_ High & bt .. ranvertioley ~ rateer will h-uzh'::n on"fl": »lgs:ud“ "“â€_M ie noon. ; e fest: e ons acc.prad up to. We ‘ Nows Notes.â€"Miss Lattie® Watson returned : home last Ictutg after : g‘r‘-u‘jw wvisit in :1 tates.â€" .‘ Geo. Weaver spent Sunday ‘with friends in Arthur.â€"Born: Nabls,.â€" on: m lith, to Mr. and Mrs. August j , a son.«â€"Penngbaker, ‘Sept. 14, to Mr, and Mrs. Rueben Pennabaker, a daughter.â€"Mr. Roy Wilfong â€" gpent Sunday with his parents in Waterlo0. â€"â€"Mrs. Heary: Scourman of Preston spent last week with her parents.â€" mâ€"ll{ Wm. Marshall,. sr.; spent Sunday in Berlin. â€"Mr. and Mrs. A. Henduck and two children .. ofâ€" St. Jacobs, Mr. John Marshall and . Mr. Edward Dopp of Preston were the guests of Mrsâ€" A. r‘nnhall on â€"3urâ€" day.â€"Rev.â€" Mr. Eilison of Ayr _ ¢xâ€" changed pulpits with Rev. Mr. Johnâ€" ston in the Presbyterian church ‘on Sunday.â€"Mr. C. A. R. Tilt â€"was. a successful exhibitor at the _ London Fair last week with his prize pou! try . â€"Mr. and Mrs. Clive S. . Bean of Waterloo were guests of Mr, .ano Mrs, Homer Watson over Sunday. of Miss Bridgep as brid: Jonas â€" last we A two ycars ago. [Ne MNOLSC IS â€" BM in his possession.â€"â€" Miss _ Florence Rellinger oi Waterloo Sundayed unâ€" der the parental roof.â€"Mr. Floyd: Shepherd of Toronto spent _ a few days at Rosedale farm.â€" Mr. Irvin Shepherd, of Toronto, paid a fying visit_to his home on Saturday last. â€"Mr. and Mrs. Luckbardt of Calgary, Alta., were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Emanuel _ Shantz last week.â€" Miss Irene Bingemanâ€"visited â€" friends at West Montrose for a week, reâ€" turning home Sunday.â€"Miss Melinda Erb of Waterloo . was renewing atâ€" quaintances . here last week.â€" Mr. Alex. McAllister® took a business trip to Canfield this week. News Notes.â€"The fine raif . wif@ch we recently had came in very handy for the fall wheat which was sown as as it was quite dry in some places. Most of the farmers in our _ vicinity are through seeding and are now making ready for _ silo filling.â€" The Beaver Literary Society held a very successful meeting last evening .. and the following officers were elected: Presâ€", Miss Emma Steckle; Vice Pres. Chas. Wanner; Sec. Miss Marie Warâ€" ner; Critic, Mr. Wiiliam Orr; â€"Editor, Kir.â€"John Steckle. The next meeting will be heid Oct. 12th.â€" Mr. . Allea Israe! has lately purchased a . new traction gasoline engine and intends to start silo filling in the near . fuâ€" ture. Detro‘ t.â€"* from Toron brother Wil Berlin . and Pottsville, Penu., Sept. 19.â€"A te legram. from the Department of Comâ€" merce and. Labot, wm?:;m, gives the assurahce that the United States Governmest intends to at once ,begin wuu of the reasons of the of anthracite coal in New Y Personals.â€"At U. 8. GOVERNMENT Ad Ad écription #1 WILLIAMSBURG ces printing Bagish » I New England Eesn & Sons, Ltd Publishers BLOOMINGDALE DOON Jt WILL 1NYESTIGATE #\ .L. W. . Moyer~ . < 0. is spend‘ng a month i States subscrib lishod . Jn sespops3, 10 yA 1 t s My joxrney. was M " olis oad cÂ¥â€" ;:4 33 %ï¬ z/) V iet * i " uurll V V-fln line of C. l Portiand a x tle, â€" line and each p‘! tioned Yor) a O mmï¬â€˜a&m crop : .. pro# pects, but .chi y in ‘ connection. will the bus ness of the Dowiron Life In surance Company. en C As to crop conciiions, your read ers will have from the leading daily papers more réLalle, tecause /. mork recent intelligence than I canâ€"> yive rom» personalâ€" observation, so thet 1 need not say . much on this subject I may say however, that 1 mnever saw the western crop as & whole look better than it did : this . y°at. in August had been a Httle drier and a"Â¥i#ila _ warmer. the West ~ would a little warmer, the West would have ‘garnered the preat>st crop â€" at its histary. As iÂ¥ is tie crop is a zoodoï¬.ndthoudxmmulub damaged or even lost by wet . and cold weather, the genal result . is good enough to give great tuUS# for thankfulness both im tre West where everything . almo=t depends upon tnt crop and in the East as well, where the différence between financial . ce: pression: and buoyant expansion is conditional more on the Western harâ€" vest than . on any other single cl¢â€" ment of presperitr Felore lsav ng, uc crop questlon let. we add that .n addigion to the weaâ€" ther conditions and the final gatherâ€" ing in of the ctop the . subjechâ€" ‘of most vital interest to the ln‘znnx diâ€" rectly" and to everybody elss rectâ€" ly, is the marketing of it. Since the vots of Ontario lest _ yCar, shut off the outlet to the south, tre farmer lying East and West to get his crop to the one market left Lim, and do their utmosd «s theÂ¥y . likeiy wi, the railway simply cannot cafry one season‘s western crop to the EaSstern seaboard before . the next season‘s is : upon them. And ‘@lmost vithout exception the farmers of the . west want reciprocity." . Their disappointâ€" ment is keen, even bitter, and Party allegiance does not count for so miich as it »used to do. _ A Tarmâ€"r who finds himself possessed ol a few hunâ€" dred or even thousand â€" bushels of wheat exposed to the spring Tains and rotting in his field is not o. be blamed if he feels pretty sore at the electors of .Ontario who siammed the door of his nearest market in his face. Even a good old; Conservative farmer in that plightJs apt to feel |his party ties loosene@ a bit. . But a truce to politics. The ~most lasting impression a ~visitor receives in regard to this country is of _ its vastness. It is indescribably Lig. It is incomprehensibly tig. (Youâ€"can put the size of it in figures pagsily enough. The great plain of the North Weuz‘ is â€" approximately 900 miles~ from: Winnipeg to the mountains and â€"> in the western end wheat will grow and ripen from the U.S. boundary to â€"a point _ somewhere about 700 â€" miles Iml;hc morth. And the fa :ther north it ripens the better the quality. Bu: now that I have the figurés down, can the reader imagine tho real magâ€" nitude of this vast region. I _ have |Been over the length of it . ssveral times and about hall way acfcss it more than once, but I cannot imagâ€" ine it yet. ‘ | The next impgession I got was the astounding growth of the chief citâ€" |iel of this region.‘ Some of the small places are growing nicely, some are not, and probably will not, but the larger â€" places, Winnipeg,; â€" Regina, Moose ,Jaw, Saskatoon, Prince {Al bert, Edmonton, . Calgary, Vancow Â¥er and Victoria are growing at ‘: rate that fairly takes one‘s LrsÂ¥ â€"away. _ Think _ ofâ€" a comparatively small city like Edmonton adding to its population in one year the equiâ€" valont ol a city like Berlin, with al that that : addition implies in â€" the â€" way of ~strects, schools, churckes, wat‘t, sewer, selectric lighting, ete. Building operatiors are be‘ing rushed ‘ with feverish . haste, public ments of : â€" all. gotts are :% e;er, where and bundreds> ir. Thos. " Hilliard Writes 1 terestingly. Concerning His , Petent THip â€" > irs lfving in tents because ‘hotuses camnot be rented for love or money. What 1 have just satd of Edmonton may be o&jlfll with small vartation toâ€" the citics mentioned . on Uncie Sam‘s sitze of the line, and &T‘:’? (‘u.fl: side in ;s:ec' e itions "ty: i mx{,'ï¬-m What alout: the‘ rsal cstate, boon.? Well, it is on sufe gnough, cast erners who think â€"of: inv in : lots would â€"do woll to y caw tious. Above all things ~ clear of the subdivision artist and is nice lithograph mars. .People in the ¢2st ghould not touch ~western property except on the advice of. reliable wes t im men. Fortuncs have teen made there, many of them, but they hay( teen made, as a rule, by men on the ground; Values quoted in the cit‘es scom to me to have raached the lim it or even teyond, but I .. may . bt mistaken on that point. I!f s>, | have good company including . many westorn en themsclves, noverth. loss. theta are good â€" opportumitles sbll. ’!l( oF THE WESI 103 i5 th th M oo Plocbs lea Do tJ turn via th { CP.R.: to #topped . over m Watetlo« ebce by Wi D4 way 4 sat In DT the Vid .00 To: at OF D& NA W Droongira rm:;f:f.ï¬'.' s "myfloz’se;olï¬â€˜ M::il‘m ELCO 94 Bociety ‘WEK_LG.4 LOKS 90 .. Uay and Friday, 12th cnd lith ] and was: one of the most -uB in the history ‘of â€"the organifationy‘ the rh receipts being in ‘cxécts of. any thing ~ hitherto â€" report=d. . The chiel drawing ~card for which ‘the soâ€" cle:.yhu much "indebted to the HMonâ€" or Adam Beck who was‘ ‘ on the mwn the .nm of Hydro Energy to â€"farm and ‘householid ~machinery. The ex= hibit embraced grain threshing, milke ing, churning,‘ washing andâ€" coopering all in active operation and was 00B« stant‘y _ svrrounded ‘by a Witge and intero®ed crowd. The other ethivits were such as are fotmally seen â€" at Fairs. Following is the pâ€"icelist ~ Jutzi ~1 year old coltâ€"W. J. Beott, J. W 7Zimmerman. 8 year Filly or Gelding=â€"C: Jutzi, Robert Woods, C. Meagdows. _ _â€" _ Brood mareâ€"J. M. ShantZ, A Fried, John Lotz. Foalâ€"John Lotz, A. Fried, Jas M. Shantz. 4j f 2 year old filly or geldingâ€"R. Nur nr, Aug. Becker, James Monaghan. year old coltâ€" C:. ~Blair, d Wettlaufer, James Monaghan. â€" _1 year old coltâ€"C. Meadows, J Wettlauter, J. E. Schaefer. Brood mareâ€"Jac. S. Webtlaufer, J; Baker, Jac. S.â€"Wettlaufer. s Foalâ€"J. Baker,‘ Geo. Risk, J.â€"S. Wettlaufer. 8 year old filly: or geldingâ€" SAmuel Cassel, J. K. Wagner. s R. Murray 3 year old filly or geldingâ€"W. Linâ€" gelbach, A. Heipel. 2 year old filly or geldingâ€". Bert Ratz, Geo. Zinn, H. Lotz. â€" 1 vear old coltâ€"Aug: Milbrandt, S. â€"Foalâ€"Aug. Milbrandt, R. Murray J T. Otto. poe: 1 year old coltâ€"At Wettlauler, A. Heipe! :Broodmareâ€"Aug. Milbrandt,. K. S McLaren, 1. ucc'&m. j _ Foalsâ€"K. S. McLaren, Aug, _ Mil Wrandt, H. Lots:. _ t ;.‘ "!‘ 3 year old filly or geldingâ€" Geo. Zinn,, Ends Christiemn, Ketrt {;‘““ 2 year old filly or geldingâ€"E.Mantz Ketr Brog:, ‘I. McOutcheon. ~~ . 1 year old colt=Geo: Clarke, _. J. Wettlaufer, Jac. M. Shantz. shoy . AripAaine mam: N the Canadian <side elsowhers : at very ~station._along . the Nine, .. there was. at least . some.building. A6tarily {on, and ~frequently. a @orsiderâ€" %MM.» The darge on the :. side: did show signg -'m: «progress, to a" sa , gre~, But. som shetn app ta be making m% that u{tï¬lfl wr lerzo centres â€" But the ?flc villires ‘over> the border aprear afroâ€" Agricultural â€"teamsâ€"â€"$ .D. M. Innes. General purpose icam Brood maresâ€"1 Robt. Wood. Foalsâ€"Robert Wood, Geo. Péat. 3 year Filly or Geldlls.:. 8. _R Brood mareâ€"A. Stoltz, J. T. Otto, The Messrs. Fred Holw«1. and Samuel Cassel and Pres. Respectively Of* the Wilmot Agricultural Society Carriage Horses Heavy Draught. (General Purpose arntal Agricultural ZMI{;‘]&MH“.- the plums over the ps Roadster J. M. Shantz, A AGRICULTURAL SOCH eamsâ€"B, F. Ken i exbtbi AM&? ) on / ‘Thy â€"J. E. Scha Schran Ur Lady riders=â€"8. J. Miller, G, Hek â€.l. 4 xC FTh 0s .Eut teamsâ€"Ph, lhvll. Jag. son, "J. H. , J. W. Zimmerman, Single a-‘-‘l Rennie, â€" A. Pingman, Bert Rate. > : Express ‘horses...W. H.â€" Lingelbach, J.â€"Schaefer. f + Saddle Horsesâ€"Dr. Gillisple, S. J. Miller,: Enos Christnet. 34 Lady driversâ€"J . W. ~ © Stiefelmeyer, S.â€".J . Miller; J W. Zimmerman. ‘ . Bingle Poniesâ€"â€"J. Kenyon, Gentieman‘s : turnoutâ€"J. Petch Fast "driverâ€"R. W. â€" Anderson, Anderson, 3. J. ‘Miller. Grade® Cattleâ€"2 year old heiferâ€" Kerr Bros., Kerr Brtos. Heifer callâ€"Kerr Bros. * Best pair butchers‘ cattleâ€"â€"Kerr Bros., 8. Cassel. eR Leicestershirb Sheepâ€" ‘Aged ‘ram â€"â€" D. H. Kelley, A. Thompson. Shearling ramâ€"D.~H. Kelléy. Ram lambâ€"A. Thompson, < D. H. Kelley:â€" > iA Pair aged ewesâ€"A. Thompson,: A. Thompson. 8e _e Pair shearling ewesâ€"A. Thompson. +Pairâ€"ewe lambsâ€"1 and 2; A. Thomâ€" â€" Pair shearling ewesâ€"A. Thompson. Pait ewe lambsâ€"A. Thompson, A Thompson. ~ > C o â€" Oxford or Shrop Sheepâ€"Aged rams â€"â€"J. Monaghan, F. M. Wilhélm. «_ Ram lambsâ€"Jas.. Monaghan, J.. M Wilheim . 4 Pair â€" aged ewesâ€" 1~ and â€"2,~ Jas Monaghan. Â¥ Pair shearling ewesâ€"J.© Wilhelm Jas: Monaghan. y *A ~Pair ewe lambsâ€"J. Wilhelm, ~Jas n, P ,â€" K. Weber Carriege teams napp ; Roadster teams lhm;hire Sheepâ€"Shbearling â€"ramsâ€" D. H. Kelley. Ram Lambsâ€"1 and 2, D. H; Kelley. Pait aged ewesâ€"D; H. Kelley. _ . Pair shearling ewesâ€"D. H. Kelley. Pair ewe lainbsâ€"D. H. Kelley. ‘, Fat Sheepâ€"2 fat shearling wethâ€" 1â€"D. H. Kelley. 4 2 fat ewesâ€"A. Thompson, D. H. Kelley. * Yorkshire sow, . 1912â€"J. M.. <Wile helm, A. Heipel. esyik. Tainworth sowâ€"1 and 3, â€" Rudy L. Roth. â€"~Tamworth boar, 19121 and . ~ 3, Rudy L. Roth. Tamworth sow, 1912â€"1 and 2, Rudy L. Roth. Pair bacon hqgs (any: breed)â€" Rudy Roth.: â€"~ it ies 5B4 phied it ~ not actually going . 4ackâ€" ward, and that even where the agriâ€" cultural conditions ‘appeared _ Tairly good. ra e it T My conclcsion was that Canada js the tettcr" plate of the two and many thovsands, of Uncle Sam‘s test fatmirs, I~find, have come to. the same conclusion. So the trek northâ€" wird cantinucs, and with good . and gulficient reason. . â€" 4 CAg sSTRUCK MARKET WAGON pl Berkshire sowâ€"D. H. Kelley, Berkshire sow, 1912â€"D. H.. Kelléy. Yorkshire â€"sowâ€"A, Heipel. Yorkshire boar, 1912â€"A. Heipel, J . Wilheilm. . inSKi, A W a Conestogo market gardenâ€" ntaining ‘many beskets _ of was strtck by street car No: charge of mototman Korhler wtuctor : Fivnn, â€" at the corner teamsâ€"J. Petsch CATTLE. sow, . 1912â€"J. ‘M. ~Wil SHEEP to one ol the passengits, | . _ Searcely & week pammos but Douglas‘ SWINE THOS: HILLIARN ned by Fred â€" Ket King str 6 trvc Bert om the had als iling m' 114 . 118000 + at work, toâ€" f, & & ~nlï¬d to a ‘ y flnlwmhuw-. «is tï¬ ts mm.gu_w?kmï¬h ; act ‘details. ‘Mrs.‘ Will lett the with ber son and was standing at gate near the street, Will came out to ‘the porch on the side of the house and nborht down with a ghotâ€"gun. She dropped to the ground and died almost instautly. The ‘gun was loadâ€" ¢d with buckshot and ~ the . charge btruck the wile" in the face, riddling it. Will then went upstairs and in a tew minutes the crowd that gathered about was surpriged to hear anotber shot. ‘When© the â€""police: arrived ; they found Will‘s dead body â€" in the _ bedâ€" room. He had used the same . weapon is one of the most cruel maladies o which mankind is subject, the many complications . arising. from time to time, making life seem almost _ unâ€" bearable. For many diseases medi¢al, frigs hss Peportmiess. Qifast fom years &" m has achieved remarkable results, but up to now litâ€" Aln has been‘ discovered of . practical: vailue in the treatment© and cure . of Diabetes. In fact, ‘people have â€"| to look upon the disease as well ‘nigh incurable.â€" Even in the modical . proâ€" fession can ‘be found doctors who are of the saure opinion, regarding scepâ€" tically any claim to ameliorate . or improve the conditions of ‘a diabetic patient. It can, however, be proved that ‘"Sanol‘s Abtiâ€"diabetes,‘",â€" ‘ the new German discovery, cures all cases ol diabetes. â€" Full particulars _ and booklet free from the Sanol Mig. Co., Winnipeg, Man. . Personals.â€" Mrs. A. C. Bowman called at the bome of Mr, A. Swartz last week.â€"Miss Stella . Witmer and Miss Clara Weber visited friends neat St. Jacobs on Sunday.â€"We ate glad to report that Miss Marion Lichty is improving slowly at the Berlin °& Waterloo hospital.â€"Mr. Alvin . . Desâ€" sler of Berlin visited. at. Mr. ‘A. Swarte‘s last week.â€" Mrs.. W. â€"B. Shantz and son Ward of Williamsburgâ€" visited at the home of Mr. I.._ Witâ€" ; mers â€" on Thursday.â€" Mr. dud Mrs. Mike Detzler and children ‘â€" visited |mnd| at Betlin last Sunday.~ Mrs, | John Staht of Kent Co., Mich. visitâ€" ed Mrs. A. Swarts last week.â€" Miss Shoemaker of Berlin visited at _ the home of her brother, _ Mr... Irvine ‘Shoemaker, <dast week.â€" Mr. . Dan: ISylrh of Blair spent Sunday . with Mr. and Mrs. A.â€" Swartz.â€" Wedding Bells are ringing. Stolen Horses Brought Home.â€"Last Friday © Messrs. Irvine _ Shoemaker : and Ephraim Hillgartner . brought back their horses which zre stolen {from their â€" stables About two years :&M which they had not heard of f I{. Shoemaker heard a reâ€" port that a hborse answering the deâ€" scription of his lost one . had .“J yeen, and intvostigation proved it ~ | be his horse, which also resulted in the Anding of Mr. Hillgartnet‘s Forse. Mamilton; > Sopt. ‘18.«â€"W. "G. _ Will, aooniat, s ine Thiclecuth ‘Rovel The new German discovery will poâ€" sitively remove gall stones, kidney stones, gravel inâ€"the bladder, ‘and will effect a complete cure. It will "disâ€" solve ‘the stomes and remove â€" without pain, ‘and there is no necessity for an operation in the fufure, ‘as ~ Sanol will ~cure ‘in every case, no matter how long ‘standing the disease may Sanol ~will be â€" found particulatly valuable in old cases of kidney _ and bladder trouble, lumbago, uric acid diathesis. Sanol is a preparatioh of herbs and extracts fromâ€"plants, and contains no poisonous â€" ingredients. Its use, therefore, cannot possibly harm eithâ€" er the stomach or the intestines. Sanol‘s Booklet free from the SAâ€" SANOL ‘NMFG, 08. Winnlp.%.i:leu Pr ice.$1.50, frcrmh Druggists or t THE WARTS DISAPPEARED *J was greatly annoyed w ;.r.:,:f':..;:r’...'*u..‘.':m y et hn remedy "3 frc R home A‘ w DIABETES M Lixt the NINE PINES cOMMITS SUILCIDE M ic shot, S AVINGS BANK DEPARTMEN T Waterloo, Ont. Branoh, WATERLOO MUTUAL Read the Ads: in the Cnroulc le Telegr::; and Save M We respectfully_soli6} "‘l: Agree b:’yw pl:-.: m t guaranteed. Priox® No,. 49. _wngago Life ,Mfllfl."%moo.“ Unsurpassed for residential education. The -u..lc.ugrl-;ki:vhhhhâ€"u m training work. mlg%.oflm needs WA u%u‘-; The 'é's:an ':I.u Bt. :-0. Berim Bd mt e on on es c A.tal ® s % y (5000 7 ie es .. ~ = â€"~ +. ~ «. ! ‘Beenact / whon Deposits â€" â€" = 23,677,7 30 * 35,04 Loans and Investments % 27,457,090 / 38,8 Total Assets= _ â€" _ â€" s 33,090,192â€" _‘ 484 i ard a a Htas 8 Branches in Cnadon dA Pus w oud , o 0 A amnuRAL BaNKING BUSINBSS TRANSAOTBD, FIRE INSURANCE.CO. w Incorporated in 1863 Tota: Assets 31st December, y $750,000 00 .. BUARD;OF DILRECTORS Dr. J. H.. Webb, Eq. W Miam Suider, E«q.â€" ; Ge:. Diebel B g. 0 _ ~_. _ J. L.: W ideman,â€" Eeq., St. Jacobs, Allan.Bowman, Eâ€"q , Preston, A1. 0O RICEEY l w Ece P. E. Shants, Peeston, 7 homas Gowdy, &%G% James Ufl?w-e. ds en Frank Haight, Eeq. See us tor t ucumbers, new,-‘c.lbhtï¬ â€˜Onions, Lettuce and Rodishes and Fresh Fruits in. Seaâ€" 90 King St. E. Win. Snid»r, . P: esident. JAl g:;pidnl Viceâ€"President, . U Arsmkum""'n{ floe. . _ s ur ter, cLOr, J. C. Haight, sm Fan . A. SOERM. Distriot Agent, Fancy ~WATERLO ®, ONT. [ m'ww Ahbbabkababdb44+44 be 66 00 v000 00000 OCECOEAES ECARE CCC BV 2 7 wessteEms .. {""} 4 ;d&:re“ gl;l;( two colo'rs;:ng the Mmm W. McNeill, Contracting Co. Roum 4, Glick Block, Borlin, Ont > General Contractors Chronitle To oRranl Dictionary Coupon .‘!"&' "4 hed® out the â€" oo Boem tnt ht etiieen caioh th eaprane Secsd aneie e ie i ie s on thuts Two Mabk THE MOLSONS BANK _ E‘-J)loyer'l Association of ateripo County. # Erse Labor Bursau at wll Branches â€" Interest allowed at Mg!:utcunwtnï¬:- DIETRICH‘S GROCERY Large campus, inspiring environâ€" RECORY OF PROCRESS FOR FIVE YEARSâ€"1906â€"1911 enz _ This Dictiocary is NOT ; uj]il ; 1 pub * you 4 .l :nlï¬meont::}s od.: deuti&e‘dy d[uvher‘:‘ £ 8 ubie beautifully | illpstra umerous subjécts by monotons 10 P OFFICERS oupons of Consecutive dates constituie®. hok e ds ce > 2008 = 0 +. o0 0. BE M % % _ $ 3,000,000 :: .. $.4,000,00 = # & .3,2:?â€9 _ 4,000,000 + â€" 23,677.7 30. "~~~‘ 35.042,31 feats > rmasnoge : 38,854801 * +. ~!_ 44000192 _ . ada30a0% in Canada, ard Agents and Correspondent in all \â€" o Aroacicel Citige t the Workd. on .202 for l Incsorporated 1855 TNustration is the ai and Vegetables sday Sept. 26th M Jacob Hespelor, Managet | No Wéak Spots Sanderson‘s â€" Bakery In a.] countries. . Ask. for. h ventor‘s Ad\iser. Maxion & M. 364 University Street, corner erine Street, Montrenl, and Washineton, D. Ca. TD 8..A; Ee Dominion : Life . is only one of the reasons its orear mesurte To PobE A AL _ RESULTS TO OYHOLDERS. % ~_â€" _ ~King 8t. Waterigo®~ . _ Fancy Buns, Bread Rolls, and nev. Cakes. 5) The Light Death Rate of the Berlin, Ont VCA as ykans> EXPERIENC E $ €