loo g Skillfuly and p,.“'“ 'atten,ded to. enlarged and impro¥® ewly painted. ‘CAmARer V aterloo Branch. Liberal Condittons of Polteles EI Em _ . Cash and Paidâ€"up Values guaranteed on TT »«ch policy, 2. All dividends belong to and are + m.Con‘ly ‘o policy holders. 3. No restriction m‘ravel, residence, or occupation. 4. Death F TNa!I*TD a mm ra ‘um< paid at once on completion of claim inds of Meats, Summer of all kinds a specialty. AS. H. FR nd 1 E> MEAT MARKETL to the people of Waterl0® wE cousty o There !AL _ BANKINC Bustuz33 TRANSACTED,: rles N. Ro nd Sign Painter and Paper ued on rrICe, MONTREAL, ,000,000. Re'tcsl,“)on Molsons censed Au LN UR PEQUEGNp clesale and Retail Jewelgy ITAL, $200,000, ew RefrigoratO®. OFFICE ATERLOO has increased to auch:.ul“ hle toyive it my perso super ippo:inted my brother Geor§e \<p‘my books during the psét < ‘mo~ keeper and cashier and )the best of my ability to abl# {iny ¢nstoimers. ) 12 a. m., 1.30 to 6.15 p. M H. B DUERING, _ E SHOP Fischer, W ELLERY, PIAMON bs, SILVERWAuh is the time fOF cted in English : ATTHE ZIMME INSURANCE CO. â€" MARKET] Coc0a Cream T H BE years M \~‘ of Ontario Legislatur ottom Waterlo0, 1) ra‘»â€" on special deposits JACOR NEXPELER, inager Waterloo Branch. BANK 100ds Guzranteed. all Principal Points, 1894 cen â€"0 liberal that, is them still better, I wi is<â€" open from 6 oclock 1 7 oclock in the ever »* _ WaTERLOO, Oyt DIRECTORs P., Waterloo. nce to vicinity Wa n‘imerous customers prices PEQUEGNATr DEPARTMEXT ) tne M & p y that J Rave of Four ent Tacobs, ï¬-.l'mh in stock Beat Brands of Cit::etu-nd.’l‘nozunhmm "stetlogCigar and Tobacco Emporium Bicycles ©00D JOB GUARANTEED. y Ylilcox & Whitmer,'_ Repair Shop *un "Canadian Aermoior." omplexion is a C elberg | niversity Ontario Mutual Life. ap Economy, Equity, Stability, Progress. EX. MILLAR, Q. C., Solicitor......... Berlin 4. WERR, M. D., Medical Referee. Waterloo 8. HODGINS, Supt. of Agencies.. Waterico pre rJ.X. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Curescthcers, will cure you oFFICERS® : EX,. MILLAR,. Q. C., Solicitor AYER‘ D a frls tho Scars Remain, HEAD OFFICE, â€" WATERLOO, ONT Established 1870, Bicyclo Race Meet, July 25th. H.RIDDELL, RRPA LCEBEXINCE ea y Sewing Machines, JNION UEPOSIT, 1y A Big Day. Mr. Herman Froehlich, tonsorial artist, Waterloo, has the sole right n town of this preparation,. It is the most harmless toilet preparation in use and removes . Tan. Blackheads, Redness of the face, ? and all other imperfections of the iÂ¥ing it soft, white and smooth, bottle and yon will use many more, HERKWAN FREHLICH, ecretary Ladies . . Electric Bells, _ Gunsmithing. r _ SURVIvORSHIP DISTRIBUTION i‘Tered embraces all the newest is the best form of PROTECTION E~Tt money can buy. It has no inleed values, attractive options, nditions. t3 THE ARK R ‘" Gem (Steel) & Star WINDMILLS. CGerman secret from the Hei ree, Jan. 1st, 1894. ;. .§17 t previous year ...... l ‘TAXGN In I8UG susllls (8 1802. . .. 2202266 c.00.000 028450 NB cce crmenes ores | 2,008,49% 1809 s mmommrccrucce | $00,440 ity of Members, 1893 2,330,981 PME ues esn elbnel 72,911 iabilities, 1808, ..... _ 220,120 INUT .: roumesneanrsarre 49,811 ALL KINDS OF beside the Post Office, Waterloo, Hydraulic rams, Iron force and lift pumps. Hose, belting and all threshers‘ supplies For information apply to FOR THE â€"â€"â€" Sarsaparilla or _ It, 8. FUTHER, Jn Travelling Agent DUST COLLECTORS. Celebrated Hailady, Standard. 6m 19 King St. Berlin Ww.S. BOWDEN, agent, New Dundece, on S10ee, Only tho rem:in, and the orv nf the past, to id ime of the good is done me, I now twenty pounds, and [ hcve heen on the yours, have noticed ectised in nll parts | lways tike pleagâ€" ddid for me." nses originating in medy is WM. HENDRY, 0 i. cCled. Atlast, x1 old mother me to tty Ayer‘s iilln. I tfoos three the sores healed, Manager $100,000 1,560.83H 'In1887......‘...... 2,314 _ 140,000 In 1888..000.0.....000â€" 4,879 _ 310,100 In 1880............. 7,672 485,000 In 1890..........)+. _ 11,013 _ 660,000 In I891............. _ 16,274 1,008,980 In 1892....22....... _ 21,080 _ 1,370,200 In 18083.. ... .....~.. 26,284 1,577,040 In 1894 (on rec‘d Jan. 1) 28,741 1,742,100 _ To this may be justly added kindred denominational organizations of young people that bavesprung from the Chrisâ€" tian Endeavor idea â€" The most notable of these is the Epworth League®rof the Methodist churches, with nearly a milâ€" lion mewbers. ° The Christian Endea: vor movement has reached most of the Protestant _ churches. Twentyâ€"four denominational conferenceés hbave been arranged for at Cleveland. The pastor study has widened, and the world is welcoming the Christian Endeavor Society. President Clark, in s recent tour of the wor‘ld fo'.ndachnnï¬lnfln- deavor welcome a Mizpah ioti In In In In In In ln 1885 In 1886 In 1887 In 18$1 In 1882 In 1883 In 1384 Harper‘s Weekly. d Christian Endeavor bas bad a marâ€" velous growth in its fourtesen years. It has passed the "big boy" period, and is far on the way to matured manhood. Ite progress is indicated in the followâ€" ing statistics :â€"â€" sgyx"A 68| MEMBERSHIP OF THE YOUNG PEOPLE‘s 50â€" CIETY OF CHRISTIAN ENDEAYOR. Societies, â€" Members. The other was less prompt in his reâ€" ply, but had observed to some purpose. ‘I notice that they fly away in pairs,‘ he said. ‘One has a little pellet of mud, the other nothing. Are there drones among wasps, as among bees" ‘Both were alike busy, and each went away with a burden. The one you thought a ‘do nothing‘ had a mouthful of water. They reach their nest together,. The one deposits his pellet of mud, and the other ejects the water upon it, which makes it of the consistency of mortar, â€" Then they paddle it upon the nest, and fly away for more materials. : ‘Nothing, except they seeimn to come and go,‘ replied one of the boys. _ You see one boy observed a little, and the other a good deal more, while the naturalist had something to tell them that surprised them very much. ‘Boys, be observant. Cultivate the faculty, Hear sharply, look keenly. Glance at a shop window as you pass it, and then try how many things you can recall that you noticed in it. You may not become great men through your observation, like Newton, Linâ€" naeus, Franklin,or Sir Hampbry Davy; but you will acquire information that will be of service to you and make you wiser, and, quite probably much better men.‘â€"Richmond Christian Advocate. ‘Do you notice anything peculiar in the movement of those wasps? he asked, as he pointed to a puddle in the middle of the road. 1 Liflhedzath© 2 5cx/ > > >z airiet 6e wasâ€"DOPR Every boy should cultivate the faculâ€" in MM'ha?vpn:t? gave him ty of observation. If he does :so deâ€" ‘nothing but a sound body, a shrewd signedly, it will not be long before he | mind, and a kind heart, . will do it unconsciously. It ‘is better! . At eight years of age he was alone to know a thing by observation than in the world, earning. a pittante :5 by experience, especially if it is oome-}selling peanuts. At twelve he h thing to our detriment. I would preâ€" | managed to keep himself alive and to fer to know which is the toadstool and go to school for two terms. which is the mushroom by observation I At thirteen he went to Philadelphia, rather than by experiment; for the,and as he walked the streets of the latter might cost me my life. There is great city he had not a penny in the hardly a vocation in which observation pocket of his little jacket to buy bread, is not of great service, and in many it | But he had an honest, stout heart unâ€" is absolutely essential. It adds to the | der it. proficiency of the chemist, the naguralâ€" He found a place as errand boy in a )st, the mining expert, and the fronâ€" bookstore, and rose before (;la.wn every tiersman# Observation quickens exâ€" day that he could wash the pavement periment. It leads to inference, to aud kindlc the‘ fire before lany other deduction, to classification, and thus store was open. "My maxim always theories are formulated and sciences was," he said, "do your work nowâ€"â€"at established. M An observing boy will become an observing man; and, ‘as boy ‘ and man, he will have an advantage over those who have not cultivated the faculty. â€" A child may know more;than a philâ€" osopher about matters that may not have come under the observation of the philosopher. _A little girl entered the study of Mezerai, the celebrated historian, and asked him for a coal of fire. . (ialileo noticed the swaying of a chandelier in a cathedral, and it sugâ€" gested the pendulum to him. To anothâ€" er inventor the power of steam and its application was suggested by the ketâ€" tle on the stove. A poor monk disâ€" covered [ gunpowder, and an optician‘s boy the magnifying lens. Two boys of my acquaintance one morning went walking with a naturalâ€" ist. ‘But you haven‘t brought a shovel,‘ he said. | ‘I don‘t need any,‘ was her reply. Aud then, very much to his astonishâ€" ment, she filled her hand with ashes and put the live coal on top. No doubt the learned man knew that the ashes were a bad conductor of heat, but he had never seen the fact verified in such a practical manner. 1X Growth of Christian Endeavor. Habits of.Observation. ieÂ¥ _aps | a0use COmn lg’& , manently cu w’m cents in sta 1 w’w) to man, sen y 485,000 660,000 | i 481 2,870 I hope not, sirâ€" There was a mistaze. sir, of one dglâ€" lar in adding up the figuresâ€" +~Here‘s the dollar. Ialwaysâ€"Good heavens ! What‘s the matter ! â€" Boy, come here, quick. He‘s in a fit. Broke it too Suddenly. f Is this the proprietor ? . Yes, sir. . Your men did ajob of plumbing at my bouse last week. [ anes in conseq Those who through abuse ooumunnn: ignorance, may be perâ€" manently cured. _ Send your address ms‘fo cents in stamps for book on diseases %ou.linr to man, sent sealed. Address M.V.LUBON, 24 Macdonald Ave. Toronto, Ont., Canada. the scalp and lrine, weak and flabby musâ€" cles, desire to sleep, fallure to be rested by sleep, eonstipation, dullness of ha-rm, loss of voige, desire for solitude, excitability of temper, sunken QY“’ surrounded with LEaDâ€" ENCIRELES, oily looking skin, etc., are all symptoms of nervous debility that lead to ptmy unless cured. The spring or vital force having lost its te'glion every t‘t_mctio? The great city in which he lived held its breath while he lay dying, In all the churches, the asylums,prayers went up from him. Workingmen and ragged street boys when they met in the mornâ€" ing asked, "How is he *‘ and when the end came said "He is dead !‘ and gathâ€" ed about his house in silentcrowds with pale faces. They did not need to name him. There was no other man in the world to befriend them as this man had done. Many Americans have mode colossal fortunes as did George W. Childs, by shrewd, nonest business methods, and many have given large sums away at their death. Mr. Childs‘ principle in business was : «Do the work before you â€"at once,‘ and in life : ‘Do the good you canâ€"now.‘ + ‘He gave it is stated nearly all of his vast fortune away, while living, to inâ€" stitutions,to churches,to tens of thousâ€" ands of individuals. This boy worked for years, sixteen hours a day, with such scanty food that he saved money out of His meagre waâ€" ges of three dollers a week. He had po especial talent or gift with which to gain success. Yet no man, perhaps, ever held the especial place which he made for himself among the American people. e ; * ‘He never gave me a penny,‘ said a negro, ‘I didn‘t need dat. But when he spoke to me in de mohnin‘, sah, it kind o‘ lightened up de whole day foh me. Dah‘s nobody so kind,‘ with the tears in his eyes. Yet it was not his success nor his wealth nor evyen his gifts brought & whole city to Weep at his grave. He had faults, but he had a pitiful, kind heart. before the eyes, twitshiniof the muscles, eyelids and elsewhere, bashfulness, deposites What was his secret? With what key did he unlock the world ? _______ ‘He was to every man a friend.‘â€" Youth‘s Companion Young, old or middle sgod, who find themâ€" selves nervous, weak and exhausted, who are broken down from excess or overwork, reâ€" sulting in many of the following ?mptom-: Menï¬ 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 kid::r, headaches, pignples on the face and y, itching or peculiar sensation about the scroâ€" tum, wasting of the organs, dizziness, specks in theurine, loss of will power, tenderness of A few weeks ago, an old man, she was struck down while at work and carried home to die. During the two weeks he lay waiting for the end,thouâ€" sands of messages of grief and affection came from almost every part of the United Statees, andimany from foreign countries. <They were from every class and kind of manâ€"great artists and suthors, whom he bad once aided ; orâ€" phars whomn he was supporting ; prinâ€" ces and dukes who had shared his hosâ€" pitality ; penniless widows; college boys whom he had opened a career ; to them all he had been kind, had given help when help was needed. _ _ He found a place as errand boy in a bookstore, and rose before (;a.wn every day that he could wash the pavement and kindlc the fire before lany other gtore was open. ‘"My maxim always was," he said, "do your work nowâ€"â€"at once. | At thirteen‘ he went to Philadelphia, and as he walked the streets of the great city he had not a penny in the pocket of his little jacket to buy bread. But he had an honest, stout heart unâ€" der it. Noddsâ€"What have you named the | â€" {About‘a And there was a mistake in the ALL MEN Bor e i ns !| â€" Street bands ‘are not permitted im eré, | Germany unless. they accompany proâ€" cessions. ~In Vienna the organ grindâ€" ers are allowed to play only between cn€! midâ€"day and sunset. 4F +1 om: |. . ‘The tail of the o is the fleshâ€" iter« | . R p * n d ea! s of of Muoonnd- is mï¬nï¬a when boiled in. its _. . |own skin, which afterward may . be ‘| drawn off like a glove, .. .. . .. Arthur Bentz, a 6â€"yearâ€"old boy of Lebanon, Pa., died from the effecte of swallowing a tadpole, which his little companions had forced_into his mouth. The great‘clook at Rouen, France, has been grinding out time and strikâ€" ing the hours fand quarters for | over 500 years, running all this time withâ€" out interruption. 1 It is estimated that foreign stocks amounting to $3,819,035,000 are held in Great Britain and the interest reâ€" receivable from them $145,000,000 per annum. t Chicago has a Domestic Science Asâ€" sociation, which purposes to build an institution where women will be inâ€" structed in home dutiés. f It is about thirty miles Rcross town in London and for that entire distance there is said to be an unbroken line of residences and stores. f Petroleum is derived from vegetable and animal substances that were deâ€" posited in and associated with the forminz rocks. The best man in the country is simâ€" ply a gob of mud fashioned into bone and muscle, flesh and blood, brain imâ€" pulse, thought feeling, desire, ambition and love. He is dressed in mud, has mud in both pockets, in short he is covâ€" ered with mud. Our finest churches, our big stores, our busy factories, our comfortable hote‘s, our cozy homes are built of mud. The prettiest girl in the land is an exquisite harmony in mud, precious mud, beautiful mud, loveable, fascinatâ€" ing distracting mudâ€"but mud just the The pink baby cooing in its cradle is & poem in mud, but sweet, dimpled, kissable, bugable, and hope inspiring In 1813 William Burton patented a locomotive that was provided ;with legs and feet behind to push ithe maâ€" chine along the track. From mud the cottage plano is exâ€" tracted, ditto the carpet, gold watch, broach and earring, the silk dress, the patent leather shoes and the four butâ€" ton kids. mud. .After a courtship of two hours James Wood and Miss Mary Stewart were married recently near Youngsâ€" town, C. ‘Say,‘ piped a little fellow to me on Wyndham street this morning ‘do you see that man over there ? I looked across and saw a comfortâ€" able looking citizen strolling along in the cool morning air. ‘Well, what of him ? I enquired. ‘That man,‘ whispered the youth in a voice in which awe and admiration were strongly blended, ‘that man is as rich as mud !‘ Out of the mud leap stately houses and big bank barns,the roaring pig pen and the convenient hen house. A gob of mud is worth niore than a plug of gold any time, for out of mud cometh forth the golden wheat,the rustâ€" ling barley,the ladyâ€"like oats,the graceâ€" ful corn, the trailing pes vine, the blosâ€" soming clover and the lifeâ€"giving grass. The figure of speech is correct. It wouldn‘t do to say that a man was as rich as gold, but to say that he is as rich as mud covers whole ground, as it were, and expresses it admirably so to speak. I _ Mud is king! Long live the mud !â€" "Khan" in Guelph Mercury. A. F2A C geffis Z8A yM sc NA @a S eP R t bbe: in No e *3 a As Rich As Mud: f-;' YOUR;CBILD__-_ e & * UNACCOUNTABLY LOSING FLesH "= 6 es menng® ) so" WHY DONT wiky @&Z.EMULSION? # + IT WILU HELP WONDERFULLY E> § Trampâ€"You never give anything to beggars ! Do you think I am going to become & bloated bondholder just to ascommodate you ? If you do you are fooling yourself badly. Trampâ€"Will you give me a few cents ? Mrs. Frederick Duppen, of Cincinâ€" nati, has just learned that seventeen years ago Frederick Miller made a reâ€" mark derogatory of her character, and has entered a sI:it. for slander. An elepha.nz’s sense of smell is so delicate that it can ecent a human beâ€" ing at a distance of 1,000 yards. Dox‘r Lose titk Basy.â€"Every moâ€" ther knows how critical a time the seeâ€" ond summer ?F, and how many little ones die during that period from Sumâ€" mer Complaint, Dysentery, Diarrhoea, and Cholera Morbus ; and how anxiousâ€" ly she wubch:sfl day by day, lest the dread diseases /snatch away the loved ones ! There is no disease that comes so suddenly, orLiol frequently so quickly fatal, as these bowel complaints, and in & large majority of cases doctors and medicines seem to be of no avail. There is, however, onie remedy, which in forty years of trial has never been" known to fail when taken accourding .to the printâ€" ed directions, and this is Prrry Davis‘ Pamx Kitrter.| It is so safe and sure that no mother is justified in being without it, A bottle in the housg ready for sudden sickness will often save a life, You can get the new Big Bottle for 25¢, The mean annual temperature of the Arctic regions jg below 30 degrees Fahréenneit. / The value of t:he steel manufactuced in the United States every year is about $500,000,000. People in the middle ages believed in wereâ€"wolves ags well as witches. Wereâ€"wolves were suppored to be men who while preserving their appearance as human beings, were yet transformed into wolves, with an appetite which nothing but human flesh would satisfy. The heart of a Greenland whale is a yard in diameter. The king of !Dshomey was educated it France n.nd_l speaks Fronch fluently. A race horse clears from 20 to 24 feet at a boun&. Two safeâ€"crackers entered a Brookâ€" lyn store to operate on a safe that made a great show from the street. They were so disappointed when they found that it was only a wooden box painted up, that they departed, leavâ€" ing their instruments behind them., Plants often exhibit something very much like intelligence. If a bucket of water during & dry season be placed a few inches from a growing pumpkin,or meion vine the latter will turn from its course and in a day or two will get one of its leaves in the water. Taking the earth as the centre of the universe and the polar star as the limit of our vision, the visible universe embraces an aerial space with a diameâ€" ter of 420,000,000,000 miles and a cirâ€" cumference of 1,329,742,000,000 miles. §OAP WILL Gentâ€"I never give anything to begâ€" IAlways â€" Smoke tae °C of any soap in the market. Millions of women throughout the world can vouch for this, as it is they who have proved its value. It brings them less labor, greater comfort. The best value for the Consumer by its _ enormous > sale that it is PCR * [. nel| * "Bes s Toâ€"day and the next 30 days we will slaughter goods in alldeâ€" partments at greatly reduced prices. Read this carefully. GLOVESâ€"Ladies‘ White and Cream Kids at 25¢. Ladies‘ and Misse«‘, â€" _ Extra Bargains The Gre'atlBankrupt Store 12 CASEs GRANITE WARE imported. direct*from the n be sold CHEAPER than EVER HEARD of. Also a large stock TORYâ€"MADE TFNWARE way below others‘ prices My own ware I have also GREATLY REDUCED in price. SPECIAL REDUCTION in EAVETROUGHNG. Something NEW in STOVES, call and see. PLUMBING, Gas and Water FITTING will be promptly attended to. Leave your orders for HARDWEKkE and secure right prices at > J ACOB CONRAD_‘S STILL to the FRONT. DEPOS!TS OF $1.00 AND UPWARDS RECEIVED, AND CURRENT RATES OF INTEREET ALLOWED. _ INTEREST ADDED TO THE PRINGIPAL AT THE END OF May AND NOVEMBER IN EACM YEAR. _ l t Spoolal Attention given to the Collection of Commercial Paper, and Farmers‘ Sales Notes. CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE A General Bankina Business TransacteD. Farmers Notes Discountco DRrAFTS is8uED PAYABLE AT ALL POINTS IN CaANADA, AND THE PRiNC:PAL CiTiEs in TtHeE UniTteED States, Great Brirain, France, Bermuda, &c. to see ‘the special attractions in ESTABLISHED 1867 HEAD OFFICE, TORONTO. CAPITAL (PAID UP) SIX‘MILLION DOLLARS REBT o« .l â€" «C o « a «. .& & Irs. Kennedy & Kowan ure the lending epecialiste of C America, They guar intoe to cure or no pay. Their repuâ€" tation and fiftson yeaurs of business ars at stake. . You gan no risk. Write thom for an honesiopinioi, no mutter who treuted you. It may maye you years of regrot and suffering. | Charges roasgaable. Write for a M n wvar fails in euring Di Our New Method Treatment y=u} fnls is utlis Diseases of men, grains and losses, pgrifies the hlood, eleurs the brain, builds up the nervous and sexual systems and restores lost vitulity to the body. We Guarantee to Cure Nervous $« bility, Failing Manhood, nyphllln,v:.-lcncele. «ricture flert, Unnustural #ischarges, Weak Parts and ali Kiduey d nladder »iscases. xi Em â€" * P K e ToF a & @ us w "", uC * PA \ ‘. » CE "t /A PA‘s s o " At 14 years of ago L learnedl o bad habhit which slmost ruined Q (~ \me. 1 became nervous and weak, My Luck troubled ine. 1 could !etand no exertion, lend and efes becaume duli. Dreame and * [,, [draing nt night werkened me. I tried seven Medical Firms, Elecâ€" ts «. uf Zik tric Belts, Putent Medicines and Fumily Doctors. They gave me " '." “ "-.\ (no help. A friend advised metéotry Drs. Kernedy & Kergan. They _\\\f' -_;,‘ 3 ‘, ‘scnt me l‘»n.«- month‘s toeatmert and it eured me. 1 could feel PR )2 ;v,» inysolf gnining every day. 7/er New Method Treatinent cures when Cureu in ons m zu. @4 else Juss." ‘They have cured muny 0. my friends." Dr. Monlton. i | 7 // m [R AATE 0A M703 NRNOD y us da bkk J da o DRS. KENNEDY & KERGAN. Thousands of Joxang aad Aétle Aped Ne:are nnnnally through carly indiscrâ€"aion +d Jiter cxcor (s, Solf sburs Discases have ruined{aud wrecked t e life of mnuny i ; romi= any of the following Byrupioms: Nersous and Despondes:; T tion; Mamory Poor; Basiy E. tiguol; lsxcitsble snd Irrood the Face; Drewins apd Draing it Nigit; Restiess:M:cnno Throat; Hair Loose;{Pains in Body:; sunken Eyes: lc csâ€" Ener :y und Strongth. Our New Mocked Ireatment will bu i4 ; and sexually. | Chas. Patterson, Read DRS KENNEBY é hy Selt: What UASs WEAK, NERVuUusaUISEA Cotton, | Taffeta and Silk, 5, 10, 15¢ up. HOSEâ€"Children‘s, 5 cents up. Ladies‘ Black, 4 for 25¢, etc. PARASOLSâ€"â€"Reduced to 21, 43, 69 cents and up. MILLINERYâ€"Ladies‘ Hats, Flowers, jetc., at halfâ€"price. DRESS GOODSâ€"Reduced to 4, 6, 8, 10c and up. READYâ€"MADE CLOTHINGâ€"Boys‘ Linen and Cottonade Suits, 25c. Men‘s Light Coats and Vests, $1 and up. Men‘s Coats, 50c. Men‘s Suits, $2.75, $3.50, $4.50, etc. _ .. ; . SHOESâ€"Large Assortment Ladies‘, Misses‘ and Children‘s Tans at 69, 79 and 89c. All other lines complete at a great reduction. Question List and Book F.:ee. Consultation Free Cuiga uit Hinews S. F6 . HENGT & CO., Musi 15 YEARS IN DETROIT. 1350.000 CURED. "Some 8 years ngo I contraptad a earions constitatiocal blood disease. 1 went to Hot Springe to treat forsyphilis. Marcury almoet Xilled inc. After a whule the smptors mpain appeared. Throat becume sore, pribs in loubs, piinples 0@ fuce, blotches, eyes red, loes of hair, glunds enia ged, ete. A medical friend advised Dre. Kenredy & Kergan‘s New detho UTroatment. Jt cured me, and I have Bad no eomnytoms for tve youre. d am amaurried and lmfrp)'.. Ae a doetor, 1 heartily recomernd it toinll who hive this terrible diseaseâ€" sppleads." 1 owih eradiciute the ppison froni the biocd." Â¥I am 8% remt« 0" nre, nnd m orricd. When young gov Jife. Eurly indiscretions & d later excessos made for me. I hbecame w oc and norvous. My kidneys jor me,. 1 becaum affected and 1 f ure factory ind my hom 1 took treatment f Method bult me u and act licon m on d SAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT B. E. WALKER, Generat Manager. (3~ iio Names Used Without Written Consentof Paticnt. ‘t miss seeang WATERLCO BRANCH DRS. KENNEDY & KERGAN BERLIN. s¥¥ h wre d Hriaght‘s diseiso. M orried ome nb appy. [ tried every hi it from Urs. Kenue o and Ker ie up mentally, physically and in in every aespact. . Try thein." THE Expross Waggons CARTS and â€"â€" MSHING TACKLE : H. J. GRASETT, Manacer GO STRAIGHT TO Kumpt‘s _ wept to a premaiture grave ind Constivational Blood ing young man. | Haveyou Fir «J in Morning; No Ambiâ€" ble; Lyea Blur; Pimples on ol Lookiag; Ulotches; Sore ~; liistrustful und Lack of j0u up mentally, physically FTOR sE MEN ien young I led a msea made trouble vâ€" kidneys bocume 1 lifâ€" was nusatieâ€" ing â€"all failed till nrean. _ Their New 1 sâ€"zually. 1 feel 148 Shelby St. Detroit, Mich. £$6,000,000 00,000 makers will k of Fac. make tinâ€" favg J 4 nÂ¥