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Waterloo County Chronicle (186303), 6 Dec 1894, p. 2

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a; A, L Kugpg’s Express Waggons, CARTS and g: JFmil mm :- DESIRABLF farm of no Acres. the N. E gy,, iniruated in Sec. M, Townuhl. 37. N.5, W. ntre Township. Emmet Co. Mich. for 3.10 or exchange on good property 'tt the County 0 W‘nterloo. Twenty tel-es clear. balance we] woodgd le, bunwood. rt's1chi2iii,i,te. A good we gonproport wln onyone gunner mm distant. 'Sd rum , mihu.2U "lendid.etuutoe] Apply to FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE Enema warm , This 6akTtrii mammals you. PriceJOch. Inlet: Tale (mun Cocoa Cun- mommy our. when all others 'gh, Coughs. Group In. throat. Shannen. Vhooplng Cough ttt Atstlima. For Contdmption it as no I" . has Cured mantis? yr'), will can you If tannin time; 80 y tugging on I [nu- mm. For 3 Lame Buck or sta use SHILOH'S BELLADONNA PLAST .150. _ v“ -_-...-.w.. v. u Immune wort In the m" . . a... {e w”... 'iiii'tiij'iitl: Might»: Mttk,A'a?. 1'gieertt,llt.t)lil'attiti' guts; Wdgitte2f.iiii' - 7 -- -e-- - V. V "V CAN I OBTAIN A PAT“?! N I you? want and a: honest optrtimt.rrrtto to " N Ancgi. whugvgtd ,'l'l."W,,ti' nu" n a no not. an!“ t,1'oJ,?,?E,r,?tlr,', i(i't'iiiit"lt',t; t A PtA,e, has: urn-non concernml I on" Ind ON tam them sent free. Moo I We! mechan- Mat and .eterttltte boom, nan: tree. Puma men (brouh Mum: & Co. noun trend notice": the Hell-unit American. and t no no brought. widely More the public wtttr. an out to the mum. This '.'ttftlgtyth mama? th'Pt.,8tNtti,fdiiF,ii"ii tn tt u m " l2: a,t,',',t. 1ste __‘L, Sold b y Simo n Boom". " 'krréitAit Pmcz Itre Cures others.wlil cure you _ W“ 7".“ mm WHO.“ F201 t co. “is MII'! ttt BIOAD'AY. I" SICK HEADACHE and Neunlgl: ao MINUTES, JHO Coated Tongue. Duri- h, l, l,-n‘!xc~\, A alrt ttT the Shir, Coustspatioet, ry J L m: {ml [mam To stay cured and ruin t' u EW s. vznv Inc. to TAIL RICE " CENTS If DRUG 87°“... 'rr-par lLoh"s2Eiaramtri Aycr’s Sarsaparilla POWDERS FOR Chronicle Ott1ce, witerioo hid". Wtrterloo, r, J. C. A yer & Co., Lowell. Mun. !hdi'sfolli)dloot I/ii COMPOUND. '. 1- J.tltrt lzvir'r5'1v~:;v,1 .5 Myth“. Myr,iftctu1::q J, Hum IN: kr. -tt tot) ... ", Whh'h [Mann to FS,- Hm» I o 13'. Afhsrtrymg In’mu laklm: Ayer's tore I my: Iimshvd the vim-d [no-mt. .rtl.i..cy,i the rt " complete cure.' RENEW. max; 'n yutiiinev, man (int Athlmny to not and I we" "3.101 'lhttl'ti1l1'St'tttii2gtd u. mace u. no: um a 'yf+rqrBeaattr. I need not tell you alitutiifuetttit mtwmnhup sighs-my (lithe! room. Wiettfbii1,tri.nnd tom-m fe nuanced. a. m yea-Lynne" to} t, I Florence took me up to we her room 3 after awhile. On the we we passed a small hall bedroom. I huge whimsical fancy that it was a convict’e cell, It was perfectly bare and cheerlees The walls were white and bare bf orna- ments of any kind. There was a small iron bedstead. a chair, a. table with the necessary appurtenances upon it and a glass hanging over all. There was not even a pretence of beautifying it. ‘That is Harry’s room,' explained Florence, and then she opened thedoor of the large sunny room over the porch, and I uttered an involuntary exclama- tion of delight. It was such a dainty nest for the young girl. The walls were of a delicate blue, and the dado 'tiarry is doing very well at school,’ ' you answevtsd. 'lle is well and quite large for his age. Indeed it makes l! him awkward. In fact he is just' at - the awkward we, when he is all arms and legs. Yourknow hoe clumsy lsoys t are when they are at this stage. Hut ) [fee-l worried sometimm when l 'ey how little he cares for his home. IG. M \t't'llH fond enough of us all i, if isn’t. ed that. hedoesu’t love us, but he is al. of Ways restless when he is at home. and 't wants to be off' someWhere else spend- ho ine his evrnintcyc' 0' 'Where does he go I' I asked, with a it little anxiety. m ‘Uh, he is safe. enough,' and you a laughed. 'He goes to see his Sunday School teacher, and I suppose he is ' just exactly as well " there, if not better, than he could be at home. I - don't mind his being there. In fact it _ f is rather a relief. It is only the know. ledge'that he. doesn't care anything ' about his home that troubles me. Mrs. Wnrrea is very fond of boys, and all her class seems to tiud the same fasci- I nation in being at her house that Har. j ry does, I wonder sometimes how she I can be bothered with themiso much,but l tastes differ of course. I confess that sometimes it is a great comfort to i know that Harry is so well taken Ciro of without any trouble to me, Now i when he got the photograph craze last winter, I just put my foot down on it. i His uncle sent him a camera, and of - course, Harry wanted me. to fix up t some kind of a dark room for him, I i knew just what it would amount to--- stains and musses all over the house, t so I told him if he had to have a dark 6 room he mast find some boy who had ‘1' one and use his. He fretted over it , for a day or two, and then discovered h that Mrs. Warren would just as soon I have him use her dark room as not, for t she is quite an amateur photographer, Jn and has everything of that kind ready h for use : so he goes over there with his " 'plates and fusses over them, perfectly f' happy with his messing, and I am clear " of it all. Boys are queer things. If a" he was only a girl now, I would enjoy to him so much more. There comes Flor. ht ence from school.’ I did not wonder t at your, pride in your graceful little 'l), daughtdr who came sedately into the be room, knowing that I had arrived y when she saw my umbrella in the hat " rack, She spoke politely to me when ov her mother introduced her and sat an down and began to talk with the ease . of any “town up woman. I did not tn wonder at her self-possession and grace- py fully assured manner, as I noticed how th; _ courteous you were to her. How, tht- ma derneath your love, there was a recog- Bm nition of your indivunlity, her right to I “ the courtesy which is so often forgot- to, ten or ignored. I was charmed with “A your little daughter, but even beyond all that I admired the wisdom and tact he. in the mother which had developed the gin child. She would not have expanded Ir so naturally if there had not been an wit atmosphere of appreciation and sympa- 30 t thy about her continually. A he l "You lucked very much troubled as /ou wondered why it was that your boy, your only boy, seemed to have no love for his home. Ive were having one of those cosy chats that women love, when one after another all the little 5 rarrdsthat, woven together make up U e mule along which our lives run, w. re singled out and discussed. You hm been telling me about your pretty little daughter, how well she was doing at whml, how she excelled in music, and the dainty bit of embroidery in yaw hand was something that you wet making fur her nest of a mom. lividrnlly your little Flamenco. sails ti.rl every (ll-sire of your heart. And then I had asked : ‘And Harry ?' it. is my weakness that a. boy hm a charm for um that no one else can pm- 3855 in my eyes. I 'Harry is doing very well at school.’ The following are the contents of an interesting letter written by a lady to her friends whose guest she had been for some time. Every mother will mud it with proht c---. AN OLD CONTRIBUTOR E, cyl } Woe, will tire her all out going there to often,' you "etuiqed, on ove- _l,'i',C. 'Do give hol- on. "can; for has]! for once. an: away. bu u lot ot . , qnd she must ho 'dt'ail'thtgt not once in ' while. ' _ Ivoo‘looking " your boy " 'Ort 'gett tt!Leity tfret, Itt1yr. so him away. Still more I marvelled that he did not hntirely withhold his confidence from you, that he kept on trying to shore his joys with you, that being' snubbed mercilessly and iavarr ably when lie came to you with a. bit of triumph over a successful negative, rare stamp, or a game of football, he should ever run ‘the risk of a rebuff again. Yet his love was strong enough to stand all this. But he woe glad to l be away from you. It wee very true that as soon on the evening meal was ended and we set down in the cosy sit. ting room. where Florence could bring her dainty works but his stump alum, hie paste and mounts and photographs were forbidden, that he begged to go over and Ice Mrs. Women. I wondered that he tried so patiently to please you, when you were so hard to please, and being pleased, so often failed to express it; t wondered why he wanted the love which could dis- guise itself so completely, and while lavishing itself upon your other child, withheld itself from the boy who strove so earnestly to be worthy of it. For he loves you dearly, that boy of yours, and if he could give you a moment’s pleasure by staying at home, and knew that he could be strong enough to draw m... ..--- mm - Before I had been twenty-four hours in the house I did not wonder that your boy did not love his home. By the time I had been there a week I marvelled at the patience, the forbear- mce of the boy with you, his mother. I wondered that he med so patiently to please you, when you were so hard o ___ “WW-v lat you, and had so evidently been brought up on the principle that boys. at any rate, 'should be seen and not heard, that I forebore to trouble him by trying to draw him out. I made up my mind that before my visit was over, however, your bright faced boy and myself should be friends. All the enthusiasm, the eager light, had gone out of his face, and when he came back after a. quarter of an hour, irrtproeGbly neat, he was very quiet and subdued Once I tried to get him to talk to me but he glanced uneasily at. w“. M“: I...) -- - . , _. - ance; throwing out his arms to steady himself, he knocked over a vase that was standing on the edge of a small table. Poor boy I it would have been trying enough to a grown person had such a chapter of accidents happened l before a stranger, but he did not need the reproof for awkwardness that you gave him to complete his misery. Be- inga loving boy and wanting to de- ‘serve your commendation and be a cre- dit to you, it was a hard trial to find himself in disgrace, and to be conscious that you were ashamed of him before your friend. As the boy turned to go out of the room, hitriol,t caught in the edge of a large rug, and he nearly lost. his Gl. - . I _ ', ".' m ', ' "r"fT"_ Waterloo County Chronicle Thursday, Deeetn' charging- lnrnp mm: bounding up" on the port-(h. ‘He (Kabul mm the hiill and can“: into Mm sitting-room with a. rush that; in- stantly sluckmwd when he saw astral!- gt-r there. Evidently he had fotgotten Myth I was expected, and had come, in overflowing with some plan or bit of news. ’ "That must be Harry. He is late today,’ you said, giant-int: at the clock. In another moment, the gate was open- ed um] shut vigorously, and a boy's 'B-u, _.' l .. . Oh, Harry do)snt care about his room,' Florence said, lightly, as Luanda some comment. 'lloys don't, you know. I am so glad 1 am not a boy. They are so Jfferent, from girls.' 'Hurry, that isn't the way WC f, I t come 'Why doctor,'he exclaimed.‘I nee two ttandlm , _ {Indeed} replied the doctor. Worr are very tyddrtunUe.' ‘How so , ' 'Why just think of what tn advent. nge u have on; tho recto! as. lop loo scathing double,‘ and beautiful picture-whining [shampo- and lore. ly hoe- m Bil rave-led to you, and you must got just a. much pie-nu out of them.’ ' When the cum It',"',',',',',',',",!,: ed, ond'tho M'Qn'for p r gin." writwn, "" hm, ','ll'd',Tl milg kid I M tat 01 the Iblo, with gawk, Iue.aetit-.aiiiia' .14 In the course of the exturtitution a. prism was pm: before the eye of the patient it; ordernto tag the muscles. Not long ago e resident of one of the small towns near Toronto came to the city to consult. en eminent Occuliet, whose fee for e oormtltation is never lose than 84. He wee tether green in appenrence. so the doctor who in tome- thing of a mug, end who we. in perti- culnrly, good spirit: that morning. thought he saw en opportunity to have A little fun It the expense of his mull visitor. tyiavirrr "V --.....-.u . an mu relieve the r “We sufferer iiiatutiu"/ De nd trlflnoi,l'trl',',t than”: no mistake was: it It' cures Diarrhoea, lawn the Stamach and rtitt,1,tigilti Wiad Si? softens the 01113:. 'ltNtt, tt 'l'fgtt'2f, 5'lhahYge?,1tr.t,yttfyy,siiiEiii f? when the feet fire Gii' , The Sonar» Become normal" by Dears-en only , l‘nconM-luuuncns ls Complete. 1 ‘Order is heaven's first Uw,' and ac- , cording to The New York World, the a old truth is manifested even in the pro- , cess of going to sleep. When a man I drops off to sleep his body does not do I so all at once, so to speak. Some senses become dormant before others and " l ways in the same order. As he becomes , drowsy the eyes close, and the sense of seeing is at rest. It is quickly followed by the disappearance of the sense of taste. He next losses the sense of smell, and then after a short interval‘ the tympauum becomes insensible to sound, or rather the nerves which run to the brain from it fail to arouse any I sense'of hearing.The last sense to leave l is that of touch,and in some hyper-sen- eitive people it is hardly ever dormant. Even in their case, lsowevtrr,there is no discriminating power or sense of what ( touched them, This sense is also the iird to return upon awakening. Then hearing follows suit, after that taste, _ and then the eye becomes able to fUsh " impressions back to the brain. The I 1 sense of smell, oddly enough. though it 1 is by no means the first to o, is the li last to come back. The swig gradual l ', loss of power is observed in the muscles l 1 and sinews as well as in the senses. ,1 Slumber begins at the feet and slowly I ' spreads up the limbs: and trunk, until . I it reaches the brain when unconscious- I a new is complete and the whole body is l a at rest. This is why sleep is impossible , 'l ml”... ' _-- L, - . . HOW A MAN GOES TO SLEEP To cure constipation, bi" ~usn98v. in digestion, sick headache, Aka Dr, Pierce's Pellets. One a dose. f0" women in DrLPiercc's Favorite Pre. sctiption, Dull eyes, sallow or wrin- kled facv, and those "feelings of weak, ness," have-their rise in the derange. nwnrs peculiar to Women “Fuwrite Prescription" will build top, strengthen, and invigorate, every "run-down" or delicate woman by reg ulatiug and assisting all the natural functions. Do not take the cosmetics, paints and powders which injure the skin, but take the easitst way to gain a beauti- nt color and a wholesome skin. Health is the greatest beautitier, The mums to beauty, Comfort, and health ve u ' ' .I - _ _ -'e» You do not, want his boyish cordid- ence now, but the day will come when you will, on your handed knees, pray with tears for power to touch the heart which you are "Telling now. I count your boy's friend a rich woman, for she has the place which ought to be yours. --Ltterior, You do well, my {rig/ml, to give such love and tendernea and sympathy to your daughter, and; oh, what you lose " hon you exclude your boy from all that makes such put-fret confidence be. tween your daughter and yourself. 'Well, go along then .if you are so sure that youve wytnced,'you answered, 'but get home by half pal nine.’ =r , .. - - go. We wouldn't go if shedidn1 want us to come. so much,' , ‘Mus Warren i'ovay, want" me,’ he said with a ring in hi, wice that, was pleasant to bear, ‘I don't .ire her. She likes me to come, and she likes me to know everything. That’s why we, forgotten, the httnruomo curly head was erect, um! 'a look of low fairly il Iumhmted the bify's cttuntenauety For .V" Fill! Tearw, To ms, A hu- lean. ututtry the Complexion B. D.,Otta hand “Eu-1y Reminiscen- ce. of Q 'a Univonity. K_inpton," by Rev. P t, Mount, D.D. These are only . for Mann of In admirable number, (all at madnble articles. The itttt"r, hr in two shades othlues, is 'dl',1,u"'l motive. It in mm the the old-aub- lithed - othes a doling-.1: to club- Ind. up discos-third the Milieu in out new of the chuck. Thin in a who.” low,“ 'etttderittar l te, ttt and grep, (Bathe gulf-llama, ' ---'F V'V'- nu Ufllr ish Columbia" by Mr. C. A. Coleman; "The Phil ophy ot TlttnMrivtnsr," a brilliant in?" by Rov.W.T. Hal-ridge. n n fui.. -.--SaeW.N, . '~ _ l The Tliunklgiving number isnued lost week, wu n "thing of beauty," on ( well u n regular otowhouse of nimble radian. minent minister, sud oth- ero isoritri Mind . number of Articles in prose and one suitable to the occuion. The printtilral feature. of the table of 1 content. were a Icon-y 'sntitled"hrmer t,'d,t,it,?ge"2Siiii,", by the well known w r Agnes Mauls Mocha-,0! Kingston, “and n poem, "We Thnnk I may}, he am. lady; "A Summer’o Work In Home Miniona,"by Rov.Prof. Baird, B. " of W'innipeg; "Brother Grateful's hanklgiving Address,” by “Knoxfonin i'.', “Chinese Work in Bris l We look upon Tm: CANADA PRBSBY- TIRIAX as by all odds the best paper of the kind published in the Dominion, and it (pulp-res Invornbly with the foremost religioo jonrnals of the Old Lend end, neighbouring Republic. The Preebyterinn family not favoured with ite weekly visit: is . eerious loser in every mt-to the young etTeeully,ia educative. . Mmuse for tood can not wily be ttttLt l g F rv_r___-.--. vs us: "_FeWrVt"rl1t$. 'sions, lsck of energy, pain in the kidne s, headaches, pimlples on the face and body, itching or pecu iar sensation about the scro- tum, wssting ot the organs, dizziness, specks (before the eyes, twitchin of the muscles, eyelids and elsewhere. basifulness, deposits I in thearine, loss of will power, tenderness of the scelp and srine, weak and fhxbby mug. icles, desire to s eep, failure to be rested by I sleep, constipation, dullness of hearing, loss of voice, desire for solitude, excitability of temper, 1,t"otJ,T,'g surrounded with LEAD. ENCIRCLBS, oily ooking skin, etc., are all symptoms of nervous debility that lead to any unless cured. The spring or vital area having lost its tension every function sues in consequence. Those who throuvh abuse committed in i oranoe, my be r- tmuteutlyeured, Sengnyour address 'ilrfi; cents in stamps for book on diseases culisr to men. sent sealed. Address M. V. 'r.%8g , 24 Msodonsld Ave, Toronto, on. Cam. I Young, old or middle aged, who find them. selves nervous, weak an exhausted, who are broken down from excess or overwork, re- sultin in many of the following a mptoms: Memos] depression, premature ill age, lose of vitality,' Ion of memory, bad drenms,dim- neu "t,thtte, palpitation of the heart emia. It will be seen that the Republican in. creased their rotes by less than 3,000, whilethe Demorcruts lost nearly 42,000 All that is necessary in '00 is to get those 268,000 Democrats out of the pools, to win the State back again. In Missouri, too, the Democratic vote fell on" from 171,000 to 113,000 while the Republican increase Was very small. lawns Democratic disgust that did it. The men who voted for tariff reform in 'M, stnyrd at home in '04 by way of punishment for the hetraval of La; riff reform. And; as the New York; Herald remarks, "it is noteworthy] that very few of the "protectionist" (McKinleyite) organs venture to con- strue the recent Republican victory as meaning that the people do not favor taritf reform." Let tariff' reform se- cure representatives in whom the people trust, and we shall see a repeti. tiorfot '90 and 'M, Rex». T f.?h9iit Id/li: 1. was“ v L"'""""""") in the States was due, not to the flock. ing tot the vCr'erg to the Republican banker, but to the disgust. of.the 1).:- moerats at the stupidity and twat-hwy of their own Waders It was the Dr. mocrntic stunt-homes that defmjwd the party. In New Jersey, for in- stance, a habitually Democratic state that went Rupubhcun, the figures for the two past elections Show this: lntemtlng- To Fuller returns are putting it beyond dispute that the late Republican swt up in the States was due, not to the flock. I Sound on Tariff Reform. ALL MEN Dem. , 2th'.398 Presbyterian; ur the New York is noteworthy "protectionist" venture to con- ciiaiii, 2 “fill! 42.463 p, 'op I.” """V, 1'0 - Oahu” do be ItEtiltltt u x . l?tftit b. nu R,ti'tlti " ie',t,',ttiepli Pr o, _ """'"', _ -v v " Who.- ""“ 1iiktliv',ttg,titte,is,iii 'att fi'fiiâ€"“Wn’ffififi ':5i5"iii'iy3i"l, 'ffkiiiiiiii"; f. mom's 'FlMit “I! bland! iitiiiiiiii'l'itii'itl?fi a'- ” 'st HIM m§%”i“§£*nw- ,t."fiieayCi'biarat'lr"i-. l h Dr. = w.. fddeet2iiiy'a'hmr. if}; , {MM CURED EVERY TIM j',..,", .‘"_""?§?HJL MASTER ul" {Kill K10!) Now, Ivan the Terrible, among his other eccentricities, was like Norman kings in that he loved to lay waste the lends about. But he was much Worse than they were, for he did it not for purposes of sport.nor did he do it in so kind a way. His idea was simply to: thin out the districts, so that there might be no muttering. and no crowd. Therefore when B district became I lit- tle too much overstocked for his liking out he rode, with sword in hand, and thinned it. And one day whi'e start ing on a hunt of this kind, in which he expected extraordinary sport end to be able to depopulate pretty well scerhin district, he chanced upon his metropo- litan, whom he strlightwsy naked to bless the expedition. But Philip the Bishop not only refused, but expostu- lated with him on his cruelty. Here upon, with more demur, Ivnn'dropped him into prison w nd had him strangled there. This was in 1669.---UngtGnu ' M.,....:..- Linguine. 1087' Chit', i",'l'iii'ii.ifjt'lii'iiiiifsi;i, M’s 1'.1eli1dl?tlllllld I» u At all events, i/ 1539 he left' the court and entered Solovecsk as a monk. He found it a place of little wooden chapels and miserable buts. He left it with a. fortitied stone monastery,a real- ly tine cathedral and more than one well built church. In short,the whole working organism of Solovetak it due to him. They called him back toMoo- cow after he had been 17 years in Solo vetsk and made him metropolitan of all l Russia. St. Philip came of a wealthy family. He was attached to the court of the Czar Ivan the Terrible, but in what capacity I did tiot yearn. Moon's PM.an become the f: with every one who tries them Lends to norvousncsn. trcttulncs,, ptusrishnesi. chronic Dyapepnia and grunt miwry. Hood's Surs-nparilla is the remedy-It tone, the stomach, creates an appetite, and giws a relish to food. It makes pure blood and Kivcs hwmhy action to all the orgam of the body. Take Hood's for Hood's Samaparina CL’HPZS. And he s'ood not upon the order of his going --Detroit Free Press. 'Well,' she snapped. ‘I'm glad I'm hot, your wife. Now, you get. out of this, quick, or she won't have as poor an excuse for a husband as she already has.’ 'l should want her to buy his book as soon as she could and gr: rid of him, mun“... , madam ‘If a Man came to her "di/itil,', dead tired als I mu and [mule u worse by trying to t.ell, her a what would you want her to him Q" make a living for Irer, and burr ' Tho “01mm had been (hurling home and whvn she was Mm] vnuugh to fol like thwin: her best parlor chair at any viiot, whu might (fume u book podrller pi‘r'SPHLNI himself. ‘Mmhun, he. begun, 'I havehere', ‘anp right there,' she interrupted, 'llavo, ynu a mother 'f " used to have, madam.' 'llave you a. “We (' 'l/s, madam, and I'm trving In _i'lBaCiytrsri--sas r 'ytttiirin nae-or Ital-“M1410! 'EAST. " r'p there '.' she The Quill and the (an. rdly' we "I! Hats, t88rtts 05.50, N on "AST. t EH‘LmbM-l. non f ' Poor "uttstton Hot, Mn- Fert. interrupted fmmjbe cathartic , manic maximum l her a. book, t her to do to m trying to IS USED. again. Was as J. fl, Williamson & Cir, Don't forget Saturday night am! we Hats, Caps and Furnishings lmu Saturday evening from 7 to , o’clock The same principle applies tn "res Goods, with a discount of 10 Per Gem Wyndham l. Macdonnell titttr'.'S $3.75 Mantle $4.00 Mantle $5.00 Mantle $6-q0 Mantle 25c. wh Mantles and Dressgoods. Friday, Nov. 16. Special to Young Men. And s? on through the whole cat . Wigner up to the R30 00 Jack. ' Ms for $3150, f Good value SMYTH JE, Good value Terms Cash and One hit, Good value Good value Cheap Cash Store, Good value Discount Sale Good value will give a straight discotu of 20 per cent. otrall LION. This means tlist GUELPH. in any depart: Mm KING ST, BERLIN All Indies quktLy my! film-up} 1711." (any, Sing AL"). “I‘M“: h \Il Il per pair. Initial hen pure silk, '0): Ill All All :es' Under, wool 'vo.hu wool starr] tt ey Ver Al I'M You bu v a for $2.81 for $3.00 for $3.75 for $4.50 Wt, 1:ii',,,',' ”111E 14de “m u duh In um . daily fr yrrp '1 lytlt' '-',r less i', 1 are w sis The in. “gunmen Bowman. lbhmvr C, n.rd an“ Guelph, v ust 5311.: and k 5mg: fun: t in 't' M M s. room, at he ha l .coOIHHr Publ it day the thet prog' ”ND sch, bl A by um “rug {AMI dmmll The pm ly on Fr apparent patsied w she Was I tic strolu sent for time i il' nevqr r. . otlt'ri Hart l bni‘m: 'tlr/l' tii “(run ed lt: w, My slut,“ um: .- " intends In rmrl but" A mgr-tied miles north of t Monday ly I" “I: with PM ',', 2 . i, BOUNTY tln gnu; Ando Mrs I sch, of I'm-51m of Hq-ni- and". ther MI L, Dunke, (f [in Missne kWh-i!) Graph M lies, (lltw , A Y The directors stitute met at th After the meetin ever iug classes , mittees were ‘PI The sum of $12 mun books And Thunkcgiving p but. A number ed the concert at highly of the ev . . . .Thct grim I our village . vld Ind chimed tar I 9rtea, and tho II Kttrn,, largo! Many a! ou TI 6'crl M rs H" '. Mr. Fl St-tt Too Lat, FLO ll Mt

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