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The Chronicle Telegraph (190101), 3 Apr 1902, p. 6

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La i _ B h dsc * 400 /,..»,rx‘ 3{ sey ue .22 y lWn nantay" ' he top 0 t‘“"** m 5 % ~ Tha Tw Câ€"'bi‘b“-‘ P 5 § w-‘fâ€" kimg. \.‘:.’v“ l in . was hauled there in the mornâ€" and was Arst of many loads um will be hauled there . â€"reathing . the site ye scribe st accosted a laboring man who was digging a postâ€"hole, and after e usus he asked the newsâ€" ,..:)i an if he was one ol the conâ€" tr and without waiting for a reply kept on working harder than ‘ It was certainly a proud 1 itâ€"for the scribe, but the reply e wus forced to make in order to keep up hisâ€"reputation for veracity brougbt him down to his ordinary level. ‘The postâ€"holes the man was ‘ marked.the chief corner oi 3 main building. â€" From this point .one has a good view of the town, and when the fiveâ€"storey building is W it will be visible from the y at different prominent points, especially in the vicinity of the G. . R. depot and also fronr King street from theâ€" G. T. R. main line to the High School. ‘A most beautiful _ landscape here out before you. At a disâ€" ; e of about 1,200 feet and about __ feet _ beneath the noble Grand runs majestically past, while F rt, â€" Breslau and Bloomingâ€" ‘dale dot the landscape in the . disâ€" â€" The size and location of the variâ€" ous buildings are indicated by numâ€" erous stakes, while others marked the route of the Grand Trunk Railâ€" way spur line, which will run to the g%‘:t the building, and also the & Bridgeport R;ilw%y which will run in the hollow on the westâ€" ern side. The site had been reâ€"staked durâ€" ‘ing the day, owing to the decision of Mr. E. H. Dyer to have the reâ€" ‘finery erected on the knoll instead ‘of in the hollow where it had been preâ€" viously â€" decided to build it. Engiâ€" neer H. J. Bowman was found busy securing levels of the sites for the various _ buildings, and determining the height the water will have to be pumped in order to reach the main building Mr. E. H. Dyer, who has charge of the erection of the plant, was also near by. He is a comparative 1y young man, tall and of fair comâ€" plexion, â€" and notwithstanding the large responsibilities he has resting upon him he is genial and obliging. ‘The site chosen, he said, compared favorably with any cther sugar facâ€" tory site in North America. ‘"Toâ€" morrow," said Mr. Dyer, "we will have another corps of engineers here to assist Mr. G. M. Braduck, our construction engineer, who has come direct from Colorado, where he has been engineering for a new factory. In a day or two more we will want {hoeod la::x'mg men to start digging lvaent, foundations, and from this time ¢ s â€" £ 6ut there wil be an army of men VARI XBLE SPRL\? wEATOER Kkept busy until the refinery is comâ€" DISASTROU3 TO WE iK pleted. . This spot will be a busy PEOPLE. beeâ€"hive â€"during _ the next _ six months."" Mr. Dyer said that they "â€"~ will employ as many men as they | Even Usually Robust People Feel R can handle and pay them the scale} Down and Out of Sorts at This Time. of wages prevailing in this section. â€"Dr. Williams‘® Pink Pills Are ‘There will be no Sunday labor whilc F j the factory is under consiruction. the Very Best Spring Tonic Asked concerning the Benton Harâ€" bor factory machinery, Mr. Dyer stated that the people think . they are â€" getting _ secondâ€"hand goods ‘"Fhey are in a sense,‘"‘ he said, ‘"but it is better than new on account oi having been tried and with the adâ€" dition of all new machinery will tell you that Rerlin will have one of the best equipped _ sugar refineries . in North America." Mr. Dyer said the fact that _ the railway is not ready will not hinder the work, as the stone, sand, ceâ€" ment, etc., for foundation purposes can be hauled by waggons. ‘‘Thouâ€" sands of dollars are spent in . the foundations and covered up and nevâ€" er seen again,‘‘ said Mr. Dyer. C ‘The brick, and there will be about $,000,000, will be purchased in this district, and will not be brought from Benton Harbor as was reportâ€" Sugar companies generally have 2 visiting day omce a month while runâ€" wing, for the purpose of allowing farmers and citizens to go through the I-Qorz. "It costs in the neighâ€" borhood of $500 a day to allow peoâ€" ple to go through the factory," Mr. Dyer remarked, but we are pleased %o have the people interested, and it is m profit to the business in the .. In referting to Mr. S. J. Williams, %m« said Berlin owes him _ a ibt of gratitude thatâ€" will be diffiâ€" w repay. ‘‘This thing was thar a doorâ€"nail just previâ€" ous to Mr. Williams‘ visit to Cleve land, so much so that I paid no atâ€" tention to three telegrams for me : éonife to Toronto to meet the cof , and would not have gone it Mr. Williams came tc Cleveland and you know the result." After <aâ€" Jong illness Mr. Wm. Boecking, an old and respected citiâ€" =-d Berlin, died at his home . on on y evening. Deâ€" m 4 m years mgo in Qt:. und came to j quite a young â€"â€" been a resident of DEATH OF WM. BOECKING soue Â¥â€"| _ Addiess by Rev. Dr. Di lon in Alma mt Sugar Reluing Co Ts a| * W W Checn, Bertin. _ â€". | â€" Mr W. H. Browhaupt Explains the and Superb Location L ues to S. J. Williams ’;\ t ‘--?‘“’. :"v E -..- z‘-‘ 1 , gave a e ec o aaf *'* PMb 2 ‘_g" L P ) N .&Lv:s â€" Ineugd his o i o. m “3 pmdrrergizernh o 2 . Abneudried i5 c- ‘fl' â€" m mm vo-j,: $ mperift vexioAriee® uc te tm en w m hi | than ever, He was in u‘{ ‘ County ‘seat of Wilson County, K sas, for z days and there : no saloon, or .“g be found there. . The License Law is as well kept there as any law of the State. If probibition reâ€" sults in more liquor selling than beâ€" jore, why are not the liquor party more anxious for prohibitiont While the citizens of the United States are worth about $25 per capita, those of Kansas have $80 per capita, being the richest state in the Union, notâ€" withstanding â€"having some natural disadvantages. The taking of â€"imâ€" toxicants into the system paralyzes the moral sense of right and fits a man for the commission of any crime. A report obtained by the New York Independent from a numâ€" ber of Judges from the State Courts |showed that 70 per cent. of all~ the crimes committed were ‘caused by the liquor traffic. The clerk of the ‘I penitentiary in Satem, Oregon;, told Ithe speaker that four fifths of the linmates â€" were â€" brought there by Pstrong drink. The Government is I the largest stockholder in the liquor Abusiness. The fact that the Governâ€" Iment can and does levy such taxes on the traffic, that it prohibits sellâ€"| ing on election days, and during cerâ€" tain hours on Saturday and the Sabâ€" bath, that it licenses only a few to engage in it, prove conclusively that it could prohibit if it chose. Reguâ€" late a vice! You can‘t do it. You must prohibit it, then you can . reâ€" gulate any one who violates it. The best regulated people in the world are those in the prisons. Any one who does not use his inâ€" fluence and his vote against the trafâ€" fic is a party to it, and is making himself responsible for the wrongs licensed by the Government. â€" ‘There is a very good method in use in the Hospitals in England to test the sanity of patients before they are permitted to go home. A tap is set running _ into a large trough and the patient given a dipâ€" per with which to empty. the trough. If he knows enough to turn off the faucet he is sane cnough to be at large. Let us hope that at the coming election the voters of _ Onâ€" tario will prove themselves sane enâ€" ough to turm off the tap. Rev. Dr. Williamson made a most excellent temperance speech when moving a â€" vote . of thanks to the speaker PBOBIBITION MEETING The spring months are a trying time to most people. At no other time of the y?ar do healith and strength seem so bard to gain and to hold. You do nmot feel that you are really sick, but you feel about as bad as you could if you were serâ€" iously ill. That feciing ought to be got rid of â€" and it can be. . What you need is a tomic to enrich the blood and free it from the imipuriâ€" ties which have lodged in your sysâ€" tem during the winter, and which are tesponsible for your present condiâ€" tion. Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills is the only reliable, neverâ€"failing tonic medicine. These pills make new, rich blood, _ strengthen _ the nerves and bring health and vitality . to every organ in the body. They are an â€" ideal spring medicine and the best thing in the world for all disâ€" eases having their origin in impovâ€" etished or impure blood.. The case of Miss Belie Cohoon, White Rock Mills, N. S., is strong corroboration The Spring~Feeling. t thorough _ and the blood and speedily cure sciatica, parâ€" Vitus‘ dance, s & Bridgeport Co. clear | Those Bailway Frauchises. ‘.uuu To speiate to the mapas tac tory much more cheaply than if it Rm tm oC Cmo P I M , of a pa b? that a _A ol this nature: could be developed, and . as the company, although entirely . inâ€" dependent, would, to some extent, be affiliated with the Berlin & Waterâ€" loo . ‘reet Railway Co. and operated in conmection therewith, the running expenses could be kept so low that a profitable business could probably be developed in the course of a few years. This, however, is a matter concerning the shareholders and does not so much interest the general public. The undoubted benefit _ of such an undertaking to Berlin ‘is asâ€" sured. It would bring Bridgeport and the entire northwest section of Waterloo Township, perhaps the best section of the County, two tand a half miles nearer Berlin and would to that extent bring trade to Berlin merchants. This would be only one of the many advantages. Now that the Ontario Sugai Co. has been loâ€" cated and‘ an additional advantage would result, both to the road, we cheerfully ‘admit, as well as to the town and Sugar Co All the required fegal preliminaries | °" had been strictly. complied with and | )4 the recuired byâ€"law had been assurâ€" | W ed by the Township Council, leaving | ®: only a short gap of about five town blocks to provide ror when the quesâ€" st tion was to come up for final conâ€" | P sideration before the Town Council | t at an adjourned meeting on Friday B evening, the byâ€"law . baving been | ® brought before the Council in reguâ€" he lar form at its monthly meeting on | 4! March 3rd. Seweral directors of the|" Berlin & Brideport Co., among them is myself, had expected to attend the s meeting on Friday evening when we were informed that at a meeting of |® the Finance Committee in the afterâ€" | P noon it had been decided not to take any action on that day, but to adâ€" journ the meeting for another week. | F What occurred at the meeting Friâ€" day evening in regard to railway franchises has been fully reported in ‘The Telegraph and on that report 1| base my comments. The Berlin & Bridgeport Co. had applied for runâ€" ning rights, not exclusive, but to be open to what other company might | & require them, to enable it to conâ€"| Inect â€" with the Berlin & Waterloo | j |line, thence along Victoria, St. Legâ€"| [er and Louisa streets, to a point on | â€"lLancaster street where they would |, â€"lenter into their own right of way.|; The application of the Berlin & Presâ€"|. : ton Co. as per letter of Mr. Patterâ€" | i| son presented at the Friday meeting, ) | was not for any part of the route directly required by the Berlin & Bridgeport Co. It was clearly â€" inâ€" tended to defer the whole question for another week when a change . of programme Was apparently brought about by Mr. Williams, with the reâ€" sult that the Finance Committee agreed to report to the Council reâ€" commending a franchise to the Presâ€" ton & Berlin Co., somewhat vague in most part and specific only in the part taken verbatim from the Presâ€" lin & Bridgeport byâ€"law then before the Council, namely along Victoria P\ strect, St. Lreger and Louisa streets. Mr. Williams, in my absence, made several statecments concerning . the Berlin & Bridgeport project and conâ€" cerning me directly, which were etâ€" roneous and misleading, let us . asâ€" & |sume due to misinformation. . He T |said the linc to Bridgeport was nevâ€" id |er heard of until _ after the Sugar 14 | Refinery was located. The line to u| Bridgeport has been under considerâ€" utlation for two years, the Berlin & Tâ€" | Bridgeport Co. _ was formed last be|summer, had its preliminaries comâ€" at |pleted long before the subscription he|list of the Ontario Sugar Co. was tiâ€"| seen, obtained its charter from the Provincial Government early in Deâ€"| cember ‘and applied for byâ€"laws to the town and township when the Sugat Co‘s project had been pracâ€" | tically given up. Mr. Williams‘ inâ€" sinuation that the charges by the Berlin & Bridgeport Co. should the Preston & Berlin Co. want to use this line would be so exorbitant . as toâ€"tie up the latter is entirely disâ€" proved by the clause incorporated in the proposed _ Berlin & Bridgeport byâ€"law, . the effect of which _ would be that the Berlin & Bridgeport Co. could charge no more than for proâ€" portionate use of the line as comâ€" pared to the whole use. As will apâ€" pear â€" lafer on instead of tying up the C. P. R. connection the Berlin & Bridgeport project would actually facilitate it and make it cheaper. The Berlin & Bridgeport Co. would expect to make 12 to 14 round trips daily between Berlin and Bridgeport, probably from April to xxm, and about five round trips for the rest of the year. Incidentally it may be said that the tariff would be the same as on the Berlin & Waâ€" terloo line, that is single five cents, regular tickets six for 25 cents, limâ€" ited tickets eight for 25 cents.. The Preston & Berlin Co. has not exâ€" pressed any intention of doing more § than a freight business, which would Imean oneâ€"or at most two trips a | day: Or would it perhaps be a pasâ€" |senger business also* It could land ' W in Berlin . anywhere along |Victoria street or at King and Wilâ€" ‘Imot streets, or at some place along "unu'- Creck, let us say at the ‘|crossing of Queen street, near the lW. G. & R. lactory, or at a point 6 , all of ints it re f‘ a stretch of in tion . to ‘N" C F is ® L ‘ i |of King and Que i streots, the cenâ€" tre of origin Of. RaU o ud Than 6 v. The Pros n,&..;; 1 Position of the Berlin and Bridgeport Road m March m‘- lm . It is clear that the Preston & P evigge: Pasinect to the : that a vice to the factory: be a_ or is Wrmo in his zeal thwart machinations of a jous Breithaupt he has ) f lost sight of the best interests . the sugar {actory? R I may perbaps ‘be allowed to say here that I have always been loyal to what I considered the best interâ€" ests of Berlin. That I had confiâ€" dence in the Beet Sugar project when it came up is attested by more than empty words. That my conâ€" fidence in its success ‘has not been increased after most of the original participators have withdrawn, after heroic treatment had to‘be adopted to galvanize into it new life and alter various other Mm?uo deâ€" veloped, is also a fact. Let us hope that the experiment to_qfll‘ beet sugar in this â€" locality be . a grand success. ‘There wil} nevertheâ€" less remain other interests. Mr. Wilâ€" liams expects to continue making the best shirts in Canada; my assoâ€" ciates and I expect, in more humble sphere, to keep on carrying passenâ€" gers, that is our business, and when we see opportunity for a new _ venâ€" ture, a venture that will be of genâ€" eral benefit to the community, and be at our own cost and risk enâ€" tirely, we trust that common sense, justice and â€" fair play will prevail with those in authority and that we may be allowed to do so. ‘ In view view of the fact that there: still is nothing except a little cross purpose to prevent the granting â€" of the required byâ€"law to the Berlin & Bridgeport Co. at the next regular meeting of the Council the share holders of the company trust that this may be done. Whether it is or not they will at least have the satâ€" isfaction of having made honest and straightforward effort. ' P Meunewe Thanking you for opportunil expression before the ratepayers Berlin, I am O President Berlin & Bridgeport Electâ€" ric Street Railway Co. HOW TO MAINTAIN SOIL FERâ€" TILITY. ‘"We all know that it is very deâ€" sirable to have a fervile soil in which to grow crops," says F. P. Peck of Michigan. ‘"For success in farming depends larigely on the fertility . of the land. Every one knows of many once fertile farms which are not now producing half what they should â€"â€" scarcely enough to pay for the â€"â€" scarcely enough to pay for the labor necessary to produce a crop. It is more profitable to farm so as to maintain or improve the soil than it is to rob the soil of its fertility, and in the end bring ruin to the owner of the farm." How is this to be done* I be-‘ lieve our greatest loss of fertility is the loss of humus. A soil without humus will not carry a crop successâ€" fully through a drouth. A clay soil devoid of humus will be lumpy and hard, and will not retain moisture for very long. We all know the effect on the crop, and the great amount of labor required to prepare such a piece of ground for a crop. ’Hence our aim should be to farm se as to produce and leave as much its owh line used ouly for its humus in the ground as possible.. This is best accomplished by a roâ€". tation of crops, and one crop in the rotation _ should be clover, which is our greatest soil renovator. We should aim to feed everything, or nearly everything produced on . the farm, and if we add a little bran or concentrated feed to the ration â€"of each animal, and carefully save and apply all the manure, it is casy to see that we shall maintain and probâ€" ably add to the fertility of the soil. Many advocate the plowing under of green crops, but unless a farm is very much run down, I would not practice this, unless it be to . bury a second crop of clover, or a clover crop sowed to protect the ground during the winter. A cover crop should always be sowed whenever a piece of ground remains idle during the fall and winter. Many times we have a piece of stubble which we inâ€" tend â€" to plant to corn or potatoes. On this we can grow a crop of rye or peas and barley, either of which will make a large growth and can be plowed under in time to plant to corn. This adds ln‘ply to the huâ€" mus of the soil, and will tend . to carry â€" the crop through a drouth without injury. As I said, it should be our aim to feed all, or nearly all we raise on our farms for the purpose of keeping up the fertility of the farm, and I beâ€" lieve it to be more profitable to sell our produce in the form of butter, beef, pork, etc., than to sell it in the rough: 1 believe our produce fed to good stock, will bring us more than twice what it will sell for on the market.. For example, I can feed a cow for 124¢c per day, and have her bring in 25¢ per day or more for butter alone, and I believe the same to be true with all other kinds of stock. Many advocate the use of _ comâ€" mercial fertilizer. Of coutse, the basis of all our fertility is the amount of nitrogen, potash and phosphoric acid a soil‘ contains. When we consider shat an ordinary crop of wheat of 25 bushels per acrte, ramoved about $8.75 worth of these élements from the soil, and a crop of corn nearly as . much, we can readily see that when a soil is . oxâ€" cflrh # n‘:y. using Teed s & the is o a on farm, we can Lâ€"“'fi:!f- nr_i::-(; these nents to the goil in at the same time ; Yours respectfully, wW. H. BREITHAUPT for opportunity of n the manure, get twice the produce. â€" We of I would not advacate the of wheat, but udt.un»“'m thase bran or cottonseed meal, . is worth more for fced than wheat, and has about double the manurial value. IL I sold much 1 would use . commercial ; freely, for it is impossible to ‘ keep up the farm and sell grain without their use. If we grow all the forage crops we can and feed ‘them on the farm, carefully save and return the manure, we need have but little fear ‘About he fertility of the land. Galt Reporter. â€"â€" There is a lively sensation in Guelph just now, . the whole city is talking about it, but the newspapers have, strange to say, | preserved : profound silence in regard to it. It appears that certainâ€" parâ€" ties in the city made statements against a druggist that the latter alleges are grossly untrue. Against some thirtyâ€"three of the tale bearers he has issued writs, through his soâ€" licitor, Mr. W. A. McLean. McMilâ€" lan & Dunbar are acting for the army . of defendants, but some of them are very badly scared and are settling on the quiet. One man is reported to have gone into Mr. Mcâ€" Lean‘s office and â€" with trembling knces offered a whole week‘s wages, $5, if the writ would be withdrawn. ‘The question beard on ali sides is, "Have you got a writ yet?" Guelph is proverbially jealous of Galt and perhaps has originated this scandal, in imitation of our own modest in~ terrogation, ‘‘Who stole the beer?" or ‘"‘Who is Bill?" The Gueiph paâ€" pers will not likely say much about the matter. The name of a young lady â€" has been used in connection with the trouble. A SENSATION IN GUELPH WRILE PARLIAMENT Is In Session, Oitawa Poople Hear of a Marvellous Cure. the Purest, Handiest, Soap in the World. _The greatest of moderr physicians, Prof. Edward E. Phelps, M. D., LL. D., alter years of long practice and close scientific study, gave to . sufâ€" fering and diseased men and women his marvellous lifeâ€"giving prescripâ€" tion, with the convictior and posiâ€" tive knowledge that it had peculiar virtues and ample powers to cure, after _ the terrible verdict ‘"incuraâ€" ble"" was uttered by the medical ‘practitioner. It Is a Rescue From Suffering and Death Effected by Paine‘s Celory Compound, THE GREAT SPRING MEDICINE. MR BROWN SAYS: "After the Use of Paine‘s Celery Com pound I am Now in the Best of Health ." Thousands of the strongest testiâ€" monials from the best known _ and most reliable men and womcn of our country fully sustain the claims mad country fully sustain the claims made by Dr. Phelps regarding his inâ€" comparable â€" Paine‘s . Celery Comâ€" pound. ( _ One of the most convincing proofs furnished, _ comes recently from _ a gentleman â€"widely known in the Capâ€" ital city, we refer to Mr. Alfred Brown, 391 O‘Connor Street, Ottawa, Ont. Mr. Brown‘s letter fully demâ€" ital city, we refer to Mr. Alfred Brown, 391 O‘Connor Street, Ottawa, Ont. Mr. Brown‘s letter fully demâ€" onstrates the fact that the greatest sufferer may cast off his or her burâ€" den of disease and _ become well, strong and happy. It proves too that the great medicine maintains more firmly than ever before its unâ€" rivalled place in the estimation . of people of wealth and social standing as well as with the masses. Mr. BRrown says: C fa "I acknowledge with thankfulness and pleasure . the fact that‘I have bYen cured of a very painful iliness of eight years standing by use of Paine‘s : Celery Compound. I had, during the years of my illness, tried almost «ll the advertised medicines without deriving any good results. I was also treated by several of the best doctors of this city, hoping to find that one of them at least would understand my case. "I was getting worse, and . was told I was incurable. 1 was indeed in a critical condition. T could not go from the house alpne, as I was fiable â€" to sudden collapse. 1 tried hospital treatment, but no relief or1 good results came to me. 1 could not sleep; anything that I ate inâ€" creased my agonies, I wus extremeâ€" ty weak, restless, tired and despondâ€" ent; was obliged to walk about with my hands ‘pressed firmly into . my left side to e-o: pains; my feet and hands were â€"continually; had inclination ~to vomit, had profese, gll'h with painâ€"for hours _ "Afterâ€"the re use ¢ ine‘s \Gelery Copound Tor a time, 1 aim PE '~.3_‘ â€" 9 “ F. W. HODSON, Live Stock Commissioner HLVER inouaiiae Wrought Irou Range Co. ~ GENTLEMEX :â€"I bave been usiog a Home Comfort Range for the past four years and am more than pleased with it. It is convepient, durable %fl'y economical in fuel. _ Burns either wood or coal perfectly and is by the cheapest range in the end.. _ _ _ a Featte+ x 'I"n‘twflmmmhwltbutoultltmw”mbm Wrougbt Iron Range Co. ~GrxTuEiB® :â€"Eight years I hased one of mflmconfi lhn:ou. with which l‘:n’pcrhz;, umd and would :utthm anctber i .l‘““. Â¥ 3 I believe them to be well worth the price. ll&m.ohu;mdu new and has not cost me one cent for repairs and I believe it will Inm.llhllfi 3 T.B. H i+ * [ \Ta cammm‘e neeua To ° 22 N3.F OExTLEMEX :â€"Weâ€"have been using your "Home Comfort" Ranges for several years and are pleased to u{ 6: ‘{'6 us entire satisfac:ion, both in baking and heating, and great saving ( a:uel.d) ie . L4 v‘;,\'\__(s‘-f: C Mre. Wu.g‘:a:v. U <ta Menno 8. Weber, s â€" Mrs: Benj«min Bowman, * â€" Mre. Benuel Bowman, ‘ § Mrs. Heckendor», * ‘ M. Srobman,. o : Alex. Hadden. f Wrought Iron Range Co. SerEuEy‘s HARD RUBBER will retain the most difficult forms of Hernia or Rupture with comfort and safety, thereby completing a Radical @URE of all curable cases. . Impervious to may be used in bathing; and fitting perfectly to form of , are worm without incomvenience by the youngest most delicate lady, or the laboring man, avoiding all sour, most delicate lady, or Te ‘aboring -l,.'mmâ€". m&lfl."fl.‘n‘fl'mhnufib- with T Made in every desirable pattern, pads anatomically m‘:’ufllfl“ m i aok sei uid io the repotntion segntred ty wes t‘®," onl on repu! y our goods during the past 25 years. All genuine are plainly Beasr 2%n se } ESTABLISHMENT { *¢44"* M The Correct and Skilful Mechanical Trestment of HERNIA OR RUPTURE A SPECIALTY, THE MUTUAL LIFE -un:f“"; the correct adaptation of a suitable trum to each individual case, and instructions for its propeF M# with necessary changes and alterations. TRUSSES THE ONTARIO MUTUAL LIFE. â€"_â€"_. . Founded 1064 . Paidâ€"up Ospital $1,000,000 “ Pactori.s. Salerroome and Offices : TORONTO, CANADA. and 8F. LOUIS, ® Westera Salesrooms and Offces : â€" DEXYEK, COLO. \7a -.nvz’rtm.ulm.““dwmfl“‘-.‘u nds c uon .E ©3ITPONRT STERL FURSACES, ‘Write for cetalogue aod prices. .\ Net Asget 3 1900 00 \mo.‘ unt .-'.R'hhn flbg% uo Government Deposit § oex FEXNEEE â€" 0 â€" 0 â€" President Grome®Lak@â€""â€" _ â€" â€" _ â€" Viceâ€"Pres, Imso Kraxz. s =â€" â€" â€" _ Manager. <en nmical Â¥atual Fir: Ins Co ln-n. ote. Jard conetan Mr. H. B. Duesring desires to thank his numerous cnstomers for their liberal patronage given him the past year and hopes that by promwpt attention to business he may have the continuance of the same. lb < Robt. Melvin, â€" Ceo. Wegenast, _ W. H. Riddell, Mr. Dusring slaoghters none but the best cattle and you can rely upon Euu-nbom-mudl tll': is wholesale pork trade this work who ndmm business and the beat of satisfaction is goaranteed. His sanaages are of the nutndpaund. ) Dried ham, bacon, sammer Formerly City Meat Market. | Dominion Life Assurance Mutu«i and Cash Systems. Premiums, Not ......0«cnczee Interest, aant and Annuities Death Claims, Endowments, Profite, etc., Al! other Paym@enb®......000 cce .e ce es n<+ Municipal Debentures and Bonds ...« ... Loans on Company‘s Policies .......... . Real E tate, including Company‘s Office ("nsh in band and in Banks.......<.><â€"â€">>> Other WROUGHT IRON RANGE CO., Limitro UOn the Company‘s Stanard, di and l:z. 3 On the Government Stasdars, 4}% and 31% orF BERLIN. Organized 1871 Abstract of Accounts for 1901. INCOME: t onl o0 | . t ooo eeten t ont Amats ho DISBURSEMENTSI LTIABILITIES sURPLUS ASSETS Waterlco Lon and WATERLOO MUTUAL "otal Assets 8#ist December 99 Manager CcomMPAMNY. MEAD OFFICE, â€" WATERLOO, ONT. in a splendid position. Security, m!tv. progress and equity are our Ese d dE V uesd We have incressed our Subscribed ital from $64,000 to $100,000. We have placed all our old We have all on 8t 4 fet gont. Reservs Stamdard s â€" ® ta. e have increased n Luaoiuiafrom Tihirt 10 theime hat every truss sold from cur srore is a Porfeet Fis. We bave Elastic, Hard Robber, Leatber Trueses. ard London and Ab» dominal szpporters; also the vest maukes of suepensories. = FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY INCORPORATED I® 1868 We Guarantee We hare a Private Room in our store where these ‘groda are fittsd and acjusted with perfeer seorcey. â€"~v€ BOARD OF DIRECTORS. @eo. Randall, Keq., Waterioo, 8. Snyder, Req., r William Snider, Meo.. * Geo. Dicbel, Keo., + J. L. Wideman, Req., 8t. Jacote, â€"_ Oarst‘ck is larse ard our ptices are the lowest. Thomas Gowdy, Keq., Guelph. James Livingstone, Keq., Raden. P. K. Shants, Preston, Berlin Wm. Snider, [Viceâ€"President, Frank Haight, Manager. R. T. Orr, Iospectcr. We have increased our Paidâ€"up Oap Measra. Bowlhy & _.sment, Solicibore, Bar aNOKBRERROUGH & 00‘Y, Agente Blair, Ont., Feb., 1002 The 20th Century finds this Com y in a splendid position. Sécurity of Canada. Clarke‘s $to‘s Progress in 1900 Ont , Feb., 1902 ISAA0 HARTEL OFFIOERS ; . *7~~ THER $1,277,606 u8 $2.613.(06 61 2,019,240.08 613 361.3 0 193.799 44 $ 908. 610 16 â€" 279.067.02 $6,301,100 41 * TETBL 33 $ 103,532.416 215,676.94 $ 7u9,200 30 $ 370,070.53 . 605,470.00 # 377 65104 Ontario T *4

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