HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton New Era, 1894-04-27, Page 7c . • ,,.- -•aseese ,_ - - �JY-• . .- ry -
Ap►'UU 27, 1813.
TH CLINTON N. IiX g..r.RI
O/yT LET MOTHER WASH -DAY
Qo BY WITHOUT Us,Mo
YOU will find
that it will do
what no other
soap can do, and
will please you every
way.
It is Easy, Clean,
ttnd
Economical to wash with
this soap.
The Canadian Fruit Buyers' and
Exporters' Assooiatiuu.
The Canadian Fruit Buyers' end Ex-
porters' Aesooiation desire; as far as poe-
eible, to Make knpwm the ()Note and aims
of the Association, and to ask the growers
of 4pplee eepeoiatly, to harmoniously co*
operate in the effoht to avert the dangers
which so seriously threaten to restrict, if
not destroy, this important branch of our
export trade. The Association has fpr its
main object e fiaoing'Mere "growers the
names of those varieties of Apples that
have been found, by practical experience,
to be best suited for the export trade; to
point out where greater care and attention
to the quality of our productions, and the
market's requirements, will prove of im-
mense benefit to all; to eradicate many of
those evils which have crept into the trade
through ignorance on the part of some,
and intention on the part of, others, and
which are bringing Canadian fruit into
disrepute in the consuming markets; and
in general, to plane the business on a more
satisfactory basis than has hitherto pre-
vailed.
It is absolutely necessary to improve.
the quality of our fruit if we are to hold
our own in the foreign markets. The pre-
valent idea that European countries are
unable to produce good winter apples is a
mistaken one, they are producing, and in
rapidly increasing quantities, fruit that is
as goo;( as many of our best winter varie-
ties, and Ear superior in every respect to
such kinds se the Phoenix, Pewakee, Tal•
man Sweet and others. Tbis is notably
the Daae in Denmark, Belgium, • Holland
and all parts of Germany and Franoe.
Growers in these countries are now becom-
ing as much alive to the importance of this
branoh of their export trade as we are.
Heretofore they have not marketed their
apples in as good shape comparatively es
Canadians—this will be obviated in the
future, as a number of large Continental
handlers of fruit visited tbeBritishmarkets
last autumn, for the purpose of finding out
the best kind of package, and the proper
mode of packing the fruit to suit the de-
mand. For some years past they have
been planting and grafting, especially in
Denmark, only those kinds of fruit which
compare favorably with oar best varieties,
such as the Northern Spy, Greening, Seek,
Baldwin, Golden Russets, etc. We cannot
ignore these facts if we desire to hold our
own in the foreign markets. It is neces-
sary to use much greater care in the plant-
ing of an apple orchard than in the plant-
ing of anything else. A mistake made in
planting an inferior variety of wheat, corn,
or any other kind of produce, may be
rectified the following season, but this is
not the case in setting out an apple orchard,
and it behooves those intending to plant
apples to exercise the greatest care possible.
The Association strongly recommends the
planting out and crafting only of those
varieties which are in themselves intriu-
sically superior in quality, and meet with
the market's requirements, having due re-
gard to the locality and to the soil. The
following kinds are known to be excellent
in quality, and by thorough test have prov-
ed their superiority as good shippers: -
Summer—Duchess of Oldenburg, Alexan-
der. Early Fall—Gravenstein, Maiden
Blush, Cayuga, Red Streak. Late Fall—
Blenheim, Ribston, Twenty Ounce, and
Cranberry Pippins, King, Hgbbardeton,
Fallawater, Snow Apple ' or Fameuse.
Winter — Northern Spy, Spitzenburg;
Greening, Baldwin, Golden and Roxbury
Russet, Seek and Jonathan. -
The Association would further recom-
mend the re -grafting of all Talman Sweets,
Phoenix, Pewakee, Swear, Jennettinge,
eto., with the Northern Spy, Golden Rb-sset
or any of those varieties which are recom-
mended to be grown. The Association
further recommends that growers give
more attention and care to their apple
orchards. From the appearance of the
majority of the orchards throughout the
country one would suppose the growers
imagined they had done their duty when
they have planted the trees, and that na•
tura is expected to the rest. After plant-
ing the right varieties a thorough system
of cultivation, and a proper pruning of the
trees is as essential to the production of
good fruit as a thorough system of culti-
vation' and care is necessary in growing
anything else. A more intelligent Dare of
the fruit after it is grown is also neoeseary.
Many growers and handlers of Apples
wonder why their fruit does not keep after
it has been stored in suitable winter quar-
ters, never thinking that it had been left
on the ground for one or even two weeks
exposed to all kinds of weather. The anti-
quated idea of picking the fruit and dump-
ing it into piles on the ground to "sweat,"
is in keeping with the same idea that when
a man is ill he must be bled; in the one
case the man is losing strength through
the loss of blood, in the other the apple is
losing its best keeping properties by being
exposed to sun, dew, rain and rapid changes
of temperature.
A well ventilated building should be used
to protect the fruit and barrels from the
soil and weather till the time for market-
ing or winter storing has arrived. If suit-
able buildings are not convenient, one
might be erected at a small expense, and
would amply repay for its,cost in a very
short time.
It has been thought best in the interest
of all, that growers should supply their
own barrels, as owing to the limited time
coopers have in ordinary seasons of getting
barrels ready, material is sometimes very
difficult to obtain, and necessitates 'their
using unsuitable stuff and making up a
very inferior package, thereby eeriously
damaging the fruit while in transit. It
has been decided that hereafter growers
shall furnish the barrels, which shall be
first class and of government standard
size.
It is hoped that all interested will give
this circular letter publicity, it being re-
ported that nurserymen are taking large
orders for those varieties which are most
inferior in quality, andtherefore unsitable
for planting. Yours truly,
J. M. SRIITTLEWOnTri,
Sec.-Treas. pro tem.
360
Perfect
for 10c
A pretty little souvenir
with each package
HONOR TO. •DARTMOUTH
Prof. Edward E. Phelps, M. D., LL.D:,
Whose Giant Intellect Discovered
Paine's Celery Cor pound.
R. Coats Sc Son,
CLINTON
A CHANCE FOR EVERYBODY.
•
--WE HAVE JUST PURCHASED A LINE OF ---
Bedroom Suites, Sideboards E$tension
Tables and Lounges
At a big reduction on the regular price, and we are going to give our customers the
benefit of this reduction; so now is your chance to make your home look neat
for very little money. Space will not allow us to quote prices, as .we have so
many different lines, but come and see for yourself what great bargains we,
have to offer you.
Parlor Suites, Centre Tables, Rall Racks,
73003E Osseo, Secretaries, Bed Springs,
Mattresses
And everything in onr line cheaper than ever. We want your trade, and if Good Goods,
Low Prices and Honest Dealings,ie what you want, we will have it. Furniture
to suit everybody.
JOSEPH CHIDLEY,
FURNITURE DEALER AND UNDERTAKER.
JOS. CHIDLEY JR.,Fnneral Director and Embalmer. Night Calls Answered
at his residence, King Street, opposite the Foundry.
•
GOOD NEWS
THIS IS SOMETHING PEOPLE ALWAYS LIKE TO HEAR.
This week we have opened out a fine assortment of TIN WARE which has
already been much admired for its cheapness and good quality. We are also
well enpplied with
FIELD and GARDEN SEEDS, FENCE WIRE,
SPADES, SHOVELS,: FORKS, &c.,
V .J..�, _1 We have Suite for Men and Boye, and make np fine Cloth
17 ins tc order at very low rates. We will be pleased to have
you pall and examine goods and compare prides. We give good bargains all through
the stock and every day. Produce taken as cash or we will pay cash for most kinds of
produce.
ADAMS' EMPORIUM, R. ADAMS.
LONDESBORO
Two giants among men --the greatest
statesmen and the greatest physician that
,America has produced—Daniel Webster
and E. Phelps—have both done honor to
Dartmouth college, one as a student, the
other as an instructor.
To Prof. Edward E. Phelps, M. D.: L L.
D., the world to -day owes longer life and
more freedom from sickness than to any
other physician. •
Every Dartmouth alumnus of more than
a dozen years' standing remembers the awe
in which he held the keen observer whose
name appeared,in-the college catalogue next
to that of the president as professor of
materia medica; and every younger gradu-
ate has admired the cotbplete museum of
medical botany which Dr. Phelps gave to
the college.
But it was the world -famed discovery of
Prof. Phelps of an infallible cure for those
fearful ills that result from an impaired
nervous system and impure blood which
has endeared the great doctor to the world,
and made his life an era in the practice of
medicine.
Prof.„Phelps was born in Connecticut and
graduated from the military school at Nor-
wich, Ot. He studied medicine With Prof.
Nathan Smith, of New Haven, Conn., and
graduated in medicine at Yale.
His unusual talent soon brought him re-
putation and prominence among his pro-
fessional brethren. In 1835 he was elect-
ed to the professorship of anatomy and
surgery in the Vermont university. It
1841 he was appointed lecturer on materia
medics and medical "botany in Dartmouth
college. The next year he was chosen pro-
fessor of a chair then vacated by Prof.
Robby,and occupied the chair, the most
important one in the country, until a few
years before his death in 1880.
He had for years foreseen the dangers of
the American way of living. He went
about to find a scientific, common sense re-
medy to cure the common evils that, under
one name and another, result from an un-
healthful state of the nervous system, and
within a score of years have seemed to be
sweeping over the country like an epidemic.
He succeeded.
He gave to the medical profession a cele-
brated,remedy, which has since come to be
known the world over as Paine's Celery
Compound. -
It was Dr. Phelp's prescription which
ever since has been freely used and pre-
scribed by the most eminent of the pro-
fession. The formula was furnished to all
STOUTLY DENIED.
reputable physicians. They found the
wonderful remedy to be exactly what was
olaimed for it, a great nerve and brain
strengthener and restorer. It was demon-
strated beyond doubt that Paine's Celery
Compound would cure nervous debility and
exhaustion, neuralgia, sleeplessness, dys-
pepsia, and all blood diseases.
It was as harmless as it was good, and it
was the universal advice of the me-
dical profession that the compound be
placed where the general public could se-
cure it, and thousands of people have every
year proven-the'wisdom of this good advice.
• Paine's Celery Compound has given the
people of Canada the best and strongest testi-
monials ever published. No other medicine
before the public has ever been favored with
such a mass of home evidence.. All classes,
from the laborer to men and women of
national reputation, have declared that
Paine's Celery Compound is worthy of all
that has been said in its favor.
As a well known physician in this city
says:
"Pain's Celery Compound is not a sar-
saparilla; it is not a mere tonic; it is not an
ordinary nervine—it is as far beyond them
all as the diamond is superior to cheap
Blase."
MY STORE IS FILLED UP, WITH NICE, NEW, GOOD
"I notice lately that a great many FURNITURE—AT LOW PRICES—BOUGHT RIGHT
fires have been attributed to electric ; TO SELL AT SMALL PROFITS
lights or appliances," said W. G. Thur-
ston, an electrician. "That is an er. ng
tor. .I will venture to say that not
one in 10,000 fires originates in that
manner. For instance,I recently read
an account of a big dry goods fire
which the proprietors say was caused 1
by the bursting of an incandescent
bulb. Rot and nonsense! The mom-
ent an incandescent bulb is punctured, 1
air crushes it. The fiber will not give ,
off light except in a vacuum. Conse-
quently there is no light, no heat, no'
fire around a busted incandescent bulb.
Air:destroys the light. That is only
one of a hundred illustrations that
might be cited. When two heavy
charged noninsulated wires cross there
is a flash and a blaze and a fire may be
started. An arc light may drop sparks
from the carbon and start a fire, but
an incandescent light never."
Rouse - Cleaning - Time - Coming
Spring is full of terrors to all whose con-
stitution is not able to resist the sudden
changes of temperature and other insaln-
britiea of the season. To put the system
in condition to overcome these evils,
nothing is so effective as Ayer's Sarsa-
parilla. Take it now.
RUMBALL' SIIILGZ FACTORY
litltixtaln
of splendid
8i; WAGGONS
and workmanship.
Huron Street, C�
We have on hand an assortment
BUGGIES. CARRIAGES,
Which we guarantee to be of first-class mate
Y you want a good article at the price of a poor,ono, call and see us.
E+ . `aTJ C XNTON
WAITER! BEEFSTAKE, HAM AND
EGGS, FOR ONE.
"God gave us meat, but the devil sent ns
cooks,” is a trite saying. From bad cook-
ing, fast eating and overeating, comes a
whole train of diseases—indigestion, dys-
pepsia, billiousness, catarrh of the stomach,
headache, dizziness, and the like. God al-
so sent us a brainy man, who compounded
the "Golden Medical Discovery," a correc-
tive of all the ills resulting from overfeed.
ing and bad blood. Dr. Pierce of Buffalo,
has furnished in the "Discovery," a great
desideratum in America, where everybody
are in such a hurry to make money, they
have no time to eat, and scarcely any time
to live. It invigorates the liver, cleanses
the blood and tones up the system.
Delicate diseases of either sex, however
induces, speedily and permanently cured.
Bootibf particulars, 10o in stamps, mailed
sealed in plain envelope. Address, World's
iepensary Medical Association, GGA Main
t., Buffalo, N. Y.
MILKING REINDEER.
SIDEBOARDS ---A nice Sideboard in 16th century, an-
tique, &c. Light finish, $6.50—new goods just -in.
BAMBOO TABLES
25c, 30c. and 40c come to hand.
POLISHED WALNUT BEDROOM SUITS $20.
A lot of Mattresses, Lounge?, Spring Beds,
Parlor Suits &o.
BEDROOM SUITS from $10.50 up
Furniture in Oak and other woods.
Large stook of Picture Mouldings in Oak,
Gilt,New Shades. Frames made to order
CURTAIN POLES and Fixings, im-
ported goods, from 25o up. Poles in Oak,
Enamel, black or assorted colors.
MIRRORS in different sizes,
FANCY ROCKERS in stnffed bot.
toms and Rattan Chairs. CentrelTables
and Extension Tables. Tarbox's patent
Pillow Sham Holders.
J. C. STEVENSON.. Furniture Emporium,
ALBERT STREET, CLINTON.
The process of milking a herd of
reindeer is singular, and we have often
watched it with Interest, especially
when, after a long tramp across the To onr customers who have helped ne to make our last year the best in the history of
fields, we looked forward to a share of the flrm, we tender our best thanks, and assure them we will will spare no
it ourselves. Attended by the sharp- efforts to not only retain their trade, but to give them even better value for
nosed Lapland dogs, the herd appears, their money or produce than heretofore. We have just closed the purchase of
its members packed closely together
Mk IR
'SHANK
and forming a compact mass, in which
the horns are a prominent feature.
As they approach nearer, one hears a
Frunting exactly like swine, and a cur-
ious, crackling sound, produced by the
contact of innuinerable horns and
limbs. They are then driven into an
enclosure, each animal is lassoed up to
an erection in the middle, where it is
milked. The quantity afforded by
each is only about as much as would
fill a claret glass but the milk is ex-
tremely rich and nourishing,
ti
4 IS' b•'S 'C U R`s E' 0 ,n •44, :a:
•
M. C ES Rif Au. LSE Falls. 4,1
t•.: , Beat cough syrup. Tatt,.s gout,. tee , y'
in time. Bold by die. • to+t
C,ONSUMPT.IQ
ONE CAR LOAD OF SUGAR
Direct from Redpath's refinery (without doubt the best Sugar produced in
Canada) which we will sell by the dollars worth or by the barrel at prices
Ibat cannot be beaten.
TEAS, COFFEES, CANNED GOODS, FRUITS
And everything pertaining to a first-olase trade as low as the lowest. We beliey'e we
are within the mark, when we say our BLACK TEA at 50e ib.
beats the town. We have had a large sale of CROCKERY ately
which has diminished our stook somewhat, but have a nice alsowent
arriving which we will be pleased to show intending purchasers. C 11 and
get prices before buying.
ill MVIrR41 & WILTSE, One
�1'earPostOfTice CENTRAL GROCERY P 40
r!