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Waterloo County Chronicle (186303), 13 Jan 1898, p. 2

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( The Opposition bave been pounding away this session on the indesoncy of Ministers of the Crown holding direcâ€" torates in trust companies with which the Government has to do. In response to an enquiry on this subject, the Preâ€" mier Thursday took the wind out of their sails by informing them that the name of Mr. Ross was submitted at a meetingâ€"of. the Trusts. & Guarantee Company on March 10, 1897. He conâ€" sented to become a director, and afterâ€" wards withdrew his consent to act and consequently was not elected. He at tended no meetings and received no emoluments. Mr. Gibson was appointâ€" ed a director of the Trusts Corporation of Ontario.~. He attended no mestings »â€" _ and received no emoluments,having reâ€" __., signed as soon at he found that quesâ€" ’ }ifi)ns affecting these corporations came "S" before Council. Mr. Harcourt was ap. pointed.as successorto Hon. Edward Blake as director of the Toronto Genâ€" eral Trusts Company in May, 1896. He resigned on November 15, 1897, re ceiving no emoluments of any account. It appears that all the Ministers reâ€" signed before the Opposition took up the cry. Pand Fire#ie...,...... Ov@a estern Advertiser......,. Chronicle and Family Herald and Weekly Ooreri@@@me Western Advertiser....... .$1 41 Chronicle and Family Herald and Weekly Star with premium.......... ..........$1 T Chronicle and Farmers‘ Advocate.........$1 9 Chronicle and Montreal Weekly Wituess..$1 g{ Chronicte and Daily World.................$3 ‘Chronicle and Daily Globe..................$4 3 Chronicle and Toronto Daily News.........$1 8 Chroniclé and Farmers‘ Sun...............$1 2 Chronicle and Hamilton_Spectator .......$1 T Chronicle and Country Gentlemen......,.§2 7 Chronicle and Toronto Sunday Woold....$2 4/ Chronicle and Toronto Daily Star..........$2.0 Bubscription $1,00 per anftum in advance $1,50 if not so paid; fi.lgh class printing, English and German, in all its branches, _ tS sls THURSDAY, JANUARY 13, 1898 _ Advertising Rates reasonable, and will ‘be made known on aq plication Notice of changes must be left at this office not later than Saturday noon. The copy_tor changes must be left not later than Tuesday noon. Casual Advertiseâ€" ments accepted _ up to noon Wednesday of each week. Watorloo â€" County _ Chronicl§, The year of 1897 shows an increase over all previous years ofnearly 2,000,â€" 000 tons in freight traffic through the United States and Canadian Sault Canals, 18,218,400 tons being carried through this year.â€" The number of vessel passengers this year shows a deâ€" crease of 1,44"7 over last year, but there was an increase in registered tonage of 370,500, indicating decided increase in the size of lake vessels. The number of passengers carried through in 1897 was 40,200, an increase of 3,150 over last year. . ‘The Woodstock Sentinelâ€"Review has received from an oldâ€"time Canadian in the States a rather dark picture of the state of affairs there. He says : «Although a little spurt of prosperity, or rather commercial activity, has set some of the wheels of industry aâ€"spinâ€" ning, as one of the national results of renewing stocks of merchandise, exâ€" bhausted by the longâ€"protracted uncer. tbainties attending the introduction of the Dingley tariff, such energy is coolâ€" ing off and thousands of mill hands are at present out.of work together with many other thousands in other departâ€" ments of trade.â€" The country is also enveloped in a dense and fetid cloud of political corruption, from the head of the Government downwards, which has created an epidemic of fraud absoluteâ€" ly depressing to all rightâ€"minded peoâ€" ple and affecting prejudicially the people as a whole. Crime seems to have become@:: almost fashionable in some quarters, and while common thieves and burglars are dealt with pretty severely, the kidâ€"gloved aristocracy of crime, as represented by the fraudulent presidents and . cashiers of banks and other instibtutions, are pitied insteadsof their helpless victims, and a sort of wholesale commutation of their very lenient sentences is being carried out through the special intervention of President McKinley ! The new oneâ€"cent post card for adâ€" vertbising purposes, principally, now beâ€" ing issued, can be hadâ€" in sheets of sixâ€" teen, eight or singly. The sheets of eight, however, aro those in greatest request, being that size which suits the printing press more commonly used for the purpose in question, DAVID BEAN, Proprietor, Weeklleewsga;J% gublished every Thui a rning. & Address EDITORIAL NOTES. TO ADVERTISERS DAVID BEAN, Postal Cards. London, Jan. 4.â€"The Washington orrespondent of the ‘Daily Chronicle‘ blcs that he léarns from the highest -,.p]oma.tic authority that there is a mplete understanding between Russia nd France in regerd to the East to the (xtent of.their co operating on sea podâ€"andit‘ event of hostilities An 2 i)) effors has been made to induce Gerâ€" $1 40| many to act in concert with them, bu $179) hitherto without success. The moveâ€" $1 o | ment is directed against Great Britain. Compléte Understanding on the Sub ject Between France and Russia. London, Jan, 5.â€"According to a deâ€" spatch to the ‘Daily Mail‘ from Rome, Senorâ€"Crispi, the distinguished Italian statesman and former primier, has said in the course of an interview there that events in the Far East have proved that Russia ‘only sought the French alliance to hamper France in this important matter, and that Italy _ would get nothing by supporting Great Britain in Chinese affairs, while she might expect much from supporting the Russoâ€"Gerâ€" man action.‘ Paris, Jan. 4.â€"Mr. Francis C. Herâ€" mes, who is well informed as to the views of the French Government, has a long article in the ‘Journal des Deâ€" bats,‘ in which he ably discusses the eastern situation, drawing the inference that ‘France for the present will preâ€" serve an expectant attitudeo in the Chinese crisis.‘ London, Jan. 4.â€"The ‘Tim=s,‘ comâ€" menting editorially this morning upon the statement of the ‘Cologne Gazette‘ that since Thursday last negotiations have been proceeding in London for a Chinese loan, upon the proposed securâ€" ity of tha land tax % & cession of terâ€" ritory, denies that "Greab Britain has any intontion to demand territory or to take the lead in the partition of China. It says: ‘Britain ‘s policy, on the conâ€" trary, aims at maintaining the Chinese empire as a going concern and a vest field for the extension of trade. In pursuing this policy we are glad to note that Britain enjoys the powerfal supâ€" port of the United States Government as well as the public opinion of that portion of the American people which is not swayed by blind jingo denuneiâ€" ations. The editorial considers the governâ€" ment would be justified even in incurrâ€" ing reasouable financial risks which might formerly be regarded as outside ‘the scope of the government action,‘ in order to combat ‘measures restrictive of trade which Russia and Germany are seeking to obtain from Ubina in the shape of railway and mining monâ€" opolies and the like. Big Increase in Exports as Compared : With ‘96. An advance report says that Canâ€" ada‘s imports for the ‘last fiscal year amounted to $111,294,021, as against $110,587,480 the preceding year. The duty collected amounted to $19,891,: 997, as against $20,219,037, a decrease of $327,040. Exports, amounted to $123,959,838, an increase of $17,581,086. Daring the year there were exported to the United States Canadian products to the value of $43,991,485, as compared with $34,460,428 in 1895â€":96. Greav Britain took of our exports $69,533,â€" 852 last year, while our imports from the O‘!d Country were but $29,412,188, ‘Che exports of cheese to Great Britâ€" ain amounted to just & little under one hundred and sixtyâ€"four million pounds, and the value was $14,645,000. The exports in ‘96 were one half million pounds greater, but, owing to the lower price, a less amount was received in money last year than was received this. CANADIAN TRADE BOOMING A New Klondyke Discovered in The Northâ€"Eastern Extremity of {Canâ€" ada. a decrease of $3,567,554, as compared with the previous year. 3 Halifax, N. S., Jan 4.â€"The ‘Echo‘ says : Not long ago, representatives of of a company visited Liabrador for the purpose of making arrangements to erect saw. mills at various points and engage extensively in the lumber busiâ€" ness. _ It is said that the project will not be carried out on so large a scale as was at first contemplated, but it is possâ€" ible that in another way the visit to the country may be productive of much more important results than deâ€" veloping the wealth of its forests. Some of those who visited Labrador state that they have reason to believeâ€"that it contains deposits of gold of great richâ€" ness and is destined to become a&a great mining country. There is evidence that gold exists in quantities that are equalled only by the deposits of the Klondyke, in fact it is asserted that the deposits in Labrador are on the same range as those on the Klondyke: ‘Those in the secret are arranging an expedition to the country . _ They propose to spend two or three months prospecting and then to take. up a large number of claims in the most promising ‘sections before the rush which they say will inevitably take place sooner or later. _ Preliminary arrangements for this expedition, which is to start in the spring, have already been made. _ If the hopes of the proâ€" moters are realized it is possible that a ‘Klondyke‘ may arise in the east that may eclipse the one in the west. Saginaw, Mich., January 6.â€"BEight million feet of lumber was burned on the docks of the Saginaw Lumber and Salt Company at Crow Island, three miles below the city, early this mornâ€" ing, causing a loss of about $120,000. The docks held about 16,000,000 feet and a large quantity of lumber was piled in the mill yard which the flames did not reach,.. The mill and salt block were saved with difficulty. The docks and one drill house were destroyâ€" ed. As nearly as can be estimated, threeâ€"fourths of the loss will be covered by insurance. THE EASTERN QUESTION GOLDIN LABRADOR. Big Fire in Michigan Now, when I say there is no necesâ€" sity for a woman‘s growing old I mean just what the words stand for. That statement is intended for women under thirty. They may stay for twenty years where they are. I have another and more comprehensive one to make, and I am fully prepared to prove all its promises. I6b is this : MODERN WOMAN DEFIES TIME. She is Only as Old as She Looksâ€" How Age May Be Postponedâ€" Massage Treatment And the Use of Aids to Beauty. First and foremost as a conspicuous example of persistent beauty and youthâ€" fulness, despite all physical obstacles, is Her Royal Highness, the lovely Princess of Wales. Alexandria, most beloved of all women in England, and its future Queen, is woll past her fiftieth year. Last summer, when the Princess of Wales was so much in evidence during the Queen‘s Jubilee, the universal opinion was that Her Royai Highness appeared to be a woman in her early thirties. Her figure is girlish, slight and supple, her complexion fair and fresh, the contour of her face as youthâ€" ful in its lines as when all Eagland welcomed her when first she came from her Danish bhome to become the bride of its future sovereign, The English people adore the. lovely Alexandria. They revere her beautiful character, so strong, so sweet and so womanly, and they fairly worship her beauty. Harriet Hubbard Ayer is a recogâ€" nized euthority upon all matters relatâ€" ing to female physical beauty and the writer of "beauty hints" in a New York newspaper. The following article ‘s from ber pen, and it tells women how to defy the ravages of time and preserve their charms in spite of years : It has also been from time to time declared by various wiseacres that every woman looks her age. _ It has been frequently said that a woman is as old as she looks and a man as old as he fesels. There are two ways of combating the ravages of time in its impress upon our faces and our forms. One, the hygenic method, which should begin with infancy and may be called the prevention of destruction. ‘The method will result in giving up to every discipline bthe maximum of her possibiâ€" lities for healthfal charms. The second is the cosmetic branch,with which may be included plastic surgery, which has reached a point toâ€"day where, in very truth, deformed faces are made symâ€" metrical. When I speak of cosmetics I do not wish to be understood as referring solely to paint or powder. The word "cosmetic‘" means, in reality, "beautiâ€" fying by externai application." Usage has made it sppear to mean paints and powders. A soap is a cosmetic, and I may add,the very best one in existence. The simplest benzoin lotion is another; lemon juice and borax & third. Paints and powders are also cosmetics, and have been used ever sinces there bas been a trace of a people and of the babits and customs of a nation. The faded woman may, with safety, use the least little bit of finest powder for her face, She may carefully brush her delicate eyebrows after with the lightâ€" est possible touch of vaseline to restore their lustre. She may bathe her lips with an aromatic toilet water which will bring the color to them, so that when she smiles her rather wan little face will be transfigured â€"by the conâ€" trast between the pretty lips and the entrancing double row of pearls. She should attend to every point of her toilet with scrupulous exactness. Every part of her dress should be irreproachâ€" able for nothing so accentuates fading beauty as carelessness, Instead of an enamel, which always gives the face a porcelain look, a deliâ€" cate liquid powder is first applied to the face, neck and arms. For this purpose a small velvet sponge is used. The liquid should be wiped off with a chamois skin before it has time to dry, or it will appear streaky. No woman can safely do this for herself The wash, if evenly spread and properly dried, is really imperceptible, but there is a danger, in doing it without assistance, of missing even so small a part, which is fatal. A libtle color for the cheeksâ€"the finest French rouge is the best made,. The slightest brush ef the eyebrow pencil to the eyes, a faint addition to the color of the lips stolen from a stick of French "Grenadine," as it is called ; a little powder, all done in the strongest glare of daylight until the subject has become skilfulâ€"this sort of makeâ€"up is positively imperceptible at night and is (beyond question) wonderâ€" fully becoming. MASSAGE THE ONLY, AGENT. It may be pertinent to say that neither paint nor powder has anything to do with keeping the contour of a woman‘s face youthful. Massage is really the only agent thabt will« effect this apparent marvel. The Princess of Wales and Sarah Bernhardt have employed competent Swedish â€" masseuses for â€" twenty five years to give them daily treatments. Adelina Patti has certainly employed a masseuse for a score of years at least. The best massage operators are regular‘ graduates of the Swedish institutions. The Stockholm. schools of massags turns out hundreds of firstâ€"class women operators, and many of these come to this country and give. real massage. I would advise my readers who wish to keep the marks of time away from their faces to securs the services of a graduate of one of these schools or to take a course of lessonsâ€"for once having learned to knead one may give one selfâ€"treatment very effectively. To those numberless women who can neither afford to employ a masseuse Waterloo County Chronicle, Thursday , January 13, 1898â€" USE OF COSMETICS. nor to take a course of lessons them:â€" selves, I suggest that the word ‘masso (I knead) is the keynote of the system. Any one who knows kow to knead bread may learn how to supply that (to me) most mysterious and difficult accomplishment to the resting and beautifying of her face. The great difficulty is in getting just the right pressure on the face and throat, just the right amount of musclé and flesh between the mouth and fordéfinger. The kneading sbhould, be deep enough to start the blood well circulating, but never»sharp or quick enough to hurt. The muscles quickly harden under this treatment, and, as the muscles support the tissues when they aro relaxed the structure gives way and the surface falls into lines and furrows. FIGURE AND WEIGHT, As to the woman‘s figure I do not hesitate to say of my own knowledge that any woman, and every woman can keep her weight at her fixed point. There is nothing so easy in the pursuit of physical beauty as the reproduction or acquisition of flesh. Except in cases of emaciation, where there is a wasting disease, every woman may determine the weight she wishes to be and reduce or increase, as the case may be, the avoirdupois she fancies. The proper weights for various heights are as folâ€" lows : 5 feet 1 inch...%«.............. 120 pounds 5 feet 2 inches................ 126 pounds B feet 8 inches................ 133 pounds 5 feet 4 imches......;/;s........ 136 pounds Bfeet 5 inches................ 142 pounds 5 feet 6 inches................ 145 pounds 5 feet 7 inches................ 149 pounds 5 feet 8 inches................ 155 pounds ‘B feet Oinches......%........~ 162 pounds 5 feet 10 inches.............. 169 pouuds 5 feet 11 inches.............. 174 pounds It is of the utmost importance that the skin should be quite clean when massage is given. O herwise you knead the dust or faceâ€"powder into the â€" pores of the skin, and the result is irritating, and frequently will produce a form of skin disease difficalt to cure. Scrub your face thorougbly with hot water and pure soap, using the camel‘sâ€"hair lace scrubbing brush for this purpose. Rinse it in hot water also, and in givâ€" ing the massage anoint the fingers with a good cream or skin food. Occasionally during the treatment the face shou‘!ld be gently smoothed with the tips of the fiogers of both bhands, always taking care to make the passes contrary to the direction of the lines or wrinklesâ€"just as one uses a flatiron to remove the creases in a bit of rumpled silk, & I am convinced that & daily hot scrub is a necessity to the woman who would retain her youthful vigor, The friction and the cleansing of the skin pores both serve to keep the skinâ€"ducts free from obstruction and to facilitate the circulation. i Sarah Bernbhardt declares that next to massage she believes her daily hot water scrub has done more toward keeping her young than anything else. A Timorous Barnard Student Never Knew It Till She Had "Passed." One of the brightest and incidentâ€" ally the prettiest girls in Barnard colâ€" lego was also the most nervous at least ab exmination.. Her saffliction, not apparent ordinarily, rendered her misâ€" erably hopeless then. She was bound to stumble and fa‘l over the simplest questions, and she knew ib. She de spised herself for it. As the fatal time approached she held herself in increasâ€" ing contempt until she felt she was not worthy to live. 6 feet Atb Barnard she was preparing herâ€" self for a professorship in mineralogy and geology. She had done brilliant work through the year, both in laborâ€" atory and recitations, so that those of her classmates who did not know of her weakness predicted certain honors for her. But the hideous finals were upon her and she wes in despair. The examination was to be oral and public, and to complete her agony they would be conducted by a Harvard proâ€" fessor, who was coming on for that esâ€" pecial purpose. A friend of hers in Barnard knew this professor and met nim on his arrival. She told him of the trepidation of her brilliant friend. On the morning of the fatal day, some three hours before the finals were to begin, the professor was walking through the Museum of Natural Hisâ€" tory and met there quite by chance his acqusintance and her nervous friend. He was introduced and beggea the ladies to show him over the hall of mineralogy and geology. The older of the young women exâ€" cused herself, having an engagement but the younger said she was only too bhappy. The honor was majgig. than grateful, she said, for ib wqfi‘a]low ber to forgeb the torture in store for her. She took the professor all over the building, which was perfectly famâ€" iliar to her. _ He asked her many quesâ€" tions, which she answered with wondâ€" erful accuracy, growing enthusiastic as sha proceeded and talking brilliantly on her hobby. Cultured Motherâ€"Well, tell me what the lesson is about, and T‘ll write out the answer for you to 7leiarn. > Small â€"Daughterâ€"It‘s most schocl time, and I‘ve mislaid my geography. Cultured Motherâ€"Umâ€"erâ€"if youâ€" ‘ve mislaid your geography, you careâ€" less child, you can just hunt till you find it.â€"New York, Weekly. Both the professor and his fair guide forgot the time until a messenger warned him. The girl looked like one suddenly awakened from sweet dreams to find herself on the edge of a preâ€" cipice. "Why should you fear now," said the professor as he took a pen from his pocket and bastily filled out a blank. "This is to certify that you have passed with honor."â€"New York Press. Small Daughterâ€"The lakes of Af rica. EXAMINED UNAWARES. S y ons s D eioat n dr oc sls B2 2 en en n aia w en nnce § oA e e eS .l is n cradenns s ieseaticadoodioey Home Help. 120 pounds 126 pounds 133 pounds 136 pounds 142 pounds 145 pounds 149 pounds 155 pounds 162 pounds 169 pouuds 174 pounds 178 pounds Has Strongly Infiluenced the Comâ€" mons. It is a fact worthy of record that at least fifty members of the House of Commons are able personally to bear united and convincing testimony to the good effects of Dr. Agnew‘s Catarrhal Powder in case of cold in the head or catarrh in its severel different shapes. These columns have recorded the testiâ€" mony of members representing constiâ€" tuencies in every corner of the Dominâ€" ion. At this writing we have before us the words of Mr. Arthur A. Bruneau, M.P., of Richelieu, Que., and Hugo H. Ross, M.P., of Dundas, who join with their other members in telling whab this remedy has done for them in cases of catarrhal trouble, At the presont time, when so _ many are sufferâ€" ing from influenza in the head it is a friend indeed. Hood‘s "Talking of lost opportunities for riches" remarked the retired capitalist, "I count two against myself which I will regret until my dying day. One came a number of years ago when a man wanted to buy a small lot ef ground from me and offered for it 1,000 shares of the Bell Telephone company, which he valued at $1 a share. I refused the bid. The stock has since sold at $750 a share. The other lost opportunity was even worke. An old friend, who had been a school companion in my youth, came to me and implored me to help him out with an option he had on a silver mine in Colorado. He had raised $8,000 and he needed that much more to prevent the expiration of the option in about a week, I bhad been bitten in a number of gold and silver mining speculations, and I refused to put up the desired $8,â€" 000. My friend found a man on Marâ€" ket atreet who had more nerve than I and took up the option with the $16, 000. Since that time those two men have cleared $7,000,000 on that mine, $3,500,000 apiece. _ The lightning may strike me yet, but I doubt whether I will ever recover those lost millions,." â€"Philadelphia Record. All Covered With Eruptionsâ€"Could Not Work, the Suffering Was So creatâ€"Hood’gHas Cured. "I was all run down with complaints peculiar to my sex, and I broke out in sores on my body, head, limbs and hands, and my hair all came out. I was under the doctor‘s treatment a long time without benefit, They called my trouble eczema. Finally I began taking Hood‘s Sarsaparilla, and after I had used three or four bottles I found I was improving. I kept on until I had taken several more bottles and the sores and itching have disâ€" appeared and my hair has grown out." Mrs. J. G. Brown, Brantford, Ontario. "I was all run down and had no appeâ€" tite. I had a tired feeling all the time. I was advised to try Hood‘s Sarsaparilla. I did so and it benefited me so much that I would not be without it." Mxs. G. I. BURNETT, Central Norton, N. B. The blacksmith‘s daughter in the country village who reads Latin, Greek and Hebrew. The beautiful little governess wh wins the young Lord‘s heart. Is the bestâ€"in fact the One True Blood Purifier. The povertyâ€"stricken maiden, who, gowned in simple white muslin and a blue sash, outshines her betterâ€"dressed sisters and is the belle of the ball. The girl Zwhose windâ€"blown tresses fall in a golden shower about her alaâ€" baster neck when she takes & canter on her spirited bay. The girl who is a dream of loveliness when she is drying her bair in the sun. The girl with .two or more mad‘y joalous suitors who can keep them all at her back and call and induce them to do anything by a glance of hor liâ€" quid eyes.â€"Facts. 9 a act. harmoniously with HOOd S Pl“S Hood‘s Sarsaparilla. 25¢. The proud beauty who scorns the atâ€" tention of the hamble young artist, and learns too late that he is a man of famo. The untutored maiden with the voice of a nightingale who brings the whole audience to her feet on her first appearance. â€"The heiress who wanders about disâ€" guised as a poor girl and falls in love with the fisherman‘s so4. substitution. the fraud of the day. See you get Carters, _ Ask for Carters, Insist and demand Sarter‘s Little Liver Pills SICGK HEADRCHE Positively cured loy these Little Pills, They also relieve Dis‘:ress hom Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Too Hearty Fating. A perâ€" fect vremedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiâ€" ness, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tongue Fain in the Side, TORPID LLVER. . They Regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. $m.d Pill Head and Limbs We Have Read About Them. Lost Opportunities Small Price. â€" 9 n Garsaâ€" Small Dose. parilla Fancy Slippers A Merry Xmas You are sure of both it yo from J.S. Roos Ths Popular Boot and Shoe Store Overshoes Asiosesisisimisesimismsshas The Waterloo County , ... CHRONICLE W ehave just moved into our new quarters in the Bellinger Block, and ha.w% now one 0 the fin=st and best stocked drug stores in the county. Our own preparations, such as H. A. ZOELLNER & SON etc., are used extensively throughout the country and enjoy a world wide reputation. We have always ou hand a full line of Dr. Hufeland‘s family medicines. We have WINDOW SHADES complete for 30c, 35¢, 45¢, etc. Also Lace Shades from 50c up. _ Get our Prices on special orders for new . houses. _ We put up all shades and see that the rollers work satisfactorily. We also sell shade cloth by the yard Curtain Poles and Trimmings, both Brass and Wood at lowest prices, _ _ A large consignment of FOREIGN PFREUMES just received.. They are adâ€" mirably suited for holiday sifts. J. K.Shinn & Co. Done neatly at prices to suit. Moulding sold by the foot wholesale and retail. . Also Room Moalding. We have lately received a nice line of Pictures which we are selling cheap. In all its branches. A first class Hearse furnished, Residence over store next to J. S. Roos‘ Shoe Store. > ~N1g~ht Calls answered by Call Bell at side of Door. § Of this town said to us the other day. "How comes t, Mr. Schmitt, that youlare selling the same shoe for $3.00 per pair that I have been paying the neighbors $4.00 for? I know that it is the same shoe because I have worn several pairs of them," The answer was; that by buying and selling for cash and being satisfied with a small profit we are in shape to avail ourselves of every possible discount thas cash can command and can buy cheaper than our neighbors. Whas profit we make we are absolutely sure of. The lady saw the point and left the store well satisfied for her footwear. n AGENTSâ€"Book business is better than for . yeats past; also have better a d fister selling books. Agents cleirine from $10 to $40 weokly. A few leaders are: "Quern Victoria," "Life of Mr. Wladstone," My Motn 1‘s Bible Stories," "Progressive Sprake~," "Kl mdike Gold Fields," ‘"Woma»," "Glunp es of the Uuâ€" seen," "Breakfast, Dinner and Supper" "Canâ€" ada ; An Encyclopaedia." Books on time. Outâ€" fits freeâ€"to canvassers,. _THEK BRADLEY: GARRETSON CO., Limited, Toronto. A Well Known Odd Fellows Block and Rubbers V. K. SCHMITT, Chemists and Druggists. Dealers in Furniture UNDERTAKLING PICTURE FRAMING RED CHEFK PILLS BISHOP‘S POWDERS ZOELLNER‘S BLOOD PILLS DVERTIERS LWAYS PPRECIATE The Leading Shoeman ESTABLISHED 1862 hA )B illa2rz> & Son BY ADVERTISERS WHO USE THE Clb oiie Society Lady Waterloo Ont SEE WHAT WE CAN DO FO . . WE WISH YOU . . Happy New Year _ , AND THAT IS THE erloo, Ont. EAPING ICH ETURNS . AND ... I have filled my new show room with the finest buggies and carriagesâ€"â€"the noiscless gearâ€"n:ade by the McLaughlin Carriage Co., the cheapest and he heéfi‘you can buy style and quality consideretgwhwh I w.ll sell at rock bottom prices. #Also the fi Boettinger, the Tailor and Gents‘ Eurnisher, is the man to supply you. All the newest things in SCOT(?H and CANâ€" ADIAN TWEEDS and Overcoating for the fall and winter trade have come to hand. that have the reputa,l% of making the best walking plough in Canada. I also sell plough shares and casbin s to fit the leading ploughs in use. Horse Suoeinâ€" as usual. Track and YOU waANT A Fit Well,Look Well and Wear Well KING ST Wilkinson and As the undersigned have again opened their business,they respect. fully ask all their friends and acâ€" quaintances for their support. As our pricesarelowerthan in any simiâ€" lar business in Ontario, it will be in the interest of the public to call at our shop before buving elseâ€" where OUR CLOTHES King St. East. Un »takng and . Embalming attendi>~ _ and a Hearse furnished Curta n Poles at the lowest rates on hand; P‘â€"turss wil be framed and all repaurs 0 furniture promptâ€" ly executed. Warehouse and shop next house to Huether‘s Hotel, King St., West, Wate loo Ont Waterloo, March 22, Are made after the latest fashions: and of the best material that money can b y and v e ’;{ria them to R. BOETTINGER INPORT A NT UNDERTA KING Tailor and Gents‘ Eurnisher PUBLIC! NOTIGE Mr. A. Rocke: & Son A. Rockel. Manager, A. C. TOMAN INTER SUIT INTER OVERCOAT ‘ a FANCY VEST Roadster Shoeing a Specialty _ your footwear TO THE GULAR SULTS PORTED NS OF 22. 10905 gury _ Ploughs WATERLOQ. Slater Williams Sewing Machines Shoes Berlin. Jn * t 1 %

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