Waterloo Public Library Digital Collections

The Chronicle Telegraph (190101), 10 Apr 1902, p. 6

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

e of onz iade Fof we animaia| krived at Berlin and were sold in «Py se o ~ prices W these ponies was anywhere from B to $25. apiece. it is not at all ; that : anyoneâ€" bought these ea t with >"the intention . of ._ from them, as they were ous more © on account of their, hea. than _ from â€" any . other €guse. . It was pointed out at this imeeting that there was danger of the @lissâ€"of horses raised in this counâ€" ity deteriorating on account of the Antroduction of these bronchos. There in . evidentlyâ€" little cause for . fear mlong this line, as any person rais ing a colt canmnot help knowing that he may as well raise one worth g as to raise trash worth only |, .* It should, however, be taken | io consideration that there is . ali wvast difference between the ordinary ' broncho â€" and the ranchâ€"bred horse. : "The common broncho is an animal |. w by some superior selection of [ ‘gire with the ordinary cheyeuse . or | mative dam, each succeeding cross | ibeing supposed to improve the stock. ? animais appear never to wholâ€" ly get rid of the wild, stubborn naâ€" "hu of the old native prairie horse, mo matter how many crosses of im* proved blood they may have in their weins and persons breeding from such stock are simply courting failâ€" ure and _ wasting their time. . The ranch horse, however, is altogether . & different â€" class of animal, being ~bred from Ontario or eastern mares ~and _ select . draft or thoroughbred stallions. Two or three car loads oi .‘ these horses were unloaded in â€" Berâ€" lin . and offered for sale during the ~past â€" winter, one lot being fairly well bred percherons. A number oi this latter shipment compared quite: favorably with our Ontario bred horses of the same variety, and would not disgrace any horse breedâ€" er by being hitched in front of his wagon. It is generally admitted, however, that western ranchâ€"bred â€" horses reared in the light, dry | atâ€" .mmphcxe of the prairie, .are . very ligble to go wrong in their wind awhen brought to the more moist ail of Ontario. _ *Guelph Herald: Mr. Archie Newsâ€" stead, one of the best known anc mest ‘highly respected young farmâ€" ers of Waterloo Township, mysteriâ€" ously disappeared from his farm neai Mosboro, yesterday. The young man was married on the 12th of March last to Miss Annie Fisk, of the same neighborhood, and they have lived very happily together. Last Thursâ€" day they took possession of Mr. Neil Marshall‘s fa. m, which they | have jcst purehased, and intended to hav« the ‘m signed â€" yesterday. For that purpose they arranged to come to Guelph. Early in the morning Mr. Newstead hitched the horse to the buggy and sent his wife to this city, saying _ he would follow her with the wagon and team and would meet her here. She ‘arrived at the @emmemercial _ Hotel in the morning and" waited for her husband, but he failed to keep his appointment. Aiter dinner Mrs. Newstead became alarm ed, thinking that he had met with some accident, and returned home, arriving there _ about three o‘clock On the table she found a note . adâ€" @ressed _ to her trom her husband, bidding her goodâ€"bye, and saying he might write some day and explain his action. YOUNG FARMER DiSAPPEARS Archie Newstead, Mosboro, Left His Home on Wednesday. Mrs. Newstead is at a loss to acâ€" count for the strange action of her husband. They had _ never had a quarre} or disagreement of any kind and since taking possession of the Sfatm he bas taken a deep interest in the work about the place. Both families are well known and highly _ respected . in the neighborâ€" ‘hood, and financially the absent man was well of. It is a. noticeable fact that the dining car department of the Grand Trumk Railway System is second to none on the American Continent, and mnew imiprovements and modern inâ€" movitions are continually . being made. The Cafeâ€"Parlots which have been running on nearly all of the diâ€" Wistons of this great System are a wonstant source of. praise from . the traveling public. The company has recentl altered the style of . the: me cards used on all of the dinâ€" "ing cars and cafeâ€"parior cars, . and ar ten up a very handsome and meat bill of fare that appeals to the artistic . . ‘The stock used | is â€"what is known as Old English Rusâ€" ‘kin Bris ; fine texture, and mist grey > . \The Grank Trunk "trade ma black appears at the _%op left hand corner surrounded by ‘a Reat combination of scroll work of A HANDSOME MENU CARD n â€" remaissance design, pMINTON 14 and embossed in high relief. Etd the meat is also ~emâ€" \high relef. and the < tout on American westâ€" into Canâ€" of this motion ‘ %he lmportation of wn as bromâ€" he past winter~ & uds ~of the animals wak passed to meâ€" minion Government Lo L ETE 7 ( m en d deary wiet en‘ ale _ colonization roads, and grade repaired and generally imp igh n y ..::!.":':..»-“"’x ‘acvess by railways aided by the &. The Rainy River Railway had been completed by the help of the sube sidies granted by the Hardy Govâ€" ernment in 1899, and its efforts â€" in uvelopinatm region traversed were incalculable, It tapped the million» acre farming beit in the Rainy Rivâ€" sr, and stimulated mining developâ€" went its whole length to Port Arâ€" thurâ€"the gold mines of the Lake of the Woods and Rainy River District and the Atikokan and Mattawin iron ranges. As to the principal railways aided by the present Govâ€" erniment, there was no expenditure of public meneys. T Pm PE PP The Hamilton Spectator, a type of | the Opposition faultâ€"finders, charged, | with a sneer, that there was . too | much "building up‘" of New Ontario at the expense of the old. Was this a fact? No. A good many persons had the idea that the effective . aid given to railways cost the people of Old Ontario something in the . way of money, and added to their . burâ€" dens. The idea _ was entirely misâ€" taken as regarded the important railways â€" promoted by the present Government. Even if these cost money, they would add no burdens, for the revenue of the province was raised by means that do not involve a dollar of direct general taxation. But these lines were aided by grants of land which were practically valâ€" ue‘ess without access, so that so far as these railway lines were . conâ€" cerned the new country was made to develop itself, and while vastly beneâ€" fiting Old Ontario, did not cost | a dollar of its revenue. What was the situation when the first railway, the Algoma _ Central, _ was thus aided? Important industrial works at the Sault â€" were at a practical standâ€" still for lack of raw material _ and the transportation _ facilities repreâ€" sented by the Algoma Central Railâ€" way. The land grant to this _ railâ€" way, in which the public interests were fully protected, gave a new life |to industry. Since then the "Soo" industries had largely expanded. . Several imâ€" portant _ new industries had sprung into being, _ including great . steel works, with buildings covering acres of ground, employing thousands _ of hands and* making steel rails from New Ontario ore, brought from the mines by a spur of the very landâ€" aided railway which was to be comâ€" pleted by the rails made at _ these works, as would be the other railâ€" ways, the Manitoulin & North Shore and the Temiskaming. In the enâ€" terprise stimulated by the land grant» to the Algoma _ Central] Rail way millions _ of capital were employed, and the amount expended on preparâ€" atory work alone amounted to about ten or twelve millions, with as much moie needed to complete the work now under way. The present estimâ€" ated pay roll in connection with the Clergue industries, for wages and upplies, â€" was" $750,000 per month, or a yearly pay roll of $9,000,000, a‘most oneâ€"third of tle customs reâ€" venie of the Dominion, and almost woâ€"gh to pay a year‘s interest on the national _ debt. (Hear, hear.) This represented an immense develâ€" opment of previously useless _ reâ€" sources, and meant a corresponding tencfit to older Ontario. EME Construction and operating work gave employment to thousands, and tle millions for machinery and supâ€" plics must be obtained from settled Ontario, _ giving employment to laâ€" bor, assisting _ our industries and stimulating trade of all kinds. . His own town, Mr. Stratton said, had been benefited hundreds of thousands of dollars in this way, and there was no visible end to the widespread reâ€" sults possible. (Hear, . hear, and cheers.) All this sprang from the first pulp agreement, conjoined with the action _ of the Government in helping the construction of the Alâ€" goma Central Railway. Similar reâ€" sults would follow the construction of the â€" Manitoulin & North Shore Railway, a development and coloniâ€" zation â€" railway 300 miles in length, which _ connected New to O‘!d Onâ€" tario east and west, diré€ted . the trade of the newer regions to the settled portions of the province, and would open about four millions of acres to â€" settlement, and facilitate the development of immensc timber and mineral _ resources, and a treâ€" mendous _ development â€" of internal trade. Less than a year ago in the House Premier Ross promised to build the Temiskaming Railway | as a (Government work, and the promâ€" ise nad been kept. An act passed last session made the Government of this province the pioneer in Governâ€" ment construction and ownership of railways. ‘The Temiskaming . Railâ€" way was to be built from the proâ€" seeds of Provincial ~lands, without the expenditure of a dollar of Proâ€" vincial â€" funds. That railway, 108 (Continaed from page 2 ) vincial â€" funds. That railway, 108 miles in length, would be built with public lands now comparatively valâ€" weless, and would give access to and secure the trade to Old Ontario . of a million acres of fertile land, givâ€" ing added value to every acre, and promoting an inrush of settlement, with all the attendant advantdkes. Was not that f Was not 4 sers.) ~Was not THE "SO0" INDUSTRIES LOYMENT FOR THOUSANDS at 1. ed for increased revenue, and was| NC "5""" alle _ to Gevote a million to good|Lees the roads, giving improved _ highway |the Oppo transportation and ‘facilitating 3 Legislatu new industry of manufacturing sugar| projected with ed for incteased revenue, and was|the territory that would not have|pany T0 Temore Mb T & to . devote a f ) r %‘- f ,~ now ~that . the roads, giving improv awa Oppos way in the ated, have been transportation and ‘facilitating â€" lature. nlsutm’ifllmmmuy new industry of manufacturing sugar|projected railways, showed . & mx‘ i~/ 4 from beets. Legislation to eAcourâ€"|extent ol the pulpwood concessions, " is not improbab w industry with $225,000 was : agreements, â€" and concluded ©4|clections in January . and the results were promâ€" ong speech in defefce of the>Govâ€"] will be called to yote ising. _A reat interest had â€"been | erament. % securing to the com aroused, and Waterloo County was| When the Minister resumed his seat|in some form. â€" This to be benefited by the establishment|there was enthusiastic cheering, and{that remova) here w of a beet sugar factory, and if ‘only |the successful meeting dispersed â€" afâ€"|untit after the electic farmers â€" coâ€"operated great> results |ter cheers for the King, the candiâ€"}are moved here, it w would come. date and the Ross Government. tention also of the" the amniavmant inâ€"a pocke! ""the greediest people on earth." He (Mr. szrnm)‘fid not believe that statement â€"could be justified, but he did believe the Germans of Waterloo County were amongst the most enâ€" terprising people of the province, for the farmers thereâ€"had shown _ the way to the rest of the farmers of ‘the province by being amongst the first _ to go into the enterprise . of beet _ root sugar making, and . he hoped that they would meet . with the greatest success. (Hear, hear.) OUR PULP WOOD RESOURCES Another way the Government had ence has shown that the OpPOTSUN! shown true enterprise was by enâ€"|ties for losses in the manufacturing couraging the utilization of our pul d of ~ the business are often as wood resources. Exploration by the|large as on the commercial side, and Government showed that we had|that the opportui:ities for economics north of the height of land enough|in the former are often much greater pulpwood at 40 cents per cord to be|than in the latter â€"Charles U. Carâ€" of the value when utilized of $115,â€"| penter, in The Engineering Magazine 000,000, an â€" asset which might be|for April. swept â€" away in a season by forest waizzzzzz iz fires. The Government had â€" made wWORKING ON SUNDAY agreements _ with seven pulp comâ€" «â€"â€"â€" â€" panies, who were given the privilege For *"*working on the Sabbath" to cut pulpwood, when they had ex<|the proprietor of the Bruce Herald, pended in buildings, etc., to the | Walkerton,; ‘and his foreman â€" have value of $4,900,000, and if they paid | been fined the usual one dollar and 40 cents a cord for it. The comâ€"|costs by the Police Magistrate. The panies did not get a foot of _ land | proprietor of thie paper explains that nor a stick of pinc, only the puipâ€"|they were pressed by work and inadâ€" wood necded jor their mills. Setâ€"|vertently continued working . after tlers could locate in any part of the|12 o‘clock on Saturday night, _ and zrri\.ory and have all the pulpwoocd|adds, "the staff of every daily paâ€" their lands which they could gut|per in Toronto work on Sunday, and to the mills. Not a stick of pulpâ€"|they _ are under the same Sabbath I wood could be sent out of the counâ€"|law as the Bruce Herald, yet we try in an unmanufactured condition, | never _ hear that Police Magistrate while in Quebec (.e territory Was|Denison either fines them or allows ‘eld on speculation, and the spruce|his _ constables to lodge vexatious could be taken out and exported, if|complaints against them."‘ oh their lands which they could gut to the mills. Not a stick of pulpâ€" wood could be sent out of the counâ€" try in an unmanufactured condition, while in Quebec (.e territory . Was ‘eld on speculation, and the spruce could be taken out and exported, if desired, to the United States on payment of a small export duiy, while no one, as The Globe pointed out, could export pulpwood from Unâ€" tario if he paid $10 per cord. ‘"Onâ€" tartio for Ontarians‘‘ was the Govâ€" ernment‘s motto. Our pulp agreeâ€" ments required the expenditure of enâ€" ormous sums in building and _ im>â€" chinery, _ anrd this *must be made within a given lime or the right to cut lapsed. In the seven agreements made the companies were required to spend nearly five millions â€" $4,â€" 900,000 â€" for buildings and machinâ€" ery, and to employ 2,000 hands ten months in the year. What this meant ultimately _ could be guessed at when it was the fact that from the operation of the first pulp agreeâ€" ment at the Soo, when an expendiâ€" ture of $400,000 was stipulated six years ago, there had already . been spent in _ works springing from it $12,000,000, _ and the total expendiâ€" ture would _ reach twenty millions. (Cheers.) it \iq‘ih 'oE e p‘:whu?h BEET SUGAR INDUSTRY The business men of the country approved of the policy of the Govâ€" etnment. A former leader of the Opâ€" position, Mr. Marter, separated from his leader and supported the Govâ€" ermment on this policy. We cannot afford to stand still and mark time.. We must move on and utilize our pulpwood forests to bring settlement into the country, to give emp}loymflfl. to our workingmen, and to give capâ€" ital an opportunity for investment. It was charged, Mr. Stratton said, that the expenditure of the province had increased. They did not deny the charge. The Government showâ€" ed that the increased expenditure was directed solely to lessening the burdens of the people, and in the province assuming obligations . that were directly placed upon the people in other countries. (Hear, hear.) Mr. â€" Stratton showed that $755,â€" 133.36 had been expended to assist the County of Waterloo, nearly $50,â€" 000 being given to assist their agriâ€" cultural societies, $263,000 for pubâ€" lic, separate and high schools, $51,â€" 000 â€" for the mechanics‘ institutes, $15,000 for the benefit of the dea!, dumb and blind from Waterloo Counâ€" ty, $60,000 for the maintenance . of prisoners, of boys and women in â€" the reformatory, â€" $218,000 for unfortunâ€" .: Wh“ : expense :(. a--:m this money E expend it. â€" (MWear, bear.) ‘The speaker had been charged by The Mail with citâ€" WATERLOO‘S SHARE E where the expenditure flg ttom nb-l by x & h ‘th’lfifltou that ~would teen the property of Ont the Opposition had their 1 Legislature.> He pointed 0 When the Minister resumed his seat there was enthusiastic cheering, and the successful meeting dispersed â€" afâ€" ter cheers for the King, the candiâ€" date and the Ross Government. HOW TO INCREASE THE VOL UME OF BUSINESS. ing and selling forces upon modern lines. . The strongest support for the selling force and the best builwark against competition is through . orâ€" 1 L F snW 2 TE 4 Lags: es en t e 3 ganitation of methods of, production; organization that will give new. proâ€" ducts, improvements of old products, more promipt â€" deliveries and lower coats. In the mind of the oldâ€"time manuâ€" facturer the word "system‘" is inâ€" dissolubly linked with that horror of "extra clerks."â€" It is the old question of the man holding the coin so close to the eye as to shut out entirely the greater and broader horizon of his commercial possibiliâ€" ties in both the expansion of" his business and in factory eeonomics: He does not understand that the losses he is daily bearing are many times the amount that his extra clerks â€" would cost him. In â€" fact, his "extra . clerks‘" would probably prove the best investment he could ever make. Many a man will place all inconcefvable safeâ€"guards around | his systems for handling and caring for his money and yet will be altoâ€" gether _ careless of the manner in which his valuable stock, purchased by his _ money, is handled. Experiâ€" ence has shown that the opportuniâ€" ties for losses in the manufacturing d of ° the business are often as large as on the commercial side, and that the opportunities for economics in the former are often much greater than in the latter â€"Charles U. Carâ€" penter, in The Engineering Magazine for April. Spring Depression. PEOPLE FEEL WEAK, EASILY TIRED AND OUT OF SORTS. You Must Assist Nature in Overcoming This Feeling Before the Hot Weather Months Arrive. It is important that yod should be healthy in the spring.> The hot sumâ€" mer is coming on and you need strength, vigor and vitality to _ reâ€" sist it. The feeling of weakness, deâ€" pression and fecbleness which you suffer from in spring is debilitating and dangerous.â€" You have been _ inâ€" doors a good deal through the winâ€" ter months, haven‘t taken the usual amount of exercise perhaps, your blood is â€" sluggish and impure â€" and you need a thorough renovation . Of the entire system. In other words you need a thorough course of Dr. Williams‘ _ Pink > Pills. If you try them you will be surprised to note how vigorous you begin to feel, how the dull lassitude disappears, . your. step becomes elastic, the eye brightâ€" ens and _ a felling of new strength takes the place of all previous feelâ€" ings. Thousands have proved . the truth of these words and found _ reâ€" newed health _ through the use . of these pills in spring time. One . of the many is Miss â€" Cassie Way, _ of Picton, Ont., who says: "A few years ago I was cured of a very seâ€" vere and prolonged attack of dyspepâ€" sia through the use of Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills, after all other medicines I had tried failed. Since that time I have used the pills in the spring as a tonic and blood builder and find them the best medicine I know . of for this purpose. People who feel run down at this time of the year will make no mistake in using Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills." These pills are not a purgative medicine and do not weaken as all purgatives do. They . are tonic in their + nature and strengthen â€" from first dose to last. They are the best medicine in the world for rheuâ€" matism, sciatica, nervous troubles, neuraigia, _ indigestion, anaemia., heart troubles, scrofula and humâ€" ours in the blood, etc. The genuine are sold only in boxes, the wrapper araund which bears the full name, "Pr. Williams‘ Pink Pills for Pale People." M‘”tfl“hp dicine or sent post w 50 cents a box or six r $2. adâ€" a the Dr. Williams by the don,â€" now ~ ‘that the move is ~ conâ€" templated, have been taken, |= the wk, are practically assured to this It‘ is not improbable that at th clections in January NM will be called to vote upon a byâ€"law securing to the gply assistance in some form. ‘Goes npt mean that remova) here will be postponed until after the election. If the mills are moved here, it will mean the reâ€" tention also of the bolt works, and the employment in all of considerabâ€" ly above one hundred men,. â€" The bolt works and rolling mills are Ao tbe consolidated in any event. 'l‘" M lh 'm sm' f An; body i Follow You lato the Joysus |Get Sick or > â€"â€" Auinglient Have an Accident PAINE‘S CELERY T onole mdudtannefs: _ } COMPOUND _â€" |fatest, Easiest, Are you still in suffering, misery and iespondenc{? Does the grim spectre Death follow you closely as the joyous springtime brings happiâ€" ness and blessings to others aroundi you? Are you still clinging tenaciâ€" ously to false theories of physicians or friends _ who persist in assuring you that time, care and the use of your present medicine, will give you ‘new health? . Be assured your present condition: is a perilous one. The continuance of the medicine you are now using is a folly; you are simply trifling with life and wasting precious time. » . You should remember that . while nature clothes the fields with fresh grass . and _ flowers, and while the trees with a strong life are showing bursting buds and new foliage, that human beingsâ€"old and youngâ€"drop off in thousands in springtime. _ Now is the time for prompt, deâ€" cided and practical action if life is to be saved. Prejudice and the erâ€" roneous _ theories of even medical men should be cast aside when the hand of death is wpon you. It matâ€" Defeats the Work of Death by Removing Your Terrible Burden of Disease. ters not Ywhat your social position te; the medicine that saves the humâ€" blest â€" man H:emn is surely the one adapted for needs of the rich and those in high social positions. Paine‘s Celery Compound has a reâ€"| cord of life saving that no other meâ€" dicine can ever equal. It has resâ€" cued rich and poor from the grasp of death â€" when â€" physicians and their most â€" carefully , prepared prescripâ€" tions failed in the work. If the sufâ€" fering men â€" and women of toâ€"day could see the happy faces and hear the kind words spoken by the tens of thousands _ who have been made we‘l and strong by Paine‘s Celery Compound, _ it _ would soon dispel their exciting doubts and fears. Paine‘s Celery Compound is the only medicine that reaches the root of disease; it is the only agency that can remove your terrible load of disâ€" case. Unsolicited _ testimonials . of cures pour in every day. Young and old constantly _ bear witness that theumatismgneuralgia, kidney disâ€" case, livefi::uplainh dyspepsia and blcod dis#ases are Banished permanâ€" ently _ when Paine‘s Celery Comâ€" pound is faithfully used for a time. Begin its use toâ€"day poor sufferer; delays are dangerous. Mr. and Mrs. Catl Weseman . of Preston celebrated their golden wedâ€" ding anniversary on Monday. Guests were _ present from New Hamburg, PERHE PARO OO OE MRO O IERE enmnicned i London, Atwood, Galt, Hespeler and Preston. The groom is in his 80th year, and his wile a year younger, and both are hale and hearty. They have resided in Preston since 1856. Rev. Adolf Eggers, pastor of St. James‘ Church, Hespeler, made _ an address . appropriate to the occaâ€" sion, and a group photograph of the aged couple and their guests _ was taken in the afternoon by Mr. James Esson. Mr.â€"and Mrs. Weseman were the recipients of many _ handsome gifts. ’mm““n“ b“e BSNII'?!HW _ Dried beef, bam. baeen, a«amme: ComranNny. anusage, eto , a specialty. Thod flr.:l lard coustantly kept on band. o HEAD OFFICE, wWATERLOO, °_"° wders are solicted from bouse to house o« hat orders }+f: at the abop or sent in by Progress in 1900. telephone wil: be pm.,;f, Alled The 20th Century finds this Com H. 8. Duering. ___ 210 C Letandid naitiin. Resrity. Propriat or. The 20th Century finds this Com v.lnk{l 'ln a aplendid '::ium'.t Security. solidity. progress equity are our watchwords. We hive increased our Snbscribed Capital from $257,600 to $400,000, " We bave increaged our Paidâ€"up Capâ€" Nominion Life Assuorane ital from $84,000 to $100,000, _ _ We have placed all our old business en '“J"m Reserve Standardâ€" higher an Government requiremen ts We have increased our Surplus over all Linbilities from $21,210 to $35,852. We have increased our Assets from 1416,807 to $520. 208. All forms of regular Anverment agenrance are i '7 A See of agents y, «im which . Mr. Whit hoids the chief interest. city‘s representatives are however. â€" Active : meas ; to the assistance of the 0 remove their works â€"toâ€" Klipport Undortaking Co. ;OLDEN WEDDING AT PRES TON city or wirte Head life Cheapest and Best EO aOPdE NTR NOeE C EDi om mm n o2 w PSFE «iph:beria, meaelos, leg:lot fever, ctc. No exira charge, directly «n indir: edy, is made «n our gords ‘o cover the cust of insuring our cas omers It is done solely as an advertisoement for our buâ€"iness, and we rely on our ever increarlag rad s to recoup us for the ou:lay. _ This is the very latest idea in adverti=ing, ind thrif.y housewives can keep their husbands insured by dealing regu‘atly with us. The Twin City‘s Best Clothing Store. ‘This policy also gives $5 00 per week comnensation up !~ ton weewe If &n ‘b.ed by accident, and $6.00 per week if sick from small pox, (ypoeld ies« iphberia, meaelee, echrlet fever, ctc. No exira cbarge, direcly « indirce:] T â€" ENUERIUEURETELE ~24â€"2CILE ‘rus nb nenanke Ir is Am Kong St THE MUTUAL LIFE Mr. H. B. Duering desires to thank his numerous custome‘s for their liberal patronage given him the past year and hopes® that by prompt attention to business be may have the continuance of the same. _ \Mr. Duering slaughrers none but the test cattle and you can rely upon vetting the cboicest meat at all times. His » holesale pork p oking trade bas greatly increased He employs experts for this work who understand their business and the best of satiafaction is vuaranteed. His sausages are of the most tempting kind. Formerly THE ONTARIO MUTUAL LIFE Clarke‘s Drug Store, Beri Robt. Meilvin. City Meat Market .+ j‘KRLOQ) MUTUA! Now Ready â€" â€" 7 Missos Fehronbach, We have a Private Room where these $500 Accident Policy. method ot accident in~urance. We will present FREE t. «very cash purchaser of $2.00 worth of goods and upwa«ds - Promjum®, Net.......câ€"nnsno Interest, Rent and Annuities Dex‘h Clatma, Endow ment», Proftâ€", etc All other Payments aP & Laans on First Mortgages...... .. Municipal Debentures and Bonda Loan« on Company‘s Policies Real E tate. including Company Cash in band and in Banks OQther Assets........ 2 2. 4 6. t l Worth It‘s Yeight in Gold. Reserve, 4 and 34 per ornt All Othe: L abilities ...... On the Company‘s Stan ard, ‘h.n‘ On the Government Standar«, 4§% a . SAUDER & CO., A large number of. new “::..d lm::dnd a new at r yâ€"toâ€" wear bats z-dl- are invited to inspect them. Pregident Abstract of Accounts for 1901 INCOME. Total & DISBURSEMENTS Ans body is baud goods are fitted with periect ~«ciecy _ Tobwh. i. lc ene 0+ JA iIILITIES sURPLUBS ASSETS Total and 3% ONice Manager "IRE INSURANCE COMPANY INCORPORATED IN 1868 nta; Assats 3ist December 99 $334. 083. Borrowers Given -n,uuo--.. Prinoipal and intersst maybafully paid «pby .u-n:-.h.': loan may be neg 6 Nâ€"x. How and Where To Borrow Money Rasy Terms Basy Payment BOARD OF DIREOCTORS +s0 Randall, Keq., Waterico 4. Bnydar, Req., William Snider, Reo.. " @eo. Disbel, Kea., a 1. i. Wideman, Beg., 8t. Jaoobs. Allan Bowman, Keq., Preston seorge Randall, President, Wim. Snider, . Viceâ€"President, Frack Haight, Mansgor, R. T. Orr, Inspector. Measre. Rowlby & Clement.‘Bolicttors, Bar TOKRK®RROUGEH & OOY, Agents ‘homas Gowdy, Eso., Gueiph «ame» 1 ivingstone, Reo.. Haden OFFICKR® BUCKBERROUGH & O0., Tirs, Life and Accident Ins, Agonta, ‘of Canada. Perfect fitting TRUS$. IF YCU ARE sUFTUEED Â¥1.77.086 08 $1,003 006 61 a 019. 469. 00 Ois 361.43 123 7120 +1 in, Ont $ gus 619 (6 $5.757 822 )7 $5,301,100 41 $ 493 432 «8 215.078 9 $ 379.970.53 605,470.00 $ 110,209 50 __Té75Ln #5 377.851.04 Riddell, 279 .007 .02 _ 18 205 76 300 i8% RQ BHiLIN

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy