1Â¥ § | { YÂ¥ Buffalo, N. Y., and asked for ‘he little book called "Comruere Maxnoon," Refer to th s \ m'i::‘-"i:n s with;n-m' g"; and entirely Mmh well introduced P * w £ M 11909 ; § I sn n peait F is wl ALOe The Elements of Mospitality Mra Emily Huntington Miller conâ€" tributes to the. August issue of the Chantanqnan & charming article on Hospitality, in which she says : The essential elements of hospitality seeim to be : â€" _ A sound,simple,everyday life,with no shams to hide,and no pretences to keep e e e That which makes hospitality a burâ€" den and not a delight,is the foolish vanâ€" ity which wishes to appear to share &a‘&hing better than it really bhas to Living in wholesome,comfortablestyle we are countended to offer our guest the entertainment we find ample, but weary ourselves and lose all the real delight of companionship in a«suming for the time a manner of living far beyond our easy attainment. We are not thinking of the social element, but of the mere exâ€" terna‘s of living,and derange the whole household im«chinery by trying to keep in motiun half a dozen new whee‘s. divide If we would make our everyday life more simple and strip it of all pretence, it would leave us awple leisure to let our hearts extend towards others, and theo.if we would pay ocur friends the usual compliment of treating them as if they were attracted to osâ€"and not to our feats and flatueriesâ€"we might make our homes ceutres of a besutiful bocpitahty thas would be both restful and blessed. DISEASED LUNGS . L.ï¬ 3 iï¬ L1 o. ul 300L that iD ind w e en To in such cases, neglected it. Ithen eonsulted a doctor, who found, on examining me, that the upser .lp'\rt of the left lung was badly affected. The medicines he lgave me did not seem to doâ€"any good, and determined to try Ayer‘s Cherry Pectoral. After uking:_ few doses mX trouble was relieved, and fore 1 had finished the bottle I was cured." â€"A. LEFLAR, watchmaker, Orangeville, Ont. Ayer‘s Cherry Pectoral Highest Awards at World‘s Fair. * Ayer‘s Pills Cure Indigestion,. If one‘s life is frank and sincere so that there is nothing to conces); if graâ€" c1ous munrers and gent‘e courtesiee are everyday sonr «nd not sin ply holiday garb; if b.igh talk and st mu ating conâ€" versation ru‘e the table instead of gossip anod criticism; it we ars hon stly seeking to be r=ther th an to seem, we shall not look with dreâ€"d and terror upon the adâ€" vent : f guest=, or exhaust ourselves in our atteimpts tu t nterta‘n thein. "THE TRIUMPH OF LOVE IS HAPPY, FRUITFUL MARRIAGE." Every Man Who Would Know the Grand Truths; the Plain Facts; the New Discoveries of Medical Science as Applied to Married Life; Who Would Atone For Past Errors and Avoid Future Pitfalis, Should Secure the Wonderful Little Book Called "COMPLETE MANHOOD and How to Attain It." "He e at last is inform t on froma high medical source that must work worders with this generation of men." The book fully describes a method by which to attain full vigor . nd manly power. A method by wh‘ch to end all unnatural drains on the system. To cure ne vousness,lack of selfâ€"control,deâ€" ‘m-ndmcuv’ etc‘ . & & a # _ To exch nge a jaded and woâ€"n nature for one of bri htness, buoyancy and power To cure forever effects of excesses, overâ€" work, worry, etc. f To give fu l. strength,development and tone to every portion and organ of the body. Age no barrier. Failure impossible. 2,000 references. ‘ _ ‘The book is pwre/y medical and scientific useâ€" less to curiosity seekers, invaluable to mer only who need it. _ _ _ _ _ _ &A desp;urmg man who had applied to us, soon after wrote : | _ 00 _ c 0000000 00. _ «"Well, I tell you that first day is one I‘ll never forget. Ijust bubbled with joy. 1 wanted to hug everybody and tell them m old self had died yesterday and my new solt was born toâ€"day. Why didn t you tell me when I firs: wrote that I would find it this way j KM. other thus : "If you dumped a cartload of gold at my feet it would not bring such gla ~ness into my life as yor method _ has done." s Write ‘o the Eniz Mreotcar Contraxy, Dora, the Dogtor, the Donâ€" tist and the Tooth. â€" By DORA‘S CONSORT. i Dora is the jolliest piece of buman fesh in »t least eleven counties. Dora is petite, and irresistible.. Dora bas dimples and whims, then she turns| on the dimpleâ€"and it is all over with the oppositi0n. 1 Well, Dora‘s tooth had given her trouble ; yes, is had given her a great deal of trouble. You may be sure it had, or Dora never would have suggestâ€" ed dentistry. She did not suggest it suddenly, as might be inferred from my statement. _ Oh, no ; she approachâ€" ed the subject in an extreme!y cautious and conservative manner, as if the thought had just flitted across her mind, aud she was willing to give it conxideration, very much as a man has | set his whole heart on getting possession of a certain piece of real estate apâ€" proaches its owner. It took Spartan endurance for Dora to assume this reâ€" flective, introspective manner while that tooth was torturing her like an inâ€" i strument of the Inquisition. But there was a reason why such manner was deemed best ; and that reason was found in the fâ€"ct that I myself had so ofteo suggested dentistry to her. If it had not been for that, Dora would have come to that long before. As it was, there seemed to be no other way, and so Dora, driven to it, began somewbere in South Africa, and gradually led on by easy stages and by somewhat unvatural sequences, until she bad uttered the thougbht that possi bly she had better have the tooth exâ€" tracted. (Dora‘s aristocratic teeth will never be pulled or even urawn; they wi‘l be extracted ) Well, I favored extraction, and said we would go to the dentist‘s immediâ€" ately after breakfagt. ‘But,‘ said Dora, ‘remember just two things ; first, I will have no dentist but Dr.Pullam touching my teeth; and second, I must take ether.‘ I made no objection to Dr. Pallam, who was ranked highest of all our denâ€" tists and whose charges ranked higher still ; neither did I object to anaesthetâ€" ic, Lut I knew that Dr.Pullam himself did not administer ether, and if Dora insisted on ether, another pbysician would have to be called in. So I said: ‘Why not nitrous oxide? Dr. Pul:â€" am administers that himself, and the effect is deliciousâ€"they call it laughâ€" ingâ€"gas, you know.‘ Dora simply gave one hitch to that expressive little muscle which the doeâ€" tors call levator labii superioris alaeque nasi, and I knew that gas was out of the question, and that ether bad been decidcd upon, So I said : ‘On escond thought think you are right,. Y«s, ether would be much better than gas.‘ [ But I thought I foresaw complica tions which might prove serrous. In the first place, I knew that Dr. Pullam would never work with Dora‘s family physician, Dr. Zuckerpille Oa the contrary, he always insisted upon havâ€" ing Dr. Philgrave, who untortunately be‘longed to the rival school. Dors, however, was very aweet, and sa‘d she didn‘t object to Dr. Philgrave & bit. A happy thought now struck ime, and I said : ‘Instead of you gnisg down to the stuffy dentist‘office, I will have them come up here ; then you will bs much more comfortable, «nd can take your time to recover fron the etber,‘ Before I had tinished I knew that I had made; a mistake, thnufh for the life of me I couldn‘t see what it was. But Dora did not leave me in the dark. | ‘How strange you should think of it! she waid, :1 suppose it‘s becuause you are a man.‘ Then itre explained that Dr. Zackerâ€". pille, who lived on our street, only a few doors away, would be @osolutely cert in to be passing the house at ‘the very moment Dr.Philgrave was coming in. I saw the difficulty, which was inâ€" deed serious, but finally persuaded Dora that we hbhad better take our chances on it. She reluctantly conâ€" sented to the arrangement, asd it was agreed that this very day should be the fateful day in Dora‘s bistory. So [ rushed down to the dent.ist.’sl office, a mile and ‘a quarter away, post haste, lest Dora‘s tooth should stop aching, abd the whole arrangement be cancelled. Dr. Pullam said he would be ready)‘at twelve o‘clock, and ‘that I might engage Dr. Philgrave to be at the bouse at that hour. Dr. Philâ€". grave‘s office was threeâ€"quarters of a mile farther on, and as he was too conâ€" servative for the rewlyâ€"fangled teleâ€" phoue, there was nothing to do but walk to his office. I arrived, heated and out of breath, just in time to sse his carriage vanishing in the distance. He bhad started on his long country ride, and would not be back till four o‘clock. So I rushed back to Dr. Pulâ€" lam‘s office to see if he would be ready at four o‘clock. Oh, so.; he wouldn‘t be ready at four o‘clack, as he had an appointment for t.h_“ lpr. & £ _At four o‘clock I leftsomeimportant work to go to Dr.: Philgrave‘s office, where I‘sat until six, momentarily exâ€" pecting lhis return. At six he came, f, as he bad an cal Conference in the cvy. This would take him out of the town d Dora‘s sister Rose was coming that week to make us a long visit, but I saw no reason why Dora should not leave her @ister long enough to bave her tooth extracted. But as long as the tooth didn‘t ache, Dora thought she should uot feel justified in having the dentist in the bhouse during ber sister‘s visit. So I made the tour of the docâ€" tor‘s offices early in the week to sey that it might be some little time before we should be able to make the engageâ€" ment. Friday night Dora‘s tooth beâ€" gan to ache fariously, and in the very midet of her anguish I made her promâ€" ise that the next morning the tooth should be extracted whether it ached or not, and whether Dr. Pullam could be had or not. But the tooth stopped aching just before daylight, and when at eight o‘ciock I reminded Dora of her promise, she said : C S & o es g en t F0 uks mlcg‘y... You wouldn‘t make nme go to the dentists‘ after such a night as that, would you T‘ ob ;l;sed her, said I was only joking, anyway, and hurried out of the house. Rose stayed three woeks. As.soon as she was gone Dora plunged deep inâ€" to the prepurations for a /2%«»: champetré (whatever that may be) in bebalf of the Woman‘s Christian Temperance Union ; and by the time that was over we were going into the country, We came back on tke first of September. Dora bad some toothache but nothing desperate, and the children must be got ready for school, which opened on the tenth. Ten days later, the wet weathâ€" er, which came with the equinoctial storm gave Dora new and unprecedentâ€" ed ‘turn‘ with the toothache. She agreed to have the tooth out at once. _ So I went down to Dr. Pullam‘s to see if he could see Dora immediately. He sould if Dr. Philgrave was ready. I hastened over to Dr, Philgrave‘s office to find that ho was off on & fishâ€" .ug tour to the Rangeley lakesâ€"his first vacation in seven years. In a fit of desperation I rushea home to ask Dora if she wouldn‘t have it out any way, or wouldn‘t have nitrous oxide inâ€" stead of ether, or wouldn‘t have some other dentist who might consent to some other doctor. But Dora with a beatific smile said : , ‘Isn‘t it splendid 1 It doesn‘t ache a bit now, darling, and I can wait as well as not,‘ So T hurried down to Dr. Pullam to te‘l him that we should be hindered a few days until the return of Dr. Philâ€" grave. > It was two or three weeks after Dr. Philgrave‘s return before the tooth brought Dora‘to terms. Oneâ€"moroing she was ready. This time I went to Dr. Philgrave first. He said he could be ready at one o‘clock. ‘Thig was inâ€" convenient for us, butI gladlyassented to the arraugement. It was inconvenâ€" ient for Dr. Pullam, too, butï¬ter some grumbling, he, too, consent to be ready. At 12.15 came a sharp ring at the bell, and Dr. Philgrave‘s son ap: peared to say that an old lady in the country bad broken her hip and that his father would not.â€"be back till four o‘clock ; his father _ woald be happy to serve Dora at that hour. I I tried to say that it would make no difference, and without waiting to conâ€" sult Dora, seized my bat and dashed down to the oftie of Dr.Pullam, I went in with a somewhat apologetic air, which no longer seemed to surprise the doctor, and told him my errand. To my amazement he cheerfally said he could come home then as well as at any | time. Then I went home to tell Dora that all was arranged, but was paralyzed when she lifted her eyebrows and said: ‘Why have you forgot the missionary meeting 1‘ ‘Then I remembered tba& Dora, after much refussl, had eoneentid to read a paper on ‘The Dark Continent,‘ at the Woman‘s Foreign Missionary Circle, and as the circles of the other churches had beén specially invited, it would never dofito disappoint them. I collapsâ€" ed, But did zot lose my presence of mind, and goon nllyin;, seized my bat, and made a tour of the doctors‘ offices; told them both that we could,make no engagement at present; got &pï¬mï¬uï¬on of fciudW d, upon the tables in time for a cold dinn,or; aud in lot the whols people.| $3 and $4" ner in time for a cold dinner ; aud instead|of the whols people.| $3 and $4 of going down for business, went to| per dozen quarts ; this is a h.\h‘l: bed. I was threatened with brain|yet the wine is good., Tt has age; it fever, the doctor said, ‘probably superâ€"| has body ; it is as good as that for induced by ovéerwork, or unusual mentâ€"| which other ack $8; a dozen. al strain or excitement.‘ It‘was five| The . best: j e 4 hmmï¬â€˜ days before I was allowed to go out| And the orders cannot be fille ï¬ apain. In the inelnï¬he my enourch. which come in from all narts of her tooth. ‘With a seriousness which was strange to her, Dora turned to me and said : * Do you know, John, that my tooth hasn‘t ached for days ; but I am deterâ€" mined that I will have it out toâ€" morâ€" row ; you‘ve suffered enough on &¢: count of that old tooth and you shan‘t he botbhered any more ‘ Something in Dora‘s manner WAs very convincing, and I somehow really felt that perhaps toâ€"morrow was to be the fateful day, for when . Dora does thoroughly make up ber mind to a thing, she is pretty sure to carry it through. i . At breakfast the nest morning I watched Dora somewhat anxiously, but I saw from the look of determination on her face that her resolution had not weakened, though she was evidently nerving bherself for the crisis with conâ€" siderable effort. After breakfast I took up the morning paper, and read that the community would be startled to learn that Dr. Pullam, its ewinent [denbal practitioner, had been stricken with cerebro spinal meningitis. Well, it was thirteen weeks before he got out again, and then 1 went down to ask him if he thought he could do a little work for my wife. ‘Any time,‘ he murmured, wearily. I went down to Dr. Philgrave‘s office, to see if it would ba convenient for him to administer ether to my wife. ‘Any time,‘ hbe enapped out impatiently. Then I went to consult Dora. ‘Auy time,‘ she sighed resignedly. So I took Dora on my arm at once, We went to Dr. Philgrave‘s office, and hbe joined the procession. Dora hardly winced when we met Dr. Suckerpille driving up the street. We went to Dr. Pullam‘s and found him waiting, forceps in hand. In a moment Dora, without a murmur, had taken the chair, with its uncomâ€" promising beadâ€"rest. In another she had taken the ether. In another Dr. Philgrave had . taken his departure, with a how! of joy upon his lips. Wl mo moueenueen i wl 1 _4 _ All wss over, The operation had taken just eleven months, four days and seven hours. A young farmer who had great con* ceit, little discretion, and scarcely any education, presented himself at a Presâ€" byterian conference, and said he wished to be ordained as a preacher. ‘I ain‘t bad any great learnin‘,‘ he said, frankly, ‘but I reckon I‘m called to preach. I‘ve had a vision three nights runnin‘; that‘s why I‘m here.‘ *What was your vision? inquired one of the elders. ‘Well,‘ said the.young man,‘I dreamt I see a big, round ring in the sky, an‘ in the middle of it was two great letâ€" tersâ€"P. C. I knew that meant Presâ€" byterian Conference, an‘ here I am.‘ There was an uncomfortable pause, which was broken by an elder who knew the young man, and was well acâ€" quainted with the poyerty of his family and the neglected condition of the farm in which his father hadâ€" taken such pride. â€" â€" _ ‘I haven‘t any gift at reading visâ€" ions,‘ said the old man, gravely, as he rose from his seat, ‘but 1‘d like to put it to my young friend whether he doesâ€" n‘t think it‘s possible those two lettera may have stood for ‘Plant Corn‘? Fortunately, this version,. was acceptâ€" ed by the applicant. couldn‘t Teach Him Manners. He bad his legs stretched across the aisle of a street car when a man who had just got on gave them & kick which nearly slewed him off his seat,. He recovered himself and turned and deâ€" manded : ‘Did you do that on purpose,f@sir T‘ ‘Yes, sir !‘ was the prompt reply. ‘Wanted to pick a fuss did you ?‘ ‘I wanted to teach you manners. It iso‘t manners fora man to stretch his legs across & car.‘ ‘Manners! You talk to me about maunners ! Sir, do you know who I am? *No, sir and I don‘t care !‘ ‘Do you know that I‘ve rid on a street car more‘n twenty times P ‘I thought this was your first trip !‘ ‘Oh did ye! Waal, it hain‘t, not by a logn shot! I was right on this car last ‘nigb!,, anod I only stretched my legs actoss the car and ate a pint of peaâ€" nuts, but laid down on the seat when I got tired and went to sleep. I guess I know how to behave myself as well as most folks, and if anybody kicks my legs again he‘ll want to hev his will made in advance !‘â€"Detroit Free Press. But the enormous success attending it justified its trial. Ooly the few in this country could place wine on their tables. it was a luxpury. It was very costly. ‘ It was beyond the reach of the E:or man. The gordelux Claret Co. s placed a good, wholesome, healthful wine, which aids SI:T the assimilation Two Versions it FATHER AND SON CURED, THE VILLAGE OF WHITECHURCH OEVELâ€" OPS A SENSATION. The Father Attacked With Rheuâ€" matisim and the Son With St, Vitus Danceâ€"A Story That can be Vouched For By alf the Neighbors. From the Wingham Advance, Mr. Joseph Nixom is the proprietor of the ooly hutel in the village of Whiteâ€" cburch, and is known to the whole countryside as a man who thoroughly understands his business, and a jovial companion as well. It is well known. in this part of Outerio that Mr. Nixon‘s hotel was destroyed ‘by fire, but with that energy which is characteristic of him he quickly set to work to reâ€"build. His story, as told a reporter of the Wingham Advance, who recently had occasion to visit his hostelry, will prove of interest. "I was belping to dig out the cellar," be said, "and in dampness and cold I contracted rheuma«tism which settled in my right bip. _ It got so bad that I could‘nt sit in a chair without doubling my leg back at the side of the chair, and I could‘nt ride in a buggy without letting the affected leg hang out. 1 sui:ll;eréâ€"d a great deal more from the trouble than anyone who has not been similarly affected can imagine. How I was cured is even mor« interesatâ€" . ing. One day I saw a neighbor whom ‘ I knew had rheumatism very bad, runoâ€" ing down the road. I called him and asked what had cured his rhevmatism. "Dr.Williama‘Pink Pills" he promptly replied, and that determined wme to try the same remedy. Well the result is Pink Pills cured me, and that is someâ€" thing other medicines failed to do. I don‘t know what is in them, but I do know that Pink Pills is a wonderful medicine. And it is not only in my own case," contined Mr. Nixon, "that I have reason to to be gratefal for what the medicine bas done. My son, Fred, about twelve years of age, was taken with an attack of cold. Inflamâ€" mation of the iungs set in and as he _was recoveriog from this, other comâ€" plications followed which developed into St. Vitus‘ dance, which got so bad that he could not ppesibly stand still. We gave hi Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills, with the reshlt that he is now thoroughâ€" ly cured an4 looks as though he had nevor bad J day‘s sickness in his life, and if these facts, which are known to all the neighbors,will be of benefit to nnyonealse,qou are at liberty to pubâ€" lish them.‘ Dr. Williams Pink Pills are a speciâ€" fic for all diseas:s arising from an imâ€" poverishcd l‘condition of the nervous forces, such as St. Vitus dance, locoâ€" motor ata*ia, rheumatiem, paralysis, sciatica, the after effects of la grippe, loss of appetite, headache, dizziness, chronic erysipelas, scrofula, etc. They are also & specific for the troubles peâ€" culiar to the female system, correcting irregularities, suppressions and all forms of female weaknéss, building aâ€" new the blood, and restoring the glow of health to pale and sallow cheeks. In the case of men they effect a radical cure in all cares @trising from mental worry, overwork, or excess of any natâ€" ure. Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills are sold only in boxes bearing the firm‘s trade mark and wrapper (printed in red ink), and may be had of all druggists or dirâ€" ect by mail from Dr. Williame‘ Mediâ€" cine Company, Brockville, Ont., or Schenectady, N.Y., at 50 cents a box, or six boxes for $2.50. "J mwas helping dig out the cellar." _ ‘Suppose,‘ said little Mabel,the other day, ‘that our pug should try to folâ€" low his uose. Would hbe run down his throat or would be just tarn a back somersault ?â€"Puck. f A bont HK.ood‘s Sareapariliaâ€"it expels bad hun and createg good humor, . A battie for blood it in A Humorus Fact In a recenot sddress Rev. August, A# UA % Mackav, of Lucknow, Ont., spoke on | "The Unbridled Tongue," and roundly | condetun+d those who calculate scandnâ€" | lous and unfounded stories about their f § neighbors. Among other things he Crum‘s B said : "The slanderer injures others by Ground, Re robbing them of what is more precious | than money. The man who robs an: , at other of a cow or a horse would probabâ€" | ly, if discovered, be sent to prison; but | the slanderer may do a hundred times | worse than that, and yet escape the‘ ] law of the land, To rob a man of his | character, or friends, is surely worse _ Fancy st than robbing & man of his cows or lins, regula: horses,or even burning his house.Shakeâ€" yd., now at speare represents a character as dropâ€" | ‘ ping poison into an ear. That is the | 8 work of the slanderer. His tongue is | full of the deadly poison. Fe drops it | into the ears of others, in the form of . lying or iusinuating words. He drops it into their eyes,in the form of insinuâ€" | ating looks or actions. We are told Just opene that the deadliest poisons in nature &TE white Lace those for which no test is known. One cheap and drop of these insinuated into the veiD8 ip,, produces death in three seconds ; and | yet no chem‘cal science can separate | 6 the poison from the blood and say : » ‘This is the poison.‘ So the most hurtâ€" | ful s‘ander may be that of which no | hold can be taken. It may be producâ€" | ed by a shrug of the shoulder, a nod of the head, a glance of the eye, or by Another s silence when duty demands speechb. I0 fheader in such and other ways the unbridled pyose wort] tongue may rob of character, and in a | short time poison dear friends thus making them as if they were dead to| j each other. It thus tranegresses the | sixth, the eighth and the ninth comâ€"| mandments. _ If the thief, the burglar, | the incendiary,or the murderer is wickâ€"| Sm‘ ed, need we hesitate in saying that the | L slanderer with his unbridled tongue is a wicked and dangerous character." _ | CHE, Youug, old or middle aged, who find themâ€" selves nervous, weak and exhausted, who are broken down from excess or overwork, reâ€" sultin% in many of the following I!mpboml 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, pimples on the face and bogy, itching or peculiar ‘sensation about the scroâ€" tum, wasting of the organs, dizziness, specks before the eyes, twitching of the muscles, eyelids and elsewhere, buifnlness, deposite ‘Now, rewmember,‘ said a lady to her new butler, who had a fair conception of business for which he demandea the highest wages, ‘»:ld remember, in anâ€" nouncing meals yob are to say, ‘Breakâ€" fast is ready,‘ ‘Luncheon is ready,‘ ‘Dinâ€" ner is served, ‘All.right mum,‘ replied the proud butleer. Not long after this the lady went to experiment on a dinâ€" ner to a few intimate friends. Fancy the expression of her countenance when, appearing at the drawingâ€"room door to aunounce dinner,this liberal butler exâ€" claimed in clarion tones ; ‘Breakfast is ready,luncheon is ready, dinner is servâ€" ed ! This is a true story. | MOST SUCCESSFUL REMEDY ABILTEL:; DMLIEID FOR MAN OR BEAST. The Precise Batler Bcandal. Bargaing Great Print Sale â€" â€" Crum‘s Best Prints, 32 in. Dark Ground, Regular Price 12%%c, noy _ Hostery Just opened a shipment of white Lace. _ This line is cheap and in great demand them Fancy striped and printed mus ‘ns, regular price 12 and 15¢ per Another shipment received of our header in ladies‘ stainless black hose worth 27. Terms Cash and one price only. Smyth Bros. WATERLIO Granite and Marble Wors Bicycle Meet is a thing of the past but J old stand, next to railway UA MElRCANTILE That at Doersam‘s you will a|lWA"! o % assortment of Musical 1 ns rumeD® Tackie, Walking Sticks, Pipes 0 Tobaceo and all other kinds of s1 sundrics. Cure S/ HEADACHE and in 20 mAwures, aso Costed Tor ness, Biliousness, Fain in the Si3¢, C Torpid Liver, Bad Bresth To stit reguiate the bowe‘!s. V&RY M/CE lnoorporg,md by Act of Ont HEAD OFFICE, &0 W ATERLC BOARD OF DIRECTORS leased to show Erb Street, opposite Mark® waATERLOO I. E. Bowmaun, M. P., Waterl0< John Shuh, Waterloo. s . H. Webb M. D., Waterlco. Gec. Mcore, Waterloo. D. S. Bewlby, M. D., Berlin Robert &clvin. Guelph. E, W. B. Snider, M. P. P., St. OFFICERS I. E. Bowman. M.P., Préside James Lockie, Secretary Alex. ;gï¬lur. Solicitor. T. A Gale, Inspector PRICE R5 Cents aT Muslins CHEAP CASH STORE, < They All Say it ; SHAEFER BROS. at 8c per yd. 6, 7 & 8c a yd. CAPITAL, $200,000 Laces 8c per yard. POWDERS Kixa St., Berus oily TRY HIM J. DOERSAL ated Tongve, Di e Sij¢, Constipa00® To stay cured and y miCe To TAKE: Draug STORE® . TV aTERLOO, UM ario Legislatur Jak §t, Tacobi what ? 0 To js stil nev, very See ‘This supplies a long felt wan “flonel cent plug. or a 10 a 5 cent piece of the famous T of pure Virginia Tobacco. The tin tag T&B is on e COUNTY AND DJ m body of a young t Walker was found in the |) below Amberstburg. _ He at Windsor races, and it is sup beving lost heavily hbe ende The deceaged was one of the bookâ€"makers in this counotry i-n';â€"[;’u day made money. R. Q. Irving, night 0 Woodstock, has been promc station agency of the C P.R kip. Mr. Clemens of that been promou-d to Drumbo, Mr. Scott, who is leaving th the company. Mr. J. 8. Cherry has rece machinery for for his bes was manufactured by Gold| loch, Gailt, aud is of the lat improved design. Work me busy placing the m ichinery Mr. Cherry expects to be | the first of nex t mouth. He meived orders for a lurt'r: flour. â€"Preston Progress The Blair hotel, belon estate of the lute W J M been sold to Mr. Ertel of 1i for $4,000. According to a Jaiver er, & young man was i eity, charged with } agrinst her will on t!: The prisoner pleadedi 1 bloomere, and lc n iâ€"! longâ€"lost brother. The charged bim, and it i tradesmen can now ~ca feminine demand fo: bloomers. Rev. Mr. Cameron of has been called to Nt An Thamesford, at a stipen John HOd:ifl*. who « last week, was &0 Thol man, but pecusar )n He had strange ideas and bfld his first wite a ed members of his fiam: farm, ang we belheso h« wish that his own body larly disposed of. ~i~ Wd wife survive hi n. be"gtve $1,000, in lieu of his son Robert, who lived the ferm, which is one of the township, he wiled th his property, which mc bomestead of 100 acres. # crops and implements. a cash m.y' be left after pay to his wife, and the neces expenses. | The other sot: ly ignored. â€"|Mitchel! Ad Frederick Clark, who a nation in ï¬â€™t arson case admitted thak he had taken firing of Boyft w Cos prom rested Tburrduy An eA made to bring back Andre br‘ly a prominent merclat Chlrfle of being connc ‘® on bis premises. _ Doyo. i\ tempted to comumit ~uic.d fore lea\'ing Montres According to T 1892, t.herei(- 45 Ontario, 18‘ in Brunswick, in British Coh.‘nl‘m. #ittendea hbet constant!y. h the the house dus w aliness., Her suleri Revere, the *use being at M Shag waus only t FB, and hbef early domjs be much regretted, a will be expressed t in this her ead i hnil(')ba, (i 10 There are thitce t miniou, 19 en nes, 22 sem} mo! and 1 quarterly, : of 747 newspapâ€" Combination Plug Diep ix M.\la\\ q101 o xhg.only child of the lat I‘qbomuJb‘ and nrece C exâ€"M. P.,of Queen‘s count mlso niece of Mrs.Ciia1!le~ G‘_dph, died at her moht llryboroï¬h, or Fr.aay late she has been tescb Waliace. Drr. McArthvur. Tews of the W Oounty District GI1 From Exchang et the wishes of theirâ€"cus Tuck ett sfld on Co., 1 td ve pluad pon the marke Smokers ; 4 1D . P&Howlsnd 0 id zo Mrs. Bethuce SMOKING 1¢ 1mmebu dai V 1t s sal 1t Can| U 1A of Ire