HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News-Record, 1899-05-04, Page 8TIM CLINTON 1UWS41091tO
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• at the option of the proprietor.
W. j. MITCHELL.
. I Editor and Proprietor.
. THE MOLSON'S BANK
/Meer- .0ated by. a et„of Pa:lament UM_
CAPITAL , $9,000,009
REST - $4500,000
Head Office, - MONTREAL.
WM. MOLSON, MACPHERSON, President
• P. WO I.FERSTAN 110.viAS, Gen. Manager.
Notes discounted, ColleCtions made, Drafts
Issued, Sterling and American •Exchange
• bought and solcl. Interest allowed on Deposits
' 1
SAVINGS DANE.
Interest allowed on sums of Ill and tip.
•
FARMERS.
Money advanced to farmers on their own
;Wes with one or more endorsers. No mort-
• gage reqeired as security.
a.. 0. BREWER, • Manager, Clinton.
G. D MoTAGGART,
Banker,
'ALBERT STREET, - CLINTON
A General Banking Business Transacted:
Notes Discounted. Drafts Issued.
Interest Allowed on Deposits.
1.11".ALCIICAME
•CLINTON - ONT
" Fire, Accident and Life Insurance
Transaoted. Bowmen. 14 several of the besti
Companies and . any information relating to
infurance gladly given. General District
.Agent for the Confederation Life Insurance
Co. Money to Loan on Reasonable Rates
Office -Palace' black, Opposite Market.
• CONVEYANCING.
Join
Con4yancer, Cormnissioner, Etc.
L••••em
Fire Insurance. - • Real Estate,
, Money to Lend.
Office -HURON STREET, CLINTON
-
MEDICAL.
• Dr. W. Gunn,
R. C. P.. and L. R, C. S., Edinburgh.
Office -Ontario Street, Clinton. Night
calls at front door of residence on Ratten-
• bury Street, opp. Presbyterian Church. •
Dr Wm,. Graham '
(Successor to Dr. Turnbull.)
Licentiate of the Royal College of Physic-
• ians, London, Eng.
- Office and • Residence, Perrin"1 Block,
ately occupied by Dr. Turnbull.
Dr. Shaw,
Office -Ontario Street, opposite English
church,, formerly occupied by Dr. Apple-
ton.
DR. 'C. W. TH011113-6-0N-
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
• Office and Residence. next to Melson's
Bank, Rattenbury street, Clinton.
DENTISTRY.
Dr. BRUCE,
' Surgeon Dentist.
OFFICE -Over Taylor's Shoe Store,
Clinton, Ont. Special attention to p Fier-
vation of natural teeth.
N. B -Will visit Blyth every Monday nd
Bayfield every Thursday afternoon during
the summer.
• DR. AGNEW, .DENTIST.
Offite adjoining Poi:teed Photo Gallery -
Office Hours, • --. g to.
At Zurich •the second • Thursday of each
• month.
VETERINARY,
• • 131a,okall & Ball,
Vetetinary Surgeons. Go vernment Veter
inary Inspectors,
• Office* --Isaac StreetaClinton; Residence,
Albert Street,
LEGAL •
Scott & McKenzie,
BARRISTERS, SOLICITORS, ETC,
CLINTON AND BAYFIELD.,
Clinton Offieci-Elliott Block, Isaac at,
Bayfield Offite-Open every Thuraday
-Main atteet4 first door west of
Post °Moe, Money to loan.
Mimes Scott, E. H. McKenzie,
Campion,
'Barrister, - Solicitor, - Notary, &e,
GODERICH, ONT.
°Fetes -Over DAVIS* Dettia Store*
Money to Loan.
.
Johnston,
'Oar Solicitor, Commissioner, Etc
GODFRICH, cit41.
OsPICS-Gor. Hamilton and St. Andrew'*
Streets.
13rydone,
asiermter, Solicitor, Notary Public, See,
Oenet
iltAVER BLOCK,. • CLINTON
••. .
Tonight
If yentr liver to out of order, candor
Biliousoess, Sir* Headache, Heart-
burn, or Constipation, take a dose of
Hood's Pills
On retiring, and tomorrow your (1.1.,
• gestive organs will be regulated and
You will be bright, 'Active and ready
for any kind of work. This hao
been the experience of otherer it
will be yours. HOOD'S PILLS ars
oold by all medicine dealers. 20 ots.
Jonn mmer on
PR LEADING BARBER,
Siriab's block, opposite Post Office
ALSO .
kept for Standard lie Insurance Co
Bead Office for Canada, Montreal,
Insurance in force, - $116,00000
investm es ta in Canada • 10,500,000
Established 1825• The cld reliable and favorite
Tio—WHILL
Horseshoer and General Blaoksmith
Albert Street, North, Clinton.
—JOBBING' A SPECIALTY.
Woodwork ironed and flrat-olass material
and work guaranteed. Farm implements and
machines rebuilt and.repaireci.
The ilicKillop Mutual Fire
• Insurance Company.
Farm and -Isolated Town Property
Only Insured.
III! 1
OIFICERS
J. , B. McLean. PreeitIvnt, Kippen P. 0.;
Thomas Frazer, vice-president, Brucefleld P,O.
W. J, Shannon, aeciy-Troas,. Seaforth P.O.;
Thomas E. Hays, Inspector of Losses, Beeforth
P_0. . •
DIIIECTORS:
W. G. Eroadfoetrfleaforth•, John G. Grieve,
Winthrop ; George Dale, Seaforth; Thomas E.
Hays, Seater! h •, James Evans, Beechwood ;
John Watt, Harlock. Tliondau Frazer, Bruce -
field; John B. McLean, Eippen; James
Connelly. Clinton. •
AGENTS:
Robt. Smith, Harlock ; -Robert McMillan, Sea -
forth James Cumming°, Egmondvillo, J, W.
Yee; Holmeaville P, ; John Govenlook and
John C. Morrison, auditors.
• Parties desiroua to 'effect insurance or tran-
sact her business will be promptly attended
to on application to any of the above officers
addresSed to their respective post offices:
• Grand. Trunk Railway.
Trains arrive and leave Clinton Station as
follows:
Buffalo and Goderich District
Going West, Mixed I°. is a.m.
4‘ Express. • . •12-55 p.m.
• " Mixed •7.05 pap:
"• •" Express..... .. . 10.27 p.m.
Going East; Express • 7.40 a.ni
•di 44 44
•2.5S p. in.
" Mixed. 4.35 p.m.
London, Huron and Bruce :-
Going South, Express •7.47
‘t ti
Going North, •
44•111..2155 ap:mm:
44
6.55 p.m.
M. talcasoat • W. E. Davis,
DN. Pass. Agent, G. P . & T. A.,.
• • Toronto. Mbntreal.
A. 0. PATTIS011; G.T.R. Agent at Clinton.
.50 YEARS'
EXPERIENCE
TRADE MARKS
DESIGNS
COPYRIGHTS &O.
Anyone Bending a sketeb and description may
cptiotiy ascertain our opinion free -whether an
invention is probably patentable. Communica-
• tions strietir oordidential. Handbook on Patents
sent free, uniest agency for securing patents.
Patents taken through Munn & GO. receive
spectra notice, without charge, in the
• Sdentific American.
• A handsomely illuitrated weekly. kargest dr-
culation of any scientific journal. Terms. 98 a
mar: four menthe, ji. Sold byall newsdealers.
MUNN & Co 361BroadwY' New York
a
Branch Office. 6%5 F St., Washington. D. .
A PALACE OF GLASS,
,1•••.•••
A Sight That WIII Dazzle Eyes at the Paris
Exposition.
At the Paris Exposition there is to
be a beautiful "luminous palace" in
the middle of a- garden whose velvet -
greet' lawns will be shaded by tall for-
- est trees.
The chief facade will have the aspect
of an immense portico whose roofs, sur-
mounted by campaniles and wing-
ed statue of Light, will be sus used
by high colonnades. On the right d
left will be grottoes of shimmer
spun glass.
The walls and the cupola and even
the flying figure sermounting the
edifice are to beret moulded glass.
• The materials' are simply hollow
glass bricks moulded like bottles.
'These bricks are very light and are
held together by inviiiible threads of
cement. Fastened together in this
way glass bricke may be used for all
purposes of building, Walls and domes'
may be built act resistant aa those of
stone or brick. The color effeots are
prodiiced by putting two pieces of
glass together and soldering them One
against the other, The face is colored
separately and welded to the uncolored
glass.
Such glass bricks as the inventors of
the palace of light propose to use are
now an article of manufaeture. For
many years attempt were made to
produce glass strong enough for build-
ing purposee, and now a process of
annealing hits solved the problem.
If the ideas of the Freneh glass
makers are realized glass May become
a valuable material. A strong product
which lets in light while it shuts out
dampttese will be useful in working
out the problems of overcrowded cities.
The fire -proof qualities of glass would
make it invaluable for nee as. parti-
tlette inclosed in plaster,
We Want The Address
OF cvERv surrErteric
bead *palatial Or riliMIMI—or from toy
illettl* !aimed by or eon pleated With listimm
Met bt 'Welling, of
Wkith the oymptesns amy be dizziness, ett-
ettition, inanntination in brain, stomach, liter,
kidneys, feet Of other parts *Isere blood tar
cunitilitill in llagglsh Veins,
Seed kidttad axe Mainz ssd reeelee litera-
ture aapiainleg the modern rettedy Which Is
for the JIM time offered fettle public Outside
Of the great hospltale.
Illtiord'is Hort RAO always waves.
May be bad at drag Mores or by mail at sec.
per boat, s boxed for az,
S. W. NOVIMMS. ?I Vetere at, forotio, Oat
`NIMMMilf#M1WiThWe's'i
16WkaWINWW*W6f tinieS. Mixed in with the manure
1,11043 la of value txu tbe' xuanure MARKETa OF .THE WORLD, Potatoes -Are eteady. Cara op the
ket le steady at 11c to 11 1-2o,
Agricultural will tend to sweeten it, and it will
wentwmARA
THE PALATIA.1/ FARM RESIDBNCB.
It is a, ruling ambition with some ,
farmers, who have eommenced in a
Breen way, to live to enjoy the cora-
forts of a fine house, writes Mr. John
DS, jamison. Their efforts for years
are in that direction. They • often
grow prematurely old in the struggle
for the coMpetence they think neoes-
sary to enable them to put on their
selected spot the building that they ,
think will add to the comforts of their '
large family, and make their declining
years peaceful and happy. When they,
reach the desired end, the results too
ofteu show that while they are mas-
ter bands at accumulating, they are
failures, as builders, to secure conveni-
ence and comfort* and instead of
comfort and happiness as a. result, they
have added, care and burden.
In one instance, a farmer, during
years of accumulating presperity, with
a large family, growiag up about him,
came to the conclusion that he' inust
have a large, fine house to aceommodate
his family and proolaira to the eom-
munity his prosPerity. The house was
:not finishddThefOie-the kard-working
and faithful mother passed to the
silent beyand. Then followed other
•rapid changes in the family, that in a
few years exiled the father from his
home. As a result, the home and farm
passed into the hands of strangers at
not more than the cost of the house.
Now they say of the farmer that he
built the costly residence to outshine
his neighbors. To this day the house
,has • neverhad a finished appear-
ance. •
On this farm, the other buildings,
• barns and stock Sheds •cost probably
three-fourths of a hundred dollars for
each thousand put in the •residence,
and were, of course, entirely out of
keeping with it. • The comparison that
the observer must 'make was against
the business, capacity and good sense
of the fanner;
Another instance is tbat of a far-
mer that gradually gathered about
hisn a fine landed estate, as well as
much personal property. Growing up
about him while • accumulating this
fine property, was a large family Of
healthy, strong children . -7' His resi-
dence was -as large as the size, of his
family 'required and e.eoh as the ,farm
would ;sustain. The barn, while a
sma.11 affair, was a good one, and kept
in good repair. • The farmer and Ins
wife lived to a good old age, and
doubtless had much •carnfoft in' what
they had gathered around them. While
the estate was kept together, all had it
healthy, thrifty appearance. 'But when
it Came to a division among the heirs,
the land thatwent to the nine heirs
that got the homestead was not suffi-
cient to sustain the buildings, and, as
a result, now they are fast assuming
the appearance of neglect. The roof
of the barn is moes-grown and decayed,
and a general tumble-down appearance
marks the onee well -kept • buildings
and surroundings.
• • When the parents have accumulated
large, landed estates and pet on them
such buildings as appear to them to
be in keeping with their wealth, their
children live •mostlyan the atmosphere
that surrounds their parents When the
days of struggle and close economy are
past. Consequently when the parents
are gone, the children try to begin to
live where their parents left off; but
the shares that fall to them are not
sufficient to sustain themon'this basis.
Consequently what the • parents have
left in •a Short time begins to scat-
ter.
I believe it is a mistake for a farmer
s farm equal
one-half that
to pul a residence on hi
in value to one-third' or
of the land. If he leaves his property
to his wife and family, by his death
the law, While seemingly* just, Cannot
share; if she
give the widow a fair
elects to keep the residence as her
homestead, the land that she will be
will often-.
entitled to as her dower
times hardly keep the buildings in re-
pair, let alone giving to her the com-
fortable living to which she is entitled.
children feel
t would have
And more than this, the
that they do not get whan
been theirs had less beeexpended on
the residence.
Too often we find farmers who over-
react themselves in blinding their
• homes, and instead of comfort, have a
debt hanging over them,the interest
on which absorbs all their income be-
yond bare living expenses. It has al-
ways appeared to me that the farmer
„ who puts all his accumulations of per-
eotal property, and often more, in a
fine residence, and builds no barns, has
started the first wedge .tti open the
way to tnisfortune. Tbe construction
of good barns usually points to suc-
cess, while the building of fine resi.
dences on the farm too often points to-
ward ruin
PURIFYING SOUR SOILS,
The value of lime in purifying pour
soils is such ea to make its general use
very necessary. Lime is not a fertiliz-
er in the strict aims° of the word, but
in connection with Manure it Is often
abeolutely essential to the fertilizing
of the soil. Land gets sour from one
cause and another, and some soils ac-
tually get "manure sick." It Is pos-
sible to so feed the soil that it gets
Indigestion, and the more that is piled
on it the less it seems to produce.
We have seen soils eo rich that they
would not product more than very
small crops. They were manure sick
and sour.
It is at this stage that lime comes
to correct matters. A, top dressing ot
limo on such a soil will do More good
than a thousand dollars' worth"of .com-
menial fertilizers. It is possible to
raise abundant crops for several years
In auctession on such sone by simply
giving them a top dressing ,of lime
every' year. It is owing to thit3 that
some farmers have gathered the im-
pression that lime is a good fertilizer.
The action of the hale was not to fur-
nish any plant food, but simply to dor
-
riot the acidity of the soil, so that the
abutulanee of fertility tould be taken
up by the crepe.
Lime is good Sometimes to kill ter.
toxin germs whit% multiply in the molt
Thus, the bacteria whieb cansee club -
Wig in route will be killed if the land
10 dreseed in the spring with lime. It
bas benefielal .effecte in other ways,
too, It Wide to loosen and ditiinteg-
rate the texture, of the soil, so that
the drainage le batter and tho mechan-
ical condition of the /Oil IS improved
iso that the roots of the plants can ex-
tend downward or water and food,
enter tbe will in conjunction with th
fertilizer to perforna its work ther:..-
Where heavy dressing of manure has
mused the potato scab in these tubers
it is wisp either to dress the land with
it:Lenitoei
e;r
oat)i'ly
lrttcmix with Mataure just
HORSES' SHOULDERS WEBB CARE,
AS !spring work begins there is great
danger of bruising the shoulders of
bores which have not worked during
the winter, or young animals worked
for the first time, Begin gradually
and do not put them at woria waere
there is jerking on the tugs, as in
breaking (stalks. KeeP _the collars
glean and soft. Wash the shoulders
with cold water at noon and night. •
THE EVOLUTION OF THE FISHHOOK
Its Ilistory Something of an Index of the
Progress of oivinzation.
• Men have doubtless been fishers from
very remote times; hunger would teach
them to catch fish as well as to hunt
mammals, bat while the evidence of
the- latter are 00 abundant in the
shape of stone weapons, the weapons
or implements meth for catching fish,
being naade of less durable, material
haveadisappeareda----The•-•exceptions to
this general* (statement are , the few
instancewhere fish hooks mode en-
tirely of stone, or of a combination of
stone and wood, or bone, have been
opreserved r maira,toa
ithette other implements
Fish hooks of*silicious material have
not been found in America, but hooks
composed of • flint or chalcedony and
bone have been found in Greenland.
• The invention of tvde implements to
acihtate the 'catching of fish would
not require the exereise of any great
ingenuity oe,„mcchanical skill. From
watching theo'fish snap at •or awal-
iow objects thrown in the water, the
idea of tying some tempting bait on
the end of a string and:, threwing it
into the water to be seized and swal-
lciwed by the fish, which couli then be
pulled out by means of the string,
•.'nuld be very simple and from this to
the earliest known attachment for
making the capture of the fish more
certain, that of attaching a sliver of
wood to • the end of the string or line
In sucb a way that any attempt at-es-
oa:cry easy
011 the part of the fish would
make its capture more certain, was
Very
Afterward pieces of bone or wood,
sharpened at each end, and sometunes
grooved in the middle to keep the
string frorn.slipping, were evolved.
• Implements of • this character are
still used by the Eskimos for catching
sea gulls and ether water fowl. A
cord made of braided grass, fifteen or
eighteen inches loag, is looped around
the groove in the bone, and fastened
to a trawl. nee, *apt extended by an-
chored buoys. • The bone. being baitea
with small fish, into wilich -1-he imple-
ment is inserted lengthwise, the trawl
lines are plaaid-near the breeding
places or the birds, and would be eaaily
efifnedeetievfefiineh. the capture of • certain
k
As man gained experience dad ad-
vanced in knowledge other forms of
implements would be evolved better
suited for the purpose, but, with the
exception of better material being
used in the manufacture, the • fish
hooks of the civiiized nations of to -day
are but little in advance of those Used
by savage •races and prehistoric peo-
ple. •,
Prehistoric fish hooks of bronze and
others mede from the • tusks of the
wild boarnre found in the Swiss lakes.
Another form of bronze fish book,
found in the Lake of adorat, is almost
identical in form with those used to-
day. • Clipped flint • fishhooks are
found in Sweden. • Among the aborig-
ines of Wisconsin native, copper was
used in the manufacture of various
weapons and implements, and • fish
hooks of beaten copper have been found
in some on the mounds in that regio
• CHINESE WOMEN'S FEET.
There is one deformity which; regard-
ed as a fashion, must have attained a
most 'respectable age, and whose *origin
is lost in the mists that enshroud .the
ancient civilization which gave it
birth, writeS,Dr, Andrew Wilson in the
Illustrated London News, in an article
on "Fashions in Dress and Personal De-
formity," I allude to • the deformed
feet of the Chinese women, known I
believe, technically in the Celestial
Empire as "the Golden Ltly" fashion.
What happens here is the bending of
the infant's tots downward, so that
they become.flexed on the sole, (musing
the future Chinese lady to walk tin the
knuckled joints of the toes. Viewed
from the sole, the heel ie shape!' some-
what like a horse-ehoet,while in front
is a triangular surface,that of the
down bent toes, a deep ridge separat-
ing'toes and heel.
The amount of distortion which is
brought about by this extraordinary
fashion ia, of course, extreme. The
higher the ocIai ratik in China the
smaller are the deformed feet, the
practice thus exhibiting grades and de, -
greets' in the amoung of distortion
which is produced. The toes, as de-
scribed by an expert who bat studied
this malformatitni, are reanY twisted
round the instep bone ,of the great
toe, and the body's weight presses on
the only adequate support which is
left, namely, the heel.
The attitude of the Chinese woman
in walking is therefore. explained by
the difficulty with which she main-
tains her equilibrium. The arms are
thrown forward so as to form Itart of
the &Aim' that finds its expression
to -day hi the care with which the de-
formed member is veiled from the or-
dinary eyes.
MOVING A. CITY.
The Japanese officials In Formosa re-
cently Showed rare executive capacity.
The city of Jeukelian was in an unsan-
itary condition. virulent epidemics fre-
quently appeared. The situation pre-
vented a good sewerage system. The
.Tapeneee officials seleeted a spot in the
neighborhood that could be well drain-
ed. Streets and ptiblio placea
laid out upon it. Buildings were
erected, and the entire' inhabitants of
the city of jeukahan, numbering 40,000,
were removed to the new site. As
the buildings were slight wooden ante -
tures, the acheine WM practicable. The
facility with whieh the moven:tent Was
Made is moist oreditable tO the Japan -
('.80 engineers,
ANOTHER. VIEW OP /T.
Ilia knew what they alwaysl say, do
bethought he would foreetall her.
suppoee you've never been kiesed
by a man beforet he Raid,
Do I look as homely as all thatl she
demanded, haaglitily.
Prices of Grain, Cattle, Cheese, 84o.
in the Leading Marts.
• LIVE STOOK MARKET.
Toronto, April 28.--3utolters' cattle
were in small supply, but the demand
was very slow and pricea remained
steady, choice being quoted at 04 to
St(4 40 per cwt. One bunch of chigoe
heavy exporters fetched 404 50 to ,404 75
per mt. The small supply of Can-
adian stockers for Buffalo raet with a
lairlY Boyd demand at firm Prices. nr
350 to 404 per cwt. Almost every-
thing in the butcher line was left over
in the pe,no at the close for to -morrow's
market. Good mulch cows fetehed 035
to a45 each, and a few choice veal
calves were steady at ea to 417 per
bead.
Sheep and. Lambs-Tbere were no
eheep on the market for sale and quo-
tations are unchanged.
Hogs -Trade la the annex was very
quiet and the 'offerings were lighter
than expected. Prices remained firm.
Choice were quoted at 1114 50 per owt.
We quote; -
Mitch cows, each 4 . .8500 to 450O0
gxport cattle, heavy, per• '
Export 'cattle, light, per
cwt. * . . . 4 50•
to 475
400 to 450
Butchers' choice cattle,
per cwt. . . . 400 to 440
Butchers' med, cattle per
Butchers* cam. cattle
. . . . 70 to 90
owt.
per ovvt.----3• 25 to . 375
Butcasers',anf. cattle per • ,
Bull:1st; heavy, Per. : 3 30059 ttoo 04 0000
Bulls, light, per cwt. • .. 325 to $ 50
Stockers, per cwt. •. 350 to 400
Feeders, per cwt. . . 400 to 440
Yearlings, per cwt, • . . 500 to 550
Spring lambs, each a. : goo to 500
Sheep, per cwt. . . . 350 to 000
Lambs, per cwt. • . . 400 to 45Q
Bucks, per cwt. . . . 800 -to 325
Calves, per head . . 200 to 700
Choice bacon hogs, per , • •
cwt
Light bachogs, . .on hoi. p. per
.
.. 450 to 000
Li
• cwt. . . • • ' • . 400 to 000
Thick fat hogs, per cwt. . 315 to 000
Sows, per cwt.,. . . 300 to ' •Q 00
Stags, per cwt. . . 200 to 000
BREADSTUFFS. •
(Wheat -The market is easier and red
wheat was offered west to -day at 68e,
and 67o, was bid. White was quoted at
69o, west. Goose wheat is steady at 66e,
west, and springon the Midland is
quoted by • buyers at 68c, Manitoba
wheat is steady at taao, to 82 1-2e; for
No. 1 hard North• Bay, and 84o, to 84
1-2e; grinding in transit. •
Flour -Is quiet; cars of straight roll-
er in barrels are quoted at g8.15 • to
03.20, Toronto freights. ' •
Millfeed-There is not much offering
and the market is firm at $14.to $16
for shorts and -012 to 012.50 for bran
west. •••
Barley -Is -dull and nominal at 410,
for No. wes
•Buckwheat -Is nominal at 48o, west.
alye--Is firm at 530, west.
Corn -The market ia steady at 30o,
for Canada yellow west, 440, for old
American east and 43e, west, and 43c,
for new east and 42o, west. °
Oats. --Are firm at 82 1..2e, to 38c, for
white west.
Catmeal-Is.steady at 88.80 for oars
of bags and 33.90 for barrelsbere.
Peas -Are in demand for export and
the market is a oent hig•her at 64e, to
t.
650.-wes
• PROVISIONS.
The demand for hog products is fair-
ly active and prices are firm. The of-
ferings of dressed hogs are very small.
Cars of western • mixed lots on the
track here are quoted at 05.
Pork --Canada mess, 014; abort cut,
015; clear 'shoulder mess, 012.50..
Dry Salted Meats -Long clear bacon,
oar lots, 6 3-4e; ton and case lots, 7c;
breakfast bacon, 10 1-2e to llo ; hams,
large, 9 1-2c; medium, 100; rolls, 8e;
green meats out of pickle are quoteca
at le less than smoked.
Lard -Tubs, '6 1-2o to 6 3-4o.
COUNTRY PRODUCE.
Butter -The offerings of large rolls
are liberal, there is more than enough
here to meet the demand, both locally
and from the outside niarkets," • and
sales are slow. (Phe market is weak
for large rolls, but good straigbt yel-
low dairy tub is wanted. Large rolls
ar'a quoted at lle to 11 1-2e. „There are
no fresh -made dairy tubs coming for-
ward yet. • Off grades are quoted at
9e to No. Creamery is steady at 18o
to 18 1 -2o -for prints and 171-2e to 18e
for packed.
Eggs -The receipts aro stifficient,
there is a• good demand and the max' -
In PO?
In the Beek?
Then probably the kidneys.
I e the Ohowt?
Then probably the lunge-
In,the Jelete?
Then probably rheurnatism.
No -matter where it is, nor what
kind; yon need have it no longer.
It may be au hour, a -day, or a
year old ; it must yield to
r. Ayers
. Cherry
. milord!
lager
• ,Inunedietely afterapplying it you
feel its soothing, Worming, strength-
enlag power.
It quiets eongestion; draws out
Inflammation.
It Is a new plaster.
treat here are quoted at itio to 80o.
Potatoes out of store sell at 850 to We.
Poultry: -The receipts are small, tbe
demand is slow and the market as
steady at llo to lao for turkeys and
40c to 750 for ciTickene.
Baled Hay -There is a good demand
for hay, the offerings are small and
the market is Avner. Cars on the
track here ate quoted at 87.50 to 88.50,
Baled Straw -The demand is slow and
prices are oorainally unchanged. Cars
on the track here are quoted at 04.50
to 05. , •
POW°, April 28, --Spring wheat lim-
it eornewbat stronger, inquiry fairly
active; No. 1 northern, 810; NO. 2
northern, 71 1-2o. Winter wheat noth-
ing doing; 78 1-2o asked for No, 2 red
and 78e, for No, 1. Corn, fairly good de-
mand; steady, No. 2 yellow, 41 1-4o;
NO. 3, yellow, 41; No. 4 yellow, 89 8-4e;
No. 2 corn, 40 1-20; No. 3 corn, 39 13-4e
to 400. Oats stronger; No. 2 white, 33
1-2 to 33 3-4o; No. 8 white, 88e; No. 3
mixed, 80e. Barley nothing doing. itye,
No. 2 on track, ()5e to 66o. Flour quiet
and steady.
Toledo, April 28. -Close -Wheat aca
tive ; cash 74 1-4c bid, May 74 5-80,
July, 74 7-8o; No. 3 aoft, 72 1-4e. Corn,
cash and May 34 80. Oats, cash 28o,
May 27 1-2e. Seed, cash, 13.57 bid. April
03.75. October $4.60.
Oswego. April 28. 1 p.m. -Wheat mar-
ket lower; No. 1 hard 88 1-20; No. 1
northern, 86 1-2o; No.2 red, 63o. Corn
steady; No. 8 yellow, 43o; No. 3 -high
mixed, 42o; No. 3 mixed,-411::-Oatsalote--
er , • No. 2, 35 1-2 to 96o. Barley mar-
ket shows a little less strong feeling;
Canada quoted nominally at 83e. to 88ea
western. 53o to 604. Canal opens May
20th. Prospeotive freights to New York
-Wheat, peas and rye 3, barley 2 1-2o
per bush,
DEATH THAT NEED NOT Ocala.
1=NIGIMIM,
one-quarter or all lare-Destroylng DIseas
• IS AbS0111t0IY Preventable.
• conneotion with the Sanitary ,In-
stitute a popular lecture was deliver-
ed by Dr. Alexander Hill, Master of
Downing College and vioe chancellor
of Cambridge University, on "Unna-
tural Death," says the London Times,.
He remarked that it was not the dan-
gers of railway traveling, nor the few
murders that occurred, which brought
down the aaerage longevity of human
life from 100 years to fifty years. They
must seek for more subtle murderers
than that. Every year 900,000 babies
were born in England and Wales. If
they took 1,000,000 children and saw
. what was likely to be the end of them,
they would find that 30,000 died a vio-
lent death by accident, about the same
number would succumb to the myster-
ious disease winch they knew nowto
bs absolutely preventable, beca.use due
to germs, tuberculosis 'in its • many
forms; about 120,000 would die from ab-
aolutely preventable causes such as
smallpox, measlesaaand scarlet fever,
only 45,000 would be allowed to live out
Lbeir natural lives, and nearly one in
neir combination of new
remedies, Made after now
methods. Blakely unlike any .
other plaeter.
The Triumph of Modern Medical
Wolof.
Tho Porfootid Product of pars oi
poPatiteortrituTionl.
aid
,to 4,40.0 awry rec.
Mood. over the pirest le_
Ural in the Vestment of 5fl throat
"Phtltg Ifferer""e‘the demob,
' it
esti roraltiag; over
enutrola crafty* sed
Plated over thoiankill of the b00%
it removes all beatetatiot *on the
kidneys mai grattly atraugthosa
weakness.
For Mae by ell Druggist&
I'M Art Om., LowsTI,34
There are three conditions:
When the blood is poor;
When more flesh is needed;
When there is weakness
of the throat or lungs.
There is one cure; that is.
Scott's Emulsion.
It contains the best cod.
liver oil emulsified, or di-
gested, and combined with
the hypophosphites and
glycerine. It promises more
prompt relief and more last-
ing benefit in these cases than
can be obtained from the
use of any other remedy.
soc. and itme, all druggists.
finoTT & BOWNE, Chemists, Terontfa
twenty might expect to die because the
machine was worn out. ,
One-quarter of all the diseases wbioi
destroyed life were absolutely pre-
ventable, If the practice of hygiene
were only on a level with. its theory
the average longevity would be rais-•
...e5.1.0...once.from fifty to sixty-five. The
greater number of diseases over which
the individual had control were due to
mistakes in eating and drinking. He
divided diseases into three classes, and
said they would never succeed in pre-
venting them until they had the co-
operation of the public. Every citizen
should have the scone exact knowledge
of the causes and properties of pre-
ventable diseases that the medisal of-
ficer himself had. The infections na-
ture of oonsumption was hardly rea-
lized twenty years ago. About one
third of the cowe in the country were
tuberculous, and half the milk distrib-
uted the bacillus of tuberculosis. They
could boil the millet, and he was no
more afraid of boiled bacillus than he
was of a well -cooked loin. The only 'mt.
tural forra of death' was the gentle
falling asleep when the body was tired.
A KING'S- CHARITY.
• Any poor child who likes to present
himself or herself at the. gate .of the
Royal Palatal at Madrid at 6 o'clock
in •the evening can have a bowl *of
porridge. •This custom originated,
through the young King having been
detained in a remote district, owing
to, a breakdown of the engine. He be-
came hungry, but no food was obtain-
• 01%; hie mother improved the occasion
by telling him that many a poor child
had to go to bed hungry, whielf so Imo
pressed the youngster that ,he urged
his mother to institute this. charity:.
,NO DIFFERENCE.
These eggs are 'lot sti goodas the
ones you sent last week. •
• They ought to be, mum. They'll,
out of the same crate.•
•
•
• •
• •
Carries, :fler....licaet
on Her Sleeve".
What a boost() many a man or woman MMa were literally so -How nianyspirits are broken
because thli 'particular organ is shackled by diesue-end yet how 'many times has D.
Apnew's Cure for the Heart bruited evilest the grim reaper and roliberhltwei
Diseases' of the heart are bffar the moat treacherots of ailments which affliat humanity-fathless
to Old and young alikenot insidious bat violent, for when the heart fails .the whole 'Rote=
'suffers violent*. 'Discussing causes here will not
canoe& the Mitering one. The one great yearn of
the 'heart -sickened patient is how to get relief and se,
cure. Dr. Agnew's Gum ler the /Heart stands pre-
• eminently to-dayas the star of hope to sufferers front '
• heart trouble, and so fir Past the experimental period • •
• that thousands to -day proclaim, inno uncertain round,
the belief that were it not for this great remedy they
. .
• r" ...vorld have long ago passed into the great beyond.. .
' Most eininent doctors, whom heart cases have. baftled, have
.---
tested Dr.' AgneYas claims, and to -day they prescribe It *
or' ;
their practice as the qukkestand safest heart remedy known ••
• to median edema% What arc the isimptoms ? Palpitation, dun
tering, shortness of breath, week &int irregular pulse, swelling of
feet and ankles, pain in the kft side, chilly sensations, fainting
spells, uneasiness la sleeping, dropsical tendency and as many.
:nom* indications • that the beast is deranged Dr. Agnew's
Curifor the Heart iai heart specific; and no case too acute
to find relief from it inside of thirty mineke-e. pewerfift cure.
lemswirarcs, oEtnanogne, Ont., after having been wasted
• • %reed from ihe being:al ass hopeless incurable. She euff,ered from
physioloss for disease of live years' etauclIng, was dis-
sents pain and palpitation, Me fret and &Aloe swollen, rad there wee •
every tendon,* to the droseieel for. oflaeort disease, bin the lady pro.. ,
owed Dr. Atones Came tor tba NEMO pa she declared, as a last bop...
• Coe dose relieved her of a very scuba spawn in less than thirty minutes,
and thmehottlea eased bee -not a symptom dike trouble remaining
Connacros'Wnsamt G. LUCAS of the N. & and living at
• Hageretowia,Md., suffered for yesixe with acute valvular farm of heart
disease—cost biro song a 'ley off" hoot IOS daily duties on the restd,• ,,
and ba west a ma fortune in remedies and treating with heart
ormsaltar ha promisee el a eve*, Loa a1 smiled to diseppointreent..nntil a good friend, who had been
,.enehted. mommended Dr. A.14111's Cuiefor the Heartlie tried 80, Aid 16,14 it itaTe ktila.pillef Alla
-omfort alone* immediately. No continued its use mid *few bottles Were taken, and fe-cl:ty he a will and •
Wong, mislays, "Tel all heart indents that Ice. highly recommend this great remedy.'
DR. AGNRW'S OINTMENT sures isesesnaLealtsibeera, tatter, mild head and all itching skit; dismiss;
wares pike la Agee to eve nig*, ss cents. '
DR. AGNEW'S CATAIRRNAL POWDER talkies cold Inaba head or hay fever In tea minutes -will
sure meet Mubboni ead long ateading catarrh Cases quickly and permanently.
DR. aomew.s LIVER PILLS oure mnstipattea, biliousness, sick headache, torpid liver -akar the
lkia. 40drams. *scents.
• For sale by Watts & Co Clinton
ONE GIVES RELIEF.
1,
• Don't Spend a Dollar
for
Medicine
.until, you have tried
•tou can buy them in the paper 5 -cent cartons
Ten Tabules for 'rive Cents.
•itirs Met kr 1.61 Otesloti gratiO!ths riatrairad Imam* ritesmit,tor a few gitst,
If you, don't find this sort of
-Ripansjatottlies:
.At ..tho. Druggists-.
Send Noe Coats to TEX /WAN Citeititan COWAN%
*wee fh., New York, and they *ill be sent to rot by
to totem 441 be mailed for 46 tents. The ellandee tter
Mei SSA Ripittit TAWS* are the *try iliteditino you Mei.