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1F^ s f o rany kind , any amount, your ideas and STou know what before you be- sted a new dry i dry lumber. isuTpassed for- blinds, or any- iouse building, other kind of used. And we- e orders, for a. E lath o r ehin- • patching; and. ed t o these lit— romptly as iis. 4AY ^ IREiyiAINS OF \OLD BILL . DOBLIN'' WHO' blSAPPEARED. .•Some People ThlnK tbi Old Man Was Mur- dered a Half-Century Ago^-flbnes Bound in Barnes Fields' Farm Yard. Tire good people of' Hodman and vi- .cinity .are\giiealy stirred tip oyer the •finding of a skeleton of a man, boots .and all, in the the farm yard of the house owned and occupied by James Fields. 'In excavating near the house, ix> build an outside entrance to the eel- Jar, and about tVfo feet below th e -earth's, surface* the workmen's, shov- els brought up a lot of bones. Furth,- •er digging -brought more bones, until -enough were found to\ determine that it once belonged to the genus homo. A full set of teeth, were ,found ! , and where the feet should have been were -,a pair of boots, of course- much decay- ed. The ghastly find was the topic not only of the hour, but of many hours, .and the oldest inhabitants remembered that 50 or 60 years ago, a resident of the neighborhood, \Old Bill Dobbin,\ .as he was called,, mysteriously disap- peared between two days and was nev- •er heard of any more. Suspicions were rife them that he had been mur- •dered, and now wise old men are wag- ging their heads and saying, \ I told .you so.\ Unfortunately nothing re- mains by which to determine his iden- tity and so it will probably remain .fiodman's mystery. UNACCOUNTABLE ABSENCE OF A ST. LAWRENCE UNIVERSITY TEACHER. RESCUED HER CHILD. St. Paul Woman Shows Rare Pres- ence of si Mind i n nn Unloosed For Eonersreiicy. At St. Paul the other day, Mrs. \Mary McEenzie proved herself a heroine by rescuing he r three-year- old boy from a cistern into which h e had fallen and was drowning. Th e cover of the cistern was a part of the floor of the kitchen, and in. or- -der t o draw water from the cistern .a trapdoor i n the floor had t o b e lifted. Mrs. McKenzie had just' lift- ed the door and turned t o pick up a pail, when little Percy toppled head- long into it, falling into five feet of water, it was sis feet t o the water line, and th e mother was helpless. She ran into the yard screaming for help, and when two women neighbors PERCY TOPPLED OVER. •responded she made them understand •and asked that they take her, one by each foot, and suspend her' head •down into the well. Without a tremor the mother la y down, and was let slide down toward the water, head first. The child was •coming up for the second time when her hands reached hi s skirts, and, 'after a strong pull altogether, the two women holding t o Mrs. McKen- zie's ankles, drew both mother and •child from the water. The child was revived in a few moments, an d neither was the worse fo r the ex- perience the next day. . ' A Hitte Household Htmt. It is asserted that if new tinware is rubbed with fresh lard and thor- oughly heated in th e oven before it is used, it will never rust afterward, no matter how much i t i s put in wa- ter. Chinese Don't Wonr Wool. The Chinese wear cotton garments \all the year round, and never those made .,f wool. The rich, for warmth, Son silk. , Bear m mind that if i t is anything ™ ™? ™? of paints, colors or varnish- es,that „omer H. Rice has it in stock '«na you should not purchase until you get his prices. Advertise i n the Ee-Union. Vent West During; the Summer to Hafce a! Canoe Trip Down the SnaKe River- Mot Heard of Sfnce Leaving: Hele- na, Mont. Canton, Sept. 19.—Much anxiety i s felt here on account of the prolonged absence of Prof. P. C. Poster, of the St. Lawrence university faculty. Prof. Poster's family went on a visit to California last spring. During the summer Prof. Poster started west, in- tending t o make a canoe trip down the Snake river and join his family and re- turn home in time to be present at the opening of the college year. Nothing has been heard from him since he left Helena, Mont. letters from Mrs. Poster indicate,, that she supposes that her husband i s still i n Canton. It i s feared that he may have met with an accident. GIRDLED BY CABLES. TreaBtiry Department Report ShoWa Thero Are 1,700 Submarine Line* in World. A report just issued by the treasury department shows 1,750 submarine ca- bles in the world, with a total length of nearly 200,000 miles. The number of messages annually transmitted over them i s more than 6,000,000. All the grand divisions of the earth are con- nected. Adding to the submarine lines the land telegraph systems, the total length of telegraph lines in the world is 1,180,000 miles, the length of their single wires 3,800,000 miles and the total number of messages annually sent 1 over them about 400,000,000, or an average of more than 1,000,000 each day. Every body of water lying between the inhabited portions of the earth, with the single exception of the Pacific ocean, has been crossed and recrossed by submarine telegraph lines. Th e chief obstacle in the past t o the con- struction of a trans-Pacific cable was that no single government controlled a sufficient number of landing places. With the landing places a t Hawaii, Wake Island, Guam and th e Philip- pines, however, no section of a cable stretching from the United States to Asia and touching at these points would have a length equal t o that now in daily operation between Prance and the United States, 3,250 miles. SEES MENACE TO CANADA. Sir \Wilfrid Lanrler Compares United States to a Glffantte Furnace- Danger i n Annotation. Sir Wilfrid Laurier, Qie Canadian prime minister, who i s visiting in Paris, discussed the danger t o Can- ada i n the talk of annexation t o the United States. *' The Journal prints a n interview with Si r Wilfrid Laurier, in the course of which the premier was asked why Canada did no t become incorporated with the United States. His reply, as published, was: \Prench Canada would disappear more quickly in that gigantic furnace than in a flood of Anglo-Saxon im - migration. All who love the Prench language ought t o wish u s t o remain Canadians. Besides, nothing no w foreshadows such an incorporation.\ The Canadian premier is i n Paris with the object of securing an in- crease of commerce between Prance and Canada. He proposes t o reduce the Canadian tariff 15 pe r cent, in favor of Prench products in return for the application of the Prench minimum tariff t o Canadian goods, the dominion government also sub- sidizing a steamship line between Canada and Prance. It Makes Them Sneeze, Among it s many curious products South Africa includes th e \sneeze- wood\ - tree, which takes its name from the fact that one cannot cu t it with a saw, without sneezing, a s the fine dust has exactly the effect of snuff. Even in planing the wood it will sometimes cause sneezing. N o insect, worm or barnacle will touch it; i t i s very bitter to the taste, and when placed in water i t will sink. The color is light brown and the grain very close and hard. Por dock work, piers or jetties i t i s a useful timber, lasting a long while under water. He Pell Slowly. The Newark Advertiser says a workman fell 100 feet in Philadelphia and was not hurt. That's nothing strange. It takes a long time to fall 100 _ feet in Philadelphia. -SKSSiKSiSSr Your Bedroom Is always an important room and should be particularly comfortable, cosy and pleasant. Qur new line of Bed- room Furniture will make your room an ideal one at comparatively small expenditure- Our new Solid Oak Chamber Suits are ideals of style and design from the best makers. - Come to tis and we will make you the handsomest bed- room you have seen and it will be tt within the price limit. ^JAMES R. SMITH. NO.' 20 PUBLIC SQUAEB Give Us Only Half a Plotnre—A Spir- itual ItiyvedHitlou Needed t o Pill I t In , -Nature alone can never tell u s al l we ought t o know of God. I t cannot contain Himt i t cannot reveal Him. It represents His work?' at a n unflnr ished stage, and i t can only point us toward His goal of work and not -ex- plain it. He who knows : God only a s he finds Him in the powers and mani- festations of the material world will have a God to fear and not t o love. A common thought, from which men fell b y thousands Into atheism- after the Lisbon earthquake a cen- tury and a half ago, was of a finished world and a withdrawn and .resting Creator. Voltaire poured scorn upon the notion that this,is the best possi- ble world, and that God's character as revealed by it is wholly good. Th e fact is that the world is not ideally good—not a finished product in an y sense—only a good place for th e work i t is designed t o \do. It is adapt- ed for the birth and growth of char- acter—a good place t o make progress and t o overcome,; a gift t o b e im- proved, not rested in. But t o judge, God by its present condition'is like the child's judgment of the work- man by a slight glance at his unfin- ished work. The lacking elements i n nature's unassisted picture of ou r God are. love and justice and righteousness. Lisbon and St. Pierre, the venom of the snake, the microbe that brings disease, seem t o contradict God's love; the inequalities of g-ift, His jus- tice; th e success of evil. His right- eousness. God has reserved for men the witness of these higher qualities of character. We kndw His love and justice and righteousness a s we rise through their appearance in th e liv- ing men about u s t o their perfect showing in Christ, in whom was all the fullness of the God-head bodily. It is only when we come from knowledge of our Heavenly Father, through faith and love and daily ex- perience, that w e are able t o inter- pret His revelation of Himself in na- ture. Jesus saw th e tokens of Hi s Pather's love i n the fields and on the hillsides of His village neighborhood. But first He knew Himself God's Son. It i s the office of the natural world about us t o fill up, not t o begin, our knowledge of God's character. When we know Him wo shall find His pres- ence everywhere. Wo shall no t al- ways understand or enjoy, bu t w e shall cease t o fear, knowing that all His work i n u s and i n the world, however incomplete, is moving on to a completion that is best expressed in likeness t o Himself.—Boston Con- gregationalism INFLUENCES UPON CHARACTER Idttlo Things Have a, Subtle Effect That TVs Shonlil De Careful to Notice, The smallest things have their influ- ence upon character, and upon the beauty and th e helpfulness of a life. It was related recently of an English oculist that h e had given up cricket purely in the interest of his profes- sion. He was very fond of the game, but h e found that playing affected the delicacy of his touch, and made him less ready for the work he was re- quired to do every day upon the eyes of his patients. There are occupations which i n like manner affect the life and character injuriously, hinder th e growth of spirituality o r make one less effective in work upon the life and character of others. We need t o deal with our- selves firmly and very heroically. Any- thing that unfits us fo r doing ou r work in th e be«t way possible we should sedulously avoid. We live but one life, we pass but once through this world. We should seek to gather good and enriching from every experience, making ou r progress ever from more t o more. Wherever we go we should try t o leave ablessing.something which will sweet- en another life o r start a new song or a n impulse of cheer or helpfulness in another heart. Then ou r very memory when we are gone will be an abiding blessing i n the world. Bo, when I fall like some old tree. And subtle change makes mould of me, There let the earth show'a fertile line, Where perfect wildflowers leap and shine, —Christian Work. RELIGIOUS TRUTHS. Holiness i s an unselfing of our-, selves.—P. W. Paber. Self-conceit blinds; self-will de - stroys; self-oblation consecrates; self-sacrifice saves.—C. Eossetti. Do not act as if thou wast going to live 10,000 years. Death hangs over thee. While thou liyest, while it i s in thy power, b e good.—M. Aurelius Antoninus. Harsh reproof i s like a violent storm, soon washed down the chan- nel; but friendly admonitions, like a small shower, pierce deep, and bring forth better reformation.—E. Cham- berlain. One cannot give money o r anything else with the same passion with which he gives himself. All other forms of consecration are secondary valuable, but secondary. No gen- eration, therefore, can show its full faith in Christianity which does not offer its best gifts.—William J. Tucker. To Prevent Smut on Grain. Use Formaldehyde. Por sale by Ho- mer H. Eice. Our $8 plates are the best on' earth. at any price. S,ee adv. in another col- umn. New York dentists. APPLE U U Said to •tractive toi 3 SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER £0; 1908 JCAB FUNGUS. tt» One of the Mont De- Pestti That Ooiuea Orchards, KING AND GAMBETTA. JUarquls de Gialllfet Publishes* Some of H1B Very Interesting Rem- iniscence!,. Very few e:cept scientists recog- niise that appl< :scab is one of the most destructive pests that comes into the orqhard of titji' apple grower. The codling moth lis supposed t o be far more destructive, but, such is not the case. Great precautions ar e taken against the said moth, but little or none against the apple scab fungUR. When a picke-B takes an apple from a limb and ftsda the scab on it he .giyes it not another thought, for that is apparently jraly a blemish. H e imagines that ie sees on the apple all the result theie is, and he considers ft not worth investigating. In fact, this scab does [most of its damage t o the foliage, and what appears on the apples is merely its secondary work. By the work of this fungus the en- tire tree is weakened and the apple crop is cut short year after year. In addition t o th|e fruit being smaller than it should be the apples fall early, as th e tree i s too much weakened to nourish them sufficiently to in- duce them t o hang on. It seems that an apple hangs on just a s long as i t is receiving nourishment. When nourishment is cut off the apple auto- matically detaches itself and falls. Anything that causes a check to this supply of nourishment leads t o th e fall of th e apple. The apple scab fungus, by sapping the strength of the tree, brings about (his result. An- other indication of the prc-enee of the fungus is the fall of the leaves before the natural time. This is brought about in the same way as is the fall of the apple. The nourishment ceases going to the leaves and the stem be- gins t o detach itself from the tree. Thus long before the other trees have dropped their leaves the tree that is badly affeoted by the fungus named is bare. When a tree is badly affected i t takes more than on,\ jnr to bring it back t o a normal ri.n.'^-in of fruit- fulness. Thus, 1 if a trn- has the dis- ease this yeas, the vr~ \< next year is tsuro t o b e small, for thi- reason that fruit buds ar e formi-d mure than a •yea,? ahead of the time uf their fruit- fulness. It £he tree is scabby this year the buds will bep.->rly developed OT not daveilfirpoa a t all. No matter how good 3a •condition next year it will not, in a single st-nson, develop bnds and btssr iruits on those buds. Spraying 3& Use only remedy, nnrl that must be continued for a number of years,—Farmers' Review. The veteran, Marquis de 'Gallifet, a former minister of war of Prance, is letting some of his highly interesting recollections get into print. He tells of meeting King Edward VII. in Paris in 1880, while the latter was then prince of Wales, and the prince asked him t o dine at the Cafe Anglais, where h e would meet Gambetta and another guest. A t dinner, as they chatted, the prince said t o Gambetta: \May I as k you and your friends to keep the Prench aristocracy out of office?\ \But sir, there is no aristocracy in Prance,\ answered Gambetta. \There are dukes that head no army; mar- quises who defend no marches, counts and viscounts who have n o counties or viscounties, no authority nor inilu- ence.\ \Suppose then, that I spoke of nobles?\ \But they don't want t o be employed. They know their day is over. They sulk, and that is their final state. One only meets them in the army and navy, and now and then in diplomacy. In these careers they cut, I own, a good enough figure.\ \But why do you not act as in my country?\ queried the prince, \where we pick out what is best in manufac- tures, railway, trade, science, litera- ture, etc? These men we ennoble, and our nobility remains a true aris- tocracy.\ \In your country that is possible, and may remain so for some time, but not in Prance. The duke of Mossy- stone would object t o rub shoulders with the duke of Cottonmills or Com- merce of Science or of Fine Arts. We cannot in a republic have any aris- tocracy but that of science and per- sonal merit. Such an aristocracy needs no titles. I t i s looked up t o for its worth.\ \I see you are a- true republican, M. Gambetta,\ \Allow me, sir,\ retorted Gambetta, \to confess that I think you consistent in beine a royalist.\ (*i««y».C»orcC0L!).- : THIS REMEDY is sure to GIVE Sati*tac!iMi. Ely's Cream Balm Gives ReUif at unco. It cleanses, 'Oftln'S ami heals tho ditieaml h&$£. SSSTaod*drtfsCOLD h HEAD away a oulit iu ilie head qtilnkly. It Is nbwirbed IlwUs and jiro- Uvis. the Membrane, itiworm the Senses of Taste- aii'l Smell. Full )-ze GUc; Trial Bizo 10c,;- at IirugKlsts or by mail. EL? BKOTHEKS.fii.WiirronHtnwt. New Turk. STORAGE IN CAVES, •When Proporly C|iiHtmete<l, Apple.* Will Keep Better in Tliem Than. in OoldjStoruK<i. Por storing fruit on the farm, noth- ing can equal a good cave. J . P. Rec- ord, one of the leading orchardists in southwestern Iowaj built a cave seven years ago and has found it can excel- lent place in which t o store apples. The cave was dug; into a north hill slope, and the dirt, removed with a spade and wheelbarrow. It i s 16 feet wide b y 60 feet deep, and will hold ENTRANCE TO APPLE CAVE. two carloads of apples. Th e clay walls need nothing t o hold them in place. The roof is made of bridge plank, held in place by posts along the sides. The plank are covered with dirt and sodded over to turn the rain. Tw<T 12-inch tiles at the top provide ventila- tion. Eats have not bothered much. A few got in, but were caught with a wire trap. A fruit house 16 b y 20 feet is built i n front of the cave. Double doors open on the north, s o that two wagons can be backed in for unload- ing. There is an orchard and tim- ber on the south, so that hot south winds have no chance to enter this cave. Apples are stored i n barrels, which ar e kept off the ground.—Or- ange Judd Farmer. Eucalyptus ami Mos«iTiltoes. The eucalyptus will not live in the winter where th e temperature falls more than a degree or two below the freezing point. Malarial fevers afo prevalent a t times ill marshy ground, and mosquitoes breed i n marshy places. The eucalyptus, by reason of ita rapid growth, absorbs so much wa- ter from the soil as t o actually drain marshes of superfluous water and de- stroy the breeding pools of the mos- quito. Any rapidly growing tree would do the same service, though in a Jess degree than ' the eucalyptus, which is a.more than commonly rapid grower, but the Carolina. poplarwoUld be n good substitute,—Meehan's. United States Cream Separators Standard of the WORLD. Received Gold Medal at Paris 1900 and at Buffalo 1901. Skim Cleanest, Most Durable and Easiest Gleaned and cared for of any separator made, and are fully Guaranteed. «S—SS—SE—SS—!S—8S-»-SS—SS—S§—8S—SS-SS—SS— H.M.Sponenberg, Both, Phones. 12 Washington St. it Jars When you buy Fruit Jars buy the kind that is sure to give perfect satisfaction. Clyde Mason - Improved Are the best in every way and cost but a trifle more than the commonest kind. E. H. Murray, 14 COTIBT ST3BBET. , . A | Timely Hint in the building season as t o where to secure the highest grades of Lumber, Hardwood Trim, Veranda Posts, Bal- ustrades, Windows and Doors as well as everything needful in this line, will be appreciated by the builder, espec- ially when he sees the quality of our stock. For superior, well-seasoned lumber, our stock is unrivalled. ite & Sulliyan, 9.7 MOTTLTON RTKETCT N OTICE TOOM^L'Jti lu'ol S- * u i tate. In pursuance of an order of Oharles L. Adams Surrogate of the County of Jefferson, notice Ie hereby given, according to law, to all personE having claims against G'*orge C Steele,late of the town of BrownvilK in said County of Jefferson, deceased that they are required to present the samt with the vouchers thereof to the subscriber, the Administrator &c, of said deceased at the Surrogate's Office in the City of Waterrown in said Countj of Jefferson, on or before the 28tfc day of October, next kated the Slst day of April, IOCS. CHE8 H. STEELS, Administrator, etn jfeuABW ft- Our Special Invisible Frameless Eyeglass le proving one of tb.e best sell- ing eyeglasses we have ever offered to the public Every one acknowledges it s dainti- ness and inconspicuous appear- ance, and the general artisti* effect when placed i n position on the nose \bridge. —Made only \by— -:-:i 'J vaOTlCh TO CBEDlTOBS:-Josepn S. Coon IN Estate, In pursuance of an order of Charles L. Adams Surrogate of the County of Jefferson, notice iB hereby gfven, according to law to all persons having claims against Joseph 8. Coon, late of the Town of A dams, in said County of Jeffer- son, deceased, that they aie required to present the same with the vouchers thereof to the sub. acriber, the administrator, &c, of said deceased at his office in the village of Adams, in said County of .Tefferson, on or before the 10th day of December next. Dated the 7rh day of May, 1002 FltEDB. W&ITE. Administrator. &c THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OB' NEW \i OKK, A To Alonzo Port»r SlieimanG. *\ortor Carrie Welsh Jessie Happole, Wilbur A. Porter, Nettle Broun S»iah Scotf. John D. Hah, E. B. Hail, Arthur Hal. aud Henry Lamphear r ext of kin ttud heir*, at law ol Ch.n-h-n 0>. Potter, late of the City of Watertown. in the I'unnt-y of Jefferson and iritato of Nt w York r|ei-\iwd Send Greeting: ••ereat', Mury O. Porter, tbt exefticrix nam ed in the Usi will aud testament of The b,»id f'haiies C4. Toner iJee**H?fl'i has hittJy applied to uu suri'oi ute of our vwniy of Jefferson, to hait ih» ttiitd will proved »•> a wnl of real and p«*anuftl prnpprti. in pi'r-iK-.nnt* of the statuie m aaeh case made and pro. t'Ki: You anci each \<> Y<JU are therefore clt'-d mid required perwon- ully to be and appear tn»iori?\-ir hitaRurvogate, ,-%l tua office in the cfry of Wau-rtown, In the county of Jofflortvjn, on the 2\*\, ii;iy of: October >«st, at ton o'clock in thr- lort-noon, then and there to attend the pru*..tr« of the said last will and testament; and tho^ uf you who are under the age of tweu-y \ii« years are re quired to appear by yuurgmtidttui U you have mn*; If you Iiavu liui.t*, that ym ,. t p ar «nd ap- ply for one to ho appointed, or in tin* evt.-nt ot Tour nogh-ct or faun re lode* si*, a guardian will be appointed by th\Mirrogul<? to rvi>tesenti and act for you in this pruceediutf. In testimony whertnf, \M* havn caused the seal of ollieecit our said Mifmgate to he [L. S.] hereunto affixed. Witney Charles L. Adams, surrogate of the mud fount y <>f J**ffer.*on at theeltj of Wateru^ ii,t he rah day of September, \m. C. L. ADAMS, tiurrotfafco. All Kinds Of Shoes At our Special Sale, solid I'omfortablo and the height of fashion can be had at lowest prices, a clean sweep of every- thing we have in summer shoes, also broken lots of men's work shoes, heavy or light 98c. Men's fine shoes $1.25 to |3.00. Women's button shoes, 2 to 4, 49c. Women's iace service- able shoes 9Se. Wont ens fine shoes $1.26 to $4.00. Boys'shoes 98c to $2.50. Mist es' sdioes 75c to li.^S A Large Assortment of Trunks, Bags and Telescopes A. ALLINQHAM, 7 PUBLIC SQUABE, •WATEETOWN, N. V. Lamps K223SB You Can't Deny The fact that when it comes to a question of dollars and,! cents,' Oar Columbia 'Automa- tic Gas Lamp for $2 is the best proposition ever offered for the money. Call and see it. w . KIMBALL & CALDER, 2, 4 and 6 Washington Hall >pj&2£ JMSi/efiilStm OOUJMin Hardware and Blades. Wo. 3 Iiurdlok OttuiMing, Watertown, lank. WAIBIWOWSt, N Y. SB Waahtogton, Corner Stone Ht„ Will pay its depositor!! interea on all depesltl iado neforo the [0th of January, Irom the 1rnt ol January, and deposits mado betyrees raimnry loth and April 3d, Interest from the Jit )f April and deposits made between April 13 lad July 10th, Interest from July, 1st, nmf en dag MHIIB made between July 10th and Ootobof Ml Joi October 1st This bank has money to loan on flrst-olasa raaB intote raortgagea. Also Trill pay the hlghont jvion for county, town, city or village bond! i ued pursuant to the laws of tho State, «. tf. WIGGINS. President. 5 B. W. BALDWIN, lot Vioe Bwiaeat, J. A. lAWYSR, 8d Vioe President O. V?. OLARB. Secretary ft. T. E. JiANSIKa, Treuanror, fre&Brlofc It. Farwell, mo. V. S. Oamp i, B. Hunserford, J, P. Wardwell, )eo. A. Fenner ta'usn J, iiaoh, VW*n V. Bariret Geo, W. WgglM Henry Purceli, D, W. Baldwin, A. £,. TJphau), J. E. fililler, J. A. Lawyer Geo. O. Shermra N OTICE TO CBBDITOKS-John 0. Boot, Estate. In pursuance ot an order of Charles L. Adams, Surrogate of the County of Jefferson, notice ia hereby given, according to law, to all persons having claims against John O. Eoof, into of the village of Therein, in said County of Jefferson, dooeasetl. that theyaro required to preBont the same with the vouchors thereof to tho subscrib- er, the temporary a.lminisfcrai or &c, of said de- posed at hit* residence In the village of Theresa, in sulii County or Jefferson on or before the 10th day of Ft-Inmry next. Bated the 5th day of August, lM. LOKEA. F . SHtTETLEFF. Temporary Administrator of the Eotae of John O Eoof, Deceased. !ANT & M0UL If you want to secure satisfac- tory things in the grocery line come to us. We handle fancy and staples groceries, fruits and vegetables, in season and at rea- sonable prices. If you are dis- satifiedwith your grocer give m trial for we are sure we can please you. We have a large hst of patrons and the complaints aia few. Farm Produce Bought. We purchase butter, eggs, potatoes, etc., and pay the high- est market price either in cash or trade. We carry everything that an up-to-date, well ecjtiip- ped grocery store should carry, and our customers are not scared away when they learn our prices. Drop in and see us. GRANT & MOULD, No. 5 TAGGABT BLOCK. The Nanawestefn mutual Life Insurance Company Combines i n one single oontro«S these advantages— U3TE INSIHiAKOE FOE WOTi I X YOU EDS! ETOOmtENT INSURANCE FOB YOTJESELir IP YOU LIVE! AUNUAL INCOME TTOL YOU Dill THEN ANNUAL INCOME TO WOTi TILL SHE DIBS! THEN MJLL FACE AMOTJM! 3MB OHILBBENI With, from 40 to 100 per cent. l*rg«| dividends than are paid by other com* ponies. Office 10 Sayings BanK Building, 0. S. Wilcox, General Agent Seeber & Nicholson's DEUa STORE Is the place where you will get all the up-to-date Foun- tain Drjmks in the city the best Ice Cream made. The Drug and Toilet Department is Com- plete. Seeber & Nlcbeboo, 1 Court and Arsenal Streete,. fl »! •I i w 9i