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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1894-10-24, Page 71 IT 'i .NULLSTONE About a, ygung man's neck to be a •ent;erer front ner- • volts exhaustion, ner- vous debility, innpair- edmemory, low spirits, i •ritable tem- per, and the thousand ofd one derands body that result from, unnatural, pernicious habits, contracted through ignorance. Such habits result in ° loss of manly power; Wreck the •constitution and sometimes pro- duce .softening- of the brain, epilepsy, pa- ralysis, end even dread insanity. 7lo reach, re-claim and restore such un- fortunates ' `tohealth and happiness, is the •iron 91 publishers of a book written in 1?lart? chaste language, on the nature, bynnpton and curability, by home treat - Mont,,' such disuses. This book will bo d, in platin envelope, on receipt of ton, s in stamps, for postage. Address, •%tro2r1t1,s Dispensary Medical Association, 0(4 Mau tit., 13utralo, N. Y. rhe Huron News -Record $1,60 a Year—$1.25 in Advance WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 24th, 1891. SUCCULENT FORAGE, AN INGENIOUS STACK FRAME FOR CURING COWPEA HAY. A Device to Overcome the Difficulty Conseil by !tains, Dews and Cloudy Weather—It Is Nelthor Costly Nor Difficult to Blake—Useful on Any Hay Several days of continuous fair weather aro needed to cure cowpea hay and other succulent forage in the very best condition for nutritious food for stock. The frequency of rains, dews and cloudy weather prompted the Arkansas agricultural experiment .. station to devise and successfully use the ingenious stack frame shown in the accompanying • illustration. five six- inch fence boards, from eight to twelve feet long, are placed parallel and two feet apart, being held together by two ,diagonal braces of four -inch fencing, twelve feet long, nailed on: thus forming an end frame. A firmly set post rising ten feet above the ground, serves as a support for this end -frame. For a long rick, one or more similar cross -frames aro secured to similar posts between the two end -frames. -By placing rails or poles upon the horizontal boards of the frame, shelves or floors are formed, two feet .from each other. This stack frame can be made entirely of • round poles if desired. By erecting cross -frames the stack can be extended into a rick of any needed length. or by planting an extra post at the inner angle, square corners can be turned, where it is desired to use the rick as a windbre k for a yard. The stock frame shown i..e engraving was conceived by Dire or R. L. Bennett, and hi s ex- periment stack was as wide as the length of the end boards, which was ten feet: The rick extended to tho length ofthree fence rails, or thirty-nine feet. The rails were laid twelve inches apar t. Its capacity was four tons of dry cowpea hay, but if boards or tarpaulin had been used for roofing ,..Y y `. •' ' Pf •e Y '. -r, y1 . f; I l 3 . a,-.*.'"�•L`ti�iT-•`.�`?.''w' ^,:..��t;r�";;:.V S i• �. 't \ ':?. 1111•,3 IMPROVED FRAME FOR CURING FORAGE. instead. of straw, it would have held an additional ton. As the sides of the stack will not shed water, they should be made `perpendicular, or even projecting above, and if the stack is very wide, a straw cover will not shed all the rain. Tar- paulin made of ten -ounce duck will cost about twenty-five cents jeer running foot of stack. If roofed with boards, side posts may -replace the slanting braces, with the middle post higher for the roof - ridge. When beginning the stack, only the ends and cross -frames are in place. The bed of the stack is formed by the lowest shelf of rails or poles, and on this cowpea hay or other forage is piled. two feet deep. Another shelf of rails or poles is put on, pressing down the for- age. A second layer of wilted plants is put on this second shelf, and so on till the top is reached, when all is roofed '.'with- straw tarpaulin or boards. In feeding, the hay is first removed from seal° the raining shelves are still well pro- tected by the roof. The cowpea vines 'were cut as soon as the dew was dried off in the morning and, wilting during the 'lay, were hauled in and stacked the next morning, with no loss of leaves or poles. Rain and dews soak the nutri- ment from vines dried in the field, and long exposure to sunshine hardens the stems, but this cowpea hay, cured in the ;` shade, retained its bright green color • through the winter and was relished by Stock. Such it tack frame is not costly, s and not difficult to make. It is por- table an�yill prove useful on any hay • s& farmny weather. e 1 wer shelves of one pulling out the poles, so that Supports for 1 rut -Lode„ Booths. The Common way to support a fruit- laden.bough is by a wooden prop placed underneath each �,y limb. The disad- ct P ~-,, vantages of such tit+.+ a plan aro many. .r.1 •;.%.,:,-i '-rG The props are likely , .it Aar •'"-'- to be displaced by rs, •the swayinof the , '. boughs in the wind. They are also in the way of the orchard- ist moving about I . among his trees. A l; ,.::`,; ,,,,Iteeltaa, better plan is to sup- port such fruit -laden -tmbs from a common point near can h the top of the tree by wires. These permanently in the trees, as heavy crops .ate likely to come in succeeding years Amon the same trees.—W. Donnol, Me. s. THE MOON'S SURFA.0 Photographing by the Great Zele cope at Lick Obser•v,uory. Tho great telescope of the Lick Ob- dervatory is not only a powerful instru- ment for seeing the heavenly bodies, but it is also a powerful camera for photographing them, The object -glass s three feet in aperture, and it was, until very recently, the largest in ex. -istence, A supplementary ('ens, thirty-. three inches in diameter, is p?ovidned, which can be attached to the telescope just in front of the thirty-six inch lens. When it is so attached the combination becomes s a great photographic camera— the est in the world—which is espe- cially suited to do certain , classes of work. One of the this g -s which it is particularly well fitted to do is to photo- graph the moon; and for the past few years considerable .time has been devot- ed to Ilrakingg• negatives of the liioon dur- ing the course of a lunation—from new to full moon. As the shadows on the moon chane materially during a few hours, it fias been necessary to make a set of such pictures every hour or so, and the whole series gives a very perfect representation of the hulas topo• graphy as it is now. By comparing these photographs with other previous- ly made (by Rutherford, Draper, De la Hue) and more especially with photo- graphs which will bo made in the future it will be easy to detect any important changes which occur in the lunar sur- face. It is certain that such changes must occur, since gravity is constantly working on the moon, as on the earth, to pull down existing; structures; and it is to the study of changes that wo have to look for a more intimate knowledge of Ituaar conditions. An accurate plas- tic representation of the moon's surface is a pro -requisite for such a study, and it will be seen that the photographs of the Lick Observatory, when 'properly examined, ftfi'ord every desired datum. Most of the photographs made by previous astronomers were on too small a scale, and were not precise enough in definition to afford the neces- sary accuracy. The enlargements froin our negatives meets every want, and enable us to construct a satisfac- tory map of' the moon on a scale of ten feet to the moon's diameter. One inch on such a map corresponds to about seventeen miles, or one -seventeenth of an inch.to one mile. A map of California on this scale Would be about forty-one inches long-, The original negatives made in the focus of the large telescope are a little over five inches,in diameter. They are extremely beautiful as mere pictures, especially when colied as transparencies on glass. Everything that the tele- scope will show is contained in these originals, but the scale is still so small that minor features cannot be distin- guished. A mile on the moon is only a ew thousandths of an inch on the nega. tive,for example. Hence they must be enlarged fo be of use. Without enlarge- ment-they nlarge- ment theyare of small scientific value. —McClure's Magazine. CURIOUS BITS. Little ThInge Worth Stowing the Memory Dox. Says a writer in Notes and Queries: A "pie" is baked in a dish, with a crust over it. A "tart" is jam or fruit with a crust bottom and not at top. A "turn- over" is jam or fruit laid on crust, which is then "turned over" it, so that. it is enveloped in paste. Those superior people who think it genteel to call pies "tarts" are wrong. Away In ,. Ira• 1t,,." This name is given to a deep, dry ditch, bounding a lawn, and giving it the appearance of being continuous with grass or garden beyond. It is said to have been introduced by the landscrtpe- garclener Bridgman. Horace Walpole. at- tributed the name ha-ha to the sup- posed exclamation of surprise which such an unexpected obstacle would elicit from a stranger._ Groaoi,g Cance, In the Eastern Counties, according to Forby, a cake was always prepared for lyingon occasions, called a groaning cake, with- which about as many super- stitious tricks are played as with bride - cake. The Tests. Of dignity: never to forget yourself. 01 unselfishness: never to remember yourself. Of a clerk : not what he earns, but what he spends. Of aood comrade : how much you enjoy talking to him. Of sympathy : how much he enjoys talking with you. Of a millionaire : not what ho spends, but what he earns. Of beauty : not that it is pc, feet, but that it always attracts. Of tact : not how often you please, but how seldom you offend. Of purity : not what it has not seen, but what ft has not touched. Of virtue : not what it does not do, but what it doeikiet want to do. Of charm ?mot how deeply you feel it, but how keenly you remember it. Of a student : not how much he knows but how much he wants to know. Of fascination : not how keenly you remember it, but how much else you forget. Of the worst pessimism : leading a poor life, and then preaching what you practice. Of a realist : not that he never de- picts ideally, but that he never depicts falsely, Of a fine man: not the harm that ho does not do, but the good that he docs do, - Of a woman's power : not how exclu- sively you think of her when she is there, but how often you think of her when she is not there. Of friendship ; I. How much you can say to each other. 2. How little you need say to each other, 8. How much you enjoy differing with each other.— ''The Century, ' Rather Puzzling. The Frenchman asked an English spar maker what he was making, "A yard," was the reply. "How much have you got done?" was the next question. '•A yard." "Where did the spar come from?" `.The yard." And the Frenchman was very much surprised at the lucidity of the answers, and amazed at the simplicity of our lan- guage.—Leisure Hours. WHICH SHALL iT BE 1 Shull the Dairymen Pasture the Mich Cow Ur Summer or Douce aid Soil Her? Whether shall the farmer and dairy- man depend on pasture for the milch cow tturing the summer months, or house and soil her ? By way of answer to this, we propose to offer some brief comments on the two systems. 'Be it understood in commencement that we believe that at this season of the year no other one question has as much to do with profit and loss in dairying as this. We shall consider the sub ect as affect- ing chiefly the months of July, August, September and October. What dons it cost to pasture a cow for these four months? Say about eight dollars which for a herd of six cows is forty-eight dollars. And we will sup• pose that each of these cows gives 2e) pounds of milk daily ; we then have 120 pounds milk per day, or about five pounds of butter, or 000 pounds of butter for 120 days. This, at 20 cents, gives us $120 as the gross return. Deducting the cost of pasturage (848 , leaves us $72 plus about 11,000 pounds of skim milk, worth about 2p cents per 100 pounds, or in the total, $22, plus about 3,000 pounds buttermilk, worth 20 cents per 100 pounds, or 80, making in all $100 as the income from the six cows on pasture. What does it cost to soil a cow for these Ebur months? Let us see. One man, at $1.25 per day, will Bret in fecal, feed then) and clean the stables in two hours and a hall: Attendance will, therefore, cost about 81 cents per day, or $37.20 for four months. Feed will cost, allowing 75 pounds per cote per day, about 215 cents per day for the herd depending upon seasons and localities. Cows thus fed and housed will give at least 35 pounds of milk per cow per day, or fur the herd and four mouths, 25,200 pounds milk. This will make, at the same rate, 1,00S pound batter, at 20 cen ts= $201.60, x 20,000 pounds skimmed mils, worth $20.0i; 4.00) pounds but- ter, at 20 cents=$8.00,=$2.19.66. This m:nus cost of feed and nttendance leaves us $182.4 )as the income from the same six cows when soiled and house, 'a difierenco of just $82,40 in favor of the soiling systems. But this is not all. The cows on pas- ture will dry up at least one month soon- er than those that are out only at nights. It is safe to allow 300 pounds of milk as the yield of each cow for these thirty days, or 1,80u pounds for the herd,which is worth at least $10.00. Then, again, cows that are required to depend on pasture alone during this period will become thin and cost a great deal .more to winter, and every pound of milk they hive during the winter months following will •cost a good deal more to produce it than in the case o Cows under the other conditions. Not only so, but the progeny from the poor- er fed cows will dry up in Wolk sooner in the season than the progeny of the others, and will be leas thrifty and give less satisfaction to the owner, ever. though the progeny of bobe fed and cared for the same. I hear some one say hat Is is over- .dratwn, Dear reader, the fa hers of Ontario O • g'. - would give thanks and sing were this not so. Travel through any of the very best and most favored dairy districts in this favored Province, and nine out of ten dairymen will tell you that their cows have failed more than one -halt' during the last four or five weeks. Alas, the picture is too alarm- ingly near the truth. In short, the one who depends upon pasturing wholly for summer feed for nrilch cows will -look upon his dairy ledger next December with a woeful countenance,—Farmer's Advocate. A ••T.ul-11oard" fastener. The device shown in the accompany ing illustration was recently seen in use upon a cart that was -made for the car- riage of heavy loads, and worked so well that its 'general use is commended. Where the "tail -board" is fitted in be- hind two upright rounds of wood, a heavy load presses out so hard upon the hoard as to make it difficult to move. One end may he retained in the old way, and the device that is shown, made of half inch round iron, placed upon the other end, the convenience of which will be appreciated when it is in use. Origin of the Clydesdales, The Clydesdales, perhaps the horse's most highly -esteemed by farmers. especially in the hilly countries are bred in districts bordering on the Clyde, and owe their origin to one of the Dukes of Hamilton, who crossed some of his best Lanark mares with stallions he import- ed from Flanders. This breed i. con- spicuous for its high courage, activity, and endurance. Several years ago the late Gen. Peel told me how successful he had been in mating his thoroughbred Toxophylite with Clydesdale mares. "When you use," said he, "a thor- oughbred for draught snares, always use the biggest and best you have, and you will be sure to produce draught horses second to none. Horses good as Stockwell are not too good for my Clydesdales. What I have bred will go on their knees to move the heaviest loads. They won't be beaten." This fact proves how beneficially a good cross of fresh blood operates, and particularly so when the new blood is obtained Prow the thoroughbred not from inferior specimens of � this breed but from the very best—from "horses as good as Stockwell." The Clydesdale diners from the shire horse in that it has a long, low back, short, fiat ribs, good hard legs, and long pasterns, which would seem to have been derived from a cross with a half -bred or thor- oughbred horse. This certainity is not a desirable conformation, and our Scot- tish brothers have for several years past inoculated this breed by the introduc- tion of the best Shire blood, both male and female, which has resulted in the production of animals with shorter and stronger pasterns. This breed is much in request in this country, and, the best specimens are readily sold to Americans at high figures,—The I3inetoenth Cen- tury. • SHO LD` WOMEN SMOKE ? • A Silly $eason Question 'with Some Silly Season Answers, The Nineteenth Century makes this good old subject its "silly seasoner." Mrs. Frederic Harrison treats in the form ofa conversation. The arguments which she puts forwatal, for and against, may thus be summarized. But first, do wotnen smoke? Yes; for "the five daugh- ters of our clergymen here all smoke," and "as you may sec le the papers, a wedding' cannot be said to be really 'smart' unless the presents include ar least three cigarette cases for the bride." And wow, ought women to smoke ? PPS. B 'cause: If a harmless smoke 'soothes and comforts Wien, who are we that we should Reny it to w0111211, because, for- sooth, it does not lit in with our ideas of what becomes a woman ? Because: "Her aro two men and two women, :nil the two amu may hide their Defect, and shortcomings in con- versation with meek 0, white Wo poor tv"mPn 11111'0 to inert our beat remark between the pail's --why should nut we smoke ? B, cause Restlessness is the fashion of our age, and smoke is good for restless- ness. George Sand advised all women to take to necdl. work as a, sedative; but she herself took to sinel,ing. The new woman 111x, f;11'0Wed her example instead of her precept. Becans : "Spanish and lbissian women smoke, and why- not English wo:9e11? ' NO. I1 cause a high,•r amorality is to ho ex- pected from women than noel mon. Smoking, as 0 nt •see self•indulgemce, is oppos.:d to tits high :r ni n•ality. Because: "Who cern suppose nicotine to h,) a us..fnl ju•e ,'ratio.' 10f the young lift: to be le wicked into the tvor it ? Anti for the nttr:;ill!4 mother with It cigarette, what can we saty? 'We would have t� bury all our pictnr's of tit : Mechem* fathoms deep III •t they might not bo• hold so unlovely a sight. " B.'canse the r.•s,•rv: force of the race must be steered up by women, and smok- ing uses up that force. Because woman is bound to 80 malty artificial wants already that she ought not to cultivate another. A Y•Il,;1,, of Fires' The Paisley- Advocate says: A flight of flies similar to the one noticed in these columns last week was witnessed on Sunday evening. In passing ov.•r the village they seemed to fly higher than in the open, making it much hard- er to estimate their extent,but the same evening a resident of Greenock, crossed the line ot'march of tho'pests,and states that ti)r an entire mile and a quarter he drove throngh mtvraids of flies so dense that to the superficial observoe they ap- peered to be clouds of smoke. They kept crossing his pathway for the entire distance, and when he finally passed tli.,eir trail they were still coming sty numerous as ever. They appeared to be moving in loose calumns, and extended from a point about as high as a !rouse 1)-ont the ground until they faded in space. To flaw: Out. This phrase certainly occurs in the Pickwick Papers. Bob Sawyer says to Mr. Pickwick : '~Where do you hang. out?" and that gentleman replied "that he+ was at present suspended at the Geerge rued' Vulture, CormhilL" An earlier instance of its use 1 do not re- member, but 40 years ago it was 0 coin - melt enough question at Oxford. -Where do you hang out ?" that is, livo or reside. At Cambridge the question put was. `•\'hero do you keep?" and the use of one: expression or other used to be re- garded asshowinee• the Oxford and Cam- bridge man. In Last Anglia, the dining room is often called the "keeping rooms." Both universities yet retain, 1 suppose, some peculiar words in their vnca l,ularv. The following is an early instance of "to hang out," with John Cleveland's "Miscellaneous Poems," IIe is describ- ing a knight, one Sir Thomas Martin,• as on exhibition : . hang ooh a flag, and gather pence a place (Which Afrie never bred, nor swelling Greece With s oriel tympany), a beast so rare, No lecturer's wrought cup, nor Bartholomew's Fair Can match hien ; nature's whimsey, that out; vies Tradeseant and his ark of novelties, This shows tinct hangingottt a flagwas an advertisement of any show.—otes and Queries. Royal A t,artmellta, It is said by a visitor lately distinguish- ed by a "command" from the Queen at Osborne that the Indian room in the palace is the most splendid apartment in the world. Heretofore the Salon des Glstces at Versailles and the fatuous salons in the castle of the late King of Bavaria have been unapproachable models in royal interiors—but the gal- lery at Versailles is now public, and no longer modern, and the apartments of the unhappy Louis are closed to all save servantseyes. The Indian room was 'milt and decorated in commemoration of the Indian Empire, and it is used solely for great banquets and those :;tate occasions demanding social grandeur. No photographs, if they were allowed to he printed, would do justice to the magnificent scheme of' deco- ration, which was the work of native ar- tists during two years. In this regal room the Emperor William and all the royal- ties lately,gathered at the Cowes regat- tas were assembled, and the spectacle is described as having been grand beyond words. It would seem as if the great little Queen desired to impress on her rather bumptious grandson the import- ance of England's sovereign beneath that splendid rooftree, and it so it was a success, as the German courtiers cannot say enough in ,praise of their surround- ings on that occasion, Osborne House is the palace least known to the Queen's subjects. Itis in all senses a private residence, a seaside home not to be in- vaded by sightseers, as Windsor• castle, or even Buckingham palace, is when the court is absent.—Boston Herald. The Impediment. '•Can you look at the divorce court and wonder why young men and women do not marry?' ° "True. Justice ought to be less ex- pensive than it is. "—Detroit Tribune. To take both pride and pleasure in having the best of everything for ueo ;al doing the household work. It is for Ilia reason that the "Happy Thought" is the most popular of all the makes of Kitchen Ranges. Being so made that it will keep fire fpr any length of time without rekindling, the disagreeable work of sifting the aches, kindling fires, etc., is entirely done away with. Though it burns but very little fuel it will bake perfectly at any hour of .the day, and without the neoessity of putting on any special fire. The various sizes and patterns of the "Happy Thought" Rtuges may be seen at our store. For a perfect Base Burner the Padiant Home is the King of Heaters. Stock complete. Old Store, Brick Block, McKay elle �r® �m S' Bl OCk. New Sto re., PEOPLE MUST LIVE And in order to do so they want the very beat they can get. We have anticipated their desire by purchasing the choicest Groceries, Teas, Suzars, Canned Goods, Fruits,&c, Having have 35 years experience, think we know the wants of the people pretty well. Our stock embraces everything found in a first class grocery, and we will not bo undersold. We have a Beautiful Assortment of FANCY GLASSWARE and CROCKERY Special Cuts on SUGARS and TAS in large lotae 0 J. W. IRWIN Grocer Leslie s Carriage Factory. BUGGIES, PHAETONS, CARTS AND WAGONS—all of the beat work, manahip and material. ll"A11 the latest styles and most modern improve- ments. All work warranted. Repairing and repainting promptly attended Lo. Prices to suit the times, 1-FACTORY—corner IIuron and Orange Streets, Clinton. 657— McKAY BLOCK CLINTON. THE HUB GROCERY. ALWAYS RlGN7'w Our Stock is complete in canned goods such as SALMON, HADDIE, FRESH HERRING, LOBSTER, BEEF, DUCK, CHICKEN TURKEY. Canned Vegetables KIN, _TOMATOES, PEAS, CORN, PUMP - Canned Fruit—PEACHES, STRAWBERRIES, APPLES, &c. ' In jams we have PEACH, STRAWBERRIES,RASPBERRIES, CUR- RANTS, &c. In Pickles—MCCARRY ONIONS, CUCUMBERS, CAULIFLOWER, and WALNUT. All kinds of Spices, quality pure. Tea, all grades; we push the eale of Ben Her Blend which draws very fine. We have a big assortment of Crockery. GEORGE SWALLOW, Clinton. May Pickings New Crop. JAPAN TEAS from 13c,,17c.,20c ,25000c. 50c., per. Ib. Try our SAILOR BOY BRAND, as a 30c. Japan tea. It has no equal. IN BLACI{ TEAS.our Russian Blend hasrbeen sold exclusively by us during the hast five years, and from its rapidly increasing sales has proved it one of the best 45c. Black Teas on the market. FIRST ARRIVAL—NEW VALENCIA A RAISINS, NEW PRUNES. CANNEDGUODS —TOMATOESPEAS. IN FRESFI HERRING, KIPI''ERPDeIHERRING, SALMON, NLOBSTERELESS S PSARDINES,ISH, EFINNAN HADDIE. Finest Mocha and Java Coffees. Pure Pickling Spices in bulk or packages. Best White Wine, Malt and Cider Vinegars, Candied Peels. Essences and Extracts. Crockery, China and Glassware Selling at Wholesale frices for the next 2 weeks. N. Robson, Albert St., Clinton. CLINTON SASH, DOOR AND BLIND FACTORY. 0 PROPRIETOR, General Builder and Contractor. S. S. COOPER, 11111 This factory has been under the personal supervision and one owner for eight years. We carry an extensive and reliable stock and prepare plans and give estimates for and build all classes of buildings on short notice and on the closest prices. All work ie supervised in a mechanical way and satisfaction guaranteed. 'We sell all kinds of interior and exterior material. Lumber, Lath, Shingles, Lime Sash Doors, Blinds Etc. Agent for the CELEBRATED GRAYBILL SCHOOL DESK, manufactured at Waterloo. Call and get prices and estimates before placing your orders, Money For Nothing. If you Want It Speak Right Up. WE are offering a year's subscription to THE LADIES' JOURNAL nearly Free to all our patrons who renew their subscrip- tions to THE NEWS -RE - ('ORD before the FIRST OF JANUARY NEXT. We will also send THE LADIES' ,JOURNAL one year to any new subscriber who sends in $1.40 for THE NEWS - RECORD before the first of January next. The ledies' Journal IS A Beautifully Illustrated and Handsomely Printed Monthly Magazine of thirty-six large pages. It contains the Latest Fashion 'News, carefully and finely Illustrated, Household Hints, Fancy "Work, Home and School Page, Mothers' Page, Elocutionary, Short and Serial Stories of all sorts. Almost all the mat- ter contained in the LADIES' JOURNAL ie orig- inal with that publication and cannot be found else- where. All the woman of your household will be delight- ed with the JOURNAL. Send in your renewals and need subscriptions now. Address all orders to the Publisher of this paper. LIVE HOGS WANTED. Hignest Market Price Paid. I. D. CANTELON, Clinton. 798•(1. Stray Heifer Came to tbo premises of rho undorsignsd, lot No. 88, con. 4, Goderleh township, on or about the 1st of August, a throe -year-old Red Heifer, with white spot on face. The owner is requested to prove property, pay expenses and take the animal away. iOEIN WOODS, Applogrove Farm, 828-4t Bayfield, P. 0. EUREKA' BAKERY AND RESTARUANT. Under the new Management business con- tinues to flourish. Our Stock comprises everything required in a first-class Bakery and Restaurant—such as Plain and Fancy Cakes, Pastry, Superior Bread, Confectionery, Cool Summer Drinks, &o., &e. WEDDING CAKES A SPECIAL- TY and prices reasonable. Picnic parties dealt with on the most liberal terms and Bread delivered to all parts of the town. Better value than we offer cannot be obtained. Give us a call. Stand next tho Grand Union Hotel, Clinton. JAMES BODY, Proprietor. .,e