· ~auadian gear to mitch every costume at very slight l Five ·weeks .Beneath an Avalanche. expense. I A r~mark a bl · f h . If the stnw is bla.ck, it may, for a brun· . e mstance o t ree persons ette, be trimmed with cardinllol not; bunched survivmg an lmpri~onment of. five weeks Settm~ the Table, high in front, the inside of the brim shirred under an avalanche, ls . r~oor~ed m "Narra.· With cheeks like the rose tha.b In summer- wicb. bla.ck satin, a. nd full ties Qf the soft t1ves of Peril ~nd Suffering. !n the valley WEDNESDAY, MARCH 6, 1889. time flows net. For a blonde, the brim f,.cing will ?f the 1!pper ~tura. a.t the foot of the Alps, In the old-fashioned garden at home, ~~ ·- - answer, but th'! trimmiog will be uoft pla.id is .the httle hamlet of Bergoletto. In uhe With eyes like twin wells and with black ~ilk in bloaks of black a.nd white. Wint.er of 1755 the fall0 of BIJow were uncom· hair th&t tells One of the .shap~s mav be covered with monly ~ea.vy: On the Nineteei;ith of March Curly trea.son to hair·pia and comb. white bonnet sill!: t he brim lined with , the parish 1:mest, who was on his wa.y to the white lace, the c'rown and aides overlaid !' church, h_ea.rd a n_oi~e from the mountains, .A.. W. MORRIS &. BRO. With footsteps as light and with aproa as with folds of white cotton crepe, (OZ'. other a.nd, oo.·trng u~ his eyes, he saw; two avtJol· PROPRIETORS, MONTREAL white soft ma.terial) pu:flbg the same high in front anches deacendl1lg toward~ the village. He As the foam on a wave o' the sea, the makers of the celebrated, with a cluster of lilies of the va.lley, finishin~ I gave the a._lal'm eome villagers, and then Bonny sweet Mabel was setting the table, the whola with ties of white ribbon or of Lhe retreated 111to his own house. · Was setting the table for tea. .crepe. Here is a dainty 11ummer bonnet, , ~he a.v&la.nches ca.me and buried OVbr for and whfoh will not cost ove~ one dollar and a . tmrty house8, an~ t_wenty·two persons were While John by the window was talking half ii the owner'· fingers are deft enough to fou:id to_ be missmq,:-arnong them the with dad '· "<lutoY!sisoowellad&ptedtochildrentha.' Cutorla cares Colle, Oonstl11&tlon About witch·grass and staples and dngs fashion it herself. And right here let me par1.sh priest who ha~ given the alarm. _The r recommend it aa 11Uperior to any prescriptiOll SoUl' Stomach, Diarrbl:ea, Erilct.a.tibn. offer th.e suggestiQll that young girls try to a.mo~nt of snow whmh lay over the ruined Of lumber ilnd liea.ms while his honest heart · bown to me." H. A. AKcmm ., D K1ils Wonn11, gives sleep, and promate9 cU!odo their own millinery. dwd.mgs wa.a about forty-two feet deep, , .ru.. · · _____ gestion, dream a :tll So. Oxford Bl., Brooklyn. N. Y. WUhous injurioua medication. The efforts will be clumsy at first, but t~o hundred i:ond aeventy feet long, a.ud A fond drea.m of: far d1ffere~t thinga. ability and taste will grow rapidly. Begin sixty feet wiJ e. . . 'l'Hm C&NTAUR CoMP~, T7 Murray Street, N.. T.; When the surv1vmg pe~sants ~ad she.ken For John had come over to ask neighbor to pr11ctise on week-aay hats or. bonneus. Pin everything fo. place axid try on before off the terror a.nd depression which such an Brown fastening perma.uently. It ma.y be necessary eve!lt ~uat necessa.r~ly ca.use, they s6t a?out For the Joan of a plow, but his hat And hill Sunday coat took a brush far re· to repea.t the operation ma.ny times before trying , o aa.ve any life or property possible. the dedred effec~ ii; obtaind. A few hours M?re t h!ln t?ree hundred pe_a.san~s from mote FOR SA.LE BY ;r. HIGGINBOTHAM &. SON. BOWMANVILLE1 daily, in the vacation time, spent in the ne1ghbor-ng villages ~a.me to their ~ss1stance. E'rom an every-day errand like that. private sewiDg room of a.friend in the buai- But they could do little; the thickness of And etill on the subject of lumber and nese, or a. little assi~ ta.nee · evenings in the the s.now ma.~s was so j;(rea.t, and the snow teams privacy of one's own room from some young .iontmued 1io foll from the ~louds in. such With da.d's viewE he ia fain to agree, Pronounced, by practical consumers, SU· But he wonders meanwhile if Mabel's sweet ~irl learning the trade, will repay themselves a!llount t~a.t t~ey were ?bhged to d!aco~· many times over.-[Goocl Housekeeping. tmue t~eir !ruitless e:xert1ons,_ am;J. wau till perior to anything in the Ca.nathe sett1ng 1n of the warm_Aprd wmds which smile dian Market. would partly melt ~he gigantic piles. Pres.i.ges a bidding to tea. Write for lnformatwn. Ene:land's Degradation. On the Eighteenth of April the villagers Ar; d when for a moment they left him alone i.;...,,.-, ...J'danufaoturers also of Oae day last week Lady Henry Somerset, returned to. their melancholy task. It was With the table, the tea. and the cat, ~~~-o~~--~~ CORDAGE, JUTE and COTTON BAGS, To settle. his doubt it was quickly found out a very ea.rne&b and el!)qoent. champion of with no hope of finding a.ny huma.n bein" tota.l abatinenue, wa.s initia.ted at Rereford a.live · . Oae of them na.med J;hccia, whose What this amorous swa.in would be at. CALCINED and LAND PLASTER. into the 0 .rder of Reeba.bites, and in a long whole family was beneath the avalanche, Toronto Office & Warehouse With fish-rod and hook from the neighbor· apeecb ~oke out frankly ab.oub drinking av was most active in the search. By the Whlt,~o~il.pel. "A week or two ago, on a. Twenty-fourth of April he had advanced so ing brook 20 Front Street East, Satul'ih:y uight,"she said, "l was walking ~a.r, tha.t, afrer breaking through six feet of And its wild piscatorial joys, W. C. BONNELL, down Whitechapel Road, and as I went 111o ice he could touch the ground with a long Managflr. In a moment more to the half-open door Ca.me the farm!!r's two tow-headed boys. great longing ca.me into my heart that I pole. Three friends worked with him. ~~ ----... ~----------------oould take some of the leading men of our The four worked vigorously; ·and made The foremost look11d in, then he turned with Itind down into the midst of thllt scene. Not their wa.y, at length, into Roc~ia's honse, bun contented with tbe ordinary public house uo one, dea.d or living, wa.s thei:e. As it Ao grin And he whispered "As sure as bhe fates· they ha.ve now invented a new method-that was probable tha.t, at the fatal moment, the Cleaned, Died, Pressed and. Repaired by; Look Bill, by hooky, I'll bet you a cookie of_ ha.villg an arehway in the open street, victims had s ought shelter in the stable That the great Gpoon is "counting the with only a counter, over which drink is which was about a hundred feet from the plates." served to the passer-by, so that the public hou_ae, R oooi.a. and his oompanions directed need open no door all ~hey pass. All the~e their .efforts in that quarter. · .L 3.st night' twas my · £0.te to be w1>lking places a.re served by youqg girls. your I AHe1 '\. Dyer and Clothes Cleaner. · bhey had ~urrowed for some time, quite la.te hear ts would have sickened if you could one of them thr.ust :J. P?le ~hrough 11n aper· Goods waPranted to be as no one will know Past John's modest house in the lane, have looked on those young faces. I say ~u~e, an~. on withdr?.wmg 1t, heard a hoarse, them from new when done. The kitchen was ne ..r and story quite clear, shame on us as a. nation. ln America the fa.i,~n vo!Ce say: Corner of King and Ontii.rio Streets,! That the lamplight had told on the pa.ne. amount of drink is enormous. But there is Help, oh de~r h~,sb11ond I Help, dear bro· Bowmanville. ·· From the stove and the cat to the rocker all honor to the n11tion In one respect; their tner, I We are alive. · feeliag a.boat; children And young girls does Tney now worked ~1th redouble~act1vity, and mat not exiat in England. ,You never find a . and soon ma.de a cotmderable ~pen1ng.. A;id All things looked suspiciously new, . And being sweet Ma.bel was setting the native-born American girl serving as a. bar- thei-e, ~nde~ t!ie snow, Roccia. to hlS J_oy maid in the States. On all the land over found his wife, daughter, and a sister-m - , table, which .w aves t.he Stars and Stripes ycu will law. · Wa.s setting the ta.hie for two. not fin . d young girls placed in positions of The three sufierers were incapable of mov. ALICE 0. DARLING. such temptation 11ond danger. Ing, and were shrunken almost to skeleto~, "I can not describe the horrors of that They w~re ~arefully removeo from their scene ia Whitechapel the street3 illuminated phce of 1mprisonme11b and conveyed to the Flavors and Sauces. by the lights of gin' palaces. There is a houseofa..friencl,a.n'.1 propermeasuresadoptWilihout doubt " hunger is the best low the11otre, which is doing the devil's work ed for t?e1r restorat ion. In a few days they . 11a.uce," but It is not true, a.sma.ny think, tha.t · . . a craving for variety is the sign of a. pa.roper· ~ix da.ys out of seven. These theatres are were f~ul;r recovered. Theu· lives we~e preserved ~urmg these ed .md unna.tural appetite. Even anima.Is llOW being licensod to sell drink on Sunday, · whom we cannot accu. s e of having "notions," an if si:x uays we~e not enough I How can long five weea:s, 10 tne f~llow1ng manner: I put before you t he i!in and misery of th11ot They had ~aken . retuge m .. the r~ck and have bee.n known to starve in the experi· 1cene ? To see the children floolring out of .manger,. w~1ch being s~rong, had withstood menter'a hand rather than ea.t a perfe~tly dens of &ii\ ! I state no e:xa.ggeration, the nni.m, uhough tne roof tell. . Fortuna_te· nutritious food of whose fl.,;vor they had those no overdrawn picture. You na.ve poly to .ll two goats ·we1renear _ohem,w!11ch supp~1ed wea.ried. , Prisoners become so tired of a too read the polioe reports. L~st yea.r you will tnem w~th ~oats milk 10 quantity. sufficient oh repeated dish that they vomit a.t the find in London a.lone 500 children under IO to suotain life. · sight of it. An American travelling on the continent yea.rs old were ~akeu up dead drunk, and . To.f~~d the goa.ts wa~ of prime importance. 1ihere were 1500 under 14 and 2000 under 2 1. !mmed1ately over the mange.r was a hole of Eu~ope becomes . acquainted with many (Pa.11 .M.a.11 Gazette mto the h ..y loft, t hrough thlB hole one of new dishes and flavors, a.nd a.lthough not all · t he women was able to pull down fodder into "-ETE!UNARY SURGEON, of them are to his liking, he must conclude the rack, and when she coul<! no longer reach tha.t our cookery, compared, for instance, · A New Headlight, it, the sagacious anima.ls .climbed upon her t _ R ONO. ONT. with tha.t of the French, is very monotonous. An improved headlight for locomotives shoulders, and helped t.hem~el!es ·· ~~ M~.11.'!.~ ~-~ ft- To b.e_ eure.,~e have the a.dvantage of the hae an adjustment whioh allows the engin· Throur<h. the whole of their imprisonment ii!~ ~ 1 ~~ · ' ~uropean In that our ma.rkets offer ns a eer uo conveniently direct the light as he they wer~ in tota.l darkness. Aft~r the first variety ?f na.tural especially may desire, to various points of the line. five or SIX days they . euffered ,htt~e from oe:;; Oi tile l~l'I~",.. lfabu, p 0111r,1,...,.iy c · l!J'ett fr~1ts,. each ha.vmg a flavor of its own, and The lantern is support;ed on a. frame or plat· hunger, though a quart of goats milk had t!Cj'.U ' b y A1tmi"!~·,,r. i<i v, ]!),.. B'"'1llH' . this faot makes us somewha.t more indepen· form, which has a movement to r i ht or left to suffice for the tn~ee. They suffered far ' · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · . ~.'olden 811<Jdil_e. dent oftheM'tof the c k s · ·11 b d It ~,,.n ba g!ven ln ~ Cl;lfl ot coffo:to or t t1· w1th ooit '?<> · 1i1l we· aive ~ee about a veitical ax is, and also up g.or down more from the excess1v.? coldness of the melt. Jh" ><lfowiodge o~th.- !C""""n ~"!clui;H; l· ,.h;.olut<ll;," !or e <rery lesson of thlB sort, a.nd especially by t?e sa.me means, the operating- mechani~m ed snow water that trickled over them, :~;;;·i,,~~'.;:'~~·; ;·;;~ 1p:~'1%\ u:~~~:;,~:~~0"'!!~,~~J ln this lihe case with the poor, .who must lead dmg back to the cab, so as to be within ! f>1\ nioonol!c wr.·oil:. a hll3 b·~n g!vcuui tbon..,.nca keep t o the cheapest food ·materials, which r ea Y. reach of the engineer. He is enabled , 1 The S eoret of B 'j' ~ ··,;'-f,,W;,,;~,f l'}, ~7;;;.:~ J.~Vt'"·¥b: I'.J:~~':}{ g~~= are n_ot in .themselves rich in flavor. . 1 roi me;, i;;·pre.~." ·'>t.e·\ ~Ith ~ha t>pec!Oo, t; bc-cume· ... o "tter Spices a.nd_ other. flavors, w tun nob used by t h1a arrang!lment, to examiee da.o.gerous or d oubtful p ar ts of the road, and in stormy We a.re told tnat beefsteak for broiling Twenty-five cents extra will be charged when accounts, ruu ~:i'~~b~~;~ r~r, t.~~~~~i'~-~"!'.l'J1r':. ... t<> .~}~~~nP.~ to exe.es~, stimulate o?r digestive organs to ;,u..1.:u.1.J".l."-i co.. ls~ ll.o.c· l!i'-· ci..c1ao ....11.a. aP°!Jropnate more easily the food to which weather to turn the lightJ upon threat.ening should be cut three-quarters of an inch thick t r ees or maeses of earth or rook· upon either and p ut over a h ot fire of coal or charoo·l over one month. they a.re added, 1 In the flavoring of soups and etewa it is side, r.nd ·which are liable to fall. .The de· i Qllite _right; but when ib has browned' quick: well to use a. number of flavors, letting no v ice also permits of ~he lantern being turned ! ly · ~s it shout~, an~ been turned an<:! browned one of them b e prominent above the others. so as to throw the light across sha.rp corners ; on line other uie, it yet remains .raw in the exhibit the line of track at some distance : mi~dl~, and if left longer the surface burns. On the other hand, it is well k. have cer· and ahea.d of the train and a t points · wh ich 1 This ie the experience of the novice who If y .a.re languid and weak, and your appe· tain favorite dishes· seasoned a lways in the ' tte poor . Sl.me way, as fresh pork with sage, summer would be entirely out of reach of t he light h~s yet to learn tw.o things; first that'immc·. in its usual fixed position. Aooording to the d1a.tely after the first browning the fire must My Beef, Iron and Wine is the tonic, be sure. savory in a brea.d drsseiag, &c. ueual construction and employment of l oao' d ecrease ia heat, or the meat be brought .A.s an invigorating t onic it is recognised by the Medical profession as the beat strengthen· mo~ive hea~lights, they are fixed to . t he further a.way ~o that t h? steak may cook ten ing medicine t hus far produced. · It is invalua. .Basting. ?ngmb front m smih a ma.nuer th!\b .t he h ght twe!ve minutes. w1~houb. burning-less ble as a blo<Jd and muscle maker, especially in those cases where weakness is the result of W hen we b£1oke a piece of mea.t in the oven is always thrown forward and concentrateci ttme will not cook 1t nicely in the middle· imperfect or insufficient food, or wasting h · one line only~this being, of course, an a.ud seoond, that, like baked meat the sur~ ~==='.'."""~==========-=~=-==-~=~=~~===~-:=-===~ fevers or excesses of any sort. It contains the we sear t e out side in fat, turning the roast in ina.dequate arrangement in the shape oi face must be kept moist with h(\b fiAt. Be- - - - -·- - - -·- - - -- --- - - r · - -- - - -nutriment of Beef, the stimulant pr operties of about in a small quantity of fat made hot in sharp curves. fo:e your steak is put over cover both sides Wine a!ld the tonic powers of Iron, and is ad· a ket tle .- We then transfer it, still in t he with melted suet, and a fterward a8 it dries mirably calculated to build u p thA emaciated k.·ttle or pan, to a hot oven where the· prospread .on a little b-u tter or beef fat. Have Canada's Ohief Inhabitants I ~::t~i:os Sold in Bowman ville by Higginboth· · case of cooking is completad, but at short inr eadv m a hot platter a few spoonfills of t ervals we moisten tl:.e surface with the fat Olive Logan says in the P hiladelphia water, in wh ich t he bones cut trom the steak in the pan. If we did not baste the roast " Times·' :-The following conversation took have been boiliDg , ;;.lso salt and pepper. we would find a. thick la.yer of gray, ta.eteless place recently between myself a nd one of When thi: steak is done lay it in the pla.tter mea.t inside t he outer brown crust, and in- tb.e most p opular cap t ains of the French and k.eep it ~ot for fi ve minutes, turning it deed the whole piece would dry long befor e line : once m the t ime. Thus you will have both the cen tre of our roast had reached the co· Captain- I like Americana, but they h11ove good steak and g ood gra.vy. agulating point. So we baste in order to such an absurd idea ot t he gieatuess of their keep in t he juices, which, as we know, will coun try. Why, the U nited States are not . A young person n~med Irving L a.timer, not mix with t he. fat, a nd . also tha.t only a. so large as France. mild degree of heat m!loV be t ransmitted to P11ssenger-Incteed ! Have you seen much m gaol a.t Jackson, Mich., is receiving large quantities of flowers and good things to the interior. In t he intervals of our basting of the U nited States ? . IUA.RKET, BEST LlJBRIC:A.TOR eo.t !rom kind-hearted ladies of that pla.ce. some wat er is driven out of the meat a.nd Captain- Oh, yes, I've been \Vest. He 1s accused of murdering his mother for evapoi:..ated into st eam. The high heat of Passenger- How far? When buying Coa.l Oil s.s.k your dealer for the New Oils, ~he ov"!3 ex pands i:tself in evaporating this, Oaptain- To Nisgara Falls. That finishes her money, Should he prove to be innocent ID heating the bastmg fat, and perhu.ps, in the country. lrhe reet is Canada, which is ,he will no doubt feel bound to return gifts w;,h}oh were m ~-~e under a ~ isapprehension decomposing par t of it; t :'lne making the inhabited principllol~y by . h mch people. or che facts. · Tne good ladies would even mea.t " tasty," and so it happens that only a ..-~.....·-·~-~ then be shocked t o lea.rn that the jellies Try once, and you will use no other. mild degree of heat is passed into the rentro Children's bracelets are composed of thi;y had prepared for an interesting mur · of the piece. We would hardly believe t hat heart-sha.ped derer links, orne.mented with a ro w h& d been ea.ten by an innocent imthe insid e of a roast, with its high p ink .ttctJOLL BROS. & CO,.Y, Toronto.. postor. color, r egistered only 160 degrees by . the of turquoises. thermometer , vet t nis C!lll b e proved by a ny .one 1il'ith a ohemista' long thermometer. Jtattsman. HOUSEHOLD. ~'1 1b' J , A. Converse M'f'g. Go, I I I :o Infants I Children. I I Sp cial ! test Designs in Gents' Ulothing IlINNH RSHTS TH OS. PEAT, arrived this week at Great variety of .Murdocli Bros. Endless var1"et1"es 1"n Fancy ·G ood.a d lrec · t f rom E} urope · ~ TA * ftt 9.ti+1" ,a. IOHN SPEN'CER~ M~DOUGALL & METCALF, Dill~- · , ., N Esi · . · if\1 · .: . ~ ~re~ter food~, are ottering Coal .as follows : Stove an d Ch est nut ' $6. G rat e and. E gg, ........:......... :........... 6 .QO .. I I MEACHAM A' BEEF, IRON ·AND WINE. LUMBER, SHINGLES, LATHS, POST & CORD WOOD Always on hand a lowest prices. o: McDOU(lALL & METCALF. THB,E SHERS AND FAR IE RS USE ONLY McCOLL'S LARDJ:NE MACHINE OIL. IN THE 'P~. MILY SAFETY& SUNLIGHTCOAL0IL it (This E ng1 m ·ing r~presents t11e L ungs in a healthy'" s tate.) Ha.ta and Bonnets. In p urchasing these, a lit.tle ca.re will achieve wonderful results. There are some shapes 1 t hat may be said to be standard bel'!g . broug ht out every ye11or with slight van a.t1on, .. Of such is a black straw with moderately high crown and fancy brim, one side rolling h igher t han t he other . This is a safe sha.pe to purch ase, as with the aid <if a stiff bonnet wire and e. litt l e moisture, it may be moulded by the hand into almost any desired form, . For summer, it may have the brim edged with a row of jet beads and be t rimmed with a puffing of soft black gauzy material, against which rest a couple of white wings. In t he winter, the brim may be lined with cardinal satin covered with black velvet, witn possibly the addition of a blaok plume, ar a bu11ch of tips. Or t he same shape mav be purchased in gray stra.w, which will be stylish for summer t rimmed with dove·colored moire, and steel ornaments, while for cold weather, it may ha.ve a bunch of black tips nestling among folds of black velveb, Indeed, a ·black velvet made hat is a. stand· by for winter wear. It ha-a the look of ~oft warmth that velvet always !ends, and will last severu.l seasons if carefully worn. But it is in the matter of bonnets and toques that t he saving girl scores her greatest triumph. Orie of fine str aw, and a couple of becoming " shapes " will furnish head· THI" R EMEDY FOR CURING HAIN ES' CARRIAGE "WORKS GEORGE C. HAINES, Proprietor, - -M.A NUFAOTURER OF- - CONSUMPTION, COUGHS, COLDS, ALL Oi~EASES OF BY JT8 A ST HMA, CRO U P , T HE .,fHROAT 1 L UNGS A ND F AI T HFUL ~ PU LMON ARY O RG ANS. U SE OARRIACES, SLEIGHS, CUTTERS, WAGONS, .&G. ·. K IN G ST R EET, BOWMANVILL OONSUMPTION HAS BEEN OURED W h en other Remedies a nd P hysicians have fa.iled to effect n. Ct? f C. JtCcommended by P H Y$1 C l'A ~S, .1-iiliNISTERS, ANri Nun. s RS. In fa.c t bv e verylx)dy .Yil :.'1 has given it a. good trin.I. ,::.-t never fail~ to h.·ix -relief. P.s A N E XP E c-c.:;; A AN T 1T HA S , · E QUAL. It is ha:·m.:css to the ~rost Delicate CM ·~!. Has now on hand a number of vehicle~ (and ls manufacturing a. gre&t many more) ot the no. pa.tternsand best finish, whlch I am otr'erlng for sale at t he lowestprioesoonsistentl with due raga.rd to workma.nship and quality. The following is a liet of t he prinoipal vehicles manufactured by me Double Covered Oe.rriage s ··; . ..... . . ..... . ........ ......... ...... .... .. . . . ... $150 Upw~ Single Ph8etons ..................................... ......................... ; ···· 100 It contai!ls :w OPi UM in m;:;r form. ) P RICE 2:lc, 50c AXD $ 1.00 P E R l l C'C: C>:. T o pBuggy........................................................................ 90 D emocrat Wagon .......... . .. . .............. ............................. ....... Lumber Wagons ... .. : . ..... . ..... .. .... .... ........... ...... ... :............. ... 65 Open Buggy .··~............. . ................ . ..... ...... .. ....... .... . . ....... ·· 11 70 ·· n 11 DAVIS & LAWB.ENCE CO. . ,, 1:mited.), 0 . eral A.aents , ..._. - ··-G en . . - - JIT.ONTUEAL. Light Wagon..··· ~ ·········· · ··· ···· ········· ; ····. ..·... ·· ~ . ..... ....... . .... ... 55 50 . Sulky ······.·.····· ····.·····..·..········..········. ·····.···......·~. ........ . .... 40 Expr ess Wagon .......... :.· ····· · · .. . .... .... ...... :............................. Skelet on ............. .................... . .. ..........·. . ........................... 75 40 1t 11 11 n Possessing superior facllitie~ for manufactnrlng oe.rriages, I Intend to sell very choap for o · or iippro·l'ed oredit, and by eo doi.ng I hope to greatly lnorease my number of sales. W om s sell the wood part s only, or the gearings of buggies ironed. · THE COOK'S BEST FRIEND l ~ All Kinds of Vehicles Repaired l At the Shortest Notice, P ainte d and Trimmed If D esired . A.t the Factory I also do P laning, Matohing, Turning and. Sawing with Olrole, Band or S u Saws. a.nd prepare all kinds of lumber tor carpenters nd others for building purposee.1 Orna.menial 11ond Plain Plokets for t enoes in eveey strla required, ma.de t o order. l