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The Chronicle Telegraph (190101), 4 Oct 1906, p. 2

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As the all of th. null: spiritual- tr, morally and inlrllwlnally, Hwy maul In”: "mm lmprrltrlly Mop- " hum. In" better "vellum of m" and mu lite. They must he an to the MM and het " tte tame, " tttey null and cull: worth- lly "Mr my nil-re; wlll by: Mel: to up" Mum“. Accordingly, ro; 'his um" I." IN- pnlous task the muhlr and intruierrtt root people of this ptoiirtve mus! Prepare, Neither wealth nnr malorial xplrn- dor can saw this your“: nation trom Stagnation of soul and itttdllcit, it mam-r mm mum's mam-Hi; in: ittttttoce of modern mammnm Worship destroys or crushes down the noble! impuhus of the heart. Where, thrn, can thr n-mmy be found" " "ttttot he brought out of tho n'lusr I European nations. It will not pro- h'rd from the protific lrwrnulanls of the hatritants. The sons and drug"!- H's ot Ontario musl prrmeate "to Ba- lional mass with inlrlln-Hral and uvirilual Iran". F'tottt (mlnrin must guy for". the mural and "duratirnal 'tt.Nencr., that will rp-arrange on a higher basis the su'nttAwivitir.rd rat-rs 0! Know that iivrrll ,tithin nnr bots Amt. _ I Let us Inm- " still [3655053 in this land a saving remnant. Shun we hr Tam-m to mum our haters, upon transitory gran-lam and material wmslih? ls mammo- “nu-ship to be restored under a new torn)? Are we to conclude that mono alone is the onc thing ttevdful? Who will dare say that ttte mung: msunl, unirtelligcnt. araricious tile is really worth living', It is Just so may days at eating, sleepin; and worming. Emerson. one of our wisest men. deelares "most nun do not how whether they are misy or idle." In the light ot things eternal and un- seen this is undoubtedly true. The little lite is "roundrd with a sleep." We live in a new land, where a new nation is rapidly rising to a high place among the competing natirttal Ion-vs oi earth. Take into consideration the many avenues to'highn measure which the culture at the intellect opens out. The (hoieest- utterances ot the wise and good ot all ages are present to cheer and brighten thy pathway of life, which is made richer in thought and more worth living. Just as the body requires daily load in only lo maintain it,.in vigorous condition. in like manner the mind re- quires careful and well seleetcd sus- tenancc tronrwhich to draw slunglh and power. . When one observes that the train- ing at the mind is neglected. and tin mind-tood should be freely partaktn ot to nourish, develop and strengthen the intellect, how sad indeed to con- template a soul or mind that for years has been sutlering starvation tor want at proper food. It is the, mind that directs the body,' so carefully adrrned, and body Wilhéut mind would be of ltttte sig-. niticancc. So' also, where the mental soil is very rich and productive, it the ger- minating seeds of good ideas are not planted, soul-Weeds by the thousand, many ot them lull of poisonous and evil qualities, sun take root and tiring forth bitter fruits. Young people go to irtthtite pains And trouble in order to properly and elegantly adorn their bodies with at- tnctive garments, while their minds are too irequuntly much neglected. It We see a fate [arm where the land is rith and lerlile, and no good sad is sown, what is the result? A great host of words. briers, and thistles spring up in a very short space of time. From now (I! till the end ol tho winter season the long nights may be utilized to great advantage by boys en the larm. They should employ their leisure in storing their minds with useful knowledge. In alter years there is Kt investment tlut will yield so desirable in return. The heads ct boys are simply excellent Plates ts, planting Valuable ideas. It they, are never planted in such ground thought- power will never tully develop there. " right powers of intelligence are not to be lound there something else lunch less desirable will get in, tor nature abhors a vaeeuum. " nature did permit a spat-e to exist in whirh not-hing eould be really found, might it not be said to-be located In cer- tain heads where wall-able ideas were never stored? A I {ugh-nu" ‘655,“m" T dug-us no} up but Chronicl- - Toby-an!) dw- In” only a“ Damn I... m I!!! ‘22-'99“. 'Mt..e' “9!. auiia.T ii -auaTraa- TCTC WINTER EVENINGS. ADVII‘I'IOIBB. b ” ulna-l- Iain-n .. gut WOO-LII -"- TRY-u? 'et. than Inn-4n) nah-ruu'i Then will the ml: and ’IHIISIIWH 'PNtttrte at our country mar forth in mm atsttttdanrr, Ilium! by a pm- plo Mir. vrlsv- and "than. I'th‘ "N's are "who! Inln ”minus vu- nnskvn by the whim ot an Immor- ld,hopr. - . I curiously ran-rd. must ttot b. or dirty, hm Ihr Worship in than-w name of the Supreme 000C. With the influx ol the othwottrirt1s at [Carolin thr- young (‘madlnn Mil frequently Ind himself, in the far west, alone and in the wide carp at the ttncrnverted. m for nim will it be " in the pursuit of gross 1""'"11 rain he lose Mu ethical idtntity, in the marst- tangled mass of htttaatt naturr that surrounds him. "at wrtt it will hr tor him it he url as flu- hiqh nwsstngzrr 'ot rigorous though bertirrtpnt Truth. Noll tor him and his (-nunlry it Light and Knowlmigc Mar wider vantage ground in th we Mart-s “It?” his he! have trrd. In this way truly an "r people lawn: truly noble and great. The golden catf at sett-iovr howeror Therrtorr, it ever this glorious Can. ad; of ours is to. be a nation truly awaLaMr worHrrHhe-rtatiomrt- mm must be rXaltnl, I " is thas that format. To this n'Prer attain-d. marrrllnus cullum Ths great task is Indore us. Its rejection will probably terminate in results niost disastrous to our “an try. its atcomplishmot Would hr ' lriumrh so great that the Hay ang- vls in heaven would rrjoicc at its lul- mint. Peirrboro, Sept. M.--The Board of F"sdrcation has decided to erect a new twelve-roamed collogialc institute capable of accommodating 4M pupils. The cost will be 361.000, exclusive of site. The board his already $10,000 at its disposal. and will ask the city council tor t a additional $21,000 re- quired. Alex. 81mm", lst tor team ot road- Hers, John Schator. lst for carriage brood mare, also for attrttrultttrat brood mare; John Gildner, 2m! lot single carriage horse; Irvin ."h.yemak- or, lst tor roadster colt; W. 1'itson, 3rd tor single carriage horse. The prize list, which will appvar in a later issue, will be of general in- terest. In the meantime We give a ow of the prizes thit wcrt' awarded In persons living iin the vicinity of Berlin. l 361.000 COLLEGIATE Cheap Jacks mu likirs were plznli- lul. and apparently did a good Bnsi- ness. . One at the prevailing spirits of the thy. in whivh lady drivers Show, their skill in handling the ribbons, was strongly indulged in at the fair. (In the “hole the lair was a grand success Bicycle races, horse speedinz, and othorrvrnts gave ample 'tniusemtatt to the crowd, while the whole van! was enlivened by first-class and ap- propriate music from the Elmira hand. _ ' The Short Horn herds, v.ithetrt. b “huh any agricultural tttow would be a lailurc. were not as numerous as , thee mirh' have been. Brertl.rs sud) . as Mr. John Burnett ol WitMerbotnns , Mr. K. Wagner, Mr. W. W. Slim- ulon. John Bricker, Lem. Powell, C'hrts. Diefenttacttpr, Andrew Smith, , and Israel Groll, and others, were _ retrresentcd, which is in itsell a guar- antee that the animals were of a high order. A beautiful hull all bred by Mr. (iron. and sold to Mr. t'ph- raim Weber. was on exhibition, which would be a erhtit to any show ring. atte sheep were not numerous but the quality was excellent. Messrs. G. “Roberts and J. Kuhl showed the Dairy rattle, comprising Jerseys and Holsteins, were shown by Mes- srs. Klimh, Zilliax, Shipley. Lurch, and R. Martin. This part ot the show was Well up to the mary tn quality it not in quantity. ‘ A pair of Holstein calves brolen in and hitched to a small Waggon and driven with lines by a boy awakenrd mth interest. Pigs were in evidence and some su- perior specimens of Berks and bacon hogs exhibited by Messrs. H. Buclln A. Heipel and others. Oxford Downs, whicuriiia,dii, were well represented try.Mr. Hast- ings. U. Bohlonder had . splendid “my ot light horses, and any one that lack a prize competing with them deserved crtdit. “I: show oraorses was good in every class. Mr. Alex. Peterson and other heavy dun hm nuns vim with oath other tor first ptare in the de- risicn ot the Judges. Meaars. h'. and _ ,--_ -___M. “g v-ou, III-u II. III- ded to the receipt: ot the previous thy. with other incomes, and» the show . success {luckily as well an otherwise. Ths propitious tulle: ol Tharp! dar had the elect ol inereasit" m INC-I‘m u "to all Fair to u almost unprecedcnled extent. The pic receipts .lonc on Thursday al-' ten-oo- mud to tus, which. ad- LameAttendauseeand the Fin. mill Receipts Exceed All Previous Slums. ELMIRA FAIR h BIO SUCCESS INSTITUTE " ot' . council: ot Cut“. There is I ditterrrtre, but th:, Minis. trr ol "stirs, can Md the Int-wimp" rum whr. The conditions line all ngrd and the debates are ttittrrettt. "are is I an" rtrid tor Mr. \ylom mum's .Imnm, Ho h a an» :nan ill Parliament. He in pot mallar- ‘pnl tle rnn out loom. trom outgrown ,rusloms. Tttere ls a “a flann- mwr was tttere . "eater-tor a mall tith mum! ‘1er and thtttt mind-l pies and the "wilt-cl ”Hindus 'Gitttt tor m mimic lite ot CtttaNo . ser'."; rin- mu would no“ politic-ll ro- 'trmpiier, and "on would Aire Iain Ptovlm “: rlghllul place in the ntcntarians. with few notnqlc ext-op- tions, during the last decade is, es- pocidly in Ontario, absoluto-ly insig- nittrant. Amt is it to be wondered at that public opinion, hating come to itself without the dimttng hand at Parliament, is not snprr-m-Iy «I» (wood about ttrtratrs that add mjnt of intnrmation and no line of argu- mom to the rm! discussion qrttO the Press and the other organs of opin- i, It had begun and~mntimml and rod- ud Btfore the polttlnl lender: came hour? But it is quite dim-rent to-dar. The mombcrs ot Parliament are not the leadcrs of public opinion. The prob- lt-ms of pressing public iniorrst are loll in be discussed ftrst and hilly by Ihe Press, the Manufacturers' Asso- ciation, the Farmers' Assoriation,, 1h: Labor Union, ' ith Socialist tayierte, "is Dominion Alliance, the 1'anadian ('Inl). and similar tnstittt- lions through which public optnion is ttring mturated and ratding "prrs'sion. The hrlp giun in all this by Pallia- we in either patty to-day that, when [there is no general campaign or bye- ' election in sight, gives himself to the iplatform discussion at public ques- 1tious " “as done a. attention Mo by men like Brown, and Mukenzte, (t.itt Blake, and Cartwright, and Mac- dunatd, and' Ctrrtier, and Meoer, or, to go back to an earlier getteration, by Baldwin, and Latontainc, and '.k"u'l'/ thousand Robinson, and Draper, and! Hagrrtmut? Pariutnetttarikns' and y 'toliticians in those days kept in dose ' oath with the leaders sill areeptcd to the full their obligations as lead- 'rs. When they spoke in Parliament 1 was with the emphasis and direct- ness and authority ot ttrst-huadknow.. lud.;e and perer conviction. They knew the people, the people knew them, and their speethcs and the in- terest and the quality that made their publication in lull good news- paper work. - *7 -~--vv- ""1 "the leading newspapers" do not “publish in full the debates in im- irortant matters as was done by pa- pers years ago,'? he might retteet MP- (n the very significant tact that Par- liament to-day does not cut the iig- ure in the life of the people it did a generatitn or so ago. The: rulin- mint was the great organ and Coca-: tor of public opinion on all the great} problems of public lite. Members oC, Parlianunt, and especially the leading men in the political parties, wmt from place to place discussing Wllh the people the great questions of the dar, informing their minds. organiz- int their ideas, and directing public opinion along large lines in relation IO the dominant problems of public policy. How is it todar? Who have Mori than ihiT." i Justice really caries "the leadine mum But another reason why newspapers to-day dd not publish as extensive re- ports at debates as the debaters de- sire is the very obvious tact that to a degree the debates in Parliament, both in the Commons and in he Sen- ate, are not the real and important debates at all." It is in the party caucus the real debating takes place and the real opinions of members are expressed. For the most part the set and regulated speech-making in Far- liamrut is devoid of individuality an] it is only “hill some master-mind breaks loose from the pre-determined pro-and-cm ot thu caucus that some- thing is said whith makes the Press Gallery sit up and take notice. I Hon. A. B. Ayleu‘orlh. " is ot gm- enl public interest, In his speech " _Ayliner the other night the '“litter of Justice. discussing the Lord's Flay Art, aid that “He regretted that the lending newspaper: did not think in to publish in lull the debate. " Inl- ten ot such importance. as was alone try paper. your "o. Had tbat lawn the can the people ot Ontario . par- ticularly would llwloughly one a!» derstood the (mental. and so sir-pn- ciated the course of the Government All to have determimd upcn puny, that Government in lutum tam . m.- ed support." mm manure: Why Is it that Canadian awn do not willie! in [III the who on important' Inner: in Parliament. t Tttat gnu-Ho- hu bot- mitted by the meml (Torono Globe.) Gumbo-Tm m, m»; M_§.;: It the Minister of s to kgow why REASDN WI" a man "inch do!" a an- I Mr. Waklman tett (“with Ins! nigh! "or ttte 1mm- ot the AN'M'. “wt to.“ not .rnrh there 'rrttit thitt showman. whrn hr mum! br Ind '00: the sad we“ Mr. and Mrs. Hakim“ were mar- md in Portland. oregon, 3nd hue line mum, " to"!!! m. Guelph, "rept. 27. - Mr. James Ryan, Lam sum, rereirot 'h, sad want this nth-moon that Mrs. J. " (Dollie) Waldman, who was infarct! and hnrncd in the Wabash tallwny wreck at ('nllin, "L. [II her way to "you'll, Ind succumbed to hu' injur- liett at [I5 this morning M St lim- nhl'lll'n lhspild. "amino. Ill. Tho "was.” mm "am Mr. K. (My Sul- trm, hrnIh-r ot Mrs. Waldmnn. who evidotttyrVtt his home at Paris, Mo. I-hcrc Mrs. Waldman had Ian-n visit- inz, on rmim of the new: ot the wrrclt. ml of the mink-s to th, family. . I wand-i Gaur." The reports on temperance and Sub- botl observance were adopted. Dr. Levl Curtis objected to the latter speaking of Christ as the world's elder "may. The virus we: tinged _ "t van brought up ' Presbyterian," an! t minister who voted for it. "It is Iltogethcr more seemly," n lurked Rev. Dr. Burns. and with ham iGUii tiiirriirGAr1' or " the close of all .ervieet, here .0... mi Mr. milk} GGiGr"irr"i" we. of " to 38, 1Pt??diarpt yin have to Uniform uervicea were strung], mended for by Rev. A. K. Birkl. The same order should be observed every- where in (tannin. he thought. but there Lrttloyl cries of dissent. I It was recommended that sociologi- cal topics be dllcusaed in young poo- lpie'. societies, and that um at book. he prep-red with a View to placing ‘lnch volumes in Sunday school and Epworth League libraries. That Ni. iowshlp in sociological studies be u- hhlinhed tn churches and colleagues. l A resolution expressing advocacy of unlvernni peace by the conference and belief in arbitration in the settlement of international disputes and approv- ing recommendation of luterparlia- mentnry union to The Hague peace Conference was adopted. It will be forwarded to the second Hague con. {cranes through the Cnnndlnn repro. "native. ‘ "We view with alarm the diminish- ing blrthrate in some notions ot our population. It must be considered a great national evil that some of the beat attains in our country are be. eoming extinct. Legislation was recommended which would not Interfere with vested righta. but would prevent individual: or cor- porations Irrottttng from unearned In- crement. I I A millionaire was defined In one who resumed his harvest from I mil- lion lives while men of culture had the beat fruit ot the world. They shou'ld face their obligations accord- ingly. Hospitals and universities en- rich the whole community. but such gifts do not make reparation for :wrongs perpetrated in the iniquitous 'acquisltlon of wealth. The blood ot 'the oppressed will continue to cry to heaven, while the scale of wages is so low that our maidens have set before them the awful choice be. ;tween hunger and dishonor. And iyet children are sinnied in mind on) .1.. In -- .. - --- _ - a --- we...“ I" a...“ and body. It was time for Christian citizenship to take up the master's whip'and drive these things from the holy pieces of civilization. The com- mercini rogue was a universal enemy. Ther deprecated opening the gnteu of the country to the criminal and those with hereditary taint. Race Suicide Depleted. Dr. Williamson did not think the judgment of the world would he with them for expelling s minister because he was a director of a reputable in. surance company. Dr. Jackson strong- ly supported Dr. Young’s amendment. Money Madness. The committee on sociology deplored evils which had their source in money madness which leads men to oppress the unfortunate and forget their obliga- tions to the higher interests of society: also the massing of the largest propor- tion of the wealth of the country In the heads of s few. t -- __- ,........ "mu-m. [ " was resolved that no Methodist minister should solemnlse s marriage of s divorced person uniess the di. vorce ‘he granted on the ground indi- csted by Jesus. snd that the pom be not the guilty party. Ministers In Business. There was no discussion Wednesday night on the resolution regarding the commercisl relations of ministers, but the question came up yesterday morn- lng. No minister or prohatloner shsll engage in say secular business or work which shall detract from his minister- int cherscter or usefulness. or interfere with the proper discharge of the dut- ies assigned him by the church, and it shall be due the minister having knowledge or reliable information of such an clone to isy s ehsrge with tho proper authorities. This amendment to discipline, sub- mitted by the committee. was reject- ed utter some debate. This discipline "strongly recommends" ministers not to become members of the semis: board of any trading company. Dr. Young moved in amendment that ministers shsll not become members of such boards and this was also re- lected. MRS. WALDMA N [HI-Zn I Intro-l. 0a... em. ".--Ane. on on“ day'- 'l'l'ett'ttvt that a he. committee report.- t Method“? m “he. was cloned litht with the lanai devotional our duo. the union hob; the twenty- Ievonth. 7 . The my topic: dealt with were at a nried nature. but u {or " noe- sihle were carefully diacuued. There were " votes in one division during the afternoon, representing the over- In attendance yesterday. Marriage of Divers“. Deliverance by the church on the marriage of divorced nelson: Ian sub mitted but was teterred to the commit. tee mr improvement. The conference regarded the law of the land In an- thoriaing. but not requiring n minister to solemniae marriage. "Divorce tor other than Scriptural reasons" was not considered rigid enough an many old testament reasons were not admit- Iahle. To lay so raised the caution which Dr. Cannon feared would un- lettle man: minds. _ Dr. Ben-on considered the deliver- onoe necesury. but wondered tt min- isters ought to go behind the lieenle “and try the groper authority. Methodist Coal-(cue new and: it.ttttheWerid a BetterTUn War _ ARBITRATION IS BEST METHOD Uniformity of Oar-via. --. Out-boo. Sept. 2t.-The Anglican at. 27. - Mr. Jan»: I Cathedral of the Holy Trinity was trert, "trirot In; 3.14 the me ot a tairhitmabte wedding At Million that Mrs. J. H. E noon tmday, when one ot W‘- man, who was in',urrd churning society hunters, Miss " n the Wabash llllwa)’ drrd "(NHL "ughter ot Y. G. in, "L. In her way to MrrMith, M. P., and granddaughter ut-rumhotl to hu' injur. of the tate Chiermmure Meredith and rs morning at s: lam- the Very Rev. Dun "autumn, In In}, "smith, Ill. Thr his liletlme rector at the English trom Mr. H. (My Sut- (htl'mtnl. was jotnnt in walla-Ix to I' Mrs. Waldttttttt. who Capt. J. it'll-r Mills. R.eu..t., at tin home at mm, Mo. Kingston. and non of Dr. hm Mills nldmnn had been visit. at (Mun. The marriage (Tn-mo" I of the new of the “u performed by the Very Rev. ' the injurlrs to :lu- Den Williams, mtor at the eathe0. T I rat, “small by the Rev. II. R, Bin. tt Mt (lurk): Inst and it was . very pretty sent”, in- mm- at thr -'idrntt, ttttttttteh a " to: . choral amt nt the ,rm-h there .uml this sane time a Intlttuy milling. The. n hr wmnltl tte mot church “I m error-tel tor the oe- N'WR. cum vtth palms and new! Iow- WIMmm were mat. on hy the yon; "in“ ot the it“. d, Ora-m. and hue and Drank-d . putty mt nu hep- ut "yam: tug-m. In; trttt th- "qetee' mun. l prestnt building of an extension to Wellcsloy. This extra bonus would have to he mind in Berlin. out " in not apparent that the county town In unions just now in the matter. Wel- loxlt-y sectivn will Urn-tore require to turn in some other direction it it hopes tor relief in the no“ future. Wellesley Maple Lear. Busin‘sa has grown so rapidly (ll the Gan-Merlin electric railway that the question ot 'incrtasing thcir power is becoming a necessity. Only a year or two ago " immense power plant was installed at Preston and a storage battery at Berlin whith was supposed to be sub ticirnt for many years to com". As the Company are luring to use Ni- 'agara power in a "ar or two they are naturally not anxious to go to _ th, oxptnsc ot manning [but power 1 _ it pros: nt, and con ;cqucntly the Web! lesloy rxttttiion is; not conquered ttai an immediate scheme, although al road is new complrlrd through Wau- crloo town. Meantime the nle for railway connection is as great as er- er in th., Wellesloy section. They tree- ly otrerot to tax themselves to the limit in the bonus try-taw a couple ot years ago Winn the Prestott-Bertin Company was burkcd from building by Berlin's tardittess. With the power now so scarce it would require a WE LLESLEY WILL TURN " 'IN ANOTHER DIRECTION. "A Medical Hralth 0mm 5mm al little town north or ttere came to me tor advice. He said thst a tummy in his town was a nuisance. lull that he got more money in medical loosi lrom the lamily ot the own-3r ilun he? did from his stipend as Medical! Henlth Omeer. 'What will I chi." he said. 'it you can't. do your duty, why: get otst,' He said, ‘I think t will.'; And he did. That Is tist the sling-w lion. They are not paid enaegh." .l: - - __ - __,,-, 3...,...e.... "What can we do?" he queried. 'riil I go out into the country to proceed, against anyone who waters milk or; anything else, I'd be told to mind my own business. The ally solution is the establishmtnt of a central arguin- tion, not a Health Board, an Kiowa tive Committee which would have-‘1 marge of the public health matters ot l the entire Province. This Emtive ( Committee Would have the power to 1 deal with matters all over the coun- 1 try. Thrn when a Medical Health or- '4 liter reported thil. John mun. was 1 doing somet4tient-he should not do the Executive Committee would send out a member of their stall and take John Smith by the scrull of the neck and tell him that it thfngs were not speedily remedied something Would happen him. T i "The Medial Health Otticers of the smaller municipalities ot Ontario are only a. tot ot blank cartridges." re- marked Dr. Shard, ot Toronto, on Thursday. "They go on with a great. hang, but do nothing. In a great. many cases they only get $25 a year, ml are unwilling to stir up trouble tor themselves." Dr. Eheard's remarks were made upropos ot the 'rtfnrsarprrir problem. HEALTH OFFICERS ARE LIKE BLANK CARTRIDGES We un uh; ting o II" system of bovine- In the built at Cal: Buy"! a. our Mom. Eva when-comer; tn trithemh Micki-admit. mutations. Whoayoulnnomgh of tho. cinch to allow that you hove bought and paid for (and. to the amount of in: dollm, return than to no and you will In entitled to tif y cent- worth of good: {no at our than It, other word. I. will pay on o dividend of an par cont o t 0v: ry am'JU'It you would in qtatstt at our atom, than asking you s peetaser in our built... to that extent. The Chou-k in printed, tho W00 mordvd and the d.vidon- mode powblv, by our mu National Cash Ibssrister. " it I huntiful piece of whoniun Ind the par- fociiou otsprem and "tmmey in buainm transactions between cloerl . and endow-non. You would pick up I dolear if you ound it no the sin-ct and think P u were in luck. You an pick up I dollu bore by our dividend mystem, but it is not luck; it is busine- -goid busing: We are bringing.” cur unnum- to bear to In ke it [my you to be 3 regular cuntomvr " or “on Becohie aPartner HILLS IMEIIEDILH. F. E. MAGKUN " Berlin the be the um " that of the hand which cum! to eMstt me "on no nmly. Ill outside medial pneu- Uonen and lhe mercury, Br. Hodg- em. who " a [0'9th othefat, ho nm ot the new hoard will, " I: and“, In W In A It" Toronto, 'Hepl. ".--Mmt. Mr. Ila- " and 10-day that m provincial board M heal". Vol“ noon te - poittted,and us composition mm" mu B. mean. Prowl-ton M -oooooooooooooop, l iii'diiiFGi'i'ihi' [9.22. 19!" mt vam-nuu. on M a Ion-h L rti',E"iEr'.f,iiy's? t2,'e','d M'J,%'a."tt, “W "-'"*m'"'m'W-M~ 2'll'Wd"/att 12:0 A"l',',lh1'ii'r2ht.' m 'nt I t I 1 'ir.r,'lfaetg, Me, 'l'llht, mun 'tttere-treef, Fri-5n In the line of mum, no hav, RMW. Pork Veal, Lamb, Sugar Caron Ilium and Bunsen Ioqtr own curing); anon ”not, always mod. In the "no of home-undo alu- Iagol, not In Bologna, Wham. Pork Sau- ce. and chemo, leor “wings 1nd Summer sun-an. G!" In a trut sud unconvinced Order, promptly delivered in t” out. of the town. Phone 243. a“ be repmu it". of up" it: human-u. outta an win out-tom an" Dior ornmv " var round The loading tat Mark l _ W .t_ t' _ ”WW” NAMES IN FEW DAY I301“. I.-:-,'--'-',-.'-'.-'.-'-.'-'-' Do You Want i'i"ii"iii"i?pitmey _ LII I!" It Wagon” Fury I'm. Dual non. a: an, can M” a. I... $anderson's Be kery Prop. Chroniclo-‘rolmm. Waterloo . " Ontario PtutN are large and sure. the work in “cycle“ lad hyacinth; For particular! all on or uric We have n proponition for run; men and young women in eithrr town or country. Whole or leisun hours can be devoted to the work. "HE IDSURAHJI! Chili!“ INCORPORATED " no: Tms' am “It Mull. " £488.81” tr. ' Mfllilh1) MUTUAL A Little Easy Work Will Secure it. Luv-m..." FraTa. . . P. "mm m. nan-In. C. A. 3018M. Dlntrlct Ame. mum. raiit ' .. - Randall M. W. has: manu- Mi - It... or. w. J. MIL-Ind or ours“. In": ”an" IIII-:0f In which you haul-m ”mun-onus lnunlducnnderlh- M III-ll“ -. W. an n: In Inn-In. than mum Dr. lulu Ind Imun-co Inn " --- ‘4, - _ an an a In; mun-1;; Tciic' " Yul: wily. HACKAY. a IP30! a TELIOBD. “may. for th- lxoon or “dial-kl» tA . J Earle). " "Pe un aaua '0 hr: mum- the spend-[Ion ttemgr 'Peet-r-ttrl-Grit-GTG". n. n I -74» _ - TttMt "our an: “HIV";- In Advance of an Other. " Don-him. um Anvnnno. fit, Wank» David Bean, "who. at. Ra Pour: ' “with“ . an at mamas 0m Sound, In h "th. ”a Va. my Conn-y

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