Letter carrier No. 400 was swinging back to the postoffice at a fine clip. It was late in the afternoon, and be had finished his last delivery. Letter Carrier X bad an east end route. It wasn‘t an aristocratie route, but they were nice people, and they apâ€" preciated their obliging and good lookâ€" Ing carrier, for carrier No. 400 was really one of the most presentable men on the force. BHe wasu‘t esactly a young man, be had stepped over the 30 line, but there wasn‘t a younger man on the force who could outclass him in any way. In fact, he was what the feminine lexicon would detine as an eligible parâ€" ty. He was quite alone in the world; be bad a tidy amount in the bank; be earried a goodly sum of life insurance; he had po cause to fear for the future. Added to this be was sober, faithful, Intelligent and badn‘t a viee worthy of the uame. Possibly his only defect was an enâ€" tire indifference to the improving sex, which certainly was not their fault, for he was, as has been emphasized, a decidedly goodly man to gaze upon. As be turned the corner on to the aveâ€" pue g young woman carrying a small Landbag suddenly confronted him. Letter carrier No. 400 stopped. She was a comely young womap with dark eyes and a clear complexion, and when he bad further noticed that she had & dimple jn her left cheek, it suddenly securred to himâ€"he was a quick thinkerâ€"that when you own as preity a dimple as that, one of them is quite enough. Besides this, ber voice was low and quite musieal, and the carrier â€"who knew really nothing about such things, felt sure that ber clothes, alâ€" though quite plain, gave ber a strikâ€" ingly neat appearance. He stopped short and lifted his hat. "If you please," the young woman timidly repeated, "I want to ask a faâ€" "If you please," said the young woâ€" man. "I came to the city," she rapid)y exâ€" plained, "to find an aunt whom I had not seen for years. 1 bad written to her I was coming and knew her ad dress. But when I went to the house 1 found she had suddenly moved away â€"out of the city, the meighbors said. Aud now I am quite at a loss what to do. 1 have never been in a city before, and 1 do got know where to go." The young womaan‘s voice trembled a little. "They told me at home," she added. "that if 1 got lost or wauted to know where to find places I must speak to a policeinan." "1 am pot," said the carrier, "a po liceman, but that," be bastily added, "makes no difference." He added it just in time, for the young woman seeined quite starticd. "I am only one of Uncle Bam‘s post: men," said the ca;vier, "but 1 fancy 1 can meet this emorgency quite as well as if I walked a beat instead of a route." He smiled as be said this, and his smile was so Infoctlons that be fancied the young woman fairly echoed it. "I have It!" he cried. "You must go to Mra. Torrens. Sh«‘ll take care of to Mra. Jorrens. She .‘ take Care 0° you tonight c~vyvay. Tell her what you told me asid say that I sent you." Hore hbe biushed «lightly. He was playing quite a new role. â€" "Ceorge." _ replied _ carrier _ 400. "(> orge Tolliver. Here‘s my card. Mrs. Torreus knows me. Go back to. the _ "And yimr name?" the young woman timicly nsked. Lost ;mn-t.. turn the corner; it‘s a white cottage with blue chairs on the porch." As he strode down the street car rier 400 suddenly noticed that be was whistling as hbe hadn‘t whistled since he was a boy. â€" rih;; thanked him gratefully and they went their several ways. The next morning when he stepped on the Torrens porch the door suddenâ€" ly opened and the young woman stood on the threshold. She looked amazing: ly well without her bat and wonderful ly neat with her white collar and cuffs. "Mrs. Torrens said you were coming up the street," she murmured, "and 1 wanted to thank you for your kindness She is a lovely lady, and I am to stay and belp ber with her sewing for a week, at least. Thank you so much." Carrier 400 walked up the street firmly convinced that that was as pret ty a dimple as the law allowed. He saw the young woman almost ev ery day, and the days be didn‘t see her geemed quite empty and wasted, for good Mrs. Torrens seemed quite loath to let her go. And one morning carâ€" rier 400 said to ber as he shuffled over his letters, "You don‘t seein to bother the postmen to any fatiguing extent." "No," she answered a little sadiy. "there is nobody to write. 1 am quite alone in the world." & â€" And If it needed any bond of sympaâ€" »Certainly," said the carrier. And his smile seemed to reassure From the city in a plain l Where 1 linger, sore or fain, Let this token join us twaitke= . ; 3 _ ""Gedenke Mein."* .h By the blue forgetmenct, ©a4 d T the Ieltha tover‘ kasks l By the nursery where we play‘d, You a merry, romping maid, 1 a8 urchin rather staidâ€" 1 an urchin rather staidâ€" i& ‘Gedenke Mein." 3 63 Children of your own today t‘; in another nursery play. i4 Let our vanish‘d childhood sayâ€" . ; By the garden near the sea, Tho‘ the stricken giant died, P And the sea we play‘d beside L With the stricken mulberry tree, Where your long legs flash‘d at meâ€" is the sa which doth divideâ€" Tho‘ 1 fall a little lower 33 He read this sddress to the ncat Than the promise of my dower, young woman at the door, and wher Aud the harvest mock the sowerâ€"â€" she beard it she besitated a moment. Cedenke Meln. and then with a merry laugh and a By the peace lm forswear, quick blush said, "Yes, that‘s for me." And the hopey fruits you bear, And Carrier George walked away And "‘.‘.:m ;:‘:_""'â€" with a heavy beart, and the sky lost â€"Bleckwood‘s Magazine. ::s color, and the grass seemed dull and _L__________ To WIR. TO MY S8TER °> you seeu muca of tue t Ro.ï¬ww-l.o-l a little thuid. "May 1 call for you Sunday more ing?" ho“..’ukd with a nflr:“t:.:‘: felt was """“'j you for a little trip on suburban "1 will ask Mrs. Torrens," she said with a happy smile. "I would like to go ever so much." So they went, as the weather was deâ€" lightful, and carrier 400 knew where really, when they came back late in the afternoon the man of the party felt that be had never spent quite such a delightful day. But, alas, there was a dark cloud in As the carrier looked over his letters the nest morning there was one for "Mrs. Tom Trimble." it was in the eare of Mrs. Torrens, and the address was written in a stiff, vertical hand. Bhe had told him ber name was Anna IIavens. And she looked so honest and so Innocent He came and went as usual, but he no louger had a smile and friendly word for the false girl at the Torrens door. Ie was all business now. Nevâ€" ertheless his hefrt was bruised and Ife couldn‘t help but notice that she looked at him curiously, and almost appealingly, and he even fancied she was getting paler. "Worrying about that brute of a husband, 1 suppose," thought Carrier George, and he felt that the neglectful Trimble would do well to keep off that particular carrier‘s route. One morning she mustered up courâ€" age and said to him: "I fear 1 may have unintentionally . offended you. Â¥ouâ€"you"â€"she couldn‘t stop her yoice from trembling a littleâ€""hbave been so kind and so belpful to me that I would not for the world have you think that 1 am not truly grateful." "Do not distress yourself, Mrs. Trimâ€" ble," said Carrier George coldly. "It isn‘t worth while." "Mrs. Trimble!" echoed. the girl "AMrs. Trimble! Why do you call me that? Oh, ob, did you think I was realâ€" ly married?" _"1 had an idea," said Carrier George a little shakily, "that when people are married at all they are really married." "But I‘m not married at all!" cried the girl with a merry laugh. ‘"Tommy Trimble is only a Oâ€"yearâ€"old boy! It‘s all a joke. He belongs to a nelghbor family at bome, and almost since he could talk he hbas claimed me as his sweetheart. It was just his boyish fun putting that address on the envelope. Wait! I‘ll show you his letter." _"No," said Carrier George buskily "I‘llâ€"I‘l} see you again." s He walked away feeling he had had a shock. At the same time he poticed the sky was quite blue ngain, and the air fairly seethed with sunshino. He knew just what he wanted to say as he came up the street next morning. What he did say was this, apd be said it very quickly: "Miss Hayens, Anua, would you be willing to change that address to Mrs. George Tolliver? Will you jilt Tommie Trimble for me?" "Poor Tommle!" said Anna very softâ€" ty as she put her little hand in the carrier‘s strong grasp. And so it presently happened that a substitute was put on in the place of earrier 400 and two happy Tollivers wept away for a brief wedding jour ney.â€"Cleveland Plain Dealer. Umbrelia Diplomaey. A man with an umbrclia was walkâ€" Ing in the rain. An umbrellaless friend joined him and shared the protection. The umbrella owner noticed that now be was getting only half protection, as the rain and the drippings from the umbrella as well fo# on one shoulder. Seeing anothber friend without an umâ€" brella, he invited him in out of the wet, snying, ‘"‘FThere is plenty of room for threoe." By this new arrgngement he now had complete protection, 3s he had to move the umbrella to the pos}â€" tion be carried it when he was using it gJone, and a friend on either side proâ€" tected him from the rainâ€"while recelyâ€" ing the drippings from the uiqbrellg.â€" John Gilmer Speed in Woman‘s Home Companion. That Throbing HMeadache. Would quickly leave you,if you used Dr.King‘s New Life Pills. â€" Thousands of sufferers have proved their matchâ€" less merit for Sh-{ and Nervous Headâ€" aches. They make pure blood and strong nerves and build up your health. Easy to take. Try them. Only 2 cents. _ Money back if not cured. Sold by 8. Snyder, Druggist. It Would Flatter Man, Few men have deserved and few have won higher praise in an epitaph than the following, which was written "Near this spot are deposited the reâ€" mains of one who possessed beauty without vanity, strength without inâ€" solence, courage without ferocity and mll the virtues of man without his ¢ices. This praise, which would be unmeaping fiattery if inscribed over human ashes, is but a just tribute to the memory of Boatswain, a Jdog, who was born at Newfoundland May $ 1803, and died at Newstead Abbey Nov. 18, 180%" dilkom ue Newfoundland He "Peeked" Too. Airs. Blank found herself in a rather embarrassing situation one day when she was dining for the first time at the home of a minister. Opposite her sat the minister‘s little boy, a sharp eyed little fellow of 4 years. While his fa ther was asking a somewhat lengthy blessing the lady elevated her eyelids slightly and caught the eye of the little fellow opposite her. The instant bis father said "Amen" the boy pointed an nccusing finger to ward Mrs. Blank and cried out shrilly: "She peeked, papa! she peeked!"â€"Iarâ€" per‘s Bazar. George Yott returned to his home in |_Byron on the tomb of his dead N ) en rig mie O the result of 1t Was Sot Considered Proper to Doâ€" fend a Horse Thick "When 1 graduated from the law school," said the old lawyer, with a reminisceut smile, "I took Horace Giree ley‘s advice and went west. 1 located in a little town that then was on the frontier and waited with the condâ€" dence of youth for clients. "B.fore 1 had fairly opened my office 1 was retained to defend a man for stealing a hborse. This clated me very much, for 1 was not aware at the time that the case had been refused by all the other lawyers in town,. as defend: ing a borse thief was notâ€"a thing to be desired if a wan valued his life. FINED FOR WINNING A "The case came to trial before an old judge and a jury composed of bewhiskâ€" ered ranchers. There was uo doubt that the man was guilty, but be had a number of friends who were willing to swear to anything, and 1 thought it was my duty to make the best possible use of them. They were all willing to swear that the defendant was 40 miles away from t:e spot when the borse was stolen, and the prosecution was unable to break down their testimony. 1 saw that 1 was going to free my client, so it was with a satisfied air that 1 saw the jury leaving the room to prepare their verdict. "They were back in fve minutes, and the old judge asked them if they had succeeded in arriving at a verdic* " ‘We hev,‘ answered the foreman, as be shifted the gun be carried on his hip. ‘We find the defendant not guilty an recommend the defendant‘s lawyer. owin to his youth an inuocence, to the u.ercy. of the court.‘ "While I was gasping for breath the judze fined me $500 and suspended sentence long enough for me to get out of town. It wasn‘t law, but 1 didn‘t stop to argue the matter."â€"Chicago Inâ€" ter Ocean. His Encounter With the Csar and His Ignoble Reward. Oune of the stories of Peter the Great which are curreut at the court of St Petersburg is of the great czar‘s wres tling match wi hb a young dragoon Ones in the linperial palaceâ€"so the story goesâ€"Peter was at table with a great many princes and poblemen. and soldiers were posted within the ball. The czar was in a joyous mood. and, rising, called out to the company: "Listen, princes apd boyars! Is there among you one who will wrestle with the ezar?" There was no reply, and the czar repeated the challenge. No prince or nobleman dared to wrestle with his sovereign. But all at once a young dragoon stepped out from the ranks of the soldiers on guard. â€" "Listen, Orthodox czar," hbe said. _ "I will wrestle with thee!" "Well, young dragoon," said Peter, "I will wrestle with thee, but on these conditions: If thou throwest me, 1 wil} pardon thee; but, if thou art thrown. thou shalt be beheaded. _ Wilt thou wrestle on those counditions?" "L will, great czar," said the soldier They closed, and presently the soldier with his left arm threw the czar and with his right be prevented him from falling to the ground. The sovereign was clearly beaten. ‘The czar offered the soldier whatever reward he should claim, and be ignobly claimed the privilege of drinking free, as long as he lived, in all the inns belonging to the crown. What became of him bis tory does pot say. Robbed the Grave. A startling jncident, of which Mr. John Oliver of Philadojphja, was the subject, is narrated by him as follows: "I was in a most dreadful condition. My skin was almost yelJow, cyes sunkâ€" en; tongye coated, pain continually in my bask and sides, no appotiteâ€"gradâ€" ually growing weaker day by day. Three physicians had given me up. Fortunately, a friend advised trying ‘Electric Bitters;‘ and to my great joy and surprise, the firat bottleo made, a decided jmprovement. _ I continued their use for thrpe weeks, and am now a well man. I know they saved my life, and robbed the grave of anothe» vietim." No one should fail to try them. Only 50cts., guaranteed, at 8. Snyder‘s Drug Store. ‘ Odd Names of Maryland Farms. The curious names given to tracts of land by the owners in olden times are ilustrated in a conveyance encounter ed by a clerk in the record office re cently while engaged in reorganizing the indexes. The deed in question is recorded in Liber W. G., No. 60, folio 57. It was exccuted in 1790 and conâ€" veyed from Joshua Stevenson to Richâ€" ard Gettings five tracts of land in Bal timore county, the consideration being £200. ‘The name of each trget and its dimepsjons are as follows: My Sweet Gifl, My Friend and Pitcher, 62 acres; Here |s Life Without Care and Love Withqut Fear, 41% peres; The Unexâ€" pected Discovery, 262 neres; Hug Me Bnug, 15 acres, and Stevenson‘s Cow Pasturge, With Little 1 am Content, 22 A tramp called at the house of Jas. Burton of Woodstock,the other day and demapded food. Mrs. Burton refused on accouut of his uncouth way of preâ€" ferring the request. Just then Miss Burton passed out of the house ‘and Mr. Tramp went out of his way to call her a "rybber neck". He afterwards followed her up the street and insulted her. The girl informed her father and ne immediately went in pursuit and soon came up with a tough looking customer who denied all knowledge of what had ocenrred, _ Mr. Burton tlf:zre- upon sailed jnto him with fists and boots and after doing the hobo up pretty well collared him, and marched him off to be identified by his daughâ€" ter. But lo, when she saw the tramp ‘he was the wrong man.« The injured innocent showed no resentment | when matters were explained, and made of as fast as his legs would carry him. But woe betide Willie No. 1. if Mr. Burton get hold of him, Will often cause a horrible Burn, Scald,Cut or Bruise. Bucklen‘s Arnica Salve, the best in the world, will kill the pain and promptly heal it. Cures A GREAT WRESTLER. Kicked the wrong Tramp. A Frightful Biunder With a Crackhed Shoe. "Every uow aud then," said a man of moderate meaos, "‘somethingâ€"hap pens to remind me that 1 am only & novice in the art of life. For instance, my shoes were wearing out, and in one of them there was an ugly crack in the top. If there is one thing more dis turbing to me than another, it is the sight of a shoe on onerof my feet with a hole in the top. But 1 had not the mwoney wherewith to buy another pair, and, though it may seem ridiculous, 1 couldu‘t very well spare the quarter that it would cost for a patch, to say uothing of the fact that a patched shoe is little less unsightly in my eyes than one with a hole in it. far as 1 knew, were little, if any, great er than my own. Te now had in the top ol':iol his trimly blacked shoes a care round bole. Since 1 had last seen his be had apparently pros pered @ j to haveâ€"got the gout, a fact on w 1 rentured to comment. * 'Wby.;r said, ‘you can get precise ly the sai kind of gout with a pair of sheafs‘ And then be swiled. He always was blithe and gay, no matter what betided. "Well, when 1 got bome 1 enlarged that hole in the top of my shae to the size and respectability of a gout openâ€" ing, and now, when 1 go down in the morning on the elevated, 1 don‘t bold that foot with the broken shoe curled under the seat, back of the other ankle, as though 1 had a curious hbabit that way, but 1 place it boldly out in front, and 1 read the paper with the air of a man who is going down town with his surplus Inteu-‘ money to take a little Gier in stocks.Â¥ But By and By Mr. Williams Geot Over His Timidity. Some day perhaps Jesse Lynch Wil lisms may follow his book of newspa per stories with some sketches of mag nzine office life. He has had experi +nces, and be can write them. Here is one of them: "When 1 first went to Scribner‘s Magazine," be said, "I was a walking interrogation point ‘The editor would toss a letter across the table just like a commom plece of paper, saying: "Here‘s & letter from Kipling. It‘s all right.‘ It might as well have been a uote from bis tailor. "I stood by and shivered at the sac rilege. .And the typewriters! They would pound out letters to Meredith, Stockton, James, Howells and Kip ling just as they might have done to me, without changing a feature or missing a punctuation mark, and 1 marveled at their nerve. One day a stout, middle aged man brushed by me in the office. We begged each other‘s pardon} * " ‘*Hold on a minute,‘ called the edi tor. ‘l want to speak to you, Howells.‘ " ‘Is that Howells? I asked the office boy. " *Bure.‘ . " ‘Mr. Howella? +k , . " "The same.‘ s "And 1 softly caressed the sleeve that the novelist bad brushed against as if it bad beem touched by a saint But after awhile the feeling of awe wore off. We deal in anuthors. That‘s our business." â€" Philadelphia _ Saturday Evening Post. "No; that is, 1 never was until yes terday. A very strange thing occurred to a friend of mine then, and now I do not know whether I am superstiâ€" tlous or pot. It bappened in this way: She and I were sitting in ber room, and she was telling me the details of ber marriage engagement, which hbad been broken off that very day. While she was talking she raised ber left arm and threw it over the back of the chair where she was sitting, and as she did so a heavy link bracelet fell to the floor. It was her engagement brace let and had been locked on her arim for more than a year. How or why it came unfastened 1 do not know."â€" Detroit Free Press. Owen Sound Sun : A very queer thing happened Thursday morning. A young man, lightâ€"complexioned, and wearing a l-lac-{ suit,cvidently a stranâ€" ger in Owen Sound, was looking for a bed on Wedneaday night, and picked on a boardingâ€"house on North Serope satreet, as a nlee place to sleep. He «id not go through the formality of asking permission, but got a plank and stood it up against the side . of the house. Climbing up on the plank he opened a window which made an enâ€" trance to the bedroom of a young lady visitor. Here he made himself as comâ€" fortable as possible by stretching his weary limbs upon the floor beside the bed, and straightway went to sleep. About 4:30 a.m.the young lady awoke, and seeing a man in the poom immedâ€" Kansas Husbands. A woman takes great consolation in thinking that some day when she is laid In the cold, cold ground ber hus band will wish he had her back to tell her how sorry he is that be treated her so mean. She Imagines him weeping over the sod and wishing be coutd see ber, if ouly for a moment, to ask her forgivencss. But he will not appear in such a scene. On the contrary, be will probably be chasing after some other woman.~Atchison Globe. Big Money. One of the largest and most cumberâ€" some forms of money is found in Cenâ€" tral Africa, where the matives use a cruciform ingot of copper ore over 10 inches long. It is heary enough to be a formidable weapon. A Colncidence, ‘"Are you guperstitious?" said one voung lady to another in a confidential chat. & intely screamed out, thus. nuklngol‘he intruder and the rest of the household, but the man was up and out of the hounboï¬mllythrumld be done to stop him, and that is the whole AWED BY THE AUTHORS. " ‘Mr. W. D. Howells? " ‘Mr. William Dean Howells? Walking, in this predicament. one "Ig > *3 es 4 Inheritance of BReaith. There is, it is true, as great an Inâ€" equality. in the inheritance of heulth as in the beirsbip of wealth or brains. Some are born with a fortune of vigor and soundness so large that not a lifeâ€" time of eager squandering will leave them poor, and others enter the world paupers of need so dire that no charity from .medicine can ever raise them to comfort, but most of us bave just that mediocre legacy of vitality which renâ€" ders us undistinguishable units in the mass. It lies in the hands of each to Kamloops, B.C., July 21.â€"An anâ€" known man has been roported hanging from the limb of a tree near the Indian reserve bere. The body was in an advancâ€" od state of dscomposition. New York, July 21.â€"A mavelion« change has come over the strike aspect in this city and Brooklyn. Cars appear t be running on all lincs presey much as they did before the strikes began Anym:mbco(mnngnr to be will ing to take the places of the strikers. improve ar. waste that property, as be chooses, for there are self mudle men pbysically as well as financially; those who, becrause of ancestral wasteful Natal‘s bippopotamuses are extinct. The last herd was protected by the government on & reservation near Durâ€" ban, but did so much damage to the surrounding sugar plantations that orâ€" ders were given to have it destroyed. Bignals used by ships at sea date from 16635. They were Invented by the Duke of York, afterward Jamea I1. ness, have only a sixpence of health and turn it Into a fortune, and there are spendthrifts of health who come to as sorrowful case as spendthrifts of gold. The body is the realm where a wise and frugal ruler brings happ ness as surely as a foolish one insures distress, and wisdom here, as else where, lies in learning and obeying oatural laws.â€"North American Re view. The rifing inside of the iun consists of 52 spiral grooves, cut oneâ€"twentieth of an inch deep at the bore. Sprocketâ€"Ridinggin a strange counâ€" try and ran agninst the forks of a road. â€"Tecvonto World. The presentation of the freedom of a city or borough in England is now a mere compliment, which does not conâ€" fer any substantial or exceptional privâ€" Heges. The largest projectile for the 13 Inch the largest gun mounted on the warâ€" ships of the United States navy, is 3% feet long and weighs ‘1,100 pounds. The projectile travels 30 feet before It leaves the muzzle of the gun, and in that distance is set revolving at the Sly Old Commodore. "When Commodore Vanderbilt was alive," says a New York Central offiâ€" cial, "the board of directors of the New York Central used to find their work all cut out for them when they met. All they had to do was to ratify bis plans and adjourn. Yet they had their uses. Occasionally a man would come to him with some scheme which he did not care to refuse outright. "‘My directors are a difficult body of men to bandle,‘ he would say. ‘l‘ll sdbmit it to ‘em, but 1 warn you that they are bard to manage.‘. Puncetured. (?mee Sprocketâ€"Had my tire punctured z this morning. ~~ Crocketâ€"Â¥You don‘t say so? How did POI' it bappen? Anea " "There,‘ the commodore â€" would say when his visitor came to learn the result. ‘I did the best 1 could, but I told you in advance that my directors were an obstinate lot."â€"New York Herald. ‘"The matter would be submitted to the board when it assembled and promptly rejected. We never did; but we have seen the clothing at this time of the year so covered with dandruff that it looked as if it Ayers Halr Vigor had been out in a regular snowâ€" No need of this snowstorm. As the summer sun would meit the falling snow so will melt these flakes of dandruff in the scalp. It goes further than this : it prevents their formation. If you do not obtain all the benefits you expected from the use of the Vlï¬-r, write the «doetor about it. Probably there is some difficulty with your genâ€" erai system which may be easily reâ€" It hes still other properties: it will restore color to gray hair in just ten times out of every ten cases. And it does even more: it feeds and nourishes the roots of the hair. Thin hair becomes thick bair; and short hair beâ€" comes long hair, We have a book dn the Hair and Scalp. It is yours, for the asking. Found Hanging to a Tree, EC: MOTDT: DE. J. C. AYER, Lowell, Mass. & Marvelions Change. Our Big Guns. J Bnrrifien Aiiiie wetar rep . Convere e Tas e Law, Solicitors Oilice" Court Houre nerffe® WR bowrks uies of inintost Barristers, | noturies, . otc. 'o-e.â€"';: > ie matble. â€" _ â€"0 000 0; 0 ccom S2 0e ele ooo o Sorimls, srim 41 [ PR m rue rmmatser communication _ _ | SHAEFER BROS. car. * Office and Kesidenceâ€"John St. Beriin. YY _ Barrister, Solicitor, Notary, Conveyâ€" M.a‘tâ€c.“.l‘:oy to loan, . Officcâ€"Devitt‘s Surgeons and Accoucheurs of Ontario. Resiâ€" dence and office on Ki Street. Opposite Woolen Mill«. Phone tl:a.‘ _ _ _ Pbysicians, Surgeons, etc. Dr. D. S. Hulhy(}on’mnlw the County. Dr. G. H. Bowlby treats diseases of the nose, throat and 17 Medallist of Toronto University, Licentiate of the College of Iu’llr{tichnl. Bur: geons and Accoucheursof Ontario. Diseases of eye and ear treated. Officeâ€"New residence, Albert Street, Waterloo, a short distance north of the hl_c lfl-. Walden‘s residence. Telephone Dental Surgeons, D.D.S. Toronto Unl\'eull{. All branches of dentistry practised. Office in Janzen‘s Block, Berlin, over Smyth Bros,‘ Store. Entrance between Fehrenbach‘s Saddâ€" lery and Stuebing‘s grocery. Dds D1CCCUS 4 2 5. Toronto, UZ, D. D. 8. Bxecl tyâ€"Preservation of natnral teeth, inâ€" cluding mounting artificial crowna on sound root and the insertion of gold bridges lop;r-ply the place of missing tecth without a te. Officeâ€"Canadian Block, Berlin. _ Phone 61 WI.BM lugbl::- XJ . "il"'oumw_"" thic Physician, 105 King Street utf Berï¬l‘. Ont. Â¥Y C. W. WELLS, D. D. S., Dentists Waterloo. Will visit Elmira, Dunke‘s Block, the second Thursday and Friday and fourth Thursday and Friday of each month (Thursday 1 p.m. to Friday 1 p. m. ODONTUNDER for painless extraction of teeth. The office will be closed ever{ Friday afternoon from May 1st to November Ist. Ll VKRY AND EXCHANGE STABLES George Suggitt, Proprictor. All kinds of conveyances constantly on hand. Charges moderate, stables in rear of Commercial l!zgel. [ IVERY FOR SALE 4 The undersigned offer‘ to sell their li\‘erz stock consisting of horses, carringes, nlelsL;t. olc., at a reasonable figurc. Terms can had by applying to KUMPF & ZDMMER MANXN. Waterlco W A. KUMPF, VETERINARY SURGEON. Livery, Sale and Exchange Stables. Firstâ€"class rigs and good reliable horses. Two and three seated carriages always in readiness. Allcalls vrotm» ly attended to and charges moderate. Office and Livery in rear of the Zimmermann House. Entranceon King Strect, next to Fischer‘s butcher shop. Officeâ€"At his _ ug Store, Waterioo. children‘s hair out. from us can afford to wear a broad smile like WELLS, L. D. 8. w *"~4E t J OHN 1. WIDEMAN hae Te Issuer of Marriage Licenses Ufficeâ€"Post Office, St. Jacobs, Ont. An easy shave, a stylish hair cut, a foam, nn_e_xh;lirn&!nn shampoon. L T4 Decorator, House and Sign Painter, Such as Oil l‘-lnung.el::‘per lhnw Kaisomining, Tinting, etc., n y executed. Church Decorating a specialty. Waterloo. Jewelry We have a ' fine assortment and are selling cheap for cash. Â¥ _ ___.__Dentist. Office in the Oddfellow‘s Block, Waterloo. People who buy this. Sanderson‘s Bakery King St Waterloo, (tIMON SNYDER l)OI\IHLMAN' BARBER SHOP L _ Opposite®the Market Squa: W R. WILKINSON 20â€" Dentist L. D. OWLBY & C . BALL, ERB $1., Waterioo. A. HILLIARD (HARLES N. ROCK EL + House and Sign per Hanger. _ Waterloo, Ont. RS. D. 8. & G. H. BOWLBY MIL F. BRAUN ILLAR & 81M8, , _ Alcx. Millar Q C. Harvey J. Sims, R. McLEAN, ol P B t £o., Sonpty Crown Att . HUGHES, D. D. S. W.I. HILL‘IA&D. ns and Aaaanchanre 5 n‘:.lul:-hml b . their Dentist, L. D. S. Toronto, U2. D. D. S. MISCELLANEOUS & SNECIOOT, 2O m-â€" Erb Sts , W 3_.90; Money to l-u.. Dentist, L.D.8., Royal College of MEDICAL "the Market SquareWaterloo DENTAL LIVERIES House and Sign Painter and Issuer of Marriage Licenses. CARDS. «* â€" â€"| _ Snyder‘s Drug Store, . WATERLOO s‘flmiu and Marb‘o Works t you have lost a loved and desire to I uma:':i.t.u-:mm :'u.su-um departed one. Kh‘fy“l.ngu-fl-nnnu we M: mâ€"d w you specimens and designs ments, Headstones, etc., and quote â€:._uh_tml uyhdw.kdunr‘n.n’:l:.o and a variety of other articles needed in the House. We ask you to give us a trial. J. K. Shinn & Co Erb Street, opposite Market, WATERLOO. The Traders® Bank WATERLOO, Notes discounted at lowest current rates. Drafts bought and sold. Farmers‘ Sale Notes collected. Advances made to responsible farmers on their owu names at lowest current rates of discount. Collections promptly attended to. Highest current rate of interest paid on Savâ€" ings Bank Deposits and deposit receipts and compounded halfâ€"yearly, Blank note forms supplied free of -c;:z.. A general banking business tran ENT NE e tm Â¥on- in the Connti. You can save rom $5 to $10 by uyil:lg from â€" me, style and quality considered. I am also agent for the Deering Binders, Mowers and Hay Rakes, which are the highest grade machines in the world. Wilkinson and Fluery Ploughs, Steel Land Rollers, in fact a full line of farm implements. Horse shoeing as usual. Am known by the leading horsemen as a practical horseshoer. t Principal and interest fully paid up by monthly payments : . 5 yr. term,monthly paym‘t,per $100 of loan $2.00 34 CA h 4 m a " 100 10 i «a «« lney1 Mortgagor releasod at any time after two years. For particulars soe I have the largest and finest stock of Buggies, LCar'r‘ngce and Lumber Wagâ€" Get one of my splendid hew scts of Harness now. It will improve the appearance of your outtit one hundred per cont. WATERLOO, * HONEST HARNESS AT D. Buoxrerrovart, King St., East of Scott, Easy Terms! Easy Payment How and Where To Borrow Money ELMIRA BRANCH. “Y iivw.fl" Rings, and JOHN STREBEL BUCKBERROUGH & CO., Fire, Life and Aocident Ins, Agents, Waterloo, â€" Ont. HARNESS SHOP Berlin Carriage Repairing at moderate rates. Borrowers Given a Definite Contract. Norman T. Hillary, Manager. Aâ€" C. THOMAN, Implement Works. The ore in the County _ _ putthdhs 4+ +4 Arveg /\ 4 o OF CANADA. Strebel‘s aft, °B. E. Bronter. . A. Brvor â€"ANDâ€" HONEST PRICES. BERLIN ONT.