HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1894-06-13, Page 5'�/V sO,,l,.V ,',
AXING POWDER,
' '1;ib° poWder is .carefully prepared from the vary best materials, is perfectly
PUN sad differing from many powders is BOLO to the system,
nee Used eet6iw ft s used
a.�
:!pared and sold only at
ll xa & Wilson's Proscription Drug Store.
Teale
rr
SPACE
L EI,ONGS TO
Co RAXUE,
Who is opening out ill the
USTOM
TAILORING,
text door to
ANDERSON & ELDERS,
BLYTH.
Grand I rusk Railway.
Trains leave Clinton station for all points as per
allowing time tabau:
GOI\G NAST GOING WEST
7,37am 10.20am
2.05 p tn 2 15pm
4.50 pm 9.c2um
GOING NORTS 00101 SOL'TR
,:10.12am $.15ain
0.55pm 4.18pm
MANITOBA
EXCURSIONS.
JUNE 12th, 19th, nth,
JULY 17th.
'Tickets good for 00 days, FARE $28 to
11eManitt ba points. For full particul-
ates apply to
. �•a,ekson,
TOWN AGENT G. T. R.
SOUTH .HURON
A Monster Mass Meeting of - the
Electors of South Huron will
be held in
ix err;,
—oN—
FRIDAY, • JUNE 16,
HON. N. CLARKE WALLACE and
DR. W. BEATTIE NESBITT, of To-
ronto, and others will deliver addresses
on the public questions of the day.
LET THERE BE A GRAND RALLY
Meeting to commence at 8 o'clock p. m.
Everybody invited.
June 8th, 1894.
LETTER$ TO THE EDITOR.
We do 1,01 hold ou eelvee reeponsiblefor utterances of
correspondents or opinions expressed under this
head.—Ed. .NEWS.RECOItL.
Give tlie• Farmers a Chance.
7'o the Editor of The Neree-Retcord.
Now look here Mr. Editor. How
about Mr. Janes Connolly as a candi-
date for the Legislative Assembly of
Ontario? Yes, I repeat, how about his
candidacy ? Is he not good enough for
some of your very bine blooded Tories
and Grits who dwell in towns? I ton
not surprised at town Grits opposing
Mr. Connolly for his alleged sin of be-
ing a .Patron—a Farmer—for they are
given very touch over to their idols of
legislative muddling and chicanery and
fee -making for lawyers and office mak-
ing fee heelers. But I ant surprised itt
town Liberal Conservatives who prate
everlastingly about the greatest good
to the greatest number, and who glibly
roll under their tongues other goodly
platitudes, standing aloof when a man
of the people like Mr. Connolly is a
candidate against tt man of the privi-
leged class of lawyers as Mr. Garrow
undoubtedly is.
I advisedly. mention Mr. Connolly as
a man of the people. Possibly three-
fourths of the people in the %Vest Rid-
ing of Huron are farmers. Mr. Con-
nolly is a fanner, Consequently he is
the man of the people:
Mr:Connolly C nnol
1 is not
man oratori-
cal ability, Mr. Garrow is claimed to be.
But gab does not count for much.
Mr. Connolly's experience and ,judg-
inent •is better than Mr. Garrow's in
matters affecting the majority, And
Mr: Connolly's sympathies and his in-
terests are identified with then!. Mr.
Garrow's are not. Oil the contrary
Mr. Garrow's sympathies and his in-
terests are identified with a very
restricted class whose aims and objects
are to multiply lahrynthine legal en-
actments which shall involve the eo-e
le 1
n legal 1 er 1'
cxltl
P perplexities th • p
g at will re-
quire re
quire men learned in the law. and
thousands of the good people's money
annually to unravel. But, tell it not
in Gath, publish it not at the gates of
Ascalon ; yen., and more especially,
herald it not in the towns of Goderich
and Clinton—Mr. Connolly is a
P -a -t -r -o -n 2 Hoity, toity, marry come
up, but here is a disability, a regular
candidate killer.
What is a Patron? Though a farmer,
I am not one. But, as I understand what
constitutes one, he is one of a body of
fanners who have organized a Society
for the betterment of the material con-
ditions and for the moral elevation and
intellectual advancement of those of
the class to which he belongs.
The betterment of his material con-
ditions he believes will be forwarded by
the economicaladministration
of the
affairs of the Province in the Executive,
Legislative and official conduct of
public matter's.
The expense aatteiTant upon Govern-
ment House at Toronto, with its semi
regal style, being out of all proportion
to the exigencies and requirements
necessary for the supervision of the
affairs of some .,wo millions bf people,
the Patrons believe that a good deal of
the gewgaws and superfluous style
should be done away with and thus
lessen the financial burdens of the peo-
ple and preserve the capital of the
Province as represented by its minerals,
lands and forests. As it Is these are
being sacrificed every year to meet ex-
travagant outlay in the manner in-
dicated above, and in other wajrs.
Mr. Mowat and his majority in the
Assembly opposed and oppose this.
And Mr. Garrow was one of the
tujaority. The Patrons hold that the
cost of legislation is extravagantly in
excess of Provincial needs. Mr. Mowat
can see nothing to reform in this line
and Mr. Garrow is equally blind.
'rimes Smith, of Hamilton, was badly The Assembly is absolutely not as im-
it`tiahed between two cars on the G. Z. portant as bounty Councils. An
Merritton Thursday. , average County Council could manage
the'afl'air: of the: PrOVInce with more
intelligence, vastly less expense and
more beneficially in the interests of the
peseespnt cumbrous andenivthe ;resent
A. proposal was made to have a
session only once in tW0 years as. an-
other step towards lopping off some of
the useless expenses of the Province.
The Patrons favor this reform. Dir.
3lowet and his majority in the Assem-
bly Opposed it. Mr, Garrow sided
wrt,h thcl'majority. The Patrons note
:with disfavor the enormous fees collect-
ed by registrars aihd others for their
own personal use. Mr. Mowat and his
majority in the. Assembly were asked
to mend this.state of affairs by provid-
ing the incumbents with a fixed salary
and having the ,surplus paid to the
counties of the Province. lair. DIowat
and his majority refused the needful
redress. Again 1411'. Gamow supported
the classes against the Massed as re-
presented by the Patrons, Then there
are a scow of other trays in which
Provincial money is paid out to
favorite, in the conduct of Public lu-
stitutions, school book contracts,
timber berths, colonization roads, etc.,
for which the puplic receive no equival-
t ut. Mr. Garrow never raised his voice
'.against these iniquities. The nitrous
want all such Corrupt expenditures
curtailed if not cut ori entirely. Mr.
Mowat and his majority in the Assem-
bly have refused.
It may he asked, Why. have the
Patrons any right to question the con-
duct of the existing Toronto oligarchy
and of their henchmen who pocket ex-
travagant stuns of the people's money
without giving value therefore ?
Because the Patrons are the bone
and sinew of the people who create the
wealth of the Province and are in
numbers fully two-thirds of the popula-
tion. Your town lords of high and low
deg"hayseeds9 scoff
theyhavehe hpower
to show you fellows who they are if
they will unite from now until election
day upon the man of the Patron's
choice.
And I would say that knowing their
power and their rights they deserve so
be the slaves of the contemptuous d['ones
who would deprive thein of their right
to have legislative representation, if
they do not exercise their franchise in
West Huron by standing Shoulder to
shoulder and voting for Mr. James
(yonnoily,
And right here let the say that the
esidents of towns who are setting
bout to compass the defeat of Mr.
onuolly are standing in their own
ght.
Patrons and farmers are not inimical
o the people of towns. Their interests
re bound up together. It is only
e non -producing class in towns whose
Wrests conflict with those of the
rmers—the money sharks and other
teepees. The storekeepers and the
tisans are necessary to the farmer
and the farmer to them. And these
asses in the towns are as interestedly
ound up in the success of Mr. Connolly
are the farmers. True it may be
at God made the country and roan
ade the towns and 1 submit that the
lrnighty's handiwork shows up hest.
nd the men who are the basis of the
ealth of the tenons are the farmers.
lore is no getting around this self evi-
nt proposition. If the people of a
wn dealt only with them -
Ives they would assuredly soon
ale to grief. The farmer creates the
ealth, the townsman handles it and
ekes his profit outofso doingas he has
ht to. But for townspeople to buck
ainst Mr. Connolly because he is a
tron and afarmer is sheer stupidity,
not worse, and may eventiuito in
rmers taking coinage rcial matters
.0 their own hands and leaving the
vnspeople severely alone. I ail not
party Ulan—certainly not a Conserve-
e—and cense ineptly have no claims
on your indulgence, but as your
urns! every week floats the motto
ndependent in all things; neutral in
thing," I ask the favor of pnblica-
n for these remarks,
C
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YOUNG FARMER.
Editor Huron A'etre-Record.
SIR,—While in town last Wednes-
day, One of Mr. Garrow's friends stat-
ed for in
inforl
natio
n .
Y that the farm-
ers m
ers of
Huron would never make as
good appointments to office, as the
Provincial Government, hence Mr. 0.
was right in supporting Mr. Mowat
against the Patron's idea of appointing
county officials. Since coning home
I have been thinking of Peter Adam-
son, Col. A. M. Ross, Dr. Holmes and
Wm. Lane, and during my thoughts.
young Mowat's salary, $8,000, and Peter
Ryan's over $4,000, have continually in-
truded on my senses. After quiet con-
sideration 1 ani forced to the conclus-
ion that except for one being the son
of the Premier. ner
andt t 1
o other a leading
Roman Catholic, the above named
county nominees are head and should-
ers above the tiovernment appointees,
and yet the Mowat officials get about
six times the pay of our county offi-
cers, and do about one fourth the work.
Until recently I was as gmet as tt dead
dude, but, when these M. P. P's. conte
to the conclusion that farmers are not
to be trusted to appoint the officers
they are forced to pay, I am alive to
the fact that I have a vote.
Yours truly,
A TILLER OF TIIE SOIL.
Colborne, June Oth, 1894.
Out With Them.
7'o the Editor of The News -Record.
Now is the time for the intelligent,
electors of this province to rise in their
might and dismiss Mowat and his
gang. They deserve to be defeated for
having built ,up a gigantic school book
monopoly which has robbed the parents
of Ontario of hundreds of thousands of
dollars, if not millions, something
which would have never occurred had
the department of education been
kept from their grasp. They deserve
to he defeated on account of their
having established a political machine
in connection with the granting of
liquor licenses wherein as it now stands
hotel keepers can hardly call their
soul their own. And while a wail, loud
and -bitter has been going up from the
people that they were almost governed
to death and on the verge of being
legislated out of existence this same
government who prate about economy
have had the audacity to increase
their own numbers from five to eight
or nine. And at the last session they
added a number to the already long
list of representatives, for this alone
they deserve to be routed at the polls.
Their attention has been repeatedly
brought to the large number of county
councillors which could certainly be
decreased, but have steadily refused to
interfere. • .11 this time, however,
•
they have been creating new -dress to
be filled Fay party hacks land favorities
who are too lazy. to work and are fed
at the public crib itt the expense Of the
industrious taxpayers Qf thu,prav'ince,
For this Mowat should be properly
punished on election day. He should
be punished for having made the
stlttement "that he gave equal rights
to all denominations" whereas there is
not a solitary Methodist in his cabi-
net, although the Methodists are the
most numerous body in the Province.
Another denomination which has
seldom or ever been represented is
the church of England although one of
the most powerful intellectually.
This being the fact the statement of
3lowat that he gives e( cal right's to all
is a barefaced lie. SS• u trust the acl-
herents of these two great denomina-
tions will thiiilk of the manner in
which they have beim. blighted on the
citty, of election. Then again Mowat
has personally been a grasping, greedy
man; he has taken •ulvtantage of leis
position to bestow fat offices on a
large inrinbee of relatives. Some of
these offices he has created, one of
theta for a son who has neveer been
noted for great mental [powers al-
though this fellows income is upwards
of $8000 a year for performing the
duties pertaining to an office created
by hislfather. For these bold, presump-
tions and highhanded acts Mowat and
his Government should be sent to the
right about at, the earliest opportunity.
Yours respectfully,
- McKillop, June 8th, 1894.ELECTOR,
Sheppardtoii.
A large crowd attended the picnic at
the Point Farm on Saturday. The
weather was all that could be desired.
The hike had scarcely a ripple and the
people enjoyed themselves intmonsly
at• boating, ball playing, dancing and
racing.
Rev. H. W. Jeans and wifo spent
Spart of Friday with Mr. told Mrs.
impson.
J. B. Hawkins, of London, glassed
through here on Saturday on Ills way
to Port Albert to visit his parents.
Dirs. Tibble and Miss Love, of Joliet,
Ill., are the guests of their sister, Mrs.
Andrew Hewlett.
The members of the Episcopal con-
gregation met and presented Miss
Annie Tigert with a beautiful gold
watch and chain and an address on
Friday evening, showing how they ap-
preciated her services as organist.
News Notes.
About 7 o'clock Thursday morning
Mr. Albert Phillips, of Petrolea, while
down the Michigan Central Railroad
track there to work, dropped dead. 1t
seems that he had been troubled with
congestion ' of !rings, and was not
feeling very well. He was aged about
19 or 20.
Farmers in Wentworth county say
the great quantity of rain which has
fallen during the past month has done
good, it having drowned out the grass-
hoppers which were hatched, and not
injuring the grain crops.
At the National Tempertuiee Con-
gress in New York Tuesday an address
was delivered by Rev. Father Murphy,
of Montreal, strongly urging all moder-
ate drinkers, especially clerygynren, to
give up their glass.
Mr. C. 3I, Walker, of \Valkerville,
awoke early Thursday morning and
found a btu•glar in his bedroom. Mr.
Walker got his revolver and fired live
shots at .the intruder, who clashed
through a window, firing apartiugshot
at, • Mr. Walker, but missing hitn.
Blood spots were found in the garden
in the morning. A few gold spoons
were stolen.
LE7' US HAVE A PAIR CO.UPARI-
SOJ
Whenever addressing themselves to
the farriers, the members of the Grit
Part
are fondsaying,
"look at the
prices you are now receiving for your
wheat, and compare them with the
prices you were receiving in 1878."
Nobody for a moment .denies that the
price of wheat has fallen. It has fal-
len in Canada as everywhere else on
account of reasons of which no Gov-
ernment has any control. But the
inference is left to be drawn that the
prices of everything the farmer has to
sell have been reduced equally with
wheat; and the farmers are too apt to
be induced to draw that inference, for-
getting that it is entirely at variance
with the facts. In the Canadian
Monetary Times each week is given a
list of prices of agricultural produce in
the great Canadian centres. We have
taken the journal above alluded to for
May 31st, 1878, for the prices in that
year, and we have taken the last issue
of the same journal for the prices in
1894. Leaving out therefore wheat,
about which their is no discussion, let
ns see what are the facts brought out
by a comparison of the two years.
Take the Toronto markets. Oats in
May, 1878, in the Toronto market are
journal quoted in the e alluded to at 33
to 34 cts. This year they are quoted
37 to 37i cts. Butter Lib May4 1878, is
quoted 14 to 10 cts. ; in May, 1894,
18 to 20cts. With regard to the item
of butter it may be mentioned that it,
was sold as low as 5i and 6t ets. when
marked "ordinary" in the formes year.
Cheese, May, 1878, 114 to 13cts.; May,
1894, the same. Mess pork, May 1878,
$12.50 to $13.50; May, 1894, $14. Hams,
May, 1878, 9to 10 cts.; May, 1894, 10 to
13 cts. Lard, May, 1878, 8 to 10 cts.;
May, 1894, 10 to 12 Cts. Eggs, May,
1878, 9 to 937 cts.: May, 1894, 10 to 12 cts.
Bacon, May, 1878, Of to 7i cts.; May,
1894,- 9 Cts. The above are samples of
the prices of the two years compared.
The fact is that a comparison of all the
articles sold by the termer will show
that outside of three or four articles
at the most, the farmer is receiving
better pprices to -day than he did in
1878 hut while this is the case, every
farmer in the country knows he is
buying his cottons and woollens, his
agricultural implements, his sugars,
his teas and every other article that he
consumes at about one half the price
he paid when the Grit Party wore in
power.
FR031 STTFT,f•EROTO TO REALTII.
THE EXPERIENCE y et WELr,-ENowN
BRUCE COUNTY FARME,Ii,
•
HE TELLS 4 STORY' OF THE DISMASE
THAT AFFLICTED 111:f1I, TUN BUFFER"
INGS ,iIE mmatru,EIj AND HOw III{
FOUND IterspaS>.,..-„OTDER SUFFERS
IUAY TAKE. HOPE FROM 11378 R.1r.LEASE.
Fres; th0Teeswater Newe.
Of all
e ills
t
angglonge causestttheflesh
sufreheir
keepee-
haps keener
ersistent
adtmor,and few ate more e difficult. to eradicate froln the
system than that nervous disease
known as sciatica. The victim of an
aggravated form of this malady suffers
beyond the power of words to express,
and it is with the utmost reluctcuee
that the disorder yields to any course
of treatment intended for its cute.
Hearing that a rather remarkable
slue had been effected in the case of
Me. William Baptist, a respected resi-
dent of the township of Culross a News
reporter called upon that gentleufan to
ascertain the facts, Mr. Baptist is en
intelligent and well-to-cto farmer. He
He is well known in the section in
which he resides and is looked upon as
it man of unimpeachable integrity.
is in the piune of life, and his pre
sent appearance does not indicate that
he had at one time been a great suf-
erer. He received the News represen-
tative with the utmost cordiality, and
cheerfully told the story of his restora-
tion to health, remarking that the felt
it1101'a duty to do so in order that:others
afflicted tae be had been might find re•
.
Up to the fall of 1892 he had been it
healthy man, but at, that time while
harvesting the turnip crop during a
spell of wet, cold and disagreeable
weather, he was attacked by sciatica,
Only those who have passed through a
similar• experience can tell what he
suffered. Pe says it was something
terrible. The pain was almost unen-
durable and would at tine• • cause the
Sorspiratiou to ooze from very pore.
leeprn forsook his eyelid His days
were days of anguish and night
brought 110 relief, Reputable phy-
sicians were consulted without an
vari-
ousy
appreciabkindswere
!lr f sorted tot. eand dies h s con-
dition was worse than before. The
limb affected began to decrease in size,
the flesh appeared bo pe parting from
the bone, and the leg assumed tL with-
ered aspect. Its power of sensation
grew less and less. It appeared as a
dead thing and as it grew more and
more helpless it is little wonder that the
hope of recovery began to fade away.
All through the long winter he con-
tinued to suffer, and towards spring
was prevailed upon to try Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills. He commenced using them'
and soon felt that they were doing him
good, and hope began to revive. By
the time he had taken three boxes the
pain was eased and the diseased limb
began to assume a natural condition.
He continued the use of the remedy
until he had taken twelve boxes. In
course of time he was able to resume
work and to -day feels that he is com-
pletely cured. He has since recom-
mended Dr. Williams' Pink Pills to
others with good results. '
An analysis shows that Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills contain in a condensed form
all the elements necessary give new life
to the blood and eestnrc shattered
nerves. They are an unfailing specific
for all diseases arisii+r frutn an im-
poverished condition of the blood, or
from an impairment of the nervous
system, such as loss of appetite,
depression of spirits anatutin, chlorosis
or green sickness, general muscular
weakness, dizziness, loss of memory,
locomotor ataxia, paralysis, sciatica,
rheinnatism, St. Vitus' dance, the
after effects of la grippe, and all dis-
eases depending upon a vitiated condi-
tion of the blood, such as scrofula,
chronic etysipel;ts, &e. They are also
a specific for the troubles peculier to
the female aysteuh, building anew the
blood and restoring the glow of health
to pale and sallow cheeks. In the case
of men they effect it radical cure in all
cases ;hieing froin mental worry, over-
work or excesses.
1)r•. Williams' Pink Pilis are
manu-
factured byDr.Williams'11
Medicine
ue
Company, rtn-
Brockville, pp y, nc kville, Ont., and Schen-
ectady, N. Y. and are sold only in
boxes bearing the fir'm's trade mark
and wrapper, at 50 cents a box or six
boxes for $2.50, and may he had of all
dealers or direct by mail from the Dr.
Williams Medicine Company- at either
address. Beware of imitations and
substitutes.
W. R. Climie, editor and proprietor
fo The Bowmanville Sun and License
Inspector for West Durham, died at
Bowman
ville Thursday.
Last \Vednesdity night abort 11
o'clock someone entered the office of
the Queen's hotel, 0 wen Sound, turned
down the lights, opened the safe, an
old-fashioned one, and stole $1,088.50,
$870 of which was in cash and the bal-
ance in promissory notes. The burglar
then escaped through a window. A
few minutes after when DIr. McCutch-
eon, the proprietor, entered he found
the safe open and the money gone.
The robbery was one of the coolest and
most daring ever committed in that
town. At present there is very little
clue to the perpetrator.
BIRTHS.
TEnnLITT.—At 999, Rose Cottagt,e,Red-
lands
California. a, on the 26th of May,
the wife of Mr. Edward Tebhutt, form-
erly of Goderich township, of a daugh-
ter.
Toon.---in Clintpn, on the Oth
the wife of A. M. Todd,.of TI -IE NEwH-
RECORD, of a sou.
MARRIAGES.
SOWERI3Y.—SALKELn.—By the Rey.
J. E. Howell, M. A., at the residence
of John Salkeld, Bayfield Road, father
of the bride, on June 6th, John Sower -
by, of Rapid City, Mich., and Miss
Florence Gertrude Salkeld.
NELSON.—RIOT IN.—On May 31st,
1894, at the Manse, by the Rev. Jas. A.
Anderson, B. A., William Fergt son
Nelson and Margaret Riggin, both of
the township of Ashfield.
DEATHS.
FERGLTsoer.—in Bayfleld, on the 3rd
inst., Agnes A. Ferguson, aged 89
years, mother ot Mr. James Ferguson,
Clinton. g '
STEVENS.--In Clinton, on the Oth
inst. Mary Jane, wife of R, Stevens,
aged 54 years and 1 !month.
DSA li$ T
fgorractodevery' Tuewlayefterneen!
CLINTON`,
Fall Wheat 0 55 to 0 58
Spring Wheat.....,. 0 tib to 0 58
Barley ... 0 85 to 0 40
Oats.. • ..,, 0 32 to 0 33
Pelts 0 33 to 0 55
Potatoes, per bush ...... 0 40 to 0 50
Butter .. 0 12 to )J 13
Eggs, per dos.,. ....... 0 7 to 0 7
Flay .... 6 00 to 7 00
Cordwood 3 00 to 400
Beef . ...... 0 00 to 000
Wool 0 17 to 0 20
TORONTO LIVE STOCK: MARKET.
Dlileh cows, each $22 00tn$45 00
Springers, forward, each..30 00 to 50'00
Export cattle, per cwt..— 4 00 to 4 61,
Butchers' choice, cwt 800 to, 3 75
Butchers'med. to good, cwt 2 50 to 2.90
Bu11e and rough cows, cwt 2 50 to 350
Long lean hogs,cwt .500to 5Z
Heavy fat hogs, cwt 4 00- to 4 415
Stores and light hogs, cwt 4 00 to 4 75
Sows, per cwt 4 00 to 425
Stag hogs, cwt 2 50 to 3.00
Yearlings, per head 4 25 to 4'50
Butchers sheep each 4 00 to 4 25
Export sheep, each 475 to 5.50
Spring Lambs, per head3 75 to 400
Choice Veal calves, each5 50 to 6'00
Medium calves, per heard4 50 to 5 0(J
Common calves, per head1 50 to 300
TORONTO FARMERS' MARKET.
The receipts of grain on the street
market were shall. Wheat was !inn-
er. Other grains steady.
Wheat—Firmer; one load of white
sold at 04c straight.
Oats—Steady; three loads sold at
39c to 100, '
Hay and Straw—The receipts were
larger. and the market was steady; 50
loads ot hay sold at $9 to $11 50 for
timothy and $7 to $8 for clover; 6loads
of straw sold at $7 to $8.
Dressed Hogs—The offerings were
fair and the market was steady .at
$8.25 to $6,50, the later for single hogs -
of choice weight.
Wheat white, standard$ 61 to $ 00
Red winter 60 to 00
Spring 00 to 00
Goose 58 to 00
Early 41 to 00
Peas 65 to 00
Oats 31) to 40
Hay, timothy 900 toll'50
Clover 7 00 to 800.
Straw, bundle 700 to 800
do loose 500 to 000
Eggs, new laid 9 to 00
Butter, lb. rolls 13 to 14
Tubs, dairy 13 to 09
Turkeys 9 to 10
Chickens 50 to 60
Spring Chickens 50 to 70
Potatoes, per bag 90 to 100
Dressed hogs 0 2a; to 6 50
Beef, forequarters 400 to 650
do. hindquarters 6 00 to 7 00
Mutton 7 o 850
Veal. 60000 tto 900
Spring Lamb 15 00 to 00
I ettrlir)gs 10 00 to 00
BRITISH MARKETS.
The following are the Liverpool •
quotations, for each of the past four
days, the prices of wheat and flour
being top figures :
s, d. s. d. s. d. s. d.
Red winter..” 4 3• 4 3 4 51 4 6}
No. 1. Cal 4 7 4 7 4 9 4 9t
Corn... 3 0t 3 71 3 8 3 81
Peau 0 4 10 4 10 4 10 4 11
Pork .67 6 87 0 67 6 67 0
Lard 35 0 35 3 35 6 35 0. •
Bacon, h'vy31 6 31 6 31 0 31 0
Tallow 24 9 24 0 24 9 24 9
Cheese, ne450, 0 49 0 49 0 •.4437 -0
tYi/ A L.C13._
e Boorway
rSllaps
a
IN
Wall Paper.
v" For Teachers and others
U E
.a;•; at the Central Business
College, Curcer Ynnge
lad Gerrard Streets, Toronto. Unquestionably
Caasaela's Greatest Commercial School. In
> eselon the entire year. Special circulars for summer
'olaeseo. Write for one.
.S IAW ELLIOTT, I O _�T
P, Incipals, ry
di
if inT T- Immo' . '
/MILITIA.
'SEALED TENDERS for the supply of Clothing
for the Militia and Permanent Corps. eompristng
-Tunics, Trousers, Great Coots and Caps; Militia
Store Supplies and Necessaries consisting of Boots,
hh s Drawers, e tl in Dat ere Socks Iron nn bodateade
Brushes Saddlery,Howe 8roomaio eo Blnnkots etc.
Hard and Soft Coal; Hard and Soft wood (English
measure) for the heating of all Military Buildings in
each of lire Military DIStrIeta, will bo received up to
,noon .Thursday, 5th July, 1891. Tenders to be
!narked on the left hand corner of the envelope:
Tender for "MILITIA CLOTHING.' "MILITIA CTonn
sIIPPLIEa." "(Mae or "FUEL WOOD," as the case
-may be, and addressed 'to the Honourable the Minister
5;01 Militia and Defence, Ottawa.
i. The contracts for Clothing are to cover a period of
t,,thr�oe years from the lot July, 1894; those for Store
'Sapplies and Necessaries, Coal and Wood, are for one
'aµyear'from let July, 1894.
-:'Printed forme of tender containing full partioniare
ay be obtained from the Department at Ottawa ant:
at' the following Militia Stores, viz.:—Theof lees of the
Superintendents of Stores at Lodnnn,'roroutc, King.
ton, Montreal, Quebec, Halifax, N. S., St. John, N.
:, and Winnipeg, Man.
[very ur8lclo of Clothing, Store Supplies and Ewes -
aides to be furnished, ae well as the material therain,•
net be of Canadian manufacture, and similar in all
respects co the sealed patterns, which can be seen at
the Militia Stores at Otawa. This does not apply to
butterfat for saddlery.
'-1�to tender will be received noless made on a printed
o}m furnished by the Departulsnt, nor will a tender
be considered if the printed form is altered in. any
'Manner Whatever.
:`Each tender must be accompanied by an ace opted
cheque on a Canadian Chartered Bank for an amount
equal to ten per cont of the total value of the articles
tendered for, which will be forfeited if the party
, eking the tender declines to sign a oontraet when
tilled upon to do eo. If the tender be not accepted
the cheque will he returned.
''T1s Department dose not blud itself to accept the
to*est or any tender.
:� • A. BENOIT, Capt.,
Secretary.
7jopartment of Militia and Defence.
Ot• awn, 2nd, Juno, 1894.
Sale Register,
T$II DAY, J JN`E 218T.—important
laird safe, on the premises, at 7 o'clock
iii the venin ; adjoining the Ratten-
itty estate; 21 acres in large or small.
lots and at terms to suit purchasers
Wm. Baw en, proprietor; T. M. Carl -
log, auc 1 eer.
Stray Steer,
• fSame to the promisee of the nndorelgned, Bayfleld
1#Otd,tho forepart of May last. a REO YEARLING
TEER. The owner le requeeted to prove property,
texpeneee and take the animal away.
SOW J. O. ELLIOTT.
New Shop.
Mf. Wm• Smithson will open his now shoal otstho
csrner of Ontario and Gihbinge etreeta next Saturday.
Great Bargains in Washing Machines, Churns, Step
udders, Long Ladders, Wheelbarrows, Gates, &e.,
for .one woek. Ail work promptly attended to.
Drite5 Moderato and satisfaction guaranteed.
1-t . WM. SMITIISON.
SOUTH .HURON
A Monster Mass Meeting of - the
Electors of South Huron will
be held in
ix err;,
—oN—
FRIDAY, • JUNE 16,
HON. N. CLARKE WALLACE and
DR. W. BEATTIE NESBITT, of To-
ronto, and others will deliver addresses
on the public questions of the day.
LET THERE BE A GRAND RALLY
Meeting to commence at 8 o'clock p. m.
Everybody invited.
June 8th, 1894.
LETTER$ TO THE EDITOR.
We do 1,01 hold ou eelvee reeponsiblefor utterances of
correspondents or opinions expressed under this
head.—Ed. .NEWS.RECOItL.
Give tlie• Farmers a Chance.
7'o the Editor of The Neree-Retcord.
Now look here Mr. Editor. How
about Mr. Janes Connolly as a candi-
date for the Legislative Assembly of
Ontario? Yes, I repeat, how about his
candidacy ? Is he not good enough for
some of your very bine blooded Tories
and Grits who dwell in towns? I ton
not surprised at town Grits opposing
Mr. Connolly for his alleged sin of be-
ing a .Patron—a Farmer—for they are
given very touch over to their idols of
legislative muddling and chicanery and
fee -making for lawyers and office mak-
ing fee heelers. But I ant surprised itt
town Liberal Conservatives who prate
everlastingly about the greatest good
to the greatest number, and who glibly
roll under their tongues other goodly
platitudes, standing aloof when a man
of the people like Mr. Connolly is a
candidate against tt man of the privi-
leged class of lawyers as Mr. Garrow
undoubtedly is.
I advisedly. mention Mr. Connolly as
a man of the people. Possibly three-
fourths of the people in the %Vest Rid-
ing of Huron are farmers. Mr. Con-
nolly is a fanner, Consequently he is
the man of the people:
Mr:Connolly C nnol
1 is not
man oratori-
cal ability, Mr. Garrow is claimed to be.
But gab does not count for much.
Mr. Connolly's experience and ,judg-
inent •is better than Mr. Garrow's in
matters affecting the majority, And
Mr: Connolly's sympathies and his in-
terests are identified with then!. Mr.
Garrow's are not. Oil the contrary
Mr. Garrow's sympathies and his in-
terests are identified with a very
restricted class whose aims and objects
are to multiply lahrynthine legal en-
actments which shall involve the eo-e
le 1
n legal 1 er 1'
cxltl
P perplexities th • p
g at will re-
quire re
quire men learned in the law. and
thousands of the good people's money
annually to unravel. But, tell it not
in Gath, publish it not at the gates of
Ascalon ; yen., and more especially,
herald it not in the towns of Goderich
and Clinton—Mr. Connolly is a
P -a -t -r -o -n 2 Hoity, toity, marry come
up, but here is a disability, a regular
candidate killer.
What is a Patron? Though a farmer,
I am not one. But, as I understand what
constitutes one, he is one of a body of
fanners who have organized a Society
for the betterment of the material con-
ditions and for the moral elevation and
intellectual advancement of those of
the class to which he belongs.
The betterment of his material con-
ditions he believes will be forwarded by
the economicaladministration
of the
affairs of the Province in the Executive,
Legislative and official conduct of
public matter's.
The expense aatteiTant upon Govern-
ment House at Toronto, with its semi
regal style, being out of all proportion
to the exigencies and requirements
necessary for the supervision of the
affairs of some .,wo millions bf people,
the Patrons believe that a good deal of
the gewgaws and superfluous style
should be done away with and thus
lessen the financial burdens of the peo-
ple and preserve the capital of the
Province as represented by its minerals,
lands and forests. As it Is these are
being sacrificed every year to meet ex-
travagant outlay in the manner in-
dicated above, and in other wajrs.
Mr. Mowat and his majority in the
Assembly opposed and oppose this.
And Mr. Garrow was one of the
tujaority. The Patrons hold that the
cost of legislation is extravagantly in
excess of Provincial needs. Mr. Mowat
can see nothing to reform in this line
and Mr. Garrow is equally blind.
'rimes Smith, of Hamilton, was badly The Assembly is absolutely not as im-
it`tiahed between two cars on the G. Z. portant as bounty Councils. An
Merritton Thursday. , average County Council could manage
the'afl'air: of the: PrOVInce with more
intelligence, vastly less expense and
more beneficially in the interests of the
peseespnt cumbrous andenivthe ;resent
A. proposal was made to have a
session only once in tW0 years as. an-
other step towards lopping off some of
the useless expenses of the Province.
The Patrons favor this reform. Dir.
3lowet and his majority in the Assem-
bly Opposed it. Mr, Garrow sided
wrt,h thcl'majority. The Patrons note
:with disfavor the enormous fees collect-
ed by registrars aihd others for their
own personal use. Mr. Mowat and his
majority in the. Assembly were asked
to mend this.state of affairs by provid-
ing the incumbents with a fixed salary
and having the ,surplus paid to the
counties of the Province. lair. DIowat
and his majority refused the needful
redress. Again 1411'. Gamow supported
the classes against the Massed as re-
presented by the Patrons, Then there
are a scow of other trays in which
Provincial money is paid out to
favorite, in the conduct of Public lu-
stitutions, school book contracts,
timber berths, colonization roads, etc.,
for which the puplic receive no equival-
t ut. Mr. Garrow never raised his voice
'.against these iniquities. The nitrous
want all such Corrupt expenditures
curtailed if not cut ori entirely. Mr.
Mowat and his majority in the Assem-
bly have refused.
It may he asked, Why. have the
Patrons any right to question the con-
duct of the existing Toronto oligarchy
and of their henchmen who pocket ex-
travagant stuns of the people's money
without giving value therefore ?
Because the Patrons are the bone
and sinew of the people who create the
wealth of the Province and are in
numbers fully two-thirds of the popula-
tion. Your town lords of high and low
deg"hayseeds9 scoff
theyhavehe hpower
to show you fellows who they are if
they will unite from now until election
day upon the man of the Patron's
choice.
And I would say that knowing their
power and their rights they deserve so
be the slaves of the contemptuous d['ones
who would deprive thein of their right
to have legislative representation, if
they do not exercise their franchise in
West Huron by standing Shoulder to
shoulder and voting for Mr. James
(yonnoily,
And right here let the say that the
esidents of towns who are setting
bout to compass the defeat of Mr.
onuolly are standing in their own
ght.
Patrons and farmers are not inimical
o the people of towns. Their interests
re bound up together. It is only
e non -producing class in towns whose
Wrests conflict with those of the
rmers—the money sharks and other
teepees. The storekeepers and the
tisans are necessary to the farmer
and the farmer to them. And these
asses in the towns are as interestedly
ound up in the success of Mr. Connolly
are the farmers. True it may be
at God made the country and roan
ade the towns and 1 submit that the
lrnighty's handiwork shows up hest.
nd the men who are the basis of the
ealth of the tenons are the farmers.
lore is no getting around this self evi-
nt proposition. If the people of a
wn dealt only with them -
Ives they would assuredly soon
ale to grief. The farmer creates the
ealth, the townsman handles it and
ekes his profit outofso doingas he has
ht to. But for townspeople to buck
ainst Mr. Connolly because he is a
tron and afarmer is sheer stupidity,
not worse, and may eventiuito in
rmers taking coinage rcial matters
.0 their own hands and leaving the
vnspeople severely alone. I ail not
party Ulan—certainly not a Conserve-
e—and cense ineptly have no claims
on your indulgence, but as your
urns! every week floats the motto
ndependent in all things; neutral in
thing," I ask the favor of pnblica-
n for these remarks,
C
11
t
a
til
in
fa
sl
tar
cl
bs
th
m
A
A
w
T1
de
to
se
co
w
ni
rig
ag
Pa
if
fa
int
to
a
tiv
up
jo
no
do
YOUNG FARMER.
Editor Huron A'etre-Record.
SIR,—While in town last Wednes-
day, One of Mr. Garrow's friends stat-
ed for in
inforl
natio
n .
Y that the farm-
ers m
ers of
Huron would never make as
good appointments to office, as the
Provincial Government, hence Mr. 0.
was right in supporting Mr. Mowat
against the Patron's idea of appointing
county officials. Since coning home
I have been thinking of Peter Adam-
son, Col. A. M. Ross, Dr. Holmes and
Wm. Lane, and during my thoughts.
young Mowat's salary, $8,000, and Peter
Ryan's over $4,000, have continually in-
truded on my senses. After quiet con-
sideration 1 ani forced to the conclus-
ion that except for one being the son
of the Premier. ner
andt t 1
o other a leading
Roman Catholic, the above named
county nominees are head and should-
ers above the tiovernment appointees,
and yet the Mowat officials get about
six times the pay of our county offi-
cers, and do about one fourth the work.
Until recently I was as gmet as tt dead
dude, but, when these M. P. P's. conte
to the conclusion that farmers are not
to be trusted to appoint the officers
they are forced to pay, I am alive to
the fact that I have a vote.
Yours truly,
A TILLER OF TIIE SOIL.
Colborne, June Oth, 1894.
Out With Them.
7'o the Editor of The News -Record.
Now is the time for the intelligent,
electors of this province to rise in their
might and dismiss Mowat and his
gang. They deserve to be defeated for
having built ,up a gigantic school book
monopoly which has robbed the parents
of Ontario of hundreds of thousands of
dollars, if not millions, something
which would have never occurred had
the department of education been
kept from their grasp. They deserve
to he defeated on account of their
having established a political machine
in connection with the granting of
liquor licenses wherein as it now stands
hotel keepers can hardly call their
soul their own. And while a wail, loud
and -bitter has been going up from the
people that they were almost governed
to death and on the verge of being
legislated out of existence this same
government who prate about economy
have had the audacity to increase
their own numbers from five to eight
or nine. And at the last session they
added a number to the already long
list of representatives, for this alone
they deserve to be routed at the polls.
Their attention has been repeatedly
brought to the large number of county
councillors which could certainly be
decreased, but have steadily refused to
interfere. • .11 this time, however,
•
they have been creating new -dress to
be filled Fay party hacks land favorities
who are too lazy. to work and are fed
at the public crib itt the expense Of the
industrious taxpayers Qf thu,prav'ince,
For this Mowat should be properly
punished on election day. He should
be punished for having made the
stlttement "that he gave equal rights
to all denominations" whereas there is
not a solitary Methodist in his cabi-
net, although the Methodists are the
most numerous body in the Province.
Another denomination which has
seldom or ever been represented is
the church of England although one of
the most powerful intellectually.
This being the fact the statement of
3lowat that he gives e( cal right's to all
is a barefaced lie. SS• u trust the acl-
herents of these two great denomina-
tions will thiiilk of the manner in
which they have beim. blighted on the
citty, of election. Then again Mowat
has personally been a grasping, greedy
man; he has taken •ulvtantage of leis
position to bestow fat offices on a
large inrinbee of relatives. Some of
these offices he has created, one of
theta for a son who has neveer been
noted for great mental [powers al-
though this fellows income is upwards
of $8000 a year for performing the
duties pertaining to an office created
by hislfather. For these bold, presump-
tions and highhanded acts Mowat and
his Government should be sent to the
right about at, the earliest opportunity.
Yours respectfully,
- McKillop, June 8th, 1894.ELECTOR,
Sheppardtoii.
A large crowd attended the picnic at
the Point Farm on Saturday. The
weather was all that could be desired.
The hike had scarcely a ripple and the
people enjoyed themselves intmonsly
at• boating, ball playing, dancing and
racing.
Rev. H. W. Jeans and wifo spent
Spart of Friday with Mr. told Mrs.
impson.
J. B. Hawkins, of London, glassed
through here on Saturday on Ills way
to Port Albert to visit his parents.
Dirs. Tibble and Miss Love, of Joliet,
Ill., are the guests of their sister, Mrs.
Andrew Hewlett.
The members of the Episcopal con-
gregation met and presented Miss
Annie Tigert with a beautiful gold
watch and chain and an address on
Friday evening, showing how they ap-
preciated her services as organist.
News Notes.
About 7 o'clock Thursday morning
Mr. Albert Phillips, of Petrolea, while
down the Michigan Central Railroad
track there to work, dropped dead. 1t
seems that he had been troubled with
congestion ' of !rings, and was not
feeling very well. He was aged about
19 or 20.
Farmers in Wentworth county say
the great quantity of rain which has
fallen during the past month has done
good, it having drowned out the grass-
hoppers which were hatched, and not
injuring the grain crops.
At the National Tempertuiee Con-
gress in New York Tuesday an address
was delivered by Rev. Father Murphy,
of Montreal, strongly urging all moder-
ate drinkers, especially clerygynren, to
give up their glass.
Mr. C. 3I, Walker, of \Valkerville,
awoke early Thursday morning and
found a btu•glar in his bedroom. Mr.
Walker got his revolver and fired live
shots at .the intruder, who clashed
through a window, firing apartiugshot
at, • Mr. Walker, but missing hitn.
Blood spots were found in the garden
in the morning. A few gold spoons
were stolen.
LE7' US HAVE A PAIR CO.UPARI-
SOJ
Whenever addressing themselves to
the farriers, the members of the Grit
Part
are fondsaying,
"look at the
prices you are now receiving for your
wheat, and compare them with the
prices you were receiving in 1878."
Nobody for a moment .denies that the
price of wheat has fallen. It has fal-
len in Canada as everywhere else on
account of reasons of which no Gov-
ernment has any control. But the
inference is left to be drawn that the
prices of everything the farmer has to
sell have been reduced equally with
wheat; and the farmers are too apt to
be induced to draw that inference, for-
getting that it is entirely at variance
with the facts. In the Canadian
Monetary Times each week is given a
list of prices of agricultural produce in
the great Canadian centres. We have
taken the journal above alluded to for
May 31st, 1878, for the prices in that
year, and we have taken the last issue
of the same journal for the prices in
1894. Leaving out therefore wheat,
about which their is no discussion, let
ns see what are the facts brought out
by a comparison of the two years.
Take the Toronto markets. Oats in
May, 1878, in the Toronto market are
journal quoted in the e alluded to at 33
to 34 cts. This year they are quoted
37 to 37i cts. Butter Lib May4 1878, is
quoted 14 to 10 cts. ; in May, 1894,
18 to 20cts. With regard to the item
of butter it may be mentioned that it,
was sold as low as 5i and 6t ets. when
marked "ordinary" in the formes year.
Cheese, May, 1878, 114 to 13cts.; May,
1894, the same. Mess pork, May 1878,
$12.50 to $13.50; May, 1894, $14. Hams,
May, 1878, 9to 10 cts.; May, 1894, 10 to
13 cts. Lard, May, 1878, 8 to 10 cts.;
May, 1894, 10 to 12 Cts. Eggs, May,
1878, 9 to 937 cts.: May, 1894, 10 to 12 cts.
Bacon, May, 1878, Of to 7i cts.; May,
1894,- 9 Cts. The above are samples of
the prices of the two years compared.
The fact is that a comparison of all the
articles sold by the termer will show
that outside of three or four articles
at the most, the farmer is receiving
better pprices to -day than he did in
1878 hut while this is the case, every
farmer in the country knows he is
buying his cottons and woollens, his
agricultural implements, his sugars,
his teas and every other article that he
consumes at about one half the price
he paid when the Grit Party wore in
power.
FR031 STTFT,f•EROTO TO REALTII.
THE EXPERIENCE y et WELr,-ENowN
BRUCE COUNTY FARME,Ii,
•
HE TELLS 4 STORY' OF THE DISMASE
THAT AFFLICTED 111:f1I, TUN BUFFER"
INGS ,iIE mmatru,EIj AND HOw III{
FOUND IterspaS>.,..-„OTDER SUFFERS
IUAY TAKE. HOPE FROM 11378 R.1r.LEASE.
Fres; th0Teeswater Newe.
Of all
e ills
t
angglonge causestttheflesh
sufreheir
keepee-
haps keener
ersistent
adtmor,and few ate more e difficult. to eradicate froln the
system than that nervous disease
known as sciatica. The victim of an
aggravated form of this malady suffers
beyond the power of words to express,
and it is with the utmost reluctcuee
that the disorder yields to any course
of treatment intended for its cute.
Hearing that a rather remarkable
slue had been effected in the case of
Me. William Baptist, a respected resi-
dent of the township of Culross a News
reporter called upon that gentleufan to
ascertain the facts, Mr. Baptist is en
intelligent and well-to-cto farmer. He
He is well known in the section in
which he resides and is looked upon as
it man of unimpeachable integrity.
is in the piune of life, and his pre
sent appearance does not indicate that
he had at one time been a great suf-
erer. He received the News represen-
tative with the utmost cordiality, and
cheerfully told the story of his restora-
tion to health, remarking that the felt
it1101'a duty to do so in order that:others
afflicted tae be had been might find re•
.
Up to the fall of 1892 he had been it
healthy man, but at, that time while
harvesting the turnip crop during a
spell of wet, cold and disagreeable
weather, he was attacked by sciatica,
Only those who have passed through a
similar• experience can tell what he
suffered. Pe says it was something
terrible. The pain was almost unen-
durable and would at tine• • cause the
Sorspiratiou to ooze from very pore.
leeprn forsook his eyelid His days
were days of anguish and night
brought 110 relief, Reputable phy-
sicians were consulted without an
vari-
ousy
appreciabkindswere
!lr f sorted tot. eand dies h s con-
dition was worse than before. The
limb affected began to decrease in size,
the flesh appeared bo pe parting from
the bone, and the leg assumed tL with-
ered aspect. Its power of sensation
grew less and less. It appeared as a
dead thing and as it grew more and
more helpless it is little wonder that the
hope of recovery began to fade away.
All through the long winter he con-
tinued to suffer, and towards spring
was prevailed upon to try Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills. He commenced using them'
and soon felt that they were doing him
good, and hope began to revive. By
the time he had taken three boxes the
pain was eased and the diseased limb
began to assume a natural condition.
He continued the use of the remedy
until he had taken twelve boxes. In
course of time he was able to resume
work and to -day feels that he is com-
pletely cured. He has since recom-
mended Dr. Williams' Pink Pills to
others with good results. '
An analysis shows that Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills contain in a condensed form
all the elements necessary give new life
to the blood and eestnrc shattered
nerves. They are an unfailing specific
for all diseases arisii+r frutn an im-
poverished condition of the blood, or
from an impairment of the nervous
system, such as loss of appetite,
depression of spirits anatutin, chlorosis
or green sickness, general muscular
weakness, dizziness, loss of memory,
locomotor ataxia, paralysis, sciatica,
rheinnatism, St. Vitus' dance, the
after effects of la grippe, and all dis-
eases depending upon a vitiated condi-
tion of the blood, such as scrofula,
chronic etysipel;ts, &e. They are also
a specific for the troubles peculier to
the female aysteuh, building anew the
blood and restoring the glow of health
to pale and sallow cheeks. In the case
of men they effect it radical cure in all
cases ;hieing froin mental worry, over-
work or excesses.
1)r•. Williams' Pink Pilis are
manu-
factured byDr.Williams'11
Medicine
ue
Company, rtn-
Brockville, pp y, nc kville, Ont., and Schen-
ectady, N. Y. and are sold only in
boxes bearing the fir'm's trade mark
and wrapper, at 50 cents a box or six
boxes for $2.50, and may he had of all
dealers or direct by mail from the Dr.
Williams Medicine Company- at either
address. Beware of imitations and
substitutes.
W. R. Climie, editor and proprietor
fo The Bowmanville Sun and License
Inspector for West Durham, died at
Bowman
ville Thursday.
Last \Vednesdity night abort 11
o'clock someone entered the office of
the Queen's hotel, 0 wen Sound, turned
down the lights, opened the safe, an
old-fashioned one, and stole $1,088.50,
$870 of which was in cash and the bal-
ance in promissory notes. The burglar
then escaped through a window. A
few minutes after when DIr. McCutch-
eon, the proprietor, entered he found
the safe open and the money gone.
The robbery was one of the coolest and
most daring ever committed in that
town. At present there is very little
clue to the perpetrator.
BIRTHS.
TEnnLITT.—At 999, Rose Cottagt,e,Red-
lands
California. a, on the 26th of May,
the wife of Mr. Edward Tebhutt, form-
erly of Goderich township, of a daugh-
ter.
Toon.---in Clintpn, on the Oth
the wife of A. M. Todd,.of TI -IE NEwH-
RECORD, of a sou.
MARRIAGES.
SOWERI3Y.—SALKELn.—By the Rey.
J. E. Howell, M. A., at the residence
of John Salkeld, Bayfield Road, father
of the bride, on June 6th, John Sower -
by, of Rapid City, Mich., and Miss
Florence Gertrude Salkeld.
NELSON.—RIOT IN.—On May 31st,
1894, at the Manse, by the Rev. Jas. A.
Anderson, B. A., William Fergt son
Nelson and Margaret Riggin, both of
the township of Ashfield.
DEATHS.
FERGLTsoer.—in Bayfleld, on the 3rd
inst., Agnes A. Ferguson, aged 89
years, mother ot Mr. James Ferguson,
Clinton. g '
STEVENS.--In Clinton, on the Oth
inst. Mary Jane, wife of R, Stevens,
aged 54 years and 1 !month.
DSA li$ T
fgorractodevery' Tuewlayefterneen!
CLINTON`,
Fall Wheat 0 55 to 0 58
Spring Wheat.....,. 0 tib to 0 58
Barley ... 0 85 to 0 40
Oats.. • ..,, 0 32 to 0 33
Pelts 0 33 to 0 55
Potatoes, per bush ...... 0 40 to 0 50
Butter .. 0 12 to )J 13
Eggs, per dos.,. ....... 0 7 to 0 7
Flay .... 6 00 to 7 00
Cordwood 3 00 to 400
Beef . ...... 0 00 to 000
Wool 0 17 to 0 20
TORONTO LIVE STOCK: MARKET.
Dlileh cows, each $22 00tn$45 00
Springers, forward, each..30 00 to 50'00
Export cattle, per cwt..— 4 00 to 4 61,
Butchers' choice, cwt 800 to, 3 75
Butchers'med. to good, cwt 2 50 to 2.90
Bu11e and rough cows, cwt 2 50 to 350
Long lean hogs,cwt .500to 5Z
Heavy fat hogs, cwt 4 00- to 4 415
Stores and light hogs, cwt 4 00 to 4 75
Sows, per cwt 4 00 to 425
Stag hogs, cwt 2 50 to 3.00
Yearlings, per head 4 25 to 4'50
Butchers sheep each 4 00 to 4 25
Export sheep, each 475 to 5.50
Spring Lambs, per head3 75 to 400
Choice Veal calves, each5 50 to 6'00
Medium calves, per heard4 50 to 5 0(J
Common calves, per head1 50 to 300
TORONTO FARMERS' MARKET.
The receipts of grain on the street
market were shall. Wheat was !inn-
er. Other grains steady.
Wheat—Firmer; one load of white
sold at 04c straight.
Oats—Steady; three loads sold at
39c to 100, '
Hay and Straw—The receipts were
larger. and the market was steady; 50
loads ot hay sold at $9 to $11 50 for
timothy and $7 to $8 for clover; 6loads
of straw sold at $7 to $8.
Dressed Hogs—The offerings were
fair and the market was steady .at
$8.25 to $6,50, the later for single hogs -
of choice weight.
Wheat white, standard$ 61 to $ 00
Red winter 60 to 00
Spring 00 to 00
Goose 58 to 00
Early 41 to 00
Peas 65 to 00
Oats 31) to 40
Hay, timothy 900 toll'50
Clover 7 00 to 800.
Straw, bundle 700 to 800
do loose 500 to 000
Eggs, new laid 9 to 00
Butter, lb. rolls 13 to 14
Tubs, dairy 13 to 09
Turkeys 9 to 10
Chickens 50 to 60
Spring Chickens 50 to 70
Potatoes, per bag 90 to 100
Dressed hogs 0 2a; to 6 50
Beef, forequarters 400 to 650
do. hindquarters 6 00 to 7 00
Mutton 7 o 850
Veal. 60000 tto 900
Spring Lamb 15 00 to 00
I ettrlir)gs 10 00 to 00
BRITISH MARKETS.
The following are the Liverpool •
quotations, for each of the past four
days, the prices of wheat and flour
being top figures :
s, d. s. d. s. d. s. d.
Red winter..” 4 3• 4 3 4 51 4 6}
No. 1. Cal 4 7 4 7 4 9 4 9t
Corn... 3 0t 3 71 3 8 3 81
Peau 0 4 10 4 10 4 10 4 11
Pork .67 6 87 0 67 6 67 0
Lard 35 0 35 3 35 6 35 0. •
Bacon, h'vy31 6 31 6 31 0 31 0
Tallow 24 9 24 0 24 9 24 9
Cheese, ne450, 0 49 0 49 0 •.4437 -0
tYi/ A L.C13._
e Boorway
rSllaps
a
IN
Wall Paper.