than any other medicine in nse. _ Â¥on, or some one of your family. ara Oeing for Chambertain‘s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoca The great success of this .preparaâ€" tion in the reliet and eure of bowel complaints has brought it into almost universal use. It never fails, and when ‘reduced with water and sweetâ€" ened is pleasant to take. It is equalâ€" Iy valuable for children and adults. For sale by all adults: * CHAMBERLAIN‘S CcoLIc, cHorâ€" Ei!.A_ AND DIARRHOEA REMâ€" Po tion. Similarly prepared the lhw b$NJ of the United Kingdom is $36.29 per head â€" or $1,506,085,189, that of the United States is $1,955,â€" 827,421, or $24.75 per head, and that of Australasia is $17.20, or $78,367,â€" 045.; The population of Canada is taken at 5,528,847, and when divided into the expenditure gives 19.8714. Canada‘s Iiquor bill is $54,586,191 per amnum, or $9.817$ per head of the MERMAIDS ARE GROWING SCARCE. (From the ‘Field and Stream.‘) The strangest of all strange fish must be the manitee and the dugong. '.l‘lo latter is the mermaid of fabled lote. The dugong live in flocks along the shores of the Indian Ocean, the Red Sea and the Gulf of Manaar, where they brouse on seaweed and vegetation. ‘They are very afâ€" mate in disposition. J Wire money into court for safe gh; Such a course would at least serve two good purposes, â€" it would relieve the executors from the responsibility of investing the momey, spd at the same time ensure the proâ€" duction of it when required. which hbas often been fllustrated by unhappy experience. The appointment by the Government of an official guarâ€" dian to take charge of the legacies of infants furnishes a satisfactory proâ€" tection in this behali. Where the wirding up of estates necessarily exâ€" tends over a number of years, and funds have to be husbanded on this account it is questionable whether a better planâ€"can be adopted than to funds have been lost to the rightful heirs through the negligence or inâ€" competence of executors is a fact foat remiss in their duties, orders them *o account for the $5,000 ard its interest. ‘this decision reverses two previous riigh Court decisions. | #Â¥n most Anstances, the position of an exrecutor is one mot to be coveted, and where the responsibility for monâ€" °y is required to be assumed, a risk is involved which might eventually complicate the estate of those apâ€" pointed to act in that capacity. That for | put yc ..-.l‘n'énh o Ince, Y man‘s g * bmil?(uthh wm Cholers Morbusy,Pveeniart sod Upon the application of the heirs of Thomas Clark, of York Township, who died in Bleecker street, Toronto, in . 1900, Charles Bellamy, of Pcil County and Robert Risebora»gh, of York County, the executr»:s of the ‘The important principle recently laid down by Judge Winchester, that executors of an estate are responsible for the actions of a solicitor or agent who performs the duties they requet him to, should impress upon exccuâ€" tors the importance of their obligaâ€" HXECUTORS‘___RESPONSI BILITY. w and be prepared for su 11 @ rice, 85 cents, J‘ will need it Hon. Dr. Reaume and Mr. Campbel! have been invited to attend a meetâ€" ing of the county counciliors of Ew sex, at Essex Centre, on March 19, 2.. talk ovér the good roads quosâ€" _ The good roads nidvement continâ€" ues to gain‘ impetus. The County Council of Victoria has passed a byâ€" law adopting a county system of roads, and will raise $100,000 to commence improvements on the 200 miles of roads to be taken over. The Councils of the United Counâ€" ties of Dundas, Stormont and Glenâ€" garry will meet on June 19 to conâ€" sider the question of adopting a siml-J lar system. | Toronto, Feb. 28. â€"It is estimated that manufacturers may effect a large saving in the cost of power by the J use of electric power from Niagara in municipalities throughout Ontario, acâ€" cording to a circular issued by the Toronto branch of the Canadian Manâ€" ufacturers‘ Association in respect to the Niagara Power Commission. The Commissioners have appointed Messrs Ross & Holgate, clectric and _ hyâ€" draulic engineers, Montreal, to catry out a field â€"engincering inquiry, and ascertain the amount of power necued by the manufacturers. 1t is pointed out that ‘"the consumer of 500 horseâ€" power pet annum, . under firstâ€"class steam power conditions, will probabâ€" ly pay anything from $30 to $50 per horseâ€"pewer per annum, representing a total outlay of from $15,000 _ to $25,000 per‘ annum. 1i undéer municiâ€" pal development the same quantity of electric power may be furnished at a cost of $15 per horseâ€"power per anâ€" num, or a total expenditure under the above conditions of $7,500, the great advantage resulting from the proposâ€" ed development becomes immediately apparent.‘" Galt, Feb. 27.â€"The byâ€"law reducing the number of hotel licenses from nine to seven has been declared ultra vires by the _ Attorneyâ€"General‘s Departâ€" ment. A new byâ€"law must be passed. It was given two readings toâ€"night and will be finally passed at a meetâ€" ing toâ€"morrow afternoon. When the motion for the first reading was inâ€" troduced the Mayor ruled it out of order, and left the Council chamber, leaving the Council to appoint a chairman. He did this to protect himself, believing the town will be involved in litigation as the result of the byâ€"law. Councitlor Thomson adâ€" vised the Council to exercise care. The byâ€"law must be passed before March .1 to be operative this year, and developments are expected toâ€" morrow. It is suggested that the opâ€" ponents to the byâ€"law may talk from 4.30 in the afternoon until after 12 o‘clock.© This is hardly likely, but it looks as if there were a colored man in the woodpile.© ELECTRIC POWER FROM NIAG cocxTY To RaisE #100,000 TO REDUCE HOTEL LICEN3ES ie uis Auallh ~ advdacsisic _ When the dead man was found he was taken to his brothet‘s house, who was naturally surprised, as he had supposed that Nathan had put up at Grishow‘s house during the night. «It is not likely that there will be an inquest. \ The horses were faithful and reâ€" mained with the dead driver until he was found this morning. That they suffered from the cold was shown by the fact that they tried to keep warm by kicking up the snow beneath them and had reached the frozen ground. The team must have been slopped by the ~driver, who could not free himself from the awkward position, the heavy load being on top of his head. There the unfortunate man had to remain and undoubtedly death re sulted at an early hour owing to the cold and exposure as well as the weight upon the head and body. j The deceased called at his brotherâ€" in.law‘s house, and after remaining there a short time he proceeded to his brother‘s farm, and while driving through a drift on the road between Noah Weber‘s batn and the Strasburg Sawâ€"mill, it is supposed the horses gave a sudden pull, which threw the driver forward to the ground, and the horses did not stop until the sleigh had passed partly over him. ed of the pigs, and purchased a quantity, of coal. Between five andâ€" six o’cl& he passed through German Mills and was seated on the front of the sleigh, on the edge of the high board around the sleigh, with his head hanging on his breast as though Hfe was siecping. Several people who saw him thought it was a very precarious position for a driver. ‘ _ The deceased made his home at his brotherâ€"inâ€"law‘s, Noah Grischow, but worked for his brother, Charles Barâ€" tholomew on the day in question. He _ was sent to Breslau earâ€" Iy on Wednesday morning and disposâ€" _ Nathan Bartholemew was a son of the late Thomas Bartholomew, a forâ€" mer hotelkeeper at Strasburg, _ and who died about two months ago. He was 26 years of age and returned about three weeks ago from the lumâ€" ber camps on Manitoulin Island. The news of the affair startlied the residents of Strasburg and German Mills, as it spread like wild fire throughout the community and natâ€" urally created considerable exciteâ€" he was found dead and frozen stif about 7 o‘clock a. m., Thursday, by Abram Weber and his men. On Wednesday morning Nathan wmmmu'-wmm a load of pigs for Breslau, and on reâ€" turning between 6 and 7 in the even hion, hefell off the front of his â€"sleigh and with the front bob on his head and the rear bob, on his legs, and the Lloncf still attached to the sleigh, FATAL ACCIDENT NEAR STRASBURG. hb&cw: on the Strasbufg mesd Tanlecuier Imnles Following Morning Falls off of the savage tribes excepting that in place of using starvatim as a Mcans to accomplish his end he recommends the more scientifiec method of app‘yâ€" ing chloroform. It is hard to crecit that a scientific man could be in carâ€" nest when propounding a doctrine such as that advocated by Dr. Osler, which is at once ridiculous and reâ€" volting to qur common bumanity, J That the ufterance by a scientific | man like Dr. Osler, stating that men |should be retired from active life or chloroformed at sixty, provokes critiâ€" cism, especially by those nearing that age, is not to be wondered at. It is said that in slavery days in the South, when negroes became old and unable for service, that their owners were in‘the habit of administering a dose of soothing poison, which â€" put the financially. unprofitable creature into a sleep from which he never awoke. In this case there is some inducement to put an old and infirm individual out of the way, because the expense of keeping him can be overâ€" come, but to chloroform a person of sixty who is in the full enjoyment of his physical and mental faculties and taking a useful part in the activities of life, for no other crime excepting that he has arrived at a certain age, is too revolting to be contemplated, and anyohe talking such nonsense has reached a stage when he ought to be chloroformed himscl!. In the history of some â€"of the more savage tribes of Indians we are told that when their squaws arrive at a certain ago, they [ are designated as hags and subjected |. to deprivations and abuse and fnaMy | / left to starve on some barren «pot| where they can have no hope of subâ€" sisting. Dr. Oslet‘s principles are apâ€" pnr’ently in perfect accord with those ‘"‘That nothing in the world is acâ€" complished by men more than forty years old and that men of sixty years should be retired or chloroformed.‘" "I have two fixed ideas well known to my friends. The first is the comâ€" parative uselessness of men above 40 years ol age. This may seem shocking and ‘yet read aright the world‘s hisâ€" tory bears out the statement. _ Take the sum of human achievement in acâ€" tion, in science, in art, in literature, subtract the work of the men above 40, and, while we should miss great treasuresâ€"even priceless treasuresâ€" we would practically be where we were toâ€"day. "It is difficult to name a Ercat and farâ€"reaching conquest of the mind which has not been given to the world by a man on whose back the sun was stil shining. The effective, â€" moving, vitalizing work of the world is done between the ages of twentyâ€"five and forty, these fifteen golden â€"years of plenty, the anabolic or constructive period, in which there is always a balance in the mental bank and the credit is good. c Tok ol eu ue s aie ue‘ kins University, which institution Dr. Osler is about to leave to become the head of the Medical School of Oxâ€" ford University, is provoking considâ€" erable comment. Dr. Osler ‘said:â€" The extraordinary _ announcement made by Dr. William Osler, at the anniversary exercises of Johns Hopâ€" Wt »xlb uc o oeu ks : . The conventiong adopted a resolution requesting the Department of Agriâ€" culture to enforce the Act by cutting off the grants to all societiee which permit games of chance at their exâ€" hibitions, and pledged its support t« the Department in any measutes it may take to suppress such features at fall fairs. â€"Guelph Mercury. ‘ EXTROADINARY ANNOUNCEâ€" & MENT BY DR OSLER to a third township society. In this county it will probably also mean that two small township societies will have to give up holding exhibitions, while the second township fair will be strengthened.© >~This will mean that all. through the province the best societies will be strengthened, while the weak and struggling ‘ones, which are doing little or no good, will go out of existence. Such â€" a change in the Act will do away with all distinction between township and district societies, and will place all societies on the same footing as reâ€" gards their government grants. In yet another county the grant to the district societyâ€"will remain avout as it is, while two small township societies will lose $88, which will go ‘| It is probable that the Agricultural Jand Arts Act will be revised and this Jchange made ~within a year or so. Should this be done, it will result in many of the smaller societies in the Province being cut off and societies which‘ are doing good work being strengthened. An examination of the returns made to the Department of Agriculture, by some of the societies of the province shows how such a change is likely to work out. In a county in Eastern Ontario where the district society has been «devoting a great deal of attention to horse racâ€" ing, this society will lose $140 from its grant, which money will go to a township seciety farther back in the country, which is being conducted on agricultural lines. In another Eastern Ontario county the district society will receive an increase in its grant of $101, which will be taken from the grants of three small township soâ€" cieties. This will probably mean tha two of the small societies will have to go out of existence and that the third one will be strengthened, leayvâ€" ing two‘strong societies in the riding instead of four at present. - The resolutions passed at the conâ€" vention of the Ontario Association of Fairs and Exbibitions, held in Toronâ€" to on February 14th to 16th, are likely to have far reaching effects. The Agricultural Societies of the Province for many years have been receiving fixed grants from the Gov ernment, irrespective of the work they were doing. At the reeent conâ€" vention, as a result of information furnished by Provincial Superintendâ€" ent H. B. Cowan, a resolution was adopted recommending that in future grants should be distributed . to societies in proportion to the amount of money they expend for agricultural WILL HAVE"FAR REACHING A SAFE COUGH MEDICINE FoRr CHILDREN, In buying a cough medicine for chilâ€" dren never be afraid to buy Chamberâ€" lain‘s Cough Remedy. There is no danger from it and reliet is always 8:;’: to follow. It is elncl..‘ w a for colds, croup cough, For sale by all druggists. â€"well, one wants at least a change of handkerchicfs, and cven if the knot be transferred it must be translated from memory! _ Rough and ready devices to refresh a jaded inemory are numerous. Many men (implored by wives to post tha letter without fail) tie a knot in their handkerchiefs; others submit to havâ€" ing a picce of string tied about a fore finger. But these are uncomfortable methods, and if the engagements are many the knots and the picces of string would interfere â€"with the use of the ‘ forefinger and the handkerchict. And if the angagements are fat ahoad § London Chronicle. x The frequent cases of weakmess "or loss of memory which threaten to make this age remarkable, have given rise in Vienna to the establishment of a "‘Memento Agency.‘" whose funcâ€" tion . is to relieve of anxiety those people who cannot rely on their own recollection with regard to future enâ€" gagements. The agency issues a double envelope to its clients. In one, orm which:you â€" write your name, adâ€" dress and the date on which you wish to have your memory jogged, you enâ€" close a note of the particular busiâ€" ness of which you want reminding. YÂ¥ou seal it up and sent it, in the seâ€" cond envelope, to the agency, which returns you the enclosure exactly at the desired. time. You are thus freed from all intermediale worry. There is only one possible flaw in this arrangeâ€" ment, but that is a fearful one. Who can guarantee that the employeesâ€"ofâ€" the agency will not also lapse into forgetfuiness? ‘"The month will not bring a maxâ€" imum of cold, but much precipitation in the form of rain, sleet or â€" snow will occur, with disagreeable fuctuâ€" ations of temperature, an unsteady state of the barometer and some furâ€" jous storms. A Venus period centerâ€" ing near the time of the Vernal equâ€" inox al always an admonition that disagreeable weather and ~many seâ€" vere to dangerous storms and otnerl perturbances are to he expected." ‘"A reactionary storm period will be .central on <~the 27th, 28th and 29th. At this time the temperature will rise decidedly, the barometer will fall progressively from west to east, and general storms of rain and wind, turning to snow in the north, Pass eastwardly across the countfy, all. follo by anotner decided rise of _ the/ barometer, northwesterly winds ahd much colder. ‘ ‘"‘This storm veriod is from â€" the 19th to the 21th, being at its centre on the 21st, the‘central day of" the earth‘s ‘vernal jeaquinoctial period, with the moon at theâ€"full, on the celestial equator and in‘ perigree. The indications are that Aropical â€" storms and hurricances will reach : the exâ€" treme parts of our south country about the 19th to 22nd, notably on and touching the 21st, apd that rain and high winds, turning to snow and very cold for the season will meet the tropical equatorial storms from the northwest. . A severe ©March blizzard over much of the country northward is among the probabilitâ€" ies at this period. Volcanic and seisâ€" mic disturbances will reach a maxâ€" imum state of excitation over the globe generally within sixty hours of six p.m. on the 20th. and the most general and violent storm conditions of the month will appear during the storm period imâ€" mediately following. . ‘It must be remembered that the vernal ‘ equinoctial period extends all this manth, and that stori conditions may arise at almost any time, even outside of~ the regular storm periods. But the most proâ€" nounced and general disturbances will arise and reach their culminatâ€" ing climaxes during these regular periods. ‘The 15th to the 17th will bring a marked storm period, cuiminâ€" ating in low barometer, rising temâ€" perature and:> general storm conâ€" ditions, ending in wide areas of rain andâ€" snow. Another high barometer and March cold wave may suddenly slip in from the northwest from about the 1i7th to the 19th, but it will give way as suddemy as it came es the probabilities of storms, tidal waves and seismic perturbations about this time. Several boreal storms with a March cold wave need not surprise any one from about the lith to the 14th. c and snow during the Vulcan storm period, exterding from the 7th to the 12th. Careful students of our foreâ€" casts will not forget that our little globe _ passes a magnetoâ€"electric crisis on and about March the 11th eaclll year. ’l‘hj_s fact always increasâ€" on and touching the 5th, ending in snow storms over much of the counâ€" try to the northward. The Merâ€" cury disturbance being central on the Tth, the probabilities are that ccmâ€" tinued _ cloudy, threatening, sleety conditions will continue into the regâ€" ular storm period following. | *A sudden high barometer with quick and severe change to boreal winds and blizzardous conditions may result in ohe northern sections an and about the 5th, but a rapid reâ€" action to warmer will set in about the 7th, followed by falling barâ€" ometer from â€"western extremes, end> ing in general storms or rain, sleet JAGGING THE MEMORY ‘‘The first disturbances for March will be central on the 3rd, ith and 5th.© These reactionary storms :’ul culminate in high temperature, w barometer, with rain and high winds eretold by the Famous FOR MARCH. Ti 6e 9 *Ws Wc haes qsc es Oe Cld CO pelars $ Magite Cedincyeus, i ary | day.", Nothing is as good as Ferroâ€" e e yE eaeg eo. Pat HBOM . .. «4 + se« se + ams» m« + «. PrO8tO J € Beagram M P ...... ...... .. Wa‘¥rico PuJHOODE :+ + » ++ ++ + + 10+ + ue e es O.P.&....'................. _reak Turner, 0. E....._....\ L___LCJ -'.'l'n---c-----.---o--u....o.m P 8. l..‘lw........-.......... w.H Bowiby Q.C Fr. Sny lor........ .. H. Knoll....... ..... J.A. MackieJ.P ...‘ Gon.8. Merner W.H. Somuiars â€" .â€" â€" â€" â€" g4 Jou® &A Roo6 â€" â€" â€" â€" â€" in BOARD OF DIRECTORS. Job1 Joun Feww®Ltp â€"~ â€"~ 0_ Direotor of the Waterioo Musloa! Soociety‘s B ind. Net Assots ist Jan. 1900 Amount at Risk â€" . f Open 8 -.............vv,T-.;.". %. 8. Kailcrgas rcdicted Eeonomical Mutual Fire Ins.Go of and D Sundries. â€" If you fdPl:)u:et t-hod::sred article come or send to us for it. _ CGreat Bargains esns L _ wE ExpEcT 3000 aAcres m For the Year 1905 WATERLOO COUNTY. Mb uht baP ialioe es d i2040 :c CS Direstory for the District of Western g:hï¬o ncluding the Town of Waterâ€" 6rden for new connections, changes of firm names, chang- of street adâ€" dress or for duplicate entries in the List should be banded in at once, ‘ ] â€" A. L. Kumpf, | Local Manager. ] 0 4s hmalwase auca _200 JCRT PRSC, AD0 other hdah-:tm w‘. brought before the THE BELL TELEPRONE COMPANY OF CANADA VWt OB MONDAY, MARCH at ome o‘clock noon, f officers and for the rec NOTIOCE is hereby given that the Anâ€" General Mesting ‘of the @tockhold ‘.-"_'3"’_.5‘!‘,“_“-!! ‘ire Insurance 000: Morcantile Firo Insurarce Co. ANNUAL MEETINC | Will you not make a visit of inspection to our piano store. We have some that will suit you at the closest figure good pianos can be sold for. We have pianos at from $200.00 up to $500 00 as good as sold elsewhere for froin" $300.00 to $600.00. A call will cost you nothing, but may teach y ing to price of instrument. You can get _ The Most of The Best for The Least. Mutual and Cash Systems. Is about to issue a New Subscribers Fagpiie elay" cmd ds t coprerecinn. (Aomaiidrot: factorics that are standards of the present day bought for cash and on that account and because no highâ€"salaried travelling salesmen, we sell at t possible figure. s Roos Pharmacy. T ME oW 0 ENe mc o eeeit . Second it must reach the buyer that involves the least expense for selli The Pianos we sellâ€"the ]E HEIMER, MARTINâ€"ORME, WAN can only be shown when a piano with the above named qualifications is secured at a fai Wmnmuthwwd.mmwmb. * . * lished, yet thoroughly up toâ€"date piano factory. a 4 o i n e L P R & P E t ant & sitomste~â€"mliirndit a tsnB Bhensar ® ld.heï¬mofuflorhh,.ndkmwpcviï¬oninwn- § * MUSICAL TONE in a Piano is almost like musical tone in the human voice. A voice that is sultured and of highqmlity,jmtlihlimihrquliï¬u in a Piano, repreâ€" unhmntholpnï¬ontmdpniut‘kingltudyfoundndu good material . PHILEP Toi&k..?hnoofbim*lqmlityituqnim t-i-o.ckillllipi-hkh‘. Pianos are made in a week or two, butygood Pianos like the reliable and reâ€" nowned STEINWAY, NORDHEIMER, MARTINâ€"ORME, and other leading makes, represent months of study, careâ€" ful nelection of matérials_ and Tanu "n "" _1 f SHf k flo-nql’inqmnldcnq but do not sess musical tone that it is evident a h?puï¬on otm public has given very little attention to the matter . mm m n ne en ues me ns ne e eb e in ++ will be held at oF BEHERLIN. WATERLOO, ONT. m n m me en e n e n un ns ue s HnmEEVVy S C)TE? T Musical Tone in a Piano the Most Impoi sans enme se os s o ons s ons + on + a» BOFH hesemmmeneneenie en c senes on . Feb. 14th, 1908. *heve0 sees seas rese sees ceeel reseenenerenne en es enc 00 00 hewe sns naes en es mee en nn e e P C CHRRArEree ce se++0+.+ . DOrIID umc soâ€"seus! The LeadingMeat Mapket & 1. bevitt, . |o with weak stomachs, t sork _ _ * ’ ul paringhive on oo D Om:zn his. PAran w#aâ€",. â€" |I00N D. FISCHER, Proprietor _ WANLESS azUsIo _ > & P sane es se ces eeere es evenssesvene neesee 000 Sleighs Qualms, _ nausea, lopging for food hnd 81 lyet drehding to eat. You may have im â€" se â€" o o& be > Coove 4@ ba esA So Genuine Economy in Buying Pianos WO ANLBESS : the real thing, but Ferrozone will cure youâ€" like it did S. D. Huntingdon of Hamilton, who says, "I frequentâ€" ly. was a;:ack!ed mfl acute dysâ€" pepsia that t t it must be heart discase. I used Ferrozone and got relief. 1 h;‘ on using Ferrozone and was cured. My digestion is in perâ€" ’Mofls 9‘ !‘m eat anything toâ€" you nothing, but may teach you mach. the INWAY, NORDâ€" * VANE. etc., are built in of the present day, and are j# +300 COUNTY GROWERS 2. K. â€" HAcrporx, Managing Director. Yours of the 15th to hand, containing check for Sugar Beets, Accept thanks for same. I am well satisfied with results and am ready to make a contract for next season,. Yours respectfully, 8e DEArR Sirs : In the line of meats, we have Beef. Pork, Veal, Lamb, Sugarâ€" Cured Hams and Baeon (our own ollrlng&;.omo teated, always used. In line of lmno-n;:o sauâ€" sages, such as Dologja eners, Pork SQmso. Head , Liver Sausage ard Summer Sausage. Give us a trial and be convinced THE OnTtARIO Sugar Co., 3 Berlin, Ont. has the reputation of supplying ite numerous eustomers with the choicest and best of meats all the DO NOT WAIT FOR A CANVASSER .To CALI, UPON YOU, wE HAVE NONE IN THIS COUNTY.. ° YE HAVE NONE IN THIS WRITE OR CALL AT FACTORY FbR buyer through a source HUGH BLAIN, TORONTO. WHAT I8 DYSPEPSIA * SEND IN YOUR CONTRACT NoOW,. THE ONTARIO SUGAR CO., umiteo BERLIN, ONT. HAVE ALREADY GIVEN VOLUNTARY CONTRACTS WILL YOU DO THE saAme? of the many satisfied growers the closest FPG 3 â€" J S t owt ¢â€" NOW IS THE TIME we hav g\" 10 FIRE INSURANCE coxpany" INCORPORATED IN 1863. fotal Assets 31ist December ‘02 $426,808.17. WATERLOO MUTUAL Muou-ym-w;u;c_llnn. now, 1b will im rove the appesarance of you PPPPTORCC__: _ ‘ Strebel‘s â€"~ HARNESS SHOP WA "ERLOO! 4 of HONEST HARNESS AT Jame nm_ ;, .ii,“-““ OFFIORRS ; George Randall, Prestdent Wm.‘Bnider, Viceâ€"President. Frank Haight, Manager, J. L. Armatrong, Inspeot~r. K. P, Clement, Hollstsor, Bcriin, BUCKBERROUGH & Co‘Y, J. L. Wideman, Req., Bt. Jacobe, Allan Bowman, Req., Preston. P. K. Shanta, Proston, BOARD OF DIRECTORS, Geo, Randall, Keq., Waterloo, Dr. J. H. Webb, «* JOHN STREBEL , who has written us, says: _n!“r ring ‘l'{-di "â€"-onu rates, Terms $5 to $10 monthly accordâ€" '.S‘//‘ . K. SavuttLzwortn, Agricultural Sup‘t, Music Store, BERLIN, Ont. * 3z €"» e &/ WiLLtAM Drvysoarn, Important. HONEST PRIOKE Viceâ€"President : E. W. B. SNIDBR, ST. JAco®s. 218t,