Waterloo Public Library Digital Collections

Waterloo County Chronicle, 23 Nov 1893, p. 6

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

«"Miss Anderson, my friend, Mr. Ranâ€" dolph. _ You must excuse me now, my duties as floor manager being someâ€" what onerous, and I shall have to leave «"Dear old Charley ! What a noble fellow, he is," mused Guy Randolph,as he sauntered off the piazza down toâ€" ward the springs. "Last summer I might have argued just as he does, but that was before 1 had learned my lesâ€" sons in such a bitter school. I am not likely to forgetit. Miss Carruthers, you are welcome to your conquest; and toâ€"night I am to be introduced to Miss Aunderson. I wish I hadn‘tâ€"Execuse me; I beg pardon!" for Guy‘s reverie had been suddenly interrupted by his stumbling almost over a young lady standing in his path. ; «Certainly," a sweet voice replied. A pair of laughing blue eyes met his as he stood with uncovered head and a look of unconscious admiration. Then both pursued their way. "Don‘t be so absurd, old fellow. Since your loss of fortune, you seem to imagine the women to have suddenly become morbid fortuneâ€"hunters. For my part, I believe the girls of the presâ€" ent day to be as nobleâ€"souled, as trueâ€" hearted as ever were their grandmothers m the boasted age of the past. True, there is a new element of fashion and frivolity, there are temptations now which were then unknown, but look underneath. â€" Guy, old fellow, beneath the silk and lace and outward adornâ€" ment, and you will find hidden the most precious jewel, which only needs a wearer to give forth its brightest rays." "A capital sermon. Charley. You have missed your vocation. Au revour, until this evening;" and with a cordial shake of the hand the two friends partâ€" 23 "Introduce me, Charley ? Certainly, by all means, although I am not a deâ€" sirable parti," and a touch of sarcasm rang through Guy Randolph‘s clear tones. The deacon smiled and bowed his head; «"Then your bill is nothing" he said. "‘God‘s be the glory, you say ! Good bless you,doctor! goodâ€"day! goodâ€"day If ever I doctor that woman again, I‘ll give her medicine made by men. "I really think she will worry through; She scolds me just as she used to do. All the people haye poohed and shirredâ€" All the neighbors have had their word; *Twere better to perish some of ‘em say, Than be cured in such an irregular way." ©Your wife," said I, "had God‘s good care And his remedies, light and water and air. All of the doctors, beyond a doubt, Couldn‘t have‘cured Mrs. Rogers without. Deacon Rogers he came‘to mé; _ "Wife is a getting her health," said he I opened the blinds; the day was bright, And God gave Mrs. Rogers some light. I opened the window; the day was fair, And God gave Mrs. Rogers some air. Bottles and blisters, powders and pills, Catnip, boneset, sirups and squills; Drugs and medicines, high and low, T threw them as far as I could throw. «‘What are you doing ?" my patient cried "En’ghte‘auing death," I coolly replied, Guy Randolph‘s Choice, Poor old woman, she takes ‘em all." Mrs. Rogers lay in her hed, Bandaged and blistered from foot to head Blistered and bandaged from head to toe Mrs. Rogers was very low. Bottle and saucer, spoon and cup, On the table stood bravely up; Physics of high and low degree; Ca.fi)mel, catnip, boneset tea; Evetything a body could bear, Excepting light and water and air. Came from the hillside cot With shining pails, and gay, Glad shout to spend the day In golden temples fair : « Now, squirrels, you must sh Whether you will or not !" "October gives her yield Of treasures, rare and wild, To those who seek her grace; Who know her times and place To those who love her gold, As well as nuts unrolled Deacon Rogers he came to me: «Wife is agoin‘ to die," said he. *‘Doctors great and doctors small, Haven‘t improved her any at all. Physic and blisters, powders and pills, And nothing sure but the doctor‘s bills ! Twenty women with remedies new, Bother my wife the whole day through. v_-?‘weet as honey, or bitter as vall, Ax.}il Fresl, and darkâ€"eyed Nell And burst the burrs in twain, And, in the morn, was found, Wide scattered on the ground, Brown nuts in cradled leaves, Waiting the chattering thieves But Jack Frost came at nicht Brown burrs in pendants hung, Mocking the squirrel‘s tooth Which sought to pierce their Truth And burst their leaves apart To gain thelr meaty heart, The spreading beeches stood $ A wreath of living gold, And showered, with profuse hand, Rare leaves upon the land,* That, overlzpping, lay A carpet, soft and gay, Along their glittering bouchs To squirrel and to child Whose bite had proved in vain Of which his sire had s{m, Relieved by shades more bold THE FALLING OF THCE NUTS. JENNIE WREN THE DOCTOR‘s sTORY E. H. CHASE WILL CARLETON OETRY, â€"[Housekeeper share, "Let us go outside.. I am tired of all this light and merriment. I want quiet and rest. Then when they had strolled out to the piazza, almost deserted, with the the yi pered "I am honored," he coldly said, and drawing Miss Carruthers to him, they were soon‘ lost in the dance. Lower and lower dropped her head, until it almost settled on his shoulder. The perfume of her hair was wafted toward him ; more tightly his grm encircled the yielding form, till at last she whis* I > (Coo mt Conacmierrena one by one, from his warped vision, and he saw things in a now light. "Guy, I have rescued this dance for you," he heard spoken in his‘ ear, as he was about entering the ball room, and turning to her who spoke. * Even in the mazes of the dance that night, with his arm encircling Nellie Anderson‘s slender waist, he. saw watching them two dark eyes. An echo of the past they stirred him to the depths, and resurrected all the hidden bitterness he had thought forâ€" ever sast, till Nellie, looking into his face with wandering eyes, pondered what change had come unto him. So days passed on ; days, when to escape from himself, or the burning gas of the eyes which haunted him, he often sought Nellie Anderson‘s side. She was like a cooling spring in a deâ€" sert wild, a sweet fresh rose in an arid wilderness, till gradually the scale fell, _Into Ina Carruthers eyes came a lightning flash. This was the man who, when last she had seen him, she had sent from her‘doomed to future misery by her own judgment. Once she had swayed him at her will, seen all the fierce, unmastering passions of his love, given him the promisehe had asked of her, sworn love for love, till came the crash and loss of fortune, when she had bid him go. She could not wed herself to poverty. But in the long months which followed there came a strange loneliness into her life which proved how weak was her strength ; and when she learned how out of the debris of his fortune Guy Randolph was bravely building up auew wealth and honor, she determinâ€" ed once more to lure him to his side. } Guy Randolph and Miss Anderson were returning from a long horseback ride up the mountain side when first he saw her. He had just assisted Miss Anderson to dismount, had breathed something into her ear which brought the bright blood to her face then turned to meet Ina Carruthers‘ dark eyes fixed upon him.. For a moment he turned deathly pale; then, becoming himself, with a low bow would have passed on, but nothing daunted, she held out to him one small hand, and said, in her softest tones : "Guy, have you no welcome for me?" "I, of course, am very happy to see Miss Cartuthers." â€" Then dropping, without the faintest pressure, the hand sparkling with jewels passed on. _â€"_ But between him and his bitter revâ€" erie would come a pair .of eyes laughâ€" ing in his own, the memory of a cheek, with the blood stealing upward at some whispered word of his into the pretty ear, a mouth whose every line spoke frankness, and he could not put the seal upon his own harsh verdict. One afternoon there came a new arâ€" rival at the Springs, a Miss Carruthers who had come to join her aunt, already domiciled, . A tall handsome brunette, with a figure of striking elegance, she searcely could pass unnoticedany where. "She is like all the rest," he would sometimes muse when alone at night, enveloped in a cloud of tobacco smoke, his favorite hour for meditation. "Was there ever yet a woman who had not surface charm? Underneath she is doubtless false as the rest !" Weeks passed, and Guy Randolph found the words he had so jestingly spokon of awakening from his lethargy were becoming reality. In this girl‘s fresh young beauty and frank enjoyâ€" ment of every pleasure, he found a strange delightâ€"an interest he would have scarcely deemed possible could be aroused in him. ’ "Don‘t be satirical, Mr. Randolph. I find the earth too pleasant to look far beyond it, Are you having a pleasant summer?‘ "«Very pleasant, as summers go, but I have been through so many of them with the same routine, that eventually it becomes wearisome. However, after tonight I trust to awaken fron: my lethargy. Can you resist this waltz, Miss Anderson|(? Do give me the pleaâ€" sure, _ I know you love dancing, and of course you dance well." __"Can you testify to that? I have been haunted â€"all day by a pair of blue eyes, suddenly brought to earth from their far off gaze, and wondered what they thought of the mundane wretch who dared thus interrupt their reverie. Had I known I was to have been brought to face their batteries I fear my appetite would have deserted me entirely." ‘‘Don‘t speak of it, Mr. Randolph. It was my fault fully as much as your own, and no serious damage was done on either side." ing." For in the pretty, blushing face before him Guy had recognized the lady whom he had nearly stumbled over a few hours before. "A very difficult task, indeed, but one I must preface by apologizing for my awkward encounter of this mornâ€" you to entertain each other unsatisfied. I know it will be hard work," and, with a bright laugh Charley disappeared. be satirical, Mr. Randolph. I irth too pleasant to look far Are you having a pleasant T L2 td snn "What are some of the qualifications for a book agentâ€"what are your methods ?" As for Longfellow, he was a phenomenâ€" ally successful book agent, and so was was Mark Twain and Daniel Webster and Bret Harte and Rutherford H. Hayes andâ€"and scores of others inâ€" cluding Napoleon Bonaparte." «"Are you not piling it on a little?" ‘‘No, sir. I can prove that Bonaâ€" parte was a book agent for Boulanger et Cie, the noted French Book pubâ€" lishers. And yet your beggarly little twoâ€"fora nickel dude clerks sniff at the idea of working as book agent." ‘â€"‘"Nob necessarily. . George Washingâ€" ton was a book agent for a short time, and I‘m afraid he lacked one of the chief qualifications for a story tellerâ€" I mean the ability to lie like thunder. "Brownâ€"Brownâ€"Brownâ€" Brown, Alexander â€" Brown, Bartholomew,â€" Brown, Benjaminâ€"Brown, Benjamin â€"Johnâ€"ah, here we are!" said St. Peter. ("Brown, BenjaminJoln, dâ€"d. First door to the left, Mr. Brown. Mind the step ? " "Well, I should say so. Why, I went into Claflin‘s a few weeks ago, and how many sets of Dickens did I sell, do you think ? I sold fiftyâ€"two sets, at $10 a set. My commission was 25 cent. I cleared $130 out of that one house. On some works only 20 per cent, is paidâ€"encyclopedias, for exâ€" ample. But the beauty of it is that your commussion is paid promptly when you turn in the order. There‘s money in this business, I tell you. â€" How did all the wealthy book publishers get their start? Why, as book agents. Appleton began that way. So did Osâ€" good. So did my brother, P. I. Colâ€" lier._ But if I named the wealthy, people or the famous people who began as book agents, I would give you a list as long as a voters‘ register. Jay Gould for instance, was a book agent, and a most successful one. ~Jay‘s strong suit was in telling stories. He would get into a store or office and get all the elerks around him by telling a funny story. _ Then he would spring his book on them. He had four or five stock stories that he told pretty well. He had chem committed to memory as a matter of business. One of them was about Benjamin John Brown. The story as Jay Gould used to tell it, was that Brown died and went to Heaven. He knocked at the gate. St. Peter admitted him to the vestibule. "What‘s your name?" says St. Peter. "Benjaâ€" min â€" John Brown," says Brown. "Bring me ledger ©B,‘ said St. Peter to one of the clerks, Ledger B was brought. St. Peter turned tke leaves until he found the Browns. Then he ran his finger down the list. «"A successful book agent must be a good story teller." In a recent interview with a reporter of the New York Sun, Mr. John T. Collier gave some good points relating to canvassing books. , When asked if it was a profitable occupation Mr. Colâ€" lierreplied,â€" Tt is Hard to Get Men Tackle a Job at Book Canvassing. "One needs some "I had thought my poor, shipâ€" wrecked vessel hopelessly stranded,darâ€" ling; for what vessel can sail the broad sea of life without a woman at the power !â€"had lost faith and hope; had grown almost reckless; until in the first glimpse into your eyes I read there love and truth. You have saved me, Nellie. But I need you, darling. T cannot spare you longer from my side. Will you come to meâ€"come as my wife ?" «Pity ! Had you pity when you sent me from your presence, ready to blot out my existence through you?! I thought my faith in women forever lost. What were your vows when you }swore you loved me? Faise! false as the lips which uttered them. The rose without its fragrance is less, Ina, than the humblest wild flower growing at your feet. â€" The perfume has fled, the past is buried. And since God has given me back my shattered faith I can say ; I forgive you. Nayâ€"more ; T say thank you." Then Ina Carruvhers knew her game was lost. _ She had played her last card and failed to take the trick. Later that evening Guy Randolph again paced the piazza with another by his side, and into Nellie‘s ear he poured the story of his life. "It was all a mistake, Guy, but have been the sufferer. Have you nc word of pity for me ?" "Ina, I can readily forgive ; since the lesson you have taught tunately did not come to late to i both our lives. There was a tim could have cursed you. That hour passed. .Herreafter we will meet triends." "I am here, Guy," was her answer came a sweeter, purer vision of a girl who neither asked nor sought forâ€" giveness, and he found strength to answer : old witching sweetness she so thore 1y understood, slie whispered : "Guy, will you forgive me!?" looking up into his face, with the in which gleamed the depth of pas ate love of which her nature was able, she waited the answer she fel sure would follow. But into Guy Randolph‘s eyes c a strange stern look, all new to Between him and this darkâ€"eved s Waterloo Ccunty Chpronicle, TT SELLING BOOKS I can readily forgive you, lesson you have taught for did not come to late to mar nerve, of course, as a time I That hour has eyes crept e felb siren cirl An exchange tells of a woman who bought a newâ€"fangled coffee pot from a peddlar. In the evening she showed it to her husband, who totd her he kept the same thing in his store for half the price she. paid. "Well," she said, "why don‘t you advertise? Noâ€" body krows what you have for sale " A wonderful new combination is R. Stark‘s Headache, Neuralgia and Liver Powders, nice to take: perfectly harmâ€" less. _ Mr. Wills, Chief of Police, Woodstock, says: "A sure cure every time." â€" Ald. Farmer, Barrister, Hamâ€" ilton, says: ‘"I experienced almost imâ€" mediate relief from their use, for sick headaches." : Mr. Mercer, contractor, Hamilton, says: "I consider them a very valuable remedy, and far surpassâ€" ing many I have tried." Mrs. Gaston, Hamilton, says: _ "I have derived great benefit from them, having been a long time a sufterer from headache, bilâ€" iousness and neuralgia." Mrs. Crist, Hamilton, says: _ ‘"No medicine or doeâ€" tors did my daughter any good until we used Stark‘s Headache, Neuralgia and Liver Powders; they have effected a complete cure." . Mrs. Keats, Hamilâ€" ton says: "Your powders have been the } greatest blessing to me." Price, 25 cents a box. Sold by all medicine dealâ€" ers. 44â€" D Nerve, tact, and gentlemanly behavior |are the chief requisites. It won‘t do to go into a place shrinkingly, as though begging a favor.. You must go in as though you expected a courteous welcome, as though you had called to confer a favor as much as to receive one. . Be easy and confident, and waste no words with busy men. , For exâ€" ample, I talkle the head of the departâ€"â€" ment by saying: ‘Six volumes of Dickens, complete; special bargain? delivered at once at 25 cents a week. I hold out one of the books as I say this, and the chances are ten to one that he will take a moment to look at it. That gives me an opportunity to talk.. The 25â€"cent a week catches him â€"that and the immediate delivery of the six volumes. / Nobody. misses twen:yâ€"five cents a week. It is beti;er" to start with the head of a departâ€" ment, for if you catch him you will have little trouble catching the clerks. If he is satisfied you have a good thing, he will help you. _ I always find it that way. But half of the felâ€" lows who so out as book agents are seedylooking fellows, who have probabâ€" ly failed at everything else, and take to book canvassing as a last resort. Such fellows needn‘t try to go into busy stores or officesâ€"they are orderâ€" ed out on sight. â€" They are the fellows who pester the poor in the tenement districts. Good men are at a premium â€"but it is the same in every business." Of pure Nomwegian Cod I/iver_} Oil and Hypophosphites» «; strengthens | Wegk Lungs,: checks alI: Wasting Diseases and is‘ a remarkable‘ Flesh Producer. Almost as Palatable as Milk, Prepared only by Scott & Bowne, Bollevitie, Yes, but feed it with Scott‘s Emulsion. Feeding the cold kills it, and no one can afford to have a cough or cold,acute and leading te consumption, lurking around him. SCOTT S | ? f & 7 ? J IWW QR:N ‘«%?mfi‘i @â€"STARK‘S Heafachs, Neuraly A sure cure for all Head Paing hsn Complaints, B; The Men you pecial bargaing cents a week.‘ books as I say are ten to one ay, N.v. 238, 1898 â€"Page Phone 124 Empire Tea Co. A.â€"G. CHAMBERS. The people‘s store for choice Teas, Coffees, Baking Powder, Coâ€" coa, Cocoanut and Chocolate. Beautiful premiums with every 1b. China, Crockery, Glassware, Silâ€" verware, etc. Large stock, large assortment _ newest goods and prices right. No better place to buy wedding presents, gifts, preâ€" sentations, etc. Give us a call. Special inducements. Goods deâ€" livered to any part of Waterloo free. The best place to obtain it is at the Galt Business College. _ _ Go to a reliable and well known business school that has an esta.blished.repufation for practical Business Training. T E4T 6 is within the reach of every person who learns to do well thosethings which are necâ€" essary to makelife a success. _ Galt, Ont. Branch, School of Shorthand wA _ Berlin, Ont. Success in Business dealer in Choice Cigars, Tobaccos, Cigarettes and Smok ers‘ Sundries, . Mouth Organs, Pocket Knives Purses, Etc. _ _ Equality between policyâ€"holders is secured by insuring 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. Your choice of all sound plans o assurance »Yered, mo other. The Policy of the Dominion Life is a straight promise to payâ€"like a bank draft, almost unconditional. _ No reâ€" stricton on travel or occupation. When two or three years in force it is nmonâ€"forfritable, even for failwre to pay renewal premiums, remaining im ull force TILL THE VALUE Ig LKXHAUSTED. It providés a lega of a law suit possible 4GENTS WANTED or choice of territory to Authorized Capitar $1,000,000. Gov‘t Deposit at Ottawa $50,000 Subscribed Capit a1 $257,000, Paid up Capital $64,400 J AMES INNES, M. P., CHR Prestpext. Call or write for circulars THE Dominion Life Assurance bo‘y, Head Office, . Waterloo, Ont. King Street, near Railway Track THOS. HILLIARD J. G. DOERSA M WATERLOO, ONT. guralgia and Liver Powderg 1 know,. THOS. HILLIARD Managing Director , "lug nesy we//. 4 ”0‘00 um or 2 wip" otfie'&_ STORE! Wt es egacy certain instead Manxacine Dirrctor KUMPFEsq., VicEâ€"PRESIDE N Apply now Guests will receive the best of attention. The bar supplied with the choicest liquors and cigars of the best brand. TEACHER of Instrumental Music. Organ and Piano, : Terms moderate NORTH AMERICAN HOTEL POEHLMAN ‘S BARBER SHOP, [] ERBERT 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€" lic Works, and the subâ€"division of lauds in the suburbs of Toronto. infhot s nlcomnemt ut he nb We nc ied 1D) _ Fire and Accident Ins&ra.n&e Aients Waterloo, Ont., representing the best Stock and Mutual Companies doing business in this Pro vince. Money to loan at lowest current rates. D. BuckBERRoverR. B. E. BrontEL. e 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. _{IMON SNYDER, b Issuer 0 Marriage Licenses. Officeâ€"At his Drug Store, Waterloo. Firstâ€"dlass rigs and good reliable horses. Two and three seated carriages always in readiness. All calls promptly attended to and charges moderate. Office and livery in rear of the Zimmerman House. Entrance on King strees, next to Fischer‘s butcher shop. JACOB BOEHMER, Proprirtor LIVERY AND EXCHANGE STABLHKS # Gro. Sugertt, Proprictor. All kinds of conveyances constanly on hand. Charges moderate. Stables in rear of the Comâ€" mercial Hotel. Will visit Elmira the second Thursday and Friday and fourth Thursday and Friday of each month (Thursday noon, to Friday noon). Will visit Baden (Kraus‘ Hotel), the first Thursday and third Thursday of each month. l ___ Issuer of Marmage Licenses. Officeâ€"Post Office, St. Jacobs. Ont. DR. C. T. NCECKER, MEDALLIST OF TO rowto University, Licentiate of the Col lege of Physicians, Surgeons and Accoucheur of Ontario. Diseases or EYE anp EAR Treateo. Officeâ€"New residence, Albert street, Water loo. a short distance north of the late Dr. Walden‘s residence. Offlceâ€"Court House, Berlin, W. DR. A. F. BAUMAN Prystorax, SurcroN anp AccouchEur. Office and residenceâ€"Two doors north of resiâ€" dence formerly occupicd by the late Dr. Walden on Albert street, Waterloo, 17 Prysicrans, SuraEoxns, Erc. Dr. D. S. Bowlby, Coroner for the County, Dr, G, H. Bowlby treats diseases of the nose throat and ear. DR. ARMITAGE _ Privstcrax, SuUrazox axp Accovenzu®. ‘‘Officeâ€"In the pooms formerly occupied by W. Wells, L. D. Sl over Mr. Fish‘s store (Bellâ€" inger‘s). Night calls answered at office., Tele] phone communication. OHN L. WIDEMAN, For the painless Extraction of teeth Waterloo Nov. 1st 1893 Special attention paid to Cfitarrh. Asthma and Chronic Diseases. Telsphone communication UCKBERROUGH & BECHTEL Conveyancer, etc. gaer oys 3 Offlceâ€"Upstairs in Economical block,53 King Street West, Borlin. Telephone communication Livery, Sale and Exchange Stables opposite Foundry, Waterlo0, Ontario, ' H. WEBB M. D., ' _ _ Coroner County of Waterloo Officeâ€"At his residence on Erb streot. Telephone communication. Apply at residence,§ t sedtsUeny CUINC 'ublic,*Conveyanccr. ctc. 3 oc ~~> (Mosey to loan.) Office hours, 9. 80 a. m. to 5. p. m. Offices. Killer‘s Block, Waterloo BO\VLBY Money to loan on Mort; REDYRICK Conqurouy RS. D. S. & C. H. BOWLBY Y EO#H. HUTCHISON W. A. KUMPEFE, VETERINARY SURGEON MISS ANNIE R. BEAN, R. HETT LEX. MILLAR WELLS, L. D. S., C. W wWELLS, D. D. S MISCELLANEOUS. W QDONTUNDER 109 King street east, Berlin Office and Residenceâ€"John street H. Bo EMENT LIVERIES. DENTAL MEDICAL. ALBERT STREET, WaATERLOO, Onz & McBRIDR DexTISTS, WaATERLOO LEGAL W Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Blr Q C. Solicitor, Notary Public MJ ira, every Monday and Oflice at Dr. Walmsley‘s RLOO anp EcatRA. > Buildings (upâ€"stairs,) H t lowest rates. \. B. McBripE vn A tto rk of th Notaries and Q. C M B BOOKSTORE, â€" WATERLOO A.L. KUMPF‘$ Can get their Scholars of the At o d toe bap e en oo V My brother was in the employ . of Messrs Wegenast & Co 24 years and is well and favor ably known and will do his best to maintain the hiigh reputation this shop has already acâ€" quired Open from, 6 to 12 a. m., 1.30 to 6.15 p. m. H. B DUERING, THE (ITY MEAT MARKET Interest allowed on sums and upwards in Capital, $2,000,000. Rest, $1,100,000, Drafts Issued on all Principal Points Oldest firm of painters ix; Waetrloo, June 1, 1893. The Molsons Bank,. Waterloo, April 18th, 1893 which will be done neatly and quickly by the day or roll, . gontracls for painting and glazing and all other work in my line taker. Orders loft at my rlesiden%'e “:i" r‘qgci\'e_ promp; attention. I ooo e e e en EOe thank you for the liberal pa«.nage me in the past. h Ww order to keep pace with the times I have just introduced a new variety of graining in imitation of/wood which is acknowledged to be the best and most natural imitations, parâ€" ticularly of White Ash, yet given, My customers and patrons know already that I have carried on business here. for tho past 27 years so that my long experience is a better guarantee for good work than that of beginners possibly can be. My work recommonds itself and I shall endeavor to do the work at the low. est possible prices so as to retain the custom hitherto given me, As I am not in the habit of putting to work inexperienced men but supervise the work personaily, I am satisfed that this will meet with the approbation of my: customers. M IN order to keep pace with just introduced a new variety imitation of/wood which is /z be the best and most natural ticularly of White Ash, vel gi Hrap OrFICE _ â€" â€" _ WaTERLOO, OxT, BOARD OF DIRECTORS : I. E. Bowman, M. P., Waterloo. John Shuh, Waterloo. J. H. Webb M. D., Waterloo. Geo. Moore, Waterloo. D. S. Bowlby, M. D., Berlin Robert Melvin, Guelph. E. W. B. Snider, M. P. P., St. Jacobs, & OFFICERS Fresh Beef, Pork and Lamb as well as all kinds of Sausages kept censtantly on hand. JOHN FISCHER Wats:loo0. March 2nd. 1891. MERCANTILE Incorporated by Act of Ontario Legislature The undersigned begs to tender his therts to his numerous cusâ€" tomersfor their liberal patronage during the past year, and trusts by close attention to business and moderate prices to merit a continâ€" uance of the same. I. E. Bowman. M.P., President James Lockie, Secretary Alex. Mill ar, Solicitor. T. A Gale, Inspector THE SAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT 42 Highest current rates on special deposits Waterloo, WATERLOO MEATMARKET Charles N. Rockel House and Sign Painter TERMS MoODERATE Orders left at this office will be promptly attended to. I also desireto call your attention to Paper Hanging hich will be done neatly and quickly by the w am mall PETER STAUFFER, Licensed Auctioneer mail wil SOMETHING NEW PETER SARARAS, Mannheim HEAD] OFFICE, MONTREAL Licensed Auctioncer for CENERAL _ BANKINC BUSINESS TRANSACTED,® NALES HIGH SCHOOL, PUBLICSCHOOL, CENTRAL SCHOOL Licensed Auctioncer FOR THE COUNTY or Fame FIRE INSURANCE CO ales conduct CAPITAL, $200,000. OFFICE ATTHE ZIMMERMAN HOU _CHAS. H. FRGHLICH. School Books mpt att BERLLN CONRAD HOFFMAN JACOR IIESPELER, Manager Waterloo Branch. ted in al mpt attention and Paper Hanger, & Ontario glish and German ONTARIO of Four Dollars parts of Waterlo lerate, Orders b Waterloo County WATERLOO. Butcher Waterloo stock will re accorded SE i 4. M h

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy