oking, ahead to the requirements cf 1 E,ytwloo the presont size uf Berlin which it â€"will certainly be in a few ) they consider it more in keepâ€" ig with the growing demands of this rbryo city that a new market build g should be erected on the north side L present market property thns ing a conmodions aquare for the fobge which gather on market days ; business. We shall discuss this itter morefully during the interval iween now and the day of voting on ?1 law. > The byâ€"law to be submitted to the h of the ratepayers for the improveâ€" ent of the Market accommodation is rovoking considerable discussion. umbers of the most progressive ciliâ€" ns of the Town of Berlin, who have Wt confidence in the future ‘the town do not favor the idea of wding thousands of dollats in itching up the present market, but Micket and baseball matches are alâ€" 3t of daily occurreâ€"ce mostly beâ€" @b local sports......The he&vy 1 of the past fow days has damaged ‘Remporary bridgo leading over the X at the site of Helwer‘s biidge e ‘ bly......Sam Schmidt who $ ser burt by _ falling off me ge is able to be ~around §.... .. Mre John Stall has arrived ‘Chicago to pay her father a visit. MARKET IMPROVEMENTS Uhieago to pay her father a visit. wo Children Maud and Roy have ‘bere the past four weeks with grandfather, Mr. G. Franke. ... te Bros. have secured the ssrvices 88 Gatés to . attend to their fine feam and lanch parior. ‘They i# good ice lenmm ntndem far Seuson as we‘ll as a fine grocery in general, â€" [QBy Ella Wheeler Wil Or ’alp'md)o and the tomb, «R luyu lead alopg ~ they geem to g}ideâ€" ;' t _Md the wrong. path winding in and out, over wide it strays, ‘or back from one main track 6 are but those two ways. â€"post pointsthe way to go p within each soul ‘& ‘dwellsâ€"a sonen that tells Foad to the goal. NEW HAMBURG TWO ROADS lmllum.lon;hsma Betzher from Frank!in t #beir first land in Asâ€"Waterioo T‘p. m . desolate at first the day sants w # floods fult msng of the blest. in The Grand Trunk Railway policy, of extensively advertising Oaoada‘s reâ€" sources and scenic beauties at the various ex posltiogps and fairs, is bringâ€" ing forth frait.. ‘The passerger ‘travel all bver: and â€" especially in the bighland of Ontario, never being London, Aug. 24.â€"T*~~~~ is no marked change inâ€"the conditi_s of M. W. Bro. R. B. Hungerford, G.M. of the Ontario Masonic Grand Lodrc, w mo is suffering from paralysis of his right side.. His case is a serious onc. ‘ New York, Aug. 24.â€"Tosa Sherry, 28 Â¥ears old, and Annic Faitzmann, aged 18 years, cloakmakers, were caught unâ€" der a fallen electric light pole on.the corner (lzl .!b‘::{‘th andl East l-‘!.a{flon streets last . It is th t they are fatally haurla. The nc.t’:lu:ent was witnessed by a large number of peoâ€" ple, but the two girls were so hedged ï¬n:l‘dto“m “"lh:lmr'md Pa:o ce go to r some g&m are now at Gouverneur the Mansion T ouse, the hotel at which they spent theiâ€" first night in Syracuse, is explained by Mr. Sanderson, who says that he paid for their accommodaâ€" tion in advance and forgot to place his friend‘s and his own name on the books of the hotel. The explanrtion of the registering on the second night of their stay as James Lindsley and William Thomson of Ottawa is that they were both addressed as "Lindsiey" and ‘‘Thomson" during the day by mistakâ€" en strangers, &nd that the names were wriiten on the register as a joke. Rev. Mr. McAmmond, who entered the false signatures, states that he was called "Father Lindsley" on /the streets of Syracuse, his resemblance to a member of the Roman Catholic clergy being very pronounced. Rather than use the title "father," he wrote "Jas. Lindsley" and also made up the first name, "Wilâ€" liam." for his friend Sanderson, who had been accosted as "Thomson. " Mr. Saqderson‘s explanation of his presence in what was evidently an cxtremely unâ€" Gesirable resort is simply that he was deprived of his senses by a drug which was administered to him in candy, and that he was taken to the place by two men whose intent, it was thought, to rob him. His detention in custody was, he says, the rosult of an outâ€" rageous action of a police official, who did not charge him with an offence, but who locked him in a cell to insure his presence as a withess in the court the next morning. Tic woman in the case was charged wit> **~ theft of Mr. Sanderson‘s gold wn(â€"i,â€"but was disâ€" charged, as there was then no evidence, nor as yet has there Lccon any forthâ€" coming that she ever =aw the owner of the watch. _ to accompany him, and the two met at Ogdensburg. Their determination to visit Syracuse was reached only after they had disagreed on Some other trips that had been proposed, and their first two days in the American city were spent in innocent sightâ€"seeing. The fact that they neglected to register at the Mansion T ouse, the hotel at which _they spent theiâ€" first night in Syracuse, cused, who, in the district where they live and are known. are believed. This is not surprising when it is pointâ€" ed out t both gentlemen have seryvâ€" ed nenrsaa quarter of a century in the ministry, and that both have held with bonor many important offices in the church. Rev. Mr. Sanderson has held his present charge in Almonte for over a year, and previous to that was sucâ€" cessively the incumbent of the Methoâ€" dist churches at Kemptville, Kingston and Centenary Church, Montreal. He is the father of a family, and in addiâ€" Jon to being a prominent figure in the church work of this district is known for his active interest in local affairs. Rev. Mr. McAmmond is also the head of a family, and has an imâ€" portant pastorate at Perth. He was formerly pastor cof East Methodist Churech in Ottawa, and also of the church at Winchester, in Dundas County. The statement as to the unfortunate eccurrences at Syracuse, as they will be presented to an ecclesiastical court next week in the form of a defence, will be as foliows:â€"lev. Mr. Sanderson, who was visiting with friends of his wife at Iroquois, thought to extend his" vacaiion by & short excursion to some point along the St. Lawrence. He asked his friend, Rev. Mr. McAmmond, The statements that Mr. Sanderson was arrested on a charge of drunkenâ€" ness, that he visited a disorderly house willingly and knowingly, and that the two acted in a way not consistent with the conduct of Christian gentlemen, reâ€" ceive a convincing denial from the acâ€" The reports upon which the charges are based come from Syrgcuse, and they have already been shown to be inâ€" accurate in several essential details. There is no evidence which can be brought against the accused, except that which is contained in the stories telegraphed from the other side, and it is, briefly, that the ministers went to Syracuse on exceedingly short notice, that they spent some two days in that city, that the names entered upon & hoâ€" tel register by them were not their own,‘ that Rev. Mr. Sanderson spent some little time in a house of questionâ€" able reputation, and that he was deâ€" tained at a police oftice as witness in a case in which a notorious woman, known as Pearl Ashley, was charged with the theft of a watch belonging to him. These facts are frankly admitted, but it is simple justice to say that the accused have with an innocent explanaâ€" tion taken away the ugly look which the story bore on its first appearance in the press. â€" ooo pastor Of the Methodist church ‘at Al» monte, came here and demanded an inâ€" vestigation into charges which have z made in connection withâ€"a w paid by them to Syracuse, N.Y. Advantage was to have been taken by the accused ministers of a financial meeting of the members of Perth dis* trict to present their demand for & hearing, butâ€"@ithough both gentliemen took part in the business of the meéetâ€" ing, the matter in which they gre so vitally interested was not meptioned ofâ€" fclally. Rev. J. Tallman Pitcher of Smith‘s Falls is the Chairman of the district, and to him Messrs. Sanderson aund McAmmond finally made their apâ€" peal for a trial. They expressed a deâ€" sire to présent the newspaper reports of their experiences in Syracuse As charges against themselves, and deâ€" clared that if any of their ministerial brethrenâ€"would draw up other charges, so that the whole matter can be airâ€" ed and their innocence vindicated, they would regard it as . nothing but a friendly act. The situation is one which is perhaps without precedent in the hisâ€" u:lry of the Methodist Church in Canâ€" ada. & Smith‘s . Falls, Aug. _ 24.â€"â€"~This Afternoon . Rev. Foster McAmâ€" mond, pqstor of the Methodist church at Perth, and Rev. D. G Sanderson, G. M. Hungerf Hedged in by Live Wires. in the history of the company. ‘osult of _ an outâ€" police official, who _ with an offence, in a cell to insure itness in the court Iliness in the court roman in the : theft of Mr. out was disâ€" no evidence, 1 any forthâ€" the owner of The figures lead to two Conclusions in the matter of infractions of the liqâ€" wor lcense laws. The first is that woâ€" men are engaging less and less in the business of m-mbn(im selll wor. _ The gecond 42~ the number of women convicted of = enness varies but litte.. The .vng number of this dau“."f. nc in seven _per mu it was 2.47. Cw decrease “_ rélatively .and AY. â€" % The Yukon has contributed to the orime of the country, as measured by convictions, 1.65 gnr cent. of indi¢table convictions, and 5.2 convictions, and 5.3 mum. of the summary convictions is an increase over the previous year, when the record was taken for the first time. The tendency, as disclosed by statisâ€" tios, ru.wean to be towards a habitual criminal class, which meansâ€"a smaller number of criminals and a larger nuniâ€" ber of repetitions of â€"crime. With respect to the birthplaces of the criminals of Canada, the Canadianâ€"born show a decrease in 1900 as against 1899, and the same fact is shown Ih the conâ€" tributions of England,Ireland and Scotâ€" land to our crime. Criminals from forâ€" eign countries increased considerably. A diminution in Roman CatholHe criminals is shown. Highwater mark was reached in 1802, when the Roman Catholic erfminals made 48.7 of the toâ€" tal oriminal calendar, while at the same time the Roman Catholics formed 41.2 of the total population. In 1900, howâ€" ever, that proportion had fallen to 38.8, 1809.. The increase of convictions for crimes committed in cities apd towns was 193. Rural districts showed & decrease of 129 in 1900, compared with 1899. ‘The returns show that the conâ€" viections for indictable offences were somewhat less among the l;borlns class in 1900, compared with 1899, an also among the industrial class. ‘The commercial class showed a slight inâ€" crease. A slight increase also apâ€" pears among the agricultural class. The proportion of females in all convicâ€" tions for indictable offences was slightâ€" ly larger in 1900 than‘ in 1899, but very much smaller than in previous €nars, the average for the period {884-91 having_been 8.7 per cent., and that for 1900 5.8 per cent. Ottawa, Aug. 23.â€"The criminal staâ€" tistics for 1900 are about to be pub= lished by the Statistics Department. Thiy chow that, the Province of Queâ€" bec excepted, the number of convicâ€" tions in 1900 increased in all the Provâ€" inces, in comparison with 1899. The greatest increase was in the Province of British Columbia, where the conâ€" victions, making aHowance for the normal increase in gopulalmn, have inâ€" creased by over 23 per cent. Nova Scotia, for a mining Province, has a low percentage of cases, only ’}07 pet ten thousand of the population, against 20.40 per ten thousand of the populaâ€" tion in Britishâ€"Columbia. The total convictions in 1900 were 5,168. ‘The number of convictions per ten thousand of the whole %eoplc were 10.72, compared with 10.75 in CONVICTIONS INCREASED IN PiiovINCES BUT ONE. British Columbia Shows the Heavâ€" jest Increaseâ€"Proportion of Feâ€" males Convicted Slightly Larger Than in Previous Years. Mrs. Henry Parsons, a respected reâ€" sldent of Exeter, Ont., is one of the mapy who have teated and proved the ealue of Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. For many mouths she was a great sufferer from what is commonly termed "a ruu Jown system." To & reporter of the Advocate the gave the following story in the hope that uther suffâ€"rers might benefit from her experience:â€""For many months my health was in a bad state, my constitution being greatly n down. I was troubled with continuai headaches, my appetite was poor and the least exertion greatly fatigued me. I consulted a physician but his treatâ€" ment did not appear to benefit me and I gradually became worse, so that l could hardly attend to my household duics. I then tried several advertised remedies but withoutrasclt,and I began to regard my condition as hopelese, A neighbor called to soo me one day and urged me to try Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. Having tried so many medicines without recâ€"iving benefit, I was not easily persuaded, but finally I consented to give the pills a trial. To my surprise and great joy I noticed an improvement in my condition before I had finished the first box and by the iime I had taken four boxes of the pills I was fully restored to bealth. 1 no longer suffer from those severe headâ€" aches, my appetite is good, I can go about my household duties without the least trouble; in fact I feel like a now woman. _ All this [ owe to that beat of all medicines, Dr, Williams‘ Pink Pills, aud I would strongly urge other safferâ€" ors to give them & trial." _ Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills are recogâ€" aized the world over as the best blood and nerve tonic, and it is this powâ€" er of acting directly on the blood and nerves which enatle these pills to cure auch diseases as locomotor atazia, patâ€" alysis, St. Vitus‘ dance, sciatica, neurâ€" algia, rhenmatism, norveus headache, the after effects otf la grippe, palpitaâ€" tion of the heart, that tired feeling reâ€" sulting from vitiated humors in the blood such as scrofula, chromic erysipeâ€" las, etc. Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills are sold by all dealers in medicine or can be bad by m.il, post paid, at 50 cents a box, or six boxes for $2 50, by adâ€" dressing the Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Mr world of misery those fow s and yet tuere -'% Srou‘h- out this.country who are suffering from this condition. Their blood is poorand water; ; they suffor almost continuously from beaduches ; are unable to obtain resitul sleep mod the least exertion greall; farigues them. What is needed to put the aystem right is‘a tonic, and experience has proved Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pulls to be the ofly nover failing tomic and health restorer. x This Condition Causes More Geauine Sufâ€" fering Than One Cen Imagineâ€"How a Well Known Excter Lady Obtained a Cure Aiter She Had Begun to Regard From the Advocate, Exeter, Oct sHOWS THAT THE BLOQGD AND NERVES NEED TONING UP,* CRIMINAL STATISTICS. Her Condition as Hopeless was in town ©Dtain, there will be general regret over his retirement, His demeanor on the bench was dignified, and yet genial, angd often enlivened by kindiy humor, and he won the affection, as well as '.3‘:'0- spect, of the bar. He had an emi y legal mind, regarded law as m science, and was a wonderï¬%! d _lawyer. At the â€":'t' "m:a y ‘the weakness regarding Aimse 4 fallible, but al kept hig nbgï¬ w& n â€" antocratie | good a lawyer,.. is m block in of adâ€" rreer 'ï¬?‘h‘ At the time of Sir George‘s retirement frox the bench The Globe said of him: â€"‘‘Although Chief Justice Burton has well carned therest whichâ€"he will now obtain, there will be gencral regret over his retirement, His demeanor on the bench was dignified, and yet genial, # :un .‘3.:"“ by kindly humor, won affection, as well as re= spect, of the bar. nehnannwlflr legal mind, regarded law as m m and was a wonderfully sound â€" Chief Justice Burton was a member of the Church of England. _ He marâ€" rhd‘n June, 1850, Elizabeth, the eld« est daughter of the late Col. Charles Cranstoun Dixon, of H. M. 43rd Regiâ€" ment, and last year éelebrated his golden wedding. * Sirâ€"George â€"William Burton, the secâ€" ond son of Admiral George Burton, R. N., was born in Sandwich, Kent, July 21, 1819, receiving his education at the Rochester Royal Grammar School. The late Ohief Justice came to this country in 1836. He studied law in Ingersoll and was called to the bar in 1841, with Sir Oliver Mowat, his lifeâ€"long friend, their names appearing on the roll at Osgoode Hall one aftér the other, . He began the practice of his profession in Hamilton, where he built up a large practice, and was generally known as a sound cemmercial, railway and muntâ€" cipal lawyer. _ He was City Solicitor there for m quarter of & century and one of the orgahizers of the Canada Life Assurance Company, of which he was the solicitor and counsel until his appointment to the bench in 1874, when the Court of Appesal was reconstructed. Having discharged the duties of Jusâ€" tice of Appeal for over 23 years, he was appointed, on the retirement of Chief Justice Haggarty, as President of the Court ngtdl Chief Justice of Ontario. Her late Majesty conferred the honor of Knighthood on the late Chief Justice on New Year‘s Day, 1898, and he reâ€" tired from the position last year, after 26 years‘ service on the bench. â€" After his retirement he took an active part th the interâ€"Provincial accounts arbitra« tion. In 1885 he served as Chairman of the commission then appointed for the reviston of the Provincial statutes. Chief Justice Burton was a member of the Church of England. _ He marâ€" ried ‘n June, 1850, Elizabeth, the eld« est daughter of the late Col. Chnfln‘ The funeral will take place from his late residence toâ€"morrow afternoon at 2.30 o‘clock. Toronto, Aug. 23.â€"Sir â€" George William Burton, late Chief Justice of the Court of Appeal, died at his residence, 292 Wellington street west, early yesterday morning. He had not been ill, but the intense heat had been very trying to a man of his great age, and hcart failure was the immeâ€" diate cause of death. He passed quietâ€" ly away at 2 a.m. Lady Burton surâ€" vives her husband, and he leaves also two sons, W. F. and George Burton, barristers, who are practising law in Hamilton and Toronto, and four daughâ€" ters, Miss Burton, Mrs. Malcolm Macâ€" pherson, ‘Wellington, New Zealand; Mrs. C. L. Ferguson of this city, and Mrs. Bain, wife of Mr. J. R. Bain, M.P. for Cumberland, Eng. DEATH OF SIR GEORGE WILLIAM BURTON FROM HEART FAILURE. Sketch of His Lifeâ€"Stadied in Ingerâ€" soll, Practised in _ Hamiltonâ€" Quarter of a Century on the Benchâ€"An Honorable Career. Some of these mounls, the Curator said, were constructed after the adâ€" vent of Europeans in America, as was shown by the finding in some of them Oof articles of clvilized manufacture. Some of the mounds were for funeral purposes and others for worship. The one just opened was for the burial of the dead. Reburial was the comâ€" mon practice among the Indians. At times the dead were left as first disâ€" posed of until the flesh had entireâ€" ly decayed, then the bones were tied in a bundle and reinterred. Such bundles have been recovered, and somé are to be seen in the Provincial Musâ€" eum. In other cases reinterment takes place while the sinews are intact, as shown by the position of the skeleton. Such an one was that just mgcovered, with the legs crossed and bent. The reason given for the custom of reâ€" burying the dead is that an occasion might be furnished of a feast for the living. M ael s _ t EMINENT JURIST EONL, One very curious discovery was the remains of a person who had been burned at the stake in the mound. The charred remains and other evidence were found, leaving no doubt in the curator‘s mind as to the flery fate of the individual in question, ‘This, as far as he knows, is the first instance of such & discovery in any of these mounds. F Cns Ca t Om APTPRITTT TV <uated on the farm of Mr. Peter Bradt, who kindly permitted the exâ€" cavations. It is oval in form, 38 feet long by 30 broad and three and a half feet high. Remains of six human bodâ€" ies were found in various parts of the mound. ‘There was no order in the method of their interment, but most of them lay on their right sides.One skeleâ€" ton had in its hands four or five flint arrowheads and a slate knife. Its legs were crossed and bent under it. This skeleton Mr. Boyle brought with him, imbedded in the earth as it lay. Only one perfect skull was found, and some principal leg bones, the rest having‘ crumbled to dust. tario Educational Museum, this week opened up a mound of the â€"Mound Bullders. ‘This is the nearest to To« ronto that any of these ancient works have been found. Archaeologists now generally attribute them to the Inâ€" dians, but there are yet eminent stuâ€" dents of that science who declare them to be. the monuments of an earlier and more highly civilized race. % Mr. Boyle returned from his work yesterday. ‘The mound in question is aBil2lDs T C â€" _ °_° Tt *wentyâ€"mile Creek, a stream every school child is familiar with from the reading of Canadian Ristory, Mr. David Boyle, Curator of the Onâ€" mln IN a TOMB oFP 4 NT MoUNDâ€"BUILDERS. Oneâ€"of the Decenased Was .:‘ at the Stakeâ€"Ourious Find the Curator of the Ontario Museuimâ€" OLRCF Helica SecumaA IX HUMAN SKELETONS, ACMCEN 4 a <a @4 + wttihn SW 4 on goa w anl Relics Secured. Island . . * Â¥2D"a0 : 7 mant M 4405 .. & ... Paris, Aug. 24.â€"During the severe storm which passed over this district carly this morning the barns of Mr. William Bailey were struck by lightâ€" ning and burned to the ground. Mr. Balley lives between the second and third concessions of Burford Township. The barns and the entire season‘s crops were totally destroyed.â€" Tt is not known whether there was any insurance. f Wondstack, Aug. 24.â€"Woodstock was :'iifl'('o‘: h;cu night -?:“ u!m mqrnin‘ th the viest ra mb«a by the oldest residents. .‘The cellars the business establishments on Dundas street were flooded, and the water rose over the curbs and sidewalks. The lightning played havoe with m and was the cause of a fire a m & hallf southeast of Embro. . She Ielt Tt, "Just think G(In' fond the old Indy is of going to & fumcral and how few there bave been." "I know it It‘s got so now that whenever she meets a man over 70 sh¢ looks at him reproachtally." old us o t ee The barn of Cornelius Collins, 4th concession of Puslinch, was struck by ligttning this morning and totally conâ€" sumed, with all the season‘s grain and a _ few implements. ‘Threa horses, which were in the stable, were got out with dlfllcul% The bundlnso:u in« sured for $1, in the Waterloo Mutuâ€" -l,“but thl‘- will hardly cover the loss. John McGuire, a G.T.R. switchman, was knocked off a ladder, falling.twelve feet and spraining his ankle. Mr. John Colson, 82 years of age, had a narrow escape. The plaster was knocked off the waill of his house, falling over and around him. Telephones were burned out in numbers, and also wires. « The employees of the Guelph carpet factory, nearby, had also a very unâ€" comfortable experience. One weaver noticed the lightning playing about the steel work of, the machine he was operâ€" ating, and moved away, as he thought, to a safer place. He was standing at a closed â€"window at the rear of the facâ€" tory, when he was knocked over. It was several minutes before he regained consciousness. Johh Brandford, anâ€" other weaver, working close beside him was also knocked down, but recovered more rapidly. Wm. Laidiaw, who was standing in the office beside the safe, was the third to feel the shock." He also was thrown down, but soon came around again. ® e en e e ie ind it all is how Mrs. Grant and her family escaped unhurt. They were in the kitchen when the house was struck. Mrs. Grant says the house was illuminâ€" ated by a ball of fire, which she saw come through the diningâ€"room into the kitchen, and pass outside between two of the children who were standing at an open window. Or three places, In both chimneys the stoppers which filled the stovepipe holes were blown across a room, and a showâ€" er of soot strewn across the floors and furniture. The miraculous thing about Guelph, Aug. 24.â€"Following the close and oppressive atmosphere of the past few days, a sudden change came about _midnight on Thursday night out of an almost cloudless sky, with the excepâ€" tion of one dark cloud. Rain came down in bucketfuls, and poured so for about five or ten minutes. Rain fell more or less during the night. At 8 o‘clock this morning there was a severe electric storm, which continued for an hour. It was heralded by a burst of lightning so sharp that it appeared to be in every portion of the city at once, and was followed by a heavy thunderâ€" clap. The heavy part of the storm travelled along the valley of the river in an easterly direction. ‘The residence of Mr. T. F. Grant, pumpmaker, St. Patrick‘s Ward, near the river, was struck. Both chimneys were almost deâ€" molished, the cornices destroyed and the shingles thrown in every direction. The clock was stopped at 8.10. The plasâ€" ter was torn entirely from one side of a bedroom which two of the children had only vacated a few minutes before: The lower sash on this room was torn out and thrown to the ground, and the curtains were fired. From the bedâ€" room the lightning passed down to the parlor. ‘The plaster here was also torn off the walls. Both windows were shattered, as well as the glass door in the hall. A parasol, which stood in a corner of the room, had the covering ‘burned off so clean éhnt there is not a trace of it left. A fancy photographâ€" holder was scorched, and some of the ambrotypes badly twisted. The lightâ€" ning left the house at a corner of this room, and its course along the ground to a wire fence on the adjacent lot may be distinctly traced. It left a burned path about four inches wide and a couple of inches deep. The posts along this fence are splintered in two Weavers in a Mill at Guelph Knockâ€" ed Senselessâ€"A Number of Barns Demolished and Their Contents Destroyedâ€"Woodstock Flooded. HOUSES WRECKED AND TELEâ€" PHONES BURNED OUT. There a young follow in Flint 'Iol::htll‘â€"-.--.o“ But the po of his girt. . _ 4 Gave the young man & # And now be is done up in 1t LIGHTNINE‘$ PRANKS, Manufactured by Lever Brothers Limited, The Vigilant Fathor, Deducts _: Soap Divides Adds Multiplies the Cares of Washing Dey from the Houseâ€" vl"-buyllh. by two the (Hlours of Comfort in the Work to Cleanliness in by two the Life of " the articles washed, From 7 to 20 years of age, in the County Boys and G;rl-.l The Misses Febrenbach, Wanted, 200 Bays and Bints |â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" §Summar i i â€" ~ â€" Millinery Cured Hams A Speoiaity . . . Good, Tender And Wholesome EZ Watch our Bargain Box in front of the store. J. RITZER, Waterioo American Soft Front Shirts, the Latest Patterns. We also cartry a good assortment of We Ars Sole Agents ( ESE o SUBSCRIBED CAPITAL . . . . . $250,000.00 DEPOSIT WITH DOMINION GOV‘T **a"%® % uhu-mb,hmnouauucmsnnnjus.co. h Assets of $15,000,000. . We aaraiateds c ainiatain) . Summer _ iï¬ The Mercantile Fir Merchant and Gent‘s Tailor Furnisher. C1 9. N. B.â€"D(I)rg:r_sr delivered l:o any part of t winâ€"City by a Im-chss delivery, Meats is what the people | want especially ~during the: hot season of the year,. As my business has greatly inâ€"‘ creased I have been obliged ‘ to build a new REFRIGERâ€"| ATOR in order to store my | meats and in so doing I am ; better prepared than ever to| supply my customers whh | the most delicious roasts and | tender steaks. | Alfred Wright, Secretary, L â€"â€"FOR THEâ€" JOHN B. FISCHER, INSURANCE COMPANY. Celebrated King WATERLOO Urion Bats pa d for (taken) in 1009 . â€" Bs 0 tor Haken) in 14 . All forms of regular sound life and endowment assurance are issued. Bee mny of onr agents or wirte Head Office for particulars. We have placed all our old business on at 4 per cent. Reserve Standardâ€" higher tK: nGovernmentrequirements, We have increased our Surplus over aH Liabilities from $21,210 to $35,852 We have increased our Assets from $416,807 to $539, 268. . The 20th Century finds this Comâ€" pany in a splendid position. Security, solidity, progress and equity are our watchwords, ital from $64,000 to $100,000, We bave imcreased our Subscribed Capital from $257,600 to $400,000. « corPaAx‘y. 3 NEAD OFFICE, _ WATERLOO, ONT. Dominion Bife Assuranse J. A. MackieJ.P................ EG 1t PRRER, : +: ezve iÂ¥ re6+vers L. J. Breithaupt................ P, 8. Lautenschlager.......... Frack Turper, 0. E.. Jos. K.Seagram MP. FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY INCORPOPRATED IN 1863. Tolal Assets Sist December ‘¢q gesaose. > BOARD OI;ERRCT ORS. Jomn FawurtL â€" â€"â€" â€" â€"~â€" President Gromer Laxe â€" _ â€" . â€" â€" Viceâ€"Pres, Huso Knanz â€" â€" â€" â€" _ Manager. W. H. Scmuars â€" â€" â€" â€" â€" Scoretary Jomx A. Roos â€"â€" â€" â€" â€" â€" Inspectt BOARD OF DIRECTORS. W. H. Bowlby, Q. C... WATERLOO MUTUAL Net Assets ist Jan: #800 ) Amount at Hisk â€" * "%815â€"900,00000 Government Deposit Eeonomical Matual Firs Ins.Co. We have increased our Paidâ€"up Capâ€" During the hot sammer months we will clore cur store every evening except Saturday at 6.15. Our patrons will confer a favor by doing their shopping as early in the day as possible. » Early .. OFFICERS : George Randall, President, Wm. Snider, ~V‘ceâ€"President. Frank Haipbt, Maragor. 1t, T. Ort, h specter. Mesare, Powlby & Clement, Solicitore, Ber Yim. BUCKEBERROUGH & OO‘Y, a Acents QGRAIN MARKET. Geo. Pandall, Keq., Waterioo, E. Bnyder, Keq., t* William Snider, Keq., _" Geo, Diebel, Fag.. w J. L Wideman, Reo., St. Jacobs. Allan Bowman, Eeq., Preston. P, K. Sbantz, Preston. Thomas Gowdy, Keq., Gueiph. James Livingstons, Eeq., BaJen. Mutual and Cash Systems. Progress in 1900, oF BERLIN. Organized 1871. by BERLIN Closing Waterion .Toronto Herpeler .Teronto.