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Waterloo County Chronicle (186303), 20 Sep 1894, p. 4

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4+ "' The qlected legder of the Pat in | say. E mug..-umuu.’.&i’:’fi: ondi y of life, a vigorous speakaer and a .1 | and: fllfl.&vimsm ..d.‘p‘ tician of some experience. He has ast : â€" If you leave your name with any of the following persons a gentleman will call upon you to take your declaration and see that your name is put on the Remember the list which is now beâ€" ing prepared is the one on which the next general election will take place, so be sure and get your name on it in time, All wage earners must bear in mind that their names will not be put on the new list by the Revising Officer anless he receives their declaration that they are qua‘ified. years of age can have his name put on the Dowrxriox Vorkrs‘ List providing he makes the necessary declaration that he is duly qualified. T L 2 OO m Subscription $1,00 per annum in advanee $1,50 if not so paid. High class printing, English and German, in a@ll its branches. ' Advertising Rates: +assonable, and will \be made known on @A}p.cation, AvyrrTIsIN@.â€"The wise and pushâ€" ing merchant always keeps his name and goods well before the public. No better means of reaching the people of the townships of Waterloo, Wilmot, Woolwich and Wellesley than in the columns of the WatErroo Cocxty CIIRONICLE, as there is bardly a postâ€" office in these townships where there are not more Chronicles than any other paper Wateripe County Chronicle. A Weekly News Ayer‘s Sarsaparilla â€" Diamond Dyes Wonderful Fame. Wood‘s Phosphodineâ€"s. Suyder Ayer‘s Cherry Pectoral Winslow‘s Soothing Syrup. Perry Davis‘ Pain Killer. Beott‘s Emuision. Dr.Piercce‘s Golden Medical Discovery "Hood‘s Sarsaparilla Cures. Cottolene. Menthol Plasters. Sunlight Soap. DOMINION YOTERS‘ Lists F.oor Qil clothsâ€" The Williams Se THURSDAY, SEPT. 20th, 1894 Auction Sx‘e â€"Louis Farwell Millinery Openingâ€"Doering Bro: An Oven latterâ€"Dr. o Williams‘ X Important to Wage Tapping Muiineâ€"â€"J. Conrad “_' illin»rj THE® PaATRON LRA DER Every young man Millinery openingâ€"C. Stmlern;gel Farms for saleâ€"F. 8. Scott Fall Assizesâ€" M. Springer Millinery Ooeningâ€"Groff & Hymmen Business Educationâ€"Galt Rusiness ] [College Dressmaking and Mantieaâ€"J. D. Willâ€" [iamson & Co DAVID BEAN, Proprietor Merchant Tailor. Agency SUN°LAUNDRY. Millim ry and Mantlesâ€"Bricker & .___[Diebel MLNISO OO 2 sn hp al) i. L, bowman, M.P. Waterloo R. Y. Fish, m 3 Colqubanu«& McBride » â€"â€" , . New Advertisements this week °T. A.B. Robertson, M.P.P., We John Walton, «Jno. W. Bundy, Linwood Fred. Donald, Hawksville E. W. B. Snider, St. Jacobs W.H. Winkler, i N 8. Bowman, Conestogo ° YÂ¥ oYr su 200. ‘ Scotch and Canadian H+s just placed in stock the choicest line of plain and fancy E.B. YOUNG, wWORST EDS seased manuat, s ‘face wilh} Mj.'pr'ha_ .‘V-‘“ ancy Vestings and Pantings in great variety and cho.ce. E. B. YOUNG, Ever shown in Waterloo Merchant Tailor, Openingâ€"Tho Boehmer Co clothsâ€"RK. D. Lang & Co. ims Sewing Machineâ€"J. S TWEEDS aper Published every Thurs ay morning, over twentyâ€"one .P.P.,Wellesley Williaoms‘ Medi [cine Co Earners. [Roos the certificate of any physic lax. | their trip ly authorized by the m?f‘nmylen.,enl |* | duly chartered college to practise medâ€" | a pleasant | | icine be abrogated, and thit all charges > dfnndor‘w“ against | in | any medical man shall. beitricd by/â€"the | | Mr. Elij Resolved, That while we approve of the principle of the payment ‘by fees, the amount:retained by offief«ls should be fixed at a fair renruneration of the services rendered, and that the balance of fees be paid into the treasury of the municipality and treated as general revenue. Resolved, That a bill should be passed in accordance with plank No. 7 of the Patrons‘ platform ; that the exâ€" isting system of inspection of county officers be oont.inuetr?o that office be held during efficiency and good behayâ€" ior ; and that where incompetency or irregularities shall exist in any office the inspector shall lay his complaint before m nonâ€"partisan tribunal to _be specified in the Act. f ‘Resolved, â€" That clause 16 of tle Medical Act ‘be mad and that: the power of the M Council to annni _Resolved, That beyond the sa‘ary attached to that office there should be no allowance or gratuity to any emâ€" ployee of the Government for living expenses or any other purpose. M uL2 d Cemb : oo onE O M T o oi(E Resolved, That the payment of any sum for Lieutenantâ€"Governor‘s clerk hire or servants‘ fees by the Ontario Government, or for the furnishing of a free resifince or supplies of any kind to that official be hereafter prohibited by special legislation. J Resolved, That there be an enactâ€" ment to render it a violation of the in depéddence of Parliament to accept a pass from any railway, steamboat or other transiportation company. y oo w ied 0C The deliberations of the conference resulted in _ agreement on â€" the following, certainly not revolutionâ€" ary, programme of legislation, to securâ€" ing which the Patrons will lend their best efforts : The Grand Board of the Patrons of Industry mev its elected members of the Legislature in Toronto last week and effected an organization for the session. Sixteen of the seventeen Pat. rons who will sit in the new Assembly were present, Mr. Pardo of West Kent being detained at court. The business transacted, a report of which was furâ€" nished to the press by Grand President Mallory, was of an important nature . being practically m plan of campaign for the coming session. Mr. Joseph J L. Haycock, M.P.P.for Frontenac, was chosen leader of the party in the Asâ€" sembly, and Mr. Senn, M.P.P.for Halâ€" dimand, secretary. The members elect were pledged to vote unitedly on any question whenever the majority of the party so decidesâ€"a block of seventeen l â€"and to resist all attempts at coaliâ€" tion or affiliation with either of the o‘d l parties. The Third Party is therefore now a fact to be reckoned with, and if, its members are as gocd as the ironclad pledge which each has given, they may i exercise some influence on legislation. | THE PATRONS‘ PLATFORM as Patron candidate was Viceâ€"Presiâ€" dent of the Reform Association. It was only & month before his nominaâ€" tion that he joined the order. He is President of the Midla. d Fair Associaâ€" tion, which holds its exhibitions in Kingston. _ He lives about two miles oat of Kingston, and is x general farmâ€" er, he says, paying special attention to market gardening, and with a particuâ€" larly good poultry attachnentâ€" so good thit he and his parcner captured almost $1,000 in pmzes at the World‘s Fair. _ He is a successful man in busiâ€" ness, and his entry into politics in carâ€"| rying by 31 of a majority a county which had been Conservative for 62 years was a remarkable enough achieveâ€" ment to warrant confidence on the part of the Patrons that he will be sucâ€" ceseful in the new political ghreer upon which he has entered. ty, where he has lived ever since. For a year he was bookkeeper for Sexsmith & Stevenson, the lumbermen, John Stevenson being the member of the Legislature who was Speaker of the House during the first terim after Conâ€" fedeâ€"ration. _ Mr. Haycock went up through the grades in municipal politâ€" ics, and for seven years represented the Township of Kingston in the County Council. Seven years ago he retired from the municipal field. He has alâ€" ways taken an acsive interesc in policâ€"‘ ics, and at the tim= of his nomisation mined character to his countenance, | and goodâ€"humored eyes, which make itl a pleasant one. He was born in Lenâ€"| nox County in 1850, his father beâ€" i ing an Englishman and his mother of} Irish descent. He attended the Comâ€" mon and Grammar Schools until ho was eighteen years of age. He was a clerk in a genera! store for three years. In 1871 _he moved into Frontenac Counâ€"| | ~ 4s Ofanab cent ue curainl eeuimometanl earsl ie e l Oe e ied Waterioo County Chronicle Thursday, September 20, 1894 _l_qm It will ou to ask Simon Moyer the price of 'f:ag& and coal oil befor:ybuying elsewhere. Mr. Q‘Nuil sbipped 1 car of cattle for the eastern markets. ... Mr. Fred Schaefer shipped 1 car of tile. ... Mr. orchards, where by-;c;ll-);.gi‘;xexplictt;!e misâ€"chance they invariably lose the trail. " P Noaae chel ies . ... Mr. Chas. H. Tye, aad Mrs. H. Walker left for London on Monday evening . ... Mr. S. Smith of London,is visiting at Mr. Jas Brown‘s.. .. There was no school last Friday owing to the indisposition of the teacher. .. . The nights of last week and this have been simply resplendent with radiance. The azure vault of Heaven is studded thick with sparkling planets, and the moon‘s pale lustre sheds a soft glow on the pulâ€" sing earth benéath transforming darkâ€" ness into the brilliance of day. This entrancing condition of nature haa alâ€" lured some fof our young nimrods,eager for game aud gore, in pursuit of the coon‘s doleful whistle. Sometimes their path leads them in the neighborhood,of On Saturday Miss Barclay and Miss Echel Brown went to London, where the latter intends to remiain and attend school....Mr. Clarence Tye was in Stratford on Saturday . . . . Mr. Edward Tye spent Sunday in Goderich . ... A flock of slowâ€"flying birds passed over on Sunday. We will not endanger our authority on the science of ornithology by hazarding an opinion of their specâ€" «. ". Mr. Levi Lang teacher,has bought a lot in the "William‘s Survey," and is now excavating for the foundation of a brick residence for bimself. ... Mr. J. A. Fish is moving into the residence in connection with the store . . . . Dwellâ€" ings now are in great demand, and unlese some more are built this fall, some families will have to remove elseâ€" where to make room for others coming in . ... A party from Poole is negotiatâ€" ing for the purchase of the cheese facâ€" tory, and we hope to be able soon to report that a sale has been effected in which case the factory will again go inâ€" to operation in the spring. ... Miss Lang of Harriston has been engaged as williner at R. Y. Fish‘s, and will be on duty in & few days....Mr. David Pollock, jr., spent a few days in Toronâ€" to last week. weeks‘ sojourn with her daughters in Beclin...,. Miss Minnie Bundy left Wednesday for Berlin where she has secured & situation as milliner. ... Mr. Wiw, Terry has sold his house and lot to Mr. Robt Kerr at an advance of over $100 of what he paid for it a few months ago. Mr. Terry has bought the Pommmer regidence on King st ,now cecupied by Mr.Philip Struck,for $500 Miss Parsill of Mildmay, is visiting her brother Mr. Chas. Parsill. ... Mr. Ingram Vernon, who has been supplyâ€" iny for some time for Rev. F. W Crow:e Ié% on Monday for his home in St. Marys.... Mr. David Pollock, of the Linwood Brick store, has secured the services of Mrs. Chamberlain, of Blythe, as bookâ€"keeper. _ Mrs, Chamâ€" berlain comes highly recommended and from her appenrance and address, we should say that Mr. Pollock has been very fortunate in securing the services of a person of such experience and ability as Mrs. C. evidenatly posâ€" sesses. A very large business is done at this stere and a good sccountant was essential to its success. ... Miss Barbara Pollock left last week for Erin, where she has secured & situation as Milliner . . ; . Mrs.A. Boomner returnâ€" ed ho ne on Friday last after a two Call at V. R. Berlet‘s, Merchant Tailor, where you will find a large assortment or Suitings and Overcoatings just received, (iood bargains are assured. The following resolution was pased by a standing vote of all the members : Ived, That we pledge ourselves to vote and act unitedly on all questâ€" ions declpred by the majority of the Patron members to be Patron questâ€" ions, and we hereby declare our deterâ€" mination to resist all attempts ut cualiâ€" tion or affiliation with either of the exâ€" isting political parties, e his Haysville. Linwood, nnablt‘tlo that it will Mr. Idington warned the Bow Park le for | people of the trouble which he was likeâ€" Fred|ly to have with the cattle purchased . Mr.| from them, and asked that some one id 32 | be sent up to watch the tests which he 1600 | proposed making. They wrote saying e in | that a.qualified vet. would be delegatea ished | to test the cattle, but Mr. Idington deâ€" P it| murred, saying he would conduct the inntnaialle :2 a+ 5) 0C : o'ne;;h‘:oqg E PabbaPiatnndrsuibistdvee has 412 4 a_ time, and at present vriti:g Mr. Idington and the Bow Park people are no nearer a solution of the difficulâ€" ty than ever, but arrangements, it is understood, are g made to enter suit -gg!ue 'mmmm t of Bow Park ; C dapinges,.; i disease howâ€" ever, Iw doesinot mm‘ the Tufections Diseases Act, though Mr. Idington‘s conscientious principles forbade that even the hides should be sold, though Mr. McMaster, is authorâ€" ity for the statement that, from what he knows of the disease and its unsueâ€" pected prevalence in every direction,the people of Ssratford are «almost daily eating meat and driukiog milk infected with tuberculosis, f C i Sn Gnriiiitaint â€" Aoistideds Ad: bu h.h A3 The disease, which is similar to conâ€" sumption in the buman family, may be communicated to man through eating the flesh or drinking the milk of a beast infected with it, was introduced to Mr.Idington‘s herd through the purâ€" chase of some six or eight months ago of eleven head of cattle from the Bow Park Farm. Soon after the arrival of these cattle, which were guaranteed to be sound, Veterinary Surgeon McMasâ€" ter, of this city pronounced them inâ€" fected with tuberculosis. and suspects were at once isolated, but the dreadful character of the disease is shown in the result. Every beast slaughtered was subjected to Koch‘s tuberculin teat and A Fine Herd Destroyed., (Stratford Herald, Sept, 12) Stratford, Ont., Sept. 18. â€"A couple of weeks ago it was announced that tuberculosis was prevalent in the city, and that a well known breeder of thorâ€" oughbred cattle had suffered the loss of 57 head. Within the last few days another ten head of choice cattle were added to the list, making a total of 67 head belonging to the fine herd of John Idington, Q. C.,that have been slaughtâ€" ered and buried without so much as reâ€" moving a single hide, the total loss be-l ing estimated at something like $7,000. Mr, A. Montgomery one of our old residents bas recently left the farm and removed to ‘Linwood, where he intends spending thefremainder of his duys. . Apples must be plentifulin this viciniâ€" ty. _ Mr, Huber‘s cider mill is running every day....Mr. and Mrs, Samuel Miller have taken advantage of the excursion to the North West. They intend visiting different points of note tefore returning. We wish them a safe and pleasant trip. ... Mr. Samuel Mcâ€" Kee spent a few days recently ‘at the Industrial Fair at Toronto . . . . Mr, and Mrs. Thompson, of Moorefield spent a few days at Mr. A Miller‘s. ... We are glad to learn that Mrs. A. Miller who has been indisposed for the past couple of weeks is fast recovering. Bridgeport. Percy Smith has a wheel.... Mr. P. Shirk is away to the Maritime Prozinâ€" ces on business he intends to stay sevâ€" eral weeks . . . . Misses Emma and Katie Shirk are visiting friends in Markham ... . Henry Huff is building an addiâ€" tion to his shop. ... Mr. M. B. Soider, and wife were visiting at Mr. Geo Shirk‘s last Sunday . . . . Word was reâ€" ceived here that Mr. William Gastâ€" meier was dangerously illinthe Guelph Hospital haviog a severe attack of cholera morbus, from which he never. recovered. He sent word to his brother Otto, his wife and his son Willie, to come to him but he prassed away before they reached there. Deceased was emâ€" plovyed as freight conductor for a numâ€" ber of years.... Mr. Jno. W. Sipee was in town the other day. w»Sreelsville is vIsiting at the home of her eister, Mrs. Eli Atkinson. She inâ€" tends to return to Streetsville someâ€" time in the following week. R. T. of T. Hall l1st Monday evening. Subject resolved that the drankard sufâ€" fers more through intemperance than his wife.... Miss Mary Cligg, of Streetsville is visiting at the home of T E Web 10 Om offeâ€"meeie o eeampene s Brydon has returned to this village afâ€" | ter baving a fow months travels in the \ : | territories.... Mr. Ed, Rife, and his sister Violet,of Walk:â€"rton are visiting â€" | at the home of Mr. Lewis Kribs.... & 9 Miss Cober of Ethel, is spending a few weeks at the home of Mr. avnd Mrs. J. N. Cober, of this village.... â€"â€"â€" BR dGLN_ â€"â€" The Mission Circle in connection with the Methodist church held their monthâ€" ly meeting at the home of Mr. W. H. Hurvey‘. &% _':A_ ‘debste took place at the MHONUINNNENNUTENNTirripierireenre ie emmmmmmmmmmmenmmmmmmmmecammzm Mubersvilic, itâ€"inpeorporâ€" "_. And received permission from â€"Mr Water Works Company, to y They are without exception the best and easiest running maâ€" chines in the market. I Intending purchasers can save dollars by buying from {Ro# amiject Williams â€" Sewing â€" Machines All are Cordially Invited. NO CARLDS, ’ O UR E_A ILTL â€"_ â€" OPENINGâ€" _ Thursday, Friday and Saturday, _Sept. 27, 28 & 29. Dress Goods, e# Popular Boot and Shoe Store. J . S. ROOS, hy Gâ€"x e Mulinery & Mantle House. Groff & Hymmen. THEH CELEBRATRED Are for sale only at the â€"Page 4. /.w.{ al THE POPULAR BOOT AND BSHOE THE GREAT . Skidmorg, manager Peme of STORE 3 q Bricker& Dichel. A very hearty invite tion is extended to the public to come and see the‘ grandest display of high class novelties ever shown in Waterloo. Thursday, Friday & Saturday, September Autumn Opening Millinery Bricks: Dicbel‘s GRAND Mantles 27th, 28th and 29th. LN TD y. Two doors Sout ig, King street, We â€"The lady teache ixuriant crop of tb ‘own Council on W ick closer than _ ys‘ work on the em of a great deal ~â€"Three smal} bri us issue. work and i excellent ve them a â€"The Guelj ig of 100 un ill near the + n, next week. 'loo Sh(v\\‘, â€"â€"A l)&lld C â€"Our :'“_leregular:gua.l â€"â€"Lhe continued hflllicle is shown arly 50 names to two day‘s canvas warded by the a imes. . Merchant lumns of the Chre ling medium . Te Pfi this week. â€"The fall as prlin, Monda» â€"The health Ayr, has tick d he is report â€"A large : companied t). ednesday 1> e Western â€"Mr. A: olstein catt prizes at | ong them e erhilntion 1 ednesday evenir e programime w n‘t miss it. â€"Mrs. F. J s E'b(‘fl'if‘.\ whiedh second time t| es have coo d pot Jalet C! copy for ch than Tues lay ments &ccep?! of each week â€"Mr. Isaac Hoffr hbe had the milk the dealers list ‘ '.'d 8 4 5 per cen is is an extra big torily expiains t ncemet L ERALE N. kerloo Young on will be held i rch, on Monday excellent progra ys, etc., is now t to G. H. Hut er‘s block, Wate et, town, for t, $6 per month 8. â€" Six rooins. ce of ous berh: â€" CHO NFEU'J FRt & vi retty m:ryo}:\ Wed the marriage o tars Bell tele , to Mr. J osep gent, of Bran was performed B bride‘s pare lan, of Hespel ladies of W y’l dm. ng that no will give the :with a I§S &n LOCA L TO AUNVLE A Ch THE 8% the out it of it. H de

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