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Waterloo County Chronicle (186303), 15 Sep 1898, p. 2

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American Lines Will Cease Cutting Sept. 25. New York, Sept. 9.â€"The Times says : ‘One of the results of the Cauzâ€" dian Pacific Railway‘s acquiescence in the decision of the Interstate Com:â€" merce Commisgion, that that railroad is not entitled to a differential in its relations with American lines, is exâ€" pected to be & speedy cessation of pasâ€" seoger rate cutting between Naw YÂ¥ork and Chicago, The Canadian Pacific pu poses b> restore rates to the s‘mudard basis on Scpt. 25 :h ; general passonger sgents cf the American trunk lines expect to see the through rates from New York to Obicago and St Paul restored to the regular figures ab the same time. s Yes, sir,said the valiaut youth in diâ€" scribing the affair, I wrote him just the hottest kind of a letter, And what did he reply % He didn‘t reply at all. Didn‘t reply ? s No. You see, I was careful not to give him my address, Extraordinary preparet ons are beâ€" ing made in Jerusalem for the reception of the German Emperor. The sultan has giranted 60,000 pamstres for the renovation of the palace, and Arabic journals announce that in the principal street of Jerusalem, which leads to the holy grave, many old houses are being tborn down to widen the streets or imâ€" prove it by the erection of new ones. The gate at the head of the street is also to be made wider so as to make room for the passage of the imperiaj carriages. Lax in Ascertaining how their Chilâ€" dren are Taught. ‘Thav existiog methods of educating the j oung fall short of the ideal there is scarcely any question,‘ writes E!â€" ward Bok in the Sâ€"ptember Ladies‘ Home Journal. The most prominent educators of the land admibt this fact. Every «ffort is undoubtedly made to better prevailing systems. But the fight is singleâ€"handed,. As teacbers and educators constantly say : We are alone ; parents give us no ass‘s‘â€" ance. They do not even give us the benefis of ordinary interest. _ Aud this is trueâ€"lamentably true. _ Parertiare also too lax abcut the methods purâ€" sued in educating their children. Io bundreds of cases they do not even know what the methods are, they know nothing about them. There is no coâ€"operation with the teicher. Howâ€" ever much we may be able to improve modern methods of education, the best results to our children cannot be reached until parent and teacher shall come into closcr relations than they mre ab present. In 1895 and 1896 there were 579 deatbs due to the use of carbolic acid mod two or three other poisons. Of these deaths 468 were due to suicice aid 111 to accident. In consequence of this state of affsirs a bill has been introduced in the House of Lords for the better regulation of the sale of poisons, PARENTS ARE UNFAIR TO TEACHERS. Bubsorig)tion $1.00 per ‘annum{in advance §1,50 if not so paid: High oclass printing, English and German, in All its branches, Advertising Rates reasonable, and will be made 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 Wednesda4 of each week. rates from now until Jan. 1st," 1899, Special clubbing rates with all American newspapers and magazines quoted upon application. Cash must accompany all orders :â€" Chronicle and Weekly Globe........... ... . $1 50 Chronicle and Weekly Mail............... .91 45 Chronicleand Farm and Fireside..........31 45 Chronicle and Western Advertiser... . ... . $1 40 Chronicle and Family Herald and Weekly Star with gremium....................$1 T5 Chronicle and Farmers‘ Advocate.........$1 90 Chronicle and Montreal Weekly Wituess..$1 60 Chronicle and Daily World............. ... .$3 00 Chronicle and Daily Globe.............. ... . $4 35 Chronicle and Toranto Daily News.........$1 85 Cbronicle and Farmers‘ Sun................$1 25 Chronicle and Hamilton Spectator ... ....$1 75 Chronicle and Country Gentlemen.........$2 70 Chronicle and Toronto Sunday Woold....$2 10 Chronicle and Toronto Daily Syt.ar. vxsaes» «8400 In order to save our subscribers the trouble making two or more remittances we have made special arrangements with the publishers by which we are enabled to offor the following Eubllcabions in connection with the WATRRâ€" 00 COUATY CHRONICLE, B.Eng?eciqal 1ow" Waterloo â€" Gounty UOhronicle. Psyourhair Sreen? It‘ s only another way of asking, is you? hair growing? For green means growing. You can MAKE hair grow by using ){yer’s .fiair W{'yor DAVID BEAN, Proprietor, Wookly Newag:}?e[x['l gl}nggghed every Thurs ning. Address CHEAP READING Had all the Best of It EDITORIAL NOTES. TO ADVERTISERS THE RATE WAR DAVID BEAN, O ur Clubbing List. Agricalture in the Public Schools. She was a young wife, just married, from boarding schoo‘!, and although edâ€" ucated regardless of expense, didn‘t know beans from any other vegetbable. Hence this dialogue with the cook :â€" ‘Now, Biddy, what are we to bave for dinner? ‘There‘s two chickens to dress, mum.‘ ‘I‘ll dress them the first thing Where are their clothes?‘ ‘Why, mum, they‘re in their feathers yet.‘ ‘O>5, then just serve them that way, The ancient Romans always cooked their pescock with their feathers on. Ib will be a surprise to hubby.‘ _ ‘Ib will that, mum Shure, if you want to help, you could be pario‘ the turnips.‘ ‘O3, how sweet! T‘ll juast pair them two and two in no time. Why, I had no idea cooking was so pictureqgae.‘ ‘I think, mum, that washing the celery woa‘ld be more in your line.‘ ‘Allright, Biddy. T‘l btake ib up to the bathroom, and I have some lovely Paris soap that will take off every speck.‘ ‘Thank you, mum. Would you mind telling me the name of the asylum where you were educaâ€" ted ? I think I‘il have to take some lessors there myself if we be going to woik together, The following extract from an adâ€" dress delivered by Prof. Gso. M. Wrorg of Toronto University, upon the subâ€" Professor Wrong touches upon the real essence of this subjcct when he points out that the education in our publicâ€"or rural schools should help to an understanding of nature, and thus to an opening of possibilities of enjoyâ€" ing her. If the teaching in our public schools aimed to give the pupil a correct appreciation cf the nature around it and a taste of bird life, the nature of growth in the tree, the flower or the plant, it would go a long way towards counteracting the tendency at present existing to leave the country and the fairm for a life in the city. True,there has been a little teaching along this line in the past, but it has been entireâ€" ly of a secondary nature, and the puâ€" pil has not been made to feel that it is the important thing to be learned What we want in this country is a rcâ€" versal of this order of things, and icâ€" stead of the study of nature and of suljâ€"»cts pertaining to a lifo in the country baing made subsidiary to mathematics, bistory, etc., leb it be placed upon the same footing and, if need be, given a position of even greatâ€" er importance on the curriculum of our rural schools. The youth of this counâ€" try are farâ€"seeing enough to know that if agriculture or any other subject is given an inferior position on the school curriculum, it is not considered by those who are responsible for educaâ€" tional trainirg in this country, of great importance, and consequently there is no need of their putting forth any special effort to master ib, or to obtain an ex‘ended knowledge of the subject. We are promised a new text book on agriculture this fall for uss in public schools. If itb is not given the imporâ€" bant position it deserves on the curriâ€" culum and by the teacher the good reâ€" sulbs that are looked for from its study will not be fortbhcoming. ‘To get the most lasting and the greatest berefit from the study of agriculture in the public schools, not only must the teaching of the sukj>cb be dons in a way that will create in the young mind a love for the country and rural purâ€" suits, but it must be taught in such a mauner as will impress upon the mind of the pupil that it is the most imporâ€" tant subject upon the school curricuâ€" lum,. Then, and then only, will it have the desired eff=ct of directing the pupils to a life in the country and on the farm.â€"Farming. _ j ct of "History and E lucation," befor: the O_tario EAncation Association last spring, bears directly upon what we bave been seying daring the past few months in regard to the question of agâ€" ciculture in the public schools : ©"Coming to the facts of our situation leb us see what wo need in Canads, To know our need will be the first step towards satisfying it. Canada is a buge country, with the agricultural inâ€" teresb as yes predominant. In Cansâ€" da, as in other countries, the tendency is to crowd into towns. In so far as this tendency springs from necessary economical sonditions it is useless to resist it, but the fact is that many sre restloss in the scountry who have no call to live in the town. Their cducation bas unfitted them for the home life on the farm, aod hs implanted ideas that engender only discontent,. Side by side with this tendency to crowd into towns we find & curious contrasb. The city dweller longs to get away to the country for one, two or three months in each year. The weeks in the counâ€" try are dreamed about in the winter, and are looked upon as the happicst part of his life. The country obviously has charms. Now, the education in our schools should help to an underâ€" standing of nature ard thus to an openâ€" ing of possibilities of enjoying her. I will nob here profess to say how this can best ba done, but surely we enjoy oature in some proportion to our unâ€" derstanding of her working. I do not think that our country boys in Canada have as a whole the sympathy with na ture that a country boy in Eogland has. Some years ago, walking near Oxford, I stopped a small boy watckâ€" ing the fl‘ght of some birds,. Tais boy »xplained to me what he knew about the b‘rds in bis immediate neighborâ€" hood. I made a nots than of the d ff erent birds‘ nests that he pointed out to me. In showing me the nests he also described briefly the chiet charac» teristics of each bird. There were more than twenty varieties.~ I doubt if boys in this country have the powers of observation and the enjsyment in the lhife of nature that this small boy po:sessed. Here, then, is one direction in which our educational â€" methods might be improvedâ€"2 simple underâ€" sbtinding of the ordinary phenomens, the birds, trees, flowers, tishes that are to be found about us." The Young Housekeeper. _A well informed correspondent of the Weekly San says there »are notb apples enough in 0. tario for the home markeb alone, Prince E1iward Coaunty bas about half a crop of unsaleable fruit. In Grey and Simcoe there will be a fair crop of Rhode Island Greenâ€" ings while the yield of Ben Davis and Kiog Towpkins will be rather good. P.umbs will be a fair crop though they are being injared by the curculio. There are over 6,000,000 bearing apple trees in the province, and the yield in 1896, ‘the banner year, was placed at nearly fiftyâ€"six million bushels,. The reason why butter varies so markedly in its market value is, almost entirely owirg to the difference in its fiivor, Fiavor in butter is that qualisy which effâ€"eis tho taste and it is the presense or absence of fliwor that com mencs or condjems the butter to the consumer. Generally speaking, the principal sources of butter flavor are iwoâ€"namely, the conditious under which the milk is secreted and drawn from the cow and the conditions to which the milk is aubjected after it is drawn and before it is manufactured into butter. Itb is generally conceded (a‘ thovgs some exp riments have provâ€" ed otherwise) that as a cow advances in her period of lactation the flavor of of the butter she produces deteriorates Why this is so the writer is not aCâ€" vised, but, it is a fact, bhowever, that as & cow approaches parturition the milk becomes more or lesa abnormal in that ths milk serum becomes more viscous, the fat globules smaller and the milk creams less exbaustively and churns with more difficulty, The flavor of the butter is not necsssarily bad, but there is a decided lack of that fine, quick, aromatic oder which the best markets demand and are willing to pay for. _ The d:fference in flavor bet ween fresh cows and strippers is zo marked that some dairymen will not pay a&s much per 100 pounds of milk from a herd where most of the cows are well advanced in their pericd of lactation, even though it be richer in fab,as they will for milk from a herd the most of which are frosh cows. Dr. Bryce, Secretary of the Provicâ€" cial Board of Health, returned to Toâ€" ronto, sfcer attending the annual corâ€" vention of the Soate Boards of Health at Detroit. He is now busily engaged in sending out copies of the resolutions passed at the meeting, with reference to the prevention and cureof consumption, to the heads of the municipalities, memâ€" bers of the Goveroment, and local Boards of Health throughout the Provâ€" ince. The firsb resolution asks that Legislatures, departments of education, and municipal authorities of all Sbates and Provinces be urged to have all hotels, boardiog houses, and workshops where consumptives may be employed placed at least under municipal suparâ€" vision and inspection; and the third, that the building of homes for consumpâ€" tives be encouraged. An Irish priest had labored hard with one of his flack to induce bim to give up whiskey. ‘I tell you, Michael!,‘ said the priest, ‘whiskey is your worst enemy, and you should keep as far away from it as you can.‘ ‘Me enemy, is it, father ?" responded Michael, ‘and it was your Riverence‘s self that was tellin‘ us in the pulpib only last Sunday to love our enemies !‘ ‘So I was, Mich ae‘,‘ rejoined the priest, ‘but I didn‘t tell you to swallow them,‘ With proper after treatment of the wood the time cf felling seems not to +ffoct its durability. _ Winter felling is generally preferable to summer falling, because both fungi and insects are then inactive and the timber may be hanâ€" dled more at leisure, both in the woods and during shipment and conversion, and if worked at once has a chance to season t> quite an extent before warm weather awakens its many enemies, When logging and milling are carried on in & large way and the log is cut into boards and those pub through the dry kiln before the fangi and beetles have & chance to attack them the prcâ€" duct of summer felling is as good as that of any winter felled timber. Where logging is done in a small way the cutting of timber in summer usualâ€" ly involves loss and commenly leads to inferior product. Winter apples this year will be parâ€" tisularly scarce. _ Peaches are also turnirg out poorly but pears will be an average crop. Thompson and Rogers wandered home iate one night, stopping at the house that Thompson supposed was his residence but which his companion inâ€" sisted was his own house. The will of the late Horace Shaver, the well known resident of Ancaster, has been entered for probate. The deseased leaves real and personal pro perty valued at §$43,582. The whole amount.goes to his daughter, Mrs. Edâ€" gar W, Smithb, of Grimsby. Thompson rang the bell lustily, when a window was opened and a lady inâ€" quired what was wanted. ‘Madam,‘ inquired Mr. T., ‘iso‘t this Mr. Tâ€" Thompson‘s bhouse ‘ ‘No ;‘ replied the lady ; ‘this is the residence of Mr. Rogers.‘ ‘Well‘ exâ€" claimed Thompson, ‘Mrs. Tâ€"ITâ€"Tâ€" Thompsonâ€"beg pardonâ€"Mrs. Rogers, will you just step down to the: door and pick out Rogere, for Thompson waunts to go home ?‘ Time of Felling Timber. Apples Will Be EScarce V anted To Go Home To Protect Health. Heiress to $43,00 . Flavor utter. The everâ€"youthful appearance cf the members of the dramatic profession iâ€" a constant source of surprise to the public at large. The resson for this is not so much the grease paint neces sary in making up which obiiterate~ bo a certain extent the natural wrir â€" kles of the skin, while it lubricates and nourishes it, but is due to the changs in the expression of the varicus emotions which every part demsnde. This causes the actress to bring into play all the muscles of the face. By using them equally they all mairt in bheir firm consistency and atrengtb, and none waste away from disuse. The resulbt is that the ekin is kept stretched and tense over the face and does not fall into hollows. If you have a thin face and the flesh seems unwilling to become plump and round in reeponse to massage, build up the system by taking a haif pint or more of sweet cream every dâ€"y, eat of cereals which may have been cooked for several hours, a raw egg beaten up in milk once a day, warm drinks of milk diluted with hot water, and baked sweet apples or ripe swect fruit ab each mcal. Sir Herbert Kitchoner, who smashed the Khalifa, bas been a man of the day before this, and probably will be again, for he makes a point of doing someâ€" thing notable about once a year. This year he has done it twice, for on Gcod Friday last he fell upon the Khalifa‘s advanced guard at the Atbara and fair ly annihilated ib. : Now he has destroyâ€" ed the Khalifa‘s power in his chosen stronghold. Sir Herbert (will he be raised to the Peerage for this victory?) is an engineer cfficer and is fortyâ€"eight years old. He is thus young to be a General of eight or nine years‘ stancâ€" ing, and his rise in the army for a while was slow, as bhe was thought to be a plodder rather than a brilliant man. His chance camse when he joined the Egyptian army at tha time of its reâ€" organization by Sir F.aucis Grenfell. His high qualities were soon ssen, and he commanded the Ezyptian cavalry from 1882 to 1884,@and ther , «fter servâ€" iog in Lord Wolseley‘s expedition, was Governor of Saskim for & couple cf years, and Acjatan‘â€"General for a couple of yeirs more, becoming Sirdar in 1890.. He also found time for s :me exseedingly daring exp‘oration work, and gained a profound knowlege of the natives. As Sirdar he has done wonâ€" derfal work. He is a master organizer, can do more with narrow means than any other soldier in the empire, and probakly in the world, and has a record of absolute and unbroken success. His prestige among the facalistic Arabs by this time is immense.â€"Toronto Globe. A blow of fresh air, a glimpse of fresh scenes and fresh faces are worth quarts cf doctor‘s tonics to an overtired and nervous woman, and give a prettier glow to the cheeks than the finest manuâ€" factured rouge in existence. Invis indolence and lazy habits that allow obsaty to gain the ascendency over elasticity in the fair sex. She who keeps ber mird and body on the alért will seldom need to have recourse to science or diet to decrease her s‘ze and weight. Young men who have no concern for the welfare of their employers have not enough concern in regard to their own affairs t) make their own life a success. The Douglas farm, 2%} miles from Morriston, 200 acres, was sold last week for 3,400 A clerk, behind either the counter or the desk, is only of value to his emâ€" ployer when he exerts himself in behaif of that employer, and the measure of his value is the measure of his <exerâ€" tion: By honest effortâ€"and honest effort is doing all he canâ€"the young man not only becomes entitled to higher wages, but he is at ths same time acâ€" quiring more knowledge and skill, which shall fit him the better to carry on business on his own account when opportuniby offers. Some time ago a fellow was charged in the Edinburgh Police Courbt with stealing a herring barrel from a perâ€" son. _ Afser the charge had bsen proved the principal accuser thus addressed the Megistrate. ‘‘Dsed, sir, the man at the bar is a groatb rogue, the stealing o‘ a barrel is naetbhing to some o‘ his tricks,. Ho stole my «ignâ€" board last week, and what does Your Hunor think he did wi‘s ? He brought it into my sin shop wi‘ my ain name oa‘s and offered to sell me‘s, as hbe thocat it wid bo o‘ mair use to me than anybody else.‘ Douglas W. Sorby, of Guelph, the wellâ€"known horss raiser, was married ‘!ast Wednesday afternoon to Miss Howict, eldest daughter of the late Alfred Hewittb, C E. Therefore, the more a young man does for his employer directly, the more he is doing for himself indirectly. _It pays to be concerned about your employer‘s business ; it dors not pry to be unconcerned.â€"Canadian Grocer. John (sheepishly)â€"‘Iâ€"â€"â€"I s‘pose you‘ll be gittin‘ married some time ? Bstty (with a frightened air)â€"‘Ob, I dare say I shall some time.‘ ‘I dare say I‘ll git married, too.‘ ‘Oh ! Perhaps we might both git married at the same time. _ Woulda‘t it be awful, John, if the parson should make a mistake and marry us to each other? ‘Iâ€" shouldn‘s mind.‘ ‘No, neither should I, to tell you the truth, Jobhn.‘â€"Titâ€" Bits. English Country Courtship Tt Pays to be Concerned. How to Keep Young. The Man of the Day. What He Did. Many Americans Disabled in Porto Rico. Ponea, Port» Rico, Soapt 9 â€"Tllaess among the Uusited States troops here is increasing. There are now more than 25 per cert. of ths men unfit for duty, Within a radins of a fow mile« from Ponce tbere are oue thousand soldiers in bospitals. Ioa somse comâ€" msnds there are 30 per cent. of them down with the fever, principally tyâ€" phoid. The City of UOhester has arâ€" rived with med:cal supplies and 46 nurses. The surgeons here are hindlâ€" ing the patients as well as possible. In cootracts for the sale and delivery of any of the undermentioned articles, the busbesl shall be determined by weighing, unless a busbel by measure is specially agreei uponâ€"the weight equivalent to & bushsl being as follâ€" 0wE iâ€"â€" Poasâ€"sixty pounds. Bsansâ€"sixty pounds. Oaionsâ€"ffty pounds. Limeâ€"eighty pounds. Wheatâ€"sixty pounds. Ryeâ€"fifsyâ€"ix pouads. Maltâ€"thirtyâ€"six pounds. : Oatsâ€"thirt; â€"four pounds. Clover Seedâ€"s‘ x*y pounds. Barleyâ€"fortyâ€"eight pounds. F ax seedâ€"fiftyâ€"ax pounds. Castor beansâ€"forty pounds. Indian cornâ€"fiftyâ€"six pournds. Hemp seedâ€"forty â€"four pounds, Buckwbeatâ€"forty eight pounds. B us grass seedâ€"fourteen lbs. Bituminous coalâ€"seventy lbs, Timothy seedâ€"fortyâ€"eight lbs. Potatoes, turnips, carrots, parsnips and beetsâ€"sixty pounds. . The Dominion Weights and Measâ€" ures Act, Section 16,which was assentâ€" ed to June 13 b, 1898, is as under, Suske charmers ought to make ex cellent bartenders. Some men are worth more than others and some are worth less. There are times when the absence of crankiness shows the absence of sense. In the province of Q iebec when po tatoes are so‘d or offsred for sale by the bag, the brg shall contain abt least eighty pounds. Every person who violates any prcâ€" vision of this section shall be liable, for & first cffonce, to a penalty not exceedâ€" ing twentyâ€"five dollars and for each subsequent offence, to a penalty not exceeaing fifty doliars, U oless a man possesses "selfâ€"zsontrol he is little better than a slave. Summer girls think there should te enough naval engagements to go round, A thing of comfort is seldom & joy to the woman of fashion. Reformers should devote more of their tims to reformer‘s reforms. It always hurts a girl when one of her old beaux marries her best girl friend. A man is firm when he scts accordâ€" ing to your wishes and obstinate when he acts otherwise. The great trouble with the majority of men who bet on sure things is that they always bet the wrong way. I‘s a wiss woman that can make her husband believe he is boss when she is the power behind the throne. Whben a girl tells a young man that she dreamed of him the night before he should begin to save up money for the furniture. When a married man bas to use a nail to connect bis trousers with his suspenders it‘s a sure sign that be drew a blank in the matrimonial lobtery. The policeo officer came into sourt this morning pushing a shaggy looking prisoner. Tha coloncl looked down and said : ‘Who‘s ho ?‘ ‘He‘s a Gunn,‘ came the rep‘ly. ‘What‘s the matter ? ‘He‘s loid=d,‘ said the officer. ‘Discharged,‘ remarked the colonel. And the reportâ€"is in the paper.â€" Kingston Whig. SIGK HEADACHE Positively cured by theso Little Pills, They also relieve Distress from Dyspepsiz, Indigestion and Too Hcarty Eating. A perâ€" fect remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiâ€" aess, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tongue Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They Regulate the Bowels, Purely Vegetable. Small Pill j S:t:‘:ali Pricge, Substitution the fraud of the day. See you get Carter‘s, Ask for Carter‘s, Insist and demand Carter‘s Little Liver Pills Woeight and Measures Act. ILLNESS INCRH4ASING Discharge and Report. Pointed Paragraphs Smail Rosoe. J.S. Roos The Popular Boot and Shoo Storo ATTENTION 1 * Boys Clothlng-â€"All the $4.00 and $5.00 Garments of every conceivable style, and make, not completes in lots, are now in one groop at $2.50. _And a PRICKE WONDER Suit at $1.50. Men‘s All Wool Bicycle Suits,â€"Brown and Grey, nonâ€"dust showing colors, Coats have finished seams, Trousers have reinforced seats, Bloomer style, sold readily at $5.00. _ Sale price now $3.25. Exclusive of above we carry a large line of Bicycle Caps, Hose, Bloomers, Underwear, Hats, Ties, Collars, Umbrellas, White and Colored Shirts, Straw and Linen Hats, Waterproof Coats, Staple Dry Goos, Boots and Shoes, at reduced prices, FOR ONE WEEK. Wehave just moved into our new quarters in the Bellinger Block, and havâ€" now one 0; the fin ‘st and best stocked drug tores in the county. Our own preparations, such as Great Bankrupt Store Sss gmag.6 Soa Selling off Supplies, Acetylene Lamps, Tires, Cements, Clips, Cyclometers, etc. Also a few second hand wheel. for sale. Call and see them. Re: pairs of all kinds cheaply and neatly done. H. A. ZOELLNER & SON & A large consignment of FOREIGN PEFRFUMES just received. They are adâ€" mirably suited for holiday gifts. 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. _______ _ BICYCLESard REPAIRS H. A. Zoellner & Son King St. Chemists and Druggists. Anyone sending a sketch and descrigtlon may qulckly ascertain our opinion free w ether an invention is probably Patemable. Comxlgunicn- tions strictly confidential. Handbook on Patents sent free. Oldest afi;mcy for securing patents. Patents taken t ou%h Munn & Co. receive special notice, without charge, in the C Mc SP D A handsomely illustrated weekly. Largest eulation of any scientific journal. Terms,. year ; four months, $1. Sold byall newsdea‘en MUNN & C9,s0r8r0aw» New Y Brauch Office, 0% F St., Washingtod, D« C« KRUEGER BROS. Scientific American. RED CHEFK PILLS B.SHOP‘S POWDERS ZOELLNER‘S BLOOD PILLS Shorey‘s Readyâ€"=to=â€"Wear ESTABLISHED 1862 S. R. ERNST & CO., 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 Corâ€" gress at $1.75 ; Men‘s Whole Foxed Bals at $1.35, Boy‘s Whole Foxed Bals at $1.25, Ladies‘ Oxfords at 75c. Opposite Woollen Mills LADIES‘ Waterloo Ont AND Look well and do not miss the place GENTS‘ A Clean Sweep in Our Clothing Department > i Men‘s SUItS, regular Price 6 00 Sale price $3.75 ; Men‘s Suits, reguâ€" lar Frice $7.00, sale price $4.50 ; Men‘s Suits, just adapted for early stmmer wear, light weight, $8.00, sale price $5.00 ; Men‘s Suits, Black Wersted. Thesey u must see yourâ€" self, as they are indescribable on paper. _ Regular price $12.00, now $8.00 ; Men‘s Suits, Broken lots. Think of it, only $2 75. Youths‘ Clothing.â€" 1004IDo _ UiULUILIINS+«â€"â€"Ever since the opening of our Clothing Department, it has been our specialty tocater for the B g Boys, wearing long Trousers, ages 15 to 19 years. In fact small men (not over 35 breast) have a graid ‘opportunity to secure ~ handsome Suit. d weekly. Largest cir. ic {ouma]. Terms, $3 a Sold by all newsdealers. 4}} comeo 44 exim Made from pure worsted stock, 20 oz. to the yard, in weight. Absolutely fast dye. Blue or black. Double wrap Italian linings. Pullar sleeve linings. "In four button sacks. Well tailored and fight up to date. C in the pocket of each garment : it means Satisfaction or your money back." Waterloo New York READ THESE THEN READ THEM AGAIN Retailed at $12.00 Clare Serge Suits. For Qne Week 4 c m nc veenonemmmennmennt s af J. K.Shinn & Co. S & & s « w uns t s WATERLOO Wood.â€"* Wanted Rice spure New Suitings BEST, EQRTABLE.DAIRY.AND FARM New Hats Exchange for Furniture ASK YOUR DEALER FOR In order to make room for our Spring Goods we will sell our Winter Stock at cost. Give us a call. KING ST. R. BOETTINGER before buying elsewhere. _ We bave the latest styles. We also have a new line of HATS and CAPS Furniture Dealers and Undertakers Tailor and Gents‘ Furnisher Come And Seo Our 44 ) commam $ 44â€" FIRST CLASS BEECH and MAPLE CORDWCOD TWEEDS WORSTEDS SHIRTS COLLARS and CUFEFS â€"â€" . Ssalft Tailors ask fa N+.: APPLYTO _, 32 KingSt , Berlin WATERLOD. New Caps shirls ONT. 8 *

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