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The Clinton New Era, 1898-06-17, Page 6
'J>ane 17, 1898 THE CLINTON NEW ERA TOYS OF THE POOR. dears of Agony An Easy andel yheeaAW ay by ensu. Which You andSuffering Result of Kidney and Female Com- plaints Paine's Celery Compound • Gives Mrs Stone a New Life She Strongly Recommends the - Medicine that Banished Her Troubles Value's Celery compound the Only True Cure for Kidney Disease i9srne&RICHARDSON Co., • tilentle•uen: -For more than twelve years Iwas afflicted with kidney, female and atomaoh troubles, and had been attended by five doctors, and tried medioine after :asedioine without any good results, My nufferinge a year ago from the kidneys and :':,'':atomach were dreadful. I was in suob a 'state that I could not live, and concluded 'there was no use trying other medicines. Botvever, I was advisee to try Paine's R;eljelery Compound. Before I had finished the first bottle 1 had itnpro'ved very much, ••yand after the use of a few more bottles I ag not been so well for many years, and Mn now altogether a different person. Tho ,intieof Paine'6 Celery Compound also ban. • sited my nervousness. I cm therefore -recommend Paine's Celery Compound to Any one suffering from kidney, female and stomaoh troubles. Yours truly, Mss GEO. STONE Eganville, Ont. I ani going to show you an innocent pleasure. There are so few amusements that are not criminal or sinful! When you leave the house in the morn- ing with the fixed intention of loafing in the streets, fillyour pockets with cheap toys -a jumping jack, a monkey on a stick, the athletic skeleton, a blacksmith ham% mering, a cat beating a drum, a horse whose tail is a whistle -and give them to the children playing in the gutter or watching a procession or a hand organ or tending a baby. Their eyes will start out of their heads. At first they will not dare to take them; they will be suspicious; then their hands will grab the gift, and they will run away like unto oats who wish to eat afar off the piece you gave them, for they have learned to beware of men. Behind the grated gate of a large gar- den at the end of which appeared the whiteness of a country house splendid in the sun. a handsome child was standing, dressed with coquettish simplicity. Luxury, freedom from caro, the habit- ual sight of wealth, give such beauty to these children that you would believe there to be made of other dough than that which forms the children of moderate circum• stances or poverty. By his side on the grass was a costly plaything as spick and span as its owner, varnished, gilded, clothed in a purple robe, covered with plumes and glass beads. But the child paid no attenrtion to his favorite plaything. This is what he was looking at: On the other side of the gate in the road among thistles and nettles there was an- other child, dirty, pitiful, face smooched with soot, a pariah brat. An impartial eye would discover his beauty if, as the eye of a connoisseur divines an ideal pic- ture under a coating of coach varnish, he should clean it of the disgusting oxidation of extreme poverty. Though the symbolical barrier separat- ing two worlds, the open road and the country house, the poor child showed to the rich child his own plaything, which the latter examined greedily as a rare and unknown thing. Now, this toy, which the dirty urchin teased, shook about an. . •ked at in a wired box, was a live rat. 'Ihe parents, through economy no d. ibt •ad taken this plaything from life itself. And the two children laughed in broth- erly fashion, and their tenth were of an equal whiteness Hooded Snakes. Dr, Stradling throws some interesting . lght on the hooded snake: "The hoods of ;nukes wore unquestionably intended by nature to not as weapons of intimidation, , Cr when suddenly opened, as they are t'eltiring theexcitement of a contest, these lye their owners an apparent and forini- adOe enlargement. But the hoods which FUN WITH "DUTCH TEARS." A Little Experiment of Interest Which Almost Any One Can Perform. "It is a great wonder to me," said an old chemist in his laboratory the other day, "why more boys do not take up chem- ical experiments as an amusement. Why, I can do things with the common mate- rials of everyday life which really seem to be more magical to the uninitiated than •bave been so useful at some period in any of the wonders performed by magi- sinake history have now become so en- .....pians on the public stage. ' auged. as to tend toward the extinction of "Now, there aro those curious little bub- ^'thefr owners, just as the overdevelopment bles of glass known variously as `Prince !R; the tusks of prehistoric, animals led Rupert's drops' and as 'Dutch tears.' Ap- „stmight'to their destruction. parently they are merely little globules of , `.`During a fight the hooded snake in the glass with elongated tails, made by heat - 'of striking his foe suffers from the out- ing a small glass rod in aflame and allow - retched and weighty hood -he overbal- big the molten drops to fall into water. *noes himself and topples forward. His After they have cooled you may pound the •i'gallant, the mongoose and some birdsthick part with a hammer or mallet, yet *tally, seizes him when prostrate, and 1 you cannot break them. On the other tijiping up the back of the neck speedily I hand, if you break a little piece off their tabes him. I tails or touch any part of them with a ;y.:;$e tells ail amusing story of a cobra ! quartz crystal, they will disappear into the tinting his head into a biscuit tin in surrounding atmosphere quicker than *arch of a mouse regaling itself on lnaca- snow will melt on a hot fire. To the per- oQns. The rough sides of the tin irritated son who dons not know the reason the '1 hl cobra so that he involuntarily dilated ' performance is most astonishing. %g;hood and was consequently unable to ! "And yet it is all very simple. It is due remove his head from his tin prison. 1 to what is known as surface cohesion. Pound next morning in this awkward ' Glass when heated to a molten state has TRICKS ON THE I t tHURY. Attempts to Cheat t nele Sam Through the Redemption Division. Many attempts have been ado to cheat the United States treasury through its re- demption division, so called, the division which has to do with redeeming partially destroyed government currency. Not long agog doctor in Alabama sent to the redemption division ono -half of a $10 bill, accompanied by an affidavit say- ing that while on a ;`spree" he had used the other half to light a cigar. The half which he forwarded was nicely charred along the inner edge, and the story would have been very plausible if the redemption division had not received within 24 hours from an Alabama bank the other half of the same note. The theory of the treasury officials was that while more or less intoxicated the doctor had struggled for the possession of the bill with some one, who had wrested half of it from him; that the despoiler had turned the half into the bank and received $5 for it; that the doctor, recovering his senses, had found the other half in his pocket, and, not wishing to lose his money, had conceived the plan of singeing the edge of the note and saying that the other half had been destroyed. So he com- mitted perjury in an attempt to rob Uncle Sam of $5. A short time ago a man in Chicago sent an affidavit to the treasury accompanying the singed half of two $20 bilis and one $10 bill. This affidavit was typewritten and in perfect form. It stated that the de- ponent was a commercial traveler; that after returning from a journey he had been cleaning out his traveling bag, when in- advertently ho had thrown into the fire an envelope containing $50 in bills; that, in accordance with section so-and-so of the law of such a date, ho would like to have the money restored to him, eto. The clerk who brought this document to Mr. Relyea commented on its lucidity and completeness. "Tho story seems unnatural," said Mr. Relyea. "Hold up the claim for a time." Twenty-four hours later a big shipment of mutilated currency canto from the sub - treasury at Chicago. Mr. Relyea asked if there were any half notes in the shipment. In four or five minutes n clerk brought him the missing halves of the bills which the Chicago man had sent in. The attempt to defraud was plain. The matter was put at once into the hands of the secret service bureau. An agent sent to Chicago. The young man vSh had made the affidavit was put ander ar- rest, and the story of his crime came out. He was of decent family, but had fallen into bad company and had been persuad- ed to attempt the fraud by older compan- ions. They furnished the money and pre- pared the affidavit. They cut the bills in halves, and for ono half of them obtained $25. The other half they singed and at- tached to his affidavit. When he was ar- rested, they fled The gross profit of the swindle could not havewe been more than 62r , and intry try- ing to cheat the government out of that amount the young man forfeited his lib- erty for a year and a half.- edioament, he was safely and quickly , lgpatched.-Ludgate..• The Longevity of Canned rood. x•-It°Is only fair to state that tinned meat Ain holds the reoord for longevity. Wit- t1tss•. the case of that preserved mutton vouched for by Dr. Letheby in his Cantor lecture, which had been tinned 44 years •m�Yid was still in condition at the end of, that time. Those tins had an adventurous vareer. In 1824 they were wrecked in the gold ship Fury and east ashore with other ,stores on the beach at Prince's inlet. They were found by Sir John Ross eight s afterward in a state of perfect pres- srvation, having passed through alarming ¢ • ;Variations of temperature annually -from tDA•'degrees below zero to 80 degrees above -and withstood the attacks of savage t ietasts, perhaps of savage men. For 18 'vans more they lay there broiled and fro- •sen alternately; then her majesty's ship In- vcstigator came upon the scene, and still "`- ' #ho contents were in good condition. ' For ?,lyieariy a quarter of a century they had "•,+withstood the climatio rigors and, as was f hilt natural, some of them were brought lioiueagain, where they lived on in honor - :l, old age till they were brought under the notice of Dr. Letheby.-Good Words. Old Age. ' "Sir George Lewis held it to be imposei- Ible for any ono to reach 110. Hardly any .,,:;one, he contended, ever lives to be 100. Professor Owen and others asserted that AO one has ever beep proved to be over 104 ears,old. Lack of accurate information ;''and mendacity, according to Dr. Kirin, is 'Vie explanation of the greater number of cefetitonarians being reported from the ig- norant classes. Education and comfort are not, in his view, unfavorable to long Rife, but on the contrary tend to protract IE The excesses of the rich do no doubt ,nhorten their lives, but it is the belief of ;µticexperts, says Dr. Kain, "that cente- narians aro proportionately more limner - line in the higher social strata than in tho toyer.” Statistics as to tho effect of oc- cupatlon on longevity concur to show that 'Mai of thought are commonly long livers. naturally reached a very high temperature, xithd when -the drops of melted, glass,are 51 - lowed to fall into the cold water the sud- den change produces stress all over the surface of the drop which is really terrific. This stress, however, must be considered as a .whale. $4k'1'strong when taken all kogether, but it is exactly as though a piece of very thin rubber wits stretched over the surface of the glass. If you puno- tured the rubber, its haste to resume its normal oondition would pull ft off the glass. "So when you break off the tail of the drop or out through the film of very hard glass with a crystal its endeavor suddenly to resume its normal condition results in itis own destruction, and it breaks up into partioles which are really finer than the finest sand. It seems like a wonderful per- formance, but it is no more wonderful than many another which any youngster could perform if he would study even the simplest forms of ohemical action. Coughs and colds need not be endured; they can be cured, and that quickly. Many mixtures are tem- porary in effect, but Scott's Emulsion of Cod-liver Oil with Hypophosphites is a permanent remedy. The oil feeds the blood and warms the body ; the hypophosphites tone up the nerves; the glycerine soothes the inflamed throat and lungs. The combination cures., This may prevent serious lung troubles. Too Much Reform. Ltt`vyer-Well, aunty, what can I do for Aunt Ebony -I want a deevo'ce from trite htisban. "'What has he been doing?" Defin? Why, ho done got relig'n, an We A1i1't had a chicken on de table foh a Month. , Most Acute. She -Yes, it is the province of woman to suffer in silence. He -In silence? That must be suffer- ing indeed. • WERK, NERVOUS WOMEN Suffering from palpitation of the heart, dizzy or faint spells, watery blood, etc., can be readily cured. A Manitoba Lady Tells About Her Case. There is no need whatever for so many womento.lie the subject of faint spells, heart and nerve weakness, anaemia,' Cr any of those health destroying ailments peculiar to her sex. Mil- es �`' burn's Heart and Nerve alt,Pills regulate the heart X��,,�' 'y, beat and make it strong f and full, tone the nerves, enrich the blood, and relieve the pain and weakness from which so many women suffer. STRUCK WITH LIGHTNING Neatly describes the position of a bard or soft corn when Putnam's Painless Corn Ex• tractor is applied. It does its work so quick- ly and without pain that it seema magical in action. Try it, Recollect the name - Putnam's Painless Corn Extractor. Sold by all druggists and dealers everywhere. Australian Curiosities. There aro some curious things in central Australia. According to Professor Bald- win Spencer, Lake Amadous in the dry season is merely a sheet of salt. Ayers rock, about five smiles round, rises abrupt- ly fron>, the desert. Formerly vast rivers flowed here, and the diprotodoton, a Worn - batlike creature, worthy of its name and four thnes as largo as a kangaroo, flourish- ed on the plains. Now there are hardly any animals to be seen. The fish live in water holes of the hills until the floods wash them down to tho valleys. At the end of the wet season the water frogs fill themselves with water, roll themselves in the stud and lie low till the next Mins, v; hirh may not conte for two years. Mean- while the provident frog,like the "mousio" .of`Rohert Burns, may have the misfortune to furnish a drink to a thirsty black. Tho natives also get water from the roots of trees. They are in the "totem" stage and revere certain plants or animals which protect them, Men of ono group can only marry women from another single group. crippled me for years. T could not Welk.many physicians tried• hysicians with - i bell��lt. On the h advice of illlt, *lend"' 1 tried your medicine. b� 'wag Cat71otely cured by three bttleEl ib Agers 'rift► 9 l , ortol<" � iw 5oc. and *Leo; all druggists. SCOTT & BOW NE, Chemists, Toronto. A sh unese Cremation. The utmost magnificence characterized the cremation of the late Phra Cbaroew Rajathon. A couple of shadow plays and a marionette show were within the wet grounds, and on all sides hung the rich banners sent by friends of the deceased, inscribed with wishes for his future wel- fare. In one corner was a booth contain- ing the store of silver and other articles which were to be given to the visitors. Each of these on arrival was invited to dip into a black bag and withdraw a number corresponding to that on one of the articles in the booth, and the expenditure on these gifts must have been most lavish. In a pavilion facing the crematory refreshments wero served, and in another one could watch the crowd or later on witness the magnificent display of fireworks. At about 7 o'clock the fire arrived from the king, and shortly afterward H. R. H. Prince Bhanurangsecame as his majesty's representative to apply the first light to the funeral pyre. -Siam Observer. ' Mrs. Alex- ander Setter, of Pigeon Bluff, Man., writes an account of her case as follows: " I have great pleasure in giv- mg my experi- ence of Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills. For about Explained. y*pyl,..anative of this town?" asked A Bill of Lading. A bill of lading for slaves is a curiosity in its way. The following extract is from one dated Feb. 1, 1700: "Shipped, by the Grace of God, in good order and well con- ditioned, by James —, in and upon the good ship called the Mary Borough, where- of is master, under God, for his present voyage, Captain David Morton, and now riding at anchor at the Barr of Senegal, and by God's grace bound for Georgey, in South Carolina, to say, twenty-four prime slaves, six prime women slaves," eto. It ends with the pious wish that "God send the good ship to her desired port in safety. Amen." However Impious it may appear to us to associate the name of God with the in- iquitous traffic, still it was looked upon by many as a divine institution, directly sanctioned by the Bible. The famous slave trading captain John Newton, afterward to be the Rev. John Newton of Olney, hymn writer and friend of Cowper, did by no means see it to be his duty to change his profession immediately after his con- version, though he ultimately became an abolitionist. He carried on slave trading for years after he was a devout Christian, giving thanks in the Liverpool churches for the success of his last venture and im- ploring ,God's blessing on his next.- Chambers' Journal. :eaueler"2jt-'it 7i'e'sidenb of a sleepy little hamlet. m "AI a what?" "Are you a native of the town?"H alley?" "I asked if you were a native of this place?" At that moment his wife, tall and sal- low and gaunt, appeared at the open door of the cabin and, taking her pipe from be- tween her teeth, said acridly: "Ain't ye got no sense, Jim? He means wuz ye livin here when ye was born, or wuz ye born before ye begun livin here. Now answer him. -HarP er's Bazar. As Germane Se. the English. A London correspondent of a German paper says: "English diet affords an ex- ample of the antiquated mode of life in England. Nothing could be more primi- tive than the preparation of English dishes. They consist of a huge, fat piece of bul- lock, sheep or pig. If the meat is lean, as in poultry, fat is supplied by hunches of bacon. The motto of these conservative islanders is, 'What our forefathers did and flourished on is good enough for us.' " n,unnru,nuusm,mmimommnmimes umunuu,ns tt oo Mops), mnmmtumtmmumus,mmumm;nu mmmnuumawm,uumu y SEE THAT THE FAC—SIMILE SIGNATURE• etnl9W^'!ani! h,1u119•n4ln'• a•s!:n1nA'nmuun imntttninniinmtlit JtJegetobleP 1parationfor'As•- g theSttonwdls and.BoweLS Oi NYIINTS a�CHILI)RL N —OF---- Worn* s 1MMeshioe,Cheerftft- ine ad estkontdiwnelttier, O ,14orpitiite-aor sal. ©T'Mut IC °TIC. -tet4g IS ON THE Tactics of Pursued Deer. An Oxford county sportsman who is .much interested in the habits of wild game reports seeing three deer chased by dogs in the deep snow. It was impossible for them to run fast, and they adopted tactics that wore at once novel and practical. They were running single file. The first thing that attracted attention as unusual was the action of the loader, which stopped suddenly, jumped to one side, and lot the other two deer run by in the path he had` made. Very soon the now leader jumped out and let his followers run ahead as long as the leader could stand it to make the path in the deep snow. This was kept up until they went out of sight, and the sportsman bad learned something new. - •1. onnebco Journal. Blackguards Classified. An Irish crier, being ordered to clear the court, did so by this announcement, "Now, then, all ye blackguards that isn't lawyers must lave the coort. "-Law Notes. ppe e medy forCons1ipa- tiolta, a v 6tomach;Diarrlloea, Warms ,C ,riwlAstons,Feversgll- ness.andLOS5OF SLEEP. Proving it. "Keep up your courage, old man," said the passenger who was a good sailor to an- other who was leaning over the railing and paying tribute to Neptune. "Never mind rue," came the answer be- tween gasps. "I've always heard that it took -travel to bring out what there is in a man. Vac P' nature• of EW ''FOBS. WRAPPER 01' EVERY BOTTLE OF CASTORIA A: ;rr.t'aorelius. old 35 Dos.es. 735 CE \TS EXACT COPY OP WRAPPER. Cantona is put np in one -sire bottles only. It s 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," Air -Bee that you get 0 -A -8 -T -0 -R -I -A.. The iso- -‘444fsimile !a asignature°P0ry of • arepper. In the earlier periods of history the peo- ple had no other method of making bread than by roasting corn and beating it in • mortars, then wetting it and forming the mass into a coarse cake. The habits of ants are more like those of a man than are the habits pf any other of the lower animals. . stCer_., Cray's Syrup of Red Por Coughs, spruce Colds, Bron- chitis, Sore Gum throat, etc. iiia Y, WATSON • CO., IA t- Clinton Sash,Door BlindPactory S. S. COOPER =77- - PROPRIETOR, General Builder and Contractor. This faotory is the largest in the county, and has 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 class- es of buildings on short notice and on the closest prices Ail worts is supeis- V ed 111 a mechanical way and andexterior dattin guaranteed. We sell, all kinde of .4n- ma Lumber Lath, Shingles, Lime, Sash, Doors, Blinds,Ete Agent for the Celebrated GRAYBILL SCHOOL DESK, m nufactuledh at Waterloo. Call and get prides and estimates before planing you irdere 1898 New Dried Fru RAISINS -Malaga, Valencia, Sultans. CURRANTS California Prunes and Elime Figs. CROSSE & BLACKWELL PEELS, Lemon, Orange ,and Citron. - Almonds and Walnuts. Ccoking Figs for 5c a pound RAISINS for 5o a pound. Headqaarters for Crockery, Glassware and Lamps. WAGGONB AND BIIGGIES We Kee; in Stock and make to order Waggons and Buggies' of all kinds. NUTS -Filberts, S. S. NICE, OLD Teas, Sugars; J.. W. IRWIN, - Clinton F. RUMBAT1L - - CLINTON ° Mistaken Ideas of Cuba and the Navy ten years ',was troubled with throbbing and fluttering of the heart. I tried five doctors and several remedies but none of them did me much good. Lately I heard of Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills and bought two boxes. Before I started using them I could not do my house work and gave myself up to die, as I thought I would never be oared. Now I feel really splendid since taking the pills, do my work, enjoy my meals and feel as if there was some- thing in life worth living for." Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills, sold by all druggists at 50o. a box or 3 boxes for $1.25. T. Milburn & Co., Toronto, Ont. Laxa-Liver Pills Dore Biliousness Siok Headache, eConstipation Pi11 Perfeott..ys- Priee 26e. To the majority of people in this country the pressing and grave impor- tance which the Cuban qnestion as- sumed last winter came in the nature of a surprise, and the inquiry, "Why bas this suddenly become any business of our?" was on the lips of many. The fact that from the time of Jefferson our State Department has consistent- ly asserted the necessity of our serious consideration and constant watchful- ness over Cuba and the Cubans is not generally known; the now familiar expressions "intervention." "annexa - 1 A Mirror Effect. At the end of a narrow hall on the sec- ond floor of, a house a praln mirror about thn height of a door and the width of the hall spare was inserted in the wall. Over this, eti Ueu of n frdmo, was draped some red fish. net, stral;:ht folds hanging down on either F1do, wit an irregulnr tura nge- ment'1'tcross the top. Tho effect added to the width and length of tbo hall and eon- tributcd an attractive feature to the pas- sagoway . Ohildren Ory for 1111 ILII i{l�saar�+�.�uu i, nnii�+�.ruwr.aa■um.-.rll�l Iif►l TARTAN IIIIIII�IIIIIIII! I %uill� I �IIVI�_ I i_Ilil 1111111111111111111111111,140111111111 ICS` i IP' III ■. Ii I Illi` Ilii■I�i1I1111�IIIi11111S(IIlllllri�llll'.11�Illi 111111 i 5?ii ._,..... �..: _._....•_ _..,.-=.:iii ■11 ■PII ests of the Untted States in Cuba to constant peril, the unjust and often outrageous acts of the colonial govern- ment. sometimes involving our own citizens, the manner in which our complaints were invariably received at Madrid -these facts have for nearly a hundred years made Cuban affairs a fruitful source of dip'omatic quartets. A concise and unvarnished recital of these matters is contributed by Profes- sor Albert Bushnell Hart to the June number of HARPER'S MAGAZINE. "No one can study the Cuban ques- tion," he says, "without coming to strong convictions, but the impartial equilibrium of the historian is carefully preserved, and the result is a compre- hensive and scholarly summary of "A Cent ury of Cuban Diplomnt'cy," a re• liable and compact history of asuhject of the greatest current interest to all Americans. A cartoon, published recently in a New York newspaper, represented a Yankee sailor scowling at the delay which kept him from the attack on Cuba and exclaiming: "What is this 'ere ship 'Diplomacy?' Can she fight?" The bloodless warfare of diplomacy is now at last exchanged for the stirring work of real fighting, the national in- ce, est, is centred upon our forces on land and sea, and the United States navy has become the favorite theme of popular discussion. Unfamiliarity wit h the sea as a scene of action has given rise to a flood of misinformation and false theory, even in the halls of Congress, and it is of greatest impor- tance to the nation, in view of the rapidly growing strength and value of one navy, to be well informed on these matters. It is fortunate that in our naval officers we have a trained body of men, exceptionally expert in this branch of the science of war and na- tional defence, and none stands higher than Captain twin Mala n, at present a prominent member of the Board of Strategy at Washington, An article from his pen on "Current Fallacies up- on Naval Subjects," published in the June number of HARPER'S MAGA- ZINE, is extremely seasonable at this time, especially as it has a direct ap- plication upon many of the tactical problems of • the present war whose cornet rotation may meaty to tie the 'icto1ioue ceneluition Of the conffitst• . _CII�.�:nnrtawinuIh,u, � Neill!' 111.AFill ill AiNIIIIIM1_lln ial,lli TO BACCO J.RATTRAY&C°. 1111 �q11 ..�..> =tom E-'si�iii', MONffEAL,CN. ASTOR IA. CAPTAIN A. T. \i.1nA.V , r.. 9 .. V . tion" and "protectorate" were used in this connection before McKinley was born, and ominous friction with the Spanish government over the exasper- ating condition of affairs in Cuba be- gan many years before the destruction of the Maine in Havana harbor, In fact, the present .var may fairly be te- garded as the natural result, at least in part. of a long series of troublesome disputes, not only with Spain but else With t Cher powers, regarding the gross rnislnanagelnent and intolerable dOn- ditioil of the unfortilllnte island•. ' The exposure of tlle-vraet atom mast f inter= WALTER BAKER & CO'S breakfast Cocoas ABSOLUTELY PURE. DELICIOUS. NUTRITIOUS Costs less than one cent a cup. Be sure and get the genuine' article. Made at Dorchester, Mass. Sold at N. ROBSON'S CASH GROCERY Dress Goods Dress Lengths, $4, $4.50, $5.00, wag All newest shades, no two alike. Plain and Figured Lustres, 25c. to 75e. per iidii y Goods General, nice lines of Dress from 25c. per yard. r' iObt. Coats &