W. C. T. U. Gleams. Woe unto them that rise up early in the morning that they follow strong drink; that continue until night, till wine inflame them—Isaiah 5:11. What is the Christian voter of Ash­ land to do with the saloon? The liquor power seeks negation ralh- than affirmation. All it asks is to be let alone. It is not a swift moving en­ gine, but a bowlder on the track.—Fran­ ces E. Willard. Nobody Questions B | .THE FACT EÊ That Win. Heverer can you money on The liquor traffic is in effect an im­ mense, a world wide conflagration, lick­ ing up the substance from every farm every workshop and manufactory, every railroad and mercantile house in the country.—W. C. Conant. The responsibility for Rum Selling. The rum seller says “I am innocent bo- cause I have paid for my justification. The law demands a license, and it therfore assumes all the responsibility; and besides, if I did not sell, someone else would ’'—Demorest. “Dear boys and girls’’ began the-------- “you know it’s very naughty to drink beer or whiskey. So, too its naughty to sell them without a license, or with a cheap license. But when the State or­ ders high license, and the town makes every saloon pay $500 out of what it gets for making drunkards, it isn’t naughty any longer to sell beer and whiskey, but a real nice, respectable business like selling sugar or hymn books.’’—James Clement Ambrose. New Location : Crocker Block. • _______________ Ladies Should Call Upon MBALS AT ALL HOURS O For Fashionable Hillinery and Dressmaking o + PRODUCE. / .60 22.00 14.06 16.00 13.00 18.00 15.00 8.00 10.00 .36 1.00 1.00 MEATS. Beef on foot, per pound— Cows,....................... .02 Steers,..................... ...01^ .02 Hogs, on foot, per pc ind.01% 3.00 Chickens, per dozen . .2.75 .08 Turkeys, per pound >• ... .06 u ... .08 .10 Steak, << . .06 (a .10 Veal, << Mutton, . . .05 @ .10