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The Chronicle Telegraph (190101), 6 Sep 1906, p. 2

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is to adjust itself to the new cenâ€" ditions. There are many things that it can do better than the West; and even farm land is still far more valâ€" nwable in most parts of the KEast than on the prairies. That very fact has its influence in sending those without land â€"and very Jittle money West, where land is cheap. _ The manufacâ€" turing centres are at present in the East. _ The fruit farms, the dairy farms, the cheese factorics, the smell farming operations, good market fac= It is a fact that young and enerâ€" getic men who would otherwise | be content iwith. the narrower agriculâ€" tural Gpportunitics of the East, are attracted _ to _ the almost boundless and fertile prairies of the west with their immense possibilitics. . There is, however, nothing more stupid thin for the people of the East to waste wind on complaint about this matter. The East is merely undergo‘ng one of those changes in relative conditions which are constantlf â€"takinz place throughout the world. _ There is no doubt that the West offers the greatâ€" er attractions for certain kinds of farming, and that is all that can be said about it. Farmers who think it‘ wise will go, and it is an act â€"of unmixed folly to send notes of comâ€" plaint after them. All advice to reâ€" main would be wasted on an adâ€" venturous youth who had made up his , mind to seeck his fortune in the West. | The right thing for the East to do , is to adjust itself to the mew C m Periodically we heat complaints that owing to the. wonderful chances Of success offered by the Northwest that country is drawing to it men of youth and enterprise from the East in large numbers, and we are conseâ€" quently the losers and just now when the harvestâ€"excursions have gathorced up all the loose labor in Eastern Canada, this effect is the more felt. It is a fact that young .and enerâ€" ADVERTISERS. swotico‘ be left at this office ATTRACTIONS Probably there are no towns : in Canada whose industrics are more diâ€" rectly affected by the progress of the Northwest â€"than those of Waterloo County, and our shrewd and progressâ€" ive manufacturers will always be found equal to the occasion. ces. But they will have to be wide awake, and use the westerner honorâ€" ably as well. The West is certainly becoming rich and is gaining a new independence., Everywhere the farmers are paying off their mortgages and entering upon a genuine era of prosperity. Of course the climate is in favor of the East, for a large amount of the manufacâ€" turing required for the Dominion, and the fact of the establishment of the institutions in the East, is altogethâ€" er in the favor of the eastern pl'ovin-' averting the glut which always takes place at the beginning of the shipping period. $ £ ital. The aggregate yield of this year‘s crop is greater than that o+ any previous year, and it will b« handled by Western â€" men snd to a great extent by Western money with out aid from the FEast. The result of this will be good, because there will be less of this year‘s crop rushd to the market in the beginning of _ the seascn, consequently the market will be stronger and steadier. A steady . demand and good prices are looked for, and much of the grain which was thrown on the market as soon as it was harvested will this year be held back in expectation. This will cause the â€" railroads to be kept _ busy throughout a longer pericd and will thus be an advantage to the roads, Will the centre of manufacture lol-l low thé centre of population in ils' march westwards, and the factory go up alongside the farmhouse? This is a ! very important question, and one‘ that concerns the eastern provinces of the Dominion very materially. The present good times in the eastâ€" ern provinces are to a very large exâ€" tent due to the ever increasing deâ€" mand for manufactured goods in the West. Nothing except a failure o(lj crops in the West can possibly retard ] the progress and advancement of the| East under prescnt conditions. 1 the West, however, should introduce its|‘ own manufacturing concerns it would : to that extent afect our prosperity. | ( Every year sees the West becoming | 1 more and more independent of th>|‘ East and better fitted to finance anal‘ handle its larger business tr:nsacâ€" t tions without calling en Eastern capâ€"l I CANADA‘S MANUFACTâ€" URING CENTRE &â€"%fi_&' be 3:-..: -:h‘ W Chronicle â€" Telegraph ‘:-‘b newspaper published every Thursâ€" David Bean\ Proprietor @S¢ iisell to the new _ con There are many things that and is stt far mote valâ€" st parts of the East than ries. That very fact has in sending those without very little money West, OF THE WEST. vertisemenls accepted up :o English and German, in Let the weeping Jeremiahs hold out their vessels in ‘arth, and they _ will receive their share of the blessings. \ ilities, the openings in mercantile and __commercial as well as inftustrial life, _ the great water transportation sysâ€" tems, the seats of learning and cduâ€" cational _ advantages and a hundred \and one things that might be‘ enumâ€" crated are largely Eastern. â€" Let us recognize these things and make the: most of them; and then rejoice with the Canadian West in its magnificent ‘ prosperity . _chmr tnergeiic young people were going to another vountry the same as they were a few years ago lh‘re' might be some reason to express unâ€"‘ casiness. But they are not enly lol-! lowing â€" the Union Jack, they are stavying in the Dominion as well.‘ There is not the least danger of the West being made prosperous without some of the prosperity being showerâ€" ed on the East. Western prosperity has made tw transcontinental â€" railâ€" ways nocessary, one of which carties the mail from Liverpool _ for Hene Kong, and surely the East gets its share out of thase wonderful underâ€" takings. Preston, â€" Aug. 30.â€"Wm. _ Aahlon Davis, of Berlin, was engaged at â€"a special mecting of the Town Coancil last night as engincer, to suwperintend works and sewerage systems. to â€" hbe the construction of the new water builÂ¥ here. Mr. Henry Meiet died at New Hamâ€" burg Wednesday night, aged 73. Deâ€" ceased was bornâ€" in Germany, and came to Canada about | fortyâ€"five years ago. residing since for the most part at New Hamburg. He was a tailor by trade, but retired from acâ€" tive work about four years ago. Two years since he had a paralytic stroke, and three others later, the last a fow days ago. He was a member of the Lutheran church, and a respec{â€" od citizen of New Hamburg. â€" He was twice married. His second wife and family of seven survive him. They are Henty, proprictor of the Arlingâ€" ton hotel, Stratford; Mrs. B. Moâ€" Mahon, Clesley; Mrs. C. H. Dillan, Harland; and Oliver, â€" Berlin® Fent nand, Arlington, â€" hotel, Stratford, end Miss HMannaa, at home. The in cral will be h*!4 on Saturday afterâ€" noon fhodes, Mrs. Pracd, N. De Bertrand Lugrin, and the late Kate Westlake Yeigh. The dopartments are packed full. * There is a variecty of interest in th: | September Canadian Magazine. Eric Waters describes in a bright yet vigâ€" orous manner the delights of a day | in Venice, the home of the Gondolier, | the city of color. Bonnycastle Dal writes of the maskinonge as h> has seen it in the Rice Lake district. The spawning period was that chosen for investigation and some new facts are recorded. _ The photographs are un usual. Archibald MacMechan gives a character sketch of De Mille, _ the Nova Scotian humorist and novelist, now almost forgotten, with reproducâ€" tions of some of his humorous sketâ€" ches. Norman Paiterson ‘describes the "Evolution ‘of a Department Store," giving a history of its rise and an ecenomic view of its funcâ€" tions. â€" This is nrofusely ilustrated: J. E. B. McCready writes of the alâ€" most tragic illness of Sir John Macâ€" donald in 1870, and the events of that time. Thorleif Larsen, a young Caniâ€" dian of Norse descent, has a characâ€" ter sketch of that greatest of Norweâ€" gian literary men, Henrik lbsen. The stories are by M. B. Parent, Emily Khodes, Mrs. Pracd, N. De Bertrand TO BUILD WATER WYORKS SEPTEMBER CANADIAN The sympathy of the munity will be extended reaved widow and family and sudden bereavement. od was industrious and of an inventâ€" ive character, being a genius in meâ€" chanical enterprises. The deceased is survived by a widâ€" ow, four sons, (icorge, Walter (Roâ€" chester), Collie and Ernst, and four daughters, Mrs. C. Minzie and Mrs. C. Kraft, Milwaukee; Ernstina, _ at home, wh> was to be married on Monday, and a married daughter in Germany, About twelve years ago he invented and exhibited the beautiful Passicn Play "Life of Christ," showing sixtyâ€" two events, and travelled extensively with it throughout Europe, the Uniâ€" ted States and Canada. The deceasâ€" (d was industrious and of an inventâ€" ive character, being a genius in meâ€" _ ‘The déceased was born in Annexâ€" berg, Saxony, Germany, on June 11, 1831, and was in his 66th year. â€" He came to Waterloo in 1878 and in 1886 he opened a bookbindery in Berlin, and has resided here almost continuâ€" ously ever since. DIED AT NEW HAMBURG. Well Known Bookbinder Passed Away at Beriin on Saturday. He was in His 66th Year. SAD DEATH OF _ CARL SCHMIDT ond wile ana e him. . They of the Arlingâ€" Mrs. B. â€" Mcâ€" express unâ€" t enly folâ€" , they are n as well. MAGAZINE cntire comâ€" to the . beâ€" in theit sad SCOTT & BOWNE, < and it cures the cold. That‘s what is necessary. Itsoothes the throat because it reduces the frritation ; cures the cold because it drives out the inflammation ; builds up the weakened tissues because it nourishes them back to their natural strength. ‘That‘s how Scott‘s Emulsion deals with a sore throat, a cough, a cold, or bronchitis, EM U LSI O N The tissues of the throat are inflamed and irritated; you cough, and there is more irritaâ€" tionâ€"more coughing. You take a cough mixture lnd8 it cases the irritationâ€"for a while. You take SCOTT‘S The Better Way _ Mr. J, L. Spink gave a paper â€" on The Hespeler â€" Presbyterian Church the value of flour from the baker‘s was the scene of a pretty wedding on standpoint. He stated that Manitoba Wednesday, when â€" Miss Wilhelmina flour excels others in st th, but Viola ~Rudell was married 10 R&Y: not in colot or flamr,/fiy%gonly the Albert V. Brown, B.A., B.D., henor tremcndous amount of . advertising graduate of McGill University. Th¢ | that Manitoba flours receive â€" that bride was attended by her cousin, have gained them such a reputation. Miss Sadic Elly, of Toronto. Mtr. Winter wheats and blendcd flours, Frank Moore of Toronto, with Mr. ! grown and milled in Ontario, are preâ€" Hollis Jardine and Mr. James Shaw | ferable to a pure Manitoba flour, and of Hespeler, were ushers, and Mr. J, : that it is misleading the public to Rudell attended the groom. [ state that Manitoba flour Js of . suâ€" mm iesonomce ommc« / PCFIOF MCKit, Emmmmmmemememm ieommeins eneneenmnnnss 1. Testing autumn and sprinz _ apâ€" ‘lications of nitrate of soda and comâ€" non salt with winter wheat, 5 plots. 5. Testing two varicties of winter rye for grain production, 2 plots. The exact size of each plot is to be one rod wide by two rods long. The material for cither of the first two experiments, or for No. 5 experâ€" .ment will be forwarded by mail, and for each of the other two by express. . Each person wishing to conduct one of . these experiments should apply â€" as soon as possible, mentioning which ‘ test he desires and the material, with ‘nstructions for testing and the blank form cn which to report, will be furnished free of cost until the supâ€" . ply of experimental matcrial is exâ€" hausted.â€"J. Buchanan, Agricultural College, Guelph, Ont. | 1. Testing hairy vetches an ler rye as fodder crops, 2 plo 2. Testing three varieties of ter wheat, 3 plots. 3. Testing â€"five fertilizers winter wheat, 6 plots. _ Material â€" for any one of the five *xperiments here mentioned will be sent free to any Ontario farmer apâ€" Jlying for it, if he will conduct an »‘xperiment with great care and reâ€" Jort the results after harvest next year. The seed will be sent out _ in the order in which the applications are received as long as the supply ‘asts: : hi . a tain abbasta fifcesicacs ioA In only two cases does the total vield of grain show a reduction. over imny former year, but in that the shortage of bulk is more than ofiset ay the improvement in quality. _ In corn and roots it is believed final te turns will be fully up to that of ‘ormer years. Barns are filled _ and »ices in all products are at high waterâ€"mark. The intimation is made, with offiâ€" cial con‘irmation, that the present is the richest agricultural year Ontario has everâ€" experienced:; _ An immecnse yield of grain of excellent quality is everywhere reported, and even better times than the present are h»ra‘did. The August crop bulletin issued by the Agricultural Department evidenâ€" ces this fact.â€"With natural conditions no more favorable than in former years the average yield per acre in all grains shows a substantial adâ€" vance over all previous recoras. This is due to ':;(-in;i‘ and im)grovcd agricul tural GoLD IN simgr ror ONTARIO FARVERS. A county board of examiners may admit to the model school candidates holding junior teachers‘ certificates who will be eighteen years of â€" age on or before the reâ€"opening of the rural public schools for the second half of 1907; and candidates who will be eighteen years of age on or before September .1, 1906, and who have failed at the junior teachers‘ examinâ€" ation, but whose marks warrant the county board in presuming that, afâ€" ter further study, they will be able to pass the junior teachers‘ examinâ€" ation of 1907. The professional certificates shall not be issued in either of the above cases until the candidates comply with the present legal requirements as to age and nonâ€"professional standâ€" ing. > mb oes l BB .202 school teachers, and the probability that it will soon become still greater during the first session of the new normal s<hool‘ system, which will go into operation in September, 1907, the Education Department has auâ€" thorized the following modifications of the existing regulations in regard to model schools and public school teachers‘ certificates. HESPELER WEDDING EXPERIVENTAL UNION. In "'A' of the scarcity of WELL SHORTAGE OF TEACHERS fertilizers _ with s and winâ€" 2 plots. Providcnce methods. the _ total winâ€" dences or have any pictures they think would be of interest appear in the Souvenirt would confer a favor by writing this office at once, as the time is getiing short and the work already well advarced. Any Chronicle reader or others deâ€" slroug of having views of thelt resiâ€" THE CHRONICLE‘S Write for a free copy of "The in ventor‘s. Adviser," No. 100,403, Wilber Gordon, Tweed, Ont., Cheese vat support. No. 100,409, John B. Hill, Wirchesâ€" ter, Ont., ballast dressing apparatus. No. 100,413, Edward R. McDonald, Shediac, N. B., check rein guard. No. 100,467, D. 8. McDonald, Glenâ€" dyer Mills, C. B., rug frame. No. 100, 503, John A. Manion, Monâ€" treal, Que., excavating apparatus. No. 100,541, Henry A. Coapeâ€"Arnâ€" old, Davidson, Sask., fibre urubbing‘ device. No. 100,575, John Wm: .\'nmimo‘, B. C., landing net 1 Mr. J. L. Spink gave a paper â€" on the value of flour from the baker‘s standpoint. He stated that Manitoba flour excels others in st th, but not in color or flavor.’ft‘%omy the tremendous amount of . advertising , that Manitoba flours receive â€" tha have gained them such a reputation. ;Wint('r wheats and â€" blendcd flours, grown and milled in Ontario, are preâ€" sustux o% FT sw t Any information on the subject will be supplicd free of charge by appiyâ€" ing to the above named firm. The _ following Canadian patents the agency of Messrs. Marion & Marâ€" ion, patent attorneys, Montreal, Canâ€" ada, and Washington, D. C. and steam power plants have thorâ€" oughly familiarized themselves with | their duties, and as an additional preâ€" | caution the owners have their boilers | inspected every three months by an expert engineer from a boiler insurâ€" ance company. & \ ; The matter of the defnition of lhc-' Prop. Crroxict®â€"Terrcrarn, i word *‘machinery" in the Assessment | WATERLOO, ONTARIO. Act was referred to a special â€"comâ€" 2 as ‘mittee, with instructions to ask the Provincial â€" Government _ to define y ‘ clearly the exact meaning of the word mm _ so that it might plainly show only 8 | the original value of lands used as a water power, and allow the origâ€" Sanderbon 'sâ€" Ba kery inal value to be used as a basis in figuring the business tax. he secures a certificate of fitness. The resoluticn further states that â€"such restrictions make for class legisiaâ€" tion, and that it imposes an expenâ€" sive hardship upon large numbers‘ throughout the Prov ince, and deprives of work many trusted; capable, and efficient employes. Such requirements are uncalled for on the plea of public safety, as operators of stcam boilers A resoluticn was passed embodying the protests â€" of the association against an Act passed by the Leg:slaâ€" tion which enacts that no man can act as a . stationary engineer unless First â€" viceâ€"presidentâ€"Wm. Munro, Monro and Roantree, Thorold. Second viceâ€"presidentâ€"A. E. Mc Leod, MeLecn Milling Co., Stratford. Secretaryâ€"treasmerâ€"C. â€"B. Watts, Toronto. The Executive Committee is comâ€" posed of the following members: (Geo. j Goldie, Goldic Miiling Co., Ayr; J. D. Flavelle, Flavclie Millinz Co.,! Lindsay; Alex. Noble, Norval; Hedley i Shaw, Hedley Milling Co., St. Cathâ€"l _arines; and Thorold; E. V. Tillson, ! Tillson Milling Co., Tillonburg; ani‘ D. B.. Wood, Wood Bros., Brantford. A Prosperous Associaticn. The _ report _ of Secretary Watts showed the association to be prosperâ€" ous, $4,000 being added to the funds, which now amount to over $19,000. | The sum of $7,500 was appropriated , for a'.dvcrtising purposes, in order tol’: demonstrate to the consumer the adâ€" * vantages of winter wheat and blended : flours. ¢ Toronto, Aug. _ 31.â€"The _ annual meeting of the Dominion Millers‘ Asâ€" sociation was held in the Board of Trade yesterday â€" afternoon. _ About one hundred _ members were present from ~Ontario and Quebec, andâ€" the meeting. was most centhusiastic. The electicn of officers took place, zn1 reâ€" sulted as follows: Presidentâ€"S. . W ton. MILLERS RILL rRBO~M OXTAR‘O WedeEatr. Crown Attorney Bowlby prosccuted and Mr. E. P. Clement, K. C., de fcnded the prisoner. A sad feature of the case is Stricker is marricd to ansthr pectable young woman who has young child dependent on him for living. Thr evidence presented was such that it drew from His Hcnor a seâ€" vere reprimand not cn‘y directed to th» prisoner but also to the young girl, who was 16 yearsâ€" of ege and who gave birth to a chi‘d on July 13 last. His Honor hold that she had sediced him more than h: h.d seducâ€" ed her, but the law makes no _ proâ€" vision for punisa®aeat in her case. Nor was it need{s). The first of a series of alleged seâ€" duction cases that have taken place in Waterloo County in the last year or two, was disposcd of by His Honâ€" 0 Juog» t; 1e 10« at rd.> ~nen be found Albert Stricker guilty on the charge of having scduced Etta Yost‘ of Lambton Co:nty, formerly of Elâ€" mira, and sentenced him to 3 months in th» county jail. I Judge Chisholim Hands Out Suff Reprimand to Pa t‘cipâ€" pan‘s in Case. . STRICKER GETS THREE MONTHS PATENT REPORT The Assessment ‘Act SEMIâ€"CENTENNIAL. John Wm: Grabam case is that ansthr _ resâ€" The »~mails ~for these two lattet countries were not discharged _ here, but ‘were carried to Quebec on _ the steamer, where they will be immediâ€" ately put on the new overland mail train of the C.P.R. _ The Empress of Treland‘s time from Liverpool to Rimouski 523 hours, or front Inishtrahull Neville, Ireland, to Rimouski, was 5 days 10 hours and 30 minutes, which is four hours fastâ€" er than made by any steamship _ of this or any other line between these points. She has cn board 299 saloon 322 second cabin and 332 thirdâ€"class passengers, a total of 954, and the mails for China and Japan. ‘ [ Rimouski, Que., Aug. 30.â€"The imâ€" portance to the world at large of the Can:dian route between Europe and America was demonstrated and emâ€" phasized by the arrival here this afâ€" ternoon of the R. M. S. Empress of Ireland, bringing the Angloâ€"Canadian mails and the blue ribbon of the north Atlantic by both routes either via the north of, or south of, _ New Foundland, now belongs to the Atlanâ€" tic service of the Canadian Pacific Railway Company. Colic, Cholera & Diarrhea Remedy Empress of Ireland Crosses Atâ€" lantic in Five Days and Ten Hours, _ It has often saved kfe before FAST TIME MADE BY C. P. R. BOAT It has received thowands of id shng: dobnaiah thoie w06 4 tene cigg by dealers who have sold it for King St Waterloo Fancy Buns, Bread Rolls and _ Cakes always on hand Almost every has need dnreinblérune‘;ymtedgq diarthea at some time during the Chamberlain‘s , Womldopfinglmly-hnol businese for the benefit of Cash Buyers at our store. Every cash customer gets with each pumhnuselucklhowin. the amount of same. Whnyoulunm‘h |of these checks to show that you have bought and paid for goods to th» amount of ten dollare, return them to us and you will be entitled to fil‘y cents worth of goods free at our sture *In other words we will pay on a dividend of five p r cent 0 : ev ry amount you spend in cash at our store, thus making you a partner in our bus ness to that extent. The check is printed, the transaction recordcd and the d vide: d made possible, by our n=w National Caush Register. _ It is a beautiful piece of mechanism and the perâ€" ‘feel ion of system and accuray in business transactions between clerks and customers. * You would pick up a dol ar if you ound it on the »trâ€"et and think you were in luck. _ You can pick up a dollar here by our dividend systâ€"m, but it is not luck; it is business â€"good business We ars bringing all qur resources to be ur to in ke it bay wan tnh. anmnllr . 5)L. 1 Become aPartner rd to risk so much for so BUY IT Now. F. E. MACKLIN â€" Berlin Fancy qulckty ascerta "h,O0r onimion tree hotheral Invent 18 wbly m ommunten. |m.-mm|‘mm.m on Patents 4 *Tuems tmken Throw m‘n-l s recetve | _ sperial notice, 'fi'&n‘ hl‘. , “ ‘" h."nen-ndmhn-homu- I % w6 | Ahandeomeiy Mustrated weekts. Larsest en | ity "of ma ving (nerc $X "OMta JOKK B. ISCHER, Proprietor 13 â€" 2 mos Contractor, Waterloo. Phone 233. Ed. Dermul all parte of the .b;n‘ Phone 243. bas the reputation of supplying Its nnmerous customers with the choicest and best of meats all the year roond. In the line of merits, we have Beef. Park, Veal, Lamb, Sugarâ€" Cured Hams and Bacon (our own curing); enee tested, always used. In the line of homo-n‘a;l.:::ll- sages, sucl as Bologna, M Pork Saussge, Head Cheese, Liver Ravsage and Summer Sausage. Give us a trial and be convineed Prae e S T The Leading Meat Market 5000 Tons of Clearest Ice Tce! Icel All ice will be sold by the piece this season. . Accounts collketed monthly. daily. Jarge ‘or emall qnuantities at lowest current prices. Abâ€" solute puréty of the ice is guaranteed, and it can be used with perfect ra‘ety for all purposes. _ Prompt delivery WONMM?WMOMOMON’MMO#% Taken from clear apring watâ€" er. _ He is prepared to deliver this to his numerous eustomâ€" era in Watertoo arnd Berlin in ?W“WN’Q#O’OO“WMMWOW A & s & L The undersigned begs to thank his numerous customâ€" ers for their kind patronage during the past years, and anâ€" nouners that be has laid in a larger supply of ice than ever before. : Carden Tools, Occupr an impertant place in our stock, the buying cf which is given apecial atte .tion and we have no beritarion in claiming that the qnality ind prices on the same will be right: ; A large a*eck of Rnildera, Hard #are, Nail®, "rongbht Tron Pipes, Firtin :s, Vxives, otc. kept in stock. _ We solicir your patronage. promptly delivered in CONRAD BROS. _ lools, Spades & Shovels Lawn Mowers, Etc. ° NOC ‘NCKk, it is business â€"good business ke it pay you to be a regular custom~r at our storâ€"> LD T P oL t And others who realize the advisabil ity of l-vh.'mdr h'rM-Ffim tramsacted 2..’:.!::" relimina ty w v_tg free, Charges Prop. Chronicleâ€"Telegraph. Waterloo â€" â€" Ontario work We have a proposition for yeung men and young women in either town or country. Whole or :eisure hours can be devoted to the work. Proflta are l_vge and sure, the Do You Want Money FIRE INSURAKCE CoMFANY INCUkKPORATED in 1s63 Total Assets stat Deacemver 92 $426,808 17. WATERLOO MUTUAL k is easy,clean and I'uein;li-r-v.g ‘or particulars call on or writ OFFIL KR8 ; George Randal!. Presidont Wm. Snider. Viceâ€"Prestdar a i tht, Mnungee J. L. Armatrong, Inspectar. K. P. Clameng, nolinfane, Rep‘ty, BUCKBERROUGH & co.‘r A Little Easy Work Will Secure it. Willtam Snider, eg., Ge0. Diebel, Eag., J. L Wideman, Ksq., 8b. Jacot. P. &. Shant«, Preaton. Iubitrnadad... A.... Dr. W. J. Karley, and of ourseilves for the prompt manser in which you have made payment of the »mount due under the above number d policy. We ma; say in passing, that, although Dr. Karley had insurance in in over ten companies, your Company was the first to muke peyment of claim, } Yours truly, MACKAY, SAMPSON & TELFORD, Bolicitors for the Execu or of the late Dr. W. J. Karley, We beg to expres the appreciation of our elfent, the Kxecutor cf the cetate of the late n.o w oÂ¥ w o. o pous I The Dominion Life AsetÂ¥hnce Co. Waterioo. ; and Washingtot D.C., V.8.A, In Advance of All Cike: BOARD OF DIRERCTORS David Bean, LA4vinge:One. Eeq., Raden Re Policy Nn Owen Suund, Mar h 15th, 1506 on or writ Dr W. J, Farley Agont.

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