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The Chronicle Telegraph (190101), 17 Aug 1905, p. 6

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f Resolution Passed by the Royal Arcanum Delegates: That a Permanent Readjustment of Rates Must be Submitted At a meeting of the directors of the North Perth Agricultural Society held on Friday evening, it was decidâ€" ed that no fall fair be held this year. This action was taken with 7"“ reâ€" gret by the directors, but in view of the horse show dates, Sept. 19, 20 and 21, conflicting with the dates, Sept. 231 and 22, decided upon for the fair and the unsatisfactory nature of the. fairs during the past three_or four years, since the old fair grounds +were disposed of, it was thought adâ€" visable to have no fair. This practiâ€" cally means the annulment till such time as other suitable grounds are secured.â€"Stratford Beacon. ‘ "That any plan to reduce the‘ amount named in the benefit certthâ€"‘ cate or of assessing preseat members in order to accumulate a large :Câ€"* serve for the benefit of present â€" and / future members of this erder i; beâ€" yond the scope of this coâ€"operative | fraternal association, and oughtâ€"not to be adopted." Several Councils which did not have representatives at the conferense forâ€" warded letters, â€" protrilag «opainst the new schedule of rat s *‘That a permanent readiusiment of } the rates must be submitted to each | subordinate Council for consrl:talion } at least six months prior to | fral ! action by the Supreme Council, and . that such new rates do not come inâ€"| to effect until the 1st of October, ‘ 1906, and that in the meantime the necessary funds for the payment" of benefit certificates thatybecome claims be raised by using the. emergency fund, and by special assessments . if necessary; and * | _ With but one dissenting voice forty epresentatives of _ the subordinale lodges of the Royal Arcanum in Onâ€" tario on Thursday, alter a conlereace with the Executive of the Grand Council at Toronto regarding the adâ€" vanced ‘rates which were â€" to have gone into effect on October ist rext, passed the following resolution :â€" WILL NOT ADVANCE RATES bers, who have huilt up the Order by their efforts, have to begin, anew and pay premiums as high as $5.36 . per month on $1,600 insurance. This they consider ~unreasonable, and altogethâ€" +r uncalled for. They contended that the older members should be allowed to pay at the rate now assessed . on those of the age on which they foinâ€" rlâ€"AIvtâ€"OPUEE â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"=â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" Messrs. Lyman Lee, Of Hamilton, and Wm. Ray, P.G.R., of Toronto, will represent the Grand _ Council of Ontario at the conference of the Suâ€" preme Council of the Order, which meets on August 30th at Putâ€"in Bay. For what reason did the Supreme ‘ Council advance the insurance rates? This problem the delegates endeavorâ€"! ed to solve. Many of them expressed ) their great dissatislaction with the } sudden turn of | aiiairs, and . thought | that the governing body of the Orâ€"! der should be requested to make a further explanation. i The delegates particularly opposed | * increases, because of the exorbiâ€" tant levy made upon members . who , are in the neighborhood of sixtyâ€"five years of age. According to the nowl schedule of rates these veteran memâ€" Among the relatives of the deceasâ€" ed in Berlin are Mr. E. C. Snyder, Mr. Jacob Shoemaker, Mr. Jos. B. Snyder, Mrs. C. Hett, Mrs. Noah Betzner, Mr. Moses Clemens and othâ€" ets. The funeral was held Monday afâ€" ternoon at three o‘clock, from the Mennonite church, _ whereâ€" setvices were held, to the cemetery. Mr.â€"Joel Clemens, one of the old=* est and most respected â€" residents ai Waterloo county, died at 10.30 Friâ€" day night at his home in Prester. Deceased was born over eightyâ€"onc; years ago in this county and was 2 lifelong resident of Preston. Deceased is survived by two sons, Mr. J S.! Clemens, of Bay City, Mich., sn 1.3 C., of Galt, and three daughters, Mrs i L. Hagey, Mrs. I. B. Clemens _ and / Cornelia, all of Preston. l The late Mr. Clemens had been ailâ€" ing for some time from a paralytic stroke, which culminated Friday evâ€" ening in his decease. f NO FALL FAIR IN STRATFORD. The cigarette habit is to be opâ€" posed on a new line by the temperâ€" ance organizations. The proposal is that employers should pledge _ themâ€" selves not to engage any youth who is addicted to the cigarette. The president of the Westâ€"End~ Temperâ€" ance Society states that the moveâ€" ment is making considerable progress in some of the Amecrican cities, and the attention of the officers of the various Canadian temperance organiâ€" zations is being called to it as an efective plan ol repression. DEATH OF JOEL CLEMENS to Councils Six Months r-l- the worth of the brush. OECK H, BRUSHES contain only perfect elastic bristles, apecially selocted under expert nprvi!’io!n. All loose bm':l. loaving a BOECKH BRUSHES Tereato, Can, NO JOBS FOR THEM ** Ayo thore‘s the rub." On the quality of tho bristles doâ€" | The same spirit creeps into the |with interesting and important matâ€" urban councils. Newspapers are €Xâ€" | ter regarding the success and advantâ€" pected to publish column upon _ colâ€" | age of the electric railway systems in umn in regard to council proceedings, | Waterloo County. luome of it of the mere expression Of | (In the final letter on Saturday a opinion of an alderman, which throws ‘ number of interviews with some â€" of !no new light upon the subject luulerinerlln': public men were given, which discussion, the space which it 0ccuâ€" wil} be endorsed by Berlinites as the ‘pies excluding something which would laduntqn of electric railway connecâ€" |be of more value. The law requires| tion. Among the interviews wors the |that certain statutory notices shall following :â€" be inserted in a newspaper publishedi Mr. D. B. Detweiler, chaicman _ of in the municipality, and too often | the Railway Committee of the Berlic complaint is made by members of the Board ot Trade, was ons ui ihe deptâ€" council that these notices are expenâ€" tation which recently iicterviewed MÂ¥1â€" sive to the municipality. A very imâ€" ‘ J, W. Leonard in regard to the exâ€" portant point is overlooked by such tension of the radial road, He has | grumblers, namely, that the space in the situation at his finger tips, and & newspaper has a certain commerâ€" gave your correspondent much inforâ€" cial value â€"to its publisher. â€"He canâ€" â€"mation. He says :â€" uot, especially at the present cut | "After having ‘seen the advantages subscription rates, make a newspaper of an electric road we wouldn‘t give pay unless he gets a réasonable . amâ€" anything for a steanm connection wiln ’ount of advertising. _ The merchant the‘north. Our prospects for sccuring takes this space because it enablesâ€" an ~electric connection are somewbat him to make known his business to better than Stratford‘s, but if such the _ public. ’I:_he judicious advertiset a proposition should materialize in 'finds that his investment i|3 this diâ€" your town it would probably affect us |rection pays. The enterprising news seriously. We depend on the district paper is advertising the city all the in question for considerable of our ‘timc, is helping to promote its proSâ€" food and market supply. Easy resort pority and for much of this it geis to another market would â€" tend to no direct return. â€" The municipality draw a great amount of this away jis interested in the success of its from us. The Stratford people should ynewspapers because to have good go slowly, however, in granting any |newspapers helps to make a good bonus to a steam . spur line. Ovt ; town or city. With this in view it | Board of Trade is so favorably imâ€" _does not seem fair that the city !pressed with the advantages of the council of Stratford should restrict present radial road that they are en jits legal advertising of the byâ€"law to â€" thusiastically loosing {ur mere romls aid the thread factory to be votcd and hope in a few years to have couâ€" on next Wednesday to one paper as nection with London by a line from iis being done. It has not been ~done < there via New Dundce and Plattsville hitherto. The legal number of inserâ€" ‘ Qur project for interchange of switchâ€" |tions required for such a byâ€"law> is ing between the two roads hete in four. It has hitherto been the cusâ€" Berlin, which is at present before the tom to alternate the legal insertiors Railway Commission, will, if realized in theâ€" two Stratford papers, but be a decided boop to our business men { while one has received the legal ruxâ€" ‘ generally." . ber the other paper has had + wo inâ€"! s o2 § sertions. This has been «departed Board of Trade President is Enthusâ€" ‘trom in the present instance, and lhcl iastic. four insertions required by the staâ€" a i¢.. Sile tute are given in the Herald, while sl?)lrl; O(x"&l](: i\‘hl:;., I‘;;:.‘I‘ll L‘,’f‘ l}:;v'nf_a(l. the ‘Beacon gets none. ‘When the (t. FICIC O LD6_LL. 32 _ JMMMML L Dce S 0C LFâ€"Râ€"&HflEm:&efam _energetic_president of _ the _ Board __o© T’lâ€"-_m"w ERETERCISCT _ CRC DCC~ con will, it is presumed, get the staâ€" Itutory advertisement while the Herâ€" ald will get nome, according to. the _ present intention of the city council |and the finance committee,. This, the Beacon, submits, does not meet public requirements though it â€"comâ€" plics with the law, nor do justice to ; the _readers_of both â€"papers.â€"â€"The Beacon has readers which the Herald has not, and vice versa. The Beason has summarized the provisions of the Il:-y-la,w but there are specific points upon which ratepayers who read the Beacon cannot inform â€" themselves j without seeing the byâ€"law â€" in full. jWhen the C. P. R. byâ€"law is publishâ€" ed in the Beacon there will be Herâ€" ‘ald readers who will not be able to get the complete byâ€"law in the Herâ€" ‘ald. There seems to be too much of a disposition on the part of aldermen lo treat the newspapers as mere reâ€" cording machines for the doings > of the council. â€" The newspapers are willing to do and are doing all they |can to promote the interests of the |city, and the expenditure of a tew, dollars should not stand in the way lol giving the fullest publicity to byâ€" jlaws of this kind. Some of these were convicted of fishing in waters where it is not perâ€" mitted. Others were shown to have ‘acquiml licenses and . sold the righss ‘conferred by them to third parties. All were fined. Orthodox Canada develored _ more "graft and scandal", in the sending of a few hundred men for the service in South Africa than heathen Japan has developed in the organization of ber army and navy and the whole conduct of the war. The press is too often treated with scant courtesy by municipal bodies. It is not an infrequent thing for township and county councils to give out their printing by tender and to award it to offices which have zo newspaper in connection because thers is an apparent trifiing saving, and yet these bodies expect the newspaâ€" pers to publish full reports of their proceedings. It is true that a cerâ€" tain amount of public interest atâ€" taches to such reports, but the inâ€" terest is confined in many cases to a narrow circle of readers. (Toronto Telegram h Japan‘s creed is not ortho@®bx _ acâ€" cording to the sacred standard _ of Canada‘s faith. GUARANTEED CURE FOR PILES Itching, Blind, Bleediog or Proâ€" truding Piles. ~Druggists refond monâ€" ay if Pazo â€"Ointment fails to cure any c3re, no matter of bhow long standing, in 6 to 14 days _ Fâ€"st apolication givâ€" es oire and rest. 50c. If your dâ€"uggâ€" let basn‘t it serd 5oc in stamps and it will be forwarded postâ€"paid by Paris Medicine Co., 8t. Lonie, Mo. Canada sent a few thousand men to battle in South Africa. â€"> There was favoritism in Canada‘s chotce of officers. Canada provided her soldiers againâ€" st the hour of their sorest need with an emergency ration that was . desâ€" cribed as a delightful compromise beâ€" tween bird seed and dog biscuit. THE PUBLICATION OF BYâ€"LAWS. Canada‘s conduct is herctical acâ€" cording to the orthodox standard of Japan‘s deeds. Perhaps there was worse than fayâ€" oritcism in Canada‘s purchase of horâ€" ses, supplics and equipment. Japan sent nearly a. million men to Manchuria, and filled the seas with her triumphant fieets, _ Hon. Dr. Reaume, Minister of Pubâ€" lic Works, is endeavoting to put â€" an end to illegal fishing in the waters of the province. Already a number _ of persons have been arrested and fined. The most recent prosccution was of a number of fishermen who operated on Lake Nipissing. d APAN â€"ANâ€"EXAMPLE TO CAXNXâ€" ADA. . ILLEGAL FISHING PUNISHED (Stratford Beacun.) TALK ON RADIAL RAILWAY In the final letter on Saturday a | number of interviews with some . of Berlin‘s public men were given, which will be endorsed by Berlinites as the ‘ advantages of electric railway connecâ€"‘ tion. Among the interviews wors the following :â€" | ‘"Alter having ‘seen the advantages! Mr. Geo. of an electric road we wouldn‘t give (Co., possib anything for a steam connection wilrt Berlin, and the‘north. Our prospects for sccuring intimate de an electric connection are somewbhat â€"gays : better than Stratford‘s, but if such ; ‘"Yes, the a proposition should materialize in greatly ben your town it would probably affect us of the. elect seriously. We depend on the district pers in Liv in question for considerable of our better freig food and market supply. Easy resort competition to another market would _ tend 10 We have sw draw a great amount of . this aWAy â€" our factory. from us. The Stratford people should in Stratfor go slowly, however, in granting @ANY extend its ] bonus to a steam . _ spur line. _ OV would be un Board of Trade is so favorably iMâ€" y5," pressed with the advantages of the _ My, p, j present radial road that they 2re ©n~ haupt Leat thusiastically loosing {u>r merc ro~‘s electric ove and hope in a dew years to have ©COU~ ter Jlinps. nection with London by a line frOM pas peen of there via New Dundee and Plattsville up Berlin‘s Our project for interchange of switchâ€"| fact that iJ ing between the two roads here in is of consit Berlin, which is at present before thcl awn busine Railway Commission, will, if realized | jin both ge be a decided boop to our business men [ district to generally." â€" ably affect Board of Trade President is Enthusâ€" g;:: ?ile(:-':\g; jastic. un far ane The question of having an electric Oor steam railway connection with the Guelphâ€"Goderich Railway is being agâ€" itated in Stratford, and the Beacon, of that city, has supplied its readers with interesting and important matâ€" ter regarding the success and advantâ€" age of the electric railway systems in Waterloo County, Mr. D. B. Detweiler, chaicman _ of the Railway Committee of the Berlin Board ot Trade, was ons ui ihe deptâ€" tation which recently iicerviewed Â¥1. J. . W. Leonard in regard to the exâ€" tension of the radial road,. He has the situation at his finger tips, and gave your correspondent much inforâ€" mation. He says :â€" Trade, â€"expressed himsell inore dreoaly as to the advantages of the ‘eleciric road. "Before we had the radial roac," Mz. Mills says, "we bad comparativeâ€" ly little trade from . the south,. Now this business is immense and. is sLcadâ€" ily â€" increasing. The electric zoad seems to bave a faculty of bringingâ€"in business never before touchxd. An inâ€" teresting feature in this connection is that the correspondence and imail matter between the points aloag tnc road has more than doubled since its construction. Berlin ‘people by hundâ€" erds run: out to Preston for an evenâ€" ing‘s jaunt, and in the exceedingly warmâ€" weather four weeks ago the evening cars were crowded by people enjoying the refreshing | and . breezy trip." "A steam road wouldn‘t be of any great benefit cither to Stratford _ or Berlin. Electric roads from toth towns would prove of mutual benefit. The fact that the Stratford line would tap our district of market supâ€" ply would not be at all serious â€" to us, for the electric roads, as they have done in other places, would bring so muck new business into both towns that the connection would be beneficâ€" jal, instead of deleterious. The peoâ€" ‘ple here would in general be faverable to granling another bonus for an exâ€" tension, if such is necessary." "The clectric connection we have," he says, ‘"is ten times preferable to what asteam road would have been in the same district. It gives us an advantage in passenger rates and has built up our trade gencrally, though perticularly in market produce. Berâ€" lin has the largest market in _ this part of Ontario, and incidentally,â€" the highest market prices in the province provail here. The proposed extension from Stratford to Wellestey would acâ€" centuate this latter condition by carâ€" tying off.a considerable section of our trade. One ‘of the most matked benâ€" efits of the radial road with C.P.R. connection has been _ the placing _ of Berlin on the basis of a twoâ€"road town. Now we can talk with some degree© of suceess to . manufacturers looking for a location. _ In fact, . we have three now firms negotiating at presont an@ one just definitely settled Interviews Concerning the Beneâ€" ht of the Preston Street Railway Facilities and Prospects of Wellesâ€" Questioned as to the probable effect both on Stratford and Berlin of tailâ€" way extensions from both towns to Wellesley and â€" Linwood, Mr. Mills savs :â€" Mayor Carl Kranz appears to be a decidedly‘ busy man, and cortainly has the welfare of the town at heart. In this latter connection he gives the taâ€" dial road credit for a considerable porâ€" tion 6( Berlin‘s present era of marked prosperity. + * Women suffer all about us with headache, backache, loss ef enetiy and sridu. Nervous Dysgepsia and many other silments which make life almost unbearable. Every woman can be imâ€" mediatcly relieved of this suffering if upon the first sign of derangement she would take a dose of * BEECHAM‘S PILLS purify the blood, give strongth and vigor to the digc:tive organs, give vim and tonc to the nerves and gnt the whole body in a healthy condition. A box of BEECHAM‘S PILLS should always be kept in the house as, like a "stitch in time," thez wfil’ invariably have the most beneficial effect and save much fature worry and anzicty. B{ followinf the instructions witk each box of pills thousands of women all over the world have saved th it lives. ® BEECHAM‘S PILLS WOMAN‘S BEST FRIEND, Bold by all Druggists in Canada and U. 8. Americs, In bores, 25 conts. * Ahie. â€" "Wizeninkante . Hok Exâ€"mayor J. R. Eden is decidedly _ the Preston .StrEEE | in tavor of the electric road. "‘Why," Iway Facilities and I:‘l:‘ Mr. Eden, in a particularly conâ€" ho elusive manner, ‘‘our line, by, means m“w'n“x” of its frequent and satisfactory servâ€" ley and other Exâ€" lice and its novel and advantageous tensions. * |features, centralizes in a surprising sumeme way a population of 30,000. Preston estion of having an electric ‘ and Hespeler were rather afraid of, railway connection with the the road at first, but they also have oderich Railway is being agâ€" benefited. One unexpected advantage Stratiord, and the Beacon, ! derived from the road is that it ;has, ity, has supplied its readers to a great extent, stopped a certain resiing and important matâ€" class of people going to Toronto or ding the success and advantâ€" Hamilton to do their shopping. We e electric railway systems in | can hardly understand this, but know County. # it to be the case. | our advantageous shipping facilities. The electric road is, besides, a good | ""An electric road, such as has been suggested, would be ol advantage tc Stratford in many ways, and would ‘brighten up your town considerably. ‘If you can persuade the CP.R. t give you, or can in any other way se | cure a radial road, you would be surâ€" ‘ prised at the changes that would fol low. You would certainly have 2 ! street railway shortly, which woulé ‘cost the city nothing. Parks woul‘ up Berlin‘s trade generaliy, and th | fact that the town has pow two roads is of considerable. advantage in â€" bis | own business. If Stratford and Ber lin both get electric lines <into the district to the north it would probâ€" ably affect the supply of market pro duce brought here, but other advant ages derived would more than mak« up for any deficiency. k Mr. D. A. Bean, of The Telegravh, says :â€""At present the C.P.R. gets more business in Waterloo on acâ€" count of the many manufacturers hay» ing switches there. The road is of great general advantage to Beriin, however, and <its business â€" here is steadily incrgasing." Mr. W. V. Uttiey, of the Newsâ€"Recâ€" ord, says : ‘"Preston,â€" Hespeler â€"and Galt might as well have been in South Africa as far as we were conâ€" cerned, before the electric rqad came to use Besiges the business advantâ€" ages, it has made us more like one community in a social sense." _ In regard to the extension of the present radial road to the north, Mr. Uttley says : ‘‘Unless we get it, Berlin will have a black eye. I think it would be difficult to grant another local boâ€" nus to the C.P.R. to aid its zonstruc. tion, but would fapor the formation of a local company to build the line. It would certainly pay. 1 Stratford gets an clectric line into the district it will cut off a great deal of our country trade." t 5 TO CURE A;COLD IN A DAY T«ke Loaxative Bromo Q 1i .ine Tab: lete. All drugeiats refuad the money if it faile to caro. _ E. W. Grove‘s signaturo is on each ‘"Yes, the town has cértainly beer greatly benefited by the cstablshnmen of theâ€" electric road. _ Now our ship pers in Liverpool are able to arrang better freight rates by reason of th competition between the two roads We have switches from both lines to our factory. If there is any busines: in Stratford the C.P.R. is certain t« extend its line@there, and your peopl: would be unwise t« grant them a bon us." & extensively interested in Berlin‘s â€"imâ€" mense sugar beet faclory, is anothcl enthusiast over the advantages of th« electric road. "I fully believe," say: Mr. Smyth, "that our clectric road is ten times as advantageous as a stcan road would have been in the same district. Our own business increasec filteen per cent last year and‘ will show a larger increase this year, and we attribute the greater part of this directly to the.electric .road. It cerâ€" tainly has a way of its own of bring ing in the transient‘trade. _ An elec tric road anywhere_ seems to make good business, even where a stcan road wouldn‘t begin to pay." Questioned as to the probable ex tension north, Mr. Smyth said : "Beâ€" ing interested in the sugar beet facâ€" tory, we are certainly anxious~ fo: the extension. At present we shi; about 40 or 50 cars a day by Granc Trunk. A linc tappingithe district t« the north, where & great part of our supply comes from, woyld enable us + greatly increase our output, The extension would also henent the far mers, as well as the towns. I woule like to see an clectric line from Stratâ€". ford to Linwood or Wellesley, but think that the city would be v‘-) shortsighted to grant a bonus to aly steam connection as proposed. Mr. Robert Smyth, of Smyth Bros. dry goods merchants, and. who is also be established at â€" attractive | point: along the line to swell the passenke» traffic, and business generally woul« be improved, even .above your preseni prosperous condition." Mr. L. J. Breithaupt, of the Breit haupt Leather Co., also favors th« electric over the steam road for shor ter lines. He says the radial roa‘ bas been of great benefit‘ in buildinp Mr. Geo. Lang, of the Lang Tanning Co., possibly the largest shippers i: Berlin, and who have had farge ant intimate dealings with both railway: says :â€" recently, all of which I attribute to advertisement for the town.‘" Exâ€"Mayor Eden The discomforts of rheumatism are so well known that nothing need be added to Mrs. McLichey‘s description; and the happy rclief she tells about has become equally well known in similar cases, where Buâ€"Ju, The Kidâ€" ney Pill, has been given a trial. The widespread success Of this preparaâ€" tion in curing rheumatism is nothing wonderful after all. It is the product of the latest medical skill in kidney discases, and, as everybody knows, weak or deranged kidneys mean rheuâ€" can obtain Buâ€"Ju, The Kidney Pill, matism. No nced to suffer when you which is sold by druggists generally. Substitutes, under whatever name, however, should be rejected. Blake, Ont., May 5th, 1905. Clafiin Chemical Co., Windsor, Ont. Gentlemen,â€"I cannot say . enough for Buâ€"Ju, for it has helped me wonâ€" detfully. I was not able to do my own work in the house and was bare ly able to dress mysclf. _ My fingers and hands were all swollen up with the pain. I think there is nothing like Buâ€"Ju. Am able to do my own work now with comfort, which I was not able to do before taking Buâ€"Ju. Postmaster _ Archibald â€" Little, . of Guelph, died at St. Joseph‘s Hospiâ€" tal in that city on Saturday mornâ€" Ing. He joined the post office staff when he was 14 years of age, and was appointed postmaster about a year ago. He was 46 years of age. The Organizers of the Ontario Vegetable Growers‘ Associaâ€" tion will visit the leading Towns and Cities in WILL ORGANIZE ‘ MANY BRANCHES ‘The officers of the recently formed Ontario Vegetable Growets‘ Associaâ€" tion purpose crganizing branches of the Association in connection with the leading cities and towns of, the Provinee. Organizers will be _ sent out during this month to towns and cities with the object of forming branch associations. _ These organizâ€" ers will be members of the Associaâ€" tion, who are leading market gardenâ€" ors in the vicinity of Toronto and Hamilton. The Association will receive a Govâ€" ernment grant this year of $800. It purposes using this money to hold a large convention for vegetable growâ€" ers at the time of the Horticultural Exhibition in Toronto, next Novemâ€" ber, and also offering prizes for a large vegetable exhibit at this show. The prize list for the show has been already completed. The constitution of the Association provides for the formation of branch Associations. The vegetable growers in the vicinity of any town or city may organize a branch Association, for which the membership ‘fee is $1. The presidents of the branch Associaâ€" tions become directors of the Provinâ€" sial Association and have their exâ€" penses paid while attending meetings of its executive. The branch Associaâ€" tions are expected to pay the Proâ€" vincial Association 40 cents for each of their members, which makes . all members of the local Association members of the Provincial Associaâ€" tion. _ The Provincial Association sends all its members copies of the annual report of its convention, â€" a monthly magazine, which is the offiâ€" ‘lal organ of the Association, and other _ printed matter. _ Vegetable zrowers who would like to see. . one »f these branch associations formed in their vicinity are invited to write to H..B. Cowan, Department of Agâ€" riculture, Toronto, who is the secreâ€" tary of the Ontario Vegetable Growâ€" ers‘ Association. Mrs. McLichey, Hclpless from Pain, ITands and Fingers Badly Swollen and â€" Disfigured by Rheumaâ€" tismâ€"Buâ€"Ju, the Kidney Pill, Brought Happy Relicl. Thousands _ of suffcring â€" women throughout Canada will appreciate the following: REMARKABLE CASE Rest shingles in the world warp and dry in the sunâ€"soak up water when it rains or snows. . Tin roof rustsâ€" cracks. When snow begins to melt, water will find those cracks and holes and leak in. 9 Paterson‘s 66 Wire Edge" Ready Roofing MRS. JAMES McLICHEY AT BLAKE, ONT bald â€" Little,; of Joseph‘s Hospiâ€" Saturday mornâ€" post office staff (uelph, Agg. 2.â€"There is trouble in local civie circles over the contract for the supply of cement for the year. The Ontario Portland Cement (Co. were awarded thecontract some time ago, and already six carloads of ceâ€" ment have been used. Recently they shipped two cars that proved to be inferior, and after using a portion of CANCELS CEMENT CONTRACT when a few feet of hose will enable you to keep it fresh and grecn all summer. along# SEE OUR. VINDOW. 14 KING STREET EAST We sell the kind that sprinkles at the end cnly. Costs a little more than the kind that provides a shower b.th all Phone 149 50c Cures a Cold in One Day, Grip in Two. Always Remember the Full Name | axative Rromo Quinine . SAUDER & CO. Let us sond you a length. the "Red Feéeather‘" line but by Special Sale. All sizes of men‘s blue beavy duck shirts, blue with white stripe and Ulue with white YOUR LAWN AND GARDEN TO BE QDESTROYED Peter Hymen, t by far the most ccopdmxcsl to buy. NOT PERMIT Yet to meet its equal. Men‘s Working Shirts for Western Fair ' The Western Fair gives the people of this country an éexcellent opportunity for‘a pleasant outing at a minimun of sost, and at the same time developes their store of practical and useful knowledge, Its educational features have always been carefully fostered by the Directors. This year several important improvements of an {nstractive nature have been added. The celebrated gist Highland Regiment Band will give three concerts daily during the exhibition. The entertainâ€" ment department will be better than ever, and will include leaping the gap in mid air on a steam automobile. _ _When Governor Simeoe liid the foundation of Loddon, Ontario, one hundred years ago he knew it would gron to bea great city, but had no thought of the Western Fair. rea mronmamon wa‘t W. J. REID, racmornt, on + 4 A. NELLES, etemerany . _ LONDON Sept. 8 â€" 16, 1905 vur exmermon teat mast rate aemCuirUmaL raire rorvian In the meantime the work of layâ€" ing the sidewalks procecds, the ccâ€" ment being secured from a _ local the Board of Works" wants to cancel its contract and the city solicitor has been advised to reach a settlement with the comtpany. it the balance was shipped back. Now King St., Berlin. 5¢ BERLIN g 4

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