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The Chronicle Telegraph (190101), 7 Aug 1902, p. 2

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mgfim AND _ _ IPULAR MAJORITIES aay .+ 5!4“ e d ‘.m & * s pam t »a\x»'. Om lt wually repre! at Ottawa out of proportion to its strength in Onâ€" #ario. In the election of 1882, imâ€" kug <-i' » * i “' m' *he Liberals were in a minority . of only 3,721 votes in this province, but 54 Conservative members . were elected , and only 88 Liberals. Jn 1872 the Conservatives had a majorâ€" ty of on,y 4,855 of the populan vote Ax‘ou-m but ‘sécured & majority of eighteen seats. â€"In 1891 the Conâ€" wes in Ontario polied 183,172 wnd the Liberals 184,036, the ‘Normer getting 48 and the latter. 44. popular majority, this time 8.637 In 1896 the Liberals again had m vow got a majority of twojat Ottawa. In 1890 the Conservative ;mty was 8,293â€"votes and eight wen seats. + «/In the recent â€" provincial election the Liberals were in a minority _ of ’ t 4,000 votes largely accounted #%or by the Conservative . preponderâ€" ‘\ te in theâ€"city of Toronto, where k unit ‘ ‘of representation is the Jargest in the province. â€" The Liberâ€" al majority of four seats, under the €ircumstancesiis not an . anomgly, BA certainly shows no such disparâ€" Aty betweem the number of votes and Â¥he number of seats as four out of 4 elections repealed. * - _MWilirid Laurier, _ says the In a“’ and Financial Chronicle, is ©ene _ of the greatest orators of the day , pl'g‘Ilr tle gtéatest in : the ';pin, which, though rich in ptatesmen of distinction, _ has very few orators, in the proper serse Ofi that much misused word.‘ At â€" the éf t party recently given by the ' tutionalâ€" Club, of Londor, the remier of" Canada carried off . the j Ts. He rebuked those who have been declaring that Britain had ‘Been on the crest of a wave of Jingoâ€" ism andâ€"was continuing . under its power. Sir Wilirid said that Great Britain stards alone in Europe . as %he one great power which can nevâ€" ®r bhe wholly swayed by militarism. Thecompiiment . is as deserved as it 4s flattering. _ England . has never bad the military fever; its wars have hever beeninspired by military amâ€" bition; some have been the most unâ€" wise, illâ€"judged, quixotic, but the Amost censurable have been carried on Sor defensive or strategic purposes, jbr‘to catry out ° diplomatic engageâ€" nents‘.with foreigh ‘allies, of punish Foes . who threaten her commerce or ¢ ... No nation has so sulendidâ€" 4y rewarded military genius, but for ‘,;h "glory‘‘ Britain . has never ‘mn blow or fired a shot. Sir \ is right, he showed genius in @nterpreting she spirit of the . old ‘land when hbe declaréd that England _Will never be carried away by the _spirit of militarism, _ RECENT POSTAL CHANGES. ~ The recent increase in the rate of postage on everything but letters ~ is beginning to be seriously felt by the mmercantile, community, banks, lawâ€" mb«m companies.â€"â€"It ubles the rate on neatly everyâ€" Ffl practically charges letter" PC on all sorts of mail matter. "The change, it is said, will add hailt a million to the revenue. ‘It â€" took tm unawares. â€" Thefe had en no Ciscussion and nobody was aware that â€" anyone â€" asked for a change.. fit-n of the country ® ’} t F’ money is not reâ€" nds :‘ ~ ever h .m es * £ P ud Ot the tion : â€" three SIR WILFRID LAURIER‘S GENIUS. i to a two cent rate & puarely arbitrary ible only to the aut be left not later than Tucsday gs ) +o3 m to advance,6.90 | German, in 1t up to looks :":'â€" v M he . y s, :f’&" & ui”. # * | T l i C o they worn Af. %fi;.:?vya.-é_; o magpgcgens Priag .N > 5 i rare J gl T rec c Kn ¢4 l uunk ifiomacinn "am i Enaiipiy es x.:x.w» F48 hm al yA Il | action <of.. ts . C Je | . This & .w.'mll it is said, precine tifths plg bank clecks â€" from . marriage. same standard would certainly preâ€" clude all ':l masters and m of Tt 2 link thes hy Shgin At & when the wflfim commuhity of Canada has hbeen serâ€" iously realizing that, with the Engâ€" lish race â€" gererally, it has almost ceased to multiply andâ€"that is large ly due to the postponement and . neâ€" glect of marriage, such a regulation seems to most men directly unpatâ€" riotic while to the : eye of a clergy man like the Rev. Drâ€" y, it _a‘.‘p.n immoral, toâ€"#ay ds of its being an assault upon ‘easible â€"right of man. Trades unâ€" ions have been rightly accused of deâ€" spotism in prescribing . what salary men shall receive or go without, and who sha‘l be . engaged, â€" how many hours a man shall work, what â€" amâ€" ount of work he may and in limiting the : _of lads to learn trades in a way that threatâ€" ens communities with an increase ol the larr.kin and the hooligan. The present regulation of the hands â€" of the employer seems to be of a piece with those which thus both invade individual liberty &nd trespass upon the best interests of the community. SCIENCE IN ADVERTISING 'u.m.uumoxmumm- et‘s Review appeared the following practical editorial on advertising: ‘"One ~ adverti t . won‘t make prosperity. Pemhglt use of zce in the paper won‘t insure business. It isn‘t % of the space "~that counts in the‘ efforts at business building: It isn‘t the «large claims with hopes that results may come,. It isn‘t bombast or _ AsSWrance OF talk that does the business. Al of these have their place in advertisâ€" ing, but the one thing that is escenâ€" tial is honest business purpose. An: effort to give to the people what is wanted, an effort to tellâ€"why it is wanted, why it will wear or satisfy why it is superior to that made & furnished in the past, why it â€" is cheaper at the . present price . than some articles that are sold for less: All thes6 are points which will give the advertisement | the tone which will gain the confidence of the people, the qualities which will make it ap~ peal to the sense of economy or high value, the worth that ‘will make it profitable to the man who has paid for and promoted the advertisement. The gdvertiser who knows what to say, when to talk, and how to shape his ideas is not the one who is unâ€" certain about the value his adverâ€" Itisement is going to be to him." It is eptimated that 4 10,000,000 head of cattle, including calves, are k lled annuaily in the United States and that these dress 6,000,000 pounds of beef and veal. ‘The present dry weather, although somewhat warm, is hailed with . deâ€" light by the farming community. The uncertainty _ of the weather has reâ€" sulted in . re!:‘ng _ the per cent of good hay, but the heavy crop to <a great extent atones for ary loss that may have occurred _ from this cause. â€"A number of fields of wheat which were cut carly in the season also suffered from the excessiveâ€"rains ‘which fell during the past ten days. In the neighborhood of Preston some fields are â€" practically ruined, the sheaves turning green in the shocks. However, the present spell of beautâ€" iful dry weather is affording an €xâ€" cellent opportunity for the harvestâ€" ing.and the. securing of the barley and fall wheat crops. Of course the process of Harvesting grain .with modern appliances requires much less time than formerly, nevertheless the scarcity of farm laborers has the efâ€" fect of prolonging the harvest longer than it otherwise would be, _ : VETERAN FARRIER REIIRES Mr. John Payne, who has resided here continuously for the past seven years, after an absence . ~f fifteen years, has again taken, his u«, ~ clurg. Mr." Payne, coming â€" from â€" pubolk, England, was onc of the otiginal farâ€" tiers of ~hortse®~doctors in Canad., practiting © many years before the Ontario .. Veterinary _ College _was started _by â€" Prof. Smith of Edinâ€" burgh, Scotiand, ~Mr. Payne brought :nb large family of sons, who are doing well, h:&t than the n;-; age young man, are f 1” has no y a year. (Mr. w rea the ':-'h P:m\d for: man cares. â€" He went to â€" Gusiph, whete his sons Robert and Frank reside. He has the best wishes af his many friends here. â€" Hamburg Indepéenâ€" SMALL POX IN WATERLOO TP Avcase.of small ~pox has b EDITORIAL NOTES. of the farm of to :« the . ployed nfems afuals ms hy < PMAE . Brampton‘s population has been §0 h . are regqul much reduced that one of the hotel e Te mt sn Erfenes on woe enc ‘The ‘rain shower on Th eyâ€" incXy > ening was evidently a facowe!l showâ€" ptGâ€"css for the hund ¢r for the rainy month of July. tors who visit the ref k C e â€" contemplating m .T.l-lr' .'-‘w~_.a Guelph, where the present Junction station now stands. ; , ‘The total acreage ‘of sugar ‘beets .n the United States for the ourrent year is estimated at 259,513 =‘acres as against 137,933 acres last year.> Two employees af" the Hamilton Street ’Ru‘lvay are eom:lt an actionâ€"for libel ~against Times lor a letter that" paper â€" publighed from Wm. LeBarre â€" J n, for some years resjdent of Wellesiey and father J Peter ~Boreman, . of & 8 House, Sebringville, _ ‘ at his home in the latter village last week, aged 65 years. ' aills on th,:m A widow of ~Albemarle township was ordered out by & n&l& '?0- master to shovel gravel in a to put in the statute labor required by law. . The woman undaunted shovelâ€" led gravel dfi side the men . for three quartert of a day. â€" . 3 There have been a gresterâ€" number of public excursions: in Ontario this year than ever before. © Last year up to this date the Grand Trunk Railâ€" way ran 150 excursions, which : was considered to be a record. / This yéar there have been 200: excursions. A big snake which eseaped from the Forepaugh & Sells circus is terâ€" rorizing the citizens ‘living in . the West End of Guelph; It is said to be over seven feet long and ‘weveral inchesin diameter. > Parties of men with guns and clubs are attempting to kill it. R A special census of Brampton has been takenand it is found that the pom‘htion is now 2,987. This cenâ€" sus _ was taken at ‘the instance of the proprietor of the Arlington ho> tel, who was refused ‘a licens® â€" beâ€" cause the town was supposed to lack the necessary population ° A Woodstock merchant who receivâ€" ed: a consignment of peaches Wednesâ€" day from Leamington, found in one of the baskets, a note . in a lady‘s handâ€"writing. which read as, louokn; ‘‘Anyone wishing to correspond with a nice yourng .~lady . please address box â€", Leamington.‘" ‘The merâ€" chant lost no time in taking adyantâ€" age of the invitation, .. ; The G. T. R:. station this morning presented some forcible remirders of South Africa, no Jess than five of the .members, of . ... the M&PI, R. hafing â€"passed. through on their way to various points. .. QOf these the only one in civilian attire was Mr.. AlL.| Oelschlager of Berlin,. formerly â€" priâ€" vate in "B" mlulxon.' Mr. Oelschâ€". lager, while itting that South Africa, particularly from a moneyâ€". making standpoint, bas some desirâ€" able features, ‘thinks there is . no place like . Canada.. Johannesburg, he says, is nothing if it is not in a ferment of excitement. and everybody there speculates in ; . stocks. The Boers, he thinks, â€" and he has conâ€" versed with quite a number â€"â€" Aare quiteâ€"as.glad to have the w d% as, the British are. . A eon!z Mr.. Oelschlager‘s in the same squad+ ron was Pte. McEwen, . who passed ;through on the westbound train .. on bis way to Hensall, where be. will shortly go west again to Calgary, Mr. Oelschlager took the train north ward bound, being _ on his way to Sault Ste, Marie und among his fel+ lowâ€"pascengers were Ptes. Parsons, Bell and Monkmian, all of "C" sq#adâ€" ton. Pte. Parsons was hound | for Fergus, and â€" Pte. Bell for Lakelet, while Pte. Monkman is going or to Mount Hope.. â€" Guelph Mercury. soOUTH AFRICAN Students who wrote on the: first part of the leaving and marticulation examinations this year need not scan the newspapers | for résults. This year the education department â€" is establishing a precedent. : They have decided not to publish the names of the succesful students in the newsâ€" papers. â€" Deputy Minister of Educaâ€" tion John ‘Millar, stated . yesterday that this step had been taken partly because of the large number of canâ€" didates ‘and partly because it a ‘deemed better not to publish : tht ‘mmea. ‘The students who are anxâ€" ous to know their ‘fate must secure the informatipr from the high m principals. .. The lflm â€"may‘ hand a â€" dist of theâ€"names to the local papers it they so desire. On the suhject of Cecll Rhodes‘ last wordsâ€"so liitle done, «o much to doâ€" London.. ‘Truth" «<ys; _ "Mr. Rhoges was not given to Wighâ€"fiown talk. and I suspect the story of his "nst words‘ is a Action. <Sydney Sifith observed that it seems a necestity thiit every distinguizhed manâ€" should die "with mm-mndq%h his mouth.‘. Mr. Pift was. 4 to his mouth.‘. Mr. Pift was n_?hu have expired exclaiming *How leave my country! It was afters NOTTO PUBLISH NAMES The Last Words of Great Men, this VETERANS 24 plea do | "The‘imtmense whimney that is being erected is now"up about 70 feet. When completed: it ‘will‘ be 170 feet high dnstead of 150 ieet as stated a tew daysago. "Over 250,000 > bricks will be Tequired im‘its construction. o mgae e Cns e yone se stnieice ‘uter : : * " s “P-r eafh tw ant socen www _ J% ‘\, Ing &’:4 l 2 , ;g.a ‘â€"‘ wees‘ 1qâ€"ess for the hundred; mb falu "“‘“ »â€" t.: who visit the refnery daily, :uc m" % Friday cevening : A t mwthahvumm‘:ga‘mmm.hfi gix" o‘glock. . They appi o "‘.:" m“m “‘-.' ride hame after. 3 bard Aag‘s, work., | tho mo? Jare .»:-n:.'-!::fi o ; codts. From year to year $ ic cyC itany | Increasedâ€" in : numerical strength, this use ir the construction work. 11:1 depending wholly on the u'..-..'u‘: furnish power for the ‘huge derricks, | prociivities of the wd:‘rlufllk-m. the mixing of cement, pumping WAter | colitge at the flm:;‘ present from | thecriver and carrying ~ beick | slub numbers one hundred members: Je ‘The ; â€" negy W piQâ€"ess for the spectaâ€" tors who visit the refnery daily, Friday cevening bL8 â€" men. were . Off the car that leaves the refinety , at six" o‘clock. . They appreciate the ride home after a bard Aay‘s work, jurn‘sh power for the ‘huge derricks, the mixing of cement, pumping water from .‘ thevriver and carrying ~ brick an@® mortarup the tall chimney. The »upon which the â€" beets will* be" 2&2‘ ‘imto ‘the cleansing cm&h"&ct leads from : the : ~ beet sheds to the vefinery proper, are beâ€" ing: éervcted at ‘present. <«All the luniber® is ‘cut by mathine â€" on the grounds. ~ +/ ‘ ‘The® cement ‘ foundation fof . the power house dowh beside the Grand River is now being constructed.. A deeptunnel leading from the ‘river to the‘ engine room of the power house is also being. dug and cement walls will be erected. © The river at this ‘point~is: exceptionally high = at this season of ‘the year. F:.iday~ ~evening" the Berlin & Btidgeport &pfl' Railway Comâ€" pany _ ran ‘ the fifst _ car. over the new line from the Ontario Suâ€" gar Refinery to â€"near Grasser‘s Hoâ€" gl, Btill;o;ppfi . just opposite the entrance "â€" to the" new park on "the Mn:l of ::: O;::!d iver. © ‘The firs on many of Berâ€" lin‘s Efl?fig ¢itizens who accepted Presi Breithaupt‘s invitation to :_tfld_w first street car that ;V'e! en Bridgéport, ‘or Berlin‘s uture suburb. . _ . > . M .atrival at the terminus . the ‘gn(:zh :lt ul:?f_‘ompm were escorted to the new park, for the purchase of which negoliations.are now proceedâ€" ing.. .. Jt is.situated .at the rear . of the Abraham, Eby . Estate property, on fln.ufi banks of the Grand n:;"q“'ibé eow‘x vmuii agreed tm * B5 «re fitted up :’pnvflfon erected thereon, there will be no more beautiful spot in the ‘country. _ The landscape view from this point is beyond description and this park will in time attract many } t.o‘rigtl on account of this particular feature. x man Ralph Cossey and Mr. Geo. A Clarke,® the, Secre of the _ Comâ€" pany . ‘The ballast of the road ftom . the uaqyi*_mmy to Bridge port Is not ‘completed, but notwithâ€" standifig . the tt(‘p" was thoroughly‘ enâ€" joyed. m taower about 75 fee!} _ in wm for,." gightâ€"seeing. . purposes, building a stairway from the _ park down to the river, where a number of boats for boating and fishing purâ€" posesâ€"will be. kept. Next. year a pavilion will also be erected. One of the gentiemen of the party was seicathusiagtic over the beautiful locatior, of fi park that he has deâ€" cidedâ€"to.purchase a strip alongside the grounds and erect thereon a sumâ€" mer cottage.. ‘‘What‘s the sense of )pig to Muskoka or Grimsby© . for the summer when you can have such \. beautiful resort next door to you," . It is the intention of the Company io take, immediate steps to ft up th: new park by leveling the grounds, was the . remark he passed to the Telegraph representative. _ | .. ocdfut Smd pcladute the Shope the Berliny.. C ~ne $ 1 trip was made in tzp'g minutes. For Weak and Sitkty ‘Children in Hot * Weather. & ‘Thousands of children die through the hot weather months, becanse sumâ€" mer complaints and . stomach troubles come snddenly, and mothers do not bave the means at. hand to promptly cheek aud cure them. .. In homes where. Baby‘s Own Tablets are nsed these precious little lives can be saved, and no home. where there are infants and young children should be without . Baby‘s Own T will prompity 1X s patritiniit i Terjung oi and are a re ren. . 'l'h‘:fihlou are sold ~under a ren. ... The Tablets are sold ~under a positive guarantes that they contain dmcined it powBr they tan be gitcs m.,phhtg.mtp a new born auffered so much last spmmer with his teoth ihat T did not think that he T ang se sn A h.‘ As the dootors ‘ medicine did ‘fdt help hi. â€"T sent for Baby‘s ~Own babe, Mre: R Ferguson, 105 Mansâ€" field street, Montreal says: "I have used RBaby‘s Own ‘Tablots and have found ‘gnm .t;o Mmodl;lm 1 l:: er en cbildrea. baby Sieays beoan winah . and delicate and FIRS T 8TREET CaR TO BRIDNGEPCRT * BABY‘s OWN TABLETS in ~ charge of Motorâ€" vj.b,~ â€"i.; ~In some casts the m..-‘ m‘"A‘.: ore powerful than in . others. :'?: m.n‘xl-hnum'ufludwm g h6 a:;,::‘dmflmtnthfl Mfl:fl“* that could venâ€" attaoked | jur» to speak With " any â€" negree. _ of kin Aud | sharpness to the man at the door, even ioine did| when the man was~remiss in his duâ€" i ; tes. mmmmnw wander. | way belonging to the State. ‘This made The annual banquets have long beld a prominent place in undergraduats life. Where and ~when these: feasts ane held is never known to the una« initiated until long afterward. Us«: ally, however, they are given in the grillâ€"room of some student cafe in Mw:ar.ttmumd the nearâ€"by shore resorts. ‘The men assenible® individually, and never in sonspicuous throngs.. Every effort. is made to avold publicity, The dinners or banquets begin ‘late at night, and end in the ‘"we ‘** hours. â€" The, men are MC m board in the order of their nfitqu*l‘q‘:mfim the head of the table as qrimes for which they were arrested were great or small. Usually, although the rule is often viclated, the man who has done the most daring crime, given the gops the greatest battle, or who has incurred the greatest punishment, heads the table and acts as toastâ€" master.. Toasts of the following kind lvl%umdd to: "Policemen I Have Met. "nnw';mmnm- cape, by One Didn‘t," "The Reâ€" Ugious Aspect of Criminality," by Y. M.C.A. member; "How I Failed to Distance a Cop in a Hundicap," by a member of the track team, and wo on, by representatives .of the different spheres of activity represented . ~ Three Soted Members Sentenced to Thirty Years‘ Imprisonment. Bologna, Italy, July 31.â€"The trial beâ€" fore the Assize Court here, which had been going on for sonie time, of Tra» pani, Foutana and Palizzolo, the last named ~formerly Deputy from Palermo, on sharges ‘of murder, was concluded at 11 o‘clock toâ€"night. The jury returned a verdict of [fiy against T and Palizzolo: for the murder: of Miceli and against Fontana and golo for the murder of Signor No bartolo. . Bentences of thirty years‘ in Pulizzolo was accusedâ€" of having, as fnirdirs of Signor. Miccll nod. "Bighor murders Notarbartolo. ‘The latter, who was & former Mayor of Palermo and a diree» tor of the Bank of Sicily, was robbed and killed in aâ€"railroad car near Palerâ€" m-.'h" t each were imposed uy i% guiltymn,whomun mo in December, 1899, The ings against Palizzolo were eu-m‘:nr- tfi"uhrly iniportant in the efforts of the Italian Government to overthrow the Sicilian Mafia. â€" Bologna was chosen as the place of trial in order that ‘witnesses and Judges might not. be intimidated The citizen wf Vienna who does not wish to be out of pocket must keep carly hours, for after ten o‘clock he is taxed on entering his own house, or, for the matter of that, any house. ‘The "sperrgeld," or door« opening ux.*a pecullar to Vienna, as the London "Mxpress" explains. The entire population of that city, numâ€" bering nearly two millions, are pracâ€" tically imprisoned in their houses from ten O‘clock in the evening until six the next morning. ‘They can go in or out only ‘by paying at least four cents to the janitor or "houseâ€"master," as he is called. by the Mafia, Vienna is built on the "fat" or apartâ€" mentâ€"house plan. â€"â€"Millionaires and working people alike :ive in houses of this description. ‘The houses are large, having five or six floors, with four flats on a floor, so that it is not unusual to find a hundred persons living under wne roof, ‘There Js one common enâ€" trance from the street, s-dh“ur tem o‘clock at night this door is and barred. Mpnnmtmlnmvzh‘o in or out must r cents. ‘The tax must be paid every time one passes through the doorway, without exception, If a m@n has occasion to o in and out half a dozen times, he must â€" payevery time.. One who has dined with a friend must, if he stay late} pay four cents to get out of his friend‘s house, and four moreâ€"to get uhhhm.&mhth.flllt necess}tates payment of the tax before the boy can enter, _ _ * ‘The houseâ€"master also collects and keeps duplicate copies 3( the forms on which every indi in the house must report to the ~police his age, birthplace and religion, his exact oc« cupation, and other personal details which the Austrian authorities inslst upon knowing. Nor does the power of: this important personage end‘ even here. From the little guard{room which he occuplas at the foot of the stairs he sees every one mmn or out. He ascertains with nig accuracy the amount of each tenant‘s Intome, the events of his family life, and the character of his visitors. . His farâ€"reaching power enables him to terâ€" rorize évery servant in the house Into entbring© his intélligence department, and ; thus mn the innormost life of the s in his fAveâ€"storey kingdom. * AH P oaat . MAFIA LHADERS CONVICTED. The Despot of Vienna. to whom is a very a State he of M. Weliche! & Son, Agents _ â€" â€"~‘. Waterloo. We represent the Canada Jyole and Motor Co. for BRANTFORD _GENDRON Wheel: »oth chain and chainless from $4 New and Second Hand wheok from $5.00 up We also handl« tall line of sundriea Repairin; tone promptly. Give us a call We also rapresent the Berlii Racycle Co. for BERLIN and RACYCLES trom $35 to $65. f * 104404 }0+90+00400+400+44 MClary‘s $ Weile _ #0+40+440+00+480+00+4+40+40 The other Sunday a lady on a tour visited °& mug,:hrcl in the west of Scotland. entered a pew in which sat a single gentlieman, who whispered to the fair tourist: "This seat it private.‘"" ‘The lady paid mo .“.aa;w a leaf from. . her note â€" handed him the folâ€" London, Toronto, Moritreal, Winnipeg, Vanco 1901 Models towards, heating a house if. fed. into a Furnace matie to heat â€"one which does not send the fuel the chimney in omiâ€"': LEAPER BROS . . Hawksvilie . . will extract more heat from a unit of coat than any ‘other good‘ Furnace. _ * Every square inch from the bottom of fireâ€"pot to top of dome is a direct radiating surface. "â€" : ~ maalcinl 'fismmsscss!?% Sunshing |\ City Mext Market _ Furnaces | «:: xserasia â€" Windmilis Supplied. "The dome is made of heavy â€" steelâ€"plate, which makes it amore effective : heaterthan the castâ€"iron dome put in common Furnaces. The "Sunshine" has everyimproved feature and still:â€"is so â€"gimple that any person can operate it. All kinds of repairâ€" done at reasonable KRUECER BROS., Waterloo Mr. H.. B. D-b‘fl to thank .hn'mwb_ lHiberal tepra riat 6 "probirt aitcoree is :-("u-n -yunln continuance of the same. o he test cattle and a getting the eboic 3’& His w holcsale plll& trade bas Tutin sn sho megaamnitinlt work. w w Â¥ business and the beet olmhhfi: guaranteed. peages are @Awmm es ars t the _beef, bam, bacon, summe ‘p"?:.u.im. :‘:':fi" constantly _kept on ndn.mmmmuim ut orders left at the or sent in by num._ymup:s;?,m. 1 All horâ€"ecwnoers ibonld have it. Made of best tanned lantoér and ruove made of pure gum . : Surciours for »ore shoulders. toed for one yoar.. Best of mfiâ€" those who havé used them. uu\-‘ tor sale, Will besold by county rights or for the Domicion. Write for dessriptive ciroulare c:ders sent by mail or otherwise will have prompt attention. x $ Dss WM. SPABETZEL, | ". » r . a. W AFactints 7 i mer ' o rrw i "')3;"'::‘ t 0. in the RITZEN‘S, the Gent‘e John Ritzer, King St.. <1+ . Waterloo Kixo Brixrs and Footâ€"comfort and shape retention,are nevet dear, at the ¢zpease of mere flecting finish, ,, e too dearly purchased, n imtites "*The Slater Shoe" Sole Local Agent, _ ind ie New Dundee. PCA

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