Each gave one day's milking. The total weight of the milk used was 207,200 pounds. The cheese is 6 feet high and 28 foot in circumforente. It is worth between $4,000 and $5,000. The man who made this cheese, J, A. Ruddick of Perth, is exceedingly proud of it. It is his masterpiece. Mr. Ruddick is a slender young man and exceedingly modest withal. He watches with great solicitude over this pride of Ontario. About once in ten days he carefnlly turne it over. Of course he does not do all (his himself, for the cheese is a trifle bulky. It is encased in a vat of rivited steel boiler plate and this boiler plate rides on a heavy wide, wheeled truck. There are strong oak uprights, securely braced; on this truck, and between thee() the huge cheese box is suspended in wrought -iron stirrups, It may be re- volved in there by a system of screws. The reason why it has to be turned is because it is a young cheese and is still "curing." Mr. Ruddick Gaye 12 of the biggest cheese foundries in Ontario contributed curda to make the cheese. Each factory pressed its contribution slight- ly, loaded it into cloth -lined milk cans rushed it by and train to Perth. There the cans were dumped into the boiler•plate vat, the curds broken up, and then the pressure of six gi,'tntjack- • ,• ' lereViliiput rtrt %brow 1dt h0 ►1ty arlttkOM". Wutk Avery btl rr,ho..4Qoa *Ute the AO, euitural Uui ding eto}te t4, look. st 4410 monumental eheedek Qt#.Qne aide: of ik is a high pyramid of Ganadian. battiod beer, and not far away ie nu exhibit :of creekei'e•.-•.•highly entieiogcontbina,tion. An aged person with,gray•ooiored hair, an abundance of beaver het and aggres. sivoly new store clothes stopped 40 take a look yesterday. lie appeared 'as if he might have come from Kokomo, or Monotony Water -tank, or aome such place. He walked carefully all around the cheese, spelled out the .all on it, epat vigorously and said: "Gosh 1 Ef skippers ever got into that Char cheese they'll grow as big fie rabbits 1" But hie ie not the only Canadian cheese in eight. It is flanked all about by big and little cheesoe. There aro six of them that weigh 1,000 pounds each. There are cheeses from Quebec, Ontario and the maritime provinces. Canada beats the world ou cheese." The most rearing matter, the most varied in character, and the best and brightest in quality of any weekly journal will be found in Town Topics, the wor 1d -famed, so-called society journ- al of New York. We say " so-called" because, while it contains a vast amount of news of the doing of swell society throughout North America, it also in- cludes so many other features of inter- est to the general reader, comprising wonderfully bright short stories, ser- ials by the greatest authors, such as F. Marion Crawford, Amelie Ri ves, Jerome K. Jerome, Edgar Fawcett, Julian Hawthorne and a host of others, with some notable foreign names; the most lpungent witticisrns, brilliant bur- esques, sketches and poetry, and fin- ally the Most elaborate financial news department, that it might more proper- ly be called a "journal for everybody." Each number is a Veritable library, large enough to occupy the leisure hours of the week. Frorn the same office is published a literary Quarterly "Tales from Town Topics," 256 pages, in each number of which is given an original story, ob- tained by competition under an offer of a thousand dollar prize, and occupy- ing about half the book, the balance of the volume being Made up of short stories, etc., from the numbers of Town Topics of years hack. Both these publi- cations, clubbed, are sent for one year for $5.00 Town Topics, 21 West 23rd Street, New York. KOSSUTH ON HOME RULE. Tlie Pall Mall Gazette publishes an interview with the venerable Hungar- ian patriot, Louis Kossuth, in regard to Irish Home Rule. In tho interview Kosselh said that he wrote a memor- andum years ago regarding Mr. Glad• stone's first Home Rule scheme. The memorandum, Kossuth said, would be found among his papers after his death, but he declined to diecloee at present what the memorandum contaius. " As to Mr. Gladstone's second scheme for Irish Home Rule," Kossuth continued, "I know very little about it or the real principles underlying it. I believe, however, that Mr. Glad• stone will never arrive at bis goal. The Irish question presents the same obstacles as squaring a circle. It is a perfect utopia, this wish of Mr. Glad- stone to establish the autonomy of Ire• land without granting to that country abeolute independence, and I should not be astonished if Ireland should one day throw herself into the arms of the United States in order to gain what she wants. Distances between countries do not count to day as they counted in the past. I•t has been said that the situation of Ireland is comparable to that of Hungary, and some eminent Englishmen have asked my opinion in regard to that assertion. My answer is that it is false. The Austrians never conquered Hungary as the English con- quered Ireland. Huugary merely made a pact with the House of Haps- burg for the sake of neighborly associ- ation. Leland, on the contrary, was conquered by force of arms, and will only be delivered by force of nrni " Kossuth, who is 91 years old, looks feeble and wasted, and is sometimes convulsed by fits of coughing. But there is still the old fire in his eyes, which flashed while he was talking. He still spends some of his time every day writing on behalf of hungary. For Over -Fitly Years, bf rts. WiNsi.ow's Soo'rnrso Svatr has been used by millions of mothers for their children while teething. If disturbed at night and broken of ) our rest by a sick child suffering and crying with pain of Cutting Teeth send at once and get a bottle of "Mrs. Win- slow's Soothing Syrup" for Children Teething. It will relieve the poor little sufferer immediately. Depend upon it, mothers, there is no mistake about It. It cures Diarrhmu regulates the Stomach and Bowels, cures Wind Colic, softens the Gums and re- duces Inflammation, and gives tone and energy to the whole system. "Mrs Winslow's Soothing Syrup" for children teething is pleasant to the taste and is the prescription of ono of the oldest and hest female physicians and nurses In the United States. Price twenty-five cents a bottle. Sold by all drug- gists throughout the world. Bo sure and ask for MRs. WINeLow'e SOOTHING SYRUP." HE DID NOT PAY HIS DEBTS AND HIS FELLOW•CLERGYMEN SUS' PENDED HIM. An unusual case was dealt with by the Ministerial session of the Methodist church of London District Monday afternoon of last week. Rev. David Ryan is a Methodist minister who was superannuated years ago. His super- annuation fees have been worth a hun- dred and odd dollars to him, and in addition to this he was supposed to bo making money in liberal quantities as a result of his dairying epeoulations, together with some profits derived from hiecapaoity as middleman in the handl, ing of flour and feed and sundry other lines of business carried on in West- minster. Indeed, Mr. Ryan had a number of "irons in the fire," and it Eu�a Baeru 4,a In tha00in thim. chime of Cl to Weir g. r# Nu nand viGitpity for. �aelr llbslai th the • ..etrou� s du r. pat t1re0 �'fa, e beg to anuounodthat the EUREKAD4ICBt and i 48 A7lt4NT is in a bettor positiou tbatt over to e11M0ossful1y eater to the wapts of the geueral public. We do our own baking, nave heavy expeusetl, and turn Out a quality of BREAD BUNS, PASTRY, CAKES, &C ., equal to any in West � erne Ontario • and at • the wary; loweetliving prices. WEDDING OAKES A SPECIALTY. Bread, &o,, delivered to all pats of the town, FRUITS, CONFECTIONERY, ICO CREAM, COOL. DRINKS. Pio nia and Private Gather inga eupplied op the ebortest notice at liberal rates, Remember the locadtion-11ext. Grand Union Hotel, Smith's Block Clinton. BO I'D BR OS., Proprietors. LEHIGH VALLEY CO NUT, STOVE, GRATE and EGG. It� L Why use low grades of Coal when you can get THIS CELEBRATED COAL which gives twenty five per cent more heat to the ton than any other mined. Hold your orders until we eall uponyou with prices. Orders can be left at our old store in the BRICK BLOCK or at our new store in tho McKAY BLOCK. HARLAND BROS., - Clinton. Are xou Coining to TJJE WORLD'S FAIR ? -C.---WORLD'S FAIR CO UPON.' ns-rtaz OCE.A.N,., . Chicago's Greatest Family Daily Paper, has opened a "World's Fair Bureau" for the accommodation of the readers of THE HURON NEWS -RECORD Who may be in Chicago during the World's Columbian Exposition. A thorough canvass of the respectable hotels, boarding and lodging houses in Chicago has been made, and to any person who brings or sends this 'Coupon to The Inter Ocean's World's Fair Bureau we will give our card of introduction to a first-class boarding or lodging house, If ifhout one cent of eapinse. 1 "Remember, you must bring this introduction coupon from your own home paper with'you to get the benefits of this offer without charge. THE WORLD'S FAIR RVREAL Room 212, Inter Ocean Building, Chicago, Ill. CLINTON SASH, DOOR AND BLIND FACTORY, 0 S. S. COOPER, - -' PROPRIETOR, General Buildc r and Contractor. This factory has been under the personal supervision years. We carry an extensive and reliable stock and estimates for andOuild all classes of buildings on short prices. All work is supervised in a mechanicaI guaranteed. We sell all kinds of interior and and one owner for eight prepare plans and give notice and oh the closest way and satisfaction exterior material. Lumber, ;Lath, Shingles, Lime, Sash, Doors, Blinds, &c, Agent for the CELEBRATED GRAYBILL SCHOOL DESK, manufactured at Waterloo. Call and get prices and estimates before placing your orders. was thought that all of these were of a lucrative nature. An assignment in his case was an- nounced in December last. Creditors there were in plenty, but they had been tormented by no anxious fears. Now they are said to keenly regret that they had placed so much confidence in the rev.. gentleman, and some of them say they wished he had remained in the pulpit and had left the milk business alone, • fc r when the assets and liabilities were totalled up it was found that only 11 cents on the dollar could be lnado out of the insolved estate. The creditors aro said to be out some $6,000. This statement of the case was made to the Ministerial session, and after a number of witnesses were heard, a resolution was carried finding that Rev. David Ryan had contracted debts with- out having the meone wherewith to pay the same, and suspending him until the case shall be reported to the General Conference: The Midsummer Number of "Tales for Town -Fol es" has just swept over the land with a cool breeziness that is very grateful to a warm and langriorotts public. It is a remarkably gay assort- Ilient of short stories, sketches, poems and witticisms culled from the. New York society ,journal, and contains, in addition to this olla podritla of reproduc- ed material, a complete and original novel, entitled "Six Months in Ilades," by Clarice Irene Clinghan. The story took the prize of $1,090 in a contest in- stituted by the publishers of Town, Topics, and is a remarkably ingenious and well - Constructed tale. For iL summer hook with which to while away alstzy after- noon, "Tales from Town Topics" is peculiarly attractive.—Town Topics, 21 West Twenty-third street, New York. • —Emma Downton, five years lod, wandered from her home in Ports. mouth Sunday morning of last week. The police were notified, and Wednes- day they learned that the child had been seen with Ada Urry, 14 years old, early on Sunday evening. When they arrested the Urry girl she confessed that she bad knocked down the Down- ton child, dragged her to a public well and thrown her in. A search of the well brought the body to light. No motive for the murder can be ascertain- ed. The Urry girl had never spoken to her victim until an hour or two before the murder. THEY DO Nor DESPAIR. An titter lose of hope is not character- istic of Consumptives, though no other form of dieeare is so fatal, unless its progress in arrested by the use of Scott's Emulsion, which is Cod Liver til made as palatable as Dream. —On Marti 19 Maggie Billsdon, of Walkerton, was laid to rest in Hans over cemetery, and on May 20th her sister, 13elll5 Ann, was laid beside her. Most loving were these sisters in life, and they were not tong parted. The sorrowing family have the sympathy of all in their sad affliction. Consumption Cured. An old physician, retired from practice, having had placed iu his hands by an East India mission- ary the formula of a simple vegetable remedy for the speedy and permanent sure "f Consumption, Bronchitis; Catarrh, Asthma and all throat amu Lugg Affections, also a,' positive and radical euro for Nervous Debility and all Nervous Complaints, after•having tested its wonderful curative powers In thousands o1 cases, has felt it his duty to snake, it known to his suffering fellows. Actuatedby this motive and a desire to relieve human suffering, Y will send free of charge, to all the desire it, this teeipe, in German, French or English, with full directions for preparing and using. tent by mail by addressing with stamp, naming this paper. W.A. Notts, 820 Powers' Cbtclr, i.ochester, 650- y —Miss Nora Clench, the celebrated young Canadian violinist, will come back to Canada next fall, and will give 30 or 40 concerts iu Ontario and Quebec, and will possibly visit. the Northwest also, flies Clench is still in London, England. The fact of her playing before' the Queeil .has brought her into prominence in the musical world, but rho is rapidly winning her way by the force of her own merit. "SIX MONT:'IS IN HADES." A truly marvelous tale of to -day. 81,000 PRIZE NOVEL IN oltr.AT SUMMER NUMBER (8) OF TALES FROM TOWN TOPICS. JUST OUT. In addition to the prize story of 150 pages there are 110 racy abort stories, sketches, poems and witticism from the old issues of Town Torics, that famous and spicy New York journal known wherever English is read. No book published this year will afford such delicious entertainment for houre of summer leisure and travel. What "The Independent" says :—"Once again New York's fashionable society quarterly volume, 'Tales From Town Topics,' has made its appearance. The tales are epioy and the topica inognaustible. Some of the tales skirt along the very edge of danger, but a firm hand holds them back within the bonds el whole- some sense of propriety." All news and book stands or Bond price, 50 cents, to TOWN TOPIC, 21 Weet 28d Street, New York. to r'$1,00 pays three .nonthe' trial subscription to Town Torics and you • 'll get any back number of Tales From Town Topics FREE. TOWN To:rce $4.00 per year. LIBERAL CLUB OFFERI Tows TOPICS and "Tales From 'Town 'Topics" will both be sent one year for 445.00. Tows Torsos, the great 35 -page weekly, is universal- ly reoognzled as tho most complete weekly Journal in the world. Its "saunterings" oolmmns aro inimitable. Its society news, especially of the doings of the 400 of New York, Boston, Philadelphia, Chicago, and all over the world, is not equalled by any newspaper. Its Financial Department is arthority with all bankers and brokers. Inn "Afield and Afloat" makes it tho most intoroeting paper for all lovers of aped—yachting, foot ball, row - In shooting, eaten etc. Its "On the Tnr•f" t. cels alg't other racing notes. Its bnrlosquee, poems and Jakob aro tho cleverest. Its etorlee are by the best writers—among them Amelia Rives, F. Mnrion Crawford, Julian Hawthorne,Edgar Fawcett, Jerome K..lerome, Gilbert Parker, ary .7. Hawker ("Lance Falconer"), Bury Pain,Panl Bourget, etc., oto.,ete. otoi?y, 331.700.18, i'HA tr,ON , ,� , 8.1 �. S, OAR.fa Ab1,� 'i'4!AGIQN� w441 !,?ir the beat, work, naanebip' analmaterlai, 1101.4110.3e latest aCyle..r nd mo.t modern implore. meats. Ail work warranted, liepatrin;o and :repainting promptiy attended;. 1?rieea to emit the .ttweu. 1, Z&"FACTORY—•-corner Huron and Orange Streeter 011oton: 607-'- Silrer Star Coal Oil; 4 IMPERIAL. GALLONS ABOUT EQUIVALENT TO 5 AMERICAN GALLONS for POI/11--— CTS WATER WHITE AMERICAN OIL, 25c. GALLON. 0 JOHNSON'S K SLSOMINE AND PURE MIXED PAINTS. CHURCH'S ALABASTINE- JOHN A. BRUCE'S FIELD and GARDEN SEEDS. 0 DAVIS & ROWLAND, HARDWARE, STOVES & TINWARE, CLINTON. ,ami.—ormm.bvsnumNaOsamon,u .. _. AM THE HUB GROCERY. 0 'We have closed our financial year let of February and find that it has been a year of fair prosperty to ns. We wieh to render our best THANKS to Customers for their patronage and will always strive to win your con• fidence in future, by giving you GOOD GOODS as cheap as any other House in Town, Our Stock of CHINA WARE, PORCELAIN AND \STONEWARE, is well assorted (and as we have a large Import Order coming from Englund) we will offer them at Close Prices to make room. GEORGE SWALLOW Clinton. HAVE YOU NOTICED THAT WE DELIVER ALL . UR GOODS FREE OF CHARGE IN TOWN. _._ 0 - ROCK OIL 10e. per GALLON. BARB and Ti 111BLESS FENCING WIRE, GALVANIZED FENCING WINE, (ILEI! AND ENMALED STEEL FENCE WIRE, SPADES, SHOVELS, WAKES, HOES. MINED PAINTS, KALSOMINE ALABAS'I'INE, DAISY CHURNS. 1 CAR STEEL NAILS JUST RECEIVED. We buy for cash the best quality of goods only and sell at bottom prices. CARL �.N� :1RIO s-, STOVE AND HARDWARE, • - Albert St., Clinton. .4K • v-- 0 WILSON & IIO\VE have Nought the good•will and interest in the bakery recently carried on by Mr. R. McLennan, in addition to the Restaurant carried on by Mr. James Anderson, and have amalgamated the two businesses The combination will be carried on in THE OLD STAND IN SEARLE'S BLOCK, and will hereafter be known as THE NOVELTY BAKERY AND RES. TAUIZANT. Mr. McLennan will he our baker. Bread of superior quality will be delivered as usual, and Bread, Cakes, &c., constantly kept on hand and sold only at the Novelty Store, We solicit the patronage of all old customers and many new ones. ilson 4 Howe, - Clinton 0 As an extra inducement to Cash purchasers I have made arrangements with a leading firm of 'Toronto for a large supply of Artistic Pictures by well. known Masters, all framed and finished in firstoclass style, and suitable for the beat class of reeidence. Each customer will be presented with one of these magnificent Pictures free when their cash purchases agg. gate Thirty Dollars. My motto in business is to supply my customers with good reliable Goods at Bottom Prices. Although the principal Soap Manufacturers have advanced prices 30 per cent. p 1 will supply all Electric Soaps and the noted Sunlight and Surprise Soaps at the old figures. Call and see those beautiful Works of Art, samples of which are on show at our Store. 1 1 • Our Sock is replete and well ?elected. We offer excellent values in fine Teas, including best grades in Black, Green and Japan?. rry our Russian Blend and Crown Blend, the finest in the market. Examine the gnalityand prices of our Combination Dinner and Tea Setts,. and be convinced that Bargain Day with ns, is every business da, throughout the year. N.-ROBSON, China Hall Clinton, Feb. 14, 1893. r