tit No other calling affords greater opportunities at the present time for advancement, and also for making a competency, than agriculture, and yet we find that only eleven young men received their degree from Toronto Uni. versity in the science of agriculture this spring. Two hundred in law and medicine, eleven in agriculture, is the proportion, and yet who will say that our great West alone does not furnish infinitely greater opportunities for ad. vancement in agriculture than the whole Dominion could possibly Bff'ord through law or medicine. This, in a way, is a sad condition of affairs, and is well worth considering by everyone having the welfare of this country and its people at heart. How is this tendency on the part of young men ,to enter the professions to be counteracted, _ and what means shall be adopted to induce our young men to enter upon such a calling as agriculture, which in this*country affords ample room for every steady and intelligent worker, are among the important problems which those in authority [will have to decide and that very soon, if this country is to retain within her borders is best young blood, l One reason why there is a tendency to crowd the professions and to over- look the opportunities which agriculture affords is, we believe, because the children both in the city and country have acquired false ideas regarding these different pursuits. No definite efforts has been made to instil in the young mind at the public school a love for the farm and for the line of life with which agriculture is so intimately associated. If the child, whether in the city or country, has been led to look upon farming as a kind of drudgery in which there is nothing but work and no play, then it: is little wonder that young men to-day are rushing into the professions and more mathetic call- ing: in lite, from which many of them (Farminz) One may well ask the reason why so many of our brightest young men, year after year, continue to enter the so- called professions and make them their life-work when there are decidedly bet. ter opportunities for advancement in other lines of life. The professions, such'as law, medicine and teaching, are all overcrowded, and where openings can :be found for recent additions is somewhat of a mystery. A few days ago, at Osgoode Hall. eighty-four were given the right to sign the roll as barristers, and at Toronto University fifty-one were given the degree of bachelor of medicine. There are other colleges yet to be heard from, and it is probable that upwards of two hundred young men will enter the professions of law and medicine this spring from the various colleges of Toronto alone. A large number of those already in these professions can barely make a living, and many of them do not do even that but depend on special lines entirely separate from their vocations to afford them a livelihood. Now where in a province the, size of Ontario a couple of hundred more lawyers and doctors are going to locate and make a competency is, as we have already stated, a mystery. Many of them, no doubt, have con- nections that will enable them to find openings, but in doing so others may be driven out. A large majority, how- ever, may struggle on for a few years, and .drift to other countries. These are among our brightest gems, and this young country can little afford to lose l them. If these had entered some of l the lines of life that would have en- abled them to engage in developing our agricultural and mineral resources this country would be able to retain them as citizens, and to provide them with greater opportunities for obtaining a competency. Subset-[yuan 81.00 per annum in advance " Ito it no so paid; his]: class printing, English and German. in all its branches. Advertising Rates reasonable, and will be made known on awhcatlon Notice of changes must be left at this offitm not later than Saturday noon. The copy tor changes mast be left not later than Tuesday noon. Casual Advertise- ments excepted up to noon Wednesday of each week. Waterloo County Chronicle. THE OVER-CROWDED PRO- FESSIONS AND AGRI.. CULTURE. to the patience to keep on taking medicine that does not cure. But -it is trying that leads to success. If you are suffering from eczema, boils, eruptions, eta, you will begin your cure the day you begin trying Irs Trying DAVID BEAN, Proprietor, Weekly Newsgaper published every Thurs " morning. MEWS $aiitilakm. TO ADVERTISERS The serious fact, however, is that an irresponsible body of men should under the Ontario law be erected into a tri. bunal with power to inflict one of the heaviest sentences that can fill upon an educated man, and that for so tri- vial a reason as the infraction of mere traditional ideas of medical etiquette. We say that the law of the province should confer no powers of that sort to anyone. If such powers are conferred, the offences to be tried under them should be clearly defined," the proceed- ings should be public, every opportun- ity for fair play should be afforded, and every possible safeguard provided to secure fair and sensible decisions. The Ontario Legislature should at the earliest possible moment ransack this Medical Act and modernize it so that tyranny' of the sort exposed may be abolished. The qi1alifications for a licensed practioner should be skill and medical knowledge; let the standard of these be high, in the public interest, but having attained that standard, let the physician be free to practice his profession according to his best judg- ment. If he thinks it wise to prescribe some advertised remedy, or to advertise his own skill, why not? Certainly no sticklers for traditionaletiquette, which The Stratford Herald in concluding a review of the whole use says: A number of our exchanges have recently been pitching into the Ont- ario Medical Council and making in- quiries into the extraordinary powers conferred upon that body by the Ont. ario Medical Act. A few weeks ago two regularly licensed physicians were brought before the Discipline Commit- tee charged with being guilty of "in. famous and disgraceful conduet", and after an investigation :conducted in secret the names of the cffending phy- sicians were struck " the register. One would think that "infamous and disgraceful conduct" would certainly be some heinous offence against moral- ity, On inquiry, however, we tind that such is not the case. The offend- ing physicians were only guilty of a violation of professional ethics and their offence consisted in acting as doctors or medical advisers for a certain remedy company, by prescribing the medicines of that company, by distributing the advertisements of the Company and by treating persons, applying at the com- pany’s address. One may well ask why these grand features connected with agriculture have not been instilled into the young men of the country before this. It is because they have not formed part of the early training of the child. Until we have on the curriculum of our public schools a course of study that will create in the young mind a love for the farm and the farmer’s calling, and Will set clearly before the pupil the advantages to be derived from engaging in agri- cultural pursuits, this tendency to crowd the professions will not be successfully overcome. We must be- gin at the beginning. Nothing much can be done after the early training of the young man has been in another direction. The farmers themselves can assist in this matter prumh more than they are aware of. If every farmer would give up looking upon his calling in a sort of apologetic way, instead of saying, 'I am only a farmer,' would say, q am proud to be a farmer,' many young men would look upon the farm in a different light. Every young man worth a snap of your finger is ambit ions, and if he feels, and those already engaged in farming lead him to feel, that, in becoming a farmer he is enter- ing upon a lower scale in lite, he is likely to seek some other calling. Farming, both intellectually and socially, should be and is (qual to any other calling, Then why should the farmer belittle his own calling and put a 'stumbling block' in the way of the best young men in the country from entering it? THE ONTARIO MEDICAL CON- FERENCE. will come forth much poorer than when they entered. True, to farm success- fully, as well as to make any other calling a success, means hard work but to say that farming means all work and nothing better is to say something that is far from the truth as day is from night. In conversation with a gentle- man the other day, who was once a successful business man, and is now managing a Llarge farm in Western ‘Ontario, he stated that farming furnished a wider field for thought and for active brain work than any other line of life, and we believe that this is true. Where will one find a wider and more pleasant field for research and investigation than on the farm in studying the qualities of the various soils, the kinds of grain to grow upon these different soils, how plants grow and feed upon the soil, why sunshine and rain are necessary for the growth of plants, the best methods of feeding stock, how to conduct the dairy, and a hundred and one other things we might mention f The standing and relationship of the College of Physicians and Surgeons, to the body politic of this Province, is in- viting criticm through the press. A physician may have his college parch. ments-he may be a gold-medalist in his acquirements--yeh he is not per- mitted to practice his profession unless he becomes a member of this close cor- poration and doles out a monetary con- sideration for the privilege which mem. bership connection therewith confers. Fhis close corporation has certain fixed rules which the physician must; accept) and be governed by, whether he likes them or nob, and these are so framed as to favor the awful mysteries that a bye-gone age associated with the heal. ing art, The violation of any one ot, Every commercial traveller, whose field of operations is Ontario, awards to Waterloo County the first place for natural beauty, progressive towns, and 'well-managed farms. They say there is an air of business in old Waterloo that is strikingly impressive and instructive. From one end of it to the other it has a prosperous and aggres- give look. Its farm houses and out- (buildings are the best to be found in lany section in Ontario. Its roads are :good, though there is room for improve ment here. It has an industrial population noted for its thriftiness, honesty and sobriety. It is well served by the two leading railways of tho country, and in a few months there is every reason to believe that its five chief manufacturing towns will be connected by electric lines, Its municipal in- debtedness is comparatively small; while its financial importance is indi- cated by the presence of no loss than thirteen branches of chartered banks. Educationally it occupies, with one High School, one Collegiate Institute, the largest Roman Catholic College west of Toronto, and a chain of most excellent public schools, an enviable position among the counties of the Province. It has water power in abundance, rich agricultural lands, springs that cannot be numbered, diversified industries, and the choicest location in the garden of Ontario. This is a very modest picture of old and beautiful Waterloo, of which Galt, a: veritable park, is its bright, particular) gem. l Bret J af?rsy of the Cralt Reporter, who some time ago returned from his quest of fortune in thelaud of thescream- ing eagle, now believes that there is no country litre Canada and no spot of Canada like good old Waterloo County. In a. recent issue of the Reporter he draws this charming picture, which is true to life: It would also be well to bear in mind that powers granted by the Leg- islature may be taken away, and noth- ing is more likely to hasten their recall than their abuse. Now, however proper and appropri- ate it may be for physicians to con sider these cases in their bearing on their special professional interests, they have no right to use for their own pro tection or aggrandizement powers which they hold as trustees for the public. They cannot show that the public int, erest demands that men be dragged before an irresponsible body like the Discipline Committee and their private business inquired into because they choose to advertise certain remedies at certain prices. Such action is more In conformity with that of ancient trade guilds thin with modern civilization. This is an age of competition and physicians must expect to have their share. They will not get rid of it by a tyrannichl use of the power conferred on their Council by the Legislature. If they desire to popularise opposition they can adopt no surer means to that end. never yet cared a patienh, should be empowered by law to interfere with a physician who may really be effecting cures. _ The Weekly San, also in a recent article upon the same subject said that the members of the Ontario Medical Council appear to have lost sight of the fact that the powers conferred upon them were intended to be exercised not for the special benefit of thelprofesusion, but for the public good, Only because public interests may be thereby served can the conferring of extraordinary powers or privileges on any class of men he defended. Yet most of the cases which have come before the Council have been cases which cannot be described as "infamous or disgrace tal" from a public standpoint, nor have they been cases in which the public health or the public welfare have been threatened. They have been cases in which the special or class interests of the profession have appeared to be im- perilled. Like the silversmiihs of Ephesus, the members of the Council seem to have been most alert whenever it appeared that their craft was in danger. GOOD OLD WATERLOO. EDITORIA L NOTES. "Oh, thou Prince of all Kings, we come into Thy presence with a. hymn of thanksgiving as we celebrate the seventy-ninth birthday of her Gracious Majesty, the Queen of Great Britain and Ireland and Empress of India, whose conduct and character as daugh- ter, wife, mother, friend, as well as gracious sovereign, has won and kept for her the loyal devotion of her own people, and the reverend regard and love of all true-hearted people of what- soever nation or race around the globe. Knit the hearts of the two peoples who speak the English tongue more and more strongly together, that we may work out: the mighty Problem of the, That this sentiment meets with an emphatic response in the hearts of the American people, was well established by the hearty "Amen, so mote it be," given to the fervent prayer offered by the Chaplain of the American Congress on the Queen’s birthday. May I repeat those words, and may it be our prayer, Permit me to say that nothing has ever occurred that has produced so deep, profound and lasting friendship for our Mother country as your moral support. in this oonfliot. Ours is a war of moral conquest, and it is very gratifying to us that we have the sympathy, the good will, and moral support of the English and Canadian Governments. We are one in lazguage, ~sympathy, religion, purpose and ambi- tion, and there is every reason why we should be the best of friends. The American people have said, "Halt !" We said it in a friendly, " ternal national spirit, and to emphasize and show our good will, we invited Spain to send one of their gun boats to our country on a friendly visit, and we treated them with all the courtesy due to a distinguished invited guest. They in an apparently friendly way invited us to visit Cuba. You are familiar with the result. They blew up our boat and two hundred and sixty-six patriotic boys in blue. We talked it over with them, but to no avail. I think if these two hundred and sixty- six bad been red coals, England would have blown the offenders into "the middle of next week" and talked it over afterwards. This Spanish offence of inhumanity in Cuba cannot be overlooked or con- doned. It is an offence agelnet our weak and suffering neighbor. Where is there an Englishman, either by birth or adoption, who is loyal to the chival- rous and manly instincts of his race, who does not in his humanitarian heart of hearts cry out, "Halt l." Cubs is our neighbor, and she has been crying in our ears: "Help us to drive from our land the enemy of our progress, the enemy of our highest and best interests as a country and people I Help us to drive out the ravishers of our homes, and the destroyers of all that is dear and sacred to us !" Shall we as a great and Christian nation close our ears and our hearts to this cry of distress? If we did we would be unworthy of our Mother Country--- a noble ancestry-unworthy of you as our brotherly neighbors. The duty is upon us. the cause is worthy, and appeals to us as a chivalrous nation. When we are through with this con- 'iliet in the interest of humanity, its generosity and unsisliishnetm will bring its own conscious reward, the fires of patriotism will burn brighter, and our country will be dearer to us for having done our duty. Nations are neighbors in the highest) and noblest sense, and have their re- ispomsibilitess and duties to each other the same as you and I have to ours. The Cubans are a brave and patriotic people, as their valor and tsacrifices in their previous ten years' war for liberty, and their present confrtet has well attested. Being a Canadian by birth, and an American by adoption, and appreciat- ing the friendly relations existing between my Mother Country and that of my adopted home, and recognizing the special interest that you and all humanitarian and liberty loving people have in our present oonfrkt with Spain, I may with propriety say some- thing on that subject. -. To intelligent and well informed readers, I need not recount Spain’s inhumanity to her own people. You have read its history, and your blood and mine has boiled with indignation at their barbaric atrocities, and this at the close of this glorious nineteenth century, when every act should be freighted with friendship and good will to our fellowmen. these, even in the matter cf advertising his profession, exposes him to the in- quisition of a secret committee who may declare his action to be infamous and disgraceful in their estimation. ard subject the guilty to extreme penalties. In is time the legislature took this basi. ness oat of the hands of the doctors and lined up the college rules with freedom and common senBe.--- New Market Ere, June 10,1898. The Hon. M. H. Levagood, a Ca- nadian by Birth, Gives His Opinion on the War. THE WAR WITH SPAIN T o the Editor Waterloo Chronicle: England I America .r--isitsbers in soul, Let us clasp hands as in friendship we meet, Love will endure whilst the centuries roll, Makin; a harmony goodly to greet. Deep in the ground let us bury to-day All the destroying distrust of the past ; Then from the chill ot the grave and its clay, Surely will rise friendship’s temple at last l " "Conquer we must, for our' cause it is just, And this be our motto, 'In God is our trust.' And the star-spangled bannm in triumph shall wave, O'er the land of the free, and the home of the brave." Small Pill. Small Dose. Sana“ Price. Substitution the fraud of the day, See you get Carter'ss Ask for Carter's, Insist and demand Carter's Little Liver Pills. Edith---Mrs. Mauve appears to be a. regular iconoclast. Brwrthu-Ye s? Eiitlr--You know she used to say her husband was the idol of her heart? Bertha-l know. E iith---Well, by her extrsvsganee that idol is dead broke.-L'oston Tran, script Positively cured by these Little Pills. They also relieve Distress from Dyspepsia; Indigestion and Too Hearty Eating. A per- fect remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsi. mess, Bad Tastein the Mouth, Coated Tongue Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They Regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. Premier Laurier, rising, evidently with some warmth, said: "I sincerely hope my honorable friend, who has just taken his seat, in his utterances, which at the moment called forth the expressions of dissent, speaks his own personal feeling, and not the feeling of his party. I would rather hope that upon the present occasion, though we are bound to be neutral and must be neutral in the present diffieultieg be. tween the United States and Spain, I should like to believe that if there is any feeling at all apart from our duty as neutrale, it is a feeling of sympathy for those who are our neighbors, and who share the continent with us.†'JIlil3. [lljEfilIIff',iij, Then let us raise together to the top of the mast as an emblem of good-will and mutual confidence, the stars and stripes, and Union Jack, and there let them wave as Christian tokens, beauti- ful in peace and good-will to mankind. highest civilization for earth," Sir Charles: Tapper, Opposition lead- er, expressed entire acqiescence in what the Premier had said, and concluded his speech by saying: "While we are bound to respect that complete neutrali- ty that has been proclaimed by the parent state in reference to the war between the United States and Spain, nevertheless, I feel that we cannot forget the people of Canada, as of Great Britain, are but one branch of that great English-speaking family, and that the interests of peace, the interests of civilization, and the inter- ests of the world will be promoted by the most cordial relations between two great nations." Now, coming to your own country, I find this gratifying news from Osts. wa, May 19th. Some member of your House of Commons, had evidently been criticizing our government, to which your two distinguished statesmen and leaders are reported as having said : Having thus given expression to the growth and development of a closer union in sentiment, and a s_'.ronger and broader friendship existing between the two great English-speaking nations of the world, the two nations that stand for progress, tor humanity, for liberty, for religion, and for all that tends to the welfare and uplifting of the human race; with these two nations united in their efforts for peace, would produce a serenity for both that would almost secure the peace of the world, and hasten the national millennial dawn. Filood's All Covered With Eruptions-c-tttyum Not Work, the Suffering Was So Great-Hood's Has Cured. "Iwas 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 tour bottles I found I was improving. I kept on until I had taken several more bottles and the sores and itching have dis- appeared and my hair has grown out." MRS. J. G. BROWN, Brantford, Ontario. " I was all run down and had no appe- tite. I had a tired feeling all the time. I YN'. gdvised _th t.ry H99d_’s Sarsnparillq. I did so and it bimetited me Bo" much that I would not be without it." MRS. G. I. BURNETT, Central Norton, N. B. Is the best-in tact the One True Blood Purifier. Hood’s Pills "N ow float thro' every ocean, o, ensign of the free, The stars and stripes and Union Jack of glory Fold round the isles and sea. Fling out to every nation A challenge brave and strong, To engage in earth's salvation, And right oppression's wrong." "In the beau/y of the lilies, Christ was born across the sea With a. glory in His bosom that trans- figures you and me, As He (lied to make men holy, let us die to make men free." seam and Limbs _ ATTENTION I Broke Her Idol. , a, Sarsa- M. H. LEVAGOOD. act harmoniously with Bood's Sarsaparilla. 26e, parilla the whole AGENTS. '"I hpTeantitul Life of Miss; Will. ard.' by her sctoretary and literary execu or Anna A. Garden ; introduction by Lady Somer- set ; sells to everybody, Great, snap. Pro. spectus titty cents. Books on time. BRADLEY-GARRETSON COMPANY. Limited, Toronto. opens the door to distinction. A man I' flected in his neckwear and linen. Just the reflection that any men might be proud to have associated with himself may be Been in our brilliant display of novelties in fur- nishings. We draw the line at new. Al. ways come to us to see what can't be seen elsewhere. Come t'--day and you’ll see Shirts, Collars, Cuffs, Ties, ke. It's the only way to see the latest in everything] What's more off color than back numbet furnishings? Move up and get of us the latest. JOHN RITZER, Waterloo, Ont. AGENTS t “Woman" is the title of our new book. Discussus allwlaseiof the subject. Con. tains "The Life and wk of Miss Willard.' the most wonderfut woman ot the century. Over a. hundrrd beautiful portraits of the greatest woman known, with biographical sketches Snap top canv. users. We have WINDOW SHADES complete for 300, 35c, Me, etc. Also Lace Shades from 500 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, Done neatly at prices to suit. Moulding sold by the foot wholesale and retail. Also Room Moulding. We have lately 'received a nice line of Pictures which we are selling cheap. "Nig'hé Calls answered by Call Bell ab side of Door. WITHOUT FIGURES . . Any money on a, tailor's name. We ’A 'tl 7' can and do tsell CLOTHING equal to the Fc:]:'; ’ [9:4 . made-Loorder kind ata : '. : I '.Y. ; : : , ' . u F"" t _ l Fa, 1 , , FRACTION OF ITS COST. 1 'Rh 7 Fc r Our Men's Suits at $3.40, $4.50, $5.00 1 k fd $7.00, and up; Our Boys' Suits at $1. 50, $2. 00 1 tttOh $3.00, $4.00, and up; Our Men’s Overcoats at ‘ _ Q' $2.90, $3.50, $1.00, $5.00 and up; Our Boys 0 -. AU, ’ Iillk l v' Overcoats at $2.00, $3.00, $4 00, $5.00, and ' T I up; Our Men's Pants at 900, $1.00, $1.50 l l . $1.75, $2.00, $3.00, and up; Our Men’s [ Underwear at 200, 25e, 45e, 500, 650, 750, and up, are SAMPLES of the good things _ weoifer.:::;::;r;;;:::.. AN, Inâ€? s SAUDEB & CO . T T _ In all its branches. A first class Hearse furnished. - - - Residedce over store next to J. S. Roos' Shoe Store. 7 __ 7_ J .S.Roos The Popular Boot and Shoe. Store The Style, Workmanship, & quality Any mom can and do se made-to-order J. K.Shinn 8r Co, 14 King Street, NW®®$§®W®WN Don't Waste E l, Mullin ' SUN WWWWWg®W®m8®X® 3®V etc., are used extensively throughout the country and enjoy a. world wide" reputation. We have always on hand a full dine of Dr. Hufeland’s family medicines. A large cansignment of FOREIGN PERFUMES just received. They are ad. mirably suited for holiday gifts. Wehave just moved into our new quarters in the Bellinger Block, and hav- now one of the firws1, and best stocked drug taxes in the county. Our own preparations, such M H. A. Zoellner & Son Chemists and Druggists. Dealers in Furniture PICTURE FRAMING RED CHEEK PILLS BISHOP’S POWDERS ZOELLNER'S BLOOD PILLS ï¬re?ï¬loa§inffor value? Have you seen the Popular Boot and Shoe Store's line of Footwear? Leading in Style, Fit, Wear Price. Men’s Whole Foxed Bals and Con- gress at $1.75; Men's Whole Foxed Bale at $1.85, Boy's Whole Foxed Bals at $1.25, Ladies' Oxfords at 75c. The Key to Success To guide you in forming an opinion, you would guess the price of our clothing at "about double what it really is. : : : : Is the kind that generally goes with high priced goods but we give them to you MINUS the high price. l : : I ESTABLISH ED 1862, LINSCOTT COMPANY, Toronto Waterloo Ont. to introduce "Glimpses of tho Unseen,' themost marvellous bonK since the publicmi n or the Bible. Revealed religion demonstrated. Sup- ernatural tarts l t the Bible no longer in doubt. Rev. Dr. Austin is the Editor; Dr. Badgl s, Professorof Philosophy, Victoria University, writes the Introduction. '1 no conlributors are nrhnlarly and devout. men, among whom are Rev. Dr. 'lhomas. Judize Groo, liev. G, W. Henderson, Rev. Wm. Kettlewcll,J. H, Coyne, M.A., Chaplain Sealers. Evangcllrt Crowley any many othrrs. Contains experiences of Wesley, Mari; Twain, Dr. Buckley, w. T. Stead. ands boat of similar men. The veil- s"paratingihe spirit. land is drawn back .30 that all may at least have a "glimpse.' Full bound canvassing book, 75 cents : worth twice that. Experience unnecessary. Books on timrr Freight. paid. Big commis ion. Sells on sight.. BRADLEY-GARRETSON co.. Limited, Toronto. Ont. Wanted Christian Men and Women The Gramophone or Tal . claim: is Truly one of the most wond “Cannons, and never fails to charm all who mar it. Talks Sings qughs Whistles imitates all kinds of animals and birds Says the Lord's Prayer as mamas any one. a'W& watchmtker, who is prepareed to do all kinds of Watch and Ch/ck Repairing. All work guaranteed I also keep in stock all kinds of Musfenl Instruments,the largest assortment ofP reg, Tobacco, Chars, Smokers' Sundries, Sport ing Goods, Novelties, &c., &c., Don't forget when In Waterloo to hear the Talking Machine at THE undersigned cirer to sell their livery mock consisting of hereon, carriages weighs. em, an a reasonable figure, Terms can be had by applying to KUMPE' & ZIMMEBMAN' U53 at ifiiiiii' iii) with Gramophone qt Talking." Maéhine jhiii"fii"ii"rlll'i"iks New Suitings New Hats Livery for Sale. JACOB BALI; Outfitters to Men. In order to make room for our Spring (LOUIS we will sell our Winter Stock at cost. Give us a call. Tai'or and Gents’ Furnisher KING M. . WATERLOD R. BOETTINGER before buyingb elsewhere. V .We have the latas styles. We also have a new line of HATS and CAPS Gomre And See jhrr, TWEEDS WORSTEDS SHIRTS OULLARS and CUFFS J. D0ERSAlTS Devitt’s Block Watsérloo Ne w Shims BERLIN " Gaps