Ontario Community Newspapers

Waterloo County Chronicle (186303), 18 Jan 1900, p. 7

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s & «... z. Ew and one thing and another. ; there house did do considerable P while it was in this section 3 became of it after it left bere 1 # isely say, but I rather think sn J:s last journey when it went a to West Antioch It was a curiâ€" sart of house, being put together h ropes instead of nails, which was ‘fif'- it did. **Yon see,"" continued the landlord. ®T was the first settier here. 1 took up a gu section of land, and with the mo mules and a Norwegian, 1 put up my house and went to farming About six months later, along comes Captain Martin, and allows that he will farm the quarter section next to me. He was a man about 60 years old, whe bad been a seafaring man all his days, and, like most seafaring men, he wantâ€" ‘â€"@ld to be & farmer. though he didn‘t know beans from a bull‘s foot First mlong I thought he was a sociable sort old chap. and be and me used to d gud our evenings together But 1 found out that he wouldn‘t take any mdvice, and when 1 told him that be was a blamed fool for building a house m a knoll in a country where cyclones were almost as common as snakes, he mad aud dropped my acquaintance gvn ma touchy as he was opinionâ€" ated, which is saying a good deal amiddie of August There wasn‘t a | better give chase at once.‘ ____~ | my compliments that Captain Martin‘s breath of air stirring."and the aky had * "I ain‘t anzious for to stay in your | bouse was standing directly across the a sort of greasy. coppery look;“t:m house,‘ says I, ‘and I‘ll leave it this | r08d. so that 1 couldn‘t get by it with aeade you feel sort of suffocated to | minute. It‘s my duty to warn you that | the oxen, and that it was the sberiff‘s look at it The mules and the Norâ€" | if you set foot on my land there‘ll be | 4UtY to see that the road was kept wegian were lying undera tree down | trouble As for the matter of your | ¢lear The man naturally did as he was &n the sorgham feld, and I was making | equatting with your house on land that | 014. and~ in"the course of the day the w pretense of weeding my onion bed, | don‘t belong to, you, I‘ll see a lawyer | sherif rode, down and investigated though I didn‘t make much beadway | this very day, @hd I calculate you‘ll | things and ordered Martin to take bis with it I happened to turn round, and | wish you hadn‘t done it.‘ house out of the road. there in the nortbwest was a little| "With that I made him a bow and | _ * ‘! didn‘t put it in the rond," said patch of clond, which 1 was glad to | left him. He came out on the veranda | the captain, ‘and there ain‘t no porsiâ€" see, thinking as 1 did that rcr&np. it | and said: . ‘If you‘re looking for them bie way of hh.’ it ont of the road m« mean rain. But while 1 was| mnles and that there Finn of withont putting it on thomol ng at it I could see it was spreadâ€" | you‘ll be wasting your time. * saw | that there individual sta alongâ€" Ing as fast as a gallon of petroleum .heou;pu.o: ::-.mscomh ddoo{’yo't& % d'- would spread if you dumped it into a | the air, and when they do come down | _‘ ‘Heavif@ enss words at one of our amill pond. In n’fow ll:n:‘t- pretty | they won‘t be of any further use con leading citizens,‘ says the sheriff, pear oneâ€"half the sky was covered with | Sidered as mules.‘ *won‘t help you. I‘ll give you two days m clond that was as black as Pittaburg ‘‘My house and everything elss be | to take your house ont of the way, and goal smoke. The way it spread remindâ€" | longing to me was clean gome, but 1 | if at the end of that time I find it stil #d me of a parcel of men laying a carâ€" | Was that mad at the captain that I did | in the road I‘ll make kindling wood of pet on the stage of a theater. You not care a straw about it I walked | it and arrest you into the bargain You @gould see the upper edge of the cloud mummum bear me!t‘ . polling over and over in great thick} badn‘t touched, and I bunted up ‘The captain beard him well encugh wunssed . All of a sudden a light breegs| G@ibbe and Inid the case before him. He | and knew that he meant business. ? up that blew directly toward| #81d that he conldn‘t see as Captain | However, he didn‘t condescend to :?m.........,..‘,...._, Martin conld be held Hable for tropase | make any answer, and 1 conld see that “Mhmg“mmg.:-hu-bnanh&b‘- he was determined to lst his house Anoging tynerd th . Phe net" thing T m--'Eu 'r": free ouany: | Sratdntdo anyibing oies. We couptert Jan wit a wrt of funnol that sevated| thing of thnt kind, Q!g‘!'_“_! ban! it bask on to my land> without *The captain hadn‘t been living in his new bouse above siz months when the Tfl( eyclone of 1887 came along, and J don‘t doubt that you have beard of it It was about 10 o‘clock of*"the morning and it was at least 20 degrees hotter than it is today. though it was only the middle of June, instead of the **Between my, land and Martin‘s there was the higbhroad, though at that time it wasn‘t often that anybody passed over it. and by the side of the road and just at the foot of the capâ€" tain‘s knoll tan the Pomponoosuc river It don‘t look much like a river at this time of year and you could jump across it most anywhere, but just you wait till the spring freshets set in and you‘ll admit that it is right smart of a etream _ I‘ve known balf a dozen men +â€"sober men tooâ€"to be drowned in the Pomponoosuc. which is more than the Lmcullus people can say for their mis erable little river One of the last things that 1 said to the captain before he and me had a coolness was that he had better dig acyclone pit. You know what that is, 1 suppose. Not Well, then, I‘ll tell you. It‘s just a bole in the ground about six feet deep, covered with a trapdoor When you see a cyâ€" clone coming, you get into your cyclone zlt and shut the door until the trouble over â€" It‘a the only eafe way, for if z:u stay in your house yon‘re liable to crushed to death, and if y&\ltl] outdoors the cyclone will pick yau up and carry you to kingdom come. Bat old Martin wouldn‘t hear of digging a pit Heallowed that if a cyclone did come he caiculated to be on deck and seo it ont He said it was all very well for me to skulk down below, seeing as I was only a landsman, but that he considered that the quarter deck was site his house and close to the road, for 1 calculated to use it as a handy place for keeping shovels and spades and rakes and such and saving the troubie 6f bringing them up to the bouse. Capâ€" tain Martin used to sneer a good deal at my pit and called it a ‘glory hole, ‘ which I considered to be irreligious, as well as ungentiemanly However, the day came when he would have been mighty glad to have a cyclone pit and to be able to climb down into it without my know} ‘ <. More oes : Cupine on h | .. town bas up. like a mushr h&uum.-bln ‘ there were only two houses m and now we have the biggest e of ‘any town in northern r ‘The two houses were pretty all tom . Mine stood just where F is standing, and it was nothâ€" ) m thar a one story, two roomed «h . Captain Martin‘s house, which rlynoodunkmll-honuqun ter of a mile triom here, wasn‘t muck the rover place for him in bad weathâ€" er. 1 made my cyclone pit nearly oppoâ€" **Well. he built his house with the help of a couple of men from Lucullus, arhich at that time was the nearest setâ€" tlement to us, and was considered to be geven miles from here. though now that Middleville bas grown clear up to the southern boundary of Lucullus, it don‘t seem to be so far away I told you that Martin‘s house was put together with rope lashiugs The captain said that no land fin(u knew how to build a & that be badn‘t any confiâ€" ‘dence in nails and didn‘t consider ‘thent shipshape. His house was much ‘the same thing as mine, except that it had a veranda on one side, where the captain used to walk up and down and look at things through a telescope. â€"*"*What do you mean when you say that your ‘ncighbor‘s house generaily on a knoll?" I asked ‘"‘Wasn‘t a habit of staying in the same â€"â€" By Â¥. L ALDEK one reason why it lasted as what with eyclones and $ of funnel that seemed of tiat kind,‘"sald he ‘without | bas! it bask on to my land> without '."‘mn”‘ Â¥4 Tu‘lam b‘-fll wm-' "Il w‘: and said:â€" ‘If you‘re looking for them mules and that there Finn cl{om\ you‘ll be wasting your time. sa‘w a couple of mules about 60 fest in the air, and when they do come down they won‘t be of any further use, con sidered as mules.‘ * ‘You don‘t know much about law,‘ says the captain. ‘1 mnever put my house on your land. It was done by what the underwriters call ‘‘act of God or public enemies," and if you was a sailor, you‘d know that nobody can be held responsible for such occurâ€" rences.‘ ‘"Just then he saw me looking out of the window toward where my bouse had been and he said _ ‘The last I saw of your house she was scudding before the wind and.heading about sou‘east or mebbe a little east of that. She was makimg, as 1 should judge, about 80 knots an hour. It‘ll take you considerâ€" able time to overhaul her. and you‘d * "I ain‘t anzious for to stay in your house,‘ says I, ‘and I‘ll leave it this minute. It‘s my duty to warn you that if you set foot on my land there‘ll be trouble. As for the matter of your squatting with your house on land that don‘t belong to, you, I‘ll see a lawyer this very day, @hd I calculate you‘ll wich you hadn‘t done it‘ _ _ * ‘t remember 1 don o oreg mm you for any po shanty on my land, and if you don‘t take it off mighty sudden there‘s a prospect that there‘ll be more or less shooting.‘ _ _ saw him standing on his veranda and lashing bimself to one of the posts with T it ln’-lidh.r:c-dy-fi we h.:fiyuflu‘m way. L t remember asking you for any advice. my man ‘That made me «o mad that I didu‘t waste any more time or breath on him, but lifted the cover of my pit. jumped into it withâ€" pulled the cover on again. “Q&I::flom'-.d- ing iteolf First there was a low, rumbling sort of sound, like a railroad train makes when it is a good way off. It grew londer and louder, til} it got to be a kind ofâ€"shricking roat, like a bunâ€" dred big church organs mixzed up with a dozen or two steam whistles It was as blick as night in that pit, except when the lightning fSashed, for there is **Luckily there was a crowbar among the tools standing in the corner of the pit, und ibunted it up and got to work as well as I could in thedark Itdidn‘t take me very lonf to burst a hole in the flooring that [ spoke of, and after 1 bad made an opening and let in the light I saw that there was aâ€" bouse on top of me. I set to work again with the crowbar, and presently 1 was able to climb out, and found myself in a small bedroom. I didn‘t stop to examine it, but opened the first door 1 came to. and there I was in Captain Martin‘s room, face to face with the old man. The furâ€" niture was all upset, and the sides of the bouse were slanting one way and another, but there was no mistaking that it was a bouse, and that Captain Martin was there, looking none the worse for having been through a cy clone. always more or less lightning playing around the funuel of a eyclone It seemas as if no eipense was epared in making a cyclone as various and enter taining as possible Jnst when the roarâ€" ing was at its Iudest there came an awful crash that made the earth shake, and then the sound began to weaken, and in a few minutes it bad died away. and the place was as still as a man‘s house when be comes back to it from ** ‘So you‘ve been and broke into my house with a crowbar, bave you?t he asked. ‘Perbaps yon don‘t know, my man, that you‘ve committed burglary and I can have you arrested for it.‘ * ‘Perhaps you don‘t know that you‘re trespassing on my land,‘ said L ‘l never gave you mo permission to put his wife‘s funeral * ‘So far, so good!‘ says I to myself ‘Now I‘ll clamber out and see if there is anything left of my bouse and the mules and the Norwegian. _ But when 1 tried to lift up the cover of the pit I could stir it only a few inches, and tbat didu‘t let in any light 1 couldn‘t unâ€" derstand what this meant:; but, being a smoker, of course I had my matches with me. So 1 struck a light and in:â€" vestigated. 1 found that there was a sort of board flooring above the cover of the pit which prevented me from lifting it, and consequently I knew that the cyclone had dropped something just aver my head. *‘The captain woke up before I did the next day, and when 1 came out of the tent he was bowhere to be seen, having unlocked his door and goune into his bhouse. About noon he came out on the veranda, looking pretty savage, and I remarked to one of my men that noâ€" body but a born fool would put his house in the middle of the public road, for he would be certain to be fined for obstructing the road. Martin didn‘t say apything, which sort of riled me, so I said to the man who was nearest to me that I wanted him to go satraight up to Lucullus and tell the sheriff with my compliments that Captain Martin‘s house was standing directly across the road, so that I couldn‘t get by it with the oxen, and that it was the sheriff‘s duty to see that the road was kept clear. The man naturaily did as he was told, and~ in"the course of the day the sberiff rode, down and investigated things and ordered Martin to take bis house out of the road. ** ‘I didn‘t put it in the road," said the captain, ‘and there ain‘t no porsiâ€" bie way ofhkins it otl;(.clth road withont putting it on of that there individual mmt side of you.! o " ‘Heavin@ cuss words at one of our leading citizens,‘ says the sheriff, *won‘t help you. I‘ll give you two days to take your house ont of the way, and if at the end of that time I fnd it still in the road T‘ll make kindling wood of it and arrest you into the bargain. You bear me!‘ . ‘The captain beard him well enocugh and knew that he meant business. put up again and the ground smoothed eut where it had been cut up by the rollera, and then I sat down andwaited for the captain to return. _ _ _ Bquire a Arst « s20 1 ciem 1 te a focl in t andes i omeneanies . « ‘-‘m-l-flmw% Louge: and i latd in provisions # yoke of oxen and some rollers. not forâ€" m to wy tarm, i the tept right hh-ld_um so that | could keep & :d-afi. him. and | went to work with the help of a couple of men from Lacullus to build me another bpousse . You see, the ful! force of the cyclone bad passed over just whete my houss had stood, while only the outer edge of it had struck the captain‘s premises : ‘That accounts for the fact that my bouse bad been carried clean away. while his bad only been fi:u]-pud cartied a few rods As the,muies and the Morwegian they were scattered all over Minnesota It was suid that some of the Norwegian was picked up about 80 miles from bere. but it wasn‘t ever satisfactorily identified. to the bighroad, and he was able to get out of a window and into the. road without coming on to my property However, he didn‘t feel easy to leave the house alone, for fear that I might meddie with it, so he staid at home for the best part of a week, when his proâ€" visions or his whisky or some other mecessary run short, and4 he had to walk over to Lucullus to lay in a fresh stuck ‘This was what 1 had been waitâ€" ing for, though 1 never hinted it to him. He used to come out on hisg ve randa apd remark in a general way. without addressing himself to me or any ome ciss, that he was mightily pleased with his new location and wouldn‘t change it for any other buildâ€" ing lot in the whole state. I never srid anytbing to bim, except to remark, alâ€" eo in a general sort of way, that if any rascally old sailor should set foot on my lund he would bave a hole bored through nim so quick that he would never know what burt him. Neither of us felt that it would be judicious to qnarrel, you understand, and so we coufined ourselves to remarks that neither of us was obliged to take any notice of. *‘I waited about an hour after the captain bad gone, thinking that he might turn back in hopes of catching me in the act of meddling with his house. At the end of an hour I felt safe eénough, for it was certain that he must bave gone on to Lucullua, and that be couldn‘t get back before dark. So 1 called the men that were working on my house, and we jacked Martin‘s shanty up with the hydraulic jack and bad her on rollers in next to no time Then 1 hitched the oxen to her with a double oz chain and started her toward the road. im the course of an hour J bad her planted square across the midâ€" dle of the road, so that nobody could possibly get by her. and 1 had my fence ‘‘Captain Martin‘s bouse happened to be planted in such a way that one corper of it projected a few inches on on to his ownu land uy fagit with you up to Lo: | â€" Meart Will Not Relieve in 30 Minutes, and Permanently Cure. Thos. Petry, of Ayimer, Que., says that for about five years he was aâ€"conâ€" stant sufferor from acute beart deâ€" rangements â€" endured untofd pain, was unable to attond to his daily work, Tas recommentiod 16 i . Dr. Agmen‘s was recom: to . Cure for the Heart. “3-' mfl"x:d him great beneft; four bottles drove every symptom of the trouble away WHEN HEART FAILS _ Life‘s Charm Vanishesâ€"No Case of Heart **Martin saw what was going to hap. pen as well as 1 did. and just before the Bood atruck bis house | saw him trying to rig up a sort of steering car by Insh ing a plank to one of the veranda posts Then the flood. which came down like a wall six feet high. burst on the house, and away it whirled. The captain‘s eteering oar wasn‘t of the least use. and before he went out of sight he dropped it and sat down on the railing of his veranda with an arm aronnd the post and his pipe im his mouth as com:â€" fortable as you pleasa | watched him for the best part of a mile, and 1 could mot ses but what the house was doing wery well and that the chances were that it would bring up in some safe loâ€" cality before reaching the Muskingurm falls which are 47 miles from here ‘Anyway. ( says to myseif. ‘here‘s an end of trespassing on my property and blocking up the public road and an end of a mighty disngreeable neighbor.‘ The sheriff, when he came the next day and found that there wasn‘t any work ‘‘What became of Captain Martint Well, his house floated ashore down nigh on to 17 miles from here, and the captain never so much as got his feet wet. When the water went down, it left the house on the most valuable corâ€" mer lot in West Antioch, just where the people had calculated to put up a new opera house. Of course the owner of the lot made trouble for Martin, and Marâ€" tin made trouble for him. There were no less than 15 separate lawsuits going on at the same time between them, and the prospect was that they would both die of old age before the courts would find out who was in the right Captain Martin made an arrangement with a grocer in the town to heave in all his supplies through a window, and be loopholed the walls of his house and made it shotproof and swore that he would never leave it alive He never the same as it does at Niagara falls ‘There‘s the same difference between an ordinary rain and a cloudburst that there is between sprinkling a cabbage with a watering pot and dumping a whole washtub fullâ€" of water over it Thishyer cloudburst that I‘m speaking of took place 80 or 40 miles above here, and the whole lot of water ran into the Pomponoosuc river and swelled it into a raging torrent that swept everything before it 1 heard it com ing just before it reached me. and 1 went for that hill youder as fast as i could run and just managed to reach it in time. Before 1 started 1 bailed the captain and toid him to ron while be could, ‘but be pretended not to bear me and remarked, as if he was speak ing to the universe and all the rest of mankind, that the curse, of thisbyer country was the eonfounded imperti mence cf the lower claases. He was one of those men that nobody can help ex cept with a club, he was that everlastâ€" ingly obstinate and conceited. days later he found Martin lying on the floor dead. *‘Yes, sir, what with cyclones and cloudbursts and prairie fires and blizâ€" sards, and such like, northern Minneâ€" sota is a middling lively place Howâ€" ever, we folks that live hére never alâ€" lows ourseives to worry over what may Sor Eaphen tor the mal 45 posls Bs pot or next sides, it would take a first clz!:yclono or a tremendous big flood to move a bouse that is built as solid as this hotel is, so you needn‘t be afraid that you‘ll find yourself sailing through the l{l or m c ealo e 2 nX tm is e did, for one day be got so particularly floating down the Pomponcosucâ€"tbu is, so long as you pays your board reg ular, as 1 am free to eay you always bas done, and 1 presume you always _ _ _____ out of the way.** = _ hant 1t 0n to bls 6wh land withont first .«um actoss the river, which was more be or any other man could do. _ My own idea is that if it hadn‘t been for the clondburst that hmud the next afternoon Captain rtin would have waited for the sheriff with a shotgun, and the sheriff, being one of the brightess minds in our section of country, would have had his revoly er ready, and before the work of deâ€" molishing the house could begin there would have been one or two corpses ready for the coroner. for bim to 3o, said pretty much the same thing. y mad that he bad a stroke, and when the coromer broke into the house & few *You don‘t know what a cloudburst is? Well, that is astonishing! A cloud burst is what we call a sort of Noah‘s flood without any ark You see, some big clond that bolds perbaps a million tons of water suddenly goes to pieces. and the water all comes down at once. "I‘ll give you two days to get your house )A a _ Old are also cured; "l ) Eic t ) T lungs. Even the -:.4 # 1 U Undertakers and Embaimers. Calls answered day and night. * prostration, which resulted in her lom:f te Kmer of her limbs. She could not hift or hold anything in ber hands, and other complications showed themsolves. _ Her parents had lost hope of her recovery. She began takâ€" ing South American Nervine, and after uilnk twelire bottles she was perfectly restored, and enjoys good health toâ€" day. W. 8. Warren, ropresenting the Reâ€" form ticket, was elected president of the Chicago Board of Trade on Tuesâ€" day. _ This means a bitter war against hbucket shops. + . Klippert Undertaking Co. Nervous Prostratin So Severs, Lost Power of Hands, Side and Limbs, but South American Nervine Heat off Disâ€" ease and Saved Her. Minnje .Stevens, danfi)m of T. A. Sterens, of the Stevens Manufacturing Co.,* of London, was stricken down with a very sovere attack of crervous Brown, in the papers last week. Mr. Brown is one of the most expert boxâ€" makers in the country, his cheese boxes, while models of good workâ€" manship, being turned out in remarkâ€" ably quick time. He has the reputaâ€" tion of â€"being able to drive one and a quarter inch nails at the rate of five hundred in cighteen minutes, and keep it up steadily. Mr. B own is an enthusiast about Dodd‘s Kidney Pills. He cannot say enough in their favor. And he means every word of it. His brother also thoroughly believes in Dodd‘s . Kidney Pills, having seen how they affected Durbam. Durham Brown‘s letter, as published last week, is corroborated by his brother and all who know him. Many other people in Kenmore know from personal experience the value of Dodd‘s Kidney Pills. Whether for the two formerly incurable and fatal malâ€" adies, Bright‘s Disease and Diabetos, or for any of the other forms of Kidney Diseaseâ€"Rheumatism, Heart Disease, Dropsy, Urinary and Bladder Comâ€" plaints, Female Troubles, Blood Disâ€" ordersâ€"Dodd‘s Kidney Pills are conâ€" sidered infallible. Dodd‘s Kidney Pills is the only medicine that ever cured Bright‘s Discase or Diabetes, and the people have a wonderful faith in them. Thrilled the thought of you down to m:! *‘She is true to her love, she is true to her trust, "And her tenderest tears will tall for me Till we méet in God‘a eternity." Under the rose and under the dew, Deadâ€"but 1 dreaim no more of you! The stormy winds o‘er my dwelling ravey Dead are the roses that blessed my grave For you never kneel by my couch to say . Yhe loving words that you said that day. Crumbles my name on the marble‘s cruifiy My dreama are dead, and my}qfl?‘fl!‘ Under the roses and undet the dow, Deadâ€"but the dreaming, dear heart, of you! For the day you knelt near the death teiled place 1 felt your tears fall over my face. And the rose that you left where my dreams must One of Many Cases in Kenmoreâ€"Dodd‘s Kidney Pills Well Known Thereâ€" Unanimous Corroboration of Brown‘s Statement. KEXNMORE, Jan. 15.â€"No little comâ€" ment has been caused here by the pubâ€" lication of a letter signed by Duarham And 1 raid, from my ecuch in the white walied dust, * STIR IN KENMORE! D}.:%%, _ 1y7 Upirersity ; M Durham Brown‘s Letter Pubâ€" lished Last Week Cause of Comment. Unusuai opportunities and loug experiâ€" dnepeminaity ie qpen toe on inf ape The Bost Medicat Advice Froe 1 all right Tn the mornidy, Tee en We now have some of most emiâ€" hont mpsidiams in tav Unuen Tuiee . Plasters over your lungs gbiny bart in e bow remaly nntinp ont ienedy ied throats and lungs. Put aone of Dr. Ayer‘s Cherry Pectoral se t Came â€" .“fiâ€"-â€"â€"_'__â€"-_yâ€" ILLAR & SIyS. Alex, Millar Q. C. Harvey J. Shps, L. Barrisiers, | noln NERVES PARALYZED. FROM THE EHADCW. â€"Atlanta Copstitution. L-‘i, sn t D. Buoxaznaoven, B. K. Broati:> i Borrowets Given a Definite Contract. . , Prinoipal and interest fully paid up by monthly payments : ‘ *MWortgngor reloased at any time after years. For particulars see BUCKBERROUGH & O0., Â¥Fhe, Life and Aoccident Ins, Agents, â€"--)"‘- » l fimfl'"fi% fHow and Where To Borrow Money Easy Terms Easy Payment An easy '-um a atylish bair out, a m od son uikrony hatr un peon. and R. WILKINSON Ww. Dentist, L. D. ®. Toronto, 02. D. D. 8. Whfln"-dm *f natural teoth, inâ€" £o0L aBd the inneftion of eala tnige, C the place of missing {eefh winaw W "uPPY Â¥Y C. W. WELLS, D. D. S., Dentiste Waterloo. Will visit Elmira, Dunke‘s m the second Thursday and Friday and f Thursday and Friday of each month t‘l‘h-nday 1 p.m. to Friday i p. m. ODONTUNDER for painless extraction of teeth. ‘The office will be ENq TY PCY SnAtnii? wndver + sls his 4d ~osed every Friday afternoon from May lst to November ist. _ T ay § ,.._ Dentist. Office in the Oddfeliow‘s Block, Waterloo, OHN L. WIDEMAN Tssuer of Marriage Licensos. f)lnlo.â€"m omes, SE S peie hh Lt LMAN BARBER SHOP t '%Tiu the Hutnsgq-uoanrloo An easy shave, a atylish hair out, a good son mmunication. !ZB. C. T.I}JOI}E'%E&L T to Uu it edal ‘eron: niversity, tiate of the College of Ph icians, Sur. geons and Accoucheurs of Ont.u‘.'.‘nm‘l:( cAylo-ndou tr%pud. Ogeoâ€"uqdw residence, a h‘sm lt‘l’l@. short istance north of the late Dr. Walden‘s residence, Telephone * t + n?nu.huns. Royal College of m . Surgene, D.D.8. Tdtonto Uni,nrslt.(. Mlhmwbr-o(denfiuryvnabed. Office in Janzen‘s Block, Berlin, orer Bmyth Bros. Store. Entrance between Fehrenbach‘s Saddâ€" lery and Stuebing‘s grocery. R. W. L HILLIARD. Licentiate of the Nyvunm, aad nflAe. o-chfln': sc.o‘:;' w"“",:‘ Woolen Mills. Phone 116. & N. H. Peterson, B. C. L. t . .. Ccorge Suggitt, Proprictor. All kinds conveyances constantiy on hand. Cha noderate, stables in rear of Commercial Haol. LnloN srwnlln Im Hooeâ€"At his . us MIL F. BRAUN IVERY AND EXCHANGE STABLES H. WEBB, M. D. ‘Sovoner County Waterloo. Offlceâ€"At residence on Erb St. Waterlso Tesghooe R. MeLEAN, . HUGHES, D. D. 8. WELLS, L. D. 8. RLES N. KEL * gu and Sign Painter and Hanger. aterloo Ont. Buch as Ofl Painti ning, Tinting, etc. MISCELLANEOUS hiy paym‘t,per 100 of loan 7 to ies oi "nb Contaren MEDICAL LIVERIES DENTAL B. A, L L B. J;J. Tssuer of Marriage Licenses. Treland ; M. D., C. M, the , House and Sign terloo Ont. Agents for the Alpha De Laval Separators ‘"best on earth." *% It need only be said of any and all eomretltion that where stateâ€" & ments of agents seem so conflicting that one cannot form an opinion as to which is the best separator in the market. The De Laval separator will be placed on every farm alongâ€" side of any of the competing maâ€" chines and their superiority thus personally demonstrated to any inâ€" tending buyer. This can be considâ€" ered as a challenge to any competing separator firms and can take place on any intending buyer‘s farm, atany time. + C. R. Lindback General Agtut Western Ontatiq, & Cream Separators Before buying a Cream Se Now is your time to get a bargain in a good Secondâ€"Hand Buggy, as I must sell the following rigs to make room for a large stock of New Cutters and Sleighs : * Seven Secondâ€"Hand Buggies. Oneâ€"Horse Democrat Wagon. Twoâ€"Horse Democratâ€"Wagon. Roadcart, Cutter, Gang Plough. Horse shocing as usual. Am known by the leading horsemen as a practica. * King St., East of Scott, _ . + BERLIN WINDOW SHADES CURTAIN POLES PICTURE FRAMING. We make a specialty of the above lines, and can sell as cheap as any one, and guarantes all work well done. Old frames reâ€" gilded and made as good as new at small cost. We have had a teleâ€" phone put in for the convenience of â€" our customers. Ring up No. 267 when you need anything in our line. & f J. K. Shinn & Co Undertakers® and Furniture WATERLOO, CIGAR STORE. A Delightful Smoke. .One that you‘ll appreciateâ€"is always the result when you use our choice tobaccos. Musical Instruments. Of all kinds, Walking sticks and sporting goods are among our specialties, Nearthe Railway Track, Waterloo Micâ€"Mac hockey skates at $3.25 Boker‘s goal d‘;fenders 225 * Beauty 2.00 ** Perfect 1.50 Shoes from $2.25 and up. Skates ground and repaired. arF mamkL. 000 CoEXomt ENAE 'fimmm TRY US Bargotts KRUECER BROS. s WATERLOO Granite and Marb‘s Works M Waterloo, Ont . See Show Windows HOCKEY SKATES, _ SHOES AND woe STICKS, ETC. J. DOERSAM, SHAEFER BROS. Lo vimt M. Devidt & Co. Wat. Aâ€" C. THOMAN, :“:;“md ‘~_ NOTICE. Give us a Trial WATERLOO. DOERSAM‘S For cheap

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