ts +s ‘:6};‘\‘ ‘l 4 #} #+6 ; ___ Risie, accustomed to follow out any:! __ caprice which might attract her fancy, | i . bad chosen to walk in the stranger‘s‘ eVA foo6 stepa and thus learn what might ~ tixke * 2 hat As Meriot listened, her face turned as white as the petals of the daisyâ€"clusâ€" ter which she had pinned on for a breastâ€"knot. _ Her violet eyes grew aark, for they were almost hidden by the intensely black pupils, those infa‘lâ€" iple tell;tales of sudden emotion, be it of joy or sorrow. But her quivering lips asked no question. She stood in mute distress, awaiting what other unâ€" kind words might fall upon her earâ€" addressed to Reginald‘s betrothed bride by his mother. ‘so you are the girl{who has‘presumed to listen to words of love from the heir of a noble house ! Have you realiz¢d the consequences which must ensue if you are marricd to my son ? the scorn of contempt _ with which bis family will regard you, and, what is of equal importance, my son‘s loss of proâ€" perty ! Have you thought of it all P But when the voiceâ€"sweet as a bird‘s in its cultured tones, but coldâ€"cold as ice, so that it seemed toâ€" freeze the warmth from Meriot‘s beartâ€"said : ‘Love conquers all, my own darling, and beneath its rule ail must bowâ€" even my lady mother. I am her only child, and my chosen wife must be acâ€" cepted, even though she springs from an bhumbler raok than mine.‘ And had she now come to prov truth of what Reginald had said ? She had seen that beautiful lady beâ€" fore, and as she ha(} watched ber leanâ€" ing back amid the -,abfc cushions of her luxurious carriage, she bad thought of words whispered in her ear by an imâ€" passioned voice : As she approached, the young lace: maker rose, and stood with dowaâ€"dropâ€" ped eyes awniting her. A happy thought was in her heart, warming it,and colorâ€" ing her smooth cheeks with a swift. coming eyé of carmine, as soft as the whade of a roseâ€"petal. tion indicated, saw a young girl seatâ€" ed in its shadow, working away industâ€" riously at some lace whose pattern was stretched je#er a huge cushion which she had ï¬er lap. With a start of surprise at the beauty of the picture upon which ber eyes rested, and a murmured, ‘I wonder no longer at Reginald‘s infatuation,‘ she left the house and walked slowly toâ€" ward her Elsie did cot give her grandmother time to answer. She sprang toward and pointed with an eager gesture toâ€" ward a huge tree in the rear of the home. The lady looked in the direcâ€" tion indicated. caw a vrounc wirl soar. Just then a tap at the door interrupt ed them, E‘sie opened it, and drew timidly back to her grandmother‘s side. . A stately lady stood there. She had just stepped from her carriage,the door of which had been held open for her byI an obsequious footman, in a showy livery. ’ The visitor was dressed in a costume of rich dark velvet. Diamonds glitterâ€"| ed in her cars, and shone from a penâ€"/ dant attached to a heavy gold chain / which encircled her neck. She would"‘ have been beautiful with the mature‘ comeline<s of middle age, had her face‘ f not worn such a cold, haughty look. It |â€" chilleca little El:ie. she did not waitt for an invitation to enter; Drawing | up the long court train of her costly |â€" robr, she advanced toward the old ‘, grandmother, behind whom Elsie had taken refuge. . M ‘You are not to trouble that little head with such fancies, It would bave an upgetting effect to give you an idea that you belonged higher than fortune has placed you. I am getting old and childish, or I should have been wiser. Forget it, Elsie.‘ j ‘Aye, that 1 did. But in my case it’ was a poor boy that wooed the grand / young lady away from friends and | home. But I never saw the day that I was sorry. My Roland was ever ); kind and true, and we were as happy a | | couple as‘ever the sun shone on.‘ }( Elsie‘s eyes opened very wide. 3 ‘Were you a rich lady, granny, with | j borses and Jands ? I But the response the question elicitâ€" | & ed was a shake of the head, and : [ eriot ‘Aye, aye, of cf)urse you do. So did I,and I not only loved to learn the like . in my young days, but I acted one. I tell you, child, sach, is life.‘ . ‘Do you mean, glqumy, that you ran \@away with your lover,like the bride of Lord Lochinvar ? 1 ‘Please sing some more. I love to listen.‘ ‘That‘s only one out of many like it,‘ was the sententious answer. â€" ‘Graony,‘ she asked, ‘where did you learn those pretty words T An aged woman was sitting by the window of,a modeifcottage.She was rock ing back and forth in a low wicker easyâ€"chair, and as she did so sbe croonâ€" ed softly to herself the words of an ballad. Her voice, though tremulous, was sweet, and the contrast between‘ ber withered face and the romanticfiove song which had thus lingered in ber memory since the, years of her early youth, was strange cnough to draw forth a wondering remark from her litâ€" tle grandchild, who had stood beside her peering into her face as sbhe sang. | this the home of a girl they call HOWER OF i{osEs. w BY MARY E. MOPFFPAT. come to prove the hP ies o o .ns 4 ‘Child !‘ she exclaimed,‘you are bringâ€" ing your sister‘s destiny upon her! It is a wellâ€"known rhyme in my family that when *‘A Finderne‘s daughter plucks a Finderne oee | For sister hands, the web of destiny grows.‘ And that was the truth with me, I was a gay young lass, thinking naught of love ; but my ti'tu'i covered me one morning with roses that had blossomed on the parent stem from whibbï¬â€œuvl grown to such size in our garden. Now as Elsie came in and half buried Meriot with the fragrant flowers, it seemed to startle the aged woman into some recollection of days gone by.‘ ww cba w ooa W T ‘Ask anything else, and I will not say you nay ; but I bave my reasons for not giving aught from thas‘ ‘See, sister ; I waited till the fine lady had gone to bring you these‘ ; and little Eisie rusbed in and covered Merâ€" iot with a shower of roses. They were of a kind that grew nowhere in the whole country round excepting within the boundaries of this cottage garden. They looked like the darkest crimson velvet, and a thin white streak ran down the middle of each petal. Their perfume had a delicate, spicy pungence, more like the odor of a carnation than of a rose. People had come from far and near to ask for a cutting, but in vain. The old grandmotbher would alâ€" ways refuse.to sever a slip from that busk. of with proudly tossing heads, their every ftootstep seemed to strike upon Meriot‘s crushed heart, as she lay like a pale lily beaten down by the storm, all the rich color bleached out of her beautiful face. :?“ w 4o CAV. hAe wicker | you t croonâ€" uï¬l _of an &1 sulous, | Neve: tween .ék icflove ; cheek: . ‘I don‘t know much about it,madam, o did | for that subject is seldom mentioned ; like ) be that as it may if it is true,it is none . I l the less & fact that her husband came of the class in which I have been born ran fund bred, and of which none of us are le of / ashamed ; but I think Elsie spoke . | aright.‘ se it [ ‘Then,as you are properly not ‘ashamâ€" and / ed,‘ I bepe you will not overstep the and | boundary line which divides your class bat | and that of my son. If he and you ver l marry I shall never look upon his face y a 1 again, and he shall not have one cent | of the vast fortune which belongs by . , | right to me,and which I can will where i l uscniets . But caste prejudices must not be disâ€" regarded, even though bappiness be sacrificed So she entered her carriage; the liveried footman shut the door with a sharp click just as she was closing her heart against Meriot ; and the im patient horsea who had been champing their bits at the delay until their glossy coats were flecked with foam, started __ Lady Vane forgot all for the moment but that Meriot was a sister woman, _and that she was suffer‘ng, She sprang forward, lifted her in her arms, and carried her tenderly into the house and laid her upon the lounge. Then, when with a faint gasping sigh the white eyelids quivered and unclosed and the great violet eyes gazed up into her face,she swept out of the room without daring to trast herself to speak ; her woman‘s heart was so strangely touchâ€" ed through all its casing of pride. ‘ 3. 1 ""B! M y | _ Struck in spite of herself by the girl‘s | majestic beautyâ€"for Lady Vape was a “ connoisseur of all things rare and exâ€" | quisite is still life, and why not also of | a perfect form moulded by the Great | Architect _ of _ the . universe!â€"she | answered as though to a lady born : |__‘I yvery much fear that he is rash |enough to throw aside all for you.‘ _ see it in your eyes. You are a noble creature, and I wish you had been born my son‘s equal, Butâ€"‘ Meriot had grown of a deathly white _ as _ Lady Vane spoke and now‘ she fell forward as silâ€" ent and insert as‘though bereft of life. ‘God bless him ! Then I will give up all for him. I 3i11 never willingly set eyes upon his bear face again,. He shall not lose motherâ€"love, fortune and friends for me.‘ ‘Then it is a promise! exclaimed Lady Vane, her face kindling with joy. U have faith that you will keep it, I ‘Madam, will you tell me this ! Would your son marry me knowing that would lose all ‘else that he values in the world P & pretty face." back with each succeeding word, Reginâ€" It is truly said that ‘blood will tell,‘ | ald Vane‘s eyes grew bright with joy. and Meriot must have inherited some of | _ The taleended he came forward. the bluest of the precious current,judgâ€" | . ‘Then, you, ‘Meriot, and your little ing by the grand pose of their beautiful sister here are the heirs for which noâ€" head as she turned upon ber tormenâ€"| tices have been kept in the papers for tor. months. The Finderne property is in ‘Madam, will you tell me this?| want of an owner,the last baronet havâ€" Would your son marry me knowing | ing died without leaving issue, and, in that would lose all ‘else that he values | default of heirs, it would before long in the world ? have lapsed to the crown.‘ usc 4 +1 as We\ - Wls I choose. Think well of it before you allow him to mar his future for love of & pretty face.‘ But she obeyed her, and turned and ran away, feeling as though her heart would break at being so peremptorily dismissed. The ladj turned te Meriot. ‘What does the child mean! It is true that the handsome old woman who was sitting by the window, and who is, I refer, the granny she spoke ofâ€"is it true that she comes of good stock ] .p:k with such decision : and ber cheeks changed so strangely from white to red ! What had come over her ? o e eRoe Kn oo e nyy Ace n "C o o2 COone e C ‘My granvy was a gbufl.d,, too. um-mwmï¬ï¬uw SboHnid so,‘ | .. / F3 J ‘# | # (Husb, Elsie, you mast run into the| _ Meriot had caugh . meaning: of house right away. It is naughty for | her words, god she "“1:& berself up you to speak without being spoken to,‘ | with an eager question : | i9. said Meriot bastily. ‘Granny, tell me who you were beâ€" t was Elsie‘s turn to be astonished. | fore you married my grandfather, I Néver hai she heard hber gentle sister | bave asked you but once before, and spgak with such decision : and ber that was when I a tiny girl like Elsie. link in the chain of great lady, too. | met with a those who look up thi CaTaRRK RELEIYED in 10 Tto 60 MinuUTes.â€" One short puff of the breath through the Blowâ€" or, sugflled with each bottle of Dr. Agnew‘s Catarrhal Powder,diffuses this Fowder over the sinface of che nasal passages. Pa nless and de. lightful to use, it relieves instantly, and permaâ€" nently cures catarrh, hay fever, coldas, headâ€" ache, sore throat, tonsilitis and deafness, 60 cents. At Ed, M. Deviti es * Drer a on eetrens Sert maled ~NIE MEDICAL CO. . Buffalo. K. Y. Why is a little boy learning the alphâ€" abet like a postage stamp ? Because he gets stuck on the letters. D L _03 10 . N CZCS HNG excess. es, reclaim your manhood!‘ Sufferers from foll7.°7!l"ork,eaflymmhu’ your vigor! Don‘ t despair, even if in the last sirges Don‘t be disheartened if quacks cieal corned you , Let us show you that me, hoe .hnd:dmm"":,‘m"ï¬' Write for our book "i‘hsfln.i-nd-‘_‘n. T Cur Do The demand for Ayer‘s Hair wideiyâ€"separated regions as S Spain, Aus.ralia, and India has | the home conâ€"umption which that these pe: ple know a goed th try it. Aod zo the stream of life and Love is master, though hard to overâ€"balance the sc: tiny. I imrnens 2 4 .1 _" 5 ~5 VDd Bumat aid. Yonfeelimpmved(heï¬rstda , feel a beneï¬t"eryday, m‘w‘kï¬g among men in body, mind and beart. Drains and losses ended, Every obstacle matried life removed. Nerve b:tm erergy, brain power, when faili or h, ararcaored by this treatment. "All mmall strensipeaL2"_‘Oo" of the body enlarged ‘Reginald stooped to choose me when I was Meridt the Licemaker" None other was fair in . his eyes then, and none other to me is as noble and handâ€" some as he is now, though all the galâ€" lants in the world should bow down at the feet of the newly â€" discovered huiress,‘ i dith. A dsn dotl i .. .24 24 by a new perfected scientific method that mnotyfai] ux:less the case is beyond human aid em us s _0 C oial sA e 7 ity __And Reginald said truly. _ The ‘Heiress of Finderne‘ and ‘Meriot the Laceâ€"Maker‘ were two widely different persons in Lady Vane‘s estimation. And Meriot was too fond of her young lover to remember the words spoken by his haughty mother when she conâ€" sidered his chosen bride so far beneath him. WEAKNESS *MEN ‘That will be as soon as I her and back here again, girl.‘ ‘But do you not see? Things are changed by the story of those lovely roses. Hurrab, I say, for the whole family of roses, and especially for the Findernes.‘ ‘A promise {s binding, Reginald,and I sha!l keep mine until your mother comes and absolves me from it.‘ ‘Then I am a mate worthy of you !‘ exclaimed MeFiot, joyfully. ‘But 1 must not talk to you. I promised your mother never to see you again, and I meant to have gone away where no one ever have found me.‘ Quickly, Thoroughly, Forever Cured She Nee n n omn® An unnoticed #@uditor had stord silently within the drorway, &as the feeble,old voicecommenced the romantic story,and as it had gradually gained in strength as the memory of youth came ue m 9 > 1 , ‘I will please you,Meriot,for you are & good child, and as all of my race but you and Elsie have gone to their rest it will harm no one. My handso uc sailor boy, whom I ran away to mi â€"» / has long since found & grave n th: deep blue sea ; and your father, who was his very picture, has followed in the same way. Your mother, too, is not living to feel hurt at me for putting ideas into your head which might make you feel above the station in which you were born. I was the second daughter of Lord Finderne. Those roses are our family flowers, and that is why I never suffered one of them to root and grow for a neighbor. No one has a right to them but the lineal descendants of our anceftorâ€"Sir Geoffreyâ€"who brought them with him from the Holy Land.‘ A troubled look came into the witherâ€" edfsoe_;thénitpaesfgs_wax.' You said then that 'ogmejrtâ€"itâ€"noâ€";;; would answer me, and I want to bear about it now,‘ only thought, with proud humilâ€" lia, and India has kept pace with nâ€"umption which goes to show ple know a goed thing whea they v- i2202 . _2 ~ "BCC Sad ..L--i?f.‘?‘.sgm m of life runs on, , though God tries e the scale of desâ€" ntific method that e is beyond human | a the ï¬md‘ > feel a | sale, wm&.king Tabl and beart. Draing Nerve fored, wil, Tok en failing or lost, Hair Vigor in such uth America, 1 can get to , you cruel 2B 1CCE another s re our | _ lard to cat never & worse co grow | _ Comror, ght «0| than lard of our , as e ought | | I declares. ad,‘ Stora For : s the j antic N. K. F, ed in ‘ Welli came ‘ eginâ€" | ________s _ joy. s l]"ffl THE WA] There is ‘a I:rgz ut?ï¬khot ‘llflrgeberlgn urposes on hand w ch w sold g-rza(n All farmers and others in build would do well to exgmino th and get prices The undermklnm business conducted Wegenast & Co, will be continued at the ag &nce as heretofore, Mr. Adam Ki ppert : funeral director as in the past. 11 Richmond Street W., Toronto Soliciting Canvassers Wanted. 42 6t SHOULD be in every house in Waterloo. It is now in use in a great many, and those who have it would not be without it Write for particulars and sample pages. â€"â€" COMPILED BY 247 Canadian, Engï¬sh a Specialists. oOF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE The ... Standard Dictionary WM. SNIDER, FIRE INSURANCE COM ANY. INCORPORATED IN 1863 Total Assets 3ist Decembe ‘03, $349,734. THE WATERLOO MUTUAL|._= OFFICERS : George:Randall, President, John Shuh, Viceâ€"President, C, M. Taylor, Secretary, John Killer Inspector. BOARD OF DIRECTORS Geo. Randall, Esq., Waterlo John Shuh, Ksq., 4 Chas. Hendry. EBQ., (0 I. E. Bowman, Esq., M. P., Waterlo0 B. Snyder EKsq., Waterloo Geo. Diebel,Esq., n William Snyder, Esq., " I. D. Bowman, Esq., Berlin. J. L, Wideman, Esq., St. Jacobs, John Allchin, Esq., New Hambarg, Allan Bowman, Esq., Proston. P. K. Shantz, Preston, Thomas Gowdy, Esq., Guelph. James Livingstone, Esq., M. P., Bade: Thomas Cowan, Esq., Gait. Cofrl:xo;n;«'é'â€"i's"ï¬mch better than or all cooking purâ€" r‘â€@’ as every one who has tried t declares. Have you tried it? For sale everywhere. Undertaking. lard. And this is in itself a reaâ€" son why ‘‘she looketh well" in another sense, for she cats no lard to cause poor digestion and a worse complexion. FUNK & WAGNALLS Co., Furnit Berlin . _ But her sys are no ol y.ays. ‘u fact she | carded 1m2:y unsatisfac the good housekeeper ex usek :igfn, but phrticularl? to the ways ‘of h ,hmt old." Yes, Solomon is fl:rht: ihnt‘awilint . K. FAIRBANK & Cco., SW aAire lc oo old Wce Lumber. Well Bowlby & Clement, Solicitos, Wellington and An;â€"“;; MONTREAL, Made only by on is right; that‘s what and American _the same ppert will by » 1000 0 O OOE e emmennnmmrntemes postLsar‘s raxexe snopr, en burhe WMnss â€" CA VISION suburbs of Toronto, c l IVERY AND EXCHANGE STABLES GEO. SUGGITT, Propric All kindla Af newie as 2~ TL SSOOT 1 (MoxEy ToLaay ) Fa N. B.â€"Mr. Reade will ros 10 in dc l l.ndEinchmottheofloq; rere. Livery, Sale and Exchange Stables. Firstâ€"class and good reliable horses. *T wo and three mrb’og; carrï¬ges always in readiness, All calls prom tly attended to and olm-glea moderate,. %flge a-ng:n lt,ivery in laeu- of the Zimmerman House. rance on Street , next to Fischer‘s butcher shop. n VAN_ CAMP extracts teeth without min , by the use of a new remedy. The best thing ever discovered, He is still making those beautiful and lifeâ€"like teeth which every body il: so delighted with. Gold and porc«lain crowns serted. All kinds of helznd uveoxt'l;rn, veyances constan: l';‘AnH- mna.?.nol. e’u._‘. " Office : CANADIAN BJ.OCK, Beriin, always open, and YOST‘s BLOCK, V T D. D. S., Philadelphia, 1891, L. D. 3.. Toronto, 1892, EPECIALTY PrREskRYATION of the Naturai Teerh including the u-ounling of Artificial Crowns on Sound Koots and the insertion of Bridges to supply the vlace of Missing Teeth without using a plate. ; Office : CANADIAN r1 mow & DENTIST. Office in the Oddfellow‘s Block, Waterloo, Ont Fred G. Hughes D.D.S DEntisTs, WaTERLOO. WiR visit Badenm {?raus‘ Hotel), the first Thursday and third hursday of each month. Will visit Elmira the second Thursdai and Friday and fourth Thuwda*l:‘nd Friday of each month (Thursday noon, to Friday noon), L/ Rrowto University, Licentiate of the Colâ€" l?e of Physicians, Surgeons and Aceoucheu of Ontario. . Diskases or EYE anp EAR TREATED. Offilceâ€"New residence, Albert street, Water loo, & short distance north of the late Dr, Walden‘s residence, DRS. D. 8. &£ G. H BOWLBY, PHYsICIANS, SURGEOXNS, Ero. Dr. D. 8. Bowlby, Coroner for the Count Dr G, H. Bowlby treats diseases of the nose, throat and ear. Waterloo Nov. ist DR. A. F. BAUMAN: PauysicraN, SURGEON AND AccovonrUur. Office and residenceâ€"Two doors north of resiâ€" dence formerly occupied by the late Dr. Walden on Albert street, Waterloo. â€" 0 _Prysician. Suraerox anp Accovenzkur. " Offlceâ€"In the _ rooms formerll occupied hy W. Wells, L. D. 8. over Mr. Fish‘s store (Pell- inger‘s). Night calls answered at office. Tele phone communication. Telephone eomm\inloatlon. W. A. KUMPF, VETERINARY SURGEON 18â€"Â¥yr 'Breohl attention paid to Catarrh, Asthma and Chronic Diseasesp Telephone communication. l‘un“ucx Corquroux. A. B. McBrIrp® V _1 â€" _ Barristers,Solicitors,‘Notaries,‘ &c. Officeâ€"Corner King and EKrb Btreets, Water: Joo, og old Post onfoo. Monéy to loan at lowest rates of interest. COL?UHbUN & McBRIDE, ) 4 â€" * Barristers.Solicitotr _ Coroner County of Waterloo. Offliceâ€"At his residence on Krb streeb. Telenhone communication. R. C. T. NECKER, MEDALLIST OF To R, WiLKIN=ON For the painless Eâ€"xtrnction of teeth. AS BARRISTERS ATL Aw :’dSondtou in all the ggux 18, Noc‘:rlu and veyancers. Money to is ud on Mo: lowest rates. Officeâ€"Court Hou e Borm 1W. H. Bowrsy, M.A. L1.B. Q C., | County 3 »wn t ..orney us h x1 s and C.erk>: in _ cace Flnu'osox & READE, > | Mm%flcï¬ on Toronto and WM'&’, wW. Rm.v B, A. J. A. Fem: { 31 King stree waoit T gyuu. Devitt store n oame en t n en w ne ST UE onydyancer, oto. 0fl$â€"0mï¬rsm Economica block,5 Kin reet! West, Berlin. R. ARMITAGK w Elï¬â€˜m.l_l"_n; _B: DENTISTRY R. HETT. &&& Jmh.' o’f?""' H. WEBB M D., OWLBY & CLEMENT I| MFDICAL. Elmira, open every Monday and longer if necessary, ODONTUNDER. LIVERIES. Office‘and Residenceâ€"Jobn street 109 King street east, Berlin. DENTAL (Money to I0an.) Killer‘s Block, Water 0o WELLS, D. D. 8., L. FYAN CamP 50 Queen street, w, horlin Solicitor, Notary Public om: _ Notaries, soN House and Sign Painter Wa erloo naaec*® Lo White Plymout always fit, perfectly, admirably, and to Barred Ply fmoush Ro:ksérown Leghorns & T. There‘s more in our suits than a| :Rocks, Black an f ins, Buf perfect fit; there‘s firstâ€"class material, | _ Indian Games, Partridge Cochi which it is always easy to select from | _ Gochins. Pekin Bantams. our superb aggregation of the fines; rand seeure . e woolen‘:ein %Vsterloo. Our suitings | Send orders early and y y3 fac in D ieequslled, . So is our high clase|! â€" Prices Reasouaiic S atisfac tailoring, and in clothing, the tailoring « Guaranteed. We is everything. Material even the best | â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" counts for notbing if the suit be badly ' made up. Clothing must be ordered Hello ePe * for you in order to fit you. Order a suit now while w{'ro offering bargains. â€"_ are made to order. That‘s why they always fit, perfectly, admirably, and to a T. There‘s more in our suits than a perfect fit; there‘s firstâ€"class materia}, which 1t is alwaus al.. [ _ _ AAW 7 Teatnentaat â€" attended to and a Hearse furnished Curtain Poles at the lowest rates on hand; Pictures will be framed and all repairs of furniture promptâ€" ly executed. Warehouse and shop next house to Huether‘s Hotel, King St., West, aterloo, Ont. Unaertaking and E attended to and 2 Hazrca As the undersigned have opened their business,they r fully ask all their friends an quaintances for their suppor our pricesarelower than in an; lar business in ‘Ontario, it â€" in the interest of the public at our shop before buying where. aterloo, March 22 P IST 20 C mm OR MR . Qurttisiriacl.. . _b iC ~"b‘s i & ‘lllllllllllllllllllIlllu..llll.llllllllllllllllllllllllulllllllllllllllnlllnlllllllllllllulm' e 1 Our stock of HARDWARE is co mers are buying their Horse Clippers from us. Buy Nothing but L n oc s9g. SS wHll DC the interest of the public to call our shop before buying elseâ€" _Â¥ _ TT°C~$ Varghinsg. a‘o:aig' RITzER UNDERTAKING COOKING and HEATING STOVES, DrLaviolettes Th inss Rones, IMPORTANT Car rarpearTaeap *A 1 .. ds Syrup Of tions of the T hrost & C_oughs, ungs, e Grippe, Croup, rp t cieco . TUPpDCENntINQ GOOD STOVES We Sell . .. Cures PUBLIC" OUR SUITsS Mrs. A. Rockel & Son A. Rockel. Manager Kimeae Br.} w ATERLOO, Conow® scientific preparation in the form of a powder. It purifies the bl ::u..digum,mu.mgb coat into a simooth and glossyoneofndé‘;u% enimal **in condition.‘‘ He then has "goofllife" and feels like holding the head and lifting his feet. "p bis MILCH COWS mbgnlybmï¬mdbylt. The whole system is toneg The digestive organs more putriment is dr h :o%da.ndthcflovdnflkhaund. ? awn from the Dick‘s Blood Purifier will pay for itgelf ten times over. rguhby&w,uwm.uwfl‘“ftifll’tofbom_ ___ Dick & Co., P. 0. B. e & P. 0. Box | ...‘....................: : : v4 482, Montreg; f d held jâ€" _ and held a !i ....mwg house near b‘yl e i axs M NEWEST and BEST Our everâ€"increasing sales prove this. This year, as usual, we are showing the ZOTHE the best baker and fuel , ‘95. i nave again they respectâ€" nds and acâ€" support. As mbal_ming any simiâ€" it will be 13 ne Drivers !L. G. Pequegnat, John ét;ebel’s,; Fine Cockerels and Pullcts for Fal Exhibil.ion, of the following varete John Fischer, Keeps all kinds of Meats, Summer Sav ages of al kinds a specialty. Large New Refrigcrator has been enlarged and impror ed and newly painted + TBA R & Co of service to the people of Waterie Cheap Harness MEAT â€" MARKZ "SOUVENIR RANQ * â€"saver on the Preeder of Fancy Fow)s Now Is Txx® Tiw® For THE SHOP RRB;8t.,. W ATXZRLOO. 20 years cannot be madé out 0: out of condition. ) plenty of oats is not en gets run down the s; and needs a general t Dick‘s Blood Purifigq New Hamburg WATERLOO 1s complete, Fy. )pers and Singem Waterloo, Ont market mough. 4 same as 4 KOnmg m D.’hm nough, Slmg ..Ah “'â€"a‘lper,’ he said eerl kl in cOnï¬Â«lHn e to a ie, though 1 have nc I bave been waitin give her a home if she ac know, I have only depend upon.‘ ‘But, man, is not t apore than ever before T Bhe can be no more | Harry. ‘It was Millic 1 â€"~â€"Millie Day that 1 )« is past. Had she : hoped to offer her a h But will you relin: T dare not press it & time my past silen: strued and my claiin “ méi\'fd & blow. #No; I am sotry for *’BON’Y; and wheref rou bad a particular e _ I , my boy, have you he Â¥ oried the newcomer h,nbesrdnmhin;; wonde , I.S?ld up or dow P“flnn kind of gold is ave you uot hbeard of the s tune which bas fallen to Mil At the mention of that nam caught his breath mve not heard," he said m't you remember an Milie‘s who was sick here in N id whom she nureed ~o ende «YÂ¥ee.‘ WWell, old Snyder, it soen > the lucky ones 1n Chicas go months ago he gied, with f ebild, and his attorn «> h ere to inform Miss Day it bheire.l to his f“"lll:c' I Min the neighborhnood .« Ailinan. What dive think : f this very night. 1 Darwin‘s. Are v No; I dou‘t bel Aod with this J trom the oftice. Bball I put up t! per T m put the books i A month has passed f the arrival of the :t come to place Millie 1: of hir fortune, and as n ed, suitors for her l and . aod persistent. l arr. his way homeward w! ~ Jasper Groome. _ J as;» *By the way, old foslow with the heirees‘ Harry starteo. *Yes. I guess she‘s after t ‘There‘s a perfect army of = train, but I think s)ie~ loo l favor upon old Corydon Warren Corydon. the 6 *Yes. He‘s worth a m balf,. Depend upon it +i apon fifth avenue. low : H.".y Cowr,pr shra A few days afte: senior partner of t ©ounting room and keeper. N bow geeply )» He thous}t it beâ€" ?}“ hostess and go He was retlectis Alight touch upon | a he saw Miliic aug wistfully u; i; house on th« The drfl\\'ihg roo! mansion were brilli the assembly was «pon the basis of f with appreciative ca â€"Of intellectual wor‘) Mr. Sturgis had n.rry’s gister, and #peeding to join : i1 discovered in anot!~ when he met \\iâ€"â€" ! 4 Could it be poâ€" Mt to sell here« He was old enou ‘Then count n im. By J on h > pry was blll{ bala1 "The only athe: 00 5 hnume was old P PV f I io ery clork. had just closed th« Jroome enwrt'd th Harry‘s senior b\ towards the close Harry I wan: u come with n Without vent wed her. Sho Bservatory. , you here, Phipj arry 1 have a . . but I have pray: I think the strenc . Pardou me if 1 a reounsel. You k1 ! ioberited a large I know,‘ s J iim WUM tl:(»u‘ bhe made their ir Never already,‘ she pu & limited int« l.g beek ker house, and Jw« prt balar 11 u 1 EIR [) 1 U is1110 id of t cing upanf i\ 1t