CAN show you the handsomest I most fnam’nt tobaceo, the cholcel:‘zâ€&g the prettiest pouch, the nobbies: cane, the n est smoker‘s »et, the best pocket knife.the lov Px:‘ m&:?:&“l:n;‘houln e?h musical instrumen County, Qua igh! Prices Low ! ? Pipe Repatring a Specialty. ATERLOO PirE & ToBacco Exror _ Equality between policyâ€"holders is secured by insuring in thres classesâ€" abstainers, general and womenâ€"giving each in profits the true benefit of its own longevity. The RATES compare favorably with any in the world. Your choice of all sound plans o assurance »Fered, no other. AGENTS WaNTED. Apply now for chorce of territory to THOS. HILLIART)» It provides a legacy of a law suit possible,. The Policy of the Dominion Lifz is a straight promise to payâ€"like a bank draft, almost wnconditional. _ No reâ€" striction on travel or occupation. When, two or three years in force it is nonâ€"forfeitable, even for failure to pay renewal premiums, remaining in W afoss c ol Enipine y 1i onlR ie C ol e wl foree TILL THE YVALUE Ig EXHAUSTED, JAMESIINNES, M.P., CHR. KUMPF Esq., PEEs1D+NT. Viceâ€"FRkS1‘ EN THOS, HILLIARD, Maxaoing Dir®ctor. Authorized Capital #1,000,n00, Cov‘t Deposit at Ottawa B5v, 000 bed taq dtn} B23:, Paid up Capital 861,1400 THE Dominion Life Assurance Co‘y, Head Office, _ â€" Waterloo, Ont. aoee¢ [E DCTZAIN A PATENT® For & st atiwer and un bonest opinion, write to g: UNN iA (1).. who have had neulgflhr years‘ erperience in th» natent business, ommunica~ tiona stritiy condontial, . A Handbook of Inâ€" formation conccroing Patents and how to obâ€" tain thoin sent free. Also a â€"catalogue of mechanâ€" k:% and acientific books sent free. beqiinPontbtdhMcadbiat C SPECIAL NOTICE Wrery number contains beauâ€" 2NC6, 2. cents. ery number contains uâ€" }1711 plates, in 0tlers, and Fhmvvnpha of new oupec.[' with plang enabling builders t‘%%huw the test dosigns und secure con 3. Addreas MUNN & €0.. Naw Youx%l BuoabDway. tute, or Inclose $1 and 6 cents in postage m‘l:tter and we will send, sealed, by return mail. Fullsealed particulars in plain envelope, to ladies only, 2 Stamps, Address The Cook Company, Windsor, Ont., Canada A recent discovery by an old physician, Succesafully used monthly by thousands of Ladies, Is the only perfectly safe and reliable medicine disâ€" covered. Beware of unprincipled druggists who offer Inferior medicines in place of this. Ask for Cook‘s Cotton Root Compound, take mym- Ned oonlly ce n d on ce t e & C â€" Cure SICK MHEADACHE and Neuraigia In 20 mmwures, aio Coated Tongue, Dirriâ€" ness liclousness, Pain in the Side, Constipation Torpnd Liver. bal Breath. To stay cured and reun ate the bows!s. VERY N/CE TO TAKg. Price 25 Cenrs ar Drua SroRrss, AYER‘S Cherry Pectoral Promptto act, sure to cure Or La Grippe, though occasionally eptâ€" demic, is sfvnyn more or less prevalent. The best remedy for this complaint is Ayer‘s Cherry Pectoral. "Last Spring, I was taken down with La Grippe. At times I was completely prosâ€" trated, and so difficult was my breathing that my breast seemed as if confined in an fron cage. I procured a bottle of Ayer‘s Cherry Pectoral, and no sooner had I began taking it than relieffollowed. Icould not beâ€" lieve that the effect would be so rapid and the cure so complete. It is truly a wonderful medâ€" 1cine."â€"W. H. WirL1axs, Crook City, 8. D. iroul INFLUENZA, POWDERS lin Waterloo by â€" S. SNYDER, Druggist. Managing Director ook‘s Cotton Root COMPOUND. certain instead Then she sat down ‘and leaned her elbows on the table and thought how she hiad ‘always liked Silag ever since she was a girl and how nétafty Carnli.= NS vine ie utssc it 4.4 22 S ing, ‘Wall, I be an old silly, that‘s cerâ€" tain, but he needn‘t have tried so hard to hurt my feelin‘s, He might a been decent an‘ purtended he thought ‘twas from somsbody else.‘ J DGaiine@Npnlll ioib drrAst bats I kind o‘ thought Silas felt as I did about it, only he needed some encourâ€" agin‘, an‘ I kind o‘ thought to send ‘im a valentine would be a modest and del‘cate way of givin‘ it to ‘im. They must have been unusually lively in the post office, for I only put it in this af. ternoon,so‘s he‘d git it toâ€"morrow. But here he‘s got it a‘ready and come and flung it in my face, too ! Land o‘mercy, like‘s not he‘s been a peekin‘ in the winâ€" der, too,to see how cut up I‘d be about it‘ And Hepsy hastily rose and drew the curtain closely, and deposited the obnoxious valentine on a sbelf mntter-| 8 ut Silas was so filled with his own ’gleeful thoughts that he didn‘t think of what the man said, but hurried home chuckiing to address hi@a ow n valâ€" entine, for it was now almost dark. Then like & school boy, guilty of rome inexâ€" cusable praok, he fixed & string around it and hurried over to tie it to Hepsy‘s door knob. _ With a heart beating like ia sledge hammer, he gave a resounding knock that put the good woman in a panic, and then took to his heels with with an agility he had not known for years. _ When lleï¬ot home he had to inake & cup of tea‘to calin his nerves, and then he sat chuckling ty his fireâ€" place till the clock struck twelve, ‘Ooly one nice one left.‘said the man, ‘cheap at sixty cents, Had only two of ‘em. _A woman bought tother one yesterday,. This (plan was successfully carried out. TLere was just one valentine left which suited Silas‘ idea of the proper thing to express his heart‘s desires. tine day, I‘il git is this afternoon, an‘ d‘reet it an‘ slip over after dark to Hepsy‘a _ house _ an‘ _ jes‘ _ tie it to the door knob an‘ knock an‘ run, way they used to with the May buskets way down east when I was a boy.‘ _ _ rBico d a sls ‘It und is the ring that h s no end, So s my lovâ€" for you my friend.‘ That‘ll kinder open the subject easy â€"she knows my writin‘â€"an‘ it‘ll sort o‘ let her know how I fee} afore I come to the pint in so many words. 1 ‘George, it‘sbeen so long sence I said anything soft to a woman, I guess it‘ll be kinder hard work to let‘er know what I maran, enywnay, Le‘s see. Toâ€"morrow‘s Valenâ€" _ T‘ll war‘nt she has a hard time this winter with her cow snd horse and pig said he, ‘not to mention gittin‘ wood an‘ water ; an‘ then wimmin folks are sech narvous creeters, ‘fraid of ghosts an‘ their own snadders. Why, we‘re Just two old fools not to get married ! I‘ll jest slip down to the village an‘ git the purtiest valentine I can find, all covered with angels an‘ things an‘ po‘try ‘bout, ' He didn‘t enjoy it nll. He didn‘t reâ€" lish his own cooking ; he couldn‘t make bis bed so it would be smooth and soft; everything was out of order and coverâ€" ed with dust; there was no one to think of putting a hot brick at his feet celd nights, and the coal fire went out every time he forgot to replenish the feeder Then he thought of H: psy. _ Probe bly she felt about as he did. old mother und-jbungflr brother & conâ€" tented «pinster life, being blessed with a _ sufficieney _ of this _ world‘s oods, a cheerful disposition und a very comfortable avoirdupois. 8> she‘"‘took life essy" and didn‘t worry till her broâ€" ther went West and her aged mother died, leaving her all alone and fiftyâ€"two years old. . Alout the same time Silas‘ sister took it into ber head to marry a widower with eight children, so he was left to keep a bachelor‘s ha‘ll in earnâ€" eat. | Everybody knew that Hepsy Jones and Silss Biggin ought to get married. lndeed, they had aimost been persuadâ€" ed of it themselves for twenty years. Where was the sense in two hbonest friends living alone, with t wo rich farms adjoining, and old age coming on and no une to comfort or care for them Silas had had it in mind ever since the next year after‘Car‘line‘ died; but vhen, his sister *Mandy was a good cook and a nice housekeeper,but he kept putting it off ; he was pret y comfortable as he was. _ And Hepsy bad lived with her WO V aLENTINEsS. waterloo County Chronicle, Thursday, February 21, 1895.â€"Page 2 Hepsy was so overcome that she sat down in her chair, ‘all of a heap,‘ as she afterwards expressed it, and Silas, manlike, saw his advantage and followâ€" ed it up, before Hepsy had time to reâ€" cover herself. ‘Send it back? No, I didn‘t Hepsy. Why there‘s my valentineup there now, Didn‘t you know my writin‘? A n‘ here‘s the one you sent me. Bee,they‘re ‘zactâ€" ly alike. Ha,ha ! Gcod joke on both of us old geese. I thought just as you did at first, but I discovered it in time.‘ ‘Must a made you hnppf took pains to send it back !‘ ‘Why, Hepsy,‘ he said tenderly, ‘what in the world be you cryin‘ ‘bout? ‘I ain‘t cryin‘,Silas Biggin, what‘d you come over here for? ‘What did I cum over here for ? ‘You‘ve come to insult me agin, I s‘pose.‘ f To insult you, Hepsy ? What on earth do ye mean ? I cum over to tell ye how kinder happy yer yalentine made me, an‘‘â€" Hep:y was so absorbed in her own sad reflections that she didn‘t hear his timid eager knock. After waiting a few moments he pushed open the door just as she was wiping one soliâ€" tary tear from her; fat but wrinkled cheek. This unloosed his bashful utâ€" terance, Then with trembling hands and eagâ€" er gestures, he replaced bis great coat and cap and muffler and mittens and rushed off through the snow to Hepâ€" ay‘s cottage, leaving his dinner to burn up. _ +B‘ George,‘ said he starting up and dropping his pipe, ‘ef I haint the conâ€" foundedest old ninny ever seen! That‘s her writir‘ on the cover, and she bain‘t seot mine back but sent me one like it We both tried to get purty ones and got ‘em just alike. Ha, ha! While these preparations were goâ€" ing on, he took down the valentine again, from sheer melancholy, and sat down by the fireplace to read over its tender rhymes once more and to gaze ruefully at the golden hearts pierced by quivering arrows,and the little anâ€" gels fAying all around. So he mournfully laid aside his fine clothes, and sadly peeled his potatoes and put on his pork to fry and meaâ€" sured out â€"his ‘drawing‘ of tea. ‘B‘ Ge&rge,' said he, ‘good thing this come afore I got over there. Guess she wouldn‘t a been very glad to see me. She must a hustled herself to send it back by mail so quick. Wal, I‘m a blaiwed old ijit that‘s what I be ; to think that Hepsy Jones ‘ud marry a humbly old critter dike me. But she might a ben a leetle easier on an o‘d chap like me and not a throwed my of fer (‘cause she must a knowed I meant it so) right back on my foolish old head. Might as well take off these fixin‘s,‘ he continued, carefully depositâ€" ing the valentine on the mantel. ‘Guess I‘ll have to cook my own dinner toâ€" day and for a good many days to. cu.‘ | But it wasn‘t from ‘Mandy. He shut the door and sat down very suddeuly, staring, openâ€"mouthed,at the valentine, which it proved to be. ‘Hullo,‘ he said, when‘ opening the door, ‘there‘s little Tom Smith been to the post office an‘ vringin‘ me & letter as he‘s going by. Guess T‘ll wait and read it ; may be from ‘Mandy.‘ ‘Guess I‘ll go oveâ€"r and see Hepsy this mornin‘,‘ said he to hiwself, by way of company. ‘The valentine must a sort o‘ prepared ‘r for whats com ng, and I guess she‘ll ask me to stay to dinuer ; b‘ (George, I hain‘t had nothin‘ t‘ eat sence ‘Mandy married that pesky foo an went to Texas.‘ The next morning, Silas had very lit tle appetite for hreskfast ; he swallowâ€" ed it rapid!y, did his morningy ‘chores, an then prevared tor woilet operations‘ of & very elaborate kind. He shaved and brushea and polished aud put on his best, wellâ€"preserved broad :loth and a very fl«hingicravat of a somewhat ancient patterb, whistling and hum ming and chutkling jike a rollicking boy meantime. ' friends with no sentimental notions up to this valentine foulishness which had ended in the absurdity she might have expected. Ani when she fou: d her fire had burnad low and the room was chilly she wert to bed a little sadder and, as she thought a little wiser than before. you happy when you to h a judicious use ofmgl‘)-;es. _ These fortunate women have found _out that, by spending ten cents for a package of one of the fashionable colors of Diamond Dyes, they can reâ€"color an old and faaed dress, and make it look like a new production, A lady recentâ€" ly informed us that she had not purâ€" chased new material for a dress in three years. This samelady is always neatly and prettily dressed, because she uses the Diamond Dyes. She has several old dresses and dyes each one twice a year, and produces as good colors with the Diamond Dyes as can be found in new grods. It is wonderful, indeed,the saving in dollars that can be effected by a IMdiniana was =8 Nt 0 ies Thousands of women in Canada with very limited means have found the secâ€" ret of dressing well and stylishly in their homes and for the streets. Under the new criminal code which came into force on Jao. lst, any newsâ€" paper that prints an advertisement for the return of articles supposed to be stolen, with the words "no questions asked," or anything to indicate that the party returning it will not be proâ€" secuted, is liab‘e to an action for $250 for cach publication. Any person can bring the action and iecover the amount. One Montreal paper, accordâ€" ing to the Journal of Commerce, has already an action on bhand for $250. Another which inadvertently printed such an advertisement four times before being aware of its liability, immediately got a lawyer to enter a friendly suit for $1.000 in order to head off a probable bona fide prosecutor. The statute also imposes the same penalty for promising pawnbrokers,through the newspapers, to return money advauced on any article that may bave been stolen and pawn-l ed. Well and Stylishly Clothed in the Hard Times. Young, old or middle aged, who find themâ€" selves nervous, weak sn(f exhausted, who are broken down from excess or overwork, reâ€" sulting in many of the following scf'mpt.oms: Meut.aï¬ 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, pimples on the face and bog'y, itching or peculiar sensation about the scroâ€" tum, wasting of the organs, dizziness, specks before the eyes, twitching of the muscles, eyelids and elsewhere, buï¬fulness, deposits in theurine, loss of will power, tenderness of the scalp and spine, weak and flabby musâ€" cles, desire to sleep, failure to be rested by sleep, eonstipation, dullness of hearing, loss of voice, desire for solitude, excitability of: temper, sunken eyes, surrounded with LKaDâ€" ENCIRCLES, oily {ooking skin, etc., are all symptoms of nervous debility that lead to }nmv unless cured, The spring or vital orce having lost its tension every function anes in consequence, Those who through abuse committed in ignorance, may be Xer- | manently cured. _ Send your address and 10 | cents in stamps for book on diseases peculiar | to man, sent sealed, Address M.V.LUBON, ’ 24 Macdonald Ave. Toron to, Ont., Canada | They are able now to earn good wages, and to take their time about assuming the duties of wives and mothâ€" _ It is not nearly so common as it once was for girls to marry simply in order to secure a home and a living. Then it is well known that the new avenues of eimployment open to women have made them more independent,and probably a.lso.more exacting as to the qualitications ot husbauds. Mavy proposals are unquestion«bly delayed gr rejected on this account. The young people are disinclined to start in a humble way, and gradually improve their situation. They want all that their parents had without waiting and striving for it. The cost of supporting a wife and raising a family is much larger than it used to be, and this feature of the matâ€" ter often causes hegitation on both sides. The m»jority of those present came to the conclusion that our extravagint style of living, as compared with that of former times is one of the effective influences. Why Men Remain Bachelors, Quite recently at a well known club the subj sct ‘Why men rem«in bachâ€" lors‘ came up for discusâ€"ion. Hepsy «»ssented, an+ ~frer a di ner that m«ce Si‘&s young »g «in,they wert down to the p«rso» « «no were marmed that very day _ The evenn g as thew a«t contentedly b fore Sila~‘ opâ€"n fire place, the two valentines. winch h.d brought so much he rt burning and so much satisfaction, reposed loving:y on the mauntle piece side by side. an‘ we ne un‘t nu‘ther of us the home were u~ d c«‘ Newspaper Linbilities,. ALL MEN oughter go tb New York and cGi one o‘ them egotists about ‘em.‘â€", per‘s Bazar, ; â€" mid »24.,.; ig i; _ in 80 with his eyes,‘ suld Mrol Dlzn.uh-. ‘that T think be‘d oughter go th New York and «*25. *J We are néver willing to admit that there is insanity in our famil until some momb{::of it makes a wi{l that doesn‘t guit us. ~ _ Mrs. Morfla’No. 18 Natalie street, Toronto, Ont., says : little boy, two years o‘d, was euffering fI’OIP a severe attack {of bronchitis, and after trying several remedies without any effect whatever, and seeing the advertisements in the n.penrt’ Dr. Laviolette‘s Syrup of Turâ€" pentine. I decided to try it and was more than & stonished at the results, as after using one 25¢ bottle, my little boy was completely cured. I can, therefore, mm it veryfhighly to a m6thers as an e remedv. Courtehip is an effort to choose a mate for Jife. Two homemakers are considered | & copartnership. The fate of unnumbered future generations is being settled. If we look straight inâ€" to the counitance of nature and at the same timekeep fully aware of what civiâ€" lization eieeta, we shall feel the imâ€" mense importance of what is going on yonder where the young man and his sweetheart sit apart from the crowd. A sacred contract is being negotiated,and upon the outcome of a few million conâ€" tracts like"l.bnt depends the whole fuâ€". ture of tl‘e buman â€"race.â€"Chautayuâ€" quan. { * { Every word spoken to them regardâ€" ing courtship and matrimony should be rich with the essense of practical comâ€" mon sense. Romance and sentimentâ€" ality are well enough in poetry and ticâ€" tion. _ It is reality, a composite of joy, sorrow,success,disappointment,serenity, vexation, _ It is the average sum of huâ€" man experience. t Corutship is not for the immature. The time is past for the encouragement of marriage between mere children,and we have to recognize the fact that it is men and women, that we are called upâ€" on to aid, enhearten and bid godspeed down the way of love. ‘John‘s aâ€"sufferin‘ so with his d Ha c im 4s conll "hes o This is a story for clerks. It shows that hard work and strict attention to duty will always teil in the long run. The boy or young man who considers his personal comtort and engagements before those of his employers never make a success.â€"Canadian Grocer. Te other boy, much grieved at the parting, remained with his regiment, won distinction and promotion for his bravery in the Crimea, and afterwards in the Indian Mutiny and in lesser campaigns. . He led his men to vicâ€" tory in many a storming party in many | a battlie. He was at Alma, Inkerman, Balaclava, at Cawnpore and Lucknow. He was one of the famous "thin red line" that withstood the desperate Russian cavalry charge. He won a Victoria Cross, the highest award a soldier can get. _ When there;was hard and dangcrous work to do, he was electâ€" ed to lead, for his regiment would folâ€" low bim anywhere. _ As one of his men enthusiastically said: "With him in commland, we could take Hell itself." He never thought of himself; his duty was his first consideration. He beâ€" came & majorâ€"general, and, if I mistake not was knighted. They are both gone now. The first hoy was A. M. Smith and the other Major:â€"General MacBean. As time went on his as«istance and couus?l were much sought after by finavcial! corporations, and he became presid?ut or director of several banks, loan compantes, insurance corporations, aud many other intersts, and an exâ€" teusiv$ut,eamsnip owner,. He became one of,the we«lthiest men in Canda. He went into the militia and for a time duriog the Fenian raid comm»@ndâ€" ed a garrison brigade. Going into politic:, he became au alderm»n, Mayor of Toronto, and member of Parliawent, and, had he so desgired, could have been a senator, for he sank his politics: when he considered it in the interest of his country that he should do so. Oane of thâ€"m touk his discharse just as the regiment was ieaving C nwida,. He was fonu of soldiering, but fouder of a Scutch girl whow he had mt in Canada. He was m ried to her, and went into the groceryfbusiness,in which he made a great success. The death of A. M. Smich, T. ronro, brings to mind a litle vbit of hiâ€"t ry Two ads joned the 93rd Highla~d r«, »nd came to Cainada with that regsâ€" ment to quell the rebellion of 1837 Toey Eere bosom companions, alw :ys torether when off dury Thâ€"y were excelient so‘diers; never grumbling; it was duy first a 1 the time, and their comimauding officer was heard to reâ€" mark that they wou‘ld be officers some dn.y. Courtship And Common Sense How Two Boys Became Great For Over Fifty Years cure. too much, whatever I'sang{â€"ca;[;;; said Mrs. Robinson. I could not raise myself up, could not dress myself, and had to be assisted in everything. Now I am well and strong, and can put out a big washing without any over exertion. I have also suffered from diarrhoea for a number of years, and when I spoke‘of it to my doctor he said if it were stopped, worse results would fo.low. At the urgent request of my son,who was then living in Maniâ€" toba, and personally knew of wonderful cures wrought by Dr Williams‘ Pink Pills, I decided to give this remedy a trial, Since usiug the Pink Pills I have been completely cured and have felt none but beneficial effects Ooly the week be‘ore I commenced taking the Pink Pills I was told by a pbysician that he could not care me, and that 1 would likely get worse when spring came. He analyzed my blood and said it was in a fearful state and that u.y dieâ€" ease was dropsy of the kidneys, which positively cou!d not be cured. This was about the middle of Jenuary. After the third box of pills my backache left me and it has not since returned. I have taken thirteen or fourteen boxes in all and owe my recovery to this wonâ€" derful medicine.I can‘t praise PinkPills i Near the village of Midhurst, about six miles from Barrie, stands the smithy of Mr. John Robinson, while within sound of the anvil is his home, where in the midet of a large and leafy orchard dwell the smith and his family. Mr.Robinson is a type of the proverbial blecksmith with "the muscles of: his brawny arms as strong as iron bands," but with Mrs. Robiuson it ha> been difâ€" ferent. The wife and mother has for a long time been & victim to acute and painful dropsy of the kidneys, Shortly after the birth of her youngest child (now about 13 years) Mrs. Robinson beâ€" gan to take fainting spells,accompanied by violent beadaches. This continued through the years that have elapsed, during which time she has obtained the best medical advice available. For about a year she was in constant terror of goâ€" ing insane. Her dull heavy headache beating pain in the back and weak swolâ€" len legs and body made her case someâ€" thing fearful _ To a representative of the Examiner Mrs. Robinson said : "It is some five or six years since I took worse, and since then we have spent hundreds of dollars in medicine and for medical advice. The symptoms of my case were heavy headaches, pain in the back and kidneys and swollen legs. I rapidly grew worse, and last July was given up by two doctors to die, and all wy friends and neighbors tell me that | they never expected to see me out again. ; Fr Kleven YearsSicknessâ€"Her Case Proâ€" nounced Positively Incurableâ€"She Was Given Up to Die by Two Docâ€" torsâ€"Now a Picture of Good Health and Strength. THE STARTLLNG EXPERIENCE OF MRS. ROBINSON, OF MIDHURST. ‘Ob, it is ? â€" Well, then send up and tura the water off! I‘m not going to wa«lk 14 <unles for nothing.‘â€"New York Dispatch. &A SIMCOE CO. MIRACLE, An inhabitant whose heels were striking sparks from the pavem nt ns he wa‘ked entered the waterworks of fice, selected his clerk and fiercely anâ€" pounced, ‘Sir, you can send up «nd take your old gas meter out of my house ‘ ‘This is not the gas office.‘ ‘It isn‘t T *No, sir. This is the waterworks office.‘ m the Barric Exa.miner wiltra of durability, beauty and delicac C 9 have long been the favorite dress goodi P Rl ESTLEY Englishwomen. _The Americans BLACK French goods. Canadian ladies can DRESS reliable dealers. Ladies should always ley‘s Dress Goods. MATERIALS He Must Do Somethikg. Ladies have a great deal of trouble in selecting dress goods. The variety is great,. The quality is vamous and the merit claimed is somettmes more than the pos. session. _ When ladies are desirous of obtaining the fin~; grade of Black Dress Goods, they should ask to see J‘;. «;. ley‘s dress fabrics, ‘These, as is well known, are the we p u; Ladies Costumes Taggâ€"There have been so man\ young men calling on my daughters, and their visits have been so fruitle, that I have adopted this plan to reduce the surplus.â€"Square Moments. Tinnâ€"Hollos, Tagg, what‘s that sign on your front door : ‘No admittance except on business " Heâ€"There is only half an hour un til train time and your trupk isn‘t half packed. Sheâ€"Don‘t worry, dear; I have bonnet on â€"Chicago Inter Ocean. Husband (setting off for n holida1 â€"Now, Honora,you may open my mai but if any of the letters are on bus pess, leave them sealed.â€"Brooklyn 1« gle. ‘I guess I missed my calling, said th boy as he saw his mother coming dow: the street with a shawl strap in he hand and fire in her eyes â€"Syracus Post. The bâ€"nefit to be derived from a good med cine in ea. y spring is urcoubred, but tmapy people neglect taki gany until the Approach 0: warmer weather, when they wilt like a tende: fAlower in a hot sun. Fomething mus© be done to purify the blood, overcome that tired feeling and wive necessary strength. Vacation i~ ca; nestly longed for, but many weeks. perhaps month*, must elapse before re«t can be indvu‘s. d in. o impart +trength. and to give a feeli k of health and vigor throughout th »y=}en there is nothing equal to Hood‘s Sarsapar 1t seems perfectly adugr-:d to overcon e â€" prostration cavsed by chanve of season, c .. or life, and while it tones and sustains the â€"â€" tem, it purifies and resovatc« the blovd. ‘Just now, by the by, my opinion i« that the most charming characteristiâ€" in a man would be that of consenting to buy a new drees without the falntest reference to making over an old on». ‘Courage, tenderness. deference, ge votion, physical charms, ments] attain. ments, these are all characteristics that we like in men, but it is silly to try to pick out anyone of them as being the most attractive to woman in gerera To every woman that manly quality is most charming which is possessed by the man most charming to her. He iâ€" not charming because his qualities tirs: made him so, but his qualities are th most charming because she finds them in him. ‘It‘s all nonsense to say that w w., , men have got any well sustained, we}; defined ideals of manly cearscter, W don‘t fall in love with & imin tbrcays he fills out our plan, but because we like the fellow ; because we can‘t he p our selves in fact ; and then we make the astonishing discovery that the curacter istics are just those that we udmire Our‘ideal changes with each new cawy ‘of heart affection, for if it were not «o how could we munage to endurc a change of sweethearts? T lâ€"lieve tha; there are some girls in this world wi have made a selection frou the other sex by rule and rote, but they ar» simâ€" ply freaks, and I look on thein wit! mingled wonder and pity. ‘I suppose it‘s a perfec |\ }, ampusement,‘ said a youny «. obgervation, ‘but for the iife 0 car‘t see the use of all this diâ€" that‘s going on concerning ma attractive trait to women _ \W, not a question of any trait of application at all ; it sinply dep the| woman‘s idee of whit i~ u t,ra.tlt.ve in some certain mnan . ide,*l all through her girlhood +} only worshipful man is the poe soulful creature,and then flop .o ly over and throw herse‘f ut <}, dy feet of the tousle headed cha of a college foothall team. Woman‘s Ideal Man Now is the Time of texture. ‘I hey of well dressed prefer them to obtain them from ask for Priest. IU8l &t» t rome i«t the ‘C and Uâ€"sion U leng It 18 neral Ing INOgt On of The )lul'i"‘] hhlp of Woolw W OoOLWICH gil t! surc pUrhum.t t s10n &ward ol l der the In Or ed b\ of s 0 lan s from N allac‘ for sct award Cl der ®utn School .A iv_' the t ‘J\ \\l\'r the C the | RC ©oOmul that statt Sh chait hundr were on tht hiÂ¥t uU TAL the wit In W oo) w ed by grrrdit A ud I# 1 West Moved by ed by Andre ]O\\‘ln;_' perso OT w10 P Winkler Geo. Auma A. Maftus: J l..l;r‘uhlu x1 A 0 Moved by ed by Andre tors 00 to Union FElmira and t & 14 Welle Nos. 10 & ?1 and that the the same â€"C The follow for the town! Moyer, $129 C. C. Dell()l Publishing C €103.00. h Moved b.v ed by Wiliig der of Davic COUNTY ship p and ; Moved by onded by W MeKay â€" be All the me The Reeve The minute A pplicati0t al parties fc 411 \ M M ] 8t f W U s printing rerman h N1 13 an W 10