M The cattle trade bas for many years bsen one of Canada‘s mainstay indusâ€" tries. The. Toronto World notes with ~regret that the raising of beeves for British consumption is on the back:â€" ward verge, and gives some good reaâ€" sons for it. This trade has been staâ€" tionary for the past five years, whilst the output to the same market has swelled 40 per cent., during the same period from the States and 80 per cent. from Argentine. The present season a‘so made a poor showing with the correspondirg portion of last year. Arthur Johnston and other breeders of pedigreed stock say that if the farmâ€" ers would buy more pure bred animals onr export steers would be so improved in quality as to feth a profit for the shipper in spite of any rivalry. This might prove a sufficient remedy, says the World, if at the same time the breeders in Canads, Britain and the States could be prevented from sendâ€" ing thoroughbreds to South America The truth is the Argentine rancher is as wide awake as we are in regard to enhancing h‘s export grade of cattle by infusion of new blood.â€" Clearly then «in addition to improving the strain in Canadian steers sometbhing more must be done if we are to stand our. ground against the Plate River country, G. S. Macdonald shows what that something is; We must take every advantage of our natural situaâ€" tion as the nearest source of supply for Britain, andâ€" insist upon our common ‘«carriers adjusting their freights accordâ€" ingly. Mr. Macdonald estimates the present average freight per head at $26 from Canada, $20 from the States and $32 from Argentina, and the averâ€" age distances to be respectively 3,825, 4,296 and 7,200 miles. So that on the . percentage basis though our aniâ€" mals travel 471 miles less than those of the States, our freight charges are actually 30 per cent. more, and, relatâ€" ively to distance, over 52 per cent. more ; which Argentine in proportion to distance pays nearly 60 per cent. less than Canads, What is wanted . right away is lisht to see the springs. of this artificial state of effairs. The: Dominion Department of Agricultnre‘ has had an investigation into the transport condition of Canadian cattle forwarded to Eoglish and Scotch mark ets, and an exhaustive report upon the subject is in Hon. Mr. Fisher‘s hands. That report ougbt to be published forthâ€" with. Presumably it gives a detailed account of the charges involved in sending animals over land and sea ; which together with Mr. Macdonald‘s facts and comparative averages would reveal where precisely the weak spots of our live stock export syatem are. ‘"The most perfect farm I know of is in connection with the London asyâ€" lum of 1,200 people. There, in two hours, the sewage disappears. Between the sewer pipes ab the asylum farm are vegetable beds, and from that source & revenue of $2,000 is derived. The foreman gets $25 a month. The desiraâ€" bility of such a sewage farm is apâ€" parent, and the complaint that one bears from the asylum authorities is not because of too much but rather too litble sewage. This farm is certainâ€" ly a moneyâ€"maker," Dr. Bryce, of the Provincial Board of Health, having been called in to give the town of Galt advice as to how best to dispose of its sowage, spoke bhighly of the land filtration scheme, He said : Yeastâ€"Did the sermon touch you ! Orimsonbeakâ€"Yesg. I threw a dollar bill into ths contribution basket.â€" Yonkers Statesqan, Hubscription $1,00 per annum in advance llï¬?git notâ€"so paid: h class printing, English and German, in all its branches, Advertising Rates reasonable, and will be imade known on application 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 excepted up to noon Wednesday of each week. Waterloo County Chronicle. "For Headache AYER‘S PILLS" OUR DECLINING CATTLE TRADE. DAVID BEAN, Proprietor, Weekly Newsgaper pt:ll;gahed every Thurs ay morning. C. L. NEWMAN, Dug Spur, Va. EDITORIAL NOTES. I don‘t believe there ever was so good a pill as Ayer‘s. I have been a victim of ter= rible headaches, and never found anything to relieve me so quickly as TO ADVERTISERS He Was Touched. BUT TWO MEALS FOR STOUT WOMEN. It is not sleep alone, however, that rests the brain cell, though sleep is absolutely essential to recuperation of the brain as & whole. Bat not all parts of the brain is involved in any one kind of mertal cfforbt, _ The blood supply of tte brain is so arranged that. by expansion or contraction of diff rent arteries, part of the brain may be flushed with blood and other parks shut off, so to speak, somewhat as the various currents of an irrigated field are regulared by the gardener. And as & rapid flow of blood is essential to great mental activity, this means that one part of tho brain may be very actâ€" ively ab work while another part is resting and recuperating. Thus it is that a person suffering from brain fatigue may leave his desk and go out into the fields, or into the highways with a bicycle, and by divâ€" erting his mind give the overworked cells a chance to resb and recuperate. It has shown unequivocally, for exâ€" ample, that a brain cell, which is the really important part of the brain, acâ€" tually loses part of its subtance during action. The brain cells of persons and of animals that have died during a period of great exhaustion from overâ€" exertion are found to be greatly changâ€" ed from the condition of the normal cell during times of health and vigor. The cell of the exhausted brain instead of being plump and fall of nervous matter, is found to be hollowed out, a cavity within its substance baving formed and being filled with water. This means that a part of the cell subâ€" sbance has been actually consumed durâ€" ing the time of brain activity, precisely as coal is consumed when one gets heat from a furnase. It is found,further,that if an animal whose brain cells are thus exhausted is permitted to rest and to sleep, its cells rapidly recuperate, new material being supplied ftrom the blood until the vacolation has disappeared and the cell is practically as good as new again. This explains why sleep is necessary to our ex‘stence. During working hours our brain is literally worn away, and sleep is the state during which the repair .shops of the brain make good the damage of the waking hours. Thus the brain of a person who suffers from insomnia is in the sondition of a locomotive which is run night and day without going to the repair shops. Disaster most ultimately result. No Breakfast for those Who Want‘ to Reduce Their Burden of Flesh. ©At twelve o‘slock sharp,‘ writes Mrs. S. T. Rorer in the July Ladies‘ Home Journal, directing the stout woman how to cure ber obssity, ‘"the first meal of the day should be taken : Two wellâ€"broiled chops, or sweetbreads, or eggs in any form, one slico of wellâ€" baked whole wheat bread, buttered and thoroughly masticated, and one green vegetable. Eat enough to satiefy hunger, but of the more nitrogenous compound. For dessert a cup custard, or fruitâ€"grapes, peaches, oranges or baked apple. A committee of British physicians, acting jointly, has for some years been giving particular attention to this topic and their researches, though not yet altogether complete, already show soms very interesting results, which, taken together with those of investigators on the Continent, let us see a long way into the intricacies of the brain. ‘For the night meal have a clear soup, a red meatâ€"in fact any meat except pork and vealâ€"a succulent vegetable, like spinach, cooked celery, a little lettuce, new peas, string beans, a little raw cabbage or wellâ€"cooked cauliflower. All meat must be broiled, roasted or boiledâ€"nob fried. _A half pound of meat may be eaten abt this meal. _A piece of well toasted whole wheat bread, without butter, a bit of well ripened cheese, and a cup of clear coffee may form the dessert. _ The success of this treatment lies in doing without breakfast. _ The patient may eat sufficient to satisfy bhunger, but »no more ; in a fow days sbe will find that the soâ€"called hunger is not felbt at the pit of the stomach, and in less than a week she will enjoy the two meals a dayâ€"the first at noon, and the last at five or six o‘clockâ€"batter than she has ever enjoyed her three meals." THE DUNKERS‘ LOVEâ€"FEAST. "After this follows the supper, the feast of love, which is spread on long tables, and consists of lamb soup and bread, and other simple viands. It is eaten in devout solemnity and reverâ€" ence. At the close of the _ meal meal the brothers turn to one another and extend the right hand of fellowâ€" ship and the kiss of peace, cach one shaking hands with his neighbor and kissing him; while the sisters at their tables perform the same beautifal rite among themselves. The communion is then administered. "The most important and the most beautiful custom of the Dunkers is their loveâ€"féast, which they celebrate in commemoration of the Lord‘s Supâ€" por, after the manner of the primitive Christians," writes Clifford Howard in describing the customs of the Dunkers of Ephrata, Lancaster County, Pennâ€" sylvania, in the July Ladies‘ Home Journal. "The celebration is held at nightfall, and begins with the rite of feetâ€"washing, in imitation of the act performed by the Master abt the Last Supper, when He washed the feet of His disciples. S.nall tubs of lukewarm water are brought in, and those about to receaive the ordinance remove their shoes and stockings. The brothers then in turn, each one girding himselt with a towe!, wash and dry one anoth: er‘s feeb; the sisters at the same time doing likewise among themselves in their part of the room. Feetâ€"Washing. the Great Supper and the Kiss of Peace. How the Brain Works Ib is, I believe, im physiological fact that some expression of one‘s feelings tends to Tlessen pain. Since weeping and groaning are distressing to one‘s friends, how would it do for us all to try singing instead 1â€"Poarson‘s Weekâ€" ly, : All the while the skilfual fingers were sewing up the wound the sweet, childâ€" ish voice soanded through the room, and the only tears shed on the occasion came from the eyes of the mother. ‘I would rather sing,‘ replied the child The little patient proceeded to illusâ€" trate. ‘It won‘t hurt you,‘ said the doctor kindly, ‘so locg as you hold your hand still,‘ adding, with a glance at the strained, anxious face of ths child, ‘"You may cry as much as you like.‘ ‘I can sif)g ‘Give, give,‘ said the litâ€" tle streamâ€" â€" Do you know that ? An eight yearâ€"old child with a cut in her hand was brought to a surgeon. It was necessary, for the best results, to take a few stitches with a surgeon‘s needle. While the surgeon was mak:â€" ing preparations the little girl swung her feet nervously against the chair and was gently admonished by her mother. The practice of serving fruit, pudd:â€" ings, nuts, confectionery and tidbits of various kinds as a dessert, is a perniâ€" cious one. In the first place, it is an inducement to overeating, since ib is qguite probable that enough has been eaten before the desert is served. If the articles offered are wholesome, they sbould be served and eaten with the meal, as a part of it, and not at its close, in addition to the meal. Bat it is generally the case that most of the articles served at dessert are wholly unfit to be eaten at any time, and so should be discarded. Dessert is really an ingenious device to lead people to make dyspeptics of themselves by eatâ€" ing more than they need. A safer and more sensible method would be to beâ€" gin the meal instead of ending ib with dessert.â€"Good Health. It is important to distinguish from the idea of impurities in the blood, the idea of @mply poor blood, i. e., blood lacking corpuscles or proper flaid eleâ€" ments. _A few years ago, young, rapidâ€" ly developing girls, whose blood was really spent and depleted temporarily in the general effort of growth, and who really needed only time, air, exercise and good food, were adjudged to have ‘impure‘ blood. They were in too many instancesdrogged with calomel herbsand ‘teas‘ innumerable, and often with the most disastrous results. There is a similar condition in many runâ€"down and worn people. Here only the gentlest restorative measures are in order. _ Nervous wear, a‘so, needs to be carefally distinguished before anyâ€" one decides just how and why his blood seems ‘ipure.‘ It may be that a good rest will restore matters, blood and brain included.â€"Dr, C. W. Lander in the Voice. ‘All right ; thabt would be better. What can you sing t‘ _ _____ _ ‘That‘s beautifal !‘ said the doctor. ‘I want to hear the whole of it.‘ The blood itself has very remarkable and efficieut agencies for ridding itself of impuritieeâ€"kidney, lungs, skin and lower bowel. It is in this very busiâ€" ness, in factâ€"taking up impurities of sundry sorts from many sources, and rapidly throwing them out as one or or other of the excreta. _ What we recâ€" ognize now are several conditions where unnatural impurities are manufactured somewhere along the bloodâ€"circuit and fed into the bloodâ€"stream in such quanâ€" tities as to keep it continually charged with them, though constantly dischargâ€" ing the same. so that cells everywhere are irritated by these foreign substances. A good illastration can be taken from the case of a person continually eating candy or sweets. It is easy to swallow more sugar than can possitly be digestâ€" ed. But the indigested sugar can be and ‘s absorbed from the stomach into the blood, and furnishes there a running source of irritation. The writer has seen a family of chilâ€" dren upset for two weeks‘ running by an importation of several gallons of deâ€" licious maple syrup into the larder, All undigested and illâ€"digested foods, whoether meats, fats, fruits or cereals, bathe the bloodâ€"stream with impurities in unnatural amounts. The remedy is self suggested now : stop the manufacâ€" ture of these stuffs. Rbeumatism and gout, however acquired (there are sevâ€" eral modes of doiog this), bathe the bloodâ€"stream with a class of impurities not easy to get rid of,impurities manuâ€" factured by cells that are working wrong, and often made to do so by perâ€" versions in the nervous system. _ Even long continued grief or unhasppiness may thus distort the nervous structure in a way to set up rheumatism. So may poor diet and overwork. Thus we may have gout in the wealthy from table excesscs, and in the poor from bhard times generally, aside from exposure and lack of flannel. This is enough to indicate the extent of the problem here, and prevent futile hopes based on the idea of cleansing out once and for all material that is being made fresh every minute. There is ar old idea, still extant, of the occasional presence and accumulaâ€" tion of ‘humors‘ and ‘impurities‘ in the blood, together with the allied belief that certain drugs bave a peculiar efficacy in cleacsing the blood of such substances. It belonged to the mediâ€" cal belicf of 60 years ago, and is conâ€" tinued down to the present time among people at large. _ It needs replacement by our present bettered informaâ€" tion. Singing Drives Away Pain. Unwholesome Desserts HEALTH HINTS, Blood Purifying. Waterloo County Chronicle, Thursday, July 7, 1898â€"Page 2 |__‘IL have sometimes thought,‘ replied the man with the sty, ‘though I never l was mean enough to say it right out, seein as how Sal is dead an gone, but I have sometimes opined it was on ‘ rccount of these riz biscuibt I had for breakfast. _ She had never rightly learned how to bake, and they sorb of lay heavy on my stummick..â€"New {| Â¥ork Journal, i o . â€" _ SCARCITY OF BINDER TWINE The War Shuts Off the Supply of Manila. â€" (From Farming) No other Canadian trad> has been so much affected by tho Spanish American war as that of binder owine. A large proportion of the raw materis] used for making bicder twine comes from Manila, and as that island is now in a state of siege it is impossible to get supplies. This bas caused a shortage of raw materia), both in Canada and the United States. So much so is this the case that it is doubtfal at present whether there is enough stock on hand in Canada for the needs of the present barvest. In addition to the lack of eupplies from Manila, the production of sisal, another _ substance used largely in the manufactuie of binder twine, has been groatly reduced during the last year or two on account of over production and the lowness of price, which caused many to give up growing. It takes about three or four years to produce a crop, and therefore, though there is an increased demand for sisal owing to the supply of Manila being shut off, it will be a few years before the growers of sigal can get into shape again. For these reasons the purchase of twine should not be put off too long Also ib is estimated that 25 per cont. more will be used in the Domioion this year than last. Now is the time to buy, and a supply for this season‘s bharvest should be purchased right away. Many of those in the trade prophesy that binder twine will probabâ€" ly be fifteen cents or btwenty cents per pound before harvest is over, Nearly all the large operators in binder twine have either very little to sell or are _out of the business nearly altogether. ‘I think as how that‘s a fake y:u*n,’ bagaun he of the peach stone, ‘for how in Sam Hill could a cyclone whisk away a‘l your personil an real estate an skip you unharmed, for you don‘t look as if you ever weighed over 102 pounds in your life? Ib don‘t jest sound reasonable.‘ ‘‘Twas ‘bout two weeks after I had married Sally Bowan. She had baked a pan of riz biscuit for breakfasb, and I et three. I was setting out on the piszz»a smoking my brier wood pipe when what‘s I see in the distance coming up the trail but a whirling and whizzing that was pulling up telegraph poles, etceters, as ib passed. It‘s a cyclone, says I, and sauntered out to the gate so‘s to get nigh enough to pull a bit off the critter for & souver nier as ib whizzed by. Darn me if that cyclone didn‘t blow clean over me, tip over the barn, cave in thesod house with tho piazzi on to the roof, _ bury Sal so _ deep that we never was able to dig her out and then disippear over the Missouri line. Obh, it was tough luck trying to live in Kansas those days, I tell you.‘ ‘Yes, sir,‘ began the man with the sty on his lefb optic, ‘I have wont through most kinds of disaster known to the human mind. Shipwrecked three times and saved by the skin of my teeth ; blowed up once in a sawmill and come down astraddle of the boiler not to mention getting my foob caught into sassage machine out in Ohicago. But the durndest equeak ever I had was with a cyclone in Kansas ‘long in 1889‘ The Cycione Came, but the Young Married Man Did Not Rise. ‘Tell us about it,‘ said the man with the peachstone watch charm., He Became so Run Down That Work was Almost Impossibleâ€"His W hole Body Racked With Pain. From the Bridgewater Enterprise, Mr., Austin Fancy is a well known blacksmith living at Baker settlement, a hamlet about ten miles from Bridgeâ€" water, N.S _ Mr. Fancy is well known in the locality in which he lives. He is another cf the legion whose restoraâ€" tion to health adds to the popularity of Dr, Williams‘ Pink Pulls. Mr. Fancy related his story of illness and renewed health to a reporter of the Eaterprise as follows ;â€""Daring the lasb winter, owing I suppose to overwork and imâ€" pure blood, I became very much re duced in flesh, and bad severe pains in the muscles all over m}y body. I felb tired all the time, hiu no appetite, and often felt so low spirited th : I wished myself in another world. S ie of the time necessity compelled me to underâ€" take a little work in my blacksmith shop, but I was not fit for it, and after doing the job, would have to lie down ; irdeed I often felt like faintine. I was advised to try Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills, and after using a couple of boxes I felt a decided relief. The pains beâ€" gan to abate, and I felt again as though life was not al!l dreariness. By the time I had used six boxes I was as well as ever, and able to do a hard days work at the forge without fatigue, and those who know anything about a blacksmith‘s work, will know what this means.â€" Those who are not well, will make no mistake in looking for health through the medium of Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pil‘s. Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills cure by going to the root of the dissase. They renew and build up the blood, and strengthen the nerves, thus driving disease from the system. Avoid imitsâ€" tions by insisting that every box you purchase is enclos:d in a wrapper bearing the fall trade mark, "Dr. Wiiliams Pink P.lls for Pale People.‘; SsAVED FROM THE BLOW A BLACKSMITH‘S STORY. Weak and Low Spirited â€"Nervous Prostration â€"Appetite Poor and Could Not Rest. "I take great pleasure in recommending Hood‘s Sarsaparilla to others. It has been the means of restoring my wife to good health. Shoe was stricken down with an attack of nervous prostration. She sufâ€" fered with headaches and her nerves were under severe strain. She became very low spirited and so weak she could only do a little work without resting. Her appetite was poor, and being so weak she could not get the proper rest at night. She decided to try Hood‘s Sarsaparilla, as we had heard it highly praised, and I am glad to state that Hood‘s Sarsaparilla has perfectly cured all her ailments." G. BELLAMY, 321 Hannah St., West, Hamilâ€" ton, Ontario. Remember H ï¬ ?~ Sarsaâ€" QQ $ parillia ©‘Yes. I always fix up my announceâ€" ments at this time of year. You see, I am a thoroughly conscientious man and I wish to be able tostatethat there are no mosquitoes." â€" Washington Sbar. Frederick Harrison on Style in English Prosge. The address recently delivered before an Oxford literary society by Frederick Harrison on ‘Style in Enoglish Prose,‘ has been published in the Nineteenthb Century. The main ides set forth in his address is that style cannot be taught. But he makes some very practical as well as exceedingly interestâ€" ing suggestions, some of which in conâ€" densed form are as follows : ‘Never qaote anything that is not apt and new. Those stale citations of wellâ€"worn lines give us a cool shudder, as does a pun at a dinner party.... Never imitate any writer, however good. All imitation in literature is a mischicf, as ib is in art, A great and popular writer ruins his followers and mimics, as did Raphael and Michael Angelo, and when he founds a school of style, he impoverishes literature more than he enriches it , , , Though you must never imitate any writer you may study the best writers with care. Aund for study choose those who have founded no school, who have no special and imitable style . ... There is much more to the game of love, ib thus appears, than man usually ever succeeds in finding out,â€"Uhicago Post. ‘Of melody in style I have said nothâ€" ing ; nor indeed can anything practical be said. It is a thing infinitely subtle, inexplicable, and rare. If your ear does not hear the false note, the toutoâ€" phooy or the cacophony in the written sentence as you read it or frame it silently to yourself, and hear it thus inaudibly long before your eye can pick ib forth out of the written words, nay, even when the eye fails to local‘za ib by analyais at allâ€"then you bave co in born sense of the melody of words, and be quite sure that you can never acquireib, O ae living Eaglishman has it in the highest form ; for the melody ef Ruskin‘s prose may be matched with that of Milton and Shelley, I hardly know any other English prose which retaing the ring cf that ethereal musicâ€"echoes of which ara more often beard in our poetry than in our prose. Nay, since it is beyond our reach, wholly incommunicable, defiant of analysis and rule, it may be more wise to say no more.â€"Northern Advocate. ‘You are advertising quite early in the year,‘ said the summer resorb land lord‘s friend. the fraud of the day. See you get Carter‘s, Ask for Carter‘s, Insist and demand Carter‘s Little Liver Pilla ‘Ob, I was ruoning no risk. I was careful‘to keep bttween him and the door.‘ Smail Pill. Smal: Bose. Small Pricgo. Substitution Perfectly Cured SICK HEADACHE Positively cured by theso Little Pills. They also relieve Distress from Dyspepsiz, Indigestion and Too Hearty Eating. â€"A perâ€" fect remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiâ€" ness, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tongug Fain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They Regulate the Bowels, Purely Vegetable. Is the Bestâ€"in fact the One True Blood Puriâ€" fior. Alldruggists. $1, six for §5. Get Hood‘s. ‘Well, I pretended to have some difficulty meking up my mind, and he had to wait. ‘He‘s such an impulsive and quick tempered fellow I should think you would have been afraid to take any such chances." f ‘Did you keep him in suspersa long when he asked you to be his wife ‘ Hood‘s Pills HeCouldn‘t Get Away,. Not so Barly are tasteless, mild, effecâ€" tive. All druggists. 256. ATTENTION J.S.Roos The Popular Boot and Shoo Store WITHOUT FIGURES . . The Style, Workmanship, & Quality opens the door to distinction. A man r flected in his neckwear and linen. Just the reflection that any man might be proud to have associated with himself may be seen in our brilliant display of novelties in furâ€" nishings. We draw the line at new. Alâ€" ways come to us to see what can‘t be seen elsewhere. Come toâ€"day and you‘ll see Shirts, Collars, Cuffs, Ties, &c. It‘s the only way to see the latest in everything) What‘s more off color than back +number furnishings? Move up and get of us the latest. JOHN RITZER, Waterloo, Ont. ENGLISH Paris Green. AMEKRICAN White Hellebore. PERSIAN Insect Powder. All and every kind of fly paper and pads. Write for quotations. Mail orders receive prompt attention. Night Calls answered by Call Bell at side of Door. Any money on can and do sell CL madeâ€"toâ€"order kind $7.00, and up; Our Boys‘ Suits at $1.50, $2.00 $3.00, $4.00, and up; Our Men‘s Overcoats at $2.90, $3.50, $1.00, $5.00 and up; Our Boys Overcoats at $2.00, $3.00, $4 00, $5.00, and up; Our Men‘s Pants at 90c, $1.00, $1.50 $1.75, $2.00, $3.00, and up; Our Men‘s Underwear at 20c, 25¢, 45¢, 50¢, 65¢, 75¢, and up, are SAMPLES of the good things Residence over store next to J. S. Roog‘ Shoe Store. Don‘t Waste We have WINDOW SHADES complete for 30¢c, 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. Done neatly at prices to suit. Moulding sold by the foot wholesale and retail. Also Room Moulding. We have lately treceived a nice line of Pictures which we are selling cheap. In all its branches. A first class Hearse furnished. 14 King Street, â€" Wehave just moved into our new quarters in the Bellinger Block, and havâ€" now one 0: the finest and best stocked drug tores in the county. Our own preparations, such as A large consigament of FOREIGN PERFUMES just received. They are adâ€" mirably suited for holiday gifts. J. K.Shinn & Co. 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. H. A. Zoellner & Son oanommemnmntonnsanmstomennensonmensome fl\ Tss Any money on a tailor‘s name. We :d\ i ) n and do sell CLOTHING equal to the EY > iE\ adeâ€"toâ€"order kind at a : : : :; ; : ; :o : s J / &| \ FRACIION OF ITS COST. I sY J /. Our Men‘s Suits at $3.49, $4.50, $5.00 BR R .00, and up; Our Boys‘ Suits at $1.50, $2.00 | D/' s h .00, $4.00, and up; Our Men‘s Overcoats at 4 : .90, $3.50, $1.00, $5.00 and up; Our Boys rouAlw> W\ | vercoats at $2.00, $3.00, $4 00, $5.00, and P ; Our Men‘s Pants at 90c, $1.00, $1.50 Â¥ I .75, $2.00, $3.00, and up; Our Men‘s nderwear at 20c, 25¢, 45¢, 50¢, 65¢, 75¢, id up, are SAMPLES of the good things Late) 1 e offer. :: :. t ofocfcgyp it r ; p» u The /’3 Chemists and Druggists. Snyder‘s Drug Store, offer, Our Dealers in Furniture PICTURE FRAMING RED CHEFK PILLS BISHOPS POWDERS ZOELLNER‘S BLOOD PILLS POISON 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 but we give them to you MINUS the high nrice. : : The Key to Success Are you looking for 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 Conâ€" gress at $1.75 ; Men‘s Whole Foxed Bals at $1.35, Boy‘s Whole Foxed Bals at $1 25, Ladies‘ Oxfords at 75c. ESTABLISHED 1862 The one price store in the Cou'nty Waterloo. Ont. Waterloo Ont. S. SAUDER & CO., i CCR mAoCP COP CC CBP pN C CE ACE AOEACE AORCoecAcp P s % Y o 7 # 7 The Gramophone or Talking Machine is Traly oue of the most wondeiful inventions, and never fails to charm all who hâ€"ar iL. Ta ks Sings # Loughs Whistles Imitates ail kinds of an‘mals and bitds SBays the Lord‘s Pray«r as plain as any une. 7 "/é y g vammans s ons Â¥f wurinnie .i 5fispsvt 4 I also keep in stock all kinds of Musical Instruments,the largest assortment of Pâ€"1 es, Tobaceo, Ciâ€"ars, Smokers‘Sundries, Sport ing Goods, Novelties, &c., &c., Don‘t forget when in Waterloo to hear the Talking Machine at Gramophone Tal'l{ing' Machine watchmiker, who is prepareed to do all kinds of Watch and Clock Repairing. All work guaranteed griceSPUNC â€" BEST EQRTABLE.DAIRY.ANDR FARM Watehes: Olo New Suitings New Hats A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest cirâ€" culation of any scientific journal. Terms, $3 a year ; four months, $1. old by all_lxewsdle'nlers. _ Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive special notice, without c%a_rge, in the_ "Pem‘ i W @a Trape Marks P D ererrare ~ Desians CopyricHts &c. Anyone sending a sketch and descriguon may qulckly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention is probrbly patentable. Comxgunlca- tions strictly confldential. Handbook on Patents sent free. Oldest agency for securing patents. MUNN & Co,35sr0«««. New Â¥OI Branch Office, 625 F St., Washington, D. C. Scientific American. ASK YOUR DEALER FOR Outfitters to Men. JACOB BALL In order to make room for our Spring Goods_we will sell our Winter Stock at cost. Give us a call. Tai‘or and Gents‘ Furnisher KING ST. â€" _ WATERLOD R. BOETTINGER before buying elsewhere. We have the latest styles. We also have a new line of HATS and CAPS Come And Seoe Our TWEEDS WORSTEDS SHIRTS COLLARS and CUFFS J. DOERSAM‘S Devitt‘s Block Waterloo Clocks Ne w Shirts New York BERLIN: New Gaps goods