Ontario Community Newspapers

Waterloo County Chronicle (186303), 11 Oct 1894, p. 7

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S. H. FRG€HLIrg ‘enserd A?.A..Hucl les ensed killfuly and Pfomw, ittended ‘to, cher, aterloo, Ount. sale .920 R PEQUEGNAT BEL‘S, / SERI, ats, Summer Sausâ€" s a specialty. efrigerator. SHOP Sign P A T““'JTILE Jt 3 ears ople of Waterioo. time for, Isons BA Â¥ LARKET, toryry LA M \NXINC Buginggg and Retail J.m' CPG, [L Y MARKET Padnter a’ldx Paper ?'ioNTREAL fi‘cufineg; it 34 $1, ‘OO-W. ®Dx brcial de tSPELER cipal Points l.ir;]nt(.ed MEUEGN, ATNG, Butcker y 10 tds tne that “"ARE, t CO Bank, <1perâ€" George MEXT raneh pas PEOple 0 I?:vg OxtT NAT, aterloo Dolar Repair Shop GOOD JOB GUARANTEED. pocs® "Canadian Aermotor." V.M. Berlet Bicycles Onrtario Hutual Life. wo Doors East of Post Office, Economy &in streets, aterlgo Wb AD A Brizsht Lad, urcs oiners, will cure you P town lots containing* oneâ€"Afth of an acter each, situated}between Spring and w dop oo i q mm ons Sewing Machines, Electric Bells, _ Gunsmithing. Etc., otc., etc. Wilcox & Whitmer, MERCHANT â€" TAILOR. Erb St., â€" Waterloo. a) 3 /* ral Conditions of Poltetes FOK SALE. 5 &# LN ma \I THE ALK L.1 and fronting on Queen street a C M TAYLOR OfFICER® , X. 1‘. Boll C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Masa, aLL KINDS OF ATRING. Hydraulie rams, Iron force and lift pumps, Ho For information apply to Gem (Steel) & Star WINDMILLS. 7, Stability, Progress. ‘»arsaparilla or R. S. FUTHER. Travelling Agent â€" M aTEKLOO, ONT )shod 1810, DUST COLLECTORS. Or 06 tm Celebrated ‘Hallady sStandard. Values guaranteed on idends belong to and are lers. 3. No restriction c occupation. 4. Death n completion of claim solicitor........ . Berlin lical Referee. Waterloo of Agencies.. Waterlco WM. HENDRY, w.s, BOWDEN, agent, New Dundce 19 King St. Berlin ksttip DisTRIBUTION uces iwll the newest furm of ProrkcrioNn can buy. It has no ‘s, altractive options, belting and all threshers‘ supplies liit nothing has Ayer‘s Sarsapde 1 ind strong."â€" 1804 108 Manager $100,000 $1 683,020 560,83M 004,700 328, 450 503424 339,440 330,081 T2,011 230,120 40,811 To make money is not the great end of life. Neither is it to make a living. It is not enough for a man to provide a home for his family, and bread for them to eat, and raiment for them to put on. He is bound to provide for them home comforts as well, so far as he can. Nome men who rule in homes seem to imagine that their whole duty is done when they have given their fawily a shelter, plenty of food tn apâ€" pease hunger, and enough clothing to make them respectable in the cirele in which they imove. These men include some farmers, and, it may be, in ‘some instances,farmers‘ wives also are includâ€" ed, although, generally speaking, the latter are anfious to furnish home comâ€" forts.to tha full extent of their ability. Home comforts include a suitable vuriety of food as well as a> suitable supply. It is not enough that the farm home be supplied with plenty of food and good in quality, if it be lacking in variety,for the farm can supply a great variety of food if it is rightly managed. n many sections of the Dowminion the farm will not only supply good meats, but it will furnish a variety, including all the domestic animals grown in the country, so that there is seldom any necessity for the farmer to contine himâ€" self or his family to a diet, the meat portion of which consists only of salt pork. _ All kinds of vegetables may be grown on the farin that are lookedâ€" upâ€" on as useful in furnishing a table, Apd they should be grown. The tarmer‘s table may be furnished with good vegeâ€" tables all the year round, and it ought to be so furnishad, and properly cared for. We co not refer here to rare varieâ€" ties much imore _ restricted _ than in others, but in ncarly all parts the variety of fruits is neither narrow nor greatly _ restricted. These _ fruits should _ be _ grown. They should be grown _ by _ tha‘ _ members of the family, where the parents are pleased to have it so, as the informaâ€" tion gained from such an experience will be helpful to the young people. In any case a variety of good food should be prepared for the farmer‘s table. The health of the housebhold demands it, and it will be good for the young people at any rate, to have it so. The remem:â€" brance of a well spread table will do much to lure back again to the farm the young man who may have wanâ€" dered away from it for the time being. dange condi dlroot.l’ ue to %;rhpmood- ul?shonld nog ;o' fim continue.as in its debility theâ€" system is especâ€" iallyJigble to serious attacks of illness. Hood‘s Sarsaparilia is the remedy forsuch a condition, and also that weakness which prevails at the change of season, climate ar life, | HOOD‘S PILLS are purely vegetable,carefulâ€" ty prepared from the best ingredients, 25c, And kind words from day to day should characterize every farm home. The spirit of constant faultfinding is sadly discbukaging to matured people, but it is doubly so to children and young people. Great care should be taken, theu, lest the spot which, above all others3,may be made typical of pareâ€" dise{regained be made a piace from which the young people would fain fles away. _ We should be as careful to try to furnish home comforts as to furnish a home. HOME COMFORTS ON THE FARM. fee‘s that he is tich; and whether &a room | 6 No di;flt;f is mofrel cogm?ined aft:)ong falls to the Ipt of one or two of the| the people than scrofuila. Han own members of fhe bousehold, let it ba | from ggnemtion to generation, it is made as comfortable as the circumstanâ€"| :ound lllI:eirly eV;ry.::mily, in some ces will permit, Those who occupy it form. may make its appearance in will prizg it all the more. E* | dreadful ruapning sores, in swellings in And, above all things, let home comâ€" the neck or goitre, or in eruptions of forts be brought to those who care for | varleg forms. At;ac:ing the mucous the home. T!]x:ey have onerous duties | ::e;vrsl.:eingn.x;ytb: lunnog:n':s cntur;h, at the best. They bave an unremitâ€"; eloping 1 , it may be, ting round of Iabors. With reference:'md often is, the prime cause of conâ€" e rsaid, there h t‘t‘ne . pischarge in "Iu oA mff tvlvohna‘t,ever form scrofulas may manâ€" be sct,xd. there‘la no discharge in ““"f o sioak. Hooty § is y_ l war." The doing of it .honldl,)zhn:fure,:} es t,:> et y 0 E:i !;Mparl a :5an be made as easy as possible the in. inveterate foe and conqueror. is troduction of ylabof-saving zanchines. : me;lic’inerh‘&s ‘“‘g} powerful &lt'e"lt;;'é’ The girl of the farra has the same right | aD vitalizing effects upon the b to be furnished with a washing machine } that every trace of impurity is expelled of the most approved kind that her|and the blood is wmade rich, pure and brother has to be furnished with a bind. | bealthy. i er of the mos# approved pattern. If â€"â€"‘-â€"l'â€",â€"- there is to befny grind upon the farm, | O, Doctor! Doctor !| I‘ve swallowed it sbould not fall most heavily wpon the ; & fi}bert‘ . young maideng thereof, lest farm life{ Swallow a nutcracker, madam. Five become so. distastefuli to them that they ‘dollars. will t‘ake the first opportunity to flee! Fum“f“;mn . from 1t, ds nend ce o Eon e s o omm eP s Comforts also include w suite ble supâ€" ply of literature. _ Ir is not enough to have books ; the should be books adâ€" apted to the age and wants of the famâ€" ily, nnd to the different members of it. It may sound somewhat like encouragâ€" ing expense to speak thus of a supply of books. It will, of course, involve some outlay, but a few dollars per year will certainly sutfice, and what are w few dollars per year as compared with the upbuilding of stable character that loves home? One of the best farm libâ€" raries that I ever ecaw was gathered in a few years from the savings of what had been spent on tobacco a few years previously. Good bookse and periodiâ€" cals in the farm home, and the epporâ€" tanity to read them at switable times without molestation, will soon come to be looked upon as real comforts by those who enjoy them, Home comforts includes the meaus of | privacy to some extent. Evea the most | bouyant members of the household | want some privacy; that is, they want, the opportunity to have it so when| they desire it. When & boy is given | & room which he can call his own, and in which he can follow his favorite purâ€" suits without fear of molestation, he fee‘s that he is tich; and whether & room falls to the Ipt of one or two of the members of rhe bousehold, let it ba\| made as comfortable as the circumstanâ€"| ces will permit, Those who occupy it will prize it all the more. | That Tired Feeling Mars. WinNsuw‘s SooTHING SyRUP has been used by millions of mothers for their children while teething. If disturbed at n#ht and broken of your rest by a sick child suffering and cryinfi with pain of Cuuin&'l‘eeth send at once an get a bottle of "Mrs. Winslow‘s Soothing Syrup" for Children Tecthing. It will relieve the poor little sufferer immediately : Depend npon it mothers, there is no mistake about it It cures Diarrhoea, resl;laws the Stomach and Bowels, cures Wind lic. softens the Gums, reduces Inflammdw, and gives energy to the whole system.*‘Mrs. W inslow‘s Soot.hlng Syrup" for children teething is })launt to the taste and is the prescription of one of the oldest and best fomale physicians and nurses in the United States. Price twentyâ€"fAve cents a bomofiesold by all Wm throughout the world. sure and ask for "Mas. WixnsLow‘s sootHIng SYRUP." ‘Victoria, Australia, owns all her railroadsâ€"3,341 amiles, is A Boox To HoRSEMEN.â€"(ne bottle of Zngâ€" lish Spavin Liniment completely removed:a It is too much to expect that while| men and women are constituted as| ‘they are there uever will be any tales| to tell of human frailty, but surely afâ€"| ter all the pitiful examples we have | had of wrecked homes and ruined | lives, those of us who are capable of} any self control at all should be able| to steer clear of the rocks and reefs.| When we reflect for a moment of the ; misery and awtulecoasequences that | follow on the yielding to uipmtion,; as surely as the day follows the night, | it seems odd that human beings can be ! so weak as to throw to the idle winds bonor, reputation, children, home and | all that good men and women hold dear. | There is a tendency among those who take flippant and vulgar views of life and conduct to laugh at the sad stories of ruined homes that from time to time come to light, yet what cause for mirth there can be in them it is difficult to see. ‘This attitude of indulâ€" geace is unfortunately only too prone to encourage those abominable men who consider it a tribute to their powâ€" ers of fascination when they can invade the sanctity of a man‘s homg, luring a weak and foolish woman to betray the most sacred relationship that humanity knows. Our howes are very dear to us all, and for the wellâ€"being of the comâ€" munity, these wretches who play upon the weaknesses of others should be held beneath contempt and tarred and feathered out of town. ‘A smart friend of mine lost a hat last week under very amusing circumâ€" stances,‘ said the story teller. ‘Heis a native Scotchman, and has a great deâ€" light in introducing Sgotch customs, We were at the wedding of a mutual friend, and he suggested to two or three of us that i quite a joke to batter in the b room‘s high hat as he started on his honeymoon, that practice, he assured us, being commonâ€" er in Scotland than the throwing of old shoes. QOneof us gave nway the plot to the bridegroom and advised him to carry his hat in his hand. He,howâ€" ever, went us one better, for he sent his own hat out to carriage by a servâ€" ant, hunted up the Scotchman‘s hat on the rack and deliberately wore it down the steps and garden walk to the carâ€" riage entrance. The Scotchman and three others, who like himself had sampled the wine freely, rushed after the happy couple and demolished the bat the bridegroom was wearing. That bappy man on entering the carriage put on his own hat, and leaning out of bis window, called up the Scotchman, expressed his regret at having accidentâ€" ally worn his hat, and especially at the fate which had befallen it. It was a new hat bought especially for the occaâ€" sion, and the remarks that night would have excluded from the mails any publication which reported them.‘ Life‘s Monthly Calendar, In whatever form scrofula may manâ€" ifest itself, Hood‘s Sarsaparilla is its inveterate foe and conqueror. This medicine has such powerful alterative and vitalizing effects upon the blood that every trace of impurity is expelled and the blood is made rich, pure and healthy. The vicious and vulgar may continue | to treat these. matters lightly, but! thoughtful men will see in them cause | for tears instead of mirth. 1f the morâ€" i al of it all comes home to women who ; may be tempted and nerves them to be ; true to themselves, their husbauds and | their homes, the lesson of the lives that have been wrecked by the wa.y-[ side will not be learned in vain.| The home should be a sacred place, for | when its sanctity is invaded a blow is | struck at the great foundation of sociâ€" | ety.â€"Hamilton Herald. ‘ Waterloo County Chronicle, Thursday, October 11, 1894.â€"Page 7. The Sanctity of the Home. The Joke Was on Sandy. A Wonderful Conqueror. RDoes your Wire Do mer own Wasmine? A Kentucky calf, ong day old perâ€" formed a wonderful feat of jumping from a clif to a river helow, a distance of 500 feet, without rumpling a hair. Tbe calf was taken down the river and bauled him in a wagon, safe and sound. : | : ReLier In Six Hours.â€" Kidney and Bladder dircases in six hours by gw ‘Nzew Gazar SouTk P Kioxgy URKE.". This new remedy great lngrln and delight to physicians on account of its ex Some 1,137 miles of railroad in Finâ€" land belongs to Russia. About oneâ€" tenth of the government. . Tus GrEat Faxuicy Meotci®E® or tHE Acr.â€"There is probably, no family medicine so â€"favorably and so widely known as Davis‘ PamN Kicurr. It is extensively used in India, China, Tuarâ€" keyâ€"and, in every civilized country on earth not only to countéract the climaâ€" tic influences, but for the cure of bowel troubles, Cholera and Fevers. Tt is used internally for all diseases of the bowels,and externally for wournds,burns, bruises, &c. Sold by druggists generalâ€" ly. 25¢. for & big bottle. _ The sympathies of a tottering nation can add no streogth to an army. The Ciuroxiccs offers for sale one of the best farms in Northern Michigan. The place contains 360 acres of land of which 120 acres are cleared and mostly stumped, 30 acres cbhopped, and 210 acres in heavy hardwood and cedar tiimmâ€" ber. There are two houses, ~and the best barn in this part ef the: country, which is insured for $2,000. _A living spring supplies a creamery with water so cold that no ice is used in the hotâ€" te:t weather,and also the stock troughs in the barn. In the orchard are 250 apple trees, 75 plum trees, 25 cherry trees, and 25 pear and crab trees,all of which are in bearing. The farm is locsâ€" ted one mile from railroad station, one mile from postoflice, telegraph and teleâ€" phoune offices,one mile from church priâ€" vileges,and one and oneâ€"half miles from school house. Horton Creek rises from large springs on the place and is full of brook trout. A very small expenditure would be needed to make one of the finest trout ponds in the state.It is free from frosts, and while crops have sufâ€" fered in southern Michigan, there has not been any frost whatever on this tract during the severe spring weather. Petoskey can be reached from the sta tion four times a day in winter and a dozen times each day in summer in twelve minutes. This desirable farm can be bought at a reasonable price and on very easy terms, or the timbered land will be retaiffed and the improved part sold, at option of purchaser, The quality of the land and nearness to shipping facilities especially adapt it to fruit and potato growing. One young man realized $950 last fall from seven acres of potatoes grown on the next place. For particulars call at the CBroxâ€" ICLE office. â€"4t. He who fears being conquered is sure of defeat. Public instruction should be the first object of government. True civil liberty, consists in the seâ€" curity of property. True wisdom, in general, consists in energetic determination. It is as necessary for the heart to as for the body to be fed. There is a similarity of position as regards religion and kingsâ€"each may be dethroned. We must use water,not oil,to quench theological volcanoes. A glutton will defend his food like & hero. Public esteem is the reward of honest men. It is never wise to inflame hatred, nor to render one‘s self odious. ren. iSome of Napoleon‘s Maxims Men are led by trifles. A true man hates no one. Power is founded upon opinion. Men, in general, are but great childâ€" 4A Fine Farm For Sale. io 4 * 4 t3 » t ":.gj i Bé F“ CA W j ues Piufh hT [AAA y firh"il uy d ts o i1954 eP E WHEN ThE RURAL UNALGIF LGIn,MLIUT it be vuy NATC B ‘7" ’r.vr.-_\ in the *** CURED EVERY TIME HTEOGL PLASTER usio. lF she does, see that the wash is made Easy and Clean by geiting her SUNXNLIEHT sOAP, which does away with the terrors of washâ€"day. Experience will convince her that it PAYS to use this soap. system for large buildings For particulars address HO‘I‘ water heating system at about the same as furnace. Properties of the air not interfered with. Fue! mmm%:bdut half as much as with furnace.coal e or the Hotwater System now The United States of Columbia own ed 218 miles of railroad in 1890. At a depth of 3000 feet in the famâ€" ous Cromstock mine at Virginia City, Nev.,the waters that trickle from sides roof ard bottom have a uniform temâ€" perature ofâ€"170 degrees Fabrenteit. A â€" Warm â€" House Small Cost. Some 181 "miles of railroad is owned by Ceylon. Chili owns 670 miles of railroad. China owns and operates all ker railways, * Denmark has about 1,000 miles of railway owned by the Government. France owns about 2,000 miles of railway but most or c&uibe all is leased to companies. England and Wales own 14,034 miles of railway. Servia also has a few lines of railway owned dy the state. Ownership of Railroads. Here is a list of railroads owned by Governments as compiled by the Encyclopedia Brittanica : , Austria owns and operates nearly 2,â€" 000 mileg of railway. Baden owns 829 milss of railroad. Bavaria bas 1,806 miles of railway owned by the Government. The German empire owns about 21. 840 miles of railway. â€" * Australia mined 4,037,929 tons of coal last year. The supply is apparentâ€" ly inexhaustible, and is counted on to be an important factor in the future industrial developement of the countâ€" ry. ; The old Rosario mines in Mexico are said to have yielded $500,000,000 worth of ore in two centuries. Great minds, like Heaven, are pleasâ€" ed in doing good, though the ungrateâ€" ful subjects of their favors are barren in return.â€"Rowe. Tillinghastâ€"‘What a bashful girl Miss Elder is? Gildersleeve.â€""Yes,she‘s on the retired list.‘ iA A. WEEK: Monu Easicy, Belgium owns about 2,000 miles of ailway. \Equal‘t o i:xlj lMfiér‘Céd's;n ‘\)TA)@ my Advice W’Z Ingist ofl)\ g'e(tt'a}\zq thisac\ 10 Cene Smoke for i# 7. " As ';,}/“":'5@2 82 JP Tine Cns NF FA wa lngrleuant, permanent, M legitimate business, with 8 choice of territory. Everx- 4 S body needs our goods all MB the time. Easy sales, big a profits. Men and women A w EEK- wanted. No exyerienoe needed. Write for parâ€" â€"â€"ANDâ€"â€"| / ticulars." C. Pusheck, MORE, EASILY, 411 Fonge 8t., Toronto, Canada, C1GARZ J. D. McEachren, t.dm of buildings with or steam heating and ventilating It is Réarly_' This being the proper time to do bathâ€"room and closet work, I have added a few more ot the best plumbers in Canada to my staff,and am therefore prepared to do all kinds of Plumbing work, as well as Water works Piping, Tapping the main water pipec, Hot Water Heatâ€" ing, Steam and Gas fitting, Etc., in the most improved way and latest style, at moderate prices, and done without any delay, in any part in Waterioo County. Get my quotations before ordering elsewhere. The best stock of Hardware, Glass, Paint, Lamps, Tinware, Stoves and Furnaces, Soil Pipe, Sewer Pipe and Cement always kept and sold Cheap. Citizens of Berlin and Waterloo. Having an Architect on the premises, plans and specifications required will be promptly furnished and at moderate charges. All inâ€" formation concerning builaing operations will be cheerfully given to contractors wishing to tender. They are without exception the best and easiest running chines in the market. Intending purchasers can save dollars by buying from fi_wm have in stock all the Best Brands of Cigarettes and Tobaccos for the great Mardware Merchant and Licensed Plumber Waterioo Cigar and Tobacco Emporium I + namrpoiir n Williams â€" Sewing â€" Machines CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE nePusits CF $1.0O AND UPWARDS RECeIVED, ANO CUTRENT RATES OF iNTEREST ALLGWED, _ INTEREST ADCED TO THE PR.NCiIPAL AT THE END OF MAY AND NCGVEMtGLIR IN EACHM YEar. Cpocsial Attention glven to the Colloctiocn of Commorcizl Paper, end Farmers‘ Salos Notes. A CzyvrErar CEanking Business Tranmsactep. Farm=nms Notcs Discou«tcto DRAFTS ISSVED PAYABLE AT aLL PGINTS IN CANADA, AND THCE PRiNCIL AL C:TIZ& IN THE UnNiTED Statss, Gr:At Smitain, Francge, Benmuoa, & ESTABLIGHKED i1307 KEAD OFFICE, TORCNTO. CAP!ITAL (PAID UP) SIX MILLION DoL.Arg i Yriy e e c WEAK, NtRVuUss Drs. Kennedy & Koâ€"gan aro the louding specialists of America.They guarintse to curd or no pay. Pueir repuâ€" tation and fifteen yeurs of busiubss are At étake. . You run no riek. Write thein for an honest opifiion, no matter who treitad you It may save you years of rogret and saffering. | Changes reasonable. Write for a never fails in curing Disenses of mon. OUI‘ NeW MethOd Tl‘eafment 1« strengtheng n.cc bo xy{lmstup:r rEl drains and losses, purifics the blood, clears the brain, Luilds up the nervous and sexual systems and restores lost vitulity to the body, We Guarantee to Cure Nervous NDebility, Failing Manhood, «yphilis, Â¥aricocele, stricture, Glect, Unnatural @ischarges, Weak Parts and all Kiduey and uladderpiscases. S ut 3&‘1("3;“ d ‘ ')4,/ & ~ d Fe/ r s â€"3 kgot / w C «â€" o dn "A4 hk & i 3 “ x on ow ... / Mess i liek Tc â€" s /R \\§7'\ xt ,_;â€": $ 7« N ts"* / > i "Bome 8 yrars ngo I contracted a eerions eonstitutional blood ‘ 4 disence. 1 went to Hot prings to treat foreyphilis. Mercury almost t iJ killed me. After a while the eymptome agnin nppeared. Throat becano sore, pains in limbs, piinples on face, blotches, eyes red, loss of hair, glands enlarged, otc. A medicul friend advised Drs. > Kenpedy & Kergan‘s New Method Troatment. Itcured me, and I have mt had no symptoms for five years. | am married snd happy. As a doetor, I beartily recomend it to all who have this lorrib{c discaseâ€" Curoeu 3 yeare ago. . &/phides." _ It will eradicute the poison from the blood." Capt. Townserd. == "em_ â€" |5 YLEARS IN DETROIN. 150.000 CURED. ,:‘ ; '.? ~ * At 14 years of age I learned a ‘hml lhabit which almost ruined me. I became pervous and wouk. BMy back troubled me. J could Q a stand bo exertion. Mead uind eyea becaro dull. Dreams and * drmrn; at night weakened me. I tried soven Medical Firmas, Elecâ€" BP To BM tric Bolts, Patont Medicines und Fainily Doctors. ‘They gave me "Ah " 248 no help. A friend advised metotry Dre. Konnedy & Korgan. They -Ԥ xoz EM cent mo one month‘s trestment and it cured me. 1 could feel N rf§ j /";: mysclf gaining every day. 7heir New Method Trectment cures when @urod in one in uth â€" all else faus." ‘They havo cured muny o[ my friende." +Dr. Moniton. m (TS MNAAKTEE) (Q MOE! NTMD g s en (Wouy Eo o “ j 4’:“ _ en k ORS. KENNEDY & KERGAN. _ J. S. ROOS, Thousands of Young and Midle Aged AMen : through carly indiseretion ar d ifter excerce. Disensos lave ruined nud wrecked the lfeof in: nny of the following Kymptoins: Nercous and D tion; Memory Â¥oorp Emsiy EFatusuel; lixcitabl tho Face; Dreims und Drains at Nught; Hest Throat; Mair Loos@y Pains in Bedy; sunken J Euercy and Btrength. Our Aow Aokod Zreutmen and sexually. * Ch > V(Jultk Patterson. nead BRS KEiqr LXAE q what UNO.RECIH Bicycle Race Meet, July 25th. Questionâ€"List and Book Frec. Consuliation Free Mondisote, Curey in time A Big Day. Are for sale only at the Popular Boot and Shoe Store. THE CELEBRATED J. DOERSAM, Prop. "I am 83 lym‘s nf age, nid m rriel. When ypoung I led a gay life. Eurly indiscretions and Itor oxcesses made trouble for me. I became wen« and nervous, My kidneys became affected and I feared Bright‘s disouse. Married lifâ€" was unentisâ€" factory and my boine unhappy. 1 tried everythingâ€"all faiked till 1 took treatment froin Ur«. Kenuedv and Korgan. Their New Method built ino up imentally, ph.\'fllcal‘l{‘ ani sexuolly. _ I feel and actlike a mun in every respoci. ‘Iry them." &"° No Names Used Without Written s Consent of Patient. SAVINTS BANK DEPARTMENT B,. E. WALKER, Generat Manacin WATERLCO BRANCH DRS. KEKREDY & KERGAN THE POPULAR BOOT AND!SHOE STORE se o n t O AN be had of a Waterloo butcher. On and C after this date I will se!l meat cheaper as follows : All firstâ€"class meat, pork9 cents per pound; beefsteak 9 cts, Jwr pound; best cut beef roast 8 cents per pound; bologmms 10 cents per :nnd: pork saugages 10 cont« per pound; Wienâ€" wurst 10 oenupe:omnd_ A liberal patronage ted. | Shop opp. Commercial Hotel, MWaterloo, Feb. lith 1804, CHEAP MEAT J. GRASETT. Manac ear the i intrustfo) und Lack of up imentally, physically 148 Shelby St. Detroit, Mich. 2 YEN pré m:zlun*é'rn\‘e ttutuenal Blood £$5,000,000 23,000 t Office, Berlin Mave you ; No Ambiâ€" Pimples on Have Done

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