The Terrible Stories of Lives Lost & Not QOverâ€" Toild. THE GOVERNOR‘$ STATEMENT.:| THE REIGN OF ANARCHY OVER Whe Loss of Life Piaced at About The Property Loss Will Be Over @00,000â€"Horrible Vandalism F Chicago, Bept. 13.â€"The followirg statement was received at 11 o‘cloo« last night: be Situation as Bad as Represented, But Contributions Coming in. Austin, Texus, Fept. 12.â€"Gov Sayers yestercay muile the TohOwing statament to the Associated I‘rcss on the flood situation "‘Conditions at Galveston are fclly as â€" bad _ as reposted. . Communica~ tion, however, has been so reestalâ€" lished between the island and muirâ€" land, and hereafter the transporiaâ€" tion of supplies will be less diiheculi. The work of clearing the city is proâ€" gressing fairly well under the diree tion of the mayor and the soidiers are patrolling the city for the purâ€" pose of prevonting depredations. The most conservative estimate as to the number of dead places it at 5,000 Contributions from citizens of this State and also from other States. are coming rapidly and liberally, and jjt is confidently expected that withâ€" in the next ten diays the work of restoration by the people of Galves tom â€" will have Leen begun in good earnest, and with energy and sucâ€" cess. Of course, the destruction of property has been very great, . not less than $10,000,000, but it is hopâ€" ed and believed that even this groa loss will be overcome through the energetic _ selfâ€"reliance _ of the peoâ€" ple." Reporis | reaching the â€" Governor show â€" that the railroads, telegraph and telephone companics have suflerâ€" ed an immeyse Joss. The Governor was informed yesterday that quite a number â€" of tugs from New Orleans arnid other available points had cither arrived or were en route 10 Gavesâ€" ton, and that, by Eaturday, tie transportation _ problem would be solved, so far as getting people frow the island to the mainland was con: gerned. horri One negro had 23 fingers on them in his pockets,"" THE been sityated for many centurics and _where numerons stadents have lived. ; p The Latin Quarter. Thackeray said of the Quartier Latin, The noted art district of Paris: ‘"The life of the yonn& artist here is the easâ€" fest, merriest, dirtiest existence poss!â€" bis. He comes to Paris probably at 10 from his province, his parents settle £40 a year on him and pay hbis master, te establishes himself in the Pays Laâ€" tin, be artives at his ateller at a tolâ€" crably early hour and labors among & nogre of companions as merry and as pesr as himself." The students‘ quar ter ts located south of the Seine, where the princtpal colleges and schools b::: GOYERNOIPS STATESIENT. to at About 5,000â€" | The Stunning Blow Has Lifted Before th i Be Over $10,â€" Powers of Organizationâ€"The NewspaPâ€" ndalism Pracâ€" ors Have Appeared Againâ€"Houston 1 and Senâ€" is Receiving Many Straggler® l .. From Galvestonâ€"The JAwiful fingers w ith risys Thousands of Dollars Subsoribed ‘â€" For Benefit of Suffers. hruls 4 MLG C â€" Bous cedb o0 AagaaP 9 â€" of the United States und some rxnumn of wngiond many (Mufd' of wliars are pouring into this city for the reliet of the destitute storm swherers. Train loads of oo Pn o provisions aud clothing are burtying 10â€" wards Housion and u.‘re-mu. Tue refuâ€" gees who have arrived here are being made as comfortuble as pussible. Estimates of the number of dead stlll vary. Mayor Jones of Galveston maintains bis opiuion that the number will be no less than 5000. Property losses are mounting higher as detalis arrive. Serae esthnates ot the city of Gaiveston reach as high as $20,0G0,)00. There are %5,.000 homeless ID ihe city io be taken eare of,. and it is a qucsiion whether Galveston can or will be reluult. ‘There sceme to be a disposition en ine part ol the seading cl Lens, however, to sinrt rescluiely where toe storm left off ind raise a mew elQ, irow ibe ruins of the MVR Froops are patrolilug the streets and lootâ€" Ing bas almost ceased. Several additional cuses have heen reported where vandala have been shot down while robbing \he dead, but the troops are rapidly galning coutrol of the lawless element. Galiveston. Tratns have alrendy DTDMgN! In between 500 and 1060 of the #urvivors and a mo.ley crowd "they are. Men bareâ€" hemled, barefooted, coatless, with swelled foet and bruised and blackened bodies ani beads, were numerons. . Women of wealth ard refluement, batless, shocless, gowns 1 sareds, were among the refugees. someâ€" times ‘there . would be a man, wife and calld or two, but such cuses were rate, nearly mil of thosg who came in baving sufâ€" fvred the loxs of one or more members of their familles, _ Never were there so many sad heurts. Men bereft of their wives and children, women widowed, children parentâ€" less. It wias enough to touch the stonlest heart. Altho a week ago these people had hiupy homes, and are now homeles« and pw oniless, they bore up bravely. _ Thetr fices were drawn from mental, a«s well as rhysieal augul<h, but there was no wh‘mâ€" perivg. no complaining. Everythiag . for their comfort and wolfure is beirz done, Many of the refugers had tusted little or no Many of the refuges food since Saturday Â¥et the Scones in and Around Galveston Are Still of the Most Ghastly and Awful Nature. Galveston, Sept. 13.â€"Galveston is beginâ€" plug io sowly recover from the stunuing Inow of last week, and, altho tne city apâ€" o ary loâ€"night to be pittiessls desolated, the avtaurities und the commercial and indu$â€" trial interests are seiuug lheir rotces 10 work, and a Start bas at lass booar dudde toâ€" ward the resumption of business on a modâ€" erate seale. ‘The presence of troops has Na 1 a bevedcial effect upon the eriminal classes. aud the appreliension of a brief but desperâ€" wte reign of anarchy now no longer exists, The saivons have at least temporarily gone out of business, and every. strongâ€"itmbed man who has not his owit butuble abot> 10 look after is being prossed Into serv.co, so that, first of all, the water sefvice nry be resuined, the gutters flushed and tuo Streets lighted. ‘The further the Ttuins are d g into the grenter becomes the Increase in the HSt of those who perished, is the how«es tuimbled wbout their heads. On the Jower bonen yosâ€" terday a searchieg pifty found n seore of corpses within a emall aren, going to sNow that the bulwark of debris that Nies etraiznt across the Island conceitls many more bod12g corpses within a that the bulwirk across the Island thin bave been Volunteer gangs continue ther work of burried burlal <f the corpses toer find on the ®hores of GBiveston Islant at the anens neighboring points where fatilities attendâ€" ed the storm. _ It will probably be days yot. however, before all the float‘ng bodies bave found nameless graves, ‘he cuy sllll prosems the appeitince of widespread wreck and rnin. Little has ‘eca done to clear the streets of the terâ€" ville tongle of wires and the masses ef wreck mortar, slate, stone and zla«s that bestrew them. Many of the sidewn‘ks are Imoassatle. Some of them arc litterd wiih debris. Others are so thickly coverâ€" ed with slime that walking on them is ant of ‘he quastion. As a general rule subâ€" stontial fhame bulldings withstood h tor the blasts of the gale thin those of brick. The sppeatrance of the newspapers toâ€" day, ager a suspension of ky eral doys, J having a good offect, and hoth The â€" News _ and Reports Continue to Come in Telling of Hundreds of Dead Bodics. Trlmne are uralsg prompt sncecoring of the suferInz and then equal promptness In reconstruction. Jt is difficnit to say ret what the ultimite effect of the disaster is to be on the city. Many people have left and some may never return. New Orleans, La., Sept. 13.â€"A special to The Picayune from Galveston says: The rellef measures orcanized here nre runving more smoothly than before; the destitute are recéiving supplies from the various depots, the sick are receiving the hest of care, and physicians Are giving the‘r services freely. ‘The Morrible Loas of Life, Reports continue to be roceived from nearâ€" by const and malzlind towns, teliing of dessruction and loxs of life. The const for miles inland is suld to be covered with bodies. _ One gentomrian nided in burring 100 n few miles norih of Virginia Point and parties are out In every direction, enâ€" gazeid in the same duty. Decomposition beinz so rapld the farther removal of bodles from the dovasiated porâ€" tlon of the city bas been Inhibited. A deâ€" scription of the bodr, and a memorandnm of the effects found thercon, are taken, and the body is buried where found. Wharves All Gone. The piling and portlons of the finor nt the wharves are all that is left of Galveston‘s miles of water front. Part efâ€" the sonth wall of jettles is gome, and rocks as large as roomg mre piled in the channel, renking it exceedingly hazardons for ships to come In. There are 30 craft of all sizes pled high and dry on the beach. Nuim bore of tramp «{ermers arg Aground nt Pelican Island, Texas City, Virginia Polug and Bolivar Point. 0 â€" The water averaged a dopth of fire feet pver the entire island. The older residents of the island profited by former experiâ€" ences. and by boring and cbopping holes in the floors of their homes ag a rule they esenped. Hundreds of Dodies Cremate:l. (On Tuesday an ordinance was prsaed, ayâ€" thorizing resening nnd burying partice to wot fire to wrecked buildinga and burn them. m these funcral pyres hundreds of corpses were cremated. (iangs of laborers are busy cutting pasâ€" age ways for vehicles thrm the clogged streotg. The debris is cast to one side to he removed and burned as ®oon as posâ€" «lhle. _ So many domestic animals were xilled or erippled and float«. drays and uhn a d i c uis 13. 000521 08122001000 Sivicicg of the city will take months to perform. As Mrs. Laird of Puslinch was carryâ€" ing a milk can to the house on Tuesâ€" day she tripped and fell across the mouth of the can. Mrs. Laird fainted from the effects of her injuries and, lay on the ground in an unconscions conâ€" dition for some time. Recovering her senses she managed to crawl to the house and was found again unconscions in the kitchen by her daughter who had been buky at the bouse work upâ€" REIGN OF ANARChY OVER. A PICTURE OF DESOLATION,. ‘Texas, Sept: 13.â€"From all parts wmall aren, & of debris that conceils many neconuted for o eoptinue { f {h‘e earnens It Was About Coons and Possuams b; the Hundreds in Mis Dreap, Which, ‘ as Events Proved, Was All a Monâ€" * strous. Turuashun Lie. (Copyright, 199. by C. B. Lewis.] » "The roof of our eatia bad bin leakin fur half a y‘ar, 1 reckon," began old Zeb White as I asked him fur a story "but as it dicn‘t rain more‘n once s week and as the leak g&:.'n't do au; great burt I wasu‘t breakib my back i fix it The old woman didn‘t say nut!« s | in till one mawnin she got up with 1 i | headache aund was techy. Seein bow |i e | was, 1 didu‘t say nuthin to provoke * | ber, but she burned ber band ag‘in the ;. | stove, stubbed her toe and Anally bustâ€" ie | ed out on me with: THE POBSUM HUNTER OF TENNESSEE TELLS OF A. viSION.* "*Zeb White, of all the shackelty critters on this yere Cumberlaud moun ting nobody kin hold a caudle to yo‘‘ "‘What‘s wrong with me? says L. "‘Heaps and heaps of things. This old cabin is reg‘larly fallin to pieces fur the want of a day‘s work, but yo‘ ain‘t man ‘puff to take bold and fix things.‘ "*I‘ll fix that leak tomorrer.‘ ""That‘s the old song. Yo‘ll go right at it this minit or thar‘ll be a row.‘ * ‘Look here, now,‘ says I, speakin a softly as 1 could, ‘T‘ll work all day toâ€" "ARE YO‘R NAME ZEB WBITEP‘ morrer. but totday I‘ve got to go up to them limestone caves. 1 bad a powerâ€" ful vishun last night. In my vishun 1 saw a cave, and that cave was chuck full of coons and possums. 1 can‘t say what brung the varmints together, but thar they was, and thar was 500 of ‘em.‘ "‘I don‘t believe nuthin of the sort" says the old womnn.. ‘Yo‘ are allus bevin vishuns ‘bout b‘ars and coons and possums, but nobody ever knowed yo‘ to hey a vishun ‘bout choppin wood or hoeln corn.‘ "She was right ‘bout that," said Zeb, with a smile, "but it riled me up jest the same. 1 answered back purt; briskly, and she got mo‘ sassy, and so we bad a row. 1 got up from the table and took my gnn snd whistled to the daws and started off. and the old womâ€" an called out to me that she hoped I‘d be clawed by wiideats. I wasn‘t yarnâ€" in ‘bout that vislin. 1 was lyin on my back in bed, eyes wide open, when that vishun riz up befo‘ me, and I seen things ro clear that I fell into a tremâ€" ble. Thar was a eave full of coons and possums, and 1 went in and slayed ‘em by the hundreds and got ‘nu{f money out of their skins to buy me a mewL 1 wanted to fix that leak. of co‘se, but it geemed & powerful sin io let that viâ€" ghun go by. I hadu‘t got more‘n half a mile from the house when the daw@ brgun to bhang back. The critter allus ‘perred to take the old woman‘s side whenever we had a row. When I no ticed him hangin back, U yelled out at him and grabbed up a club, but be wert out of sight like a rabbit 1 wanted that dawsg to hold the mouth of the cave while I went in and slaughâ€" tered the vurmints, and 1 jest made up my mind to kill him when I got bome. \Thar was three caves, and it was a siz mile trip. Tle middle cave was the ‘ biggest, and when 1 reached it I looked THEIR CONDITIGSN DETERâ€" MINES THE STATE OF YOUR HEALTH. HOW ARE YOUR NERVES? Paing‘s Celery Compound is a Nerve Medicine and Nerve Food. IT MAKES SICK PEOPLE WELL. Too many people are ignorant of the fact that the nerves regulate the blood supply through the body. _ The conâ€" dition of the nerves should therefore claim our best attention. If the nerves are out of repair the result is, loss of sleep, irritability, deâ€" pression of spirits and lassitude, all of which are the beginning of serious ailâ€" ments and diseases. Paine‘g Celery Compound is a nerve medicine and nerve food as well as a purifier of the blood. . When used, it removes from the nerve centres all irritability, and by supplying abundâ€" ant nutrition to the nerve tissue seâ€" cures healthy action throughout the nervous system. _ , 8 When men and women are worried and overworked in home, workâ€" shop; store or office, find it bard to mlloop at nigh en the usedâ€" up in gets no time mh noâ€" thing so refreshes, ens and gives vigorous life as Paine‘s Celery Compound. It is the food for brain and nerves. â€" Paine‘s Celery Compound is the ackâ€"| threshera‘ coming. The Judge deciâ€"|" P _NP! nowledged chief of all mod?cines for | ded the plaintiff was entitled to damâ€"|7,547 cas the cure of diseases due to nervous| ages. This virtually means nmnmn beet, and weakness or to a foul condition of the|the Judge‘s jurisdiction the th otal amo blood. 1t is the one real remedy| must keep their appointments, no matâ€"| by the T known toâ€"d % fails to beneâ€" mlowmwmuoboï¬nfl to | short peri fAt. hï¬ m:{m.w on his way to work | duce, tra Ln‘ you be for the contract has already been | and sea, made, | ge20,000. & 0 00. l meitongs then went in. It was a narrer openin, and the nvz was dark, but 1 had \-:r taller candle. 1 lighted the and begun to look r we, "Dod rot it, but what a a man kin make of bimself when he ‘tries"" exclaimed .’t old man after a pause. ‘ "Anybody of sense knows that coonsand possums don‘t go hangin around caves. That vishun was & tarnasbun lie. That cave was as big as baif an acre. and 1 walked all over it and found nuthin 1 was mad and kickin myself when 1 started to go out, but I hadn‘t gone fur when the roof of the cave ‘peared to fall down upon me. Mebbe it was balf an bour later when 1 opened my eyes and found myse!f on my back, and it seemed as if one side of my bead bad bin caved in. I found my rifle with the stock broken, and 1 could smell b‘ar all around. It didn‘t take me long tb Agger out that a b‘ar bad loller‘d me into the cave and fetched me a whack ‘longside the head. In a minit 1 beard him sniffin and movâ€" in around outside the cave, and as I erawled along 1 found him on guard. He was lyin down fair in the way, and I was his prisoner. If my rife bad bin all right. 1 could hev got rid of him in short order, but it couldn‘t be fired. "As the b‘ar heard me movin up he showed his teeth and growled in a way to muke my b‘ar stand up. He didn‘t come in after me, but it was plain ‘nuff that be wasn‘t goin to let me out. I thought it was best to keep still fur awhile and see if he wouldn‘t go away. and, d‘yo‘ know, sub, to the best of my belief that critter went right to sleep. 1 couldn‘t git out without steppin over bim, and it was too risky to try that I kept quiet fur two bours, and be nevâ€" er moved. Then I flung a stone at him, and he woke up and growled till 1 had a chill. "Mebbe yo‘ll say 1 orter bev taken comfort in that cave, but when I found the afternoon wearin away and the war hangin on I was mighty miserablo over it. The b‘ars of ‘Tennessee owed me a powerful grudge fur the way I had slaugbtered them, and who was to tell what this critter proposed to do? He could finish me off any time he wanted to, but hbe ‘peared to be playin uother game. Bimeby it copme dark, iut he didn‘t move. I was hungry and thirsty, and I knowed the old woman would be worryin, even though she was mad. The b‘ar didn‘t move off, however, and at last I softly crept as fur away as I could and went to sleep. J don‘t reckor he come pigh me durin the night, but he might hbev slipped away fur food or drink. He was thar all right when daylight broke, and then I was so mad and hungry that I ;ot desperate. With the rifle bar‘l in mmy hands I advanced to the mouth of the cave and yelled fur him to come in and hey it out with me. He wouldn‘t do it He growled and romred and clawed, but he wouldn‘t come in. It was a narrer place to git out, and he bad all the advantage. I yelled and whooped and flung stones and called him names, but he let me tire myself ouit. Noon come, and he was still thar ‘ had another row with bim, and if ‘d bin a proper b‘ar be‘d hey come :1 nnd showed his grit, but be staid eutside and growled. "I looked fur the old woman all that ‘ternoon, but she didn‘t come. I bad 1 old shotgun in the house, and 1 . owed that if she come she‘d load it ~ith buckshot and bring it along. If e blar waited fur her, he was a gonâ€" Night come along ag‘in, and I was ilin over with madness and ready to it uails from bunszer. The only thing could do was to sleep, but it was a o shtmare all through the long dark urs. 1 kin tell yo‘ I was mighty ind to see the daylight ag‘in. 1 went .. look fur the b‘ar, and he was in the tame old place and as cheerful as ever. ‘Ve bad a ‘jaw, but he wouldn‘t fight made up my mind to wait about two lours and then kill or be killed, but I "‘‘ITears to me l‘ve seen yo‘ befo‘. Are yo‘r name Zeb White? " ‘That‘s it,‘ says I. "‘Ginerally spoken of as the possum hunter of Tennessee? "*Yc8" "‘Man what bas vishuns of coons and possums in a cave?" "‘I thought it was a vishun.‘ "‘¥es, 1 know, but it was mighty ging‘lar that when yo‘ was hevin a viâ€" shun of coons and the possums yo‘ dign‘t see puthin of the b‘ar. Zeb White, yo‘ come ‘long home and go to work on that cabin roof and let vi shuns and dreams go to pot.‘ was out of the cave before that time. The old woman bad come huntin fur me, mnd she got clus up to that b‘ar ind fired a handful of buckshot into \im befo‘ he knowed what was up. As 1 crawled out of the cave she looked at me fur a minit and then keerlessly said: Toronto banks report the prevalence of counterfeit ten dollar bills in the city and samples are in the hands of the detective department. . It is said that nothing could be a poorer speciâ€" men of green goods, but a careless perâ€" son might easily find himself out of pocket. It is an exceedingly clumsy affair, the paper being the only porâ€" tion which resembles the genuine The printing is poor and one of the signatures of the one in the kands of the police is written with lead penoil, They are on the Molson‘s Bauk. "I was glad ‘nuff to do so," explained the old man, with a sorrowful smile. "I tagged along behifd hber till we reached home, expectin she would hev tmo‘ to say, but she was mighty good about It. She cooked me the biggest meal I had ever eat, and she let me go to bed and sleep fur 20 bours, and all she said was: * "‘Zeb, yere‘s nails and hammer and boards, and now yo‘ hey a vishun ‘bout leaks in the roof of this cabin.‘" The Cobden Sun says; A judgment * N h oL of which farmers and threshers will do| _ Two thousand five hundred tons of well to make note, was delivered here| Canadian hay for the Imperial Governâ€" on Friday by Judge Deacon. A farâ€"| ment was shipped from St. John on mer, named Kirinsinske, brought an| Wednesday, which makes 19,200 tons, action against a thresher, who bad|valued at over $300,000, sent from disappointed him after ;ï¬e plaintiff| Canada since the outbreak of the war. had gone to the trouble and expense|In addition, there has been sent from of making all preparations for the| Canada to South Africa for the use of threshers‘ coming. The Judge deciâ€"| the Imperial troops 8,207 bags of cata, ded the plaintiff was entitled to damâ€"|7,547 cases of jams, 12,687 casese of ages. This virtually means that within | beef, and 38,285 sacks of flour. _ The the Judge‘s jurisdiction the nfuï¬ 1 amount thus expended in Canada must keep their appointments, no matâ€"| by the Home Government within a ages. This virtually means that within | beei, and 38,200 sacks of flour. . ihe the Judge‘s jurisdiction the ï¬rmï¬ 1 amount thus expended in Canada must keep their appointments, no matâ€" | by the Home Government within a mmmwm..jobotnlufl to | short period for these articles of proâ€" one of them, while on his way to work|duce, transportation charges on land fur a spell and M. QuAD. I Was a Great 1_vention, byt 1t Ha# â€" Weak Points, # bu § ‘sit," began the peddies gung. "that there are children in the Sherlock Holmes?" iquired Mr. Poply ironically. "Not exactly, but"â€" flmmuflxu&n†ishingly correct by a process of scientific deduction," continued Mr, Poply in the same sarcastic tone." "Let me see if 1 can follow your line of reaâ€" soning. No doubt you noticed Towser, who has just fitted from the back door with a milk can attached to his caudel appendage. That round hole in the stainâ€" ed glass of this door would at once couâ€" vey the word ‘bowgun‘ to your acute mird. That dull sound which we now hear can ouly be produced by hammering a high chair with a hand mirror or & cream pitcher. Am I right?" _ _ "Probably," answered the peddler, "but J drew my inferences from the fact that you came to the front door with and are still inadvertently holding a rattle in your hand. And unless my eyes deceive me there is a jumping jack attached by means of a bent pin and a string to the rear of your smoking jacket. However, all this is immaterial. I called to show you the greatest invention of the age, ‘the patent noiseless baby jumper and child amuser.‘ By its use a child may be left alone for hours and need no atâ€" tention. Place the infant in this swingâ€" ing seat here, and"â€" he expects more than he deser He â€" « .% * good 7 244 5oo td q good 2. aâ€" 2 1Â¥ ie â€" The ' C ally ‘/v gether M 7 hy observin Pm l _ i. learns t ps §4$7", ~~â€"â€" woman who i \Pa *L bze ically weak an *"" r*â€"" 4*# ous and incap Love has a long way to go to reach the heart of the mogem up â€" to â€" date young man. When he looks for a wife, he expects a good deal. Probably he expects more than he deserves. AYy ' They usuâ€" 4 C ally go toâ€" Q/v gether. An A observing man /m 6 learns that a " ; *~Aâ€" woman who is physâ€" ~ *L bze ically weak and neryâ€" * J "~ 4* and incapable, is likely to be illâ€"naâ€" tured too. The swectest temper is ruined by continual sickness. . ~A woman whose nerves are constantly racked and dragged by debilitating drains and inflammation, cannot be a genial comâ€" panion or happy wife; and she is totally unfitted to be a mother, "Have I the honor of speakingâ€"to Mr. ‘These troubles prevail almost universâ€" ally among women largely because of carelessness and neglect. There is no need of thein. Dr. Pierce‘s Favorite Presâ€" cription is a gosilive specific for the weakâ€" nesses and diseases of the feminine orâ€" ganism. It cures them radically and completely. _ It heals, stn-'ï¬:n- and gurilies. It is the only scien remedy evised for this special purpose by an educated, skilled physician. It is the only medicine that makes motherhood easy and absolutely safe. _ â€" 222 Its sale, through dealers in medicines exceeds the conï¬)incd sale of all other medicines for women. It acts directly and only on the childâ€"bearing organism. It allays inflammation, soothes pain, heals ulceration and gives the tortured nerves a rest. It does away with the discomforts of the expectant period and makes baby‘s coming easy anrre compara~ tively painless, ‘Thousands of women have testified to its wonderful virtues. All good druggists sell it and honest dealers will not offer inferior substitutes for the sake of a little extra profit. Dr. Pierce has been for thirty years chief consulting physician of the famous Inâ€" valids‘ Hotel and Surgical Institute, at Buffalo, N. Y. His reputation as a skilled specialist in woman‘s ailments is worldâ€"wide. Miss Lauretta McNees, of Reno (P. 0. Box 723), Washoe Co., Nev., writes: ‘"I have discontinued taking the ‘Prescripâ€" tion‘ and will not take any more (at presâ€" ent). Last month I had no pain at all and worked every day without any inconvenâ€" ience whatever._ It was the first time I mever had pain during that period. I canâ€" not say too much for yout medicines espeâ€" cially the ‘Favorite Prescription‘ and ‘Pleasant Pellets.‘ I know of a lady who took one bottle of your ‘ Favorite Prescripâ€" tion ‘ and she says she was not sick like she was with her first baby. This was her second baby. She thinks it a grand mediâ€" cine. So do I." 0 "I had suffered untold misery for a numâ€" ber of years, with ovarian trouble, an exâ€" hausting drain, constipation, Yainfnl peâ€" riods and other annoying troubles," writes Mrs. Annic James, of No. 27 Seventh St., Memphis, Shelby Co., Tenn. " Tharlk God, my health has been fuily restored and I can gladly say I am a well womtan toâ€"day. I used six or seven bottl«s of your ‘ Favorite Prescription,‘ and also used the lotion which you advised in the ‘Common Sense Medical Adviser.‘" . e *‘ For years 1 had been failing in health and kept getting worse and more nervous all the time," writes Mrs. Annie Dulan, of East Strou&shurg, Monroe Co., Pa. ‘"‘I doctored with two different doctors and they told me that my system was run down nm{my nerves were weak. I had ulcers of the uterus which were so painful at times that I was afraid that they must be cancers, Indeed I felt discouraged with the treatâ€" ment, and did notget any better until m: 3!:;“ advised me to write to you lnd‘ id so. whatever and can do the work ï¬n‘lâ€"ï¬;i'i; of eig'ht. and feel better tham I have for years." _ Lo l y s & Two thousand five hundred tons of Canadian hay for the Imperial Governâ€" ment was shipped from St. John on Wednesday, which makes 19,200 tons, valued at over $300,000, sent from "In May 1 commenced hlin; your ‘Golden Medical Diecoverx ‘ and ‘Favorite Prescription‘ and followed your advice as closcl{ as I could. I took twelve bottles im all, six of each. Thanks to God and the right kind of medicine I feel myself cured and a well woman. I have no _c; feeling _ Dr. Pierce has had a lifeâ€"time of experâ€" | Kaisomining, Tinting, etc.. hearly expentet ience in this particular field. His 1ooo. | Church Decorating a specialty. Waterioo. illustrated. book, * The Pepple‘s | â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"=_=â€"=>~â€" gommon Sense Medical Adviser ‘ conâ€" ® tains several chapters devoted to woâ€" s lal sale c s man‘s special physiology. A paperâ€"bound copy will be sent free on receipt of 31 OHHMB '“'"uf" to o :‘he ‘c:fl of cusâ€" Large assortment and at the low toms and mailing only. World‘s D?en 3 good rrived. gary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. . t priceo.. Ne 8 8 For a clothâ€"bound copy send 50 stamps. Hair Brushes, eererrcommaonpiinecete c uit s Tooth Brushes, A LONG CROOKED ROAD. sportation “mrâ€"'"'" on land Waterloo. amounts to total dI P. 8. â€"Mail orders receive prompt He wants good looks, ,good sense, good nature, good health. Galt. Money to loan +. ie Mones o lows, Oflice. Riliers Black, Waterioo. Master in Chancery, Barristers, bolicitors, Kue, Money to loan. vilices: Upstairs in the AmZ, in all the courts, Notaries and Conveyancers. Money to lend on lonnru al lowesl rates. Ofliceâ€"Court House berlin. W. H. bowrsy, M.A., LL.B., Q. C., County Crown Attorney aud Clerk of the Peace. E. P. CLEMENT, Oificeâ€"Corner King and Krb Sts., Waterk over old post office. Money to loan at low rates of interest A._ T ied Psnb lin me roel dioas +4 20k e reâ€" ancer, etc. Money to loan. . Offliceâ€"Devitt M Upstairs Economical Block, Kin «) ‘Coroner County Waterloo, Offlceâ€"At his re-idgn::g on Krb B’t.. ‘;-.urlu Telephone RS. D. 8. & G. H. BOWLBY Physicians, Surgeons, eto. Dr. D. 8. wiby Coroner for the County. Dr. G. H. Bowl!g treats discases of the nmabt-v.hmt and car. Officeand Residenceâ€"John Beriin. Surgeons and Accoucheurs of Ontario, Resiâ€" aence and office on King Street. Opposite I )R. C. T. NOECKER, Medallist of Toronto University, Licentiate of the College of Physicians, Surâ€" geons and Accoucheursof Ontario. Diseases of eye and ear treated. Officeâ€"New residence, Albert Street Waterloo, a short distance north of the late Dr. Walden‘s residence. Telephone communica Woolen Mills. Phone 210. Dl(. W. N. ROBERTSON, C. M. M. C. P.and 8. 0., Licentiate of the Royal College of I’h{nicinns. Burgeons, and Royal Maternity, Kdinburgh. Specialty, female diseases, conâ€" sultation in German. ‘Medicines in the office. telephone 196. Office, over Neville‘s drug store, Berlin. 24â€"3m, DR. W, J. SCHMIDT, Dentist. Graduate of ‘oronto University and of the Rorn" College of Dental Sur%'eons of Ontarâ€" io. â€" All branches of modern dentistry practised including crown and bridgework and ortho dontia, {A)cnl mnaesthctics used for painless extraction, . Wili visit St. Jacobs the first Friâ€" day of each month. Office, Knell‘s block King «treet, Berlin. &A Dentist, L.D.9., Royal Colle: e ot Dental Surgeons, D.D.9. Toronto Unl\'ersil‘y. Allbranches of dentistry practised. Office in Janzen‘® Block, Berlin, over Smyth Bros, Store. Entrance between Fehrenbach 3 Sadd: lery and Stuebing‘s grocery. W.R. Wilkinson, L.D.S., D. D.S. AMES C. HAJGHT CELLEN & W ) J. A. Scellen, B. E‘ L L B. J. J. A. Weir, oo otaina YCV C. W. WELLS, D. D. S., Dentista Waterloo. Will visit Eimira, Ziliax House, the second Thursday and Friday and fourth Thureday and l“r_idny of egg_)v mgg&l‘i Sl;!:l!;'l:»d'ni ooo e y m e vian s 1 1 p.m. to Friday 1 p. m. ODONTUNDER for painless extraction of teeth. The Waterico office willbe closed every Friday afternoon from May 1st to November 1st. LIVERY AND EXCHANGE STABLES George Suggitt, Proprictor. All kinds of conveyances constantly on hand. Charges moderate, stables in rear of Commercial Hotel. Block, Waterloo. Ww *z Wk JOHN L. WHpEMAN TIssuer of Marriage Licenses, Officeâ€"Post Office, St. Jacobs, Ont. Eeoami Come e e smcs l Opgonne the Market SquareWaterloo An easy shave, a stylish hair cut, a ood sea foam, an exhilirating shampoon. 1.&.-' and children‘s hair cut. POEHLMAN'S BARBER SHOP Upposite the Market Squa: CHARLE& N. ROCKEL House and Sign Painter and Paper Hanger, _ Waterloo Ont. Painter, Buch as Oil Paintinig, Paper Hangi Kalsomining, Tinting, etc., nug execute Church Decorating a specialty. aterloo. QWLBY & CLEMENT H. WEBB, M. D. B. McBRIDE ILLAR & SIMS, _____ Alex. Millar Q C. Harvey J. Sime, R. W. L. HILLIARD, Licentiate of the Collego of Physicians, A. HiLLIARD MIL F. BRAUN G. HUGHES, D. D. S. Dentist. Offlce in the Oddfelliow‘s Office: Canadian Block, Berlin. MISCELLANEOUS SNYDER‘8 DRUC STORE, Barrister, Solicitor, Notary, ete. MEDICAL LEGAL Barristers at Law, Solicitors DENTAL LIVERIES DENTIST. Decorator, House and Sign CA R D S Cycle and Motor Co. for _ BRANTFORD GENDRON Wh We also rspresent the Heoycle Co. o BERLIN and RACYCLES _ / from $35 to $65. New and Second Hand wheels from $5.00 up. We also full line of sundries. done promptly â€" Give us a eall Kipling Ties 3 Newest shades and colorings ; _ also a fine lot of? 8 Silk Front Shirts < Our stock of furnishings is \:~ more complete than ever. g Try us for your next tie shirt > etc. ~ J J. RITZER, Waterlioo _ 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, Wells Drilled f; Wind Mills Supplied : All kinds of repairing done. â€" at reasonable prices Near the Railway Track, Waterloo First Class Watches, _ Clocks ano Jewelry. _ Watch Repairing a specialty ; Having had 20 years‘ experience of _ Watch Repairing, I can guarantee first class work. Prices Right. j OPPOSITE BAND STAND. : Jacob Ball Waterioo. Just Opened â€" Ou@ TRADE%%ET/’/);&;)W Klipport Undertaking Co. Undertakers and _ Embailmers Calls answered day and night. J. DOERSAM, conduct full eqhmml' offices in M and Wnthingzon ; this qualifies us to ty dispatch work and quickly secure as broad as the invention. Hélu furnished. ‘ Patents procured through Marion & Maâ€" tion receive special notice without im over 1oo newspapers distributed ‘ the Dominion :m"&m:x‘wd Manufacâ€" _ MARION & MARION _ We Patent Experts and Solicitors. LEAPER BROS HAWKESVILLE _ ANOTHEK LOT OF DOERSAM‘S Wate rloo,