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The Clinton New Era, 1898-06-03, Page 4.7m1ie 3, 1898 'EEE CLNTON NEW ERA NEW MAN. Paine's Celery Com- pound . Gave Him a Fresh Existence. He Had Endured Years of Misery and Agony. lad Given Up All Hop and Expected to Die. it is a Medicine for Your, Poor Sum rer. ^'sem,•--�' You Cannot Be Disappointed if You Use Paine's Celery Compound. WELLS & RICHARDSON CO., DEAR Sine.—I can conscientiously recom- Inend Paine's Celery Compound to all who may be suffering from dyspepsia and liver trouble. For years, while living in Black Brook, I suffered from a complication of troubles, and was so bad with dyspepsia , that I could not touch a morsel of food. I found it difficult to sleep, and wbat little I ..did get was often broken with horrid dreams. Intense suffering from liver com- plaint added to my load of agony;I also had 4izziness, pains in the bank, ani was pale, haggard and despondent. I kept doctoring and dosing without de• riving the slightest benefit, and finally gave up aI1 hope of getting well. One day my daughter, who had read of the wonderful cure by Paine'd Celery Compound, begged me to try one bottle of the medicine. I told 'icer it was no use to throw away money,but she pleaded so hard that to please her f bought a bottle, and before it was used up I felt better. Encouraged so much I contin- ned with the medicine and improved eve.y ,,.da. am now cured, thanks to Paine's Celery Compound. You cannot wonder that I con - 'aider Paine's Celery Compound the, great• est medical discovery in the world. •I urge •all who are suffering to try this grand med- .]p'ne and test its virtues. Fours very truly, C13Aaaga COMEAU, Neguac, N. B. THE INNER EARTH. It .Ia [slowing With Heat and Is as Hard • as Rock. the haat. of the it i�a li~efl� b61tdiii tame ... . ,. inner, gtiit bh ti, td, it When Tite �tiielail6 li lw v o d• uta ` oi6�whi �� A ii, , athered frail! trio 6ioud1l a to tiro fluid :slate—fluid by heat. For a time this mass was throughout glowing with heat, after the manner of the sun, but in time the �• enter -part yielded up its caloric to the cold epaoes•of.the sky and became frozen. Un• 'der these conditions we should confidently <;texpegt that in going downward the amount i':ef the increase would grow less for each aiaile in depth until beyond a hundred or o miles theain In temperature would be, very slow all the way to •tle center. ,igne the central part "cf Ohlglrhgret It tbtigli probali'Ty at it' higher >te 1 pereture than we can produoe by our arts, may not ba anything like as hot as would be the • :;ease if the gain noted in our mines were 'ndontinued down to the middle point. • The. quantity of the earth's beat is a uratter of great importance, for on tbe oon- tinuance of the outflow of the heat depends that shrinking of the sphere which uplifts the continents and the mountains, and so '''keeps the land from disappearing before the aotfon,of.the rain and the waves which race ever wearing them away. If the heat •Should oease to go forth from the bot ren- al parts of the 'globe, these agents of de- et1911oukt soot: seduce its surface to le ,wstate of a universoceaa tong ago, when the evidenoe that the earth was excessively hot within was un- gorgtood, ito Ao to bo generally belfevet hat the greatst part of the MEV W&b :ten—n thin crust, perhaps less than 100 miles in thickness, floating as a frozen •• Coating on a fiery sea. Of late evidence/me ti""'`-urp „rul`ted to show that the interior of ,the globe 'must be as rigid as, ordinary hard rock and may be as rigid as steel.— .Professor Shaler in Youth's Companion. Biemarok and the English. I can well remember the impression I always carried away when the subject of ingland has cropped up in conversation ' WW1 Germany's groat ex•ohancellor. Hav- Ing previously been fairly well acquainted withthe unfriendly pert English states- :;.,.lmanship had often played in its dealings •with Bismarck, the even violent—at times personally offensive—language used by *oro than one English dlplofnatist in his ~publliabed reminiscences with regard to WW1 I should not have been surprised to hepar Prince Bismarck give vent to some i trohg expressions in return. But, al- thotigh I was present on several ocoaslone yvlielt.the prince frankly conversed a`Glii Egglaxid grit; the English—sometimeg be- rofp Qom axy, iet othei Clines Wheni wive cn.ril to a Sue with b• hn in tl.e:+ -A rr uoP `t vjsrriiii—I cannot recollect ono sirtgle'word 1wltioh betrayed the faintest suspicion of iSilks or bitterness on bis part. On the nary-, it' has often struck mo with s. s• a ;ziosthat after what Bismarok's irritable %let'4!t :s system must have suffered from ttltno to time at hands which worn deoid- ..dll' .to he should still retain suoh lit largo' amount of good natured—I had al- inoiit; said extravagant -appreciation of 'rringiatnd and tbo English.—Sidney Whit - *Mn An "Harper's Magazine. 'OM Si Millward, travelling freight plltof•t.hitC.T'.R., died at. Montreal, t e r'esttlt Of a bicycle accident. A KNOWING DUG THE TRUTHFUL TALE OF A MOST MARVELOUS CANINE. Disaster Came to Wag When He Tried to Ring the Bell on a Batch of Chestnuts That Sprung re S e p g ws New Stories at a Hotel Men's Dinner. Colonel John McGillioudy, the veteran hotel clerk of Pittsburg, at a repent con- vention made the assertion that one well trained dog was of more value than four bellboys in a properly conducted hotel. "Fur 40 years and more," continued Colonel MoGillleudy, "I've stood behind the desks of hotels all over this country, and during ten of these years I drew a sal- ary for my dog Wag as well as for myself. Ile was left over in Wilkesbarre, Pa., by a circus troop, Lind when he found.that he was deserted he naturally went to the ho- tel where I was. Our hotel got most of the theatrical business in those days, and that dog knew it. He was a dirty white bull, with a stumpy tail, a scarred face, bloodshot eyes and the remains of a re- markably fine set of teeth. It was a warm afternoon, and I was dozing in an easy chair behind the desk when I was awaken- ed by a loud bark. I looked up and, stick- ing above the level of the desk, was a dog's head. Two bloodshot eyes glared at me, and a pair of dirty foro paws rested on the register. We had suffered from a mad dog scare, and I was sure that the animal in front of me oould not bo sane. I jumped out of my chair, and as I did so the dog sprang on the desk, Ho looked me over critically and then wagged his tail. The relief was great. I coaxed him down from the desk, gave hila something to eat, and from that moment wo were fust friends. "It was quite by accident that Wag de- veloped his greatest usefulness. I taught him a lot of tricks that any dog can learn, such as growling and showing his ugly teeth when strangers asked mo to cash checks, watching the dining room door at mealtimes to make surd that only guests entered, and even running errands in re- sponse to calls. For this last work I fitted a email slate around his neck, on which was printed, 'What do you want?' A pen- cil was attached to it. When a man rung for a bellboy, I would say to Wag: " 'Go to room 20 and get the gentle- man's order, Wag.' "Away be would go, and I never knew him to make a mistake. He made himself very useful in these ways, but, as I said before, it was purely by accident that his greatest usefulness cane abort. Wag was like a puppy in ono characteristic. His appetite was large, and he would swallow anything that he could get intohismouth. ; I kept on my desk in the office a small but powerful alarm clock, so that when I was on night duty and happened to take a nap I might be aroused in time to Call up such guests as intended to go on the early • trains. Wag watched that olook hungrily for the first two woaks that he was with me. The alarm boll annoyed bite. One morning when it rang out Wag, who had been sleeping near the stove, jumped up, • mage a bound eta the yit's1 gndl before I Could prevent it, swallowed the clock. That night I was on duty. Before falling into a light sleep that should carry me through to the time when it was my duty to arouse the guests I noticed that Wag " .nniinna hhnt wet') btfili1 i11fi0tteh a lot o, i toped himself put 0n now to me. >=I0 etre his back and wound his feet around in the air much as a gymnast dons when he is balancing a barrel on his feet. I was tired, and I fell asleep without troubling myself much about. the dog. I cvas aroused by the familiar sound of my alarm bell. This sound came from the floor, and I looked down. Thorn was''Vag standing up ans looking dt me knowingly. The rl-uging 1 came from his stomach. Wag winked one of his red oyes at tae, and when the ring• Ing stopped he stretched himself out and went to sleep again, "NoW, yeti fellows may not believe this, and I wouldn't if I had not seen the thing myself. That dog, with almost human in- telligence, had discovered a way of wind- ing up that °look by stretching himself out on bis back and waving his feet in the air. You see, it was a clook with a regular key attachment on the back. On the fol- lowing night I saw Wag go through his peculiar motions, _end at tb-e,proper hour. the neat•morning the alarm rang out at the regular time. Then I knew that I had a dog that vane worth while. Wag knew it, too, and his new importance made him very dignified. I trained him so that it , wasn't neoessary for me to get up in the mojoing. Wag wquld wind the clook up every night, and when in the morning be heard the admonitory oliok inside which gave warning that the alarm would ring t upstairs - e� !note he would trot �nh am and, as the alarm rang, walk up and down in front of the rooms ocoupled by early guests. You don't know how many hours' sleep that dog saved me. He went with me from one hotel to another, and he was such a curiosity that I brought him to a hotel men's dinner 1n this city. Every one petted him and fed him, and Wag was on his good behavior. He listened patiently to all the speeches until Mr. Simeon Ford began telling new stories. Then Wag•got clown on his bank and began waving his feet. He was at the other end of the room from where I was seated. I knew, of course, that ho was merely winding up the 1 r nam but the waiters didn't. They thought that he was having a fit. Before 1 could interfere two of them grabbed him and bustled him out of the room just as the bell begun to ring. They threw him into tho street, and I haven't seen him since, but I can toll"— At this paint the presiding officer pound- ed with his gavel to indloate that Colonel Ne011tleudy's time had expired.—Now York bun. Euphonic Spelling, A gehtleinird CI served a letter In whioh Wens these Words: "Not flndi.ng ]frown as from, I delivered your mesog to his qt." The gentleman, finding it bad spelling and therefore not very intelligible, calltld hie lady to help him read it. Between thorn they picked out the meaning of all but the "yt," which they could not under- stand. The lady proposed calling her chambermaid, "because Betty," says she, "has the best knack at reading bad spell - Ing of any one I know." Betty canto and was surprised that neither sir nor madam could toll what "yf" was. "Why," says she, "'yf' spells wife. What else can it spell? .And indeed It is a much shorter method of spoiling wife than 'double you- i•f•e.,' which in reality spell doubleyfey." —New York Ledger. Little Tyrant. Little 8 -year old Mabel went out for e Walk with her father one morning, and as they started to return her father asked, "Shall wo walk back, Mabel, on, take a street ear?" "I'd Aker walk," she replied, "if 'ctt will tortor —Chionge Novae Tormenting "I suffered for years with tetter. On arising my hands were stiff and my fin- gers crooked. They would crack all over and the blood would run from them. The doctor ordered me to give up work. Then a friend said, 'Try AYER'S SAR- SAPARILLA.' I took in all eight bottles, which completely healed me." Mrs. W. SLOAN, Royersford, Pa. Tetter. CORNELL'S CURIOUS ORGAN. Instrument Over Whloh'the Most Skillful Organist Might Balk. An organ which the leading organist of New York oould not play is now being used by professors of Cornell college. This organ is not, as might be supposed, out of tune. It is because it is in perfect tune that it differs so radically from all ordi- nary organs. • The Cornell organ was invented by Von Helmholtz, and it contains a purely math- ematical scale., It is made for the compo- sition of °herds suoh as are not to be ob- tained on an ordinary instrument and is used to study the vibration of notes and of what tones an organ note is made. Every tone In music 1s to be found on this organ. For instance, what are known as sharps and fiats on a piano are not really sharps and fiats, C sharp and D fiat are struck on tbo same blank key, but strictly speaking that black key is neither. It is a note or tone situated midway between C sharp and D fiat. If both of the latter were on the piano, however, the difference between then is so slight that it would confuse the player. So a compromise is made, and the two are blended, or rathor the tone mid- way between them is used. But in Cornell the organ contains keys for every note'ln the scale, no matter how fine the grad,tiou. With it students can see just how a note on the organ is built up. Certain notes on the organ aro made up of certain other notes. On the ordinary piano you would not be ablo to illustrate what these notes aro. You would need the true sharps and fiats in order to compose the notes. The overtones on the domestic instrument would be quite different. The pure fifth, which can here be accurately denoted, is very much curtailed on the piano. Used in connection with this organ is a complete set of resonators, or tuning forks. In order to find out how many resonations are contained in a given note it is only necessary to strike that note. Those forks which resound in sympathy with it are sure to be included in the :make up of the note. The silent ones are not included in it.—Philadelphia Inquirer. The things that pcotle ace are inside of them and not outside. No two people see the Basle thing exactly alike. One woman may look out at a beautiful landscape and see all the beauty and restfulness and grander:: that tbe:e ii in it, Another one etll leek Out a' the same scene and see nothing. Th., man who is ptrfectlp and vigor ni enjoys life to 'the fall, Dr, Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery makes people well. There isn't anything miracu- loa8'abont i4—it is the meet naturad thing In 1•>vd world. It simply puts the digestive organs, the stomach, the liver, the bowels, in perfect order• and thereby makes the blood pure and ri3h. All diseases live and thrive on impure blood. Keep a stream of pure, rich, rid blood flowing into a diseased sjot, and the disease will not stay, A ]non lives on rich, pure blood; disease a'es on it. Dr. Pi'•roe's Go1rin .uedioal Discovery mates pure, rich blood. Send 31 cents in one -cent stamps, to World's Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y., and receive Dr. Pierce's 1008 page "Common Sense Medical Adviser," profusely illus- trated. The pastor of a St. Louis (Mich.) Church astonished his congregation on Sunday last by making this annbunce- ment: "Remember our quarterly meeting next Sunday. The Lord will be with us during the morning service and the presiding elder in the even- ing." A botanist, insists that many ne- glected American weeds are good to eat. The Lender young shoots of milk- weed are said to be as delicate as as- paragus. with similar valuable proper- ties. Pigweed is related to beets and epinoeb, The nettle is well flavored, though somewhat coarse and sti ingy, which argues that the donkey may be much more of an epicure than is supposed. It is suggested that every weed has an honest value it it could only be discovered. PAIN IN THE HEART. Too serious a condition to neglect. A Guelph harness maker tells how he was cured. Mr. Wm. Dyson, the well known saddler and harness maker of Guelph Ont„ makes Ihs following statement: "i heartily rs- commend Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills to anyone suffering from nervousness and heart trouble. They are a splendid medioine for such complaints. For a long time I was afflicted With ner~votlaness and pain in any heart, which was especially severs at night, often destroying my res These pills oured me and invigorated my !nervous system which is now strong Itnd healthy, They restored restful sleep besides removing the distressing heart pains *hlok formerly gave me so mnoh anxiety tiind tronlrle.'r Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills iiO eta. 11- .,rhos for 0 25,: poli by druggists or sent by mail. 'Li. Milburn d: Co., Toronto, Out. 'LaairLi'ddr Pills eerie Constipation. Heart Weakness. Must be Treated in Time or Ends in certain Death. Some of the Symptoms are Palpitation Af- ter Slight Exertion, Sometimes Severe Pains, Dizziness and Fainting,Spella—It Can Be Cured. From the Echo, Platteville, Ont. Tho Echo has read and has published many statements from people who have been cured of various ailments by the time- ly and judicious use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People, but never before have we had such personally convincing proof of their efficacy as in the eaee of Mre George Tay for, who with her husband and family rt side in this village. To an Echo reporter Mrs, Taylor gave the following history of her Dinette and cure, and asked it to be giv- en the widest publicity, so that others might be benefitted: "1 am 82 years of age," said Mra Taylor, "and in 1885 my husband and myself were living on a farm in Petth county, and it was there I was first taken sick. The doctor who was called in said I was suffering from heart trouble, due to nervous debility. All his remedies proved of no avail, and I steadily grew worse. The doctor advised a change, and we moved to Moncton, Ont. Here I put myself under the charge cf another physician, but with no better results. At the least exertion my heart would palpitate violently. f was frequently overcome with dizziness and fainting tits. While iu these my limbs would become cold, and often my husband thought I was dying. I tried several med- icines advertised to cure troubles like mine, but with no better results,and I did not ex- pect to recover, in fact I often thought it would be better if the end Dame, for my life was one of misery. We Moved back to the farm, and then one day I read the state- ment of a -lady who had been cured of sim- ilar trouble by the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pilie, so 1 said to my husband that I would try this medicine and it seemed to me that it WAS my last chance. Before the first box was fiuished I felt an improvement in my appetite and felt that this was a hope• fel sign. By the time I bad used three boxes more may trouble seemed to be entire• l v gone, and I have not felt a single recur- rence of the old symptoms. Since moving to Platteville I have used two boxes and they had the effect of toning up the system an 1 curing slight indispositions. To -day I am a well ttSoman and owe my life to Dr. YVilliam'e Piak Pills, and to me my restor- ation seems nothing short of a miracle. I wrs like one dead and brought back to life, and 1 cannot speak too highly of this val- uable medicine, or urge too strongly those who are.afhioted to give it a trial." it has been proved time and again that Dr. Williams' Pink Pills omit heart troubles, nervous debility, rheumatism, sciatica, St- Vitue' dance and stomach trouble. They make new blood and build up the nerves, restoring the glow of health to pale and sal. low faces. Be sure you get the genuine as there is no other medicine "as good as" or "jest as good as" Dr. Williams' Pink Pi11F. 1f your dealer does not have them they will ba sent p,.stpaid at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 by addressing the Dr. Wil- liam' Medicine Co., Brookville, Ont. Changing Pork to Fish. now does as Buddhist fisherman justify bis trade? By arguing, says Mr. Young, h on] that he does not kill his fish, but y draws it out of the watery aft@f';;� hr�' the fists dies a quite natural death. We know a bettor story than that of R•obglome Wears on tho eastern etesmabip 1i0 • N.,p oh ii ,,.. _.. .,.oueuunredurt eats perk, but yet& Moslem lascar has aoouirod a bolief 1p the transubstantiating values of sea water, so he hooks his chunk of pork to a line, tosses it overboard and, after a reverent pause, b,gins to haul in, hand over hand, to his nasal, slow chant: "Jao suer! Idhar ao macheol" which being interpreted moans: "Away pig! Come along, fish!" Experi- erlce has proved the practical efficacy of this rite.—London News. She Might. "There is one thing you don't have to do anyhow," growled Mr. Wipedunks through the lather that covered his face as ba proceeded to strop his razor. 'a You're always complaining about your hardships. You ought to be mighty thankful you haven't got a beard to bother you," "I dou't kuow about that," replied Mrs. Wippedunits. "If I was a beardesl iad-y, I believe I could make a bedsit iivitig for this family than you're making." -- Chicago Tribune. Lacks Prestige. "'Do you think Mrs. Dash will be elected pi isident of the Federation of the Federa- tion of the Federation?" "Mercy, no; she's never been to Eu- rope 1"—Chicago Record. In London certain policemen are re- quired to remain at certain listed sta- tions in various pelts of (he ci l y t hat have telephone connection, so they may be summoned instantly. PILE TERRORS SWEPT AWAY. Dr. Agnew's Ointment stands at the head ps reliever, healer and sore cure for Piles in all forms. One application will give coo• fort in a few minutes,and three toeix days' application according to directions will onre chronic oases. It relieves all itching and burning skin dieeasee in a day. 35 cents. Sold by Watts & Co. To Make a Mirror. In a new process for silvering glass it is practicable to give a tine polish to the sil- ver after it le spread on the glass. Tbis is accomplished by means of two solutions which must be prepared with great care inasmuch as delleaoy of treatment is re- quired. To a silver nitrate solution is added, drop by drop, sufficient ammonia to redissolve the original precipitate, cau- tion being observed to avoid an exoess. Afterward enough distilled water is added to make the liquid measure one liter. A second solution is prepared containing 10 per cent of formaldehyde. The mirror maker soloists his plate of glass and, after polishing it deftly with rouge and chamois skin, wipes it perfectly dry and clean. Then a rapid mixture is made of two parts of the silver nitrate solution and one part of the formaldehyde solution, this mixture being poured evenly on the glass. From 10 to 15 minutes will be required for this application to be completed, and then the plate may be washed with water and al- lowed to dry. In the production of an ordinary mirror the dull upper side is treated to a ooating of varnish, but if the silver side is the one to be used, as in op- tical instruments, the layer of silver is to be polished with tine rouge. The attempts to make mirrors of tin amalgam, experts say, have not yielded satisfootury resulttl. —New York Times. A Furniture Polish. One of the most satisfaotory polishes is also the simplest—namely, a mixture of linseed oil and vinegar, kept in a well corked bottle and shaken before use. The furniture must be dusted first; then the mixture can be applied over a small sur- face, polishing quickly with old silk raga. This somewhat primitive but efficacious compound bas a double advantage—it does not form a cake over the wood even with long use, which cake invariably pro- duces cranks, and the combined o11 and vinegar removes many stains and grease marks that ordinary polishes do not touoh. —Exchange. Trustful. "Do you consider Mittimus to be de- pendod upon?" "I would trust him with millions." "But you haven't the millions." "I know. Perhaps that is the reason why 1 would trust him with them."—Bos- ton Transcript. A medical authority asserts that death caused by a fall from a great height is ab- solutely painless. The mind aots very rap- idly for a time, then unconsciousness en- sues. There are in the southern part of South Carolina•oattle ranBes as large as many in the groat west, covered with cattle as wild as any that ever roamed over the prairies. Robert Cornwall, a fanner living in the eastern part of Barton County,Mo, has made use of nature's possibilities to outwit one of the farmers' greatest pests. He has succeeded in propa- gati,ig a species of potato, which thrives and develops without the aid of the sun's rays, sends outno stem or vine, and grows entirely beneath the surface, using the energy copeumed by ordinary potatoes in producing "tope" to further the tubers. DR. r vin •• e NORWAY PINE SYRUP r Heals and Soothes the delicate tissues of the Throat and Lungs. .:. CURING ... COUGHS, COLDS, BRONCHITIS, ASTFIlVIAiftiOAIISENESS, SORE THROAT, INFLUENZA, and PAIN IN THE CHEST. EASY TO TAKE. SURE TO CURE. - vf�Cray's -, 1 ,• IP�t � �f.f4, t.,u4:Syrup 1 -.;:gw_.A of Red Por Coughs, Spruce Coltldists, BroSorg n um - G , 'throat, etc. KERRY, WATSON • CO., recce, MONTrlreL. ACiliKENITA A OP: DELIGHTFUL CIGAR Yhat Makes P Foveie rdY one who Tries it of 1- J.FiATTRAv r, C° MONTREAL. WAGGONS AND BUGGIES We Keep in Stock and make to order Waggon and Buggies of all kinds. F. RIIMB I II nn,m nmututltlmnnnmIs8WmhtIuI II nntmnnellm, • (t9 ()o ))Rocs) nmm11ununnlnuunt.,nmulllamlamltllltlllltatmn,m111I11llumllll u muni mnnmasrus nn,uwmnumnulmnuanamaltnnmm�[ egettittaPreparatiouforAs- tlinilatiogaeroodandRog ula- I the Stomachs andBowe7sraf INFANTS t(IIIL]DIUEN PrfmiotesDigestionleheerful-` fiess Qpdltest.Gvntaft1s11elther pppium,MorphMtC•nor �Titteral. bow a OT IC MUERere OttnirtrvilW712 I'Ln�p,>1}l. l i'p c tC - dmna ifeeei • , y,Q'Lie.* Qg 'ecl•''flemedy forConslipa- tion, Bour•6toutach,Diarrlloea, Worms ,CQnvulsions.,Feverish- nessrandLossoF SLEEP. ' 'seitSi nature of '1147('M 1+T EW YORK. " A r b-,, rxi o rr.(111T. d ,35I3a r 3SC "ITS•. EXACT COPY: OF WRAPPER. A • [ - S1313 THAT THE FAC -SIMILE SIGNATURE —OF— IS • ON THE WRAPPER OF EVERY BOTTT •T1 OF CASTOR1A Castello is put up in one -size bottles only. It -is not sold in bulk, Don't allow anyone to sell yon anything else on the plea or promise that it is "just as good" and "will answer every pur- pose,' Bee that you get O -A -B -T -O -R -I -A. The re- signature ,.I fe on signature ��%`CA�w�. every of • wrapper. Clinton Sash,Doorl BlindPactory S. S. COOPER • • PROPRIETOR, General Builder and Contractor. • This factory is the largest in the county, and bas the very latest improved ma- chinery, capable of doing work on the shortest notice. We carry an extensive and reliable stock and prepared plans, and give estimates for and build all °lass- es of buildings on short notice and on the closest prices All work is supervis- ed in a mechanical way and satisfaction guaranteed. We sell all kinds of in. terior and exterior material. Lumber Lath, Shingles, Lisle, Sash, Doors, Blinds, Etc Agent for the Celebrated GRAYBILL SCHOOL DESK, manufaotnted ataterl W oo Call and get prices and estimates before placing your orders Tr 1898 New Dried Fruits 189 RAISINS—Maiaga, Valencia, Sultans., CURRANTS California Prunes and Elime Figs. CROSSE & BLACKWELL PEELS', Lemon, Orange and Citron. NUTS—Filberts, S. S. Almonds and Walnuts. Ccoking Figs for 543 a pound NICE, OLD RAISINS for 5o a pound. Headquarters for Teas, Sugars, Crockery, Glassware and Lamps. J. W. IRWIN, - - - - Clinton_ Robson' S owfiake MAKING POWDER TE absolutely Pure. Is Canadian. Is Economical. Is a High Grade e fewer eggs. Powder. With it you can use lees shortening. You can u a Yon will find it equal if not superior to many 50o Baking lPowders. 1 lb. can 25c. oleo buy our Mocha and Java Blend Coffee, Monsoon, Blue Ribbon and Standard Teas. N. ROBSON'S CASH GROCERY cess Goods Dress Lengths, $4, $4.50, $5.00, All newest shades, no two alike... Plain and Figured Lustres, 25c. to 75c. per General nice lines of Dress Goods from 26c. per yard. ats. aSa s'