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Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 2 Jul 1896, p. 7

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142 Mh&qu‘myphhirmd sby amiles, came for with a moreel af a baby in her arms. Say, Dickie, did you ever see a prettier creature © *Never,‘ sasd the Canary, in â€"a soft chirp, do&ha eyes peacebully. ‘I can see her now, Peter,‘ floufln-igr“hn-pp«.ud she as a plain plenteous meal, ‘a’::&u Montimer coaxed her, l Autter and dimples, to alow hist to n':;d a night‘s sheiter. _A charming ittle goldenâ€"haired girl was eycing us, bouche beyant on the doorstep, a fat litâ€" A faint curiosity stirred the loungâ€" ving group. Peter was not an inveterâ€" â€"ate story teller, though his experiences had been many and varied, and we fancied there would be an episode realâ€" ‘ly worth bearing about, were he moved for the girls to cry over. We were in <clover among ‘em, and began to feel as if we owned the Pineries and large tracts of the adjacent Union, when we were called down as follows : ‘One sultry eveniog we wheeled up to the nearest door yard of the prettiest flohoye;zb meet us across the rag carpet of livingâ€"room, and a very Greuze A s mother, all aoft eyes and Peter was glancing over the daily paper, from which one of us had been «reading lutrowint details of the Minâ€" mnesota fires, and he presently said softâ€" ‘Iy, ‘Poor beggars! I how how they wheeling through the pineries for a vaâ€" <ation trip. Ҥe bad a firstâ€"class time; people fed us, housed us, and listened to our yarns. Dickie did the Tommy Tucker act, always giving a comic song for the old folks to laugh at, ond after supper some vile sentimental ditties ‘It was three years ago, more or less,‘ began Peter, ignoring our remarks,‘that Dickie and Ted Montimer and [ went "Tell ‘em about it, old man.‘ he said. *I believe they‘d be interested.‘ The camping party moved uneasily. ‘Is it long T asked Barebones. ‘Is it true? enquired the Parson. ‘Make it a brandâ€"newâ€"yaro, Petie,‘ said I suggestively. The rest of us remained disgreetly silent ; (in a storyâ€"book we should have clamored for an explanation, but one doesn‘t so tempt fate in real life.) _ Dickie turned his blond head on its cushion of rugs and pine boughs. *No, nor yours,‘ said old Peter, beâ€" tween puffs, as he settled back in his lounging chair, with ‘Mrs. Feter,‘ as his favorite brierâ€"root was known to the boys, tucked “‘nto the hollow of his great, brown band. Bay, Dickie, we‘ll never forget it ? *No,‘ said the Canary, with a long breath, ‘I guess not.‘ $ ‘Talking of bush fires,‘ said Peter, pausing with &ipe raised for a fresh lightâ€"up, remind@s me of an experience I once had,‘ and as he spoke he dropâ€" ped the match and bastily popped & burnt finger into his mouth. ‘One thing at a time, Peter,‘ admonâ€" ished Dickie, a tenor whose yellow curls and liquid tones had earned him the sobriquet of the Canary. ‘No need to quicken your recollection of the bush fire by scorching your fingers.‘ @8â€"inch Ginghams, regular 10¢. yard for Tac. gaâ€"inch Ginghams, regular 20c. yard for 124c. 36â€"inch American Percale Prints, regular 124c. a yard for Tc. Will be pleased to send you samples on request. 1 the |» iess of our patterns and ‘| â€" »dness of the goods ; and it ~tanus to reason we.cant serve you best with our big buyâ€" ing facilities and selecting from the makers direct. this month are in big demand. We never had so much that‘s nice and good to sell, and will warrant you‘ll get a better selecâ€" tion of choicer patterns and a considerable money saving in ordering through our Mail Order Department. Good words come to us frown all along the line on the ;» iess of our patterns and ‘| . »dness of the goods ; and it ~tanus to reason we .cant Wash > Fabrics A}VlPâ€"- T IRE I ARN. BY GRACE E. DENISON SPECIALS. df"-yuoeufloo'-thnq. "We | is another story.‘ Let it alone ! can take the young ones,‘ semarked Dickiec. ‘Qive us those reins, old felâ€" low. Now you take the girl, Peter ; Tore Mis Flosb in Agomy. put her tootsics in your jacket pocketa, | ‘I uw-fiuhfi her arms saround our neck, and T‘ll piles for 20 years ; was unsbie to buckle her fast to you with this rein.|and tore fesh in agooy. Unkted Now, there you are. ‘l‘d.uhthom.lznhmmu boy.‘ And in leas time than it takes | relione Chaeae‘s Ointment was a God uuuummwm:.-id-.( l-o‘.huh-':‘-h” ing alowly stong coud imadâ€" and am 10 eavery doy/ s ‘4.7& m "‘:‘.o"‘ 'uua-. fl sghant up the rear, ecrema, teem horee, on which m:fiM‘”“ f _ ‘What ! and leave the little woman and the babies T cried Dickie, bouncing past me and hauling out his wheel. ‘Don‘t you see,» Peter, old man, they may be burned in their beds.‘ ‘I sew, and we all wheeled back : ‘There was a slope of straggling grass, burnt into long brown wisps by weeks of drought, a tiny grove of EIII- es halfâ€"hiding it from the road, and & few yards away were dozens of pine branches which some farmer had cut and left where they fell We had soon stripped a pile of the fragrant twigs and arraoged them for our beds in the fashion learned from the woodâ€" wen, and efter stacking the wheels in sheiter of the bushes and finishiog our smoke, we stretched ourselves over our rugs and were soon executing & trio that would have racked with envy any kazoo band in Americs. "Ted awoke first, in the gray dawnâ€" ing, and rt;l.l:d us both down the bank bé;xe we our eyes . _ *Boys,‘ he shouted excitediy, ‘::‘;o. emell anything ? ‘Bmoke,‘ said Dickie, yawnâ€" ing. ‘Anything else, Ted? _ For Ted was out on the road peering back alon, the way which he had come. ‘Boy-.f do believe the woods are burning away off there,‘ he cried. ‘Come out of that and let‘s wheel back to see‘ ‘I questioned this idea Better get on, old man ; these bush fires burn iz 4 o 44 ‘Dickie was also in favor of a night in the open ; we bad light waterproof rugs on each bandleâ€"bar, and so we wheeled away from the inbospitable giant and within a mile or so found the very nook we wanted. _ _ ‘Let‘s go on and find a nice corner and sleep out toâ€"night,‘ said Ted. It‘s as dry as Sabara, there‘s nothing to hurt us, and these piney woods smell like a sleeping draught.‘ ‘We thought of the little mother and checked the laughing retort ; no need to .caution us about matches ; bush fires had errors for us all, and our Vesuvians were always black before we let go of them. ‘Git on off my place,‘ he shouted. Don‘t you go pitchin‘ lit matches ‘rourd here neither. We ain‘t achin‘ for no bushâ€"fires.‘ ‘He had also stowed away three enorâ€" mous suppers, and felt as lazy and loth to move as you cartimagine. I wanted & piney buok and a quiet pipe, with eight nours‘ sleep to follow. Dickie preferred tranquil repose to the wealth ot Crogsus, but Ted wanted no#bing more than the giant, a ring, and a fight to a finish. Ted was always either scrapping or sketching ; I don‘t know haw he‘s making out up aloft. He bas neither diversion there, so they tell me. We balted on the roadside for discusâ€" sion apd a lightup, while the giant watched us from the gateway. ‘Ted could draw when he had a model worth it, and his pencil danced over thp page until an interruption came to this idyl, and a heavy footfall on the broad path was followed by a shadow thrown across the door. It was the shydow of a young giant, who stood and lopked at the artist in frownâ€" ing silence. We all stood up, while the (Freuze mother intsoduced us with some hesitation as cycliits who wished a night‘s lodging. We realized in ten seconds that we should not get it, even before the giant vouchsafed his reply. ‘I don‘t keep no hotel, and don‘t want fellers loafing ‘round here when I‘m away. You‘se better all get a move on, {or it‘s all of ten miles to the nighâ€" est tavern.‘ ‘Ted‘s brows were knit in an ugly scow!l, and as we wheeted away he utâ€" tered a word which exactly matched his facial expression. _ ‘Never mind,‘ said Dickie consoling ly, ‘you got some good sketches.‘ ‘We shuffled out rather confusedly, for the tongiof the eya of the giant were not friendly. Ted turned detiantly to the little mother, ‘We all thank you for your kinduess,‘ he said as he passed her, leaving his sketchâ€"book on the table in his annoyance ; and we quitted her presence with no further remark, mounting our wheels and riding solemnâ€" ly out through the rustic gateway. that elfâ€"lock of %- picturer of the sweet litsle who posed and. amiled and looked idealized mater nity enough to make one feel like say ing a prayer to her | ‘Dear old Ted! How his Tore Miks Plosh in Agony T mw-fiuhfi J mm o7 Tt t vpey ns tore A m.-‘z-&.m failed to vclione. Chase‘s Ointment was a GQod send. I am a botter man then in 20 *No, Peter haen‘t told you how he .u&o-:.’o&.l& nor how we stood godfather n how old Tedâ€"‘ mer, P Peter held4 up Mru. Poter in a ples hDido. saaid dowly * f son, hbe ‘Mznm aaid, ‘Thet is another story.‘ Let it alone!‘ _ A dip in the lake and a good breakâ€" fast soon put us in trim for the road ; when we were ready to start the young farmer same forward. ‘You folks treatâ€" ed me white this day,‘ he said heartily. ‘I‘m majh sorry I acted so mean to you. You was what set me up,‘ he sdded boarsely, turning to Ted. ‘Here‘s yer picture book ! I‘d as Mc NL fiun.udqyo-md life,‘ and drew from his belt Ted‘s little sketchâ€"book. Ted took it silently and held o.ti.h:.hu‘. which ,tbc giant * 4 on T4 4 stout S6 ot m m ‘I‘d like to put a bullet through you,‘ said Dickie viciously ; but Ted, after » glence st us, laid tL-n his small boy and strode back into the smoke whence we heard shouting of those that were left behind. a "There they come !‘ cried Dickie & fully as the two men staggered view, bearing between them the limp form of the little mother. We dropped the babies and helped them to a breathing place, and you never saw five such gri.y#-nqfin‘ndr eyed sights as we were, hen we got our bn::lth farmer led ‘:d to the nearest shelter, where the people wondered and sympathized to their hearts‘ content with our sorryâ€"looking ‘Buddenly the light grew stronger, a faint taste of fresh air was in my nosâ€" trils, I heard Dickie‘s glad shout, ‘Are you there, Ted? and Ted‘s hoarse answer, ‘All safe, and we all came wheeling over one another in & bunch, down the slope and on::fon the beech. Ted carefully dismounted and unstrapâ€" ped his little burden. ‘The boy‘s head hung lifeless, but he soon revived ; the little maid began to whimper, and sudâ€" denly from the smoke the farm borse dashed out, riderless, its nostrils dilated with terror» Once I tried to snatch them away, then a rush of recollection came over me and I groaned & little prayer for her, for myself and for the other boys. ‘We had to watch our way pretty closely though morning had ‘fairly brokâ€" en, for a baze seemed to be settling over the heavens and a choking taste was in the breeze. The little maid gripped my neck ; I declare I seein to feel her little fingers this moment. The road was rutty, and once in & hollow one had to stay there, with pedals striking the. ridge on one‘s heart aâ€" thump, for fear of a fall, until a chance came to escape to the grassy side tracks. Keep your mouth shut, growled Ted decidedly, and his advice was exactly to the point. I hope I shall never be called upon to repeat the next two miles‘ ride ! _ ‘Once or twice a hot breath came through the smoke and made us chill with dread. Dickie was out of sight of Ted, and Ted seemed far away from me. I felt horribly deserted and the maid‘s hands maddened me. ‘The smoke caught up to us, hung over us, and, passing us, did its wicked best to suffocate and blind us. We rode slowly now, thinking fearfully of the little mother and the young giant away down the road, shut from our view by a dense veil of smoke. We strugglea along, and out of unseen rute, perspirâ€" ing, breathing in groans forgetting our precious burdeus, oblivious? to everyâ€" thing but the gray smoke shutting out the sunrise, and the yellow flanves dancâ€" ing through the pine needles and lapâ€" ping around the resinous trunks, ‘Can‘t yougo a little quicker? It‘s gaining on us, and there‘s a taste of wind getting up.‘ _ _ _ ‘Make a pace, Dickie,‘ T cried, «hd away he sped and we after him, leayâ€" ing the nag and the farmer trotting a long way astero. ‘The air was stifliing and the smoke was certainly gaining on us.‘ ‘It seems a long ten miles,‘ said Dickie with a gasp and a cough. _ swimming in tears One ides was in all our minds as we carefully wheeled glong with our burdensâ€"the lake, the wide beach and safety, ten miles away from us ; behind ul.Luloko,.ndnnl- ly creeping closer and settling down on the narrow roamdway. Presently the baby began to fret and Dickie piged it a tuoe, a regular rockâ€"aâ€"byâ€"baby. You‘d wonder where he ever came by it, but I‘ll be hanged if that bsb‘{vdidn’t stop crying to listen to him. hea be had made quite a distance he called to me in a hoarse whisper : |_ MOGDB PELLA are the farerite family snthâ€" artic, ouy io take eaay to op wate, & riy and in o o rei l «d. Pure blood is their proper food, and pare Upen pure, rich blood and you need not fear ‘ Aouhhmvug-muxhu w“m“ whgmum-uww. ; ."“‘:'w“l E edge in general, and French in partion driver was very . "What lar. Bhe sought and obtained an interâ€" “hk‘“m‘flnwr """“““",.."“"“"“‘:‘*':_‘: "I am Bearon Rothchild," excle aoid a friend, to was 4s ed 1 O, well, she anew wasan‘ the just wore her nom de plume !On anoth z“ "aal dout wauk 1o e or occesion, when she had been resmies oR What I want is gour £ yoneg womee taid â€" Walt, nally, 4 | ""Tos banker was to grost hanta, #| Pn ns moisioill dB | win . ant ts m ho mtc ness and death in the house, and wice |**** "W7® 0 the change" An is the secrotâ€"The magic word now ! Make sure, however, that what is to be done ought to be done. ‘Never pat off dfimvfiummbhfl" is a good proverb, don‘t do what you may regret.â€"Merchant Bentinel, can bring it into line. You may oy:t:nhn seen tae anecdote of the mnvhovn:;ohlwhh:m- plished so m in life, ‘My father m;h-o,' was the reply, ‘-h-' I b Vuytfln.to_‘a,.oud’doit."l\-o people contrire to make of a dey ; it i# as if they picked up the moments which the gawdiers lost. And if you ever find yourself where you have uo many things pressing upon you that you hbardly know where to begin, let me tell you a secret ; Tuake hold of the nqfimtbu‘thuu-&bd.nd you will ind the restipall fnto file and follow after, likes company of well drilled soldiers, and though work may be hard to meet where it charges in a equed, it is easily vanquished if Don‘t be & single bhour of your life without doing exactly what is to be done in it, and going straight through study, whatever it is, take hold at once, and finish it up squarely ; then to the next thing, without letting «ny moâ€" ments drop between. It is wonderfal to see how many hours these prompt _ ‘For many years I bave been a sufâ€" ferer from liver troubles, and have doeâ€" tored with several pbysicians, but only found relief for a very short tims. My bhusband advised me to try your Paine‘s Celery Comaound. I did so, and found so much relief from the first bottle that I continued, and I am now using the third bottle. Your Compound has done more for me than any p{;“sicin For months before using the Compound 1 never had one night of sound sleep ; but now I can go to bed and slcep soundly and naturally, and feellike a new creature in the morning.‘ done in it, and going l!l’lvi$t through it from ho‘innhf to end. Work, play, studlu whatavorlt is tabe hold aF nane The liver is the great housekeeper of ‘our health, On its right and proper action depends our enjoyment of life. Read this letter written by Mrs. George Durant, of Elms, Oot, No stronger proof can be given of the virtues and powers of Paine‘s Celery Compound in the cnie of liver troubles: One of the simplest indications of a disordered and diséised liver is a nasty tongueâ€"furred and coated. The coatâ€" ed tongue is proof positive that your liver is not working well. Other sympâ€" tows are as follows : nauseous taste in the mouth, pains under the shoulder blades, and in the reign of the kidneys. The mental symptoms of the liver trouble are often far worse than the bodily ills. Bufferers _ experience meotal anguisb, gloomy forehodings, melancholy, and a general feeling of disgust with life. When those bodily and mental troubles are experienced‘ your liver tells you it wants help. If help is not given at once, sickness and death must result. Thousands have found Paine‘s Oclery Compound & sure and certain cure for liver dissase. It always acts promptly on thegreat nervous system and restores that healthy and natural action that the liver must have at all times, Paine‘s Celery Compound drives from the sysâ€" tem all the poisons that have accumuâ€" lated, and the sick one regains his oldâ€" time vim and energy ; the muscles and tissues are made hard, and firm,the skin clear, and fresh, so that perfest health is the result. Thousands Die Each Year From Liver Trouble. Paine‘s Celery Compound Promptly Cures Thw Insidious Disease. Is Proof Positive That You Are In Danger. A NASTY TONGUE Feed the Merves Just For Fun People. asid he, "n;l Ml--s ;"ui;il egain. Whst L want * "'mw-.u:.m’.:‘a here. T‘ve an order for a willhon/ he asid, "give me the hz" And he Toe ork shand tnd Ths promiges hoghed‘ . Restaseinly o frided 0 the n Baroo 0;.‘“* wu that moment, situation, mfi nustake and fealing ..1 samd to the Raroo. *If you want ton france, sir, I don‘t _ "The migute I sat down the chsir “?xc.:m?."m':a‘ began to flfi;n tune. Ib had a musicâ€" to produce a case of box arrangement attached to it, just Eczema that Kootenay @ like meny other articles g furnimr;oi will not cure, are made, Some of ‘em when you pu 8 B out adrawer a musicâ€"box begins to Med IC' n e play, and all that sort of thipg; and this was a musical chair, Ti:b right $. 8. Rroxman Meviome Co., awicrow, Our. up but the chair kept right on playing. These things are apt to bave m key,| ________________________________ you know, or‘ s stopper of some sort Retaliiation about ‘em somewhere that you press to| ‘May I offer you s stick of gum ! stop‘em. I â€"felt forthat key but I|asked the traveling man in the skull souldn‘t find it, and I got my lamp|cap, by way of introduciog himself to and looked for it, the music kept right|the passenger in the sest in front of on playing all the time, and the first| him. thing I’knev it broke out louder than| The other man turned sround, lookâ€" ever; it had come to some sort of & bell | ed at the proffered siabh and shook his sttachment thet it had and was mxkâ€"| head. iog twice as much noise as it was at| ‘Iâ€"I beg your pardon,‘ he said ; ‘I first, and the only thing I‘d got in the| manufacture that gum, Bat if you will beg was the thermometer vhm join me I will open bhhboxofe‘ndyl wished I‘d never seen s« sil, wh bought just before I mkon the train,‘ dropped in the beg when the first surâ€"| ‘The traveling man looked at the label prise struck me. on the box and shuddered. . "I took another quick look over the} ‘We made that candy,‘ he remarked chair with the lamp, but I couldn‘t|shrugging bis shoulders ‘I never "I ‘once had a very singular experiâ€" ence in a fine bhouse in a small city in the west," said the retired burglar. "They had their silver locked up, but I found on the table in the parlor a lot of bric aâ€"brac, mostly silver things, that are well worth carrying off. There was a curious looking thermometer that caught my eye in particular, and contrary to my custom I stopped to take a look at it before putting it in my bag, and then it occurred to me that I‘d like to see how warm it wasâ€" it was very close in the room with the windows all shutâ€"and I took & look st the mercury, holding it down in the light of my lamp on the table, standing u‘p myself, but I couldn‘t see it very plain standing up, so I sat down in a chair that was left there by the table to get & closer look. ~ln“ufi;‘"&uw-uumu M" there is season. :F“ .,:â€"Yn;tfi-ymu“'hd The driser toased the card ray . “.."';fi"'!"flf _ urcâ€"1 a_ 11â€" <ver‘s Sarsaparilia for the blaod, Are the Best AYER‘S PILLS Highest Awards at World‘s Fair. Baron Rothchildâ€"wis once caught in CFor Stomach and Liver Ayer‘sPills nllâ€"round family medicine I have ever l nown."â€"Mrs. May JoNsoN, 368 Rider Ave., New York City, *I have taken Ayer‘s Pills for many vears. iud idways derived the best reâ€" alts rumm their use. sLow‘s Sxeurhas be" °04 | of more valueâ€"if "you haven‘t got them of for their got ?fi:_-fi:.-‘.:*.?.?'â€"m apything else. â€" World wide ibles, and for the cure of gcadache seit by these derangements, Ayer‘s s cannet be equaled. They are easy The Retired Burglar. Por Over Fifty Vears Mrs. May Johuson. uid . 4 | makes comfortable clothing possibls for abe onz‘:’uhd-onruli-'prhuflo ;-“‘ ctadk:.nqd. u-pl-ut.‘ Fibre Chamois, um bar, | from fine »prace fihre, which gives a ume | perfect healthful -f-fi-fihun“- iog weight or bulk, * ‘The reason is that it is an absoiate nonâ€"conductor of sither through the clothing lined with it, ::-illt let the natural hest of the A Sure and Simple Frotection From Cold. ‘May I offer you s stick of gum 1 asked the traveling man in the skull cap, by way of introducing himself to the passenger in the seat in front of hins. Conuty Seat | mailed free ou lgyllc‘uun. Note the lullowln’ advantages:â€"Cheapness of land, lcruulfl 0 soil, firstâ€"class live stock and dairying facilities, abillty to produce all the crur of the temperate zone, winter employ ment in lumber umpl.Jw- ting out pulpwood, ties. etc., {rou forest weelth, 'oud w for labor, eheap ulldln{ material, p‘l‘:‘ ‘ffir ll;w cutting, truit for the plcking, game utiful. NIPISSING DiSTRicTt. Don‘t You in the Provivce. The Tu'uhlr of Widdifield, Fertis and Chisholm, especially, tributary to the County Beat, are all well adapted for m{ud farming. Good roads nave been prepared by the Ontario Government, centering in North Bay. As seitiement advances extensions and new wu be completed. Lands in Ferris and C m are opén for settlement under the " Free Grants Act," and lands in Widdifield are for sale at Pure and plentiful water, n?rulnr rainfall, temâ€" perate climate, excellont drainage. Northern Untario lands mudl{’exc-d the inost fertile states of the American Union. An abundance of well paid employment outside of mfll‘\ll\u" renders it easy for settiers to establish themâ€" selves on their own land b] their own labor. Ad ways a good demand for farim produce. assured for {nn to come. Write for pamphlet and loca} information, tu L. P. 8X by®, Traders‘ bank, North lhd "J’ A large map of the district refe ‘to may be Seeu at and the aer(ormumo of the customary settleâ€" ment duties, fully ex}alllnad in the rmrmot. "Northern fihtrlfl_._ of Ontario," which will be cood LOCAL MARKET FARM AND DAIRY LANDS Population 1881, 1390 ; 18. 13,000 ; 18%, matod) 18.000. Bold in Waterieo by Ed. M Dovitt. J, W, Fear & Co.‘s Hardware Store. Seat | | Founded | 1881, abhod < NORTH _ BAY< Population, . Bo that it ensures comâ€" warm gipthing are Ketal Het Assetes _ â€" .> > ‘"‘7 .n 4 » a MA Ancrease in A895 » » Economical Mutual Fire Ins L8 THE WATERLOQ MUDTVAL FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY, â€" INCORPORATED IN 1863 Total Assets 3ist Decembe ‘98. It provides a legacy certain instead of a law suit possible. KEquality between policyâ€"holders is secured by insuring in three classesâ€" abstainers, general and womenâ€"giving each in profits the true benefit of its The Rms compare favorably with any in the world. Your choice of all sound plans o assurance »Fered, no other. for choice of territory to l THOS. HILLIABRD * The Policy of the Dominion Life i~ . straight promise to payâ€"like a bank draft, almost unconditional. _ No reâ€" striction on travel or occupation. THE When two or three uears in force w is nonâ€"forfeitable rven for failure to renewal promiums, remaining in all fore TIHLL THE VALUE I§ EXHAUSTED. JAMES INNES, M. P., CHR. KUMPF Esq., Want This Company holds its Keserveon the Actuarie $20,000,000 THE ‘ Dominion Life Assurance Co‘y, Authorizsed Capital $1,000,000, Gov‘t Deposit at Ottawa $50,000 Subscrbed Capital $257, __ Paid up Capital $614,400 Results To Policyholders Unequalled GEO, WEGENAST, Actuary W. H.ORIDDELL, Becretary. _ A4GKNTS WANTED. â€" Apply now George Randall, President. John Shuh, Viceâ€"President, C. M. Taylor, Sectetacy , John Killer Insgsotor, Meesrs.{ Bowlby & Cement, Solicito BOARD OF DIREOTORS Geo, Randall, Keq.,. Waterio John Shuh, Keq., 4 Chas, Hendry, Keq:., w j L E. Bowman, Keq., M. P., Waterioo 8. Bnyder Keq., Waterloo P. E. Shants, Preston, B Thomas Gowdy, Keq., Gueiph. x James Livingstone, Keq., M. P., Badém, â€" _ 0 _ Presipe®t, |_ Viokâ€"Presioex HOS. HILLIARD Maxacine DirEcro®. Mutual anc Cash Systems, . Nead Office, â€" _ Waterioo, Onrt. I. E. BOW MAN, M.P., President. C. M. TAYLOR. Vic â€"President. ROBT. MELVIN, 2nd Viceâ€"President. ALEXANDER MILLAR, Q.C.. solicitor I“}T."W'i‘.fifii' M. D., Medical Referee W . 8, HODGINS, Bupt. of Agencies. â€". OF BERLILN, Ontario Mutual _ Life ISSUES THEM ALL. A Lite Policy An Endowment Policy q An Investment Policy Or an Annuity Policy © 4 Per Cent. Becretary. WM. HI!NDRY. Manager IN FORCE

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