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Waterloo County Chronicle (186303), 19 Apr 1894, p. 2

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m "% Auction Sales AuctionSales The Waterloo County Chronicle covers the field by reaching more inhabitant, in Waterloo county than any other paper published. Leave your orders for bills and advertisinqat the Chronicle Office. rump: answer and an honest opinion. write to I I _ N .\ (0,. who haw had ueurlzdflr rears' ouw‘rlcnce In the uuh'nt business. Crumnunlc- m-ms mu-nv mnndumml. A Ilnudlumk of In- lurnmnon mun-nun: Pun-nu and how to ob. nmn me sum free. Also N analogue of mechan- 'e and smciettttttqe banks will tree. Pam-u amen mmuxu Munn & Co. receive awn-ml mmwm the Picietttittr, A"terirttn. and thus are hmuuht which before the public with out an! to the unventur. This upland“! L%it mum“! weekly. Megan!” tltmstrateu, bu hi "the lam-st mn-ulntwn of NW scienmic war In the world. 83 a year. bump'h- Gwyn-n sent free. Hmldimr Immun. mnmhlv t' In m... an..-“ v w, - V -_.. -...... .' w 'TEN pr... “we. Huoldi FAHHUB Ewan-11y. (3:50: Fear. Single chum-s. Jf cents. y. ery Dumber tNstttNttta begu. mm plates. m comm. and ghouumphs of new houses. mm plans. euabltrtg miners to show the ""tit'; Jt,tuPs, yut,tttytt fNYr.ee.tt. _Address _ 1.11:; f,Ar u' t v; .1 (turn: promptly rum: __. 'st' un a rs f 1 Ccu.rhit, Cramp. Beta I‘m-3A, i; ‘..‘n:s:. VJhoupiar- Cough and {5:21.} r gr» 2217201: tt {as no Pmf. I». c.4217: . .3422 '3..ng will cure. TCHI if r. was. "c. 5v! 3 l y Immgism cn a gun:- r t'r', . ”A " Lacro Ilat) or €th use 5:1.LOH': LLLLADF'NHA PLASTER..'iax RED CLOVER ' BEES rhat Tired Feciing, Constipation and Pain in the Back Appetite and Health Restored By Hood's Sarsaparilla. It adrcrtic,c thew well as“ On this de ‘pendi grcatly the success '0 [In sale. Illtri)d'sspa'la Cures h _ -.t .,._...- “nu. .-V\_V --r.r...k.9rT. nuun'ss Muss a Co., Nu! Youx. 361 Bummuv. ' I? 9“! _ jg . .» _ \ ttfr, ', T _ / cis":",,:,,:,;'.-,":,!)-;:.--,--'-'-:-)',-, rjsi'iril k . "vrf. " iu' ( . , x. C? _ r$;'i>§x . -1, ' x kV I ', yucr me: To TAKE PRICE " 7"“1/73 mr DRUG STORES. II' I OBTAlN A. PATENT? For n BrOken in Health The Bro/sch C will mun b2comluctcdthrough out different parts of the County. It pays a AND CO]! PIERDATIOI I Fee! Like 'P, SICK HF, Hundredfold FOR PURE HONEY P C) Tv"' D F.? R S Bee page 8. Jf r “In uni... Al of nut twfnrv- lmlf the (luv u: mummy of xm-uivims rmaucm. rune: from any 'hia remedy is 3118th 2. Lucas. Irijecicrtrud. tev New Man. I as itr'ir'.,r_r, as I! SATARR ff R EM EDY, t‘imr smote Waterloo, Minn. Ieould pt menu: of the pain r. I il as that tiyvtl mfnrv In” the USN 3r mm: as over I might. Ihave I Hawk mum- “nh Erie l're- non of amend. 'q Suraapnrilln. w. l have cun- we males. and and Npurarr,rin new oi' bro n troubled breath. um {It t Axum the young doctor was silent. lie moved to a deae which ozcupied one ante nf the little surgery, and 5 ood for a moment, tidgetiug With some looso pqpers thtreon. Presently be turned. .NI ould it be a. great disappointment it you should never learn to play upon the violiny he asked with a strange made of pathos in his voice, Tom thought. 'Why, what do you (twan y replied Tom, looking up curious‘y into the face of his interlocutor. The young doctor w; now standing iiji"/'i2'l'tntfd'iC,1'l'f/l12'Cnit/d'Q1't". fully at him, with an expression of of pathetic sympathy in his eyes Lh-ct was not lost upon Tom. Laying his Gud kindly upon his patient's should. er, he asked '. 'llumph T' a} tculated the doctor,lnnk- ing up into tht, had of his patient. ‘llo you play tlu, sioliu f " mly a. little by our ; but I intend to study music.' tis i.; your left hand,' said the doe, cor, lwndmg low over tlm woundml member. 'l fmrtlzc leaders Me- cut, at least of the little mud second tinypts, and I shall havetosew them.’ The lelr rs 1' ialtvred' Tom. The doctor answered nothing. ltut, bus'ed hixlnsolf with- his task, wlnch was ere long, ldeftly and skillfully accom- phshed. l 'Aurl you have made this violin your- self 3' pursued the an-r. 'l%tirely wyseli,aud I hoped to play my tint tune upon it to-night, or to- mormw, but now 77â€". It will be sothe timv now, I suppuse, before I shall be able to use my left Innd .?' Ti k, ti k, . t ttg' 'but lii,rii at?" tuit-alt, . 'li'Gil;Ul'il"l,1 tkh; Pe-u-hr, ttttde hm for it a coil-r, ' bio-hr th- his». 21'1'l7if.'Wdl "ttttki, and. 'Can you bear to put up with a great disappointment 1' 1 - 'Are you wry fond of mtv/c-ef the violin y inquired the doctor “.th con ciusion of the operation, as Tom sat in his chair, pale, silent and thought- ful, 'Very- passionately fond of it,’he re~ plied. 'l-r-hope ms,' filte q have h ul disappoiutn have outlived them,' an his thoughts went bac form and dancing eye 0 his thoughts went back to the regal form and dancing (we 0 his divinity. 'Bectuue,' continued tlhe doctor, slow~ ly and kindly, 'you may’ never be able to play upon the violin mow. The lead- era are cut, you see, 3113 your little tin ger, at any rate, will (wtsys be stiff You will not be able to lmnnnge the tin. gering.' : There was an utter silence in the lit- tle surgery for a upsce. F Only thetick- ing of the clock, through the half open door leading into the next room. could be beard, but it was stringely loud and distinct. ' Tick, tick, tiyr,--thtidewr morning- tide of life and hope,-%t aid. Tick, tick, tick, m hour has flown, the Inn is high, ind love it born, Ind hope goes forth with high smbitiqn. Ti¢k, tick, tiok,-how golden in tho glint , of Inn- shine on the work of " begun , Tick; tiek, tieit,--ttte ihat 4ieiiroirtttneU" Tick, “pk, tt=--<tot bld, bit 'tleer .With a :hiwl violin. Timmy) the chisel Hippo sult,' Urrod To”: that. hath ‘liun, Tom. Run Tom, dwarf Dan't delay an instant. (m! Do be quick, I’ll 5w nothing to umthe r.' She optar)tsrl the door and pushed him unruly out,aud stood lookmg aiter him, wringing hvrhundsns he strode away do“ n the sitlownlk. It Was not far to the doctor'r-vot the funily doctor-he lived sun-NI blocks awry ~huc a Stringer, who had lulvly settled in the same atrevt. [he was. forth Itel)’. at horde, a. fresh, fm, uoodhuAjru.r, voting fuliJw, not unlike Tom huns-it', With an eyie and manner that in-p:.rul corttidencti, and bespoke hath n- 1've unrl skill. 'An ugly cut,' Sui i he, examining; the wound, from whi ‘I the hn'uingws bud bum remowd. ‘IIow did you do it .3' 'Oh, Tom 3 What is it l.' The sweet lips WrH'r' tiuit' rirte,and the gr: at brown a)“ were tided with mars. "PM Hm»! ilippvd Just. as I was put- ting "I" thi,uinur tuuciws no the hri Ige, and l huw an my Gud svveruly, the hf.- harnl. I b,vrahoumd mm “HI as I could, hut I mu~t In“? medical Hid at once. Them, dou't cry, dear. 'Tis noth- . , trod “The girl Gd obtained posseviin of the wmmdrd hand, swaddled In iilwn, through which th.n blood was slowly UNIV-.4 and WM! 1”“ng and crsressitw It With "mans and teisrspspd terms of t-iV drummer-t. ‘Hush 5 Where's mother t' Tom, who stay! In llw doorway of the hale room Mm his hat on, looked furniwly round H.» nparcuwnt, and than beckoned his mam-r ium the Gll. [ sti», I have met with an accidvnt. l 4.4” haw to cu to the doctor at otter. I) su't my anything toutothewull I come hate' NOON. 'What has happened, Toml Whv are um tiO While? 5 r A. ll. AIM/£750.47. CHAPTER III sui i he, examining; thr i " the ha'uingvs Mud How did you do it .3' . I was tinishing a mi turrwd in my lmnd, mi, and this is the re- ked poor Tom. isms before,and ' like a Gssh, [lord No one had been near it. It would have broken Tom’s heart to behold the idol tumblsd from its throne, and as for Jessie-well, she was her brother's counterpart, his echo. It was rarely that anyone else ever came near the toorhouae. “In! it the embodied wraith of the instrument gazing at its own inert, for- hakon shell? Was it the ghost of the music that now could never well forth from its vibre ting strings to the touch of the maker, grieving over its untime- ly ht??? Or was it the spirit of the broken chord of that maker's life-harm- ony. that ttood,tmrrounded by the dunk and the rose-glamour, contemplating the unfinished cenotaph of that maker’s high ambitious hopes The door leading from the kitchen into the little tool.house opened gently and noiselessley, and a female tigure, clad in soft gray. clinging drapery,glid- ed into the shadow of the mom,u figure tall and regal,yet with the simple grace of a. woodland nymph. She stood for a moment by the threshold, as if listen. ing, and then looked cautiously round. Ah 3 yes. It was there. Swiftly and silently through the un- certain light, that momentarily became mare obscured, she glided to the bench upon which, untouched since the acci- dent of the morning, had lain the vio- lin. The gray figure stood with arms full- length' before her, and hands clasped in front, sillengly regarding the violin. qdidn'+tttink anybody bod been here betcha Ms]: he continued. ‘I n - could ”when it being. in the illtl uni the I . e, but I wt por- ur.--', I , Tim rosin: thritered outsidwmd show. "red their crimson pv'ala downward. Tim soft, Blinnhemus wiluf the glimm- in: #ttN lwgtnnillg to droop above the rim-r bend,wore, the alders and willows stood by the broad lily-pads that had Haunted in tlu, sunshine, and the gray trout had lHipt and shimmered in the morning light; the sable rooks were slowly winging their liuineward way to. ward theuiiat-cowled ehns that did their Trappist penace nt the shrine of the daisyhrowored meadows ; and, against the wall, the roses sent up their silent evening orisons to the hush, the purple and the gloaming, as in the morning they hud otftwed their ruby chalices of dmv at tha altars of virgin dawn. There was a. sound, as of a stifled sob, ltrnngely hutuan,ittrtsngelr woman- like, and the gray future stooped and laud her white taper timgers tenderly on the neglected instrument,und there tol. lowed u. subdued murmur of words. - ‘Jwiéiis ttuiroet Whut no you doing'herp than in the dark I' He had entered the room, and In: nppro-chibg the bench. 'Poor boy ! Poor dear fellow! What, oh ! what has happened? How shall he be comforted I' The gruy dusk deepened around the gray forrv, by the bench, whtle in the corners of the room the shadows loomed blackly. Agiin there was t sound as of nome~ one at ths, door. . The figtre by the bench started and turned,an'd her eyes fell on another guy fieure that tilled the 'rntranee,hul,ereet like bemlf.yet indistinct in the gloam- ing,but with one arm, the left nrm,|up ported by , sling. ‘Come, dew-f she said. 'We will not fre-t any more. There is, indeed, other music In life, Mm], together we will tind It. Sim know what he meant. With a woman’s Quick instinct,shu had already diam-d the dung‘r, the possible out- cou-v of that cruel slip. She Jrew hinniuto the hall, and put- ting her mum about, him, laid her head on his shoulder and cried there quietly for it wlulv. Then she driml her wars, and taking his uninJured hand in hers led him toward the sitting-room. ‘Whut ',toras the day-hm any y he re- pmn-d. 'lie says, dunr. that there is other mums in life, and we must, tind IL I H., stood for a mo want in the shunt- ine mnhght, looking down into her brau'ifui a} es, even now dimmed with tears, Hut, in spite of her, would have their Way, and wellrd slowly up and out. He stomped and gravely kissed them, her "yes and lipu, and then hnrnightvn rd hum» f “ghill, and looked up co the bum- sky mu] Um sunlight. (Mu-r music in life, other musvc in life, other mum: in life. He walked to the refoxiv, marching to it as it were,in the directton of hom ,where in Me door. way. stood Jade, pale as Tum himself, expel-mm, Pagerly watching. ‘My (My-ling Tom. Ia it all right? Have you had it tended? What does the doctor my 1' - 'Don'riret "bout it. Don't take It too muchtooheart,’auid.the goot,i-nattrred young docut as he accompanied Tom to the door, 'lt might, haw been much worse Mun it is, even ii it should turn out as I fear. Well, my dear fallow there is other magic in hte besides that of the, viohn.’ Wm. amthinu like a groan of an guish, Tam row from his chmir to go Tick, tick, lick,--. hedusk,thto, dukthe oulwl' Vuid! Waterloo County Chronicle, Thursday April 16. IS 94.._Pag-e 2 (‘HAI’TICR IN “INK Mas. Wmsmw‘s Soormxa Sump has been used by millions of mothers for their children when teething. If disturbed " night and broken of your reet by a lick child suffering and crying with pain of Cutting Teeth can " once and get n bottle of “our. Winslow', Soothing Syrup" for children teething. It will relieve the p6or little truirerer immedi- etely. Depend upon it, mothers, there in no mieteke shout it. Itcuree Dinrhoen, P.pe lntee the “munch Md bowels, cane Wind Colic, when. the (nine and reduce. iniUns. mutton, and given tone Ind energy to the whole mm. “In. Win-lo"- Soothing Smp"!or childrenteethlng is fluent to the hetenndirthepreecriptiono mature olden end but femnle phyeicim md unne- h the United tttated Price twpattrdhmr out. n UttU Sold by All ttttt 'diN,'t,'2t,Ptt; Berni-undue for In. more Atimrixa Sun. 28-1, “Now good digestion wait on appetite, And health on both," says the great Shakespeare, bathe did not have in mind a coated tongue or torpid liver, with all the symptoms of biliousness, so common in this country. All this, and more,can be cured by Dr. Pieree's Golden Medical Discovery, a purely vegetable compound. which re: stores the action of the liver,giveis tone to the flagging energies oi the dyspep- tic's stomach, and thus enables "good digestion to wait on appetite, and health on both." By dragging. Asthma and Hay Fever cured, by a newly discovered treatment. Address for pamphlet, World's Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. Y. "Bread," exclaimed a Vassar Coll age girl, "Bread! Well,I should day I can make bread, We studied that in our iirat year. You see the yeast fer. manta and the gas thus formed perme- ates everywhere, and transforms the plutic material into a clearly obvious atomic structure, and then--" "Bat what is the plastic material you speak oft" "Oh! that is commonly called the sponge.” "Bat how do you makethia sponge?" "Why, you don't make it; the cook attends to that. Then we test the sponge with the thermometer and hydrometer and a lot of other in- struments, the names of which I don't rernember,and then hand it back to the cook, and I don't know what she does with it then, but when it cones on the table it in just splendid.” Ouuside,the roses showered their fra- grant petals ddsnurard, the dusk deep. ened into the night, the cowled elms watched in the meadows bv the river brink where the lilies slept ', but,inside, the untinished violin lay upon the bench before the two gray iigures-ita mission accomplished, in music gone out into all the spheres. 'Oh, Barbara! I have lost one love. It never cun be mine now.' There Wtth' aworld of feeling in his voice, pathos unutterahle in the derered droop of his head. He felt a hot tear full upon his band. ‘I have lost one love. You, of all women on earth, can tell me wheth- er I am to lose or hold another,' She: had come nearer' to him, and he could dimly see her eyes in the dusk lifteu towards his, but in their depths, theold time laughter had died nway,aml ixfits place was a pathos and a pity that emboldened him to go on. She had come entirely to him and was nestling by his side. ‘Miss Pisher,i-i',avssra," he began. q would not live to day over again for wealth untold. I think I have, verily passed through the valley of the shadow, but this moment makes tunends,' And this“: v'vas no broken chord, but perfect harmony. ' 'Oh I I am so sorry.’she said,‘so very sorry. I have no words to tell you how sorry I am. What was that in her voice , The music of life was beiue played as of Jore. It was full and strong in the young rtuut'y ears--strong and as ptlpable to the butward sense as the perfume of the roses in the air, as the magic of the stately presence before him hut where was now the discord? That one hope of life had become this day ce- duced to a minor key, and now another lame, another melody was intermingling “uh the music, and making itself felt thmueh and above the variations that wow themselves in billows of sound. fveliu,.,r about his listening senses. Jessie told me of your accident, and your-your---' she could not go on. Again came in the sweet Breath of the roses The roses outside ffung in a sweet burst of fragrance, and as it played about the young manu brow, it seemed fraught With a mes-mg", the message he had heard outside before, that day, 'there is other music in “Mother music in life.' ‘What was there in her voice, her presence, tlmt he had not recognized be, fore? Why Watt she there at all, and now , He stopped in evident confusion. She had taken a. BN'p forward. _ q tttO Miss Fisher to my associates In the sunshine ; to my friends in sor- row,I mu aiusplyBsrissra,'siw said gent- 1y. A College ulrl Who C'onlcl Bake Bread 'r-rr beg " u- pudon. I dld not know For over “It: Years. [THE mu] 4W Whttjl it? When in itt The thon- unds who harOtied Birvaed Bronch- ul 81.1):th mph-tied}, that " is the 5-.qu an: "uaotoaq undy'in the Gait for with» com: housem- aod all "ixst'tom of tho'mul when. Bun-rd atytatyttul Syrup was. all aeett8ttEiiiy_t)1t, om» The gross amount expended by the Education Department for all educa- tional purposes since 1867 was $12,- 372,922. Of this sum 86,'220,410 were' divided among the Public, Separate and other schools, to meet the annual expenditure for teachers’ salaries and other purposes; 82,157,261 were spent for the training and examination of teachers of Public schools, at Normal Schools, County Model schools and Teachers' institutes; and for the in- spection of schools, $1,092,570 were paid directly for the support of High schools, and $166,576 indirectly for the benefit of High schools in the way of intpeetiiorrand the training of High school teachers; $992,509 were paid to superannuated teachers, and $734,596 were paid in aid of technical educts- tion. From an average of 8000 paid per teacher in 1867,[salaries have increased untll in 1892 they amounted to iO04 per teacher. During the last 10 years alone, 45 High schools of unsurpassed architectural beauty and convenience, and equipped with all modern appli- ances, have been erected, 25 had ad. ditions made to them, and many old buildings substantially repaired. The tendency to cast a certain portion of the burdens of their education on the pupils, and proportionately to relieve the ratepayers, appears to be growing from year to year. In 1882 the amount collected from fees amounted to 11 per cent. of the teachers' salaries. In 1892 the pupils' fees amounted to 21 per cent. of the teachers' salaries The amount of fees collected now is almost equivalent to the appropriation made by the Legislature for High school purposes. In 1867 the fees represent- ed only 28 per cent. of the Government appropriation. - With regard to High scliooh the whole number in attendance in 15“le was four times the attendance in 1367, or to put it in another form, in HGT. about l per cent. of the school popula- Lion of the Province between theraqes of c, and 21 ymrs attended lt High School. In 139‘.) about l por cent of the school population was enrolled in a Highschool, The number of pupils enrolled in our High schools alone represented a trifle over 1 per cent of the entire population of the Province; in the United States the cnrohnrnt of the same class of pupils was only .58 por cent.: the enrolment in the schools of Prussia was slightly in excess of Ontario, viz.: Ic?. per cent. Tn the matter of expenditure for teachers’ salaries and for the improvement of school sites and buildings the liberal. ity of the ratepayers has been extraor- dinary. Th0 most Imticuahlv featuri- in Con- peetiou with Separate Schmils is the lnrgu amount "xpcrult1l in H92, (milk pun-ll with the expenditure of It“? In 1tii'r7 the average: expenditure per school was $265, and trim cxpmuiituru- (salary) per' teacher $16!}. In [Him Lhr expenditure per school had in- ovasvd to $929, and per teachur lo #2203. There has also 1mm . a wry grn'ifying reduction in the number of pupils to each teacher. In M07. 210 teachers were in charge of 15,931 pu- pils, or ‘Jl pupils per teacher. In IHE'L’, Uti'.’ teachers had c' arge of 37,166 pupils, or one teacher for 56 pupils. The ~aystem of kindergarten instruc- tion, first mtrodcced into Ontario in 18s'2, and subsequently made part of the school sysmm of the Province by the Public Schools Act of 1885, the re- port says, has met with encouraging success. A rcpurt of the pupils recon. ing instruction in this way was first made in 1802 This report showed that in me short space of 10 yours, (in kindergarten were established with loo teachers, attended by 6,375 child, ren under Gyeurmlf age. In Ito.", tho number of kindergarrens had increased to 85 with 200 teachers, attended by 53056 pupils under, (3 years of ago. The provision made for the training of kindergarten t, achers in cumin-(slim: with tho Provincial Normal Schwls sccurcs that pvoftvcsiural skill and vulr ture Wlllcll are of the utmost impuri- nncc in this department of school "ork. Stntlcnls in attendance at the Nurnml Schn tlr, ru ccive instruction also in kindvrgiwteu methods, the cllrvl. ot" which on tlu-ir future success "h' leach cm can hardly bu vrer.esiiuoatvd According to the last. report (1893) I of the Minister of Education for On- i turio there are some 385,670 pupils; registerrd as attending school out of a population of 2,112,989, or about 23 l, per cent. The average attendance ofl rural pupils was 47 per cant. of the I registered attendance; in towns it was i o'?. per cent., and in cities 68 per cent. I The averages of the province as a whole i is 52 per cent. . i Education in Ontario. Rpuxr 1181: 1tovres.-o- man. and Bladder din-cues relieved in 'l'llno'tl',', b; tého ‘EnlW Gnu-r Sou-m rtl"i'rieif,,1,?gt,t on m now and: swan-pun 393311:th 11tttltr'iayts 18t .qoount gr itg ax- None of the hospitals of this Pros incr- are owned by the Province. They :n'v all owned by private companies my our. porations. But all that comply with thestatutory tequirementsreceive ( im _ ernment Iid.In this way privateiwner- osity is stimulated to do a work which, under other circumstances, would lu- either left undone or would have to he done entirely by the Government. Chills aid is given in proportion to the work done. A hospital that cares for loo patients in the year, will receive just twice the aid thac an institution will that only provides for 50 patients. In this way, all are treated alike and ho favoritism or partiality can be shown to one more than another. The amount of aid given to thse institutions by the Province last year was $107,312, while the entire cost of maintenance was $297,660. The average cost of each patient per day was 84 M cents. Each hospital must have the requisite build. ings and equipment, satisfactory to the Government inspector, before any gov- ernment aid is given, and us we have already said, evely hospital is open for patient: of every creed and nationality, _ and all are open for government inspec- tion at all times. limpltnls ol \‘urionx l<iml~ l amt it; Government aid. In 151“: Il.~ minim- of patients trested in thcw MA} ital,» was 6,0553, and in ll‘flil thia nnrnln-r was mow than doubled, llt‘lll- .IL'.r,(cr. This shows that tho admin! "t:f:' ihc)‘ nll'trtl art-appreciated and "iH li‘lli: availed of ln’ the public. 'l‘lwv "tt'tt all situated in the large Ctfntt'ec, i I llvlrltlil tion, and acisiy,iloh, to tlii- l)!“l {who specialists in awry clam 0be on l‘vr "Ulrs', howvver ntlligud can tlin.‘ mull theruc,elsos of tlu) vi'ry hm: n viliuzil skill at a small cost, or if pool. luv ot' charge. To many this skill \'-<Illiil not be. available but for these inuiznnnnx. It is, also, not only the heat HiHilHIl skill that is,in this way,mad" :u :iilulile. but texperienced and skilled litlf'mw urn secured and whose services, in c: itica! (2880*, are almost as nec'c'etituu'y mill tho ful as are those of the medical punk sion. There Is no doubt, but tlmizxnnxh have heen enabled to get ttvatmeiit in this way, which in many instvsnres, " fected complete cures and in others greatly prolonged life,who but for Illix would hive found an early gmu- The human suffering, also, that has been averted, is inestimable. “W itt'e mic in saying that there are many who an: useful members of society and who ill'C busily engaged in the activities of mmf: day life, who but for the treatment ro- ceived at some one of these institutions would long ago have been within-rod thh the dead. In view of thaw cir, cumstances, therefore, it is sutGing that any should object to the cninpnru tively snmil amount of Government aid which these institutions receive. has.“ uTiii%liiiii, p...) C.,,'.',:"':,',,.?:?,",:.".';,'.,",'::";'", epic'te"'""i'thhiot 019'ch “augments!“ The Hospitals of Ontar T-letters ' "s ietfiiitiic"iii"i',s'i'_ii, OERCHKLV 'at? "N GieedTji-riTrf Loszf‘, wr, -- ls par-usws l.? R/ff :7: s:. WHY DON'T YOU TRY _ PIO UNACCOUNTAL‘LY LO'iil, REFUSH‘IB TO TAKE I75 i,rSTuitis Atit) LESILIT; 'tl " 'me'H: puNi~h hi" mare u-fthv; ttlttt ill rum.“ H believe lie, e ir, to would 'r SUITI l tl him, the In iii. xii, maxim, icuus. . AYER’S Samaparq'g wt, r! ll " rule,", tuit Ulh‘w " " hurt myself so iVi, to I‘ll! sun- to bosom" a m to who Iota of mbdh'lm' dune me bo much :nml it Lilly. "t tma made Am? w Ten year": name to 1 euntidev,ti; "When I was our- V011 r of mmsuxupli 4.. 'ru. too. Would mun mu. m "nought that mm. If I never b0 t+le to w.:.'). weak and 1-1:"). A 1:: broke mam-r my arm. " r21',',i and 11mm: " hurt myself so as totl 1111 in! out. but with vai hut, of ti ltr, e llll'lV t JW wt NS th A Brigh " The x ll ...--g,"""""'-""-"' j,?jf,r,-.yy,-isj, H _ (Pc: FgCt,/, i Jr ir, / bet-f') C 'r': r.~ ' ,3,“ .1 . " £¢w t ' "3:41pm _ 2" , 5° .'.'. Hf}! (ti; ,‘ ,5 _-" J ' .31 J,, ,‘x W :1 '. bi" ‘6 " J, k) _ -y-? >‘":J‘.'.'~.i - SAP bah, dean Millions of wnmm 'l: World can mum l Cr, OI' u lea The best 1ialatii, the Consumer is thy who value. It I labor, grub fl erI‘IhV ll 1.1%.”. hm ughmnd ul ,~m‘c- dim“ ll m any soap in 1 I\, t v V he! (ll. [r-ss heartache srl Imm- sum! 1 p";l.l'(‘. If lLalKT. tat l m mun him ', if H, \‘k'tNZ HI "'ll; Hfllull u th ily' 11t I .xp h ml SLAhlfp t'tlu If IN iN by Has aw rmoq '. Him " “I ' Go, Prom mg. i' It; I: "' 1", “I oi K mews of t l, "pl"""' rid] "ati "htust 11- b anxious s't' . a IAJIII'N“ t, bid, Flap 1'. 1 see MIN”: ol be a fawn-1"» tine run lp lhv M'Pz‘agr I" ..L_ . ford tot/sod alum; tRrike qluivki}. A . yes, lily fl‘ivlui. ', ' jouug man van "ti, dishotwsty. Mu [ -. may soinvt'uwvs w but who it d,rr.s permanvnvy all 1) gained It)“ will“! in» the methods of nth take. The 5;Ufuis_ given to the mum: Nor. It makw I tt men may "uc 1"" theirs and not pm lake of it. Es-ry stares. The up“ it the one and tl Ainet of success. P M Other kind, I), but it is all in Eiiii reality. Let “a the palhuflu ifrji'i him how 'lui Jaatine once-e» I has m". id or d l is a It nk, If Mun.» trduy with tl u the pi'oi"'l e, as be bus I, Le A number .1 up. . . .Fhl'nn- Drivm: Yuk wlded tn tt' vi] ny by Faces an [any ct tbe {an m ploughing. " still ream} Um. w tall “ht-xi x' backward wwu ‘wrnte " the l s. The pap-rs ' mini dren'x-t rrm. tin-s Dunalnuw “ion . rod in orpoei 'nd I umnul'x Ur knew Guru l" Inns " PW“ t "trntrs' iitvst, mg “1|thth 2" O" tlte 19”: t of “PM Het ytes win] H.“” gou’rnwvm t sh took a chlnumi um imam!» "t itherf-trl, Ir I Hu- ran ,grwuhum being in H I when“. " bo x hnscu-I and w]: he mm (ult it 10“ - their Fro rerurrtsd 1 " Joistri m ot' in repAll‘lll ote'4 DUIIih rviloortrc: RH At money {1141mm tsit thing (H :u LiQIt RS hm; l" ' ' ing :0 the 11mm l' ofunqumnuxmi .13 tad for div inqr, :t..v' u III-n ever yak " _ ounde ofay-ct-- h “abut abwluivi} “tuned means in 1w _ and that trlone. t'itl' _ An honest lift, v: w life for a y"rrltrrrl “cane life that Is ce'. ttt and surm! trcs . W. Bok. tr-tt ot utivlh IC"'. at is NI ter i, J1 run” ttOtt Mittert"" AND DISTRICT An Hon, tl ll NP“ It h tlsr, ‘XL' I‘mtlr I lame weight KI'. Melvin Uruhb, ol It Wytheville. V; II at age, weighs In NI trt"a -ritad fish M 'tteds ouch yew m 113.11 tl H 1118 n

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