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Waterloo County Chronicle (186303), 29 Mar 1894, p. 6

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. (‘ountj‘ ! in 1893, i as &A Ccon i the pay ' counties & t ing : & {Â¥# Brant i" \__ â€"ham fh y CH +A ent, Y #4 Lennox $3 IMPROVED FARMING, The 19th Annual Report of the Ontario Agricultural College. t} it &H.O Dt ance Suly 28O, dents trom out in;: I:'A.I,L pwl'u,‘f from 9 to 16 fr the (h;r tio‘ &nil dai dau~ WeA all la: Ca in The tht' att and frow CLASSIFICATION Fa the general course Third year....... mecomd year .. .. First year .llll.. WUT Fachcountry in the Province is alk lowed to sond one student free of tut tion. â€" [The nomination is made by the ('(nuntj; Council. Of those on the roll in 1893, fifty were so nominated, and, as a consequence, were exempted from the payment of tuition fees. The counties represented were the followâ€" ing : Brant, Bruce, Carleton, Dundas, \_ â€"ham, Elgin, Essex, Frontenac,Glenâ€" , Grenville, Grey, Halton, Huron, ent, _ Lambton, Lanark, Leeds, Lennox, Lincoln, Middlesex sex, Muskoka, Norfolk, Ontario, Uxâ€" ford, Parry Sound, Peel, Porth, Peterâ€" boro, Prescott, Prince Edward, Renâ€" frew, Simcoe, Stormont, Waterloo, Wellington, Wentworth, York. ; Ontario students not nominated by county councils pay a tuition fee of $30 & year, and nonâ€"residents (from other Provinces, Great Britain, and elseâ€" vh«:)fny_ a fee og $100 the first year and $50 the second year. If a nonâ€" resident student has nad a year‘s exâ€" re‘il practical work on a farm, his tuition fee for the first year is An« The choir was full of children singing with heart and word, With melodly almost divine, The praises of the Lord, O aweet their ringing voices th 18 fro: 0 ndan from THE WHITE DOVE. 1 W Mak ue . mited m m other place A x A# iT TP STUDENTS faru d an attend Lt D)r nde w OPBL F1 N n tani PAl earln 1t W tal 11 UO 4t um} nfll\ ates »tu dur if 161 th the H 240 186 ty) L1 other breeds, and we may possibly try the Chester Whites and Poland Chinas next year. Experimental work has been carried on throughout the year, especially in testing varieties of grain, dates of seedâ€" ing, and methods of cultivation. . (m the plots at the College, Mr C. A. Zavitz, experimentalist, tested 70 varieties of winter wheat, 74 of spring wheat, 75 of barley, 135 of qats, ~l of peas, 5 of buck wheat, 157. of potatoes, 54 of Swede turnips, 37 of fall turnips, +0 of mangels, 10 of sugar beets, 35 of carrots~, 45 of fodder corn, 19 of llli“"l, â€" About 330 acres of the College land is managed as an ordinary farm. Work in this department has gone on as usul al throughout the ye«ar. Cattle have done fairly well. ~Sheep also are in good health, and look much better thar, usual. _ We have a fock of very nicé t that reguarding [ tere=t taken ’;_\ UOntario in the the (,llr“':;_'t'. T ducted by exâ€"st and other intere Ontario in the experimental â€" work of the College, â€" This is co operative, con ducted by exâ€"students of the College and other interested farmerâ€", under the control and supervision of the College experimentalist with the assiâ€"<tance of A committee appointed annnally by the Ontario Agricultural and Experiment:â€" portant points in churning: the saiting working, printing, packing, and immarâ€" keting of butter: the use of the Babâ€" cock milkâ€"tester, and the runfing of cream separators by hand, tread power, and steam No entrance examination is required for the Dairy School. _ Tuition is free to residents of the Province of Ontario; to others #5 for the course, Ladies are invited to take this course the full course, a portion of it, or the Home Dairy course. The Jatter is esâ€" prcially intended for them. Five ladies took the course last year, three of whom passed all the prescribed> exam inations and received certificates. Two of them came out near the head of the list [nrt says ies were represented by the students as follows : not take, the factory course, hA shHhort Home Dairy course has been pm\'idl'(l. This is intended especially for farmers and their sons and daughters who may wish to learn ~-»m4'thin;.; about the latâ€" est utensils and appliances used in priâ€" vate dairies: the best methods of setâ€" ting milk and handling cream: the imâ€" portant points in churning: the salting working, printing, packing, and marâ€" keting of butter: the use of the Babâ€" cock milkâ€"tester, and the runfing of cream separators by hand, tread power, The Travelling Dairies continued their work during the year. They started out on the 1st May and returned en the 28th November. Total. : The average ‘age of vears. The counties and territories in which the dairies worked during the season are the following : Lambton, Huron, Bruce, Grey, Dufferin, Simeoé, Ontario, Durham, Peterborough, Victoria, Musâ€" koka, Parry Sound, and Algoma, A considerable amount of time was spent in the northern territories, including Manitoulin and St. Joseph‘s Island. The whole of Ontario has now been covered, ‘excepting Halton, and parts of Peel and York. These counties are, of course, entitled to the same considerâ€" ation as other portions of the Province, and some districts are asking for a secâ€" ond visit. _ Hence, says President Mills, I would recommend that one of these dairies be kept at work for another year, at least. §Oxxer schoor ror TEACHERS. » Writing of that short summer course in Apriculture for Public School teachâ€" ers the President says :â€" â€"‘ The great majority of the le of this Province are &p&a‘tp?n?our Public Schools for the whole of their secular education. Pu The primary aim of ie Sehool teachers should nndn-bx be to teach well the ; ela.nents of a genoral mdldinnâ€"buw]fi.- hn.w.pfihhflfit.h;&m tion Oof diiferent fertiunz¢rs on ol ots, diffterent methods of cultivating dder corn, potatoes, and rogts on 150 ots, methods of preparing: potatoes r planting on 20 plots, and mniscellanâ€" us experiments on 161 plots. Of ac ctual farmi farming operations ns the Re Methodists . ....... Presbyterians .. ... . Episcopalians ... .. . Baptists.....}..... Congregationalists. . Roman Catholics... Friends .......»«r. Evangelical Reform nlOf, HoW THE FARM Is WORKKE! H t} ut tpplir“fti SPREAD INXTEREST I fothe most strikin ements made in t wding the rapid in« pAIRYINC. «stions for admission to the )1 lastâ€" winter were more e accepted until increased on was provided. who do notwant, or canâ€" <factory course, oa short farmet students is at, testea 10 t, 74 of spring of qats, ~1 of 0 of potatoes, f fall turnips, ir beets, 35 of . 16 of millet, J N TEXst (Of 1hâ€" throughout al _ work of rative, con the College o under the v€ 216 mifiâ€" rt is waterloo County Chronicle, Thursday, March 29, 1894.â€"Page 6. No examination wase required, and as a consequence theg work was entered into as a kind of redreation. The work of the Tarmers‘ Institutes has greatly increaséd within the last few years. Thefirst regular institute mectings in Ontariq were held in the winter of 18S5. l January of that year the professors wf the College asâ€" sisted in holding twentyâ€"six meetings. From that time to (the present there has been a gradual development in the work and usefulness of these importâ€" ant orcanizations. In a recent paperiin the Lancet, Lonâ€" don, Dr, F. Clemowj of St. Petersburg, presents a mass of evidence showing the highly contagious nature of influenâ€" za. The concluding. portion is as folâ€" (One af the most interesting instancâ€" es was furnished by the town fof Prjeâ€" vaisk, in Central Asia, where the postâ€" master was the first to sicken, but whether the infection was conveyed by means of letters or (more probably )was (~<mtructedluy him while travelling is not quite #fear. _ Dr, Smolitchef wrote: "()n January 4, 1890, after the sorting of the post, the pastmaster sickened; heâ€"had returned twa days before from a tour of his district, in which he had inâ€" spected all the post stations, among them at a considerable distance from Prjevalsk, and where a disease very like grippe prevailed. T was summoned to attend the postmaster," wrote the senior physician to | the local lazaret, "and on the next day I began to feel ill: on the third day T had severe rigors, repeated sevgral times, headache, catarrh, cough, etc.; but as there was no time to lie up, in |consequence of the extreme searcity of doctors and the great amount of work to be done, I conâ€" tinued my visits to the lazaret,. Fvery day the out patients were first seen by me, and these must have caught the infection from me and carried it to and spread it among the men of the garrison. It was a remarkable fact that all the acquaintances with whom I had occasion to converse on January 8 and 9 were also seized with grippe, although of a very light character. These facts, and also the cireumstance that after influenza‘ patients were adâ€" mitted to the lazargt wll the patients already lying there| were quickly atâ€" tacked with the disease, point to the infectiousness of the air expired by ‘those sick with influenza." In response to cir¢ulars setting forth these views, sent towhe Public School teachers of Ontamo, 30 applications were received and 34 came of whom 17 were â€" ladies. _ No] tuition fee . was charged. Rooms and board for the four weeks during July of the course was provided in the College for 12, t}llnis Province should, incidentally or Aherwise, give somd instruction in agâ€" riculture and one or two of the sciences related thereto; should impart as much reliable information as possible about agricultural pursuit§; and do all in their power to inspife their pupils with a love for the simpli¢ity, independence, and healthfulness of farm life. INFLUENZA IS SPREAD BY CO#â€" TAGIOK. lows In Viernoe, also: in Central Asia, "the officials in the post office were the first to suffer; then on December 18 a Cossack sickened. The Cossack was sent to the regimental hospital, where he remained for two days, and then was discharged. Two days later {Deâ€" cember 20) eight men of the Sedond Sotnia (a sotnia of (Cossacks is a divisâ€" ion consisting of 100 men) suddenly sickened. It must be noted that the sotnia was quartered close to the hosâ€" pital and that there was constant comâ€" munication between the two buildings. Three days later cases of grippe apâ€" peared in the military school and in the band."‘ A second reply from the same town confirms this order of events, and the writer adds that influenza was conâ€" fined to the postal officials for a space of three days. Finally, a third authoriâ€" ty in Viernoe, the surgeon to the arâ€" tillery brigade, wrote that the first cases in the brigade were among men who were sent to fetch the letters from the ‘post. These jinstances seem to point clearly to t ibility of the infection being ct.n?i(gol:;‘ means of letâ€" Some of our bést educators and wisest statesmen are of opinion that the teachers in the Public Schocls of ince at least,‘there is also another duty, wlfich, though secondary, is by no méans unimportant, viz., to consider the occupatinn which most of.the childâ€" ren willifollow on legving school,and,as far as possible, give them instruction, not only in the elâ€"ments of a general education, but also in some of the prinâ€" ciples that underlie guccessful practice in the industry by , means of which they will have to earo a livelihood for themselves and thoge depending upon them. | Numberless oth exn.m{:lu are to be found in the & fl:eut,nm of the subject pointing to spread of influenza by « _ I would briefâ€" ly repeat, in concly that: ~(1) Inâ€" patle oo Hemim (4) i egen : FARMERS INSTITUTES Many people, with the notion that nature eught to take care of herself, allow a cough to, plague them for weeks and months. Whereas if nature wereassisted with a dose or two of Ayer‘s Cherry Pectoral, the cure might be afâ€" fected in a very few days. Whenever you want invisible blue, just try to find a policeman. Have you really and truly given up bacon during Lent! Yes, indeed ; 1 dorft éven read Shakespeare. And so, Mrs. D. Gollyer, your poor boy was killed by savages. Ab, yes ! South Africa 1 No â€"college,. and south, and east and west: (0) it followed the lines of human intercourse: (6) its rate of diffusion was less rapid than was at first believed, and not more rapid than could be accounted for on the theory that it was spread by contagion alone; and (7) there is much positive evidence of the spread of inâ€" fluenza by contagion in Russia, even in towns near to the place of origin of the epidemic and in the earliest days of its course. In summer, autumn, winter, spring, If you‘d be happy, wise, And to your household pleasure bring, Just use the Diamond Dyes. K7 If you mail this,verse and notice and 25 cents in stamps or money to Wrrers & Ricnuarnpsox Co., Montreal, you will receive Our Home, Canada‘s new monthly family paper,for one gear; also illustrated book on "How to make Mats and Rugs," and one package of Ink Powder, for making 16 ounces of best black ink. RZ¢"Mention this paper. If you decide to take Hood‘s Sarsaparilla do not be induced to buy any substitute article. Take Hood‘s and only Hood‘s, On the march European troops are struog out in the proportior of 2,000 men to the mile. Fifteen English brewers and wine merchants who died last year left over $30,000,000, Waiterâ€"De usual staffe sah ? Regu lar customerâ€"No, I am tired toâ€"night Bring me a plate of hasb. Whitherbyâ€"‘I saw the doctor‘s carâ€" riage in front of your house the other day, Has anything bappened? Planâ€" kington (sadly) â€"‘Yes, old man ; two things have happened. Twins,‘ This rich relative of yours,is he a disâ€" tant relative? Yes, extremely distant since he became rich. the world over, endorse it ; babies and children like the taste of it. Weak mothers respond readily to its nour~ ishing powers. Scott‘s the Cream of Codâ€"liver Oil, is the life of the bipod, the maker of sound flesh, solid the very essence Physicians, Emulsion t inP S ds "ike mc " ced h t 4P\~ \ YIOBT by iiL,T Remember thoat C tz 15 Y .‘ |Henry J. Rockel, | & Af1 Have a YVery Bad Cough, 2 Are Sufferings from Lung Troubles, Hnavo Lost Fiesh through lHiness, Aro Threstened with Consumption, ~ FTL L.r79V #o 4 % T YQU «EOUIRE *E 9+: 4. I BEG to announce to tne people o Waterloo and vicinity that I have full assortment of Auntieâ€"‘Does your new doil ciose its eyes" Little Ethelâ€"‘Yes‘m, but she is the most wakeful child I even saw. She doesn‘t shut her eyes when I lay her down, as she ought to _ The only way I can make her go to sleep is stand her on her head and shake bher." WATCHES, CLOOKS, JEWELLERY, DIAMONDS, Jilson says that with all due respect for the old proverb, when the average servant girl gets through with a piece of valuable bricâ€"aâ€"brac it is generally too late to mend. ARTHUR PEQUEGNAT, Millieâ€"‘Agly, dear, I dreamed last night you had given me such a lovely bracelet for a birthday present.‘ Aglyâ€" ‘Did you ?Then you‘d better go straight to bed and dream who‘s going to pay for it. It‘s the cheapest way out.‘ "I freely confess to you," said Dr, Sharp "that I would rather, when I am laid in the grave, someone in his manâ€" hood would stand over me and say: ‘There lies one who was a real friend to me, and privately warned me of the dangers of the young; no one knew it, but he aided me in timecf need. I owe what I @p to him.‘ Or I would rather have some widow, with choking utterâ€" ance, telling hber children: ,There is your friend and mine. He visited me in my affliction, and found you my son an employer, aid you, my daughter, a happy home in a virtuous family.‘ I say I would rather that such persons should stand at my grave, than to have erected over it the most beautiful sculpâ€" tured ponument of marble. The heart‘s broken utterance of reflections of past kindness,and the tears of grateful memâ€" ory shed upon the grave, are more val uable in my estimation, than the most costly cenotaph ever reared. All Work and Gogds Guaranteed. ty 3â€"~~ ARTHUR PEQUEGNAT, | FOR SALE 0 Cure, SICK HEADACHE and Neuralgia it 20 miwnurTes, also Coated Tongue, Dizziâ€" ness, Biliousness, Pain in the Side, Constipation Torpid Liver, Bad Breath. To stay cured and regulate the bowels. verr wIce To TaKke. iThe Wholesale and Retail Jeweller. PriCcs 25 Cents at Drya SroRres, POWDERS A Good Man‘s Wiso. SILVERWARE, &o| VAAA at bottom prices. & Waterloo, and l UCKBERROUGH & BECHTEL, Fire and Accident Insurance Ai”u aterloo, Ont., representing the best Stock and Mutual Companies doing business in this Pro vince. Money to loan at lowest current rates, 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‘Enlcngineer on the construction of Pubâ€" lic Works, and the subâ€"division of lands in the suburbs of Toronto. Officeâ€"Court House, Berlin. Will visit Elmira the second ’I‘humda{ and Friday and fourth Thursday and Friday of each month (Thursday noon, to Friday noon). Will visit Badem (Kraus‘ Hotel), the first Thursday and third Thursday of each month. 14 GEo. SUGGITT, Proprietor. All kinds of conveyances comsumdf on hand. Charges modcrate. Stables in rear of the Comâ€" mercial Hotel. & Firstâ€"class rigs and good reliable horses. Two and three seated carriages always in readiness. All_ calls promptly attended to and charges moderate. Office and lLivery in rear of the Zimmerman House. Entrance on King street next to Fischer‘s butcher shop. VE'I’ERI.\'ARY SURGEON, MILLBANK _1 Ont.. Honorary Graduate of the Ontaric Â¥ Ont., Honorary Graduate; of the Ontario Veterinary College, Toronto. © * POEHLMAN’S BARBER SHOP, â€"__ Puvsicrax, SURGEON aND AccocrcHEUCR. Office and residenceâ€"â€"Two doors north of resiâ€" dence formerly occupied by the lage Dr. Walden on Albert street, Waterlon, _ 1 LJ roxto University, Licentiate of the Col lege of Physicians, Surgeons and Aceoucheu of Ontario. DisrkasEs or EYE axp EAR TreEATED. Officeâ€"New residence, Albert street, Water log. a short distance morth of the late Dr Dr G, H. Bowlby treats diseases of the noâ€"e throat and ear. Officeâ€"In the rooms formerly occupied by W. Wwells.L. N. 8. over Mr. Fish‘s store (Bel}â€" inger‘s). Night calls answered at ofice. Tele phone communication. _JIMON SNYDER, { Issuer 0 Marriage Licenses. bOflwâ€"At his Drug Stere, Waterloo. Epecial attention paid to Catarrh, Asth and Chronic Discases. W. V Barristers, Solicitors, Notarie and Conveyancers. WaTERLOO aAND ELMIRA Officeâ€"New Insurance Buildings (upâ€"stairs, Kirg street, Waterion. At branch office, Elmira every Monday and ‘lax)ursday afternoon. Officeat Dr. Walmsley & store. Uonveyancer, etc. . . Offlc{â€" L‘pz'.n-c in Economical block,5 King Street West, Berlin. Money toloan on Mortgages« at lowest rates FREDYRICK COLQURHOUX. A. B. McBRIDE Public, @Conveyancer. etc. _ _ _ _ *(Money to loan.) Office hours. 9. 30 a. m.‘to 5. p. m. Offices. Killer‘s Block, Waterloo, 12 BARRISTERS AT LAW Solicitors in all the courts, Notaries and Donveyancers. Money to lend on !w lowest rates. Officeâ€"Court House, in. W. H. Bowrsy, M.A., LL.B., Q. C., County Crown Attorney C and Clerk of th eace F EO.; H. HUTCHISON J . ~~ Barrist Falden‘s residence. _ _ _ *Telephone communication ) ___ Issuer of Marmage Licenses. Officeâ€"Post Office, St. Jacebs. @nt. â€" Opposite the Market square. An easy shave, a stylish hairâ€"cut, a good seaâ€" D. BUCKBERROUGEH. For the painless Extraction of teeth Waterloo Nov. 1st 1893 Telephone communication )RS. D. 8. & G. H. BOWLRY. f Pnysiciaxs. Suroroxs. Erc. Dr. D. S. Bowlby, Coroner for the County ' H. WEBB M D., * Coroner County of Waterloo. Officeâ€"At his residence on Erb street. Telenhone communication. * w shampoo,, a ) w ?lles":n:ohfldnn'l ir tastily cut. E. P. CLEXEXT. OHN L. WIDEMAN, IVERY AND EXCHANGE STABLES Livery, Sale and Exchange Stables. OWLBY & CLEMENT, H.C.T. N(ECKER. MEDALLIST OF TO OLQUHOU‘N & MCBRIDE J. A. F. BAUMAXN R. A2MITAGE PRYsICIAN. SURGEON AND AccoUCcHEUR CITY BAKER LEX. MILLAR, Q.C W. A. KUMPF, VETERINARY SURGEOX W ELLS. L. D. 8.. C. W WELLS, D. D.S MISCELLANEOUS. Richard C. Clarke, 109 King street east, Berlin Office and Residenceâ€" Job stre ODONTUNDER. LIVERIES. DENTAL MEDICAL. Barrister, Solicitor,fNotary DextisTs, WaATERLOO. «& Ontario. Solicitor. Notary Public ,, alwaysgiven, | _ One of our particular fall and winter lines l; cut. gi Gnmmln‘ud Filing all kinds of saws and to this line we pay special attention and guar D _ _ _ _ fantee every saw. Weare bound to give <ati~ mA te I beg to announce to my numerous cuâ€"tomers nd | whose support has been so liberal ().«‘. in ro | order to accommodate them still better. ] wi k have my place of businss« open from 6 0 clock in the morning until 7 o‘clock in the cven » _ mfily business has increased to such an exton: AL a being unable togive it my personal â€"iper d vision I have appointed my brother Georgé po] | Duering, who kept my books during the past ~/ICITY MEAT MARKET i9 . Ahar ut en on e NCc faction. Sewing Machines repaired and guar anteed one year. all makes included. Gun and lock smithing, key fitting, etc. Bicycles reé Pundudcunverud from the old style to the in acs Nh al e cerome oo av C R2 PC Betimate® given on _jobs on application: BP hnni o s a eoepand roaln, ud uies i9, ©x member _ the of the Sewing Machin Saw, M Cns e W oon, Tolophemn ty o *A ** lates. Pneumatic Tyre/New rolls put on clothe» wringers. Scales rep-irNed and adjusted. New rubber mwton carpet sweepers, All kinds of small work and lathe jobbing work mnd mechanicallyâ€"executed by power. Eetimates given‘ Om large jobs on application: Capital, $2,000,000. Rest, $1,100,000 A GENERAL BANKINC BUSINESS Interest allowed on sum and upward:« in seven years, as bookâ€"keeperand ca~â€"‘ I williendeavor to the be«t of my ability fy the wishes of my customers. Drafts Issued on all Principal Points The Molsons Bank. My customers and patror I have carried on busineâ€"â€" years so that my long ex guarantee for good work :) poâ€"sib‘y can be. My wor, and I «hall endeavor to do est powsible prices so as to hitherto given me,. As I a of putting to work ine upervise the work perâ€"on that this will meet with th« curtomers. I also desireto call your a Contracts for painting and other work in my line taker Olde=t firm Waetrloo. June 1. 1x which wi!l be done nea‘ly day or roll. my residence wi thank you for ti me in the past. IN order to keep pace wi* just introduced a new varie imitation off wood which i< be the best and moâ€"t natur ticularly of White Ash.ve &H#FOFFICE ATTHE ZIMMERMAX Hors The undersigned begs to teng his therts to his numerous cy tomersitor their liberal patrons, during the past year, and tru=ts} close attention to business &; moderate prices to merit acont; uapce of the same. Fresh Beef, Pork and Lamb well as all kinds of Sausages k. constantly on hand. JOHN FISCHER Watsacloo. March 2nd. 18921. Waterloo, WATERLOO MEATMARKET Charles N. Rocke)] House and Sign Painter THE SAYINGS BANK DEPART» MERCANTILE Incorporated by Act of Ontario Loeg Hrap OÂ¥yFICEK, â€" +0 Warek: BOARD OF DIRECTOR: I. E. Bowman, M. P., Waterio; John Shuh, Waterloo. Open from, 6to 12 a. m., lrbo'to 6.15 p. H. B DUERIN( &4 Highest current rate Waterloo, Feb. 15th, 1891 BERLIN REPAIR SHOP. CHAS. H. FREHLICH Licensed Auctioneer IFOR THE COUSTY OFj WiaTirioe J. H. Webb M. D., Waterlo« Gec. Mcore, Waterloo. D. S. Ecwiby, M. D., Berlin Robért Melvin, Guelph. E, W. B. Snider, M. P. P., & OFFICERs I. E. Bowman. M.P., Pre James Lockie, Necretary Alex. ;Millar, Solicitor. T. A Gale, Inspector SOMETHING NEW Sales conducted in English and German HEAD OFFICE, MONTREAL FIRE INSURANCE CO CAPITAL, $200,000 TRANSACTED.: FALL TRADE Paper Hanging TEA F ny long eXpe: ood work that io My work r eavorto do thk ce« s0 as 10 me. As I am work ines;« work persona ] eet with the a CONR&D HOFFM JACOB HRESPELER Manager Waterloo 1* re ul 43 and Paper Hanger, * Ontario ew rolls put on clothe» eneâ€"fifth of an Butcher mb as = kept nder m ‘Age s by and in€ How to Succeed in Stens Time w her Owil T most ho © or at Je arst availani t rebnemen| vions we‘e ection, *" sgelves !! mkg 11 ‘\-‘ they wer than 1 one 11} adapt that > ward now ] suite! othc, there the w gent § out tu 1 aud tnt alontg. 8’3‘ corh may © contor that s that } her istic U well i the o & w OHn# fritte! Y olyif Wt that ; satist Alid band n U stet do n to cou eA o we! )C eT of a po p(’l en t greal I ed for decige A Word for Our whe 10 &1 with haps anol whd un 1N 1 it3 (C) ujAl 11 K1l t« ut tia‘, thin the: thei We hav ness 1D ber giris Wi their timo been tits Of cours it to be > wants sU their sds they can here is a that she and is ) another ingâ€"book rots lt > is n A where t! tion mxaI gettins U that t! otfice 1 folly 1 tions t do no from } age th first, > 1 uj appo:n!nuz.t L406 otherw is The ginl w0 ca position, t ut retal ean write uet not Pldlt'\ eare {Dihs write neatiy t ithe Wriu*r, and can h letter the sentenc in construction, should be, and ca words or nirpla who is intelligen school educatiot dignified, is the . office work,. â€" She her surroundings peed to be dor quietly and with L her ethployer w L work was done 1 girls there is ye§ Jt T

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