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Waterloo County Chronicle, 18 May 1893, p. 6

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"The ills we have," to wit, the exâ€" tremely affable young ladiesat "central," we are all more or less acquainted with ; now let us look at one or two that at present we "know not of," but which the eloquent automatie projectâ€" ors would like to «run us up against. We all know â€"how thoroughly reliable electric currents are when there is a speck of dust in the key contacts or a leakage of battery power to ground during wet weather. This last factor is so important in the ajustment of. a magnet and variation, that a telegraph operator has sometimes to keep the ajusting serew of his relay continually in his hand while using the instrument. The "automatic" exchange instrument for each telephone, containing four or five magnets, is expected to look after itself (no operators need apply), to ajust itself, to keep itself clean, to autâ€" omatically put on its own bib and tucker and to go to church Sundaysâ€" â€"_ in fact to lead an exemplary life generâ€" ally ; no one is allowed" to take a fathâ€" erly interest in the orphan becauseâ€" is it not "automatic?" _ Now we will auppose a subscriber wants to call up ‘ the general hospital and has gone. _â€"through the cabalistic performance on the keys required to make the necessâ€". ary number, and _we will stretch a. point and further suppose he has done. «_ it correctly, and some wandering micâ€" robeâ€"of a fly, as we expect he might, ‘ hns_'.\a.s been fooling around one of the contact points and the machine has slipped a cogâ€"only one cog, mind, in ‘the possible 9999â€"instead of the genâ€" eral hospital he would be just as likely to get the jail. â€" Imagine what a shock o Cholly‘s feelings if he tried to call up his sweetheart and got an underâ€" taker, or the effect on the presiding maiden of the Y. W. C. G. if some . besotted bibulist took her for a brewâ€" ery and ordered a dozen of beer and one of old Tom gin and sent it a brace of shakes at that ! There would be a delightful uncertainty as to what â€" you were going to get about the Business that would be particularly charming. It would be a soulâ€"destroying invenâ€" tion, no doubt of that. If you wanted the Salvation Army for instance, and Sot the Mercer Reformatory, you A device more ar less complicated, intended to do away with the "central" operator, is now being brought before the public, but. why the â€"expense of such a complicated conglomeration of apparatus should be gone to in order to deprive a few young ladies of a chance to earn their daily bread is toâ€" tally beyond our comprehension. Our comprehension may be limited, but while the fact remains that the annual interest on the cost of a six or eight wire system, such as the newâ€"fangled idea requires, would be more than enough to pay the wages of expert opâ€" erators, we are compelled to cry cut. bono, what is the good ? Why displace the operators whose‘ wages: are a small fraction of the expense of@a telephone system in order to introduce other complications and expenses. Tt is as much an open question now as it ever was in the days of the imâ€" mortal Shakespeare, whether it is not better to "bear the ills we have" than "fty to others that we. know not of." Tt is perhaps ungallant to speak of the long suffering and usually patient "hello girl" as a cross to be borne with Christian resignation, but the stern and solemn fact remains, that if you ring your bell too much in her ear the "linked sweetness long drawn out" that is supposed to characterize the angelic switchmaiden of your lightning expressions is liable to be changed to something undeniably peppery. From the Canadian Electrical News, May, 1893 : But on the contrary Quite delightful smells, smells, smells, Smells, smells, smells, Quite delicious and deâ€"lightâ€"ful smells ! Doesn‘t groan. Then each citizen who dwells At the place where once were smells Day by day his neighbor tells. That the smells, smells, smells, Which dairy now he smells Are not at all the smells Which formerly were smells, Normomoan. . . . [ Then each citizen who meets All these smells upon the streets a it‘s throne. _ Then each atom that‘s afloat Has no menace in it‘s throat, Purge the backyards of their smells,â€" Deathly smells,â€" Ply with disinfectants these miasmatic hells ! Fire and feverâ€"laden lane, Drench the dire diphtheria drain, Sweep the dread and deadly typhoid from In a putrified delight,â€" Breathing death, death, death, With their fiery foetid breath, In the slimy effervescence that so perilously wells From the smells, smells, smells, smell, Smells, smolls, smells. From the fusion and intrusion of the smells. On the murky awir ofmght 2 _ While the microbes feast and fatten, Eating up the smells they sa> in, (Dedicated to the Board of Health by kind perâ€" mission of the late Edgar Allan Pos:) Oh, the backyards with their smellsâ€" Awful smells,â€" What a world of cholera their stuffiness foreâ€" tells ! Hg‘w they batten, batten, batten The following timely warning has been sent by a friendâ€"a wellâ€"known Ottawa, writer, whose intiials are R IrouReetH AUTOMATIC TELEPHONES. : THE OETRY, SMELLS ‘ First, then, get leave to ascend the the noble clock tower of the Produce Exchange, very near the island point where the city had ts beginnings. Beâ€" low you is the site of the old fort, in which the Dutch governors ruled "New Amsterdam," and. which hardâ€"headed old Petrus Stuyvesant had to surrender to the Duke of York‘s forceâ€"their first act being to reâ€"christen the settleâ€" ment and fasten their master‘s name upon us. . Within sight, every where, is perhaps the most continuously historic ground of the Revolution. Here, too, are the Battery and Bowling Green. Look off, and you will never forget the scene about you. The vast commercial region stretches northward. You can almost throw a stone into Wall street, where Washington took his presidenâ€" tial oath. In this direction you see the grandest buildings, vying in height with Trinity Church and St. Paul‘s . a little further, mark the "Telegraphic Capitol," and the towers and domes of the lofty newspaper edifices. Everyâ€" where, far as the eye can see, is a mass of stores, warehouses, financialjbuildings, in short, the spreading traffic, the strictly commercial and executive part of the town. Survey the harbor, to Liberty and Staten Islands, to the forts, and through the Narrows to the sea. To right and left are rivers, the Bridge, Brooklyn, Jersey City, and the inland hills. Both of the rivers, you. remember, are to bebridged and tunnelâ€" ed again and again, Whatsplendor of life and movement in the streets and on the water ? Such a maritime panoâ€" rama at all hours, with ferryâ€"boats, tugs, schooners. steamers, going to an fro, and ships and yachts at anchor, can be seen nowhere else on earthâ€" there being no other city, equallyhuge, that is at once ocean port and metropâ€" olis. I will suggest the method by which visitors can gain at once the personal impression of New York as a whole which the best map poorly conveys. To begin, I would have them view it on both sides, the Brooklyn and Jerâ€" sey frornts, and "the islands" with their institutions, from the ferryâ€"boats east and west. Then let them obtain those "bira‘sâ€"eye" views â€" which _ various points afford and which are rivaled only by the views the from Boston State Housedomeand the Eiffel tower in Paris. That from St. Paul‘s Cathedral in Lonâ€" don, owing to the fog and the smoke, affects one chiefly through the imagiâ€" mation, which in truth it powerfully excites. There will be a grand lookout in Philadelphia when the tower of the public building will be finished. But rarely will you get such a metropolitan prospect as from any one of three elevâ€" ations which I select from the many available. No w go three miles northward, and How a Stranger May Get a Bird‘s Eye View of the City. The immense cost of the system in a large city would far overbalance the amount of the wages of a few. girls, while the uncertainty of results would be a serious, if not a prohibitive drawâ€" back. We have fresh in our minds the words of caution given on the subject of electric investments by the president of the Canadian Electrical Association at its last convention, but do not think that inventors,though they may not know very much about the matter techâ€" nically, will place much faith in a teleâ€" phone company who would offer to equip every town and village in the county and build trunk lines from New Brunswick to British Columbia on a capital of $250,000. The claim that a small country town or village could use this system instead of the ordinary one does not appear to have good foundation. If automatic instruments were installed it is idle to say that they would look after them selves. They would have to be main tained. It would simply mean the substitution of an expect to keep them in order, instead of the cheaper boy or girl whose only qualification needed would be the ability to ring a teleâ€" phone bell. NEW YORK SPREAD OUT. °_ Any system that depends on a batâ€" tery current to work its mechanism at a distance, must in the nature of things be uncertain. The failure of the writâ€" ing telegraph that has shown some years ago was entirely due to this eause. The apparatus would work perfectly with a definite resistance and uniform battery, but was inoperative when exposed to vicissitudes of weathâ€" er and distance. If, as is proposed, a comman battery main is used with branches to each subscriber, a cross on the line, liable to happen any time, would paralyze the whole exchange. The switch board would have the same number of connections as the orâ€" dinary telephone switch board, with the addition of a complicated piece of mechanicism in place of the plain anâ€" nunciator drop of the ordinary system. Its adoption, instead of saving in the cost of labor, would simply substitute expensive mechanics for comparitively inexpensive operators. ‘ would not, . mesaphorically. speaking, take off your hat and apologize to the polite operator at Central for not speaking plainer.. Oh no! The resâ€" training influence of that young lady‘s presence as it were would be absent, and you would illuminate the dark depths of the automatic‘s transmitter with a blue streak of indignation that would make the six wires sizzle to try and carry it all away at once. â€"_‘"Every man in the office left his desk and gathered round the ‘Jay‘ to see what he was doing with that elecâ€" tric cyclone. Well, sir, he was right on the word, and was putting it down in the prettiest copperplate hand you ever saw, even crossing his t‘s, dotting bis i‘s and punctuating with as much care as a man editing _ telegraph for ‘rat‘ printers. .St. Louis got tired by and by and began to slow down. Edison opened the key and said, ‘Here, here! this is no primer class ! Get a hustle on you!" Well. sir, that broke St. Louis all up. He had been ‘raw hiding‘ Memphis for a long time and we were terribly sore, and to have a man in our office that could walk all over him made us feel like a man whose horse had won the Derby. .I saw the ‘wizard‘ not long ago. He doesn‘t wear a hickory shirt nor put his pants in his boots, but he is very far from being a dade yet."â€" Practical Electricity. At the end of the line was an operâ€" ator who was chain lightning and who knew it. Edison had hardly got seated before St. Louis responded and St] Louis started in on a long report,. and he pumped it in like a house afire. Edison threw his leg over the arm of his chair, leisurely transferred a wad of spruce gurm from his pocket to his mouthb, picked up a pen, examined it critically, and started in, about 200 words behind. He dida‘t stay there long, though. St. Louis let out another . link of speed, and still another, and the instrument on Edison‘s table humâ€" med like an oldâ€"style Singer sewing machine. "I was an operator in the Memphis office when Thos. A. Edison applied to the manager for a position," said A. G. Rockfeller, a member of the Remiâ€" niscence Club, St. Louis. "He came walking into the office one morning looking like a veritable hayseed. He wore a hickory shirt, a pair of butterâ€" nut pants tucked in the tops of boots a size too large and guiltless of blacking. ©‘Where‘s the boss? was his query as he glanced round the office. No one replied at once and he repeated the question. The manager asked what he could do for him, and the futureâ€"great proceeded to strike him for a job. Business was rushing and the office was two men short ; so almost any kind of a lightning slinger was welcome. He was assigned to a desk and a fusilâ€" lade of winks went the rounds of the office, for the ‘Jay‘ was put on the St. Louis wire, the hardest in the office. _ " Scott‘s Emulsion AT ALL CRITICAL PERIODS AND CHANGE OF Lire. Sold by all Druggists, or by mail price 50 cents, six boxes, $2.50. The Celery PM ©0.» TOIQH40; OBbe Lnifnimemmmzaccas.. _ NX s S e ’!, w THFFR. because it heals the irritation of the throat and builds up the body and overcomes the difficulty. **CA UTHON.‘‘â€"Beware of substitutes. Genuine prepared by Scott & Bowne, Belleville. é’old by all druggists, 500. and $1.00. because they can assimilate it when they cannot ordinary food. Tt is beneficial for because it makes fat and givesstrength, Tt is beneficial for Three miles more, and you may climb the Belvedere on the highest emâ€" inence of Central Park. Here one is enchanted by viewing that long pleasâ€" ureâ€"ground which nature and art comâ€" bine to make so varied. It is too narâ€" row, perhaps, but this enables you to see how it is bordered with new and stately mansions, and to look away to the _ Riverside _ and _ Mornington parks, and yonder to the "Cathâ€" edral Heights," to be crowned anon by the Grant Mausoleum, the Columbia University, and by that coming wonâ€" derâ€"the Protestant Cathedral. Beâ€" tween is, the "new New York," a spacâ€" ious tract with fair streets, houses of modern design, a score of new churches, and all the evidences of amazing recâ€" ent growth, Above Central Park, the Harlem district is a city in itself.â€"E. C. Stedman in April St. Nicholas. of Codâ€"liver Oil and Hypophosphites is both a food and a remedy. It is useful as a fat producer and at the same time gives vital force to the body. . It is beneficial in you are in that civic center which has shifted, within memory, from the City Hall Park to Union Square, and again to Madison Squareâ€"the plaze around which are tokens of our most brilliant life and pleasure. . Here you are whirlâ€" ed up thedelightfui Sevillian tower of the "Garden," and from a height of 300 feet look out "over the roofs of the world"â€"picturesquely _ broken _ up, spireâ€"pierced, full of color. _ Here you view the socialand residential "uptown" regionâ€"rich and proud mansions, the costly hotels, the theaters, clubs, musicâ€"halls, operaâ€"bouses, and the colâ€" ossal apartmentâ€"houses.. The Roman Catholic cathedral lifts its white spires over all. You see the churches, homes and playâ€" houses of upperâ€"class New York, as it now exists. CcOoUGHS AND COLDS SICKLY CHILDREN CONSUMPTION When Edison was Young. Waterloo County Chronicle. ALE K. MILLAR, Q. C., Solicitor.........Berlin J. 4. f[WEBB, M. D., Medical Referee. Waterloo w, gf HODGINS, Supt. of Agencies.. Waterleo w fH.RIDDELL, WM. HENDRY, 1. Casfh and Paidâ€"up Values guaranteed on each po/licy. 2. All dividends belong to and are paid on[Iy to policyâ€"holders. 3, No restriction on trayfel, residence, or occupation, 4. Death claime] paid at once on completion of claim papersf* Assurances in force, Jan. 1st, 1893....$16,122,195 Increase oyer previous year ...... 1,187,388 New Assuranges written in 1892 .. ... 2,051,000 Increase o/YÂ¥er 1891................... . 222,050 Cash Income/ for 1892.................. _ 614,951 Increase PYet 18901.................. 67,331 Assets, Deceimber 31st, 1802............ 2253,984 Increase[OVer 1891....... .......... _ 294,053 Reserve for security of Policyâ€"Holdâ€" Erser o o ce en ean, es k is es se 001009 MnoreasR OL 1891.. ... .2..... L.s..0 980,927 Surplus oviPr all Liabilities, December eP HBB92. .. c stvl sc ul l onl i ns ioeel o 176,907 Increage OVer 1801...2........22.... 20,742 The 20. yfear SUPERYISORSEIP DistRIBUTION Poricy nc/W offered embraces all the newest features, Jnd is the best form of PROTEOTION and InyE$TMENT money can buy, It has no equal, G/uaranteed values, attractive options, and liber@l conditions. DOMINION IPEPOSIT, Economy, Equifty, Stability, Progress. TE= Ontario) Mutual Life. HEAD OrFIO®, > WaTERLOO, OXT. BOARD OF IDIRECTORS ; I. E. Bowman, M. JP., Waterloo. John Shuh, Waterlof. J. H. Webb M. D.,f Waterloo. Geo. Mcore, WaterÂ¥oo. D. S. Bowlby, M. [D., Berlin Robert Melvin, Gulelph. _ E. W. B. Snider, JM, P. P., St. Jacobs, OFFIICERS : Incorporateél by Act of{ Ontario Legislature CARD OF THANKS. MERCANTILE E. Bowman, MJ. P., President. James Lockie, $ecretary, Alex, Millar, Solficitor, T. A. Gale Inspeéctor. The prices are consistent with quality of material and workmanship. The latest invoices include the finest of American and Foreign Fabrics. _ We can sell you 4 light colors 4 dark 8 3 light 6 3 dark 6€ 2 light i 2 dark &f Codight 1â€" 4 / 1 dark § 4 light t 4 dark 3 also a full stock of mond Dyes for silk, Devitt‘s City Drug Store Inspection is invited to the NeW Lines of SUITINGS, MEAD OFFI(CE, â€" WATERLOO, ONT. Ebtablished 1870. "Tis not Come and bring the children to see our grand display of EASTER EGGS. haster Rog Dyes 4/ beral Conditions of Polieles : {FIRE / INSURANCE CO. CAPITAL, |$200,000. Secre tary. V. N. Biggiet. TROUSERINGS and John Ritz V. M. BERLET the clothes that make the man," but they help OFFICERS : Merchant Tailor. King St. Waterloo colors for 5 cents OVERCOATINGS. 10 (G 10 Lo Turkish and Dia wool and cotton at Manage $100,000. Kindly favor us with a call and we shall be pleased to show you specimens and designs in Monuments, Headstones etc., and quote yflu figures for any style of work either in Granite or marble. First class work gugranteed. THE undersigned offers for sale his house and lot, corner of Allan and Mary streets, The house is a new two story brick building provided with all modern conveniences. The property must be sold as the owner is leaving town. For further particulars apply at the house. L. C. KLIPPERT, full force TILL THE VALUE IS EXHAUSTED. THE WATERLOO Granite & Marhle Works Waterloo lith Oct., 1892 Your choice of all sound plans of assurance offered, no other. AGENTS WANTED. _ Apply now for choice of territory to THOS. HILLIARD When two or three years in force it is monâ€"forfeitable, even for failure to pay renewal premiums, remaoining in Equality between policyâ€"holders is secured by imsuring in three classesâ€" abstainers, general and womenâ€"giving each in profits the true benefit of its own longevity. The RATES compare favorably with any in the world. 9 IF‘ you have lost aloved one and desire to erect a fltning tribute of affection to the memory of the departed one. Tt provides a legacy certain instead of a law suit possible. The Policy of the Dominion Life is a straight promise to payâ€"like a bank draft, almost unconditional. _ No reâ€" striction on travel or occupation. JAMES.INNES, M. P., CHR. KUMPF Esoq., PrEsIDENT. Viceâ€"PRESDENT THOS. HILLIARD, Maxacine DiREcror. Authorized Capital $1,000,000. Gov‘t Deposit at Ottawa $50,000 Subscribed Capital $257, 000. Paid up Capital $64,400 THE Dominion Life Assurance Co‘y, Head Office, â€" _ Waterloo, Ont. Erb Street, opposite Markec. Bicgcles changed from the solid and cushion to the latest preumatic tire. Sewâ€" ing machines repaired and guaranteed for one year. Gunsmithing in all its branches. Keys made and fitted to a!l kinds of locks. Locks repaired. New rolls put on clothes wringers. . In short we repair everything in a mechanical line and guarantee satisfaction All work sent us shall receive our prompt attention. Remember the place, Canadian Block, Berlin. Sign of the Sewing Machine and Saw, C. L. HENDERSON, 72 King St., Canadian Block. Established April 1, 1891. Now running by steam power. Fully grepared to all kinds of saw gumming and ling. . Skate grinding and grinding edge tools of every description, such as horse clippers, barber‘s clippers, barber‘s and tailor‘s shears. butoher‘a moat IiniGan: muin: it % io Aic es n e in e s tailor‘s shears, butcher‘s meat knives, prin ter‘s paper knives etc. Berlin Repair Shop, ‘V W are now prepared to fill orders for th best Scranton Coal in Egg, Stove or Nu size. We would advise all to order now befor an advance in price takes place. . The grobnb lities are that money will be saved bf ookin orders at once. _ We respectfully solicit you patronage. Orders left at our office at the co yard or at J. W. Fear & Co.‘s Hardware Sto1 will have our careful attention. PROPERTY FOR SALE, COAL ! Scranton Coal ! Waterloo Coal Yards. Telephone 134P. 0. Box 164, 1/’ | in Sreat variety kept constantly in steck also all kinds of FRESH GROCSRIES can always be aprocured at his shop. : CHRISTIAN A. HENRICH. St. Jacobs. 1 a He also does a retail trade in grains etc. COIKING AND PARLOR stoves, SHAEFER BROS. THf undersigned will pay the highpt market price for NELVS FROM ST. JACOBS BAFRYY, LATHE WORK OF ALL KINDS OATS, HOGG & HABBICK. TINWARE; Managing Director PEAS, WATERLOO, POTATOES, ETC. Machinist, Proprietor. CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER, WATERLOO. HERBERT J. BOWMAN, PROVINCIAL Land Surveyor, Civil Engineer and Draughtsman, Graduate of the Ontario School of Practical Science, and late assistant to the York T'ESEngineer on the construction of Pubâ€" lie Works, and the subâ€"division of lauds in the suburbs of Toronto. + Officeâ€"Court House, Berlin. JOSEPH MICKUS, HEIDELBERG, Licensep AvotionzEr. Salea Eromptly attended to. Satisfaction guar anteed. Orders lefé at the Heidelberg mill of: fice or Steiss‘s Hotel will receive prompt atten: tion. German and English spoken TKACHER of Instrumental Music. Organ and Piano, Terms modetate Henry J. Rockel, BUCKBERROUGH & BECHTEL, Fire and Accident Insurance Aients Waterloo, Ont., representing the best Stoc &nd Mutual Companies doing business in this Proâ€" vince. Money to loan at lowestcurrent rates. LIVERY AND EXCHANGE STABLHS. GEo. SUGertT, Proprietor. All kinds of conveyances constanly on hand, Charges moderate. Stables in rear of the Comâ€" mercial Hotel. 3 Opposite the Market square. An easy shave, a stylish hairâ€"cut, a good seaâ€" cam, an exhilirating shampoo,, always given. dies‘ and children‘s hair tastily cut. Will visit Baden the first Thursday and third Thursday of each month. Elmiraâ€"The second Thursday and Friday and fourth Thursday and Friday of each month _{IMON SNYDER, The new remedy for the painless extraction of teeth. This remedy is simple, effective and perfectly harmless. The preservation of the natural Teeth a specialty. OFFICE: YOST‘S BLOCK ELMIRA. DisEases or EYE ayp EAR TreatBeo. Offlceâ€"New residence, Albert street, Water loo, a short distance north of the late Dr. Walden‘s residence. DR, C. T. NCECKER, MEDALLIST OF TOâ€" RONTO University, Licentiate of the Colâ€" lege of Physicians, Surgeons and Accoucheurs of Ontario. Nitrogen monoxide_ gas and local anaesthet es for painless extraction of teeth. Dr, G, H. Bowlby breats diseases of the nose, throat and ear. DR. A. F. BAUMAN: Prvsicrax, SUurGEoN anp AccovenEur. Office and residenceâ€"Two doors north of resiâ€" dence formerly occupied by the late Dr. Walden on Albert street, Waterloo, _ ________ Issuer of Marriage Licenses. Offliceâ€"Post Office, St. Jacobs, Ont. ) _ _ Issuero Marriage Licenses. Officeâ€"At his Drug Store, Waterloo. ___ PHysicran,. SURGEOX Anp Accovenzur. Offlceâ€"In the rooms formerlg occupied bF W. Wells, L. D. S. over Mr. Fish‘s store (Bellâ€" inger‘s). Night calls answered at office. Tele} phone communication. D. BUCKBERROUGEH. Will cal at St. Jaéobs ingoing to Elmira ‘Waterloo Office open very day. is ost CORCeIT RRUUC ANC Conveyancer. Solicitor for the Canadian Bank of Commerce and County Solicitor.. _ Money to l>an on Mortgages. Office â€"Germania Block (upstairs), Queen reet. Berlin OHN L. WIDEMAN, w wEdemitene ANCRTT EUOIC Conveyancer, etc. Offlceâ€"Upstairs in Economical block,53 King Street West, Borlin. E" EORCUIOVET SUNC Public, Conveyancer, etc, (Money to loan.) Offles hours. 9.30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Office over Geo. Hasenflug‘s storo Tels hone communication OEHLMAN‘S BARBER SHOP, 109 King street east, Borlin. S(fecin.l attention Fpaid to Catatrh, Asthma and Chronic Discases. Aled in onl o n nneiien ied reb e radrmenec t id w 3W 303 store. Money to loan on Mortgages at lowest rates. Frien rck Corquroun. A. B. McBrip® Offlceâ€"New Insurance Buildings (upâ€"stairs,) King street, Waterloo, At branch office, Elmira, ever: Monday and Thursday afternoon. _ Office at %r. Walmsley‘s ahama )RS. D. S. & G. H. BOWLBY, Prrystcrans, Surerons, Erc. Dr. D. S. Bowlby, Coroner for the County 2o EOCISURINS 21 LAW Solicftors in all the courts, Notaries and Conveyancers. Money to lend on Mort.%nges lowest rates. Officeâ€"Court House, Ber in, W. H. BowLBy, M. A., LL.B., Q. C., County Crown Attornoy inlce and Clerk of the Peace ]OHI\ KING, Q. C., ‘ Solie Telephone communication. E Coroner County of Waterloo Officeâ€"At his residence on Erb street. Telephone communication, D. D. S. Philadelphia. L. D. S. Toronto. E. P. Chearenr Apply at residence,§ R. ARMITAGE OLQUHOUN & McBRIDE EO. H. HUTCHISON OWLBY & CLEMENT ____ Barristers, Solicitors Conveyancers. _ LEX, MILLAR, Q C H. WEBB M. D., R. HETT, WELLS, L. D. 8. C,. W WELLS, D. D. S., DEntISTs, WaTERLOO. MISS ANNIE R. BEAN, R. WILKINSON, D.D.9.L.D.S MISCELLANEOUS. ODONTUNDER. Office and Residenceâ€"John street LIVERIES. DENTAL __ WareRtoo axp EnatRa. InsuÂ¥Ance Buildings (upâ€"stairs,) Paora MEDICA L. Solicitor. Notary Public LEGAL. ALBERT STREET, Barrister, Solicitor Notary BARRISTERS AT LA W Solicitor, Notary Public WaTERLOO, ONT. B. E. BrogteL. , Notaries and . Waterloo and LUNG TROUBLES The Waterloo Bookstore is putting in one of the heaviest and best assorted stocks of wall papers in this district. He keeps all grades and prices [from [(2 cents a roll up. No trouble to show goods. A. L KUMPF A CENERAL â€"BANKINGC BUSINESS Interest allowed on sums of Four Dollars and upwards in . 6. O Drafts Issued on all Principal Points. Capital, $2,000,000. _ Rest, $1,100,000 The Molsons Bank. SNYDER‘S DRUG STORE, Sherk‘s Studio, Waterloo Good for the first of May until the first Oct. ‘The person holding this ticket is enâ€" titled to one first class passage on the P. H. W. from Waterloo to Chicago on foot or bicycle or to run after the train through the: St. Clair tunnel or to swim across the river if you can, provided said person get his Photo taken before the first of May at Exeursion â€" Tickets Waterloo, » The bar supplied with the choicest liquors and cigars of the best brand. Charles N. Rockel House and Sign Painter Firstâ€"class rigs and good reliable horses. Two and three seated carriages always in readiness» All_calls promptly attended to and char%es- moderate. Office and Livery in rear of the Zimmerman House. Entrance on King streeb,. next to Fischer‘s butcher shov. NORTH AMERICAN HOTEL. Orders left at this office will be promptl attended to. 8 P wC PETER STAUFFER, Licensed Auctioneer, BERLIN, = ONTARIO, Farm sales and siles of live stook will re: ceive prompt attention THE SAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT 42 Highest current rates on special deposits SALES conducted in all parts of Waterloo â€"County, Charges moderate, Orders b mail will receive prompt atteption. 3â€" g2r0FFICE ATTHE ZIMMERMAN HOUSE PETER SARARAS, Mannheim P Licensed Anctioncer for Waterloo County opposite Foundry, Waterloo, Ontario. JACOB BOEHMER, ProrrtEtor Guests will receive the best of attention Pleasant to take. Sales conducted in English and Garman. HEAD]OFFICE, MONTREAL. TERMS MODERATE. Licensed Auctioneer FOR THE COUNTY o® waTErLO® Livery, Sale and Exchange Stables; CHAS. H. FREHLICH, W. A. KUMPF, VETERINARY SURGEON THE BEST REMEDY FOR HOARSENESS BRONCHITIS ASTHMA OUGHS, 2 + L DS, CROUP Waterloo, Ont. TRANSACTED.; JACORB HESPELER, Manager Waterloo Branch AND and Paper Hanger; â€" â€" . Ontario Sure Cure.

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