The Clinton News-Record, 1899-01-19, Page 7A
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THE MINTON NEWS.REORP
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• Ther.da.te to whiok every aubsoription
ts paid is denoted by the number on
the address label. No paper discontin-
ued until all arrears are paid, except
et the option of the proprietor.
• NV. J. miTcantx.
Editor and Proprietor.
THE MOLSON'S BANK
•Incarkiorated by Act ct Parliament 1015,
' CArrria. $2,000,000 '
Rear . $1,e0e,00n •
Read (Mee; MONTREAL!.
WM.mOLsoNT.• MACPHERSON; Preeident
P.OLPEItt TA/sT 'I 110MA 0,•Gen, Manager
Notes 00counted, Collections made, Drafts.
Issued, Sterling .-and American pxohooge
bought and sold. , /Ott rest allowed on DeposIts
' FoLvINGs BAlqz. .• •
'Interest -allowed on sums Of el and up.!
Constipation
alitaieshilly holt tile eleatiese he tile werld.
Walla, tits q06441 focettqo intela the howillt
and Protteelillieuserea, torpid neer,. WI
00
gotton. b14 to*.tot c°4t4d
II 1111111 010 110od'e 001. IS
tonne flak hooch,. In.
00
CVO eouotipellote ewe ell it;
.441,ftroutigy. 2,50, Ali drugnists
rrop;re4 by Q. 1 fioo s Co Lovell Nape
'I'ho o41 WM with 2000 thukeparlua
•
John T Emmerton
PIE LEADING BARKER,
• Smith's block, opposite Post Office .
41.40
Agert. far Standard Life Insuranco Co
• Heed oftioe for Canada, Montr.eal,
Insurmitie in force, $110,900,000
invest]t td jn canaria • 18,500,000 •
Established, 1826 The old reliable and fe.Vorite,
.CENTRAL BUTCHER. SNP?,
• FO Sz MURPHY,
• (Stu:meson to J. W. Ltingtore.) •
Hiving bought out theabove .husiness, we
intend to conduct it oh the ons.h, prin. °tole. and
wfltRuvply our oustomere wttu too oest meats
at the lowest paYing prices.
, , • Ford ft Murphy.
, •
GO. TROW1111411,
Horseshoer ana.General Blacksmith
Albert Street, North, Clinton.
JOBBING, A SPECIA-L-TY: ---
Woodwork ironed title tiret.ohiss material
and work guaranteed. Farm implements and
machines rebuilt and repaired.
• •
-•
•
FAxtralcits. .
Money advanced to- farmers on their, own
notes with one or mere ondowtere. No mort-
gage regaired as seburity.
. u . .
4 0. BREWER, „Manager, Clinton. - I
G. D. 1VIoTAGGART
Bnkero
AL33EBT STREET, CLINTON
, . •
A General Banking 13usiness Transacted.
Notes Discounted, Drafts Issued,
Interest Allowed on Deposits.
ar.a.Ciceies &."A•wattOeie,
CLINTON • - - ONT
Fire. Accident and Lire Inaurance
Tr r naacted.
Companies and any. information relating to
ins licence gladly given. . General Distriet
Agentfor the confederation Life Insurance
Co, Money to Loan on Reasonable Ratea.
Office -Palace block, opposite Market.
CONVEYANCING..
•'John : Ridont.
•
COnvoyanter, conimissioner, Etc,
• •
- Fire insurance: • • ileaLEstsie.
. :Money to Lend. -
• Office--IIURON STREET, CLII4TON
I
• • .
• MEDICAL. *9"-\
Dr. W. Gunn;
C. P. and L. . S., Edinburgh.
Office-Ootad_o Clinton; Night
calls -at .ftrint. door of residence on Ratten.
. bury Street, opp.. PresbyterialrOhureb.
Dr, Turnbull
Office in Perrin's Block,. Rattenbury pt.
Night calls at Office attended to.
. • CLINTON, ONT.
Dr SI**, „
Office -„Ontario Street, opposite English
church„ Ihrmerly oceupled by Dr, Apple.
ton.
DENTISTRY.
Dr, BRUCE,
Surgeon Dentist. ,
OPPICEa-Over Tayloes Shots Store,
Clinton, Ont. Special attention to preter.
vafion of natural teeth.
mB -Will visit Biyth everthionday and
hiyfield every Thursday afternoon during
t he summet,
DR. DENTIST.
Office adjoining Poster's Photo Gallery.
Office • Hours, •• 9 to e. '
hiasigt .the second* Thursday. of each
Tont)
VETERINARY.
I E. Blackall,
VETERINARY SURG,EON am;
VETERINARY INSPECTOR.
Offies be Isaac Street next New Era office
Residence, Albert St., Clinton.
LEGAL;
Scott 85
BARRISTERS, SOI.JCITORS, ETO.
Clinton Offire.--Elliott Stook, Lam et,
• Bayfield Offiee-Opett every Thursday
•• • -Main street, firet door west of
-Past Office. Money to loan.
:WM &Ott. E. H. McKenzie.
•
pitri E. Campion, (1.0.,
Barristen - Solicitor, - Notary, Sec,
GODERICII, ONT.
TO THE FARMERS!
, Study your' own interest and g where
, You can get ,
•
I manufacture none but thebest of gook
Beware of shops that sell cheap, as they
• 'have got to live. 041 and getL-pricea
• Orders by moil promptly attended to.
„
John Bell,
itemise 59mporibm, ;Myth. cnt
RELIABLE- HARNESS
ViltfithWAINIMMINOWNWMWsWrift
Agricultural
If you are ill you need a
doctor in whom you have
confidence', .
1 Ifyou need a remedy you
COMPOSTING MANI/I/WIN WINTER, want one that has been tested
rl'he great liortion of the. stable Man.
are made on fertile accumule.tea eluting
the, Winter sewn, at which time atock '
la bowed, arid its stolid end liquid OX-
oreinent Can more reaaily be saved than *
during the summer. :The winter -Made '
Manure is also- rioheV in- all the 04'
roente Of Pfitat food, fer etoek is natl.
a ly gralued a t is aesteort, while grain
la ratela fed to aniMale at PaiitliTe'.
Hut, tut usually handled, drawn freak
and mixed with atraw in the early
aping, end plowed under, this Man-
ure deo apt do bald the geed it sluilild,
In the firet place, aays A,raerican Car.
tivator, the excreMent luta to ferraent
befere the fertility it. .00ntains isimade
available. If plovred under in sPrinit,
it often happens that the raine whits)),
-fall afterward, do net wet down to the
manure lying it the bottom of the
furrow, where it reraainsi duriiig the
3 .
tietnion, drying the Soil above it, and
doing more harni than good • to the
,crop. With- some care in Makag A
•
corapost heat/ and protecting it against
extremes a moiatuto or drynarta (mania
manures may be fitted. for iinmediate
'efficiency in winter, ao that when
used the following Spring they Mill he
•equal..te the concentrated. nitrogenous
fertilizeks-that are always high priced
but are necessary fer growing good ear-
ly crops,: To de this with least hiss
poine auperphosPhate ef lime Or -else
some pOtash, salts should be miiced with:
the manure as it 'ferments', and, some
fine earth ale° ,be spread overahe fel)
of the heap. We have seen both horse
and hen manure rotted down to a fine
powder in this way, tied, a teaspoonful.
mixed' with the soil iii tile hill monad
give the young plauts a start that at-
sured their superiority all the seaeon-
lifterWurd.: In'most eases •manure lip -
Piled in saring 'cloa4 net do the:'prop
mlich - good until hot weather comes,
and then 'for the 'reatiaindei of the see -
sen it suPPliee alt excess. of nitrogen
that is washed away'and masted by the'
melting Mums and reins ef winter.
'
1 Therefore thirinanure used does
do half the good it should: ',Nixie fine-
ly: rotted eon:wont can be had it should
be applied atilt:bp:dressing after plowing
.and covering .lis nearly as poitsible the
whole. urface. Tbis Will give enough
where the. sped germinates to. act as
a star er. for the 'Plant jet* as it,' ger-
minatea,-;•Th la .gaceeit_vigorouts ginyith
and it r3 roots will push out and reach
. .
Tatni and Isolated Town Property . other spots over whieh some. of the
r.• I '' °.Iii3r•-•—•Illsurel . : ... . dOes More good than can. the emit
fertilizer has 'fallen. The. fertilizer
OFFICERS: , , . amount of' plant food Oita it *Contains.
1 t
The Mutual Fire
---insunactilotpaRy.
George Watt, PreardentHarlook P.O.: j. B. The fermented excrement le so rich
11 °Lean. Eippen P.O.; lk. I. Sha.nticin. SecI .- .
Treas., Suitor Ix, P.O. ; Thom- s E. Hays, n- in _elements of fertility ,that it. helps
snootier of losses, 5'e4 forth, P.O. • to release fertility in the 'soil it cornea
piosoTorts • in contact with. If White organic mat -
w. G. Broadfoot, Feitforth 1 Arlin G.. Grieve,. •
Winthrop: George Dale, Pes.forth; Thomas 19. ter, it sets that, also to fermentiug.and
-11ay8,_Selifori5._• -Toluca Evans. Beechwood ; thus releasin more plant toed. If the
Thomas Garbutt CiinUnx; Thoirlan-Fraseri - • •
,BrUcelield ; Sohn '13. McLean, Hippen., crop ban had 'this early start, its roots
• maims; will by midsummer have spread all
R°'". Smith. }1440ek ' 'I'm"' memina.°. sea' through the rioil,..taking op plant food
forth- Jame Cummings, Egniondville, J, W.
Yee; goimenville P o. 1 John Gorse -410k end -so fatst as. the soil releases it. In. this
aaen , Morrison, auditors. , i way,the prop will make" a steadyectini-
Parties destrons tci effeet humane° �r teen- t form growththrough the whole sea -
inset other business will be promptly attenled non, which is mlurb better, especially for
• coon application to any ot iaa above Wilcox% the corn Prep, than to have the ,planta
addressed to their respective post opines. weakly early in the season, and then
_ --- try to make up a :wort of growth af-
GrandTrRailway. ' ter inideumitter. To make thc. beet fine
. • ' compost the excrement of stock should
..
Titans arrive and leave Olipton ntattop
follows:
Buffalo and Goderich District i.a.
Going West, Mixed. io.le a.m. haa been used in compost to have
" " Express 12.55 p.m, every particle fermented. This is a
., mixed . . .. ,..,...,, 7.0.5 13,111. point for thosewho wish to drill dom-
• 4`, " Express • rti.ei p.m.,/ nested fertilizer
'with the seerdrg-iiiiii:
Going East, Express 1.4.9 a,in We have seen such compost used with
.4 44 2' ,55 pin. extraordinary results on spring -sown
.. . ' tr mixed,,, .,,. 4:Ig Dm, oats and barley. If phosphate and pot -
„London, Huron and Bruce e- -.' . . ash salts have bean 1196d in Making -the
...., „ _ „,. compost, and it haft been lsifted so as
Geilna tu.t
tb, .x p,t;esc 7.41."`”' to remove all 6011.036 114111p6, it can be
I
,,,, . ,, - .. . .. • • 4.3e P.m. drilled quite as well ae the mineral
°ling irir•thi ' ... 11,°"5"Th fertilizer, and it ist even a better stiro-
'1 A " ., -a. -..*.• 0. ..ss p.m. ulna to the early growth of the grain.
M. C. Dickson, - W. E. Davie,' It as well 'known that the soil in early
Die. Pasq. Agent, G. P. & Ti A., • spring is always washed. bare of avail -
Toronto. . - Montreal. • able pilot food, though it ia then that
A. OASOp.. Agent Cintonhe gernainating gramMost rde& it.
• •
The result le that • Ali early -planted
_: •_, _ ' crops make at first a slow and Etunted
50 TEA50' growth, unless they are implied with
EXPERIENCE. some .available nitrogenous fertilizer.
But this costs more money' than can
be afforded for ordinary farm crops,
It is what the market gardener does,
and enables' him to grow two and
sometimes three crops the same season
' from his land. • But nitrogenchre fer-
tility is ao.mtteh dearer he concentrated
form that farmers cannot afford to
buy it. But by composting ail' their
winter -made manure and adding the
bit saved entirely free from „mixture
with straw or other coaree.material.
It arill be far Jess likely to fire -fang,
nd it. is also difficult .where straw
for years; not an obscure,
un-
tried thing that is Urged upon
you, or on which you save a
eration as against health.
For wasting in children
or adults, Scott's Emulsion,
of Cod-liver Oil with Hypo -
phosphites has been • the
recognized remedy for twen-
ty-five years.
sec.'and 3t.00, ell &mists.
SCOTT a VOWNE. (lanitsts, Toronto.
for years says a writer, that sheep will
not eat very mach dog fentleli 00!1141
burrs or the genuine smart weed,. Of
nearly every. ether weed found On our
farms they are More or less fond. Tbey
are Trite partial ,to dendetion and they
eat heart's eerie avith rrelieh. Itt,new
Matures, which are just Seeded
and in winch may be found: weeds where
thegraes failed to catelt,, the weetle will
be•grazed vrith the same apparent rel-
ish that the grass is, If the Owl/ are
turned in in time. We have noticed
that when sheep "bare been turned in-
to e 'Rubble field, where sand burrs
are found, they de not eat them read-
ilY, and no one ialames them for not
doing so at this Season of the year,
when such burr is on its guard; Cock-
le burrs, when they have grown large
and rank; will only be partially con-
suMed, unless starvation. is coming.over
the flock. Some years ago, when the
Protracted dr -sixth struck this cottntry,
a kind of Weed new to, this locality
sprung, up in all the peetures, and for
want of a better name was celled pig -
few tents—that is PO corxsid.
PATENTS
.. TRAng MARKS
Cxeliorts_
COPYRIGHTS dte.
Anyonesending a sketch and dead tion may
ouleklY ascertain ear °Pinion fres w ether. tin mineral fertilizers needed. they can
invention is probably patentable., Communtcs.
ttonsetrietveogdenued. Handbook on Patents have a fertilizer as good AS any they
sent free. oeldsnt gooey for securipinostents. mai buy. When farmers lee= to make
Patents takethrough Munn a w, Moira
taticial notice, without warm., In tbe stable manure available by compost-
Sdentific Rtnerion. ng it through the 'Winter, oho good
effect will be to incite them to feed
A handunieli Illustrated weekly,. 1,Argest tr. better ., sio as to have richer mattute
oulation o any galantine founts'. werras.4 4 OS begur with:. lAll know that the OX -
liar rfour months. ei. Boa Walt nom:lame ..
creinent from grain.fed animale hete
!INN G 31/11kmdw'of New 'lark very rapidly, and if cart is taken to
Broom 010-Egt. Wtobbagt", (1' prevent waste of ammonia, the result
•- • its a. great deal richer fertilizer than
can; be made -without tha grain. The
.S41,13ANESE DENTISTS. benefit from linseed meal and cotton-
seed meal is greater than from gfain:
The Jatenese dentists perform all Each of dread is worth an a fertilizer
tlreiraoperationiantooth drawing with nearly as- much itis its_price. alie
the thumb and forefinger of one haz.id.
The &ill neee,sstiry to do this Is ae-
qttired only- after- long practice, but
when once it is obtained the operator
is able to'extracit half a dozen /teeth
in_aboutseconds urithout once re-
moving bin- frigera &di:a-the atleitra
Mouth.
ANCLENT SOAP.
•
Sdap ho been in use for4000 yeara,
and ia twier mentioned in the Bible.
A. few pears ago a aoap.boiler's shop
was diecovered in Pompeii. The soap
found la the shoo had not lint all its
efficany, although it had been buried
Orrice -Over Davie*Dreg Store. 1,800 years, ! •
Money tO LOAM. *"*"*"-*
O. Johnston:, . Boward's
Ezirrister,, 8oiticitor, :Commissioner, Ets for all bait Weak.
• d6riERIO/Vil orstr,, lips al iiflOrAgil
091zlearCor. Ilanititon and Andiew's 101ati
Street*.
Tbeillood is the
disease, the seed o tat . o g
rattureiewn invicrater add the best tari der.
e-ati
elief 1,
market, and if the purpose of the feed-
ing fa to make manure that can be
fermented and made available for,early
liming use, we think that the itmaul
amount that it is safe to feed stook
of theee rioh food returns more than
LIs,..00lst_in the itzereaeed_value,of the
manure pito. Ono 01 the -0Nier-diffV-
eulties with Most lumen in making
their winter -made manure do what it
should, is that It was made with too
little nitrogen in It at Drat, mid ibis
Makes it take longer to put ,it into
the Leaf emolltion foe USe, By COM.
poating manure there. la also °poor-
turlity for profitablework on the farm
AC a time of year when there Is not
much ClialWA5 for the farmer to drrany.
thing that will save or earn him any.
thing. If he otiti prevent tthe mites-
eity Of buying fertilizers In spring,
and at the same time get better roulte
from thosse he le able 80 compost tit
horn% it will be a better paying Job
than he eould «itt at_anything else
on the farni.
222 'WEErifi V/E PASTURE.
itt. itegAt sloodhreels IAA a rule, We Ode are not destrabio
Ntr. Brydone,
on any farm. If the sheep paature fa
/ft tnAtay cgOtirt heitt *ad vcita Itic Power Managed as it *liquid be there will
te perreetty return the blood from the helm be but few wet*, in ft tO bother the
and extremities. for purification. Then follow
Attacks cif dizziness headeche pat tetlon, p4h.,„ fA.a alt
narrister, Solkifot. Neter), Public, &co nral HOWARD'S HEART SURF "" `"'"""'""
;31;Pleit ; Ask rant druggist or by- MO tit jOth ritet3OX
BRAVER BLOCK, CLINTON .
carts tech biesses, kinds of weeds, but *mut they do not
g boxes or
eau; to tem* except in * very early
f 0.093
• 3
l nOAftb, it Vi0i4Allity Ttantsi, stage of growth. We have °Warred
ItilliKETS OF THE WORLD,
1'MM of Grata, Cattle, Cheese, 80.
lo the LeatlIng Marts.
• TORONTO.
•
ITOrdlitol Jan. it -For an oft -day,
we hid. rather a lively market at the
Webt•exn (tattle yards this morning'.
There were 22 1.0.14$ of offerings re.
Ve4ved love, incluclieg 1,0.0 hogs;
There was not much doing in export
ca e bu. we had sont fairly god
stuff here, and it sold in small late at
-from IN to ;24.25 and 24.50 per cwt.
A few pareale of selections eel(' at
24.00 per cwt.
Butchers' cattle mad well, molder,.
ing thkt the quality was not Anything
more th. a ordinaryt, ,Choioe hatcher
cattle WaSi firm at from 33-1 to 40,
and now and then 4 1-8o par Ili, but
Ilia 1;4P wag v0P3' ocetvarenel, Good
cattle fetched from MOD to $3,70 per
cwt.; medium sold from 88.25 to sus
and 03.75, per cwt.; add inferior to
centmon fetchad from 83.16 down to
$248o per cwt. The sales to -day „ did
not drag, and everything sold early.
The following transactions' were re-
ported;- ,
chai load of :butchers' averag-
ing 1:02.fi 113S, sold italo pep 13);•
Another load, averaging 1,00 'be.,
094:at 0 1.2,0 per Ib. ••
Feurteen cattle, averaging io.op lbs,
sold at 4c, and ten dollars back.
A load of butchers' cattle, averaging ,
1,085 lbs, sold at $3,90 per cwt.
A load of butchers* cattle, averaging
905 lbs, sold at 31,-2o per lb.
Ten °tittle, averaging 890 lbs, sold at
8 1-4c, and five dollars back.
Six shipping cattle, averaging - 1,170
lbs, sold at 44.275 per mat. .'
There was lie taquiry for milkers. to-
day. Stockers, feeders, and bulls are
unchanged. • '
No onc. is shipping • sheep :just now,
and they are dull, at from 3 to 31-10
eon grass. It grew everywhere, and
on sortie farms the farmers become Al-
armed at its appearance. Our cow Ma-
ture had an abundance of it. Grass was
lateryvvhere 'very scarce. The sheep
were turped into the cow pasture and
they soon caused the disapPearanoe''of
all this weed, as they' seemed to 0011 -
Mune it with a relish, ,As a weed
sumer no domestic attunet will equal
the sheep, except goats, winch are roeFe
than their equal, and whtle goatit will
not eat tin cans and old rubberboots,
they will eat almost any kind of weed.
"Weeds are not very nice to ' see in a
pasture, and if the Pasture is well :cast
with grass there will be but few weeds,
•If the 'weeds start up, alt you have to
'do IR tn,Pasiumthe land heavily With
sheep and few weeds will live to liZ
seed. ;This kind of treatment for a
few years will rtd the farm, of such
weeds as have been mentioned. Pox -
tail. is everywhere present, and sheep
will . eat it and it can only increase
on them when a season is partici:1101'-
0r. favorable to tts growth, or if i
is growing • where the sheep Can ot"
,
get at it. It is peesible to hay thi
weed grow in a• sheep pasture hat: is
not sufficiently supplied with sheeP•
A few sheep on agend pasture, vvhere•
'an- abUndance. of -feed may be found,
may not get tili "the, weediwilagweed
is another pest that is found on most'
faruis, and this is* very good weed
for abeert as it, is one from which the
obese medicine called worm seed is ela.
tabled; Sheep will not constinae all
this -weed if the growth is luxuriant,
for they merely nip at it as a medicine
rather than &for nourishment,nr be-
cause they are tend of it.
GIVE STOCK PLENTY OP SALT.
Alt kinde of farm stook should have
atilt where they can.get to it et will.
Rock salt Placed Under shelter 4thou1d
be kept before them at•all times,. Be-
sides this. stock should have asmalL
inount-of fooiresalt twice a week. None
of the animals will eat too much salt
if it is kept befOre them constantly.
Salt stimulates theappetite, assists di-
gestion •ad assimilation and increases
the flow Of the fluide of the body,
Where 'stock has not had a sufficient
supply 'of„,nalLtatzjta_gradoattly.,.. Sect
feed up. An oYerdoge acts hs
' SPIES AND THEIR WORK.
Do Thelr Hair ts.neitlio, ,$vems.e .191. o. Half•Rd
a
i
"Spy" in an ugly word, but. accord-
ing to Lieut. -Cot. W. N. Kleodowsky,
of the Russian Imperial staff,,.the men
,and worgen,who engage in the business
of Spying' are not "half bad." lausi-
neva • Tea. Kleudowsky'S book on
spies, about to • be -issued in France,
bluntly states that Military and poli-
tical authorities the world over look
upon espionage ita s recognized PrOfea-
eiOit. "Without espionage 'their work
vvotilcl.be acidly lacking in direct pur-
pose,".. says the author, and continues:
"Spies, or, ,as they are politely de-
signated, secret agents, are no Lest, a
necessity in times Of peace than in,
woe. If it wete not for spies, one
country would know vets little about
the mobilization of another, about on-
ward movements .tothe! .f,rozitiers,
about' the spirit of foreign 'troopsand,
the infeotions of the commanding
generale , •
"The employment of spied is usually
intrusted to- is high officer of long and
honorable standing. Abov'e all, he must
try to 'find out whether the Persons
_offering their services are in intent:lid
Amite or Want' to become spies to
satisfy envy, hatred or political ambi-
tion. The Brat' ate liable to sell
themselves to the bigheat bidder
among the powers; those in the other
eategOa'y are alyvitys liable to alter
their nanda sooner or later, and when
they 'dte-ecr thelletria
Urea of the government which engag-
ed there.
"A spr„t.o, be useful, nittet be a good
actor, tallSt be courageous, a linguist,
Weil versed in technical Boland% al-
ways on, the alert, true to his master.
;Women make excellent spies; hottest
Women as will as bad. women. With
many female spies theminister of war
detail directly, sending them out on
precarioues business. Others are. apies
so/Ithaca knowing it. We empley ome
good looking chaps who make love to
them and eseertain their husbands' of..
Octal secrets. . A foreign military
per,son in active tterviez makes an ideal.
spy. If I Were utiniater of war 'would.
not hesitate to pay araillion of .roubles
to a foreign general eta( officer who
totneented to betray his country. •
"Above en, pay your apio
Frederick the Great tilted to nay a fel-
low who riaked his head for your sake
ought to he well treated, in the late
Wal with ertrinny the 1'ranch chose fo
dieregard this axiom, with disaitrolie
results'. was shown at Bernina*
t lei thai him marahal pald despatch
terriers who had passed through
enemy's line from 4 to * frames
that exteteei. That wax bid butt.
UP" ' • -
. Ikeeirtesseeesereimese ,
al to -day, but all otiose are well Main* 04131/30111)01133 AM. 1.24--Wh00
tained. Femme', loads old to -day at ary, 07 &tic; May, 07 0-1 to 671
from .5.0 in 3540, aa to quality ; 682.8o, on track_ ; No. Ixerd. se
Western hogs were quoted, on track, No. 1 Northern,•07 0.8e; Na, 2 Northe
in car lots, at about ;Ile to 3545, Mix- 65 5.8a. Flour and bran-Unchenire•di
eit weigl2te; and Northern at about Duluth, Jan. hare
About fifty lambs came in, and prices
are firmer at from 34 to 84.25, and. oc-
casionally 84.86, per owt. A little
more •was reported as paid, but We
doubt it. Lambs are in demand..
Bucks are slow- at 2 1-2c per Ib.
A fear good veal% will sell. •
Hogs are steady and unchanged, at
$4.62 1-2 for the very beet selections;
light hogs are' quoted at from 84 1034.-
25 ;- but for any kind of heavy far bogs
the outside figure Is 33.75; they will.
soft at this price, but not a tent over.
Sows are worth, 8c, and stags 20, Pei
lb, Stores will not sell. 1
• . Cattle, '•
Shipping, per cwt. . $ 400 3450
Butcher, choice, do . 375 412 1-2
Thatcher, med, to good.. 350 360
Butcher, inferior, . 300 325
Sheep and Lambs.
er 300 5
Bucks, per cwt.. . . 225. 25
Lambs, per owt, . . 400 435
Milkers and Calves. •
Cows, each, , . 2500 50 00
Caives, each, . . 200 600
Oh, Leo hogs, per. ewe, • 4a5. 4 62 1-2
L' *hogs, per cwt, . 400 4 121-2
Heavy', de., par cwt,0 00 375
• . •PrtopudE.
Eggs -Receipts Lair, demand good,.
and prices firm. Choice boiling stock
sells at 20' to 23e; held fresh -or cold
stored at 16c; and limed' at 1to 156.
Potaloes-The market is steady and-
movenieot• fair. Choice sold to -clay, on
track, car lots, at 55 to 500. Dealers sell
out of store at 65" tcr 70c; farmer' loads
sell et around 50 to 60c. , •
Poultry -Not much demand and re-
ceipts almost nil. Prices are steady for
good choice stock. Quotations are: -
Chickens, per pair, 25 to 40o; ducks,
40 to 60c ; .gease, per lb. 51-2 to 6a;
turkeys, per lb., 9 to 10o. ,
Beans -Firm. • Choice hand-picked
beans sell at $1.10 to $1.25; and cora-
mon, at 60 to 70c, per bash.
Dried appleti-Unchanged. Dealers
MY 4 1-2c. for dried Wick, delivered.
here, and small lots resell at 5 to 5
1-2e; evaporated B to 8 1-2o for email
lots.
Honey -About steady. Round lots Of
choice, delivered here, will brit* about
1-2. to 6e; dealers quote from Oto 70;,
per lb for 10 to 60-1b. tins; and in
comb at around $1.2.5 to $1.50 per
dozen sections.
Baled hay -Movement, is very light.
Strictly, choice ear lots isquoted at
$6.50 to 37.50 per ton; and No. Sat 36.
Straw -Price easy. Car lots are quot-
ed at- $4 to $4,50, on track.
1-,Tope---Veaturelese, • Dealers here sell
at 16 to 20c ; and outside holders are
asking 18c. for choice. .
DAIRY PRODUCE.
Butter -Steady demand and moder-
ate receipts keep the market unchang-
ed as to prices. Quotations are as
follows. -Dairy, tub, ,poor to medium,
11 to -12e; choice, 19 to 14e. large;
rolls, 14 to 15c; .8=11 dairy, lb: prints,
about 15 to 100; creamery, tubs and
bore, 19 to 20e; lbs., 20.10 21c.
Cheese -No particular feature. Choice
Stocks eell tit from 10 to 10 1-26.
MESSED BOOB AND PROVISTONS,
Beceipte of dressed' hogs more liber-
0- a a...-.
05.15 to, 20.20 for select Iota. The mar- wadi, 68 7-8o' hauary, 080; Mar '00 "0;
kot for pork produots quiet and Prices No. 1 North'ern cosh, 66e hid; iantiarY.
unaltered, 68e bid; May 67-8c.
Quotations are as follows: -Dry salt- Detroit, an. 13., -Wheat closed;. -NO.
ed shoulders, 7 1-24; loog clear holm, 1 white, oath, 710; No. g red, 0,4103, 004
car tits, 7 1.2o. ton Iota and cage Iota jannary, 70 1-20; lallY 7-4)0•4
10onu
8er raked6diumme,8318-0 tgoari-tajlilighitl,411tel 'htgl liewratt steady;
4'3;187 161'G '1 11 aibel CO :41 elt17; le°0 1P °PUtd
breakfast bacon, 10 1-2, to ile; picnic Merck' 5.00 to 51.65c; May,' 5.75 to0.80g
7 8-10 • or haeis 1-2, to 8 3-40
hams, 7 34 to 8e. All ;mete out of july, 5:0001 August, 5.05e; Sept
pinkie lo less than prieea quoted for 6.(0; Obtober, 6,05o; December,
smoked meats. spot coffee, Rio eteady; Mild
Lard-Tierees, 7o; tubs, 7 .1.2 to 7 eteady. .
3 --le; pails, 7 3-4 W.& ; compound, 0 8ogar - Raw Irregular;
to 6 1-2e. --, toe', 0 15460; centrifugal.
' like. molasses sugar,
Buffalo jau. 13 -Spring wheat -Quiet quiet.
steady; No.. I hard, 7a 1-4e; No. 1, 75,
6-4e; No, 2 Northern, 7 1-40. Winter •
wheat-Non:anal; No. 2# red, 74 1,20 ;
No. 1 white 74 1-2o.
5
core-Demandtive ; strong; No. Oyellow, Mei No. 4.
AO- TREATMENTeiORPmAINNErB.RIATFA IN
yellow, 33 1-4c to .38 1-2e; No. 8 corn,
89 14 to 88 1-20; No. 4 corn, 38e, The sixth paragraph of the nosy coda
Oats-Pairenquiry; fir, No, 2 white. which will come into ;iteration, in
3t930o_2. 08 ..B4rwlailtee320t,'rolsinog.. 4Rwye_Nlitte,0711Germany hi 1900, enacts compulsory.
Ina" 010 in store for No, 2. Fjour_, tre,atment of habitual drunkards, in -
Wet. but steadY. . - volving their being plazie.d under a
Imo 1-20; i/fay, 78c, Corn -No. 2 mixed.,, the individual anywhere for .trez mit
36e. Oats -No.. 2 mixed, 280. Tiv
Prime oash, $4,80; March, $4,62 1071
Dull; No: "2 cash, 50e. Clovertieed- the court. The eitiot description
ri:ei,,, :,..,,,,,,„ janrgoonedgetrito:on:euroaftoinrsheil:
73/117411Gerhaaunkeget Jan. 13, -Wheat -No. 1 cannot provide for his affairs or brings
himself or his family into the danger
Northern,. 69o; No. 2 Northern, 67 to
00. of need or endangers the safety of otha
67'I -4o., . Rye -No.- 1, 54 3-4 to era." This measure was first s.dvaaa•ted
BarlaY"-No' 2,• 61" t° 61-1-g°; am?aPles in 1868 at 'a meeting at Hanover. it,
42 1-2 to 51o, ,,. .
Toledo Jain, 13, -Wheat --No. 2 cash cirator, who will be eiroxivierencl. to put
HRheumatic:
tAt
erdicto
AYER'S MIR VIGOR fulfills •
at The peotittgeg made for It, Is the
tartlet of those who hoe irted
•
er
4 "I' have sold ATEA% HAM VtGon &Hinton
years and do not know ole single caim wirers -
it did not give entire ingisfactiotr."*P. M•
GROVE, Paunsdele, Ala. -
cur
" Whet% digase cruised ntyludr to 821 m141
fdiold'Avan'a lisitt VIGOR. a most excellent
preparktiOn and one that deg ali that is
C11432104 tor it." -L. RUSH, Connsusvitur,Pa.
•
evor
“.6.Venos lima Vomit bezel; teeth elistmed
• lor lt It restorait ohi h
f
• lrtttt3,113igttoe.`2411 1A40%,
bit, N.J.
South. American Rheu-
matic Cure ()Urea in
*ci De.ye.
' Solornbn Woodworth,. of Hope-
well, Hill, MEI., is rescued from a
deplerablyhelpiss condition, induced
, by tlux agonies of rheumatism. Mr.
Woodworth had contracted rheuma-
tism of ,the severest form and in a
• very shbtt timewas incapacitated for ,
work• -•for weeks he could get no rest
-altered the most violent pains in his
arms and shoulders -grew viorsearici
fdt he could not nee,•so terrible were
his sufferings -his arms became
'teddy helpless. tle .began qaung
South AnTerican Rheumatic' Cure-.
after the second doe he experienced
' gtiat relief and at the end of 'three
-Ilbt!very vestigeot the_Pain_WAL
gon the use of his hand an&arna
retu &gradually and he feels alto-
gether like a new man and today re -
j oices,in a cure which he proclaims
llama a miracle. South American
Rheumatic Cure cures Ini to 3 days
every form of rheumatism and neu-
ralgia.. Do not suffer longer -it will
relieve in six hours.
South. American Nervine soothes
the nerves and cures all fonas of nee-.
• vousness. ,
• South. American Kidney Cure
cures only kidney diseases -relieves
My head beetle.* full of mire d *het
A time to heirbegan f put use of
AV WI Urn VroOlt go 6.1 the
alittrVitV
• Por 'sale b3r Watts -8sIfo , Clinton
retty Foot
Goes it Long'. Way
• • Tweet to see Granby" on the
belie* then 1 knot "Mt mit
pttips.
•
But what is the use of a pretty
foot, in this country in the *inter
time, if you do not have a perfect
fitting Riibber or Overshoo.
Now, this inay be 'news .to you,
but you will find it to be a fact;
there is only one .make of Rub-
bers and Overshoes, in this, emu -
try, that are right upto-datioju
fit, finish, quality and durability
and they are the ,
ranby Rubbers
. and 017,,gliSH04$
thin, light, comfortableExtra thick at ballqind heel.
"GROBY ROBERS WEAR LIKEIRON." •
ONE, OIVES RELIEF:
Don t Spenda Dollar
for r
Medicine:
-until- you have tried
You tau buy then. hi the paper s -cent cartons
Ten Tabules for Pive Cents.
1116So or! 15 indite atee•Pb,t6 0,41004'000MA treO•st thansad to s low Set*
If you don't find this sort of
Ripans Tabules
At the Druggist's
„
.stott Inv* cents to Tule atrAto cameo, commay, No.**
*IMO St., 4110 Itotk, out they will be seat to you by mak Or *
14 wont w I bit wiled lot aft OWL The deuces ere ten to
our tlikt Ai gullet ere tho wuy ow:lithe you heed.
•
„
. • '