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Waterloo County Chronicle (186303), 22 Mar 1894, p. 7

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Ad Dews NK!NC BUSINESS ¢ 64 ort s 11 P Painter and Paper H NG NEW Auctioneer Y orf} watep ns Bank, mif EATMAR nd FRCE HLI RADE v! and winter. linest® il kinds of â€" saws &B@ : attention and 48â€" â€" bound to give sati# â€" repuired and '= es included. Gum iq. etc. Hicycle® m the old style to MM ew rolls put on dand.udjulu:fi ‘ t sweepe inthe . jobbin« ly executed _ jobs on d’mfll manuie N TILE iN FISCHER 2nd. 1891. AIR SHOP, «K and I_,amb as C SAUSAGCOS Kaemkg Machine ! of the be euv= DERSON, 1MERMAX q . Rock MARKET, MONTREAL st, $1,100,000, d G» th PILFR ing the past. cashier and@ 000 lers left ag a ntion,. I «" accorded RING, Butcher to tendgp ity to m 6 0 c1o0® i the even an extend nal superâ€" uâ€"tomess that, im n of m; Points, § Dharg mibg in «ized tq ne ien but xi ifl;‘ Detter Xinners < itselt he low custom past 2 by the ay ‘ thay ars S M M { R =If Christ Came to Cbicago." Une of the most daring, sensational chapters in this book of sensations is entitled "Dives, the Tax Dodger." ‘The assessment system is based on a lie. It is worked by perjury, and it has.as its natural and necessary results injustice, Curruption, and the plunder of the poor. _ Whatever may be the cause, there is a heavier sum in solid dollars pocketed every year by the .official perjurers or assessors in Chicago than is paid to any other officials in fl$° serâ€" vige of the city. °. .* 6| The assassors, under o@th, M!lig, ‘as the personally of loading <itizens/thése fignres: â€" Marshall Marshal)} Field, ir , AT 11 :. STEAD‘® STARTLING EXPOSURE oN WwINDY CITY LIFE, N t Stead, editor of the Review »~ws, has given the World‘s Fair ne hard hitting in his latest It Christ Came to Chicago," ar for the "union of all who the service of all who suffer." dues Christ think of my life" is aote. _ The book 18 a startling of Chicago lifeâ€"social, indusâ€" olitical, _ religious. _ Existing eâ€"exposed fearlessly, and the ~‘tors are named openly, withâ€" u«l to person or consequences. ‘< is divided into five parts, t following â€"titles:â€"*"Some ve lhave Made of Me," "Christ‘s isl Measuring rod)in Chicago," â€" [nvisibleWorld Displayed," « Church in Chicago," "What srist do in Chieago?" v< that. for the 3,000 people me district there is no minisâ€" sion, no city missionary, no ) apply the inteilectual needs, there a bath or a wash house; there any public lavatory or venience, except in connecâ€" the saloons. An agency lout pretending to be of unt from a charitable point evertholess fed more hungry & winter in Chicago than all wencies, religious, charitable ipal put togetlier, was the of the saloons. creign people may govern i theory; as a matter of fact dle is monarch of all he surâ€" he shows bhow the aldermen CAIN 11 vistence hat wh in the predatory vrich in icntioned the idle rich. Of mich, cultured â€" Chicagoans ing for the woelfare of the d siys : "This is a plague azo which cats far more the vitals of the communiâ€" v sportingâ€"houses or one 1M n cal dogmas, modern Chicâ€" ie stock. But it sul» »th hands to anything izned by the three Dei viirie aven tie, â€" Marshall D. Armour and Geerge These three millionaires vorkaday «leities of modâ€" Thov e the idols of the w hisK eV 1 AD impertâ€"ct â€"manner this faulty‘ substitute for reâ€" stcourpelling the heeler der and the tuugh,whom hurches can reach, to fundoimental | principle therhood â€" which Christ Tnis class l and ddlet ly lin C] N8 neve » J in UDicago.;: o with theâ€"criminal pdom, the fallen woâ€" iskey _ and _ politics, eâ€"though it mighs be, party â€" organization it t LV uied hich is eml ipal lfl-gi\l‘lli Lt it iln:pu\)licam party ss extent in the rtheless doing the hurches ought to (act, rich men anod ving to the temptaâ€" hem, the most disâ€" of the community; ie heaviest â€" indictâ€" millionaire _ class ied by responsibiliâ€" blications, that it produce a class of well l't‘j;(lll:l.tt‘(l comâ€" ustified in sinking mitil the breath had ter Mr. Stead says about the men call the diabolism lass he divides into idlerich. Of the Charles T. Yerkes, ut GAtG, COniGs 11]] CLIUDE DT BPRA EIRIAIE L2 NeA UT CAE e criricism. _ "Of)| These two should form an alliance ‘erkes at an earâ€"| for some definite practical reforwms. before he was| Referring to the series of lectures reâ€" o as a financier| cently given on the first chapter of mate, bad served | Genesis by Prosident Harper, of the itentiary, I would | University of Chicago, Mr. Stead west that in his: says : "The real religious issue before ; he lhas broughg) the city is not whether Cain killed dutches of the| Abel, but whether rascals, compared | with whom Cain was a gentleman, are redatoryâ€" rich in | to be allowed to continue to sit as alâ€" tha idle rich Of| dermen in the City Council." . LV l severely arâ€" v indiflerence s citizens. azo he would izens had forâ€" ny. moral law & embodied in LW id uen â€" * _ | rything thu.ci y him to be| y infamous| Â¥4 o .\ man is he keeps _ The second devil which "toâ€"day ‘ ! nieeds exorcism is one I did not expect to find in a civilized and progressive | country. * * * Of all folklore tales of Europe, the most horâ€" |rible is that of the Vampire of the é Levant. The P.A., that strange assoâ€" | ciation for the protection of the Ameriâ€" |can citizens, reminds me of the restless ]vumpire of south eastern Europe, No | Popery fanaticism died fifty years ago ‘in England. We imagined it dead and buried. _ Here in Western Ameriâ€" |ca we find the same old demon, with |its familiar hoofs and horns and tail, | gscaring the old women of both sexes | with the bogey of impending massacre | and of the domination of sixty millions by six. * * * Ridicule | ought to be the best imneans for exorâ€" | cising this belated survival of antiquatâ€" | ed bigotry." | _ According to Mr. Stead the devil | of intemperance is the next evil to be |\ removed, _ "In Chicago there is said to |be sixty millions spent every year in |intoxicants." Speaking of prohibition : ‘"The true ‘policy is to recognize the | need to which it (the saloon) ministers and to put something better in its | place. * * ul Chicago is | abundantly illâ€"supplied with lavatories | and similar conveniences. * * Bad as the saloon is it holds the fields ‘ and deserves to hold it until there is at | least one temperance saloon in every | preciuct. _ There are 800 precinetg and | 7,000 saloons and there are not seventy | temperauce resorts." $12,000; J.W. Doane. $10,000; H H. Kohlsaat, $1500; C T. Yerkes, $1000; Pot:er Palmer, $15,000.).. Mr. 8 calls attention to the that | the manipulations of the asgessor inflict greater hardships on the poor, and a comparative table shows what the poor have to assume in the way of taxes. "The basis of a true system of assessâ€" ment is very simple. Whether it is a matter of realty or personalty, there exists an automatic method of asgessâ€" ment that lies ready at hand. Why not make every citizen his own assessâ€" or? The city might accept as final the sworn statement of each of its citizens as to the value of his possession subâ€" jact to the distinctly understood proâ€" viso that they might at any time be condemned or appropriated at the figâ€" ute at which the owner assessed them." Of the spirituality of_ Chicago churches this will suffice: "Instead of regarding the church members as saved souls come together for the purpose of saving others the tendency is too much to regard them as the members of & seâ€" lect club, meeting together for spirituâ€" al edification and for harmless aesthctâ€" it indulgences." Under the heading "Casting out devils" he first treats of the plutocrat. The wealthy men are spoken of as havâ€" ing absorbed all the monopolies of serâ€" vice, and reference made to the way the predatory rich have entrenched themselves in the universities. "The Brotherhood of Labor" is conâ€" sidered in Chapter IV. _ Mr. Stead reâ€" grets the lack of aftinity between the labor unions of Chicago and the churchâ€" es. The labor unions are suffering from the lack of support which the churches [could give them. and the Church is vaguely and painfully conâ€" scious tnat it is not ministering to those who need her most." The first appendix in the book is what he is pleased to call a ‘black list of the occupiers, owners and tax payâ€" ers of property used for immnoral purâ€" poses‘ in two districts, Armour avenue and the Levee. The list: implicates some of the best known and infl@entâ€" ial people in the city.> j * Another appendix is devoted to Chicago assessments. There seems to be no reason to doubt the general corâ€" rectness of the statemerft that taking the city all round, the assessed value is only oneâ€"eighth of the real valué. "My chief hope for our great cities is that the increasing number of intelâ€" ligent, warmhearted people will éstabâ€" lish neighborly. friendships with the crowded precinets which at‘present are almost as unknown to them as the territory of Timbuctoo." Mob n ied Rie ooR e mnndete n s>ft or calloused Lumps and Blemishes from horses, Blooa Spavin,Curbs, Splints, Rugngona. Sweeney, Stiftes, Sprains, Sor%,snd ollen Throat, Coughs,â€"otc. Save $50 by use of one bottle." Warranted the most wonderful Bleâ€" mish Cure ever known. Sold by Ed.M. Devitt Lenten Mortification / Rev. Dr. Plrstiyâ€"I trust, my dear young lady, you have decided to observe Lent in a proper spirit. _ > ; .[ ‘ Druggist. I_'Yq;mg Ladyâ€"Indeed I have, doctor. I shall come twice every Sanday to hear you preach. o ierg English Spavin Liniment removes all hard DANIEL RITZ, . New KP#""B o. 15 /93,; saye: I «was* auffering « The striking thing about the execuâ€" tion of Vai â€" was the appalling quickness of it all. Action was so rapid, says a writerin the New York World, from th¢ instant he appeared in the doorway|of the prison to the moment tho knife fell, that it was alâ€" most impossible to distinguish the slight chain of|incidents He flung himself eagerly &gainst the plank, was strapped to it and in the flasn of a glance the plank was pushed forward on the platform jof the guillotine. An instant‘s vision of a recumbent figure, face downward ; in the same moment ahersd, with two staring, wide open eyes, whirled }.lmost defiantly, as it seemed, and with a slight zigzag moveâ€" ment, to the rightward, while simulâ€" taneously the (pinioned body rolled inert, convulsive, into the capacious basket, also at the righthand side of the guillotine, _ Th swiftness, the mechanâ€" rical promptness ‘of the business fairly stupefied the spectator, It was impossâ€" ible to realize ti)ac a human life had entded in less time than it would take to draw a full breath. The guillotine had done its work well, There was scarcely a sense;of horror in the sight. Twentyâ€"four bours later no one could have associated Paris with perhaps the most impressive vengeance society has ever taken upon the revolt. The Mardi Gras festival was being kept as no Mardi Gras known since the bonanza& [ days of the empire. ____ In spite of Lh"e ‘London weather,‘ as it is called, all the gayeties and graces known to Frenth funâ€"making were osâ€" tentatiously vigible in every quarter. Pageants of revellers filled the strects in theatrical garb. The concert halls contributed a c#valcade immensely sucâ€" cessful in merryâ€"making. _ Scores upon scores of high chariots, bedecked with every fantastiâ€"dlevice known to stage management ard crowded with thedeâ€" dizened houris of the scene, kept the population in ()Evn-mouth delight from early nforning to midpnight, Y oung, old or miildle aged, who find themâ€" selves nervous, v«‘fak u.m%exhausted, who are broken down from excess or overwork, reâ€" sulting in many of the following sx'mptoms f Mental depression, premature old age, loss of vitality, loss of memory, bad dreams,dimâ€" ness of sight, palpitation of the heart emisâ€" sions, lack of energy, pain in the kidneys, headaches, pinplés on the face and body, itching or peculiar sensation about the scroâ€" tum, wasting ot the organs, dizziness, specks before the eyes, |twitching of the muscles, eyelids and elsewhere, bashfulness, deposits in theurine, loss of will power, tenderness of the scalp and spine, weak and flabby musâ€" cles, desire to slegp, failure to be rested by sleep, eonstipation, dullness of hearing, loss of voice, desire fqr solitwde, excitability of temper, sunken eyes, surrounded withLEaDâ€" ENCIROLES, oily Xooking skin, etc., are all syntoamss of nervous debility that lead to inptmy unless cured. The spring or vital force having lost its tension every function wanes in consequence. Those who through abuse committed |in ignorance, may be ger- manently cured. | Send your address and 10 sents in stamps for book on diseases peculiar to man, sent sealed. Address M.V.LUBON, 24 Macdonald Ave., Toronto, Ont., Canada. ‘Maria,‘ said the stalwart young man as he gazed ardenly at the blushing little fairy of a girl by his side, ‘do you really and truly love me? ‘Far more than life, dear CGeorge,‘ was the earnest freply. : ‘I would even go through fire and water for you if it were necessary]‘ | Mrs. Wiysrow‘g Soortiitxa Sy®ur has been used by millions of mothers for their children when teething. [If disturbed at night and brokep of your rést by a sick child suffering and crying with pain of Cutting Teeth send at once and get a bottle of "hirs. Winslow‘s Soothing Syrup" for children teething. It will relieve the poor little sufferer immediâ€" ately. Depend ypon it, mothers, there is no mistake about it, It cures Diarhoea, reguâ€" lates the stomack and bowels, cures Wind Colic, softens the gums and reduces inflamâ€" mation, and gives tonc and energy to the whole system. ‘*Mrs. Winslow‘s Soothing Syrup" for children teething is pleasant to the taste and is the prescription of one of the oldest and best female physicians and nurses ‘Make no rash promise in regard to water, Maria, unless you can swim,‘ reâ€" plied the noblé young man in fond loving tones. (But in regard to fire, if you are perfectly willing to promise me that even on cold winter mornings you will not hésitate to get up early and. wrestle \viyh it, I will summon up courage to ask you to become my wife.‘ | in the United States. Price twentyâ€"five cents a bottle.. Sold by all druz{istr throughout the World. Be sure and ask for Mars. Wixsrow‘s Soorhixa Syrup. 23â€"ly Peacemaker:â€""I wouidn‘t fight, my good men." First combatantâ€""He called me a liae sur " «An‘ he called me a lazy. loafer." _ Peacemakerâ€" «Well, T wouldn‘t fight ‘over a differ ence of opiniq‘n ; you both may be I'ight:. s ; ‘L Work quiokew : ] â€"â€" : j ifi y Ca.â€" . DOES TS Work qUuIOKLy: â€" | Â¥or Over Fifty Years. ALL MEN Testing HMer Love e ‘London weather,‘ as he gayeties and graces h funâ€"making were osâ€" ible in every quarter. ellers filled the strects rh. The concert halls With Which the Guilâ€" Muman Life. io A member of a wellâ€"known club in London lost his umbrella in the club and was resolved to draw attention to the cireumstances. _ He caused the folâ€" lowing notice to be put up in the en trance hall. ‘The nobleman who took away an umbrella, not his own, on such & date is requested to return it.‘ The committee took umbrage at this statement and summoned the member who composed ft before them. RHEUMATISM CURED JN a Day.â€"Soutn American Rheumatic Cure for Rheumatism and Neuralgia, radically cures in 1 to 3 days, Its action upon the srstem is remarkable and mysterious. _ It removes at once the cause and the disease immediately disappears, The first ;‘I)om greatly benefits. 7 conts Sold by Ed. M. evit Druggist. ‘Why, sir,‘ they said, ‘should you have supposed that a nobleman had taken your umbrella" ‘Well,‘ he replied, ‘the first article in the club rulessays that‘this club istobe composed of noblemen aud gentlemen,‘ and since the person who stole my umbrella could not have been a gentleâ€" mian, he must have been a nobleman.‘ s Argonsaut. A young lady who was troubled with the too persistent attentions of a young man, played a shabby trick on him the other night. "Here‘s an oriâ€" ginal game ; take this pencil and mark as I say," quoth she. _â€""Now . make a row of 11 siphers ; make a perpendicuâ€" lar mark downward at the right of the first, fifth and tenth ciphers, and upâ€" ward on the fourth, seventh and eighth." Then she ask him to read what he had written. Try it and you will see why the youth beat a hasty retreat. Tfil{pnblio’-wili pleise take, notice that I â€" have anasnadim® nhoto narlors and am 11. Hammerly, a wellâ€"known business man of Hillsboro, Va., sends this tâ€"stimony to the merits of Ayer‘s Sarsaparilla: @Several years ago, Eiuirt my leg, the inivry leaving a sore whichled to erysipelas, My :‘.ufiermfz‘ were extreme, my leg, from the i-.uce to the ankle, being ia solid sore, which began to exâ€" tend to other parts of the body, After trying various remedices, I began taking Ayer‘s Sarsaparilla, and, before I had finished the first boitle, 1 experienced gl}-at rc)le(i the sccoud bottle effected a complete cure.‘ now ready for ther time nor */repared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowe‘!, Masa. , They‘re the smallest, the easiest to takeâ€"and â€"=â€"â€" _ the cheapest pill you can buy, for they‘re guaranteed to give satisfaction, or your money is reâ€" turned. . Berlin Photo Parlors.| Waterloo : Coal Yards. Cures others,.will cure you b‘€ y only y ou pay onl for the 9 'ood ou It won‘t do to experiment with Catarrh. There‘s the constant danâ€" ger of driving it to the lungs. You can have a perfect and permanent cure with Dr. Sage‘s Remedy. | Ayer‘s Sarsaparilla m . AYERNS _ . SARSAPARILLA E s B o \curE| &5‘ & Osa Ipyat»A & / 8 € CC SPLOdLâ€" O3 â€" A DISTURBANCE isn‘t what you want, if your stomach < and bowels are irregular. That‘s about all you get, though, with the ordinary pill. It may relieve you for the moâ€" ment, but you‘re usually in a worse state afterâ€" ward than before. This is just where Dr. Pierce‘s Pleasant Pellets do most good. They act in an casy and natural way, very different from the hu&r‘e, oldâ€"fashioned pills. They‘re not only pleasanter, but there‘s no â€" reaction afterward, and their help <lasts. One little sugarâ€"coated Pellet for a gentle laxâ€" ative or correctiveâ€" three for a cathartic. Constig;tion, Indigesâ€" tion, Bilious Attacks, Dizziness, Sick and Bilâ€" ious _ Headaches, are prompily relieved and cured. Logical Ontario Mutual Life. f Established 1870. DOMINION DEPOSIT, * _ $100,000. Assurances in force, Jan. 1st, 1893. .. .$16,122,195 Increase over previous year ...... 1,187,388 New Assurances written in 1892 ...... 2,651,000 Increase over 1891.................. â€" 222,050 Cash Income for 1892.................. _ 614,951 Increuse over 1891.................. 67,331 Assets, December 3ist, 1802............ 2,253,084 Surplus over all Liabimiea,Decembe} Histy 1BO2..>>,>:â€":4sssr«sss:«2 | â€" 170,901 Increase over 1891.............;.... 20,742 The 20â€"Year SurervisorsuIr DistrrrUTION Porrcy now offered embraces all the newest features, ind is the best form of PROTECTION and INVESTMENT money can buy. It has no equal. Guaranteed values, attractive options, and liberal conditions. Trâ€"0reAse OVOr I8Q1.....;1 ssiisisils Reserve for security of Policyâ€"Holdâ€" 1. Cash and Paidâ€"up Values guaranteed on each policy, 2. All dividends belong to and are paid only to policyâ€"holders. 3. No restriction on travel, residence, or occupation. 4. Death claims paid at once on completion of claim papers. OFFICERS : ALEX. MILLAR, Q. C., Solicitor.........Berlin J. H. WEBB, M. D., Medical Referee. Waterloo W.S, HODGINS, Supt. of Agencies.. Waterico THE WATERLOO MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY. INCORPORATED IN 1863 Total Assets 3ist December ‘93, $349,734. T w H.RIDDELL, WM. HENDRY, THE | Dominion Life Assurance Co‘y, Head Office, > _ Waterloo, Ont. Authorized Capital $1,000,000. Gov‘t Deposit at Ottawa $50,000 Subscribed Capital $257, Paid up Capital $64,400 JAMES;INNES, M.P., CHR. KUMPF Esq., PRESIDENT. VicEâ€"PRE81DEN The Policy of the Dominion Life is a straight promise to payâ€"like a bank draft, almost unconditional. _ No reâ€" striction on travel or occupation. Wher. two or three years in force it is nonâ€"forfeitable, even for failure to pay renewal premiums, remaining in _ Equality between policyâ€"holders is secured by insuring in three clussesâ€" abstainers, general and womenâ€"giving each in profits the true benefit of its own longevity. It provides a legacy certain instead of a law suit possible, ______ _ â€" The RATES compare favorably with any in the world. ___ â€" Your choice of all sound plans o assurance »Fered, no other. ull force TILL THE VALUZ IS EXHAUSTED. dealer in ingpectio1 Choice Cigars, Tobaceds, Cigarettes and Smokâ€" i ers‘ Sundges. ‘ Mouth Orgaus, Pocket Knives, Lines of Purses, Etc. . SUITINGS, King Street, near Railway Track. TRO CAN be had of a Waterloo butcher. On and after this date I will sell meat cheaper as followa bwg'l:ellrkstfclws meat, pork 9 cents per pound; 9 cts, (rer pound; best cut beef roast 8 cents per pound; bolognas 10 cents per pound; pork sausages 10 cents per pound; Wienâ€" er wurst 10 cents per gound A liberal patronage solicited. 8, SCHNEIDEK, Shop opp. Commercial Hotel. AGENTS WANTED. â€" Apply now for choice of territory to THOS. HILLIARD Waterloo, Feb. lith, 1894, CHEAP MEAT THOS. HILLIARD, Maxacine Dirkcror. HEAD OFFICE, â€" WATERLOO, ONT BOARD OF DIRECTORS Geo. Randall, Esq., Waterloo, John Shuh, Esg., 4 Chas. Hendry, Esq., w I. E. Bowman, £sq., M. P., Waterloo 8. Snyder Esq., Waterloo, Geo. Dicbel, Esq., i+ William Snyder, Esq., " I. D. Bowman, Esq., Berlin. J. L. Wideman, Esq., St. Jacobs. John Allchin, Esq., New Hamburg. Allan Bowman, Exq., Preston. P. E. Shantz, Preston, Thomas Gowdy, Esq., Guelph, . James Livingstone, Esq., M. P., Baden. ‘Thomas Cowan, Esq., Gait. OFFICERS : George Randall, President. John Shuh, Viceâ€"President. C. M. Taylor, Secretary. John Killer Inspector. Messrs. Bowlby & Clement, Solicito & Berlin ncrease of 1891 Liberal Conditions of Policies J. G. DOERSAM WATERLOO. ONT. ecretary. COAL ! Managing Director | "Tis not the clothes that make the Coal ] orde,s for Manage 2,061,602 "~‘The Boom Continues no‘| Berlin, Feb. 20th, 1894. f Oddfellows‘ Block, | . Town Waterloo, |* The great Drive we have been selling lately has _ CROWDS of PEOPLE Every Day. READ THIS WONDERFUL * LIST. Ladies‘ fine button shoes $1.15 red. to .75 M.n’lfin‘m 7 i 1.15 n .65 u_ lace or congress » 1.75 n _ 1.00 Boy" fine lace n 1.50 n .90 A fine lot of Children‘s choice for .30 Heavy cottonade .25 in .18 GREAT BANKRUPT STORE, Kindlyv invite everybody to call on them whnen in Berlin, arnd examine their stock ‘of Cressman & Hallman General Dry Goods, Men‘s and Boys‘ Ready Made Suitsfand Overcoats, Hats and Caps, Ece. KING STREET, Wall Paper, Books and Formerly carried on by E. S. Hallman| patterns can always be had at Bring your watches and clocks want ing repairs to C. J. Alteman, who will undertake to put them in good running order and guarantee satisfaction. The Copner Jewellery Store,) Waterloo, The prices are consistent with quality of material and workmanship. The latest invoices include the finest of American and Foreign Fabrics. CASK EROCRRT, Alteman‘s, the Jeweller.] Wedding Presents. Suitable articles iu great variety of Incpe:ction is invited to the New ooflands opposite the Zimmerman House.) Everything as advertised. New Goods ari with the crowds to the get anything better than TROUSERINGS and imon Snyder, John Ritzer. WATERLOOQ, OQONXNT Call here for your man," but they help? You Can‘t BERLIN Coughs, Colds AND Hoarseness. Merchant Tailor. . King St. Waterloo. Druggist, Hast of Market, BERLIN. onsumption FOR OVERCOATINGS Stationery, at Ont .18 .10 UPrg Table linens .25 red. to ."Z’g A fine lot of prints .05 and up, | «// Black Dress Goods way down ‘ A beantiful line of Dress Goods at .08 _ Double width Tweed effect « 300 red. to .1§ _ Heavy shirtings at 7c and up, : Men‘s and Boys‘ suits way down THIS® :â€": WEEK Special | _ We have just finished our annual stock taking and as a result have laid on our tables a pile of Remnants which we will sell regardless of cost. Come iand get a bargain. | [ NEW SHIRTINGS. 18 yards good Shirting for > yards extra heavy Shirting for yards 121 Shirting for 1. FLANNELETTES. 161 yards of Flannelettes 121 yards extra heavy Flar for ®1. COTTONADES. 20e Cottonades for 15¢ per yard ; 2be Cottonades for 20c per yard ; extra heavy Cottonades worth 35e for TW EEDS. Don‘t Fail 2D¢ A special purchase of Tweeds worth 530c to 60c per yard. The whole will be offered this week at 35¢ per yard. See this. REMNANTS. Terms Cash and One Price. Watches, _ Clock Cheap Cash Store, Cheap Harness J. STREBEL‘S, Cheap Cash Store, SMYTH BROS. to see the special attractions in per yard Hello There King St., Berlin. | Goods,| Musical Irigtruments ERB STREET WATEKLOO. Now is the time for arriving daily. Come Headers E. R. ERNST. _ FOR KING ST,. BERLIN AT â€"ATâ€" Aduet innelettes M 10

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