‘‘Chancing to put his hand into his «pocket, he noticed with a feeling slightâ€" ‘‘ly akin to horror that his keys were not in their aceestomed place. The loss ¢ »a bunch of keys is sometimes a serious »matter to a business man and may reâ€" weult in great inconvenience, if nothing «worse. Mr. Brown had been very careâ€" Aul for years always to put his keys inâ€" rcako the same pocket and to keep them _ "I know of a business man named Brown who went to his office in haste one night on an errand, pulled his bunch of keys from the left hand pock:â€" et of / s pantaloons, where he is in the ‘haiy _f keeping it, unlocked his rollet sto" self locking désk, attended to the /# and, which included the writing of a letter, closed his desk, took the letter to the postoffice and started to an enterâ€" tainment, where he was to meet his wife. ‘‘The kitclhen and the parlor were also goune over carefullys and each one of us at different 'tiuipnt to the girl‘s room, thinking perhaps they were there in some obscure place, and every timeo one of us failed to find them in Ada‘s room or any where else the dining room was given another going over Even the front porch and the back steps and the stairway were searched for the missâ€" ing article, and the girl went to school firmly convinced that«tho house had been entered in some mysterious way by thieves during the night and that her glasses were stolen. My wife‘s sister, who has a reputation for fnding things, ~was to arrive on a morning train, and I assured Ada as she left tBat her aunt would soon discover the hiding place of the glasses. @3 The chairman had been quictly inâ€" formed that the motion would be mado and was requested to give what the inâ€" formant knew to be the visitor‘s pet Adea as his subject. Being assured that po ill fecling would follow and that the mociety would hear something wc_)?z;fï¬ listening to, he consent ‘. ond as. Mr. Dolldenning â€"came forw_ra is ccbject awas announced as "The Way to Find Anything Is to Quig Looking For It/~‘ ‘‘I believe, my friends, that evéry, person in this house tonight can recï¬:ï¬% mot one, but a numberâ€"perhaps many_f â€"instances similar to the case I have related, in which the most diligent search failed to locate a lostarticle, and no sooner was the search given up than the article appeared in the most unexâ€" pected way. f "It seemed useless to look more, and the search was abandoned, but as my wife was putting dinner on the table the dish of potatoes tilted a J‘ tblg.to one side, and the glasses were found beneath the cloth, which it was then C‘u berâ€" ed had been turned back the nightbeâ€" fore for me to write on the table _ = "‘Five yoars ago,"‘ said he, "my daughter Ada, who was a s_gï¬?‘bï¬@d 12 years of ago, came down to breakfast one morning without ï¬%;glas"ses she finds it necessary to wear all the time when studying and remarked that. sho bad evidently mis%'id them, as they could not be found n her room. ‘*After breakfast sho looked for them in the dining room, where the family had spent the previous evening. My wife soon joined in the search, and as the time approao&ekgd for Ada to start to school I, too, began looking for theo much wanted glasses. He had nover been asked to speak 0 his favorite theme to such a large and ence before, and a smile of gennine & isfaction played upon his face.gg‘hié-. gan. s ‘*But the aunt declare@ï¬jï¬sitively to me at noon that they were not in the dining room and said she had turned everything upside down in the girl‘s room, «going so far as to unmake her bed, one piece at a time, and all in vain. Eooo e e e tet e e c c Half a dozen members were on their feet at once to second the motion, and it was carried with such a volume of, voices that Mr. Dolldenning was justified in feeling flattered. o";‘ "I desire to make a motion.. We are honored tonight by the presemcé of Mr. Alexander Dolldenning, a gan of merited distinction in an adjoining stato, who is spending a few days in this vicinity as the guest of his: sister, Mrs. Robert Clevermate. I should like very much to hear from the gentleman, and I believe that I express the wish of this audience in moving, as I now do, that he be requested to make the extemâ€" porancous speech whichcomes at this place on our programme."‘ The programme for the firs{ meéting in December was of unusual inferest, and the house was packed ‘umbrl there was not standing room for amother perâ€" son. Each district was reptesented by its best man in the debate which conâ€" stituted the main feature of the enterâ€" tainment, and the discussion was an exâ€" citing one. The decisionf,- judges as to the winning side produged great merriment on the part of about, half the audience, but the defeated disputants and their supporters took defeat good naturedly, and after a mugical number had been rendered everybc’fy was ready for the next thing on the programme, which, according to custom, would*be" an extemporaneous speech ’\by Some one selected at the time by the society on a subject given by the chairman. So just at this moment a young man in the rear part of the house arose and, being recognized by the chair, said : HOW TO FIND A WIFZE. The man of vast learning and the man of equally vast ignorance, the man of sterling integrity and the man who is utterly lacking in that most essential quality, the man who is worth a milâ€" lion and the man who couldn‘t raise cents before sundown if his I}fe depend ed on itâ€"all these, together!with their wives and children, are alike in one significant particular. M s Each individual has & hobby“â€"'a!!}f;%% you please, some pet idea, which, in the case of many people, is brought forth by the slightest possible provocaâ€" Alexander Dolldenning belongs to this class, and the happiest moments of his lifo are when he is given an unchalâ€" lenged opportunity to talk in public or in private on his favorite theme. E tion whoenever=they were out of his ight,. and "My wife for findin orning tra oft that | the hidin:g claresf 1ey were n coking For It/~~ ;'; asked to speak ONgl ,, uch a large aundiâ€" ) > lo of genuine sat= | ,, his face as he be: | , * saiduhe, hy | , is az,ï¬ï¬l 12| 1, wn to breakfast | |, the.glasses sho | £, ear all the time | .. ind benoath | mined r ?E‘;;jfu berâ€" o nightbeâ€" | husband able _ | both ser that evï¬iyg all the v can recall | however haps many | gorrect . case I havۤ empron st diligent| sing@s be airticle, and | home, en up than en:gw?h most unexâ€" "Care ©‘Benson‘s _ worldly _ possessions amounted to less than $4,000 when the uncle died, and the #um which was thus placed within hil@ grasp looked very large indeed to him.\%The handling of vast amounts of mone}\was right in line with his ambition, /too, and he knew it would require a m‘&“flffl!‘ strugâ€" husband to keep her from discharging both servants the same day and doing 11 the work herself. Mr. Smith knew, %_owever, that her new thecry was the gorrect one and readily consented to a @ompromise plan by which his wife has sinc@> been of great usefulness in the home, where she is now a tireless workâ€" er and@ the happiest of mothers. *Care burdened wives and mother. and daughters here tonight whose greatâ€" est happiness is found in contributing to the comfort of those you love, your lot is an enviable oae, and I believe you consider it so. I urfge you to be contentâ€" ed with it. 3 *‘The eccentric millionaire uncle of my college chum, Frank Benson, died during the young naan‘s last year at !chool;"fegving him, three years hence, provided he Bad married by that time, the snug sum of $50,0.00, If at a given date young Benson rernained single he was to receive only $500, and another heir, who would thent become of ago, was to get the balance.| ~__"‘It was now evident to Mr. Brown that he had only repeated a former piece of absentmindedness by dropping the keys in his desk and closing the top down, thus locking them up, and s0, as on the former occagion, he borrowed a screwdriver and proceeded to take the desk apart. An hour was consumed in this way, for‘the desk was not made to Fbe taken to pieces every few months, â€"and the task was a difficult one, leaving &he man engaged in it very red in the "face when it was finished. But the keys had not been dropped there this time, and he was now at his wits‘ ends. ‘After pacing up and down the room a little while to quiet his nerves and think of some means by which the lost treasure could possibly be found Mr. Brown searched through the same pockâ€" ets again, made another trip to the postâ€" office, and thence to the place where he had discovered his loss, then went to the office of&a morning newspaper and paid for the insertion of an advertiseâ€" ment offering a reward for the return of his keys. ‘"‘The most unbhappy woman that I ever knew was a Mrs. Smith, whose enâ€" tire energy was devoted to having a good time. She was the child of wealthy parents, received a finished education and married a successful professional man, whom she loved intensely and who did all in his power to gratify her every ficeting fancy. She employed a houseâ€" keeper who took all responsibility perâ€" taining to household affairs off her hands and hired a competent nurse who cared as an own mother for her baby. Mrs. Smith did no â€"work. Her health was good, and she seldom found it necesâ€" sary to deny herself any pleasure that she craved. ‘‘The girl friends with whom she had been brought up considered her very fortunate indeed, but her heart was filled to overflowing with bitterâ€" ness, and the more she surrendered herâ€" self to the pursuit of & good time the greater that bitterness became. Thus matters went on for a year, and she could stand it no longer. ‘‘She saw plainly that her housekeepâ€" er and her nurse were getting more that was really desirable out of life than was she, and the cause was apparent. Her feeling was so strong that she wantâ€" ed to become both housekeeper and nurse at once, and it required a deterâ€" mined remonstrance on the part of her ‘"‘The clerk whose first and constant aim is to find favor in the eyes of his employer fails in at least nine cases out of ten until he quits looking for favor and begins with self forgetful singleness of purpose and concentration of effort to bring about results in dollars and cents to his employer. The man most out of favor with his employer of any I ever knew was the one who exercised the greatest care to anticipate the every wish and thought of his employer, alâ€" ways endeavoring to please him, and ‘he man with whom this same employer &s at all times ready to intrust any inâ€" beresk,. however great, rewarding him ly, was the one who was most thoroughly indifferent as toâ€" the showâ€" ing he made in the presence of his emâ€" g)loyer. "‘The same truth applies even with more emphatic force to finding happiâ€" ness. Did it ever occur to you that the individual who makes the most direct effort to be happy usually wears the longest face in the community, while the one whose days arp filled with useâ€" fulness and nights with sound sleep comes up smiling at every turn in the road which leads to the valley of conâ€" tented old age? ‘‘The man who spends $30 a week in an effort to find happiness is, so far as my observation goes, exceedingly miserâ€" able in comparison with the man who has only 30 cents to spend in that way. "This case strikes you as something new only because you are not business men with self locking desks, but I am persuaded that while I spoke of keys you were reminded of small pieces of farm machinery and articles of houseâ€" hold use whose disappearance was just as mysterious, the search for which was fully as long and disappointing, and the finding of which occurred in the most unlooked for fashion soon aftâ€" er the search was abandoned. Illustraâ€" tions of the truth for which I stand toâ€" night are of common occurrence in the life of ever: individual, and_ I rely upâ€" on your personal experience to clinch every point I make. ‘"He was just in time to accompany Mrs. Brown home from the entertainâ€" ment, and he told her that he should probably not be able to sleep a wink that night, but as he entered the house, feeling in his vest pocket for a match to light a lamp, his finger touched the missing keys. He had always thought of the bunch as being too large to fit in his vest pocket and so didn‘t look there for it. He had doubtless put it there unâ€" consciously while in the act of taking a match from his pocket just after openâ€" firg the desk. â€"*Finding thom gone, he ‘hurricdly felt in the other pockets of. his trousers and in those of his coat and overcoat, but to no avail. He then retraced his steps to the postoffice, and from there to his place of business, looking constantâ€" ly in front of him and on either side, hoping against hope for the appearance of his keys. Reaching his office, he went back several times over the steps he remembered having taken there and was especially careful to look everyâ€" where under and around his dosk. Words of cheer are words of help. Words of gloom are words of harm There is a bright and a dark side to every phase of life and to vxery hour of time, If we speak ‘of the bright side, woe bring the brightness into prominence ; if we speak of the dark side, we deepen its shadows. It is in our power to help ‘or to hinder by a word any and every person with whom we have any dealings. A look or a word can help or can harm our fellows. It is for us to give cheer or gloom as we pass on our way through life ; and we are accordingly responsible for the result of our influence. The sweetâ€"toned belliings out sweet ness, however gently or rudely it is struck, while the clanging gong cannot be so touched #s not to respond with a jingle. There is the same difference in people. From some you learn to expect always a snarl, or a whine, or a groan, while others give forth words of cheerfulness and joy, _ When the grace of God possesses mind and heart,you wil! respond with a sweet spirit to every touch, kind or unkind, rude or loving. You will be a voice for God in what ever place or company you are thrown, a witness for charity and kindniss and truth. _ "When a man lives with God," says Emerson, "his voice shall be sweet as the murmur of the brook and the rustle of the corn."â€" Be a sweetâ€"toned bell. ‘‘"Young man, the way to find anyâ€" thing, even a wife, is to quit looking for it. * Mr. Dolldenning took his seat amid round after round of applause. â€"Hubert Burruss in Omaha Worldâ€"Herald. Sheâ€"When you post a letter, do you stick the stamp on yourself? Heâ€"Certainly. Sheâ€"I always stick it on the enâ€" velope.â€"Loadon Judy. ‘"‘Just 15 days after the fortune passâ€" ed to the other heir Bonson was driving across the country on a matter of busiâ€" ness when he was caught in a severe windstorm ten miles from the town in which he had settled and turned into a farmhouse for shelter, There ho mot a Miss Nettie Rosebud, who strangely stirred up a veritable windstorm in his heart before he had known her an hour, and she wasn‘t dressed in her Sunday best either, as the other 288 girls had been. He arranged to continue the acâ€" quaintance, which soon became a courtâ€" ship, and one year from that stormy Wednesday, with the loveliest of sunâ€" shine outside and the prettiest of flowâ€" ers within, having a heart as strangely peaceful now as it was turbulent on the former occasion, Frank Benson led Nettie Rosebud to the marriage altar. That was 11 years ago. Last month I was a guest at their home, and a hapâ€" pier one I nevervisited. Frank declares positively that he has not regretted for so much as one moment at any time since he met Nettie the loss of that sum of money, and I am sure he doesn‘t need it now. Waterloo County Chronicle, Thursday, Janu ‘"He next put in three weeks at the home of a boyhood friend in Denver, then two months visiting an aunt in San Francisco, from which place he came back to Atchison county, Mo., where a brotherâ€"inâ€"law lived, went next to Minneapolis, thence to Chicago, paid an oft promised visit to an aged relative in Page county, Ia., made a trip to Bosâ€" ton, where he remained several months, spent nine weeks in Indiana and conâ€" tinued to go from place to place in this way, always making a most welcome visit to some special friend or relative and never forgetting the secret.object of his travels until he had spent from two weeks to three months in 36 communiâ€" ties and formed the acquaintanceâ€"a very pleasant acquaintance, tooâ€"of 288 marriageable young ladies, 27 of whom he had really tried to love, but trying, failed, and now, nine days from the time limit set by his uncle‘s will, it was still true that ho had never met the lady whom any financial consideration, however largo, would induce him to wed. "He gave up, allowed the other heir to come into possession of the money which might have been his, and cheorâ€" fully applied himself to business, firmâ€" ly resolving that if he ever married he should mect the woman by chance or Providence and not by going out to find her. Tef this fortune pass into another‘s hand.. But he had never met the girl whom he would take as a life companâ€" ion, even though this financial considâ€" eration was multiplied by tenâ€"not beâ€" cause all his lady friends were inferior creatures, far from it, but for the better reason that no one of them had ever shown herself able to disturb his heart, and marriage with him, if it occurred at all, should be a matter of love rather than finance. ‘*When graduation was over and he had received his degree Benson lost no time in undertaking his new self asâ€" signed task. He went about it deliberâ€" ately, however, and communicated his purpose to no one. ‘"‘The first five weeks were spent as the guest of a cousin who was promiâ€" nent in the legal and social circles of Des Moines. There he met a score or more of highly accomplished and thorâ€" oughly attractive young ladies, each of whom treated him with kindliest courâ€" tesy. Several of them satisfied every doâ€" maud of his intellect, and he tried to place his heart in as susceptible an attiâ€" tude as possible, but it continued to be as inactive as ever, and he came to Richardson county, Neb., to visit a sisâ€" ter and, so far as he could, subject his heart for a montL at least to the femâ€" inineo charms of a rural district. As at Des Moines, his intellect was in several cases satisfied, but that was all. ‘‘The condition in his uncle‘s will seemed unreasonable in the extrame to him, but, after all, as a matter of fact, he did really want to get married if he could only find his true mate, and the plan took definite form in his mind durâ€" ing the romaining six months of his school life to devote as much of the next 2%% years as it required exclusiveâ€" ly to hunting a wife. 0x Tsbic agd Da i "Cealt fg’g&@ :5‘ aASK Words of Cheer. your grocer fOr Smart. 5. d The old style of portraying famous people through a "sketch" or ‘"bioâ€" graph" is to be modernized in The Ladies‘ Home Journal during 1898. Five of the most prominent Americans have been chosen for the departure : President McKinley, Mre. Cleveland, Mark Twain, Joseph J«fferson and Thomas A. Edison. Each will have a special article, which will consist of about fifteen or twenty fresh, unpubâ€" lished stories and anecdotes strung toâ€" gether, each anecdote showing some characteristic trait or presenting a difâ€" ferent side of the subject. The idea is to show famous personalities through their own doings and sayings, and to make these articles accurate the reâ€" latives and closest personal friends of the subjects have assisted and given to the Journal the best stories and anesâ€" dotes within their own knowledge. Each article will thus represent the closest view of the one sketched, No authorship. wu.lgg‘f.bt;ï¬zd to any of That she was not feazed by tho inâ€" formation was apprrent to all, and the man from Tuxedo allowed himseif to forget whether his partner‘s long suit was Learts or diarmonds. A great cure and a great testimony. ‘For ten years I suffered greatly from Heart Disease, Fluttering of the Heart and Smothering Spells, made my life a torment. I was confined to my bed. Dropsy sst in. _ My physician told me to prepare for the worstb, I tried Dr. Agnew‘s Cure for the Heart. One dose gave great relief, one bottle cured the Dropsy and my heart.‘â€"Mrs, James Adams, Syracuse, N.Y. ©Madam, this is the smoking car. There are plerty of seats for ladies in the other cars.‘ She lighted her pipe and smoked all the way to Jersey City.â€"New York Sun. The commutters looked up from the whist, and ev. n the man from Tuaxedo was a little bit inter sted when she seated herself, unmindful of the smoke As the train moved out from the sta tion the brakeman enatered the car, tapped ber on the shoulder and said : Thin the woman winked knowingly, took out of her pocket, pips, tobacco an1 matches, and answered : $ ‘And did\ye s‘pose for wan mini: I didn‘t be afther knowin ‘twas the gsmoker P k I am troubled, on account of the inâ€" jury received on the railroad, with sclerosis cof the spinal cord. Atb this minu‘e I cin see you double and you know by experience it is generally enough to upset a man to see you once.‘ ‘Yes, Albert,‘ said the Queen, ‘and I like its introduction much ; but it is not evidence of good drainage.‘ The Woman in the Smoking Car When the Orange county express, on the Erie railroad stopped at Pater: son one morning last week, a stout, middle aged Irish woman climbed up the steps of the smoking car and walkâ€" ed in, not beeding the warning, "Rear car, ladies ; this is the smoking car." ‘Oh,‘ said Prince Albert, laughing, T think it is a beautifully artistic ijes, and gives a stamp of Nature to the scene.‘ They both laughed. ‘The joke was that at that time Her Majesty was very fond of farming, and Prince Albert, for his part, was devoting nearly all his attention to land drainâ€" ago. j Mr. Si‘ney Cooper, R A., was many years ago painting a picture at Osâ€" b rno of a fine Gu rasey hbeifer b longâ€" ing to the Royal Farm, and Her M â€"jesty wished to see how she work was progressing, The picture was submitted and admired, and the artist was about to leave, when Prince Albert s id ; The artist exclaimed that the introâ€" duction was allowable to avoid the monotony, as much as possible, of grass and earth. ‘Well,‘ said the Prince,jocosely, ‘they are beautifully painted and assist the composition, but they do not give @viâ€" derce of good farming.‘ ‘How about the little pool of water in which the heifer‘s hind legs are standing P ___â€" Mr. Câ€", the railroad company‘s lawâ€" yer, was noted for his nervousness in examining witneeses, and endeavoring to disconcert them. _ This witness, howâ€" ever, determ‘n(d not to: be equelâ€"hed or confused by his opponent‘s counse). After becoming thoroughly provoked at the attacks of the liwyer he remonâ€" strated. ‘How about those dock leaves that you are introducing into theforeground, Mr. Cooper T _ â€" _ . Her Msj sty smiled, and, shaking her finger av the Prince, said : | Durirg a trial which took place in a new England city ssm years ago the plaintiff .was undâ€"rgoing a rath r sharp examinalion from the defendant‘s attorâ€" aey. The cae was one of dâ€"mages claimed on account of severe botily inâ€" juri‘s reccived by the plaintiff on a railroad, due, the plaintiff cla‘med, to the negligence of the defecdant railâ€" road comp iny‘s servants. . ‘Mr. Oâ€",‘ said be, ‘I am an invalid. I cannot a low youa to question me in this manner, it is a positive irjary to my nervous system, which is at its best in a shattered condition.. I sha‘l have to refuse to answer your questions unâ€" less you put them in a diff reut marâ€" ner. Whother out of gratitude for this tribute to his remarkable powers, or from a feeling that tha general sentiâ€" ment was against his method of questâ€" toning on that occasion, it is said that the lawyer was noticeably mild in his further treatment of the witness with sclerosis of the spinal cord. A New Form of Personalities. Dropsy and Heart Disease. How ths Queen Scored His General Effect ALL WILL â€" TESTIFY No medicine was ever named kidney pills till years of medical research gave Dodad‘s Kidney Pills to the world. No medicine ever cured Bright‘s disease excepb Dodd‘s Kidney Pills. No other medicine has cured as many cases of Rheumatism, Diabetes, Heart Disease, Lumbago, Dropsy, Femalo Weakness and other kidney diseases as Dodd‘s Kidney Pills have. It is universally known that they have never failed to cure these diseases, hence they are so widely and shamelessly imitated. Why is the name "Dodd‘s Kidney Pills" imitated ? As well ask why are diamonds and gold imitated. . Because diamonds are the most precious gems, gold the most precious metal. _ Dodd‘s Kidney Pills are imitated because they are the most valuable medicine the world has ever known No name on earth, perhaps, is so well kuown, more peculiarly constructâ€" ed or more widely imitated than the word DODD. Ib possesses a peâ€" culiarity that makes it atand out prominently and fastens it in the memory. Ib contains four lettera, but only two letters of the alphabat Every: one knows that the first kidney remedy ever patented or sold in pill form was named DODD‘S. _ Thair discovery startled the medical profession the world over, and revolutionized. the traatment ot kidney disease . THE IECULIARITIES OF THIS WORD No Name on Earth So Famous â€"No Name More Widely Imitated. No imitator has ever succeeded in constructing a name possessing the peculiarity of DODD, though they nearly all adopt names as similar as possible in sound and construction to teis. Their foolishness prevents them rhalizing that attempts to imitate increase the fame of Dodd‘s Kidney Pills The People of Ganada [Are Satisfied and Convinced. YÂ¥es, woman‘s love is free from guile, and pure as bright aurora‘s ray. Munyon‘s Nerve Cure stops neryâ€" ousucss and builds up the system. Price 2Dc. N unyon‘s Headache Cure stops headâ€" ache in three minutes. Price 25¢c. Munyon‘s Pile Ointment positively cures all forms of piless Price 25¢. Munyon‘s Blood Cure eradicates all impurities of the blood. Price 25c. Munyon‘s Female Remedies are a boon to all women. Munyon‘s Catarrh Remedies never fail. The Catarrh Cureâ€"price 25¢c.â€" eradicates the disease from the system, and the Catarrh Tabletsâ€"price 25¢c.â€" cleanse and heal the parts. Munyon‘s Asthma Remedies relieve in three minutcs and cure permanently. Price $1. Munyon‘s Vitalizer, a great tonic and restorer of vital strength to weak people. .$1. A separate cure for each discase. At all druggists, mostly 25 cents a vial. That Munyon Has Kept Faith With The Pecple and Made Good . Munyon‘s Rheumatic Cure seldom fails to relieve in one to three hours aud cures in a few days,. Price 25¢c. Munyon‘s Dyspepsia Oure positively cures all forms of indigestion and stomach troubles. Price 25c. Munyon‘s Cough Cure stops coughs, night sweats, allays soreness and speediâ€" ly heals the lungs. Price 25c. Personal letters to Prof. Murnyon, 11 Albert street, Toronto, Ont., ans xered with free medical advice for any disease, Dâ€"0â€"Dâ€"Dâ€"S His Remedies are Becoming the Safeâ€" guard of the Homeâ€"The People Have Trusted and Have Not Been Deceived. Mrs D. D .vis, Trenton, Ontario, Cansda, s ys : _ ‘Mine has been a marâ€" vellou:>cure of eczema by Munyon‘s Remedies. _ When I began using these remedics I was covered from head to foot with scabs. I suffered the most intense agony from the irritation and pain, I felt so bid that I believed it 1impossible to ever get well. I had used a number of remedies to effect a cure, but instead,I was getting worse. I was in Grace bospital for three months, but they could not help me, I finally deâ€" cided to try Munyon, and after using Munyon‘s Salve and otheNtremedies I received immediate relief. The mediâ€" cine seemed to help and cool the irritation. I am happy to say now that I bave not a mark on my body and feel it is my duty to tell others of the wonderful cure which has been effâ€"cted in my case. I have unbounded faith in Munyon‘s treatment and heartâ€" iy recommend his remedies.‘ Munyou‘s Cold Cure prevents pneuâ€" monis and breaks up a cold in a few bours. â€" Price 25°. _Munyon‘s Kidney Cure speedily cures pains in the back, loing or gioins, and a‘l forms of kidney disease, Price 2Dc. HIS PROMISES MUNYON‘S CONY ERTS , 1898 â€"Page 7 47â€"tf Will visit Elmira Dunke‘s Block, the second Thursday and Friday and fourth Thursday and Friday of each month (Thursday 1 p.m. to Friâ€" day 1 p.m,) ODONTUNDER. Firstâ€"class rigs and good reliable horses. Two and three seated carriages always in readiness. All calls promptly attended to and cha.rï¬tlas moderate. Offlce and Livery in rear of the Zimmerman House. Entrance on King stroeb, next to Fischer‘s butcher shop. LIVERY AND EXCHANGE STABLES® Gxro. SUgerTT, Proprietor,. All kinds of conveyances constantly on hand. Charges moderate. Stables in rear of the Com mercial Hotel. ‘POEHLMAN"S BARBER SHOP, s Opposite the Market square. An easy shave, a stylish halr cut, & 'ï¬ood sea foam, an exhilirating sbampoon. Ladies‘ and children s kair cut, Office in the Oddfellow‘s Block. Waterloo, nt. HERBERT J. BOWMAN PROVINCIAL Land Surveyor, Civi Engineer and Draughtsman, Graduate of the Ontario School of Practical Science, and late assistant to the York T’E Engineer on the construction of Pub: lic Works, and the subâ€"aivision of launds in the suburbs of Toronto. UCKBERROUGH & CO. B Fire, Accident and Life Insurance Agents, representing the best Stock and Mutual Comâ€" panies doing business in this Province. L5 BARRISTERS AT LAW Solicitors in all the courts, Notaries and Conveyancers. Money to lend on Mort%a.ges at lowes rates. Officeâ€"Court House Berli W. H. BowrBy, M. A., LL.B., Q.C.," County Crawn Attorney ie and Clerk of the Peao L.D.S., Torouto, ‘92. D.D.S., Philadelphia, 91. SPECIALTY: Preservation of natural teeth, including mounting artificial crowns on sound roots, and the insertion of gold bridges to supâ€" ply the place of missing teeth without a plate. Fred G. Hughes D.D.S. DENTISTT. D, BUCKBERROUGE, Toronto and Waterloo s Â¥7, M. READE, Ei'{'A' J. ‘;& FERGUSONt, B. A Omices 1 dyo i Aevimestore,, Watenip (Mon®y To LoaAXN,.) N, B.â€"Mr. Reade will reside in‘ W aterloo and be in charge of the office â€" S:fecial attention paid to Catatrh, Asthma and Chronic Diseases. DR. C. T. N@CKER, MEDALLIST OF TO RONTO University, Licentiate of the Col lege of Physicians, Surgeons and Aceoucheu of Ontario. DiszaseEs or EYE anp EAR TREATED, Officeâ€"New residence, Albert street, Water loo, & short distance north of the late Dr Walden‘s residence. _ Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Public, Con veyancer, etc. OOLQUHOUN & MCBRIDE, Barristers,Solicitors, Notaries, &c. _ Officeâ€"Corner King and Erb Streets, Water® Joo, over old Post Oftice. Money to loan at lowest rates of interest. FREDI RICK COLQUKOUN,. A. B. McBRIDE ALEX. MILLAR, Q.C. HarvEY J. SIMS, B.C.L. Barristers,. Solicitors, Notaries, etc. Office: Upstairs Economical Block, King St., West, Berlin. W. R. WILKINSON, ‘Dentist. DRS. D. 8. & G. H BOWLBY, s Pryvsiorans, SurerEons, Kto. Dr. D. S. Bowlby, Coroner for the Count Dr G, H. Bowlby treats diseases of the nose, throat and ear. _{IMON SNYDER, b Issuer. 0 Ma.rrla,ig Licenses, Officeâ€"At his Drug Store, Waterloo. Homeopathic Physician, PROFESSIONAL . . . CARDS. [OHN L WIDEMAN, Issuer of Marriage Licenses, Officeâ€"Post Office, St Jxcobs, Ont. Officeâ€"Court House, Berlin. OFPICE : Canadian Block, Berlin. ‘Phone 61. l H. WEBB M D., £ Coroner County of Waterloo, Oflceâ€"At his residence on Erhb street. Telephone communication, Telephone communication (Money to loan.) Office‘ Killer‘s Block, Wateroo, Ont. E. P. CLEMENT. AMES C. HAIGHT ERGUSON & READE, OWLBY & CLEMENT Livery, Sale and Exchange Stables. R. HETT, ILLAR & SIMS. . W. L. HILLIARD . . 105 King Street West, Berlin, Ont. For the painless Extraction of teeth Office hours from 9 a. m. to 5 p. m. W. A. KUMPF, VETERINARY SURGEON. Licentiate of the College of Physicians, Surgeons and A ccoucheurs of Ontario. Residence and office on King Street. Opposite Woolen Mills _ > Phone 210. , EVANS, L. R. C, P., Ireland ; M. D., C. M. Trin Univ.; M. C. P. 8. 0. Licentiate of _Medical Council, Great Britain. Speciilty â€"Diseases of Woâ€" men and Surgery. Calls day or night promptly auswered. Schweitzâ€"r‘s Block, Conestogo. WELLS, L. D. 8. C. W WELLS, D. D. S., DR. McLEAN, MISCELLANEOUS 109 King street cast, Borlin. Office and Residenceâ€"Jobn street Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries _ Conveyancers, etc. LIVERIES. MEDICAL. DENTAL LEGAL. GEo. ‘A." Bruor. DENTISTS, WATERLOO. A". RAYMO, he watchmaker, who is prepared to do all kinds of Watch and Clock Repairing. All work guaranteed, Such as Oil Painting, Paper Ha.nging, Kalsomining, Tint ng, etc., nea ly executed. Church Decorating a specialty. Address care of H. Niergarth, Water!« â€" Dr. Lobcthai‘s Kesence for the Eyo, the geat German remedy for weak and inflamedeyes for sale, wholesale and retail, by C. W. Schierholtz PUPIL of A, S. Vogt of the ‘Toronto Conse vatory of Music, late of Leigsic,h(}ermanv Pupils prepared for the first/and second year‘s examingtions in Piano at ,the Toronto Con servatory of Music. Residence, â€" _ â€" _ Albert St. JAKE‘S CIGAR STORE, Fancy Bread, Buns, Rolls, and Fancy Cakes always on hand. for circulars. J. 8. MUSSELMAN, DEALERIN Fruit and Ornamental Trees, Grape Vines Small Fruits, Shrubs, Roses, Etc, BERLILN,â€" â€" â€"â€" ONTP No classes, Individual instruction. Rates Moderate, Teacher of Piano and Organ Sanderson‘s Bakery BE‘ O R â€"â€"ps Trunks, Valises, A commercial school where the equipment and teaching are just what your boy or girl reâ€" quires to fit them to enter commercial life. If you are interested write to the EMIL F. BRAUN . KNITTING . . WatehBSaCloeks c l MISS ANNA R. BEAN go so Henry Maier. Prices as low as at any other place. IT PAYSTO ATTEND For Weak=Eyes~ RICCSPUNE DECORATOR. House and Sign Painter. Hello There! The Richt Place BEST FORTABLE. A l;audsomely Mlustrated weekly. Largest culation of any gcientific Journal. ‘Terms,: ear; four months, $L Bo‘d by al" NOREUENICIE MUNN § Co, 3010« New York Branch Office, F 8t., Washington, D. C. Cheap Harness John Strebel‘s, Scienfific American, ASK YOUR DEALER FOR JACOB BALL A full line of knitted goods stich. as Ladies‘, Gents‘ and Children‘s Hose, coarse and fine yarns, fancy goods etc. kept on hand. A call is solicited. Guilph Business Colfege For Bargains in Violins, Accordeons, Autoharps, Guitars, Mouth Organs, and all kinas of Strings, you will find at n of any %cient’lflo %ouml. 4 CLIRE 0 27 four months, $1. Bold by all newsdealers, Near theRailway Diamond Waterle Now Is Tnx Tru® For King St. Waterloo. usters, weatâ€"pads, Waterloo,"Ont. Devitt‘s Block Waterlo , W ATERLOO ‘ MISS STRICKLAND. J. Sharp, Princip &1 Elmira, Ort