® + n li.‘l' The boiling and bubbling sugar is passed down through funnels to the next floor, where it is emptied into a box, the bottom of which consists of two thicknesses of canvas, one being coarse, the other fine. This thoroughly filters the stuff, and the room is kept at a terrific temperature, in order that the liquid sugar may flow freely and not become cool and thick. On the floor below is another great coppertank,some 25 feet deep and nearly filled with bone black. This purifies the sugar, and,afâ€" ter being used for a few hours becomes surcharged with fouiness, and is sent to the lower flioor, where it is b-rn?‘ sg»in. The sugar which is still kept a temperature of 150 degrees, is pasg«ed r another receptacle, which is made tight and the air and steam are exâ€" hausted by m-fl As soon as the sugar is vd, if it is to be soft,it is let off by means of centrif ie CORE 1 Aftrtnitiatioatsnial} Ardslstcbidat in 3 d 2. as boilers. The process of boiling reâ€" quires considerable skill, and the men who have charge of it are paid $100 or $150 a month, the number receiving the latter figure being extremely limitâ€" ed, only about one man in a hundred who receives employment in the refinâ€" eries becoming & boiler, which is the bhighest ambition of the workmen. i. the dn Anlaiiiniah thmcdiiels and in a minute or so pops back again, and is lost to sight in the moist cloud. The liquid is pumped up to the top story of the pile, passing through a wire atrainer, which removes any particles of size which may be in it, and is empâ€" tiedinto great copper receptacles heated to 208 or 210 degrees Fahrenheit, know n nationality before going to work, he trembles lest the edict may conderoan him to the "dryroow." If it be that, however, he receives it with characterâ€" istic stolidity, and is thankful for an opportunity to earn his miserable pitâ€" tance, even under such terrible circumâ€" stances. _ Then begins a life of perpetâ€" ual torture as long as he remains in the refinery, and not infrequently death comes quickly to his relief, HOW THE SUnAI I® HAXNDLED, When the raw sugar is dumped from the ship in which it is brought to the retineries it is placed in h great cistern near the river‘s edge, and is dissolved in hot water. From this vat a sweet, sticky steam constantly arises,and every little while a workman,dressed in overâ€" alls and undershirt, pops out from it, E w (Meemin ouiconss rarely above middle age,it being a well known fact that men employed in the retneries rarely live to ola age. â€" They ar nearlyall uvwimmigran%‘hen first employed, and before work is given them they must be found perfectly docile and obedient. The rules of the refineries are laid down to the applicant for eniâ€" Sn suity not discharged they will be "docked," as the superintendent sees fit, and this genernlly means half a day. The majority of the workmen are Poles and Hungarians,and the severity of their labors is shown by the fact that they are nearly allthin and stooped,and Nn I LWn 1 I that they were on hand when work beâ€" guu. If they are late there is a good chance that they will be discharged,unâ€" less they have been employed for some time, ard have been found to be faithr ful! and docile men. In case they are mumpoas 1 1 04 BR ' There are about 3,000 men employed in the big refineries, and these are diviâ€" ded into day and night shifts. About 5 o‘clock in the morning h«lf of the force can be seen filing down into the basement of one of the great buildings. Work is begun immedintely, and sonâ€" tinued until 5 in the evening, when the men are supplied with checks, showing that they were on hand when work beâ€" _ Realistic pictures of what human beâ€" ings may be compelled to undergo in earping their daily bread may be ob tained there, however, and the longâ€" continued spell of roasting weather from which New Yorkers have suffered lately has accentuated the misery which was severe enough under ordinary conâ€" ditions of temperature. (From The New York Tribune.) It is doubtful if there is any other group of buildings in or near New York where the fearfuldifficulties under which men labor for the bare privilege of livâ€" ing, are so plainly shown as they ate in the towering, forbidding fortressâ€"like structures on the East River front of Brooklyn,owned‘by the American Sugâ€" ar Refining Company, better known as the Sugar Trust. The big buildings cover & space of four blocks, their walls extending seventeen stories above the street level, and this group is only one of the refining places owned by the trust. The employes of the great conâ€" cern are disciplined with rules as strict as those which govern an army. If one attempts to get into the refineries he meets a discipline in the shape of a gruff watchman and a club, and a call at the offices reveals it in the shape of a more or leas polite negative from the cléerks, who will say that they cannot answer questions. ! DEATHS IN REFINERIES,| EOW THRE SUGAR TRUST SLAVES SUFFER AND DIE. 1d1 San Francisco, . Cal., July 26. meeting of the comtnittee A The Central News has this despatch from Sbanghai :â€"War bas been declarâ€" ed between Japan and China. The Japâ€" anese have seized the King of Corea and hold him prisoner. Eleven Chinâ€" ese ster mers are on their way to Corea. Most of the troops on board are coolies armed with bows and arrows. Some Chinese steamers ‘which have arrived at Corea have been prevented by the Japanese from landing troope. It is reported that the , Japanese artillary sank several of them. meeling of the cominittee ting wrangled, they fought, â€"hurled Japanése residents was mm.:t‘zomonomher, but. one quiet, Japanse ¢ to last :3:': and it thoughtful member introduced a resoâ€" was decided to 6 efforte | lntion which calmed ‘the troubled watâ€" to raise $10,000 ta assiet their Governâ€" ers and all was peace. ~So it is..when ment in carrying on its war with China: | the whole system is troubled, distarbed London,July 26. â€"The Central News says late this evening that accordiug to latest information received important developements are imminent in Corea. What is it? Where is it! The thouâ€" ands who‘ have used Harvary Bronâ€" shial Syrup declare empbatically that that it is the best and most efficacious remedy in the world tor coughs, colds, hoarseness, and all affections of the bronchial tubes. _ Harvard Bronchial Syrup surpasses all other remedies as a cure for croup. Misery and distress are plain on all sides. Children, pale and pinched for the want of proper nourishment, run half naked about the strsets, and treâ€" quently a drowned man is found floatâ€" ing in the river near the piers. The deâ€" scription of the body generaliy says it was clothed in "a pair of overalls and & cotton undershirt,‘ the common uniâ€" form of a common sugarâ€"house employe. Coming from northern countriee these men feel the heat severely, and when under the influence of their horrible surroundings. their minds give way,the hallucination always takes the form of a belief that they are burning up, and the first mad rush is made for the nearâ€" est water, the outbreak is insanity genâ€" erally ended with death and a beggar‘s burial in the Potter‘s Field. The men are for the most part new arrivals in the country, and the sugarâ€" house offers the first field of etmployâ€" ment. â€" The chance of work is eagerly grasped, but it is only a short time beâ€" fore they find out the difficulties surâ€" rounding them. But they stick to the refineries, hboping against hope that something better will turn up. â€"Most of them live near the sugarâ€"houses and with bent heads and downcast eyes they wearily drag themselves away after their work is done to their foul and dingy tenement bomes, Many of them are married and have large families,and it is a wonder how they exist on the small wages they receive, Their meals are of the most frugal character, black bread and coffee being the simple breakâ€" fast, while frankfrutters and bolognas with a schooner of beer make up the midday meal, the beer being a luxury. Japan and China Have Begun Hostilities. During the recent hot spell men in the drying rooms have dropped down and been carried out like dogs, and so _numerous has been ‘the prostrations that at times it has been difficult to find msn to continue the{work.ffThe men thus prostrated are said by their comrades to have been treated with great brutality. The refinery people tired of calling on the hospital ambulâ€" ances, because it attracted the attention of the newspapers, employed physicians at the refineries, and the unfortunate victims, after reviving sufficiently to stagger away, were turned adrift to reach home as best they might. Many liave died, and others have had their minds so affected so as to be unable to return to work. But others took their places and the killing work went on. It ts on record that there were 200 prosâ€" trations from the awful heat in one day last summer, the number reaching 500 in the week. This summer the harvest has been great,, but public attention has not been ca]led to it by the freâ€" quency of deimmands for aid from the haspitals. ° _ The rooms in which the drying is carried on are veritable infernos. No wan can stay in them over ten minutes without falling dowu utterly prostrated by the terrific heat,. No one but an employe is ever allowed within these walls,and no one but an employe would dare go in them when the heat is on and the sugar is drying. Clothing is discarded, with the exception of a "breech clout" and shoes and there is absolutely no ventilation, as the winâ€" dows are kept tightly closed, ard at the windows in other rooms which are perâ€" permitted to remain open the men may be seen gasping for breath, almost nakâ€" ed, with their hair and bodies as wet as if they had been plunged in the East River, in their short respite from their frightful toil, Men who have worked in the dry room have only one exptesâ€" sion to describe itâ€"the short, forcible word "hell." [ WAR DECLARED AT LAST. HOME LIFE OF THE REFINERY HANDs. CARRIED OUT LIKE DOGf WORKING IN AN INFERNO. Tre City Counrci, LirE a Bras GarpEx.â€"The alderman seemed to be lctngteq‘by'fl:o demon of antagonism, The heaviest; rainfall is . near the equator and diminishes as the latitude For Over Fifty Years, Mars. Wixsrow‘s SoothtIxo SyRUP has been used by millions of mothers for their children when teething. If disturbed at night and broken of your rest by a sick child sufferin and crying with pain of Cutting Teeth seng at once and get a bottle of "hirs. Winslow‘s Soothing Syrup" for children teething. It will relieve the poor little sufferer immediâ€" ately. Depend upon it, mothers, there is no mistake about it. It cures Diarhoea, reguâ€" lates the stomach and bowels, cures Wind Colic, softens the gums and reduces inflamâ€" mation, and gives tone and energy to the whole system. _‘‘Mrs. Winslow‘s Soothing Syrup" for children teething is gleuant to the taste and is the prescription of one of the oldest and best female physicians and nurses in the United States. Price twentyâ€"five cents a bottle. Sold by all drnxgian- thmu%lc,ouc the World. Be sure and ask for Mzs. Wissrow‘s SootHINc SrrRUuP. 23â€"ly Agsain, a man is sick with typhoid fever or pnuemouia, or almost any othâ€" er disease, and@died, it is said, from heart failure ; but what has been his diet during bis illness? At present it is very fashionable to commence at once with what may well be called the stufiâ€" ing processâ€"iced milk, which is so cool and grateful to the patient, from three pints to one gallon during the day and night. But if allowed to makea sugâ€" gestion I would say that in place of it clam chowder thickened with gravelâ€" stones, eggs, beefâ€"tea, whiskey, cream and all the other good things the poor patient can be induced to swallow. A man is found dead in his bed and the medical attendant pronounces it the result of beart failure and such is the certificate of burial given, Now the man was out, partook of a late supâ€" per and ate roast beef, turkey.chicken, lobsters, mince pie, plum pudding, ice cream, cake, an orange, nuts and raisâ€" ins, three or four cups of cuffee, etc., went home at midnight,retires,and dies of heart failure before nine o‘clock the next morning. What did the heart fail to do ? When a sick person, or an old one, or one with feeble digestion, sleeps, diâ€" gestion is nearly or quite suspended, but fermentation goes on and the gas is generated as before stated. Now when this upward pressure on the heart becomes excessive more danâ€" gerous symptoms supervene, a larger quantity of blood is sent to the brain, some vessel ruptures and a blood clot in the brain is the result and the patâ€" ient dies of apoplexy or if he lives is a cripple for life. _ The stomach‘lies directly under the heart,with only the diaphragm between and when it fills with gas it is like a small balloon and lifts up until it interâ€" feres directly with the heart‘s action. The stomach never generates gas, but when filled with undigested food ferâ€" mentation takes place and gas is generâ€" ated and the interference depends upon the amount of gas in the stomach. To overcome this obstruction the heart has to exert itself in proportion to the interference more blood is sent to the brain and the following symptoms are the result: A dizzy head, a flushed face, a loss of sight, spots or blurs beâ€" fore the eyes, fashes of light, zigzag lines or chains, etc., often followed by the most severe headache. These symâ€" ptoms are usually relieved when the gas is expelled from the stomach. Now the heart has the very meanest and most contemptible neighbor that ever an organ had ; namely, the stom:â€" ach ; a drunkard, a glutton, a trespassâ€" er, and almost everything else as bad. Verily it ought to be walled in and kept on its own grounds. A physician writing to the Medical Brief says:â€"I wish to say a few words about heart failure. We almost daily see reports of deaths attributed to beart failure. Now what I wish to ask is, what is it that the heart fails to do?! I have always considered the heart the most perfect organ in the animal econâ€" omy and one that never shirks its duty. It commences its labors during the earâ€" ly stages of pregnancy and goes on till the last moments of life without one second of rest night or day often withâ€" out the intermission of a single pulsatâ€" ion for a 100 years or more. At every beat it propels two ounces of blood through its structure. At 75 pulsatâ€" ions per minute nine pounds of blood is sucked in and pumped out. Every hour 540 pounds; ezery day 12,960 pounds ; every year,4,730,400 pounds ; every hundred years, 473,040,000 lbs. Verily a good organ, and all performed without one moment‘s rest. HEARTIFAILURE AND STOMâ€" ACH STUFFING â€" â€" Waterloo County Chronicle, Thursday, August 2, 1894.â€"Page 6. SAllen‘s Liung Ralsam yÂ¥ €Allen‘s Lung Balsam*t: iodocit tA Aâ€"iaAtAr As c dkaidps d t e *‘ t* *." _ "HIGHLY RECCOMMENDED N â€"â€"~=v:=tzmâ€"â€"oâ€"tineoveme As a Preventive and Cure of all Throat and Lung Diseases.~ For that Bad Cough of you A PLEASANT SURPRISE \ is in store for you when you buy Doctor Pierce‘s Pleasant Pelâ€" | lets. If you ever took the ordinary liver pill, big and bulky, nasty m | too, you‘d appreciate a good thing, espeâ€" ciaï¬y when it is sugarâ€" coated, tiny as a musâ€" tard seed but very effective. Other things being equal, the smallest is the best in liver pillsâ€" hence, "Pleasant Pellets." A If you are tyoubled with Indigestion, Constipation, Biliousness, Bilious Headpaches, and a hundred and one ills which depend ugon an inactive liver,â€"use Dr. Pierce‘s Pellets. With these pills you get not only temporary relief but a positive cure,; they‘re guaranâ€" teed to give satisfaction in e case, wr‘ your mon: e a k tm ‘Fof "fat people: who suffer ; is N P le th bi > to a Cl CC In the year 310 hardlyâ€" a drop of rain fell in England, and 40,000 peoâ€" ple died of famine. ©He says all he has left," related the gooq _man, is his religion." _ _ "His religion !" exclaimed the other in a tone of irreverence ; "even that‘s in his wife‘s name.â€"Washington Post. Brother Billings â€" met an acquaint: ance shortly after and to him he related the conversation he had with the late Banker Politician. "I am crushed by reverses," said the exâ€"politician, in a querulous voice. "Evâ€" erything is gone. All T have left, Broâ€" ther Billings, is my religion." "Hello, brother Buster ; how do you fare?" said the good man. A A story was told on the House side relating to a certain Western: banker and politician whose name, for, good reasons, is not to be disclosed. This man was prominent for some time by reason of the success with which he dictated appointments in his vicinity under the present Administration. Reverses overtook him and he disapâ€" peared as a political factor. One day, a short time ago, he met an old friend of the Presbyterian faith on the street. "Mamma,was that a sugarâ€"plum‘ you just gave me "asked little Mabel, "No dear,itwas one Of Dr. AyerԤ Pills," *"Please may I have another?" "Not now. dear; one of those nice pills is all you need at present because every dose is effective." The black death of 1345 carried off 24,000,000 persons in Europe, more than 30,000 towns and villages being totally depopulated. As late as 1350 ships were found at sea with all the crew dead on board. 71 ABOR Tedc 2iA t 00 200 6A dn c3 21 American Rheumatic Cure for Rheumatizsm and Ncuralgia, radically cures in 1 to 3 d ays Its action upon the system is remarkable and mysterious. . It removes at once the cause ant the disease immediately disappears. The first dose greatly benefits. T5cents Sold by Ed, M Dovitt Druggist. ‘ The men I am afraid of are those who believe everything, subscribe to everything, and vote for everything. I cannot help suspecting that those who abuse themselves are in realicy angling for approbation. O ! _ how much more doth beauty beauteous seem, by that sweet ornaâ€" ment which truth doth give. Drunkenness places man as much below the level of the brutes as reason elevates him above it. Never rail at the world, it is just as we make it. We see not the flower if we sow not the seed. The arrogant man does but blast the blessings of life and swagger away his own enjoyments. _‘ The desires and longings of man are vast as eternity, and they point him to it. I know of nothing which is not some modification of power. Ill cotmpany will make this earth a hell. Those who would make us feel must feel themselves. Let the end try the man. Poverty is the sixth sense. / Light is the task where many share the toil. RHEUMATISM CurEp An Awful Plague Pearls of Truth Mis Religion. IN A DaY.â€"Soutn «)\ Baking Powder, and guaranten Bring your watches and ctocks wantâ€" ing repairs to C J. Alteman, who will undertake to put them in good running Suitable articles in great v patterns can always be had at TH E WATERLOO MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY. INCORPORATED IN 1863 Total Assets 81; December ‘93, $349,734. Alteman‘s, the Jeweller. Empire Tea Co. A large and. well selected stock of China, Crockery, Glassware, Silverâ€" ware, Tea, Dinner and Toilet Tets. Our 97 piece dinner sets at $7.50 are beauties. We shall be pleased to see you or hear from you. Goods delivered to any point C. 0. D. At 30 cts. a lb., Is a riser, Pur(:. and__a.lw_ays Fresh We are up in the trade, understand the: business, do all our own blending, and guarantee you satisfaction. Our teas are delicious, our coffees fragrant, possessing a rich aroma peculiar to our own blends. Premiums with every I). OUR OwWXNX _ Wedding Presents. Sure to please you. and MOCHA and JAVA For & trial order of our Pure INDIA and CEYLON Fishinl%on the said stream is prohibited, and a reward of $10.00 is hereby offered to any one giving information leading to the convicâ€" tion of Trespassers, GEO, WEGENAST, 17â€" Secretary. NOTICE is hereby given, that the stream known as, the “Canaquugi%ue. has been leased by the undemifgnod and others from and including the farm of Geo. Holtzworth (about 5 miles north of Elmira) to the farm of John Brubacher, including all the intermediate land over which it flows. hete k m 72 King St. West, Berlin. _ Bicycle Sundries OFFICKERS : George Randall!, President. John Shuh, Viceâ€"President. C. M. Taylor, Secretary. John Killer Inspector. is complete and is kept very busy. We thank our many customers for past PAtâ€" ronage and solicit a continuance of the same. Yours respectfully, C. L HENDEDSON, Prop. Berlin Repair Shop, |_| ho Â¥riâ€" l aee ol usds LE RSus d BOARD OF DIRECTORS Geo. Randall, Esq., Waterloo. John Shuh, Esq., i Chas, Hendry, Esq., D I. E. Bowman, Esq., M. P., Waterloo 8. Snyder Keq., Waterloo Geo. Diebel,Esq., n William Snyder, Esq., * I. D. Bowman, Esq., Berlin. J. L. Wideman, Esq., St. Jacobs. John Allchin, Ksq., New Hamburg. Allan Bowman, Esq., Preston. P. K. Shantz, Preston, Thomas Gowdy, Esq., Guelph. James Livingstone, Esq., M. P., Bade Thomas Cowan, Esq., Gait. From these makers we can sl?ply paeu> matics from $50 up. Those intending to Purâ€" chase wheels will make no mistake in seeing our samples and prices before placing an order. ooflands $10.00 REWARD. Practical Wheelmen Borlin Our Repairing Department get anything better than Coffees, Tea and Coffee Specialists simon Snyder, Call up Phone 124 Druggist, WATERLOO, ONT Bowlby & Clement, Solicito s, | is Uonsumption FOR ' Coughs, Colds You Can‘t Hoarseness. AND variety of Teleph on ty o in qib e famunate h Mb e 184 AN be had of a Waterloo butcher. On and after this date I will sell meat cheaper as : All firstâ€"class meat, pork 9 cents per pound; beefsteak 9 cts, pound; best cut beef roast 8 cents per Mï¬docnn 10 cents per es Wuret .10 o-m'ul-' pets suten: Awmm Shop opp. Commercial Hote!. Waterloo, Feb. lith 1894, POEHLMA.N'S BARBER SHOP, CHHEAP MEAT 0d EJ EOW NP ET EOOCU 7 APVUIAL AL _ land / Surveyor, Civil Engineer and Draughtsman, Graduate of the Ontario School of Practical Science, and late assistant to the York T’EflEnginoer on the construction of Pubâ€" lic Works, and the subâ€"division of lauds in the suburbs of Toronto. @{IMON SNYDER, | Issuer 0 Marriage Licenses. b()flooâ€"At his Drug Store, Waterioo. D) _ Fire and Accident Insurance Agents Waterloo, Ont., representing the best Stock and Mutual Companies doing business in this Pro _ Opposite the Market square, An easy shave, a stylish hairâ€"cut, a good seaâ€" cam, an exhilirating shampoo,, always given. dies‘ and children‘s h:lr mpot.flv cut. YA FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE. intuiantsictiisinticenititootnahcudiclno d dichcalie 2 '\TETERINARY SURGEON, MILLBANK, Ont.. Honorary Graduate of the Ontario Veterinary College, Toronto. t Firstâ€"class rigs and good reliable horses. Two and three seated carriages always in readiness. All calls promptly attended to and char%]ea moderate. Office and Livery in rear of the Zimmerman House. EKntrance on King street next to Fischer‘s butcher shop. Jid ... . Gro. SUcarTt, Proprietor, All kinds of conveyances conamu',l%' on hand, Charges modcrate. "Stables in rear of the Comâ€" mercial Hotel. Will visit RBaden (Kraus‘ Hotel), the first Thursday and third Thursday of each month. Will visit Elmira the second Thursday and Friday and fourth Thursday and Friday of each month (Thursday noon, to Friday noon). DR. C. T. NECKER, MEDALLIST OF go RONTO University, Licentiate of the Col lege of Physicians, Surgeons and Aceoucheu of Ontario. Diszkases or EYE anp EAR TrrEatE». Officeâ€"New residence, Albert street, Water 100. a short distance north of the late Dr Walden‘s residence. DRS. D. 8. & G. H BOWLRBY, Puysicraxs, SurerRox8, Erc. Dr. D. S. Bowlby, Coroner for the County Dr G. H. Bowlby treats discases of the n‘-c throat and ear. Officeâ€"Court House, Berlin. DR. A. F. BAUMAN Payvasrcrax, SUrerox anp AccovchEUR. _ Office and residenceâ€"Two doors north of resiâ€" dence formerly ocenpied by the late Dr. “’al‘den on Albert street, Waterlon, W. Oe o Pn Airen ABubice . nbrutwialctt: o tk: Ince. Money to loan at lowest current rates, D. BuckBERROUGE. B. E. BECHTEL. DR. ARMITAGE o PRysICIAN. SURGEOXN AND AccoUCHEUR. Officeâ€"In the _ rooms formerlg' occupied hy W. Wells, L. D. S. over Mr. Fish‘s store (Beliâ€" inger‘s). Night calls answered at office. Tele phone communication. x Special attention paid to Catarrh, Asthma and Chronic Diseases. OHN L. WIDEMAN Issuer of flamage Licenses. )fficeâ€"Post Office, St. Jacebs. Ont. COLQUHOUN & MCBRIDE, Barristers,Solicitors, Notaries, &e Officeâ€"Corner Ki"tï¬ and Erb Streets, Water loo, over old Post Office. @ Money to loan at lowest rates of interest. FREDrRICK COLQUKOUN. A. B. McBrip® For the painless Extraction of teeth Waterloo Nov. 1st 1898 Telephone communication. Public, §Conveyancer. etc. _ _ (Money to loan.) Office hours, 9. 30 a. m. to 5. p. m. . Offices,. Killer‘s Block, Waterloo. Conveyancer, ete. _ _‘ _ _ _ __ ; ; _ _; _ __.__ Officeâ€"Upstairs in Economical block,5 King Street West, Berlin. Telephone communication UCKBERROUGH & BECHTEL, 1J BARRISTERS AT LAw Solicitors in all the courts, Notaries and Donveyancers, Money to lend on Mortï¬agen lowest rates. Offlceâ€"Court House, Berlin. W. H. BowLBy. M.A., LL.B., Q. C., County Crown Attorney _ _ L * and Clerkof th eace IVERY AND EXCHANGE STABLHES ' H. WEBB M D., * Coroner County of Waterloo Offlceâ€"At his residence on Erb street Telenhone communication. Livery, Sale and Exchange Stables R. HETT. YETERINXARY SURGEOX OWLBY & CLEMENT, EO., H. HUTCHISON. LEX. MILLAR, Q.C W ELLS, L. D. 8. C. W wWELLS,. D. D. s MISCELLANEOUS. . CLEMENT. Richard C. Clark W. A. KUMPF, ODONTUNDER 109 King street east, Berlin,. Officefand Residenceâ€"Johstr LIVERIES. DENTAL MEDICAL. DexTists, WaTtErLOO. Barrister, Solicitor,JNotary Solicitor, Notary Public, John Fischer, Keeps all kinds of Meats, Summer $a8° ages of all kinds a specialty. Large, New Refrigeratd‘ has been enlarged and imp"0"" ed and newly painted of service to the people of Water® MEAT â€" MARKEL J. STREBEL‘S Cheap Harne® a being unable tow vision 1 have appoint Duering, who kept my seven years, as book 1 williendeavor to the I fy the wishes of my cu I beg to anno whose suppor order to accorn have my place in the â€" morni ing. _ CITY MEAT MARKEL Interest ; and up ward Drafts Issued on all P The Molsons Bay HEAD CFFICE, I.'.'ONTREA'. Capital, $2,000,000. Rest, $1,100 1y Open from. 6 Waterioe, F Repairing Skilifuly I BEG to a Waterloo full assortmer WATCHES, CLOCK 8, | JEWELLETy DTA Mox Ds. S1 L\'L’](\\'AF‘E ARTHUR PEQUEGNy House and Sign Painter _ and Paper J Waterloo, e 0:::: Incorporate Heap OrrFicr BOAK I. E BU“ m: MERCA NTILE sales conducted in Eng &2TOFFICE ATTHE Z1\ James I Alex. M: THE SAVINI John shuh, \ J. H. Webit Gec. Mcore, D. s.Po R iy busines> has it Hello There All Work 3 Licensed Auctioneep FOR THE COUNTY or ““’l:lu. THE SHOP Charles N. CENERAL BANKIRC Busicg TRANSAOTED: The Wholesale W. B Now is the time fo" 20 years FIRE INSURAXC CHAS. H. FREHLIE; CAPITAL, $200,.009 WATERLOO al« ARTH at bo () Ki iIfuly and Prompï¬, attended to, â€"ATâ€" Waterloo, 08 JA00R HPsPribr n 18 and Retail Jewelip H rincipal Poirt, 1ER M WA \‘ROCQ Rocks A1.0°G ERIN W ,‘IFon Ladi â€" Cocoa ps B REpaAa Repai agomplexion ;â€" “‘.‘Rl niver TZ,zourn and i) o:) .'.’lu\'im: it soft: w ‘~h‘f)mlle and 1 of HER MWaA each policy paid only t« on travel. 1 claime pai papers. Increa Assets, Dc Increa Reserve 1c Increa Surplus o\ Increa ALEX, MILL A }. . \;El&)t M W.S. HODGIN Ontario J Assuranco The 20 Y ear Poricy now o‘ features, uno i~ and INVk8T Mb N equal, Guarail aud liberal conc pOMINION 1 Increa New Assu W "Canad! geld, A extrem© Economy, Equity, half «evel trated about folt }j taken dow n w when I bes!) sttack of my 0 At the frst of me Ayer‘s 141 them as l«00f «ould propsr‘ that cUI but one ,-klded HEABD OJ PLC+ re &ln Every Dos chest "Foy AYER®! E:\l'ngg M D JOB G &ilcox & Liberal Condit have in stock *lreu. and 1y M 200 readils Arti in the Mr. H ar and T. e« Electri Pr.J.< Bi laln TJ1}1