iJ All the Members present The Reeve in the chair. The ininutes of the prev were read and adopted. The @bove explains itself. These young men were within range of sight when the commotion attracted their attention. They watched the proceedâ€" ings and now kindly offer to drive the last nail in our friend‘s coffin, Shouldn‘t wonder but Constant Reader may still have the brazen effrontery to tell these men they know nothing aboutit. Once upon a time two friends met. One exâ€" claimed, "Why, sir, I heard you were dead !" "Well," said the other, "I sup pose you see I am not." "Oh ! no," said the first, "I would believo the man who told me a good deal quicker than T would you." So also in this case, the scribe would believe the man who told him rather than any amount of eviâ€" dence to the contrary. Had Constant Reader himself been an eyewitness to the scene, he would doubtless find it necéessary to ask the "Rev. gentleman" whether he is at liberty to credit his own eyes, There is no denying facts. Every man, woman and child in the village knows the truth, and Constant Reader is simply making himself apâ€" pear ridiculous to the knowing public by his continuing to ignore the unmisâ€" takabie evidence of the fact that the boys did snowball the preacher. In conclusion, by way of exhortation we would say, come friend, make a desâ€" perate effort to be honest. Frankly admit like a gentleman that you had mistated the matter, and give us some assurance that you will behave like other men in the fuature and do as you preach. f _ Thanking you, Mr. Editor, and awaiting further developments, I remain, j Correspondent. The Municipal Council of the Town ship of Woolwich met at St. Jacobs on the 9th day of May A. D. 1893 pur suant to adjournment from last ses sion, New Dundee, May 13th, 1893 Dear sir :â€"We the undersigned cerâ€" tify to the correctness of an article as written by the New Dundee corresponâ€" dent in reference to . a snowballing affair with Rev. Mr. Learn last winter, being eyeâ€"witnesses to the same. We remain yours &c. involves the truth or falsehood of stateâ€" ments recently published.. In our last letter we furnished positive proof supâ€" portad by circumstantial evidence that the human figure calling bimself a preacher was snowballed and that be knew it. We gave the testimony of several participants and proved that even the honest scribe knew of the ocâ€" currence at the time. Now, how does Constant Reader clean himself ! He tries to wipe the dust from his face by washing in muck. He makes no atâ€" tempt at discrediting the proof we adâ€" ‘ duced, no attempt to offer counter eviâ€" dence, but cunningly imagines his misâ€" sion is complete when he offers thesingle solitary sentence, "I emphatically reasâ€" sert the correctness of my former. artâ€" icle.". That this should come from a Sunday school teacher and » classâ€"lead eris sufficient to draw tears from a church spire. We have frequently heard little children debate their differences by the powerful and allâ€"convincing arâ€" guments, "‘Tis so !" "‘Tain‘t so !" &c, &c, but we entertained hopes that our honest friend had passed beyond that stage of life. The fact‘C. Reader‘is someâ€" thing like Pat‘s snake. Two Irishmen landed in this country and for the first time encountered a snake. They batâ€" tered its head until they concluded life was extinct. They left the reptile but to their surprise it soon began to wrigâ€" tle as before. The Irishmen again atâ€" tacked it and completely severed its head from its body, andstill the tail conâ€" tinued to manifest life. Pat looked intently upon it, then tur ning to his comrade, said, "Shure and he‘s dead, only he is not yet conscious of it." Shure and "Constant Reader" is dead only he doesn‘t know. it. "Does it show the highest type of Christian character" for a man who lives several miles from the village and who claims to know nothing of the snowballing to brace himself with mulish obstinacy, flop his ears and repeat that his stateâ€" ments are correct whenthe boys confess their fault? Simply to see what this classâ€"leader‘s conscience will permit him to do if he is hard pressed we insert the following which was voluntarily handâ€" ed to us : To the Editor of the Chromicle: Woolwich Township Council New Dundee, May 15th, 1893 is called to our new line of biâ€"focal spectacles. People requirimg glasses for both distant and near vision should call at the White Drug Store, Berlin, and examine our stock. Only one pair of spectacles required for reading and distance. We make .a spccialty of work. Read the testiâ€" monials from those who are using them. Continued from First Page. , Druggist and Optician, 20 KING STREET WEST, BE J. H. LANDRETH, H. A. Copley. Jno. Kilty. John S. Rhodes Jos. Kropf. previcus session ATTENTJION Houghton, Mich., May 14.â€"Ten men wete dashed to pieces in the Red Jacket perpendicular shaft of the Caluâ€" met and Hecla mine at noon toâ€"day. The miners were coming up in the cage to dinner and the engineer hoisted the cage against the timbers of the â€"shaft and the .coupling pin broke, dashing men and cage downward over three thousand feet to the bottom. The names of the killed are :â€"Allen Camâ€" eron, James Cocking,, Joseph Pope, John Rodgers, John Bicks, Andrew Edno, Robert Wuopia, Michael Leavitâ€" to, James Trevni, Con. S. Sullivan. TWO SHIPS SUNK AT SEA Collisions Attended. With Koss of Life. London, May 14.â€"The captain of the steamer City of Hamburg, which arrived at Swansea toâ€"day from Hamâ€" burg, reports that at one o‘clock yesterâ€" day afternoon his vessel collided in a fog off Trevose Head, coast of Cornâ€" wall, with the ship Countess Evelyn, bound with passengers and iron ore from Bilbao, Spain, to Newport, Wales. The captain of the Countess Evelyn jumped aboard the City of Hamburg, and Mate Richards crawled to her They Fell Down the Shaft of a Michigan Minc, a Distanfe of over 3,000 Feet. Council adjourned to meet again on Monday the 29th day of May at the Township Hall, Crosshill, when the Court of Appeal and Revision will be held, and the clerk be instructed to adâ€" vertise the same. By Law No. 420 to appoint an Enâ€" gineer under the provisions of the ditch and water courses act was read the first second and third time, by which Herâ€" bert Bowman of Barlin was appointed. and Mate Richards crawled to her through a hole in the Countess Evelyn‘s _ Orders were granted as follows :â€" German Printing and Publishing Co. for printing, $27.00 ; Economicai Fire Ins. Co., 3 years‘ insurance of Townâ€" ship Hall, $7.00 ; C. Delion, printing in 1892; $2195, 1 We consider that an open ditch on the side of Townline road could be made easier than the East side, and could be kept in better repair with less expense and would give general satisâ€" faction to all parties interested. We would further recommend that some work be done on the said ditch on the West side of the road.â€"Committee. It was moved by Peter Dentinger, seconded by A. B. Robertson that the Council be ‘a . committee to inâ€" spect the different road divisions and let contracts where they find it necesâ€" sary to gravel the roads.â€"Carried. REPORT. Your committee appointed to inspect the ditch on Lot No 1. first concession Western section Wellesley beg to reâ€" port as follows :â€" Council met pursuant to adjournâ€" ment the 15th day of May 1893. All members present. The Reeve in the chair. The minutes of the previous session were read and adopted. After several communications were read and a certain deputation heard, The council then adjourned to meet again at St. Jacobs, on Tuesday the 30th day of May 1893, at 9 o‘clock a. m. _ The Court of Revision and appeal to be held on the same day, at 2 o‘clock Dam. Woolwich May 9th 1893 Seven hundred and fiftyâ€"one dollars were granted to the several pathmasâ€" ters for gravel and road improvements. The aforegoing petitions were laid over for future consideration. The following accounts were paid. George H. Bauman, for repairing culvert $3.00 ; Charles Ruppel for cofâ€" fin for Mrs. Dubrick $10.00. John Chalmers, of the Township of Pilkington presented a petition from five _ rate payers of the Township of Woolwich praying to have the lands of the said John Chalmers annexed to Union S. §. No. 2 Pilkington and Woolwich. Tilman S. Shantz, presented a petiâ€" tion from Isaace Devitt, and others praying. to have a new line of road opened leading west from Floradale road through the lands of Joseph Musâ€" selman and Tilmann S. Shantz, and to extend the same along the County line between Peel and Woolwich adjoining the land of Alexander Stoeser. Council met again. All the members present. After issuing a number of pathâ€"mas ter‘s orders, the council then adjourn ed for one hour at noon. Wellesley Township Council TEN MEN KILLED Jonx J Winmmax. Clerk J. L. Krorrson, Clerk BERLIN. A clever story of another kind is that of the new English novelist, Gilbert Parker, in the same uumber. ‘"American Society in Paris" is an article of another kind, but one which will interest all who have had occasiâ€" on to make even a short residence in the French capital, The CosmoroLITaX scores a success in producing in its May number, almost simultaneously with the daily papers, an elaborate description of Professor Gray‘s marvellons . invention, the Telautograph, which reproduces the hand writing, or the work of the artist, simultancously, thousands of miles distant from the place where the writer or artist is sitting. Mr. Howell‘s purpose in "The Traveller from Altruria" is, menth 1y month, becoming more evident, and is now receiving wide attention at the hards of the critics all over the world. if science were to predict tomorrow that the end of the world would arrive within the next thirty days, ‘The answers are various and curious, and heighten the interest which is felt in the second part of Flammarion‘s great novel, which appears in the May Cosâ€" AMOPOLITAN. _ It is a question which everyone will find interesting to ask of himself ; What would you do if within six weeks the end of the world were certain ? Probablyno novel which has ever appeared in an American magazine has been more ele borately illustraâ€" ted by more distinguished artists. _ Laurens, Saunier, Vogel, Meaulle, Rochegrosse, Geraâ€" din and Chovin all contribute to the explaâ€" nation of the text. A New York daily paper, taking up the idea conveyed in Flammarion‘s exciting novâ€" el, "Omega : The Last Days of the World." has interviewed a number of the leading men in all professions as to what they would do A German student wrestling with the English language rendered a text as follows : "The ghost is willing, but the meat is feeble." Floods in the South. Arkansas City, Ark., May 12.â€"Parâ€" ties from Linkeport report that the break in the levee occurred one mile and a half below that place, near Brooks Mill, where a crevasse occurred last year.. Fears are entertained that the opening will increase rapidly before the ends can be tied. The water that comes out through the break will flood all of the lower part of the country. The country submerged is the finest cotton country in the world. The crops had just been planted and prospects were good. It is the same country that was overflowed last year and in which no crops could be raised. The prospects are that if the water will remain over the country long that no crops can be grown. _ The people are already impoyâ€" erished by the floods of previous years and in many instances were almost destitute, it was with difficulty they succeeded in mortgaging their lands to secure advances this year, and now that the flood has come great destituâ€" tion will prevail. _ The other day a Springfield hen laid an egg which measured 8} inches in cireumference one way and 5$ inches in cireumference the other. We res pectfully call the attention of the hen editor of the Hamilton Spectator to the fact. If his polled Angus hens cannot beat this it is time for the pubâ€" lic to know it, _ He has been posing as an authority on hens and as a hen raiser long enough, and if he cannot bring his hens up to the seratch. and outâ€"lay these back township, hens the sooner the world knows it ‘the better, so that he may be stripped of the jackâ€" daw feathers in which he has been strutting so long, imagining himself some pumpkins on henology. Produce your hens, Specky dear, and let the people see. what they can do. Are: they genuine Cotswolds or only mongâ€" 1 rels ? Private dispatches have been receivâ€" ed to the effect that the Commercial Bank Company, Sydney, New South Wales, has suspended. For this and othâ€" er reasons the uneasiness on the London Stock Exchange is increasing. The Commercial Banking Company of Sydâ€" ney is one the oldest banking establishâ€" ments in the Antipodes, having been established in 1834 and incorporated in 1848, The capital is £600,000 ard the reserve fund was stated to be £830, 000. T. A. Dibbs is the general manâ€" ager in Sydney. _ The Commercial Banking Company has many branches in Queensland and New South Wales. Brisbane, May 15.â€"The bank of North Queensland (limited) has susâ€" pended. _ The Queensland National Bank bas also suspended. The deposâ€" its in the Queensland National Bank last December amounted to £8,500,000 of which amount about oneâ€"half was from Great Britain. The subscribed capital of the Queensland Bank is £1,â€" 600,000, of which one balf is paid up. The bank has claimed a reserve fund of £485,000. The bank has branches in Sydney and other places in Austâ€" ralia. gors. Boats were lowered at once from the City of Hamburg, but the search in the fog proved almost uselsss, Seaman Jarbin was picked up, but he died a few minutes after having been brought aboard the steamer. The dead body of a little girl was also fyund. Otherwise the attempt at rescue was resultless. The lost passengers were the English wife and the son and daughter of a Spanish gentleman in Bilbao ; Mrs. Williams, her son and infant daughter ; two men named Barâ€" ton, and a Londoner whose name has not been asce rtained. quarter. Ninety seconds later the Countess Evelyn went under with her crew of sixteen and with nine passenâ€" Australian Banks Go Under. A Big Hens‘ Egg. Dundas Banner. Waterloo County Chronicls. of the Rockies is equal to 113,220,000 bushels, which shows a further decrease from the previous week ; but compared with a year ago there is an increase of 42,000,000 _ bushels. â€" This, however, will not count for much if the injury to the winter wheat crop in Europe is as great at the present estimated, in which event $1.00 wheat will be very reasonable. There can be no doubt that the past two weeks have worked a wonderful change in the aspect of the wheat market, the prospective supâ€" If present appearances regarding the crop shortage in the United States and Europe are not misleading, much highâ€" er prices are sure to be realized during the coming cereal year. Since the last reports of the continued drought in Engiand and on the Continent were received, along with the irreparable injury said to bave been done, the price of July wheat in Chicago has adâ€" vanced 7c to 8c per bushel from the lowest prices touched, which show good profits to thase who bought at about bottom figures, The visible supply of wheat in the United States and Canaâ€" d has been reduced from 75,027,000 bushels 73,068,000 bushels, showing a decrease of 1,959,000 bushels on the week. The amount of wheat and flour on passage last week to Europe and the visible supply of wheat on the side east TE WIMEAT PROBRLEM. The outlook for the wheat crop on both sides of the Atlantic is far less promising than it was a month ago, some wellâ€"known authorities placing the yield in the United States at 350,â€" 000,000 bushels, but,of course, it is yet too early to estimate the quantity with any degree of accuracy, although the reports from the winter wheat sections are very disappointing, and would cerâ€" tainly indicate a considerable decrease as compared with the crop of 1892. Then again the severe drought, says the Trade Bulletin, that occurred in England during the month of March and into the first week of April must have wrought great injury to the winâ€" ter wheat ; and as the principal wheatâ€" growing sections on the continens of Europe have been similarly affected by the drought, it seems that a general shortage may be expected on the other side. LocktE.â€"On the 11th inst. in Waterloo, Wim. Lockie, aged 79 years, 3 months and 21 days. : Ganzrâ€"On the 8th inst, at New Hamburg, Samuel Gabel, adopted son of John E. Roth, aged 21 years, 5 months and 18 days. Yacerâ€"On the 4th inst, at New Hamburg, Barbara, beloved wife of Henry Yaggi, aged 44 years, 1 month and 20 days. Urrrrscrtagcâ€"On the 8th inst., at St. Agâ€" atha, John Ueberschlag, aged 52 years. Smatpsonâ€"On the 5th inst., at Berlin, Tindâ€" ill Simpson, aged 59 years, 5 months and 22 daks. ie o in P m mt co is t ids 1. Bn ib uce m t Bs t a d Rev. W. Y. Yaeger, of Hespeler, Henry John Kraft, of Shakespeare, to Emma Jane Miles, of Hespeler. O‘Doxornorâ€"HExrorrer.â€"On the 7th inst. by the Rev. P. H. Aeymans, of Berlin, Lorenz O‘Donohoe, of Windham, to Lovina Henhocfer, of Williamsburg. Bavairaxâ€"HAUseR â€"On the 8th inst., Anton Bauman, of Berlin, to Catherina Hauser, of Hespeler. GrEsâ€"UntsAcH.â€"On the 16th inst. at New Hamburg, by the Rev. J. A. Schmidt, Anthony Gies, of St. Jacobs to Adeline Umbach, of New Hamburg. DEATHIS Ortroâ€"On tho 9th inst, at Sebringvilla, Valâ€" entine Otto, aged 67 years, 6 months and 19 days. MARKET REPORTS. The cheapest and very best from 2¢: per roll upwards, Ingrains and felt papers at half price can be seen at Hymmen and Russel‘s Hardware store aut. Weberand An‘a. market ornnary: auc Weberand Co‘s market grocery No old stock. All new goods. Sundays Owing to the pressure from the peoâ€" ple, the directors of the World‘s Fair have decided to keep the gates open on peua‘es WALL PAPER, Mr. Erastus Wiman made a general assignmenent to D. B. King, of New York. A. VETTRR, BURTHS. PCAS (.....l.k6ke.. MHBYEIFE s namcrr ce in SHAW Lo L.rrafcalnes Wood per cord...... Eggs per dozen ..... Butter dairy packed Butter rolls...... .. Cheek@ ........0n2.. Potatoes per bag ... Apples ...... t..... Rorko i n ica ces‘ Fall Wheat......... Spring 8 .0..2.... Straight Flour...... Ocean Di Middlings........~/. Shortsl....nanvalladr Branc c onl asie ce PoR8. rswsnaralee dn noe Batrleyss..ltl u0. dal B&B¢.. 00â€" im taie es Butbersonell uie Dried Apples....... Hay per ton.. ....... Apples per bushel.. Potatoes per bushel Hamng..â€"c.covnlcnet. Shoulders per Ib.. ... Boude Arrceueree nae Talloworelenai en Flour (Roller) Fall wheat... White Wheat Spring Wheat Goose Wheat Bran i.i iss Middlings ... Shorte....... Barley....... Oate m ut‘ .. ROMSL ... 62e ne ++ Oe l tlfll. Potatoes, per bush Rye: s/..idn/2.. Flour, per 100 lbs Butter, per Ib ... Eggs, per doz. ... Hay, per ton..... Hides: per lb. ... Sheepskins each . Fall Wheat, . . Spring Wheat Goose Wheat . Barley....... Dressed hogs, per cwt Chickens, per pair.... Butter, pet lbl..uuce s Egos, new laid.... ... Potatoes per bag ... Apples, per barrel..., . Hay, thnothy NSJ!.... Straw, ‘sheatou.:..2. Toronto, May, 16th 1893. STREET MARKET, About 50 loads of hay were offered toâ€"day and prices were about $1 per ton lower, ranging from $10 to $12 per ton. The deâ€" mand was only fair. Straw was in fair supâ€" ply and steady at $8 to $9 per ton for bundâ€" led and §4 to $5 for loose. Receipts of other lines were almost nil and prices remain genâ€" erally at Saturday‘s quotations. Wheat, fall, per bush...... $0 69 to§0 70 Wheat, red, per bush......"0 66 / 0 00 Wheat, spring, per bush... 0 00 0 00 Wheat, goose.per bush......0 00 0 62 Barley........ u.. rclllccct0 43". 1000 Oatez. ul lt 2 se acee. mom Liverroor, May, 15.â€"Wheat steady; de mand fair, holders offer moderately. tor common ones. . Mr. Bourassa bought the two best calves on the market for $16. Sheep are slightly lower in price, atb from 4# to 5¢. })er 1b for the unshorn and from 41 to 4Jc do or the shorn sheep. There is an active deâ€" mand for good lambs, as the supply is too small for the demand, and prices kept pretty high for this season of the year. â€"Mr. Joseph Richard bought 8 good lambs at $4.25 each. Fat hogs are slightly higher in price at from 64c to a little over 62c per lb. _ Lean hogs sold atfrom $7 to$11 each; a lot of $ lean hogs were sold here for $63. 4c do, while the half fatted beasts and milkâ€" men‘s strippers sold at from 34 to 34c per Ib. A few cattle were bought by shippers at from 4} to 4c per lb. ‘Calves sold at from §5 to $8 for good ones and from $2 to $4 each overâ€"supply of 5a,ttle, and trade was slow, with more or less decline in the prices of all kinds of cattle. The best butcher‘s cattle were sold at about 4%c per lb, with pretty good stock, including large fat cows, at about 4o do, while the half fatted beaste and milli MoxTrEAr. May 15.â€"The live stock exâ€" port trade is now in full swing, but the prosâ€" pects are not very encouraging, all advices from the English and Scotch salesmen advisâ€" ing the greatest of eaution. The quotation for finest steers in Liverpool toâ€"day was only 6d. _ While this is a better price than at the same time lasgyear,.the indications are that there will be another marked decline before next Monday. _ There have not been so many cattle shipped as there were at this time last season, the exports to Saturday last being 4,822 head, 6,540 head up to the corresponding date last year, but the shipâ€" ments of last year were distributed to a greater number of parts, while Liverpool and London will take the bulk of last week‘s shipments, and shippers feel that if the niarâ€" ket is weak with no Canadians avriving they will be worse when large supplies of Canadâ€" ians are offered for sale. The farmers and holders of cattle in the country are still askâ€" ing for rather higher prices, but the shippers are not doing any business of importance, So far ascan be learned. There were about 600 headiof butchers‘cattle, 300 calves, 250 sheep and lambs and 65. lean hogs offered at the east end abattoir toâ€"day. _ The butchers were out in large numbers, but were in no hurry to buy upon seeing that there was an LVE STOCK MARKETS, THE BRITISH CATTLE MARKET. LIvERPOoL, May 15,â€"The demand is only fair, and the market slightly easier, alâ€" though receipts of Canadian and United States cattle are reported light, and general home supplies moderate. The following ?‘rices, calculated at $4.80 to the £ rule: Finest steers, 12%¢, good to choice, 11}; poor to medium, i0%c; inferior and bulls. 8 to O%c. plies have undergone a big shrinkage ; and the chances nre that values will steadily improve if the reported injury to the growing crop has not been ex. aggerated. Itis about time there was a change. (Reported by Jonathan Uttley.) Elmira, May, 16, 1893. ‘heat,................80 63 to §0 63 t Whest...v.0:../v... / 060 0 60 Wheat um aace uiul o ae. 0 89 0 60 hn sn penitndire esns ciscln e alo 00 040 ue trmaitests urealetie ns o e (0.B9 0 57 MAE AAE rorncrexne e eceed :000 0 31 esy perbush."..2...â€"00.0040" . 0 50 d drlrelivl o. ol oaipiB4us . 0.56 per 100 Ibg=..¢..2â€" .10 180 0 .00 y per 1B coall o era 2els O 14 0 15 perdoz...?.c2..%.....200â€"10 0 00 per ton:2.. .. ¢ ... ... 6.00 700 per Ib. .n culu. Lt2l. 0084 0 04 ilking each ... .......2..0 65 100 WATERLOO MARKETS. WaTERLOO, May 10 th, 1893. _ B s se ancealeao. o e on aciius $0000 $ CUELPHIC MARILETS, Guelph, April l1th. 1893 Heryostss.s . sluas 2 .§1 85 2 ieR e t rionicmianie se es 0 60 0 MEAG .+. rcrmarsnnss 0 00 0 heat ... o. tersc... 0 5§ 0 feat. nsc ers., 1 58 0 ainles eale enraisie sn 8 00. / 43 Erigris is stt siexinsi ns 18 00. 18 tavlne rene elm esc s 40 00â€" 15 rahicite ces siceinals sns T00 7 cOrd /ssc .lsav en 400 4 dozen ............ OH 0 ity packed........ 014 0 is it se rocccareceme d 18 0 mmpanneiees c omed d 0 TORONTO MARKETS. BLMRA MARKETS GRAIN MARKETS, 0 35 7 00 0 43 0 38 0 61 s 00 0 75 o 19 0 114 7 00 30 13 10 11. 16 60 32 55 13 00 18 00 15 00 0 40 5l 0 60 7 50 3 50 4 50 012 0 17 020 012 0 80 0 65 7 50 $ 0 62 62 2 00 2 25 2 10 0 65 0 65 0 58 62 40 15 20 43 8 00 50 0 12 11 14 This is a new business. for our town and we have every reason to believe that our efforts will be appreciated and that we will be favored with your work. _A trial solicited. Office: Boehmer‘s Block, Waterloo, J. ECHART, THE WATERLOO CHRONICLE OFFICE Waterloo, Ont. The Star Laundry, FOUR hundred acres of land in Michigan 150 acres improved, balance heavy timâ€" bered with basswood, maple, elm, and 40 acres with cedar, Well watered; small creek flowing throughitin which are abundance of trout. Within a mile of the Chicago& West Michigan Railway, and eiggxt miles west of Petoskey Fine bank barn, best in Charlevoix County. Fine land for wheat, corn and other cereals. Flourishing young orchard, 250 agple trees and 75 plum trees. Two dwellings which will ansâ€" wer for three or four years. ‘This property will be sold en bloc or will be divided into two parts One half cash, balance at 6 per cent. Good reasons for selling. Qccugja.nt wishes to retire. A splendid opportunity for a man of limited capital. If not sold the farm_ will be rented on shares. For further particulars apply to Ontario Mutual Life Assurance Company will be held in the TOWN HALL, WATERLOO, ONT. on THURSDAY, May 25th, 1893, at Oneof the Clock, p. m. WM. HENDRY, ;PURSUANT to the Act of Incorporation, Notice is hereby given that the 23rd Annual Mecting of the Conrad Hofman Will make his announceâ€" ments from time to time in this space. Has contracted for this space: April 22nd, 1893. Philip Hohmeier, Gas Fitter, Plumber, &c. does all kinds of Laundry work in first class style. 921 FOR SALE OR TO ;RENT, ANNUAL MEETING. WATERLOO, â€"â€"theâ€" Proprietor Manager, es. A trial will convince. finest work at reasonable pricâ€" CHRONICLE OFFICE. The For Printing of every Description Job Department All these requisites are found ) in the which has more readers in Waâ€" terloo County than any other paper Waterloo County Chronicle Productive Advertising is to he found ONLY in a medium of wide ‘circulation, character and influence among those whom adâ€" vertisers desire to reach. Advertise liberally The CHRONICLE gives all the facts within its realm and reaches more inhabitants in Waterloo County than any other paper published. Leave your orders at the â€"â€"â€"BUT _ Advertise Right,