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The Huron News-Record, 1894-04-25, Page 3ABOVE: ALL OTHERS, Dr. rierf,'q!s Oelden Medical 'lAeovery, in eves' disedse caused by torpid liver air i;n- ppuaa bleat, !or Dyspepsia, ,I,ia er and Bowel deeangeMentat ttna kindred ailr►le lie, noths alae appro4Glies it as a remedy. Mrs. AunuLre VAN - MLR, of .rlanifiton, Ind., writes: My friends said I would never bo any better, for I bad ulceration of the bow- els. By the time I had taken a bottle and a half of Dodter Plerco'e Golden Medical Discov- ery, the bleeding had almost stopped. My ap- petite was y'ood, noth- Y5- ing seemed to hurt me that I ate. My Improve- AtrnaLu Vexzu.tt. Improve- ment was wonderful. Set' 1111 1, ears have passed and my cure le permanent." rhe Huron News -Record 81.60 a Year—$1.25 in Advance WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25th, 1804. Outside Spring Grafting. The real value obtained through grafting is very great in any orchard of fruit trees, shrubs and vines. The process is really a simple one, and there is no reason why old varieties of fruits should not he greatly unproved by. the grafting of new and better - varieties on the old stocks. There is an increasing tendency to propagate fruit trees and plants in this way, al- though years ago there was a strong prejudice againgst it by those who con- sidered the work hard and dangerous to accomplish. Grafting can be accom- plished out of doors in the spring of the year very easily, and there is scarcely a year but some of the trees could be improved in this way. The work gives the best results in the spring just as the sap is starting up into the trees. There is less damage caused by excess- ive bleeding then, and if there is a natural relation between the stock and the scion the new growth will readily start into life and become firmly attach- ed to the tree. When the sap is active the union between scion and stock is only a matter of a short time. Many good stocks are found in orchards, but whose branCies are pour, and of little value. It pay to graft such trees a little each spring so that in the course of a few seasons a com- plete change will he made in the old tree. Sometimes the best varieties of fruits do not produce a large, healthy teunk. It pays occassionally to plant a very poor variety of apple, pear, quince or peach in order to get a good stock. When the trunk has attained a fair size then begin the work of grafting improved varieties on it, cutting off all the limbs of the first variety in order to make room for better fruits. In this way we get the foundation of a good tree, and also the finest fruits in the market. Varieties of apples, pears and peach- es are changing every few seasons, and When some strictly good kinds have been introduced they should be grafted upon the old stocks. In this way the character of the orchard is constantly keeping abreast of the times. When a certain variety takes well and sells well it can be propagated rapidly over a great number of trees. Grafting and budding are really the easiest and quickest ways of growing new varieties of fruits, and the surest way of turning our old, unprofitable fruit trees into good, valuable producers of salable fruit. To make grafting a success there must be a natural relation between stock and scion. From a profitable point of view pear should be grafted on pear, apple on apple and quince on quince, although prom, peach, cherry and apple all belong to the same older and can be made to grove oar the same stock. It is not advisable, however, to resort to this 'nixed met hod of graft- ing, except for show and ornament. The, stock must be in active growth, and the scion dormant to make graft- ing successful. The graft should be cut off before the sap has started it into spring growth. Keep it in a dry, cool cellar until ready for use. Make the scion if possible of the same size as the limb to which it is grafted. The bark will then join on eac h. 1 t1�t' For Over Fifty Years. Mai. Wisetow's SOOTHING Smut' has been used by millions of mothers for their children while tee thing 11 disturbed at night and broken of ) our rest by y nick child suffering. and crying with pain of Cutting Teeth send at once and get a bottle of "Mrs. Win- elow's Soothing Syrup" for Children Teethiing. f will relieve the poor little sufferer immedately. Depend upon it, mothers, there is no mistake about It. It cures Dlarrhaoa, regulates the Stomach and Bowels, cures Wind C,,llc, softens the Gums and re• duces Inflammation, and gicea tone an I energy to the whole system. "Mrso Window's Soothing Syrup" for children teething le pleasant to the taste and fa the prescription of one of the oldest end best irmale physicians and nurses in the United States. ,Price twonty.ave cents a bottle. Sold by all drug gists throughout the world. Be surd and ask to Mns.WINstow's So va aso SYRUP." Robert Fin dirty, husband of Myrtle Findlay, deceased, and adin inistrator of her estate, has begun an action against the Chicago & Grand Ti unk Railroad for $10,000 damages. Mrs. Findlay was killed in the Battle Creek catastrophe on October 20th last. Mr. Findlay says that his wife's son, Frede- rick Ii,angdon, was deprived of his means of dn e support and p cation. He t also declares that his wife's s )ewcls and other property, valued at $500, were destroyed in the accident. NORWAY PINE SYRUP eurea coughs, colds, asth ma, bronchitis, hoarseness, Z, sore throat and diseases of the throat and lungs. Price 25 and 50c. The story of a horrible assault conies from the Brantford Indian Reserve. It is stated that Mrs. Williams, to - Iether with her husband and two other ndians, were walking near Caledonia one day last week, when they were assailed by a party of six whites. The latter, it ie claimed, drove the husband and his companions away, and then took the woman into the bush and repeatedly assaulted her. CONSUMPTION IS CONTAGIOUS. new the Tubercle peonies is Photons' oat ed J.rrom. One to Another, Let us now glance at the germ called Idle tubercle baoillus, the genii ahtatt causes and which mope can cause tuber. mitosis. It does not exist in the Ludy of man or animals in health. Without the entrance of this particular germ ;1)10 the hinnan body from without, tuberculosis cannot develop in it. Without the transmission Of this germ in surae %ray or other in a living condition front the sick to the well, tuberculosis Canilnt spread, In the life story of this tiny germ lie both the potency for mischief which we deplore and the secret of our release from its bandage. The tuberole baoillus is a little color- less rodlike plant, so small that even many thousands of them piled together would make a heap still far too small to be visible to the naked eye. It cannot move about, nor can it grow without Moisture, nor at a temperature much above or tnuoh below that of the human body. The material on which it feeds must be very nicely adapted to its re- quirements, and it has no lurking or growing places in nature outside of the bodies of mien and a few warm-blooded animals. It can be cultivated artificial- ly in the laboratory, and we know mora about its life and peculiarities than auouc almost any other germ. While it can remain alive in a dried state for many weeks, it is readily killed by heat, by sunlight, and by many of those chemical substances which we call disiuftcent ts. It does not flourish equally well iu the bodies of all human beings. When pace it gains lodgment in a body suited to its growth it multiplies slowly, each germ dividing and sub- dividing, taking from the tissues mate- rial for its growth, and returning to theta certain subtle poisons which it sets free. The action of the tubercle bacillus is peculiar in that it stimulates the cells of the body, wherever it may lodge and grow, to the formation of little masses of new tissue, which we call tubercles. These tubercles are as a rule short•lived, and if the disease progresses, tund to disintegrated and broken-down Material, often containing myriads of the living germs, may be cast off from the body. Iu tuberculosis of the lungs, or consump- tion, this waste material is thrown off with the sputum. While almost any part of the body may be affected, tuber- culosis of the lungs is t¢y far the Most common form of tile disease. It is the sputum after its discharge from the body ou which our attention must be fixed. While the sputum is moist it can, as a rule, do no harm, un- less it should be directly transmitted to those who are well by violent coughing, by the use of uncleansed cooking or eat- ing utensils, by soiled hands, or by such intimate personal contact as kissing or fondllug. But if in any way the ems tum becomes dried, on floors or walls or bedding, ou handkerchiefs or towels, or on the person of the patient, it may soon become disseminated in the air as dust, and cau thou be breathed into the lungs of exposed persons, This germ -laden material fleeting in the air may be swal- lowed, and thus enter the recesses of the body through other' portals than the lungs, but these are the most vulnerable and accessible organs. The wide distribution of tubercle bacilli in the air of living rooms, and in other dusty places where people go, is due partly to the frequency of the dis- ease and the large numbers of living bacilli which are cast off in the sputum (sometimes millions in a day), and partly to the fact that many of the victims of consumption go about among their fel- lows for purposes of business or plea- ure for months or years. So each con- sumptive, if not intelligently careful, may year after year be to his fellow., men a sonrco of active and serious and continual infection. -Froin "Tubercu- losis and Ito Preventiou," by T. Mitchell Prudden, D'I,D., in Harper's Magaziue for March. "Half a span of angry steel" will pro- duce no more fatal results than a ne- glected cold or cough. For all throat and lung diseases, Ayer's Cherry Pectoral Is the best remedy. It is in- valuable in cases of croup, whooping cough, bronchitis, and la grippe. T -E--r' W MIDY- ••••.••••••••••••....*•••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Magazine Expansion. The marvelous expansion of the world of lotto's shown in another way -in the multiplication of magazines. We hoar of popular magazines circulating,uot by thousands, but by hundreds of thou- sands. How is this success achieved? By pandering to the gross appetites of a brutal mob ? Not at all; by giving, not to a brutal mob, but to an intelligent people, which wants to read, and knows what kind of reading it wants, exactly what sults them -tales which are inter- esting, real and strong; essays which have a real message to deliver; histories and adventures which carry the reader along; articles which instruct on those points which the people desire to learn. It is very easy to pick out things that have appeared now • and again, and to hold them up to ridicule. The fact re- mains that the great bulk of the mal ter submitted to the patrons of cheap maga- zines is sound food and wholesome literature. I have in my mind one paper -a weekly penny paper. It began with being little more than a, receptacle for scraps of all kinds; it became popu- lar; as it grew it became more serious, its scraps became articles; it continued, it is true, certain features which the graver journals have long ceased to use, but in other respects it joined its more serious brothers. That journal is now as staid, as serious, as Chambers' Jour- nal itself. Or let us take this paper it- self, ono of the oldest weekly journals, always in the vary front rank of jour. nide, always conducted with the greatest skill to discover what people like, and the strongest sense of responsibility, so that there has never been the sligh,est doubt as to the nature of the literature provided for its readers -the model for 50 years of what a popular journal should be. Now the circulation of Chaumers' Journal is 250,000. If each copy represents a household, one-sixth of the inhabitants of England and Scotland take in and read this paper, I submit, in short, that anyone who will take the trouble to read the popular jownals and magazines of the day will rise from his task with a greater respect for the popular judgment than he ever held before. I know that there is a great flood of rubbish -penny novelettes and so forth. The readers of this rubbish are boys and girls. The reason why they read it is that it is the cheapest form of recrea- tion, and the most accessible. Get the boys and girls into polytechnics and continuation and evening schools ; briug them together with social clubs ; teach them in the home arts ; make them sing, play, act, dance, and you will stern this flood. As it is, we have taught thorn this cheap and accessible form of recreation ; the laws of the world give them 24 hours to the day i they have so much time to get through, and, if you think of it, they might .do even worse than read the Penny Dreadful, --Walter Besant,• in Tile Contemporary Review. Father c_ Mother Grandfather Grandmother r. Chld en c And All. READS THE. NEWS -RECORD They read the Locals, the Stories, the Advertisements—every line in the paper. Then they send it to distant relatives interested in the town, as numerous post- masters will certify. The Local Weekly is the best -read publication in existence. It has the home news which no other paper gives. Advertisers take Notice—THE NEWS' RECORD is read by several thousands at people every week. An advertisement in this paper is therefore, of some account.. e, Subscribe fol THE NEWS -RECORD, xi Ad Vel'tise in TIIE NEWS-RECIUtD. CJZII N TQ] r _ CLINTON • SASH, DOOR AND BLIND FACTORY. S. S. COOPER, - - PROPRIETOR, General Bui der and Contractr. This factory has been under the, personal supervision and one owner for eight years. We carry an extensive and reliable stock end prepare plans and give estimates for and build all classes of buildings on srt notice and on the closest prices. All work is supervised in a nieohan cal way and satisfaction guaranteed. We sell all kinds of interior and exterior material. Lumber, Lath, Shinges, Lime, Sash, Doors, Blinds, &o. Agent for the CELEBRATED GRAYDILL SCHOOL DESK, manufactured at Waterloo. Call and get prices and estimates before placing your orders. THE POST -OFFICE STORE SUMMERH1LL, ONT. CHOICE GROCERIES. DRY -GOODS, &c., &c. Our expenses are low and our Customers get the benefit. 0 We want YOUP. trade. It will pay YOU to inspect our stock. SEE OUR DRESS GODS. Produce Taken. Geo. M. Kilts, General Merchant. THE POST -OFFICE STORE, SUMMERH1LL. Seed Grain for Sale. Wo have a largo amount 01 Send (.rain for sale. Choler aix•Rnwed Rsrley. Seed Peas and Oats. Feeding Corn and;Ensilage Corn for Seed, fi11 of the Beet Quality. Plenty of Feeding Corn f r Stock Feeders always on hand. Drive right to the Warehouse at the Rvilwny Stat- ion . W. H. PERRRIN, 801 4-t Clinto . House For Rent Frame story and in half dwelling. with or withon stable, also lot. Soft and hard water. Six rooms pantry and cellar. Will be rented reasonable. Fur particulars apply at Tii at Tint News-ltreocu,00iee. • Wash Day Made Easy. I have secured the right to manufacture the famous Magic Washing Machine. Already I bave made and sold a number. The purcbasers are delig'httd. To uee the machine on trial is sore to make a sale if ono is required. Wash -day is rondo very easy and carpets can be kept perfectly clean; no splashing or weste water whatever, The prion has been set at a very low figure. The machine may be seen at my residence on Isaac Street. B. COLE 800.0 ISMOMTMUMN MANY A YOUNG MAN. When from over -work, possibly assisted by an inherited weakness, the health fails andrest or medical treat- ment must be resorted to, then no medicine can he employed with the same beneficial results as Scott's Emulsion. A recent issue.of the Winnipeg Free Press gives this account of a wedding which took place under peculiar cir- cumstances : "Daniel Muir, a young Walsh county, N. D., farmer, started on Friday for Inkster accompanied by Miss Aggie Dickson, it young Indy from Guelph, Ont., to secure the services of a minister to tie 0 matrimonial knot. for them. They encountered, the blizz- ard when about half way to Inkster and were compelled to stop at a farm house for the night. Here they found a minister on his way home from the presbytery at Drayton, all blizzard bound. The wedding took place there and then, and the farmer made a wed- ding feast for them." SHILOH'S VITALIZER. (1) Mrs. T. S. Hawkins, Chattanooga Tenn., says : "Shiloh',s Vitalizer 'SAVED MY LIFE'.' I consider it the best remedy for a debilitated) system I tier ttaed." For Dyspepsia, Liyer• or Kidney trouble it excels. Price 75 cts. Sold by d. H. Combe • At Baltimore, Md., last week John Bankert end wife, an aged Ge5•man couple, attempted suicide by cutting the arteries of their wrists- Mrs. Bankert is dead and the hnsband's life is despaired of. Bst,rea In Stx Houne.—Distressing Kidney and Bladder dlseasee relieved in et hours by the NEW GrtnAT Sou•rn Attttnr0AN Kinser CUM " This now remedy ie a great emprise and delight to phyelolane von account of Its exceeding promptness in relieving pain in the bladder, kidneys, back and every part of the urinary paeseges In male br female. It relieves retontlon of write' and pain In passing .it almost Im• mediately. if yen went qulek relief and mire this is nue remedy. bold by Watts & Co. and Allen bt Wilson, Druggists. MONEY FoRYOU If taken in time it will care most severe taus ad Coags, ]Bronchitis, Asthma►m &reek irritation of Throat or Lungs. THUS a hea doctaft hilt. U SAVE :;:suscmsiort. CIT Y BAKE RY OPPOSITE FAIR'S MILL. The undersigned having hroneht out the bakery business so socceestnlly carried on by Mr. Wm. Young, will continue the bneiness at the old stand. He will endeavor, by eupplyinga first class article, to merit the liberal support of tho people. Bread de- livered anywhere in town. Wedding Cakes, Fruit or Sponge Cakes supplied on short notice. M. BECKWITH, - - CLINTON. OHANEEE of BUSINESS wision & Rowe, uccessors to jams Anderson.. NEW WOODWORK AND RE- PAIRING SHOP. ALBERT STREET, CLINTON. I have opened a new woodwork and repair- ing shop in connection with Trowhill's Black- smith Shop, Albert Street, Clinton, and am prepared to execute all classes of Woodwork and repairs at reasonable prices and on the shortest possible notice. Satisfaction in prices and work guaranteed. Farm and town work a specialty. Any vehicle can be made new or as good as new. W M. McKOWN, Clinton. F. W. FIIRNCCIIIB The undersigued have bought the stook, good will and interest of James Anderson, and tire store will hereafter be known 118 tlrc ` Novelty Bakery and Restaurant. The new firm will keep in stock everything found in a firet..class Ree- taurant and Green Grocery, and by strict 'attention to business and courtesy hope to receive the continued patronage of all old customers. WILSON & HOWE, - Clinton, (MEMBER OF ASS'N of P. L. S.) Provincial Land Surveyor and Civil Engineer, LONDON, ONT, OFFICE ' , J. Stewart's Grocery Store, Olin on 701.17 Ono* 4 GORED BY9/,; Perseverance m using n will give relict, even in cases of long standing. where a cure seemed impossible and ole seemed hardly worth living Per Bottle,25c,50c,or$1.00 PEO LE MUS LIVE And in order to do so they want the vory best they can get. We have anticipated their desire by purchasing the choicest Grocer ies, Teas, Sugars, Canned Goods, Fruits,&c, Having hove 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 be undersold. We have a Beautiful Assortment of FANCY GLASWARE and CROCKERY Special Cuts on SUGARS and TEAS in large lots, 0 J. W. -IRWIN, Grocer, MoKCLINTON.CK 1 1LSO 84 HOWE i THE LEADING BAKERS and CONFECTIONERS, OPPOSITE THE MARKET, ALBERT, ST., CLINTON. 13rea,a.", Calces, Confectionery, arc., or a superior quality, at the lowest living prices. OYSTERS of the Very Best Quality at the lowest possile. price. -8/ 7 iY i 1 013. eib cc) N7v ® e THE NOVELTY BAKERY & RESTAURANT, CLINTON New Goods for the Xmas Trade —Just arrived and in Stock. RAISENS, VALENCIA, Fine Selected, off Stalk and Layers. SULTANAS EXTRA DESERT, CURRANTS, PROVINCIALS in Brlt, and half Brls. FTN ;:5.1' VOSTIZZAS in CASES. LEMONS, OR N.GE.->, FIGS, DATES, PRUNES. 11t W PEELS, ORANGE, LEMON and CITRON. FRESH GROUND SPICES of all kinds, also full lines of CROCKERY, CHINA and GLASSWARE, TEA SETTS, DINNER SETTS, TOILET SETTS. Cash for Butter and Eggs. --- N. ROBSON. Albert St., Clinton.' Leslie's Carriage Factory. BUGGIES, PHAETONS, CARTS AND WAGONS -all of the best works manship and material, *'All the latest styles and most modern improve- ments. All work warranted. Repairing and repainting promptly attended co. Prices to suit the times. Dar FACTORY -corner Huron and Orange Streets, Cliaton. 65y :Lt See- blit,tier.'•:"..rnetl.`1N'S'J l 5 dins _tt k .y.l•. r'�>:"�v n�'.�tii ,ti.• r'; G°•. nSi' , , i t'i�.lP,�;i.4ii. y. fS'` WONDERFUL CURES,y O THO5IAS MINCIII)b. MAJOR W. A. SIMFIELD. Bofors Treatment. After Treatment. Nervous Debility and Catarrh Cured. Thomas Minchin says: "I was reduced to a norvous wreck—only weighed 118 poands. The result of early abuse was the cause. 1 had the following symptoms: Miserable mentally and physically, melancholy, nerv- ousness, weakness, specks before the eyes, dizzy, poor memory, palpitation of the heart, flushing, cold hands and feet,, weak back, dreams and losses at night, tired in tha morning, pimples on the face, loss of ambition, burning sensation, kidneys weak etc. Dootors could not euro me; but Drs. Kennedy & Kergan by their New Method Treatment, cured me r in a few weeks. I weigh now 170 pounds. It is throe years oit,co I have taken their treatment." til fr•,t% Before Treatment. Alter Treatment, Blood Disease and Dyspepsia Cured. Major Simfield says: "I had Dyspepsia and Catarrh of the Stomach for many years. To make matters worse I contract- ed a Constitutional Blood Disease. My bones ached. Blotches on the skin looked horrible. I tried sixteen doctors in all. A friend recommended Drs. Kennedy & Kergan. I began their Now Method Treat- ment and in a few weeks was a new man with renewed life and ambition. I can,. not say too much for those scientific doc- tors who have been in Detroit for four- teen years. I conversed with hundreds of patients in their offices who wore being cured for different diseases. I recommend them as honest and reliable Physicians." is. KENNEDY ff KERGAN The Celebrated Specialists of Detroit, Mich. TREAT AND GUARANTEE TO CURE Catarrh; Asthma; Bronchitis; Con- sumption1st and 2nd stages); Rheumatism; Neuralgia; Nervous, Blood and Skin diseases; Stomach and Heart dis- eases; Tapeworm; Piles; Rapture: Impotency; Deafness; Dtsen.es of the Eye,Ear. Nose and Throat; Epilepsy; Diseases of the Kidneys and Bladder; Errors of onth; FailingManhood; Diseases of the Sexual Organs; Female Weakness; Diseases of Men and Women, and Chronic Diecnees is general. They euro whoa others fail I ONLY CURABLE CASES ARE TAJ(E1'( FOR TREATMENT Their NEW Eno known the world over, is curing diseases of every fREATMENT nature that has baffled heretofore the medical profession. They are not • 'family doctors' — they make a specialty of Chronic and d,trlcult diseases. lea DISEASES OF M from self abuse, later excesses or disease. Young N. They guarantee to cnre'all Weakness of Men twitting man, you need kelp.Drs, dt K. will caro yon. Yon may have Wen treated by Quacks—consult Scientific Doctors. No mare, no pay. Consult thorn. DISEASES OF OMEN Why suffer in silence? They can enre yon. , tJd. AS V WOMEN. 11. Female Weakness, Barrenness* , Plaplacfrments, Irregularity, and painful periods cured in a short time. Renewed vitality given. Illustrated hook Free. Inclose stamp. Spormatorrheen, Varicocele, (Meet, OnnatuCal SPECIAL DISEASES. Discharges, Private dlemnses, 3trlcture, S pri. ills, and nil Blood diseases gnarantoed cured or no pay. 11 years in Detroit — It 0,000 Cures --National reputation. Books free -Consultation frog - Names confidential. If unable to call, write for a list of questions and advice free. DRS.r KENNEDY & KEROAN, 148 Shelby St., DETROIT, MiCR.