HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News-Record, 1899-04-27, Page 9THE CLINTON NEWS•RE00110
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.V0.1,141n.....••• 10 00 (100. 600 1(10
Is°4..:.t.W....-1 4 QV a Oe 200. 126
gignigeClitA seinen from ea to tit percent extra,
' Ver transient Adverttsements 10 cents
per line for the first ineertion; 3 centa
Fee,v„r iille„ each attbsequent Insertion-
."olfartal UAW/Sure tkr02084011ai cards,
slot exceeding" one inch, 45.00 Per
• anneln JohAdvertieementa without spec
. ..
......win be pablialied till
. forbid and. charged for accordingly.. n
. ' •
Transieut notices --"Lost," "Foillnl,'
"For Sale," ete,--.50 cents for first in- ing LEADIfIC BARBER,
sertiOni 24 cents for eteli !subsequent
.Itottee the tor yid Myer, sea ewe
hillotioness, leek he* de Che leundiees
Meese indigos tIon, eto, They are fl
• valuable to prevent a cold or break UP a
fever. Mild, gentle, certain, they are worthy
your confidence. Purely vegetable, they
otkn be taken by children or delicate women.
Price. 26o. it all medicine dealers or by Man
of (7, L 1190 & qo,ow�U, Mel&
. •••••••••,mme
Insertion. • '
THE NEWSeRECORD will he itent
to any. address, free of Postage, f°r
01.00 per year, payable in advance, -
S1.50 may be charged if not so paid.
The date to which every subscription
Is paid is donated by the number on
the address label. No paper discontin-
ued Unttl an Arrears are patd, except
at the -option of the prepeletor.
W. T. MITCHELL.
.1 1 Editor and Proprietor.
- •
IIE MOLSON'S BANK
17 -.Act of Parliaincot 1856.
CAPITAL' $20100,000
REST
Head 91110, bi0NTITEA10.
. latitsom..MACP111/R0ON.' President.
Illeketere Oen. Manager
etas ;Recounted, Collectigne Made, Drafts
tied, Stetting and American Exchange
light and sold. Interest' allowed onDeposita
Im.••••••ftw •
0,AVINGs BANE,
lite:sat allowed On sums of • 01 and up.
'tutu/Mts.
Money advanced to ferment on their ciwn
otes with one or more endorser% . No wort -
age rectuiredes security.
. _
(); BREWER, Manager, Clinton.
D. IVIcTAGGART,
Banker,
ADIERT.STREET - CLINTON
A General Banking Business Transacted.
Notes Discounted. Draft's Issued.
Interest Allowed on Deposits
.r..s..acoans ums.'srx.coma
- • - • - ONT
FireeAcoident and Life Insurance '
Tronactei. Repreeen.e several of the best
Companies and , any information relating to
iniurance gladly given, General District
.Agent for. the Confederation Jag° Ineur,eice
co. money to Loan on Reasonable Rates
Office -Palace block, -opposite Market' •
CONVEYANCINC...,„,
..john
conveyancer, 'C'cimmissioner, Etc.
• . .
Fire Insurance. r • e Real Estate.
'Money to Lend,' .
, • , „
Office -HURON STREET, %CLINTON
IVIE.DICAL
Dr. W. Gunn,
R. c. P. and L. R C S, Edinburgh.
Office -Ontario Street, ClietOn. • Night
calls at front dotal' of residence on Ratten-
bury Street, one preshytetian Church. .
Dr 'Win. Graham
..„ -
(Succesgorli) De- Turnbull.)
Licentiate of the Royal College of Physic-
• Jetts, London, Eng. •••
Office and Residence, Perritt's Block,
ately occupied by Dr. Turnbull, , •
Dr. Shaw,
. . • . • ••:
Office -Ontario Street, opposite Engliall
• church„ formerly iiecupied by Dr.' Apple-
ton:.
DA., a W. .THOMPSON
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
Office and Residence next to M.o)Son'S
Bank, Rattenbury street, Clinton.
: DENTISTRY.
Dr, BRUCE,
• Surgeon Dentist...
OFFIOE-Over Taylor's Shoe Store,
Clinton', Ont. Special attention to preser,
vation of natural teeth.
,N B --Will visit Blyth every Monday and
Baylield every Thursday afternoon during
the summer. '
D./VAG-NEW DENTIST.
• Office adjoining Foster's Photo Ckillery,
' Offien Hours, •9 to s.
• Atgurich the second Thursday of ouch
month,-
_
VETERINARY.
Blaokall 84 Ball,
VeterinarySergeons Government Veter
inary Inspectors,
Office -Isaac Street,Clinton; Residence,.
Albert Street.
LEGAL..•
• Scott S; McKenzie,
•BARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, ETC,
CLINTON AND' BAVEIELD,
Clinton, Office -Elliott Block, Luta° et.
Bay,field Office -Open every Thursday
-Main streit, Brat door west of
Post Office. Money to loan.
janies Stiott. E.U.McKenzie.
.E. Campion, qa,
Sarriater, * • Solicitor, * Notary, •&c
GOVERIGH, ONT.
Cifftnolt--OVer Davis' Drug Store. P
. Money to ,Loan.
M. 0. trOhrliStOlii •
BarSolioltor, Commiesioner, Etc
,00ntaton, OND.
.0M011 -....Cor. Hamilton and St, Andreer's
Streets.
t•
•r. liriefIceo .
Derfleter,'Soliciber, NOtary Public; •&el,
BEAVER BLOCK, CLINTON
•
1
Smith's block, opposite Post Office
, A.1.130
Agept for Standard life Insurance CO
Tread Office for amide, Mentreal.
• Insurance in force, e 5110,00,000
nwesta 0. to in Canada - 1$,Im.000
Entab11stea.1825: The cid reliable and faverlte
• GEO. TitOITHILL9
Horseshoer and General Blaolismith
• Albert Street, North, Clinton.
Ja3BING "A. SPECIALTY.
Woodwork ironed and eret,ehkes material
and work guaranteed. Perm impleMenta Mad
lillSOldries rebuilt and repaired, . •
The,kKi1kp 1,04ial, Fire,
Insurance Company.
Farmand Isolated Toxin Property
Only Insured.
• orrimpRsi
3, B. McLean. Presid.nt, Wpm P. O.
Thomas •Frazer. viceliresideet. Brumfield P.O.
W. J. Shannon, Secy-Treas:, Seaforth P. O.;
Thomas E. Hays. Inspector of losses, Setiforth
• DIRECTORS;
W. G. Broadfoot, Seaforth; John G. Grieve,
Winthrop: George Dale, Seaforth: Thomas E.
Hay% Seater' ; Jam& Evans. Beeobwood ;
John watt. Oarlock. Thome Fetzer, Enloe -
field; John B. McLean. Kippen; James.
Connolly. Clinton.
' AGENTS:
Robt. Snit1i. Harlook t Robert McMillan Sea.
forth: .Tanies Cummings, Egmondville, J. W.
Yee: Holmenville P O.; .Tohn..Govenlook and
John C. Morrison, auditors.
Parties desirousto effect insurance ' or trait -
Beet other business will be promptly atteiried
to on application to any of the above °Moore
addreseed to their respectiye post office',
. • ....„
Grand.Trunk Railway..
Trains arrive and leave Clinton Station as
• • follows : • •
Buffalo and Goderich .District
Going West Mxed Joas a.m.
" ," Express 12.55
efieee,,, .... l• o$ p.
1, 4' Express (3. 27 p.m.
Gohig East, Express7
,4o a.
41 41 . ......
• 4.35
London, Huron anti Bruce:-
Going:South, Express .... . 7.47
" Mixed. .
n
Go• ing North, ...... 0.15 a.m.
4, • " • • • ••• • 6.55 pen.
C. DicitsoN; , W. yaws,
_ _
Pis. Pesci. Agent, G. & T. A.,
Toronto. , •Montreal.
0.:(P.Artasozo, G.TX•Agetit at Clinton.
'50Y,EARS.
EXPERIENCE
'TRADE. MARKS,
, DESIGNS'
COPYRIGHTS dtC,
Anyone sending e'sketch and description may
quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an
Invention is probably patentable. COnitnunica•
time strictly confidential. Handbook on Patents
sent free. Oldest agency for securing_patents.
Patents taken through Munn 8: co. receive
special notice, without charge, in the
• .
• • A handoomely illustrated weekly. Largest car:
culatlon or anyte1mM°
•42At:rer four mon i0,ei. Bo 7tit
5UNN
& Co,36iBmadwaY? New Ytrk
• Brain% office.. Bt.. Washington. D.
• LEAP YEAR.
Within eight more creates -les leap?,
year will -have become a relic of the
present time. By that time the ex-
tra 11 days lost to make upthe
changes from the old Innen Calendar
to that of the present day will all
• have been duly accounted for. and the
world -will Tun round. in just 305 das,
end no more. The ladies of the dom-
ing century will be forced to deviee
some tither scheme for forcing the un-
willing mantle to take a Wife. Nine-
teen hundred, while one of the even
years ending a quarter; will not be a
leap -year simply because in arranging
the dates it was purposely left out.
The -ladies lose the.r privilege again
in 1960; but Lhough there will not be
many of those who See 000 who will
see 2000, the latter year, ending a
fourth century, will -be a leap -year. In
this way three days are retrenched in
fciur centuries; and the remaining
seven days will be made up in a little
over 800 years. After that calendar
year will be like solar yeara, and er-
rors in calculation of time will occur
110 more. -
The loss of leap -years will in thou-
sands or years affect the seasons, but
probably the mathematicians of the
centuries hence will be go expert in
handling figures and making caletila•
thins that they will have no difficulty
In keeping things goino correctly.
LONGEST. HEAD Or HAIR.
The woman who posseases the -long-
est head of hair in the world is Said to
be Mercedes- Lopez, a Mexican. Her
height is 5 feet, and when she stands
erect her hair trek; on the ground
four feet and eight Inches.. The hair
Is so thick that she can completely
hide herself in it. She has cut it Very
frequently, as it grows so quickly, en-
abling her to sell large treseeti to
heir dealers every month. She le the
Peq..ebee1111414eFe......
4Efeeetgee 4(46 64L
HOWARD.* ed
eart Relief sh
sh
FOR ALL fa
Aft Weakness or Path itt
} HINTS FOR
THIE FARMER.
THE PETTED COWS OP HOLLAND.
Me been termed the Cow%
Paradise, because there everything le
done to make a cow's life one of beau-
ty, e•omfort and even luxury,
allmnier and irk 'winter the cow
la the One Object of the thoughtful, lova
• ing care of the farmer and., his fam-
ily.
Early in tay the cattle •are turtle
•Animintir will be very much leavened
by such a treatinent in the spring.
A variety of corn abould be select-
ed which vill arrive at the glazing
!nage of growth before the mittal per-
iod of frceit ill the autumn.,
It should be pleated in rows Or
hills not leee than three feet apart.
If in rows, it should be planted so
thin that stalks will net be °User
than three to the foot In 0441/) TOW
• if in hills, from for to Ix stalke
Per hill. If the seed be awed and
Of a high percentage of vitality, about
twenty pounds of seed' per acre le
enough.
It is (meetly a goo& plan to harrow
the corn (iron with ligbt harrows when
d the planta are abut four inches aborts
ground. That id partioulArly bench -
as
after a rain. But the ground, should
be dry enough to be in good working
tilth before the harrowing is done.
The cultivation should be frequent and
always shallow. The mots of the corn
Plant grow out sideways; where tbe
cultivation outs these off, greet injury
to the crop is done.
The best stage at which to out the
ccirr: crop for ensilage, is when the
kernels in the ears are of full. else,
but before they begin to harden, That
Is usually the stage when the lower
leaves of the corn stalk become yel-
low and withered.. At that time the
plante' will contain the largest quan-
tity of digestible matter, and will be
an their best condition for preserva-
tion The feeding value per acre is
greatest when the crop is nearly MAN
tare but not ripe,
out to pasture where the gratis grow)
most luxuriantly; the fields being
Mowed and fed to cattle on alternate
year's,. • .
Dilates from fifteen to twenty feet
wide, of deep blue water, 'separate the
fields; these are spanned by ruatio
-bridges having bolted gates to prevent
intruders among the cattle.
Scatterecj throughout each field are
metalling posts for time oninfort • of
the kine; for even the will -eared for,
sleek -coated Holstein -Friesians cattle
enjoy a; good seritehing occasionally.
• Many farmers are so thoughtful of
their cattle as to put onto them
lin-
en wars to protect tate: from flies
and other inmate, as well as from the
raw Winds.
In the nildat ofezquisitt emerald -
green fielda of from twelve to fifteen
acres each, with abundant water el -
wept at hand, the COWS Spend at °least
eight or nine months of the year ;
coming together in squads toward five
o'clock daily to await the Milkers with
'the great shining brass cans,
In Noveinber, when tbis weather be -
conies too cold for the cows toremain
out of doors, they pie' driven into
their respective farmyards to be 'siz-
ed tiP by their owners that is,
the farmer . will pair them off accord-
ing to their height and size, and then
let thorn enterthe cow:stable to -take
their: Places in the long row of stalls
on one side of the really elegant cow.
stables, the 'tallest equine to occupy
:the center stall and the .couples to
graduate in height down:towards eith--
er end of the row.
There are frequently' fifty or' more
heed in one herd, 'awl 74-,n would open
Your eyes in oinaiement.cmild you en-
ter one of 'these Holland stables.They
are built as a part of the farmer'e
house and ' separated from the living
rooms by aeglass doer; so gams and
his fro can sit in their best. 'room
and yet keep an eye on their '• belov-
ed cows; for it issaid that A Dutch
•farmer thinks. or has cows all day. and
tlieam.s of (hem -at.' night, '
The typical Dutch farmhouse covers
from' ten thousand to twenty thou-
sand. feet of groend. 11 his brick
walls to a height of siX oraheven feet,
above which :rises a high peaked roof,
thatched, or .partlYthatched, and
tiled, in Which; is kept t.y!3, wititer's
supply ot hay.:
The Hollanders are fond of gay col-
ors; so they often paint ethe wells of
a house, bright green, which contrasts
prettily with the dull Colored thatch
and the bright red tiles of the roof,
and the beautiful blueof the water-
way running neerby ; for most farm:.
ees build -close beside ; the waterways
which .- traverse - the ;entire tioutary.
The co* stable is a long hall on one
aide ef the lower floor;•on the outer
aide of it runs a row of stalls, each
raised a few inches from •tlie floor, t,
and large enough for two cows. Be- '
tween the stalls are little windows
With pure white muslin curtains, and .
windowsills Of blooming plants.
The floor of the ball is' sometimes
sanded iii. pretty designs, or else been -
Melly tiled, as are the stalls- during
the summer months, but through the
winter the cows have to be content
to stand on earthen floors. •
Quaint old dressers and handsome...
ly carved tables, loaded with heir- J
looms of silver, of Chinese and jarian-
ese curiosities, and pretty native wares -
adorn the. halls of the cows,
Wide . gutters extend the length of.
the stalls it'either end; that at the
head ;being filled. with running wa-
ter for drinking purposes. •
The cows are seldom, if ever, left
alone; some member of the household
being always with them by night And
by day. The boys and girls of farm-
ers; families •spend much of their time
in talkies to and petting the *cows,
as well as' .in assisting to care ler _
their comfort.
The stable is sceubbed thoroughly,ev-
ery day; the cows are washed in Warm
soapsuds every morning, then carp -
fully dried arid rubbed. After being.
washed and oombed, their tails have
straw plaited into the ends, which are
thee knotted and slipped through iron
rings *suspended from the ceiling, thus
soprioiteedo.ting the tails from ,beeoming
Along the ridge pole is a row of
ventilators, and the air io kept per-
fectly' fresh and sweet. •
The &MS are milked twice a day, one
on either side of the kali, yielding
from twenty to thirty, or more, quarte
at a milking. This s converted into
butter and cheese by the women.
In the North of' Holland most of the
milk is devoted to ebeesema,king. The
celebrated Edam cheeses, which look
So =nth like great red cannon balls
in the grocer& windows, are shade from
the fresh Milk and exported . to all
parts of the world.
In Friesland the Wile is devoted to
• bettermaking, such as bringe extra
high prices. in the London, and Paris
markets.
" Brave Little . Holland" has been
• noted for its dairy products since as
early as the dinth century. The black
• na white cattle known tie the Hol-
stein -Friesian breed, peculiar to that a
country, may be traced back More than f
twe thoueancl years, although their v
fine qualities were not known to the
world. unti, mueh later date, •
Th •the seventeetith denture' Eng
land and other countries began irci- E
porting the breed, but 'nowhere else
itnthe known world is the gentle, in -
e
Iligent and most invaluable cow
awarded tuth tender, loving tare and
luxuriate apart
ments as in 'Rolland.
-•
cial if the ground is at all crusted,
'THE DAIRIES OF (11111.DA,
REPORT OF THE UNITED STATES
CONSUL% GENERAL. • '
Mow It Is litleUltlitie4 the Government-'
/our *Great sources ,of Weelth-linpres-
• sive information for American runners
• and Incidentally, for Canadiana • as
Well.
..United States Consul General john
L : Bittinger at Montreal is impressed
by the pOlioy With which the Canadian
Government has developed the agri-
culture of. the Deniinion, • especially
dairy 'production; aye a Washington:
deepatch. • '
• "The great eiourcepof wealth in flan -
Oda," Maj. Bittinger .writes, "may *be
said to be four•-fisheripe, mines, for-.
eats and farms. The amount annually
derived -41-0M them is; in round figures;
020,000,000 from the fisheries; 080,000;.•
.000 from the Mines 080 000 000 from
forests,.'while agriculture soars abeve
all the others 'combined; with ii-grend
total' of over 0600,000,060. The pro-
ducts of the. erstwhile despised 'few
arpents of sinew' are now well known
inthe markets. of the worid. Mani-
toba wheats ;go found everyvvIere,ihe
Produce ef •what but a fewyears ago
Was regarded San so raitOh • waste
. "While wheat has made enormou
progress, it is equaled, if not outdis-
tanced, by the rapid' increase of the
• 0
cheese business,. The. ripid. progres
made .ist best told by Statistics,' which
show. that 65 per Cent of.. the cheese
in the British market is- supplied by
Canada. tin the year 1871 there, were
but 853 . factories 18 the country
turning- out but ,04600,000 worth of
cheese; while in 1897 thseentimber had
increased to 1,700 factories, producing
over $16,000,000 worth of cheese."
UncennfOrtably *significant is . the
statement of the Consul : General that
"a eoraperison of the cheese exporti
tor the lest ,ten years shoes the de -
cedes". in United States exports as
compared with the evolution among
our cousins in Canada.'• ;
"It is well to took for the reason
ot ale," • Maj. Bittinger continues.
-goo- fact has often been lost !light Of
by inatufacturers, and that is the ab-
solute necessity 'Of: • ,
PLEASING CUSTOMERS,
by maitaacturtng what they like in -
steed adepting the too often vain,
and always lengthy, proceei,of endea-
voring to educate thein 'to appreciate
the producer' notion or what ought
to be. Business houses are not pen*
tally pulpits for the elevation of the
benighted foreigner, who perfers hia
Cheese a little 'browner or his but-
ter af a flavor rich and rare. Toe
often large fields for business exten-
sion are untouched, simply because a
Manufacturer. sent out what •he
thought ought to succeed, and because
it did not the attempt was given up
without further inquiry. To my know-
ledge a first-class Cheese sent to • a
German trader failed foe no otner rea-
son than that, when out, it would not
make a good cheese sandwich. If the
shape had been right the cheese would
have been a success. As its is, the
gender to -day,, declares, !'There is no
market there.' In another case a
consignment of butter was avoided like
the plague by the peasants, because it
Wail in barrels like those in which Fin-
nish butter had formerly been sent, at
a time when that brand had an exceede
legit,' unsavory reputation. , Deems of
other exainples are familiar to every
one who hes traveled with his eyes
open. '
"There is no doubt that ihe decrease
of imports of United States cheese into
Great Britain ia due to exactly the
same sort of thing, together with an
.unfortunate remissness on the part of
some manufacturers to remember it
WAS °hawse that was being floade.
"A feav shipments of apples, rotten
at the bottoreeof the barrel, hidden.by.
a layer of rosy cheeks, will damage the
"national credit to a marvelous witent;
se With everything else. It may not
ppear of importance to a man mn his
actoty or orchard in the middle .0f a
ast continent, but if that same man.
could tranapart himaelf few thoilSand
Miles and see his package offered foe
sale to A crowd of costers from East
ed, London, rwekett as a wasp` and
sharp as An awk,' he Would learn a
leaS4ilt as he viratched the effeets on
the prices of everything elm that came
from that district -nay, even wk.
Bittinger attributea the re-
markable development of the industry
in Canada to
THREE PAOTORS,
One of these is that "wise action has
been taken ill the titittetttient and rigid
enforcement or laws in regard to
deity products; and, consequently,
haesti obetvaeirtrincloraemhilen:
$.4Caeottitiotta.tattionfchevrth
In the. rieXt Plitee the Consul General
pointa out that "the old 'bee by
Maine of which neighbors helped one
another In the young settlement, has
developed into the plesent co-operative
system, which has had such good re.
sults, PY Ole means, the farmer on :
the prairie has all the benefit aeorti.
Ing from the tilie Of the best Marhirie
baVe viritittoltP3ottal"equhentrieer itt
er
compete on fair terms with the rest
of the world."
, • qr. p
1,
The chief reason for Canadian pro.
grata in this field, Maj. Malaga con-
cludes, Is the Intelligent govellarnent
encouragement.
"The opheene and butter production,"
he says 'could never have attained ite
Present' position but for the great in.
tenet talon In It by the krovernMelit•
which has Worded every aid poesible
to the farmers. The present Waster
of Agricultura-Flon. Sydney Fisher-,
being, a practical farmer, bats given
ininkeithe Impetus to the trade in farm
Products-partioularly Cheese and but-
ter; and, moreover, knowledge hark
enabled him to give help that could
never have been given by ens, one
- without practical experience. The
aeatiered and beterogeneella Maio -
tion of the northwestern pprtion of
the Dominion of Canada had more than
ordinary kiiffieulties to overcome.
They were isolated, and in Mona' cases
remote from the railroad. The Finns,
Magyars and Gallicians as.well as the
Preneli Canadians, had' to be taught
every step In the metod of making
cheese and butter for exportation,
and that task can only be aPPrerdated
by those acquainted with their con-
servative habits." '
Maj Bittinger has obtained returns
from the different provtnces, showing
the detalle and the results obtained
from this policy. Of Ontario his re-
port says:- e
"I have a list of 1,123 cheese factories:
and 234 butter factories. Ten years
ago not a tenth of them were in exist-
ence. Many of the cheese factories are
putting in
• CREAMERY PLANTS. •
'The local Legislature ta very' vigorous
in all matters connected with agricul-
ture, having spent 04,500,090 in the last
thirty years over the Agricintural Col-
lege, dairy schools, farmers' inStitutee,
fruit; experiraent stations and the col-
lection of agricultural atatistios."
' The chief regulations with regard to
the Dominion dairy. stations are as
•follows:
1. The company owning the build-
ing makes it frost proof. -4
2, The Dairy Comatissioner pays
6100 as rent and fixes such apparatus
as May be needed.
3. The equipment becomes the pro-
perty of the company, or is removed,
as arranged. •
4. The agreement lasts for two
years.
5. The Dairy Commissioner, Manu-
factures butter from milk furnished at
the factory at the rate of 3c perpound;
that inaludes all charges for labor,
tubs, fuel, sale, eto., this low tate is
set to induce farmers to join,
6; The Dairy Ccananissioner sells' the
butter to the best of his ability awl
pays net .price to _the patrons, accord-
ing to milk 'supplied, tested by Bab-
cock milk tester. -
7. The Dairy Coonmissioner pays an
advance of 15o per pound At the end
of each month. - • • '
8. The patrons receive at the factory
80 pounds, of skim milk, and 10 pounds
oft buttermilk. per 100 ponds of milk
received. If the buttermilk is sold it
is to be accounted for to the patrons.
Irk 1898 Canadian. exports of cheese
were .017,572,763, and of butter 02,--
046,686.
" .
A NATION'S DEAD.. •
'game or the• Naval Heroes Who Rest In
S• Vreptininater Abbey.
• The, well-known" saying, "Westmin-
ster Abbey or glorious vieterr," attri-
btdt boarded•
, San Josef at the battle of Cape
cent, seems to point to the hero's own
wishes es to an abbey grave. But for
sonie unknowe reason, when the end
came at the famous battle at Trafalgar
' 1805, Nelson was buried at St. Paul's,
. and the abbey antherittes, finding
orowds going there to gate on his
I t t' I had if' d.
of him and :set it up near Hempen-
felcit's monument, in order to attract
people back .to Westminster, with- the .
desired re,sult, • The,figure neW stands
• in .the Islip Chantry °bevel with the
other funeral 'effigies, .and ,ts A very
life -like and good representation of the
great -man. It is said to have. been .
• copied from a smaller figure for which -
• Nelsen sat, and all the clothes except
the coat he actually., wore.
who borrowed the hat for his picture
of "The Death of Nelson," found •the
marks of the eye patch on the inner
lining, 'and the /stamp of the period in
:the oroWn.
NATURALLY. • ' b
' F• irst Thief -What clieyer do when
' they yelled "Stop• thief f"
Second Criminal -I didn't.
,
VODDAit C011X.
In the cultivation of the Indiark corn -
011.a feW paints are important. he
ti still either Unknown or overlook -
by Many farmers.' A coin crop
Mild get a ood istart. The lane
ould be fully manured near the sur-
e.), or .the corn should be planted
tietia bed prepared by the plow -
g' under of sod or clover.
If tho land be foul with weeds or
asey, a etirtaee cultivation at two in-
rvals of ten days ettel, early itt: the:
lug,- Will give the weeds a elianee
•start. When they will be tiettroy.
by the tillage preparatory to the
rotting of the dorsi. The labour of
ping the Plaid clean during the
• • in
ItOWAftlali HEART 1MM/ft la kteltrtret,
heert tettle.-mtultiag the bleed tO geweinitir
evegt, tanestitear relievingxerticet et ted gr
gletetra4:04 uTrikita tarty ill thrne rgittig te
otcaligiingerys, or irt tite brs. sgrr
-. net be etkeetted.
Olititetted with desttgrel "API da ettotirg: , ti te°4
At 4
ecd , at '110°10*grtgl,M feli.itifYttir 645! P• I
4. W. HOWARD, 71 Vete& St. To ‘tee, kee
•
Many persens have their good
day and their bad day. Others
are about half sick all the time.
They have headache, backache"
and are restless and nervous.
• Food does not taste good, and
the digestion is poor; the skin
. is dry and sallew and disfigured
• with pimples or eruptions;
sleep brings no rest and Werk
it a burden, '•• • •
What is the causted tat this?
Impure blood.
And the remedy?
It clears out the channels
through which poisons are
tarried from the body* When
• all impuritlea are removed from
the blood nature tikes right hold
and completes the cure.
If there is constipation* take
A Pilis. They awakn h
drowsy (WHOA of the War; they
cure biliousness.
Vifelloh t. was Doratoro
it°4Sein1/14'.1242141ifill
Itt'h •Ar nmettti%14.
KAM T ac WOW
imam
"1:070toltre, °Ar.ap 14114 21C..--"Wtke ha,ChdellaSa''to4:1
/lithe Leading Marts.
receipt 02 40 loads of offerings at the
weetern- cattle yarde thth rooreing, but
soarcely any trade Wan dnele, as drov-
ers and. dealers were far apart in their
-1dews as to values.. The cattle here
• were •almost entirely !shipping cattle,
and between the difficulty in obtain-.
Mg space oa Ube steamers and the low
e
prieee prevailing for cattle in Bugland
esportere are not at all anxious to
• buy, at Present Khios especially ; hence
We had no shipping trade today, and
no local defamed worth ..speaking of.
Pricee are nominally Unchaeged. We
had about 150 ahem yearlings, and
spring Iambs; these also were quiet
and unchanged. Stockers and feeders
alone show a rather firmer tendency.
Abouts four ,hundred hogs were here,
and the prices of Tuesday 'still hold
.
"VW -I -role aPpearanoes weshall not
have much of a market' here to-mor-
drooww,n. end •,should receipteattle be
•
qb • ovt jjay t,oiNovpni ors ei Le is tal Iree range e l yotcurrent c:meant
• • Cattle.
Shipping, per eavt 0 4,25 at 5.00 --
Butcher, choice, do , 4.00 . 4.30'
Butcher, mad, to good8,50 • 3.80„.
Butcher, inferior 3.00e 3.40
• • Sheep and Lambs.
Ewea,-per 13.50 4.00
Yearlings per owt • 5.00•5.40
Spring. lambe, each 2.00 • 5.00
13'• 717, pmerilkoewrst.eand • c:i.v75e0.• 3.12 1-2
CoWn, each' .4. 25,00 45.00 ,
Calves, each 2.00 . • 8.00
Hogs -
Choice hogs, per cwt.., 4.00 4.50
Light hogs, per owt 8.75 • 4.00 -
Heavy bogs, per tort"8.00 8.7
• • •MONTREAL.
Montreal; April 21. -There • were it is necessary t� the huntan imitate
"Probably no single drug
is employed in nervous dis.
eases with effects so mark.
•edly beneficial as those of
cod-liver oil."
These are the words of
an eminent medical teacher.
Another says; "The lay-,
pophosphites are generally.
acknowledged, as valuable
nerve tonics." 4;:h =
Both these remedies. are
combined in Scott's Emul-
sion. Therefore, take it
for nervousness,•neuralgia,
• sciatica, insomnia and brain
ei,llall6f10I1. •
see and ell druggists. .
SCOTT & SOWNE, Chola% "
TOPAZ,
Oats.- caish 280, May 27 1-213. Seed,
cash 08.42 bid, April 08,65 bid, Oen*
ber 04.85 bid.
Oswego. Aril 21„ 1 p.m. - Wheat
market, steady,;• No. 2 red, 04 to 84
1-2c; No. 1 northern. no; No. 1 bard*
89 1-2 to 90e. Corn steady; No. 2 yel-
low, 44o; No. 8 yellow, 41o; No. 2 mix.
'ad, '41 to 41 1-2e. Oats show More
strength; No. 2 white sold at 87 1-40;
NO. 3 othite, 36 8-4 to 870.• Barley mar-
ket shows. no change; Canada amain-
elly 88 to 88e; western ss to 600; an
entire absence of transactions; price*
therefore nominal. Rall freighte t�
New York -wheat, peas, rye, and bar-
ley, 10 1-2e per cwt.
USE .0P SALT.
arming Beige That the Illhaerell NAO.
• Very Wholesome.•
.
5• For -many centuries It has been t110
'• common belief th t alt d
about 325 head of butchers' • cattle, 500
'calves, 40 sheep, and 20 spring lambs Few people are aware that on anaver-
offered for sale at the east end abat- age the food we eat . contains suffi-
toir to -day. The butchers were pres- dent of the mineral, for all ordinary '
ent in large numbers, and trade was
fair itunohanged prices. Prime- purposes. Many Phygioians. on the
beeves sold at frorn 4 1-2e to a little .cOntrary, are now tending to the bee .
over 50 Per Ib; Pretty good ate* at lief that salt is moderately, if not
from 33-40 to nearly 4 1-2o; common highly, deleterious to the system.
'dry cows and milkmen's strippers, at is true that certain animale require'
• from 23-4 to 3 1-2cper lb. Bulls of it in, .large quantittee, but -;this does
varying degrees of texture soldat- not hold for the human race. Sailor",
from 3 to 4e per lb. Calvessold at who are confined alinost mit-rely to t
from 01 to 07 each.. Sheep, with thin use of salty food, suffer il s unapea
fleeces still on; sold tip to 40 per lb, able on long voyages. The use of salt
and yearlings up to near 6c do. Spring is purely a habit, and, although thee. •
Jambs sold at from 32.5010 05 eaoh; who have been addicted to the use of
Straight loth of kit hogs, just off the it for years would undoubtedly suffer
ears; sold at -about 41-20 per lb. ,• if they were to break off suddenly,
Toledo, 'April ------21..e-Close-Wheat eel flehrerare is no reaso why they cannot
gradually. Condiments in any -
.
tive; cash„ ;74 1e4c, May ea 844 July form are beginning to• be generally
74 7-8e, Corn,',eash 3643, May 85 1-4o. ,
decried by the hygienists. I
t
I' DEADLY CATARRH
hes fastened its relentless grip upon
some roember.of nearly every family
ie the land. Competent authorities
estimate that from eighty to ninety
per cent. of the entire population of
this continent suffer froin some form of
this repulsive and dangerous malady.,
If you orany of your family suffer
freiothmtheerfirngerinreeogns ,00dirs! wia4rrtsb mh ;trout
its early stages -don't tri • mial
It is the pranirsor of constespdoe
and death. .
Dr. A!new's Powth
Oatarrh
never fails. It is the remedy of ell
retnedies, endorsed by the most eX•
perienced and ethinent rapannaltbrolit
specialists of the day, to4 haviag a
record of a multitude o1-vaThcaI, 'per
gamete 'cures of chronhecases wlkh
culiadrelibeeenqktdieciarn theedhehair ielitnath:mae. epoyo
fever, loss of sive% deefirees., sore
' throin,seneffitis, asthma, and all dee-
tar diesuies. Itis deligkeful to we.
"r. I have bad chren10:14tetfls Peer
sine. llattnillr4„"413.tViit]...11 grd
despaired of ever being iedeo. • I used
three bottles of Dr, ilipitiV4 CatarrV
Powder and nty catarrh has entirety
Me." Rev, C. E. Whiteonibe, rancor .
Matthew's Episcopal Church, Hunt
Ont., was a great sufferer. lb used
Agnew's Catmint Powder, and now pro.
*bean a safe, simple and mons me%
The Lord Bishop of ?pronto. east, re.
oommeads the remedy Over his own
-signature. Sold by druggists.
De. Agnew% Cure for the Heart.
relieves heart 'disease in so minutes,
Dr. Agnew's Liver Pills-soc. for
'doses -are the best. Dr. AsneW'S
Ointment relieves in a day eczema,
tetter and all skin diseases. Cures
piles in 2 to 5 nights. 35e. 2
por sale by Watts & Co Clinton
Fir
ONE GIVES RELIEF.
on't Spend a Dollar
fOr
Medicine
• uhtil you ha.v:e tried
Q4.0
Off2490
•
• You can buy them in the paper 5 -cent cartons
Ten Tabules for Five ' Cents.
ipso dimply to avatar tbs uttered licenalfdisimii4' ter is kW Wier
if you don't find this sort of
Ripan$ Tabules.
• At the Druggist's
•time
Five VAN te Tent ROANS Cinneteet. Cettl'Alria Nalt, It.
ro St, OP Voile and they will ho oom to you by ISAU; or
wtd be roomed ler 41i owe. Tha ahottoos ate NAM
td Rierike Winks IWO the ray **mike you watt
•
ewe