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The Chronicle Telegraph (190101), 27 Jul 1905, p. 2

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The Road and Bridge Committce of the County Council inspected _ the Greenficld _ bridge, _ which has been completed, and found it to be very satisfactory. _ The_cost _of â€"theâ€"struc= furé is borne by Waterloo and Oxford Counties, each of which will pay $719,31. The cost is divided as . folâ€" lows: Frazer & Eichlet, concrete, $432.60; J. Black, inspecting, $27; Coldic Milling (Co., cement, $258.71. The Ayr bridge will be built with planking and joists and will cost about $300. The committee would have preferred to use stecl joists and concrete flooring but owing to the limited amount of money. at its disâ€" posal this year the bridge could not be built with these substantial maâ€" terials. Now is the time to buy Chamberâ€" lain‘s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoca Ramedy. It is certain to be nceded sooner or later and when that time comes you will need it badlyâ€" you will need it quickly. Buy it now. Tt may save life. For sale by all drug» Tne company has the authorizaâ€" tion to develop (125,000 horsepower, and are proceeding to take full . adâ€" vantage of their rights. The tail race, tunnel, reel pit, headworks, power house and cverything for the full deâ€" velopment ‘ of 125,000 â€" horsepower, with the exception of the water wheels and gencrators, will be conmâ€" pleted next summer, while wheels and generators sufficient for the developâ€" ment of 60,000 horsepower will | be installed at once. ; While the company is not able to quote rates for electric service until the completion of the works the manâ€" ager naturally expects to offer power at prices sufficiently attractive to create a demand therefore: It is also the intention of the comâ€" pany to build branch lines to Guelph, Galt, Preston, Hespeler, Berlin, Watâ€" erloo and other towns thruu;huut the western peninsula. Toronto, July 21.â€"Theâ€" electrical development Company of Ontario, whose construction of a transmission line between Niagara Falls and ‘l oâ€" ronto is nearing completion, has deâ€" cided to* extend their line westwara to London as quickly asâ€"possibl«, touching at Brantford, Paris, Ingerâ€" soll, _ Woodstock and intermediwte points. â€" * Next week the proposed route wiil be surveyed, and while it is dificu‘t to state time of completion, the comâ€" pany will endeavor to deliver power before next autumn.. WILL EXTEND LINE WESTWARD Electrical Development Comâ€" pany of Ontario Will Build Line to London as Quickâ€" ly as Possible, With Branch Line to Berâ€" lin and Waterloo. BRIDGE COST COUNTY $719.31 forego the $3,500 pension as long es he is a judge. If he has to foreâ€" go his pension under these cireue:stances, why should not the same reâ€" striction apply to senators ana n:embers of the House who still draw their indemnity? These latter zre: Sit Mackenzie Bowell, Sir .lohn Carling, and Messts. Haggart, Foster and Sifton, also Sir Richard Cariâ€" wright and Hon. R. W. Scott when t hey retire from the ministry. Retired Members of the Cabinet Who Will Draw $3,500 a Year Pension and $2,500 Indemnity as Wellâ€"â€"What the M. P. S. LINE UP FOR PENSION. _ Five other members of the Cabinct have not completed the five years. _ They are: â€" Messrs. Prefontainc, Brodeur, Emmerson, Hyman and Oliver. i mloed it There are now eligible to be addcd to this list the following memâ€" bers of the prescnt Government: _ Sit Wilfrid Lauriet ($6,000 pension); Sir William Mulock, Sir Frederick Borden, Sit Richard Cartwright, and Messrs. Scott, Fitzpatrick, Paterson, Fisher and Fielding, $3,500 each. Of the Laurier Cabinet, it is already announced that Sir Richard Cartwright and Hon. R. W. Scott will retire fromâ€"the Government, .but remain in the Senate, which will net them cach $6,000 a year for life. If_Mr. _ Fitzpatrick â€"takesâ€"a â€"judeesh iP,; 48 it â€"isâ€"rumored, â€"he â€"will â€"haveâ€"t> Liberals. John Costigan, exâ€"minister ..... Clifford Sifton, exâ€"minister ... A. G. Blair, exâ€"minister ... ... J. Israel Tarte, exâ€"<minister ...... Sir Chas. Tupper, exâ€"prime minister~ Sir M. Bowell, exâ€"prime minister ... John Haggart, exâ€"minister ... ... George E. Foster, exâ€"minister ... ... Sir John Carling, exâ€"minister ... .....â€" Sir Adolphe Caron, exâ€"minister ... ... Sir Hibbert Tupper, exâ€"minister ......> Sir Hector Langevin, exâ€"minister ...« Ottawa, July 18.â€"The pensions provided in the resolutions brought down in the House yesterday are very much larger than they appeared at first sight to be. For some of the beneficiaries it is in effect a dual pension system, the beneficiary being entitled not only to the pension al= lowance, but to the indemmity which he is at present drawing as & member of the Senate or of the House of Commons, Sir‘ Mackenzie Bowell, for instance, as exâ€"prime minister, will draw $6,500, which includes half his salary as premier and his sessional indemnity. . Sir Charles Tupper, another exâ€"prime minister, will draw $4,000, or hall his salary while premier. But the exâ€"prime ministers are not the only beneficiaries of the dual pehsion system. Every member of~ Parliament who has served five years as a Cabinet Minister secures both the pension and the indemnity. The favored ones are John Costigan,â€"John Haggart, George E. Foster, Sir John Carling and Clifford Sitton. Each of these gentlémen will draw $6,000 a year while he remains a member of Parliament, and $3,500 _ a year for the rest of his life. Following is the list of the beneficiaries of the pension plan:â€" _ SIR ADOLPHE CARON, SIR HIBBERT TUPPER, SIR HECTOR LANGEVIN, A, G. BLAIR, AND J. ISRAEL TARTE, EACH $3,500 A YEAR. + SIR MACKENZIE BOWELL, $6,500 A YEAR. SIR CHARLES TUPPER, $4,000 A YEAR. JOHN HAGGART, SIR JOHN CARLING, GEORGE E. FOSTER, JOHN COSÂ¥IGAN, AND CLIFFORD SIFTON, EACH $6,000 A YEAR. Conservatives. Total TOTAL, $58,000 A YEAR. BUY IT NOW. (Toronto World.) Former Salary. Pension. Indemnity. Total In past years the assessmment on railway property was based upon the value of the right of way, according ?o the value of land adjoining, but this year the assessments of the , townships of Guelph, Puslinch, Nichâ€" ol, Pilkington: and Eramosa include all real property other than the right of way together with the latter. This made the assessment on railways through the various townships $10,â€" 000 per mile. This action was taken upon the advice of the county solicitâ€" or who held that under the new asâ€" sessment Act it was feasible. The I(‘-ram‘l Trunk and Canadian Pacific ‘railways that were affected opposed ‘nw assessment imposed but the townâ€" ship courts of revision would not ‘accede to their suggestions to mainâ€" tlain the _ assessment in itsâ€"original form. â€"An appeal was consequently lmadc to the higher court. Mr. M. K. Cowan was present in the interests of the G.T.R.; Mr. A. Mcâ€" Murchy was representing the C.P.R. and Messrs. Donald and Hohn .Guthâ€" rie were counsel for the townships. Mr. E. Donald, Taxâ€"Commissioncr of the C.T.R., was also present. lin cas it is runiored. he â€"will havo {;, | NAS Pried â€"with â€"trouble for â€"himsel{ â€"uated in â€"Blockâ€"Number Two, containâ€". ts â€"&8 it 48 rumored, hehwfll ha',c 1# or ot't:'rs. He was a dangerous man, ing by measurement sight hundred . s he is a Jjudge. _ If he as.l-J orc‘: ripe for something worse than his and ninetyâ€"sixâ€"acres of land, being tances, why shoult! noti] thel_.la-;unel re own sudden taking off. "composed of: lots . number seventyâ€" ommc "Gywal Sip jops _ The verdict of the jury is that Mis. ‘three and eightyâ€"five, lying in: the . Sir lti#ckenzula I.;So'ch: ha ; L.:or‘? Kyle was justified in shooting to tract of land in block number two, hep telnrs hom ho mi istry.. _ "_° frighten McGee away, and that the ‘containing sixty thousand acres, purâ€" Shrey felire from, ie Infuisityâ€" jkilimg. u1 him was accidental and unâ€" Chased by Danicl and Jacob Erb of m=mmenemâ€" intontional. In face Oof this verdict, 4R'lc§§rd Beasley, of Barton, District k Mrs. Kyle has been sent to jail. Of Niagara,. RAILWAYS AND ’Nwarly every reader of this paper will | The deed exhaustively. describes the { rentirely sympathize with the womah, !l:l\d :m% the c;);difigns ofâ€" sale and 1 and will be more disposed to comâ€",Was duly signed and sealed on the £. + T HE ASSESSMENT Imend than blame her for her action. 20th of July, in the year of Our Lord «> 1 She acted wencc and put out One thousand, eight hundred and five. ; d Gueiph Heldâ€"ofâ€"theâ€"world~Aâ€"manâ€"whoâ€"was a danâ€"|} â€"Below the deed proper is written a Board of Judges at ph s f ipt That Railway Superstructures ger in lf., and altlyough the . jury receip for the amount of one hu.nt_lred | y oup might fairly have given het a mors ’Mld fortyâ€"nine dollars, six shillings | _ Shall Only be Assessable . explicit exoncration, yet the authoriâ€"(And cight pence, and signed by Daniel | When Occupying Highâ€" ties have jailed her as if she were a ETb, and Jacob Erb and Richard ways Lengthwise, and criminal, which the verdict says she 'Beasley as witnesses. * was not.. The knowledge that sh*! On the outside of the deed is the Not Merely Crossâ€" caused the death of a fellow creature following inscription: i ing Them is no small punishment to a rightiyâ€"! ‘"‘A memorial of the within deed, t ce constituted waman, however much of &',‘:Sttel‘e:f ;!I the Register office, he accident there was in it, and great nty ork, Province of Upper ‘Fhe appeal of the G. T. R. and Câ€" o5 was the necessity that caused f}r Canada, © the twentyâ€"seventh day'J pg[ P. R. against the assessment TAtES 40 â€"proquce the pistol. Justice in this JUIY, one thousand, cight hundred imposed upon them by the seVerAl case scarcely required that Mrs: Kyle @90 five, at eight o‘clock in the foreâ€" townships of Guelph, Puslinch, ETA cpourg have been sent to jail, and 100n. Thos. Ridout, Registrar." mosa, Nichol, Pilkington and N@SS@~ perq there as if she had perpetrated & ‘ Weprnns | Ietinghnmmniminesns After a lengthy argument the board delivered _ a unanimous . judgment, which was unanimous in striking out the assessment of superstructure, reâ€" ducing the assessment by $183, 00. Judge Gorham and Judge Clement both delivered â€" judgments, helding that section 41 vf the assessment act was the code applicable to the asâ€" sessment‘ of railways, the first subâ€" section stating the diffcrent kinds .of property assessable, and the second subâ€"section the manngr in which such property should be assefsed, and that while the new act provides expressly that railway superstructure shall be taxable where it occupics the highâ€" way lengthwise, bot merely crossing it, and an express provision is made for the mode of valuation, namely, as upon the sale to another company poâ€" sessing similar rights, powers â€" and franchises, there is no provision for the assessment of such structures when situate on the lands of the railâ€" way, . _ G Â¥e ‘Fhe appeal of the G. T. R. and C. P. R. against the assessment rates imposed upon them by the several townships of Guelph, Puslinch, Eraâ€" mosa, Nichol, Pilkington and Nassaâ€" gaweya, . was heard at Gueliph on Thursday by a board of judicial â€" arâ€" bitrators, consisting. of His Honor Judge Chadwick, for the County of Wellington; Judge Gorham, for the County of Halton, and Mr. E. P. Clement, Berlin, acting judge, for the County of Waterloo. The case was one of wideâ€"spread interest and was keenly watched by the municipal auâ€" thorities throughout the province. Freae COqECC es 000 oz â€" 97000 mmz ©4,000 { ie : 7,000 Counsel for the municipalities reâ€" $8,000 $4,000 $ 8,000 4,000 2,500 7,000 _ 3,500 _ 2,500 7,000 _ 3,500° 2,500 7,000 3,500 â€" 2,500 7,000 _ 3,500 7,000 _ 3,500 7,000 _ 3,500 7,000 7,000 7,000 $13,000 3,500 3,500 $15,000 â€"$58,000 2,500 2,500 $4,000 3,500 3,500 6,000 3,500 _ You, or some one of your family, are wre to need this nm«fy:uomrorim' '\‘ndwhenthd'?“meon:mwm-fl j 4 ‘mupoue ; _ Somewhat late in the session of the Municipal clerks and treasurers are Dominion Parliament the Postmastâ€" required to make annual returns to ¢*â€"General, in compliance with a very the Ontario Bureau of Industrics,.the ObÂ¥vious though not formally: expressâ€" statistical branch of the Ontario Deâ€" ©4 desire on the part of the public, partment of Agricultute. Frequently Obtained from the House of Commons these returns are in default, and it is the appointment of a special commitâ€" only after continual urging that they te¢ to report on the whole question are obtained. One reason frequently Of telephone service for Canada. For given is the inadequate salaries paid ‘a number of sittings of«that commitâ€" to these public officials. In making a tet Sir William Mulock acted as its return some months behind time, the chairman, but a good deal of its work clerk of a western village makes this has been done since he was called very significant comment : ‘"What ca @Way to England on cable telegraph be expected? This municipality pay ‘ business. Quite nalurally in the cir-‘ its cletk five dollars per month,.‘‘ cumstances, no action was taken on This is a common complaint among the report presented to the House beâ€" the clerks and treasurers of Untario fore the close of the session, because villages and townships, and when if the telephone system, or any part‘ fhe amount of their municipal werk Oof it is to be nationalized by statute, is considered and the returns they it must be attached to the Postoffice are required to make in various deâ€" Department, and also because the subâ€" partments, it would seem as though ject in many of its aspects is too newi there is a fine opportunity . for agiâ€" to the public for the general opinion | tation for better pay, t(:) erystallize in any particular direc-l n : e W & ) The evidence taken by the_commitâ€" F.â€"W.â€"HODSON WILL RESIGN. | tee, much of it the outcome of experâ€" w i ience and some of it the testimony of Ottawa, July 211â€"F. W. Hodson, experts, has been reported by â€" the Dominion Live Stock Commissione‘, newspapets in a fragmentary way, is about to resign his position on acâ€" but if there is any desire on the part count of illâ€"health. He will he suc= of the Government to reach interestâ€" ceeded by John DPryden, former Minâ€" ed people, the best way to do this ister of Agriculture for Ontario. , would â€"be to issue the report as . a public document. _ All over Ontario, eâ€"â€"câ€"â€"â€"câ€"ooumounmommummucamcâ€"<â€"â€"â€" db in meny ~other parts of Canatia, Â¥* 1 there is a keen destre on the part of ~ . farmers and others living in a state ; of social isolation to keep more in ‘touch with ncighbors near or remote * «_ _| than they have hitherto been able &o C | do. Man is normally a gregarious anâ€" , imal, and there is a deepâ€"sceated and ... widespread conviction that it is betâ€" k« ter to be able ':o, talk to lrit-m::l over M-‘ ® «*) the telephone than not to be able to ‘Ch':lt c‘:::"“h. c.{m' talk to them at all. A considerable ) era M # ; proportion of the evidence goes to m _,..-“1.& 'move the feasibility of cheap local Don‘t put yourself in this man‘s place, telephone systems, and the hest way ut keep a bottle of this remedy in to gratifly the curiosity that has been gome. _‘There is so fot aroused on the subject is to send copâ€" &"II“,"CMH us "'k%mh umt fi ies of the report to all who desire to nmmar fin-nn'-l-& â€"J;L.I_ Weslieus have them. tum and has saved the lives of more thildren than any other medicine in nse, When ndnce-iwlthmhrndm- med it is pleasant to take. _ _ tam ..'a hn":vn:d-t:ovm .ol; There seems to be little reason ~to thildren than an ‘:::a:tmodldmhu doubt the expediency of nationalizting Mw.l.t-hmt NO'ith water and aweet. the longâ€"distance telephone, . which Tou mp eunm ;h | could easily be made the connection Jure to need this ntiig d A yA family, &te between any number of local systems \“'m“h“-"m"sh variously organized and operated. LQ“W‘(,.“-“.%-" Some of these are now the property buy it now and be prepared 2 of jointâ€"stock companies, others have an emergency? * rice, 85 cents, â€" beon cstablished by voluntary and inâ€" Ottawa, July 211â€"F. W. Hodson, Dominion Live Stock Commissione*, is about to resign his position en acâ€" count of illâ€"health. He will he sucâ€" ceeded by John DPryden, former Minâ€" ister of Agriculture for Ontario. Municipal clerks and treasurers are required to make annual returns to the Ontario Bureau of Industrics,.the statistical branch of the Ontario Deâ€" partment of Agricultute. Frequently these returns are in default, and it is only after continual urging that they are obtained. One reason frequently given is the inadequate salaries paid to these public officials. In making a return some months behind time, the clerk of a western village makes this very significant comment : ‘"What ca be expected? This municipality pay ‘ its cletk five dollars per month." This is a common complaint among the clerks and treasurers of Untario villages and townships, and when fhe amount of their municipal | work is considered and the returns they are required to make in vatious deâ€" partments, it would seem as though there is a fine opportunity . for agiâ€" tation for better pay, The general opinion all over the country will | be that the coroner‘s jury at Ingersoll might properly have brought in a .verdict more clearly acâ€" ‘qnitting Mrs. Kyle for the shooting of the man McGee. Unless ber acâ€" count of the affair can be upset, which is not likely, the firing of that revolver was justifiable and necessary and the consequences probably better than they would have been had the result not been what it was. McGee was primed â€"with â€"trouble for himself or others. He was a dangcrous man, ripe for something worse than his own sudden taking off. i 4 > \ m TOWNSHIP OFFICIALS PROTEST buildings. As this decision is the first given by a board of Judges mnder the new act, it will no doubt be read _ with much interest by those concerned in the working of the act, the principle established being that the lands takâ€" en for the roadway or right of way of a railway are to be assessed . as herctofore, at the average value . of the land in the locality, excluding the lied upon the interpretation clauses Of the act, and contended that the word "land"" used in subâ€"section d4 must include all struetfites afized to such land, but it was pointed out in the judgment that the language of the present statute in respect of the asâ€" sessment of railways is very similar to the original arsessment act of 1853 and that the interpretation placed upâ€" on this section by Chiel Justice Sir John Robinson in the case ol Great John Robinson in the case of Great Western Railway Co. * Rouse, de cided in 1857, that '.bT.v:lu of railâ€" way lands shall be estimated accordâ€" THE INGERSOLL CASE. (Toronto Star.) , The deed calls for the transferriag to Daniel Erb and Jacob Erb, of Block Number Two, Home Districis of the province of Upper Canada for and in consideration of the sum of one hundred and fortyâ€"nine poumis, six shillings and cight pence of lawâ€" ful money of said province in hand paid by Joseph Eby, of Green Townâ€" ship, Franklin County, State of Penâ€" sylvania, in the United States of America, and forever acquits and . discharges the said Joseph Eby of all ‘those parcels and tracts of land sitâ€" ‘"A memorial of the within deed, registered . in the Register office, County of York, Province of Upper Canada, © the twentyâ€"seventh day of July, ~one thousand, cight hundred and five, at eight o‘clock in the foreâ€" noon. Thos. Ridout, Registrar." Below the deed proper is written a receipt for the amount of one hundred and fortyâ€"nine dollars, six shillings and cight pence, and signed by Daniel Erb, and Jacob Erb and Richard Beasley as witnesses. _ The writing, which was probably done by Richard Beasley, is excepâ€" tionally clear and neat and can 1.« easily read. The document is what is generally known in . legal circles as a "‘deed pole,‘" meaning that only one copy was made and was handed over hy the owners of the parcel of land _ to the buyers. It is a heavy specimen of parchment and is about 30 inches wide and about 24 inches deep. A% the bottom the corners are cut out in an irregular shape. ONE HUNDRED The deed is the property of the trustees of the Joseph Eby estate, and its contents are associated with th: early history of Waterloo Townâ€" ship. An Interesting Deed That Trars ferred Over Eight Hundred Acres of Land Belonging An interesting document was shown to the writer at the office ol .Cleâ€" ment & Clement, Berlin, in _ the form of a deed that was drawn up THE TELEPHONE REPORT. to Daniel and Jacob (Toronto Globe.) Eby in Waterâ€" loo Townâ€" YEARS OLD “Th: .]I'I'AI. CLEANERA COMBINED only Paterted Polish in the World. No Dust, fio Dirt, NoSm:ke:‘ No Smell. noo. Ph.’m.oyo Con('alm no benzine or other explosives. ‘”P;'x;y‘?‘ mnkcnmnhrm polish and lasts wWATERLOO, ONT. Ce m e Oper BanJa lepbone PRICE 160. AT ALL GROCERS S & Bs craere" so mon‘e PULVO "rousa WATERLMY MUTUVAL HUGE RomAN HIPPODROME October 1st has been chosen as Sunday school rally day in Ontario. Now, the small man is the â€" proâ€" duct of the small constituency. In the case of the constituency, we do not mean "small‘" in mind or spirit, but in extent. * * * One cure for this expensive drag upon the machinery of Government, is to extend the boundâ€" aries of the constituencies. If we had large constituencies which cou!d never be covered by a "glad hand" artist, our public men would have to reach them in a legitimate way; and â€" only men of real stature would be elected. What cur Parliament nceds is weedâ€" ing out. Or, perhaps, it is the prunâ€" ing knife that is required; for it is the crabâ€"apple crop which is too large. To be blunt about it, there are too many small men in Ottawa, who neither do honor to the country nor perform good service for their conâ€" stituencies. It is the thought that such as these are voting themsclves $2,500 a session which sharpens the edge .of the â€"popularâ€"disapproval of the The truth is that there are â€" too many $250 men in Parliament. _ And they cost the country a lot more than their indemnity, too. They are the men who expand Hansard with empty gabble, and who compel the business of the nation to pause while they make sure that their names will appear in the next day‘s daily paâ€" pers. The additional weeks which such mental Lilliputians keep Parliament in session, with all its costly machâ€" inery moving, would pay the addiâ€" tional indemnity many. times over, while at the same time removing the excuse on. which it is now demanded. indemnity "grab." FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY | INCORPORATED IN 1se3. _ | otal Assoets 3ist Decembor‘02 $426.808 17. â€" BOARD OF DIRECTORS, I Beo, Randall, Keq., Waterl0o, Dr. J. H. Webb, e William Snider, Feg., * Geo. Diebel, Keq., J. L. Widemon, Reg., Bt, Jacobs. Allan Bowman, Keq., Proston, P. E. Shants, Pro«ton. ¢ Thomas Gowdy, Keg., Gueiph. Janc ; Livingstonc, E+q., Baden, I lrou LARGER CONSTITUENCIES. (Montreal Star.) Now that our members of Parliaâ€" ment have modestly appraised their own faithful and unselfish services to the country as two and a half times as valuable as those of their predeâ€" cessors ol a Iew years agoâ€"when such men as Macdonald and Blake, and Mackenzle and Tupper, and Thomp son and Chapleau, and McCarthy and Nill:,kd the Geoffrions sat in the Commonsâ€"it would be a neat bit of repartee for the people to demand that they take someâ€"painsâ€"to tive up ‘to this high valuation. That there are men in both Houses whose time, even lor a reasonable session, would be worth $2,000, no one will question, though we doubt whether that numâ€" ber has increased in the last ten or even twenty years. But it is equally true that there are many men . in Parliament whose services to the Doâ€" minion would not be worth $250 if they kept Hansard busy reporting them from snow to snow. formal coâ€"operation; still others are owned and operated by private hdl-} viduals. The value of th.tvinfiv'i en by a system would be by â€" the privilege of connection with othâ€" er systems by means ol the long disâ€" tance telephone, and on this subject ! a few months would do much to edâ€" ucate the users of local telopho.-.l The Government can hardly fail to be aware of the fact that this will be} in the near future the most important question in the practical politics of OFFIORKRS ; George Randall, President Wm. Snider, Viceâ€"President, Frank Haight, Managor. J. L. Armatrong, Inspector, K. P. Clemens. Holtotsor, Berlin. BUCKBERROUGH & CO.'_Y, doors. Farms and small towns are put on the same plane with the big cities. Mooney‘s Perfection are packed in 1 & 3 Ib. airâ€"tight packages, fresh, crisp, deliciousâ€" and reach you in the same conâ€" dition no matter where you live. c AT aLL arocens ¢ dust Cream Sodas proof packages. Halâ€" the Of Drugse and Drug Sundries, If you fail to get the desized article come or send to us for it. For the Year 1905 | The Locding Keat Markit 100 Cireus Champions & Colebrites 10OQ THURS 90 N2 i catiiai gieo wea, » cmyvNB""'m Te Urottoque oitgeasâ€"Fote Doskrowâ€"â€" Pangy Ni gool GRAND GOLD GLITTERING STREET PARADE _ _ _ Will Leave the Show Grounds Every Morning at 10:30 _ Adults, 50c. â€" Children, 25, One Ticket Admits You to Everything Rose Dockrill Doily Miller Estelic Settier mo%l““:llm Frank Miller Austin King Herbert Rumley | Wm, Dutton Only ONE BIG CIRCUS coming to BERLIN You can get T he Most of The Best tor The Least. Biggest and Best of All Foatures of Every Kind MILLION DOLLAR MENAGERIE <" A Muititude of New Features Never Before Presented in America . _ Garoâ€"Back | Acrobats, Gymnasts | Trainod Animal f W. K. McNAUCHT, President. 8 Entries Clos : Live Stack.ote . Aug. 7th. $45,000 in Premiums _ $38 300 in Attractions art ga Coromation Picture D{W commund of His lflm the Abbes ‘ ed and histeric :fl.l*‘ on ax’hfl:l..l'u :um-g the enture Fair, Canadian National Exhibition AT TORONTOâ€"AUG. 26 TO SEPT. i1 All Kinds of Exciting, The irish Guards Band. _ _ Fall of Port Arthur An Im PJB PRIZE LIST ENTRY BLAKKS AND INFORMATION ADDRESS Seven Marvelous Belfords Meinotte, LaNole & Meinotte Flg:n Victorellas Troupe r‘ufilmm Weavers Five Plying Banvards Famous Gardser Family Gracetul MicDonald Trio s;lv:n K?nlltlonj: Japanese Sugimoto Japanese LadySwordswomen & Pencers al Collection of Rare Wild Beasts AlEE Thrilling, Real Races and Tests of Skill | JONNâ€"B. FISCHER, Proprietor Urders ro-wy delivered in all parts cf the town. _ In the line of meats, we bave Beef, Pork, Veal, Lamb, Sugarâ€" Cured Hams and Bacen (our own curing); once testod, always nsed. In the line cf homeâ€"made sanâ€" sages, such as Bologna, Wieners, Pork 8--;50680.4 cm\« Faurage ammer Give us a trial and be convineeod bas the reputation of npplfltg Ite namercus customers with the choicest and best of meats all the year roond. [ S ce 2 e P (Weets ie Terendiona t | h9 1t* Special Excursion Spccial cheâ€"p railway and stcami excursions ha~e been arranged. :.':: .d_-l'!l.l__w.“fl-.l.. or tickct agents Jd. 0. ORR, Manager & $0e. . Poultry and Dogs, Aug.i9th

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