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The Chronicle Telegraph (190101), 15 Oct 1904, p. 8

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~ 0890909 3960660 9060066506006 there an 1t lodks from vere." remarked w “:'â€"-. "That‘s the way of: â€"."It is wortb while to find out," re As we turued to go Trask called to me: "I may drop in upon you laterâ€" widnight, perbaps. . Are you a night ow!? 1 want to bave a talk with you." "Auy time at all," said i. B0 Lity"%\."\ ind 1 wenfmout rowing, aud ! talked io ber of every pleasant aud hopeful subject within the range of humas kpowledge. J am not altruâ€" istic in conversation, as a rule. stickâ€" Ing to my own theimes. which are fre qilently gloomy, but upon this eccasion 1 ‘drew upon every resource of my wind and soul for the betterment of wy companion‘s spirit. The shining water and the wandering winds of the night must have taken us for two of the cheerfulest mortals under the woon. "L cengratulate you heartily." ind I laid great credit to myseif, for t would bave been much easier for ve to fall into the opposite mood. The girl revealed a very dainty mind »»mn that little cruise. Sbe talked de «tfully of simple things and led me mi1ny pretty paths here and there in â€" fairyland of a June night, yet 1 nid not belp knowing that to ber the ~ .e was asbes anod the scented air as rer as tears upon her cbeek. It is a wmder of the world bow nature echâ€" .~s a grief, and loudest for those who uve ber best. There is a different moon in the sky for every joy and sorrow, and to most of us there comes a night when we could weep bec@use it is not the same moon that it used to be. We staid late upon the lake, and it y bave been baif past 11 when I mched my room. Trask came within a few minutesâ€"in fact, before 1 was quite ready for him. The subject that we must speak of was delicate in the extreme, and | knew the man very ligbtly. ‘Do you expect to be bere long?" I ted by way of opening. ‘A1l summer," be replied. "I thougbt perbaps your engagement night have made you change your vans," I ventured. "It bas," said be, smiling. "Unless we bad come to a decision soon I should bave gone a way." "It is very distinctly none of my busiâ€" ness." said 1. "but 1 believe you ought to go. 1 speak plainly. i would wish .an ther man to do the like for me im case of need." He asked me, with every evidence of vrise. what 1 might mean, and I old him straight out. He sat in silence ‘and beard me to the end, gnawing his «€igar meanwhile until it was a rag, so that he bad to throw it away. When I Bad finished, be rose to his feet and /took a turn or two in the room. ~>"This is a remarkable situation," he mald. "I scarcely know what to do. I must think the thing out." "I don‘t think it reqnires any vast amount of gray matter," said I, with some impatience. ‘"To my mind it‘s a mere matter of perception." "Pardon me for remarking," said he, "that on a matter of perception I don‘s think that your mind is fitted to play & star part. Torry, you are beyond all gomparison the blindest bat I ever saw. ou‘re a good fellow, but you don‘t ww anythingâ€"at least, you don‘t kn anything about women. That is ene reason why you are beyond all posâ€" OF THE ~ORGHARD ied to prove ©y not overstated 6 quote hira t the scene, for "Wait, wait!" 1 interrupted. ty of comparison the thost danâ€" -manlemmnhfidllfi’ 4. and I‘ve been t quite a bit. ou are crazy," sald 1, and be proâ€" gl_nmntylmhmflul not overstated the frct. Tt is painâ€" was vi ‘; ‘mmumyum from Europe," he continued, _wward 1 ”M‘~ ntry ? I happen to know. h\ § nto 1lR i: BY HOWARD FIELDISNG. *Then you wandered ~and gracefully into the pleasant felds of the Witherspoouns and started right in to take Helena Jones sway from me, thougb she and 1 had loved each other for two years. And you didn‘t miss it more than a mile Don‘t laugh. She told me so herself, You shook ber to the soul. But you couldn‘t do it again." 1 wagged my â€"bead at him hopelessly. 'rhenmu-‘umcfllcllfl ravings. % "You are & good deal better than & handsome wan," be went -.u"!n bave a t personality. may boonl’nm‘ht.'nnll""h is impressive. You know bow to serve a woman, to meet eyery need for which a cavalier is valued. You bave a fine counterfelt of bonesty. No one who doesn‘t know you can doubt your sinâ€" cerity. You are as eloquent as the devil, and you bave that confounded veice that you sing with"â€" _ " "My dear fellow," I pleaded, "why waste the widnight bour with this sinâ€" gular mixture of abuse and fattery? What bas it to do with the subject of our discourse?" "It is you," he cried, "you who have broken that little girl‘s beart. The idea of pretending that you don‘t see it! Shall 1 tell you how 1 found ber lying upon the ground in the north grove crying over a foolish rose that you‘d given her? Shall I"â€" He did not speak. He simply looked at me while 1 beld him by the arm. We may have stood thus for three minâ€" utes. It was better than talking. 1 reâ€" leased my bold of bim and ralsed my hand somewbat as one does who makes & vow. â€""Wait, wait!" I interrupted. "Let me think This can‘t be true." "If this is true," said I, "God knows that I am glad. If she loves me, 1 am mot here in vain upon this earth. 1 will make ber life a rose garden to pay for the one rose she wept over." "I believe you mean it," said be, with almost a sob. "I‘m relieved, very greatâ€" ly relieved. You are a good fellow at heart, Terry. I never doubted it." W "For myself, you know," he added, smiling in bis sudden, bright, cheery fashion, "I must know more about the matter before 1 can weep for the other persons concerned." ‘‘The first essential, as it seems to me," said I, "is that you sbould know Miss Witherspoon. You bave seen hber, but of course it did not then occur to you"â€" I besitated for the exact phrase. "It did not strike me as probable," said be, "that 1 should ever be asked to consider ber as a member of the famiâ€" ly, and the fact is that she was present not more than ten seconds. Siby! and I were sitting on the veranda, and I had no idea that there was any one Inside the little house, but suddenly Miss Witherspoon came out. She was beâ€" hind and I caught only the most Imfit sight of her face. To be frank with you, I mistook ber forâ€"for Miss Seett" + "Who is Miss Scott?" I iInquired. "She is Siby!‘s maid, or perbaps 1 had better say companion, for we don‘t in the smallest degree make a mervant of ber," said he. "Bhe is a young woman of somewbat humble birth, but excellent breeding and inâ€" struction. ‘Why have you rigged Miss Scott up like that? I asked, for there were so many mysteries in the air that I could be pardoned for suspecting anâ€" other. But Siby! set me right ‘It‘s Lucy Ann Witherspoon,‘ she said. ‘She comes down from the house to bring the luncheon.‘ So I thought no more about it till you mentioned the girl later, and then I didn‘t regard it as ,neceulrytoteuyouthnllndhend her name." {o_ l "I wanted to be sure of my ground," said I; "sure of myself. In this week !I have seen Lucy as often as possible, and I have tried bard to make no misâ€" takes. The harm, if there was any, was done Already. It remained to see how it could best be righted. 1 have _7181?éwr' I exclaimed, growing hot in the forehead, "It can‘t be that she really is Miss Scott!" _ "Ob, no," said my father with dect gion. "Sibyl would play no such prank with you. Siby! is a girl of very deliâ€" cate feeling. Still, she couldn‘t fore "That‘s just it!" I cried. "She couldn‘t know or suspect that either Miss Scott or myself would suffer an injury." We were silent for some seconds, and L pondered deeply. _"I don‘t care who she is," said I at uct."-mcomyhlkfltl'rruk:m ago last evening"â€" _ "A whole week?" said be. "I didn‘t understand uwu-o‘l:zm 1 should have thought you w have sent for me at once." [Glzz said not a word that savored of love, though it has been very hard someâ€" times to keep a tight rein on my tongue. 1 have found her out to be a girl who isn‘t happy, though she has every po# sible right t6 be so. It is that which has drawn me to her, and you are to blaime for it. You endowed me with & Mwmmmwum. and this is the result. I have come to the point where 1 care for nothing else in the world except her happiness. The merest shadow of pain upon her frce is ah appeal to my beart, and when 1 can make her Iaugh and play like the happy child she ought to be 1 am in the seventh heaven. I am more Mvfllh‘bhnfimfl‘ my life. lmq-n? than to rwvoitm *il“l her." f â€"-i.‘m“v awiay from me out window and down toward the of "I don‘t think it 14, If you w CHAPTER XVL PATERNAL ADMONITION. father said that he was sorry, really very sorry. e i CC >% would rather have my arm broken in a wecond than in a week, aud 1 would rather for her sake see you desert this girl now, even though you were mack more bounld is honor to her, than witâ€" ness her long agony in a wmartinge mfl-hunflm "But 1.am a poor pbilosopher. Let me come down to practical advice. There is pleuty of time. Do nothing hiastily. Marsbail, 1 know you soul and bodv. I know some one whom you would love, and you couldn‘t help is And as for her"â€" He paused. "You know that she has cared for me," said L "In a strange way 1 beard of it.. When Siby! was in New York, she did the best thing that she knew for a man who was learning to love me about singing to you and how you sang to her and how she dropped the "So it was really Siby! who sang?‘ «aid 1 with something like a groan. "l{eares grant that her volce will not always ring If my ears." "It was she," said be. "And now go down to the orchard. She has some thing to say to you. Then take your time. Doun‘t burry about anything. If you really love Miss Witherspoon and she loves you, you‘ll love each other & great deal better a year from nowâ€"â€" five years from now, for that matter. And if there‘s a mistake, it may be set right. Time will set all right, my boy, and that‘s a hard doctrine for youth to swallow. If there‘s no mistake and you bring her to me at last to be my daughterâ€"well, 1 think you know me, Marsball." prise I beheld Derringer and Miss Laâ€" moine. My mouth opened for speech, but no word came out of it. 1 was donâ€" bly surprised, for my father had told me that Sibyl was in the lodge, and 1 had supposed that Derringer had gone back to New York. In the last few days I hadn‘t seen him. _ > I took his hand. and there were tears In my evyes. Nelther of us spoke as 1 groped for my hat and found my way out of the rooma. fieclmenptomohntflyflflol stood hat in band. ‘Torry," he said, "I am the chief of idiots, and 1 have the luck belonging to that kind. I was all wrong. She is really Miss Lamoine." I & inn my hand to the lady, who at that moment extended hers. 0 "How could we have been in doubt?" said I.. "She really looks like her brothâ€" er very much. You must know, Miss Lamoine, that Jimmy hbas been the solace of my days in this place. He is a great boy." "Jimmy is a little monkey," said she. "I suppose he has played tricks upon yeu without end." "Slightly assisted by Providence," I replied, "Jimmy has accemplished wonâ€" ders for my entertainment. But what am I to infer by Mr. Derringer‘s reâ€" mark about his luck?" "We await congratulations and best wishes," .said she, "In the old fashionâ€" ed way." 3 _"If ever since the world began they have been -lncerely(‘lm. it is now," said I, taking a hand of each of them. _ _ She 'looked-qulcuy at Derringer, and in that instant sbe was a different woâ€" man to me. She had come out from beâ€" "Come," I cried. "I haven‘t tme to ¢xâ€" hind the vell, and there was a awest abd beautiful sincerity in ber eyes. As for Derringer, he was admirably ab #wurd in his bappiness. The Best Family Medicine. is the way to m of the pity of the way to my ntter «~r «Such a Nolse!" ‘l‘hmmhwâ€"% #I can hardly endure it.* Then a creeps over her as she thinks of the awâ€" ful silence which falls upon the home a ie ies "titinca aie nardy af body is glad her c are hardy of body Snd ds srgan oi digention sn oo mi â€" tion, and so enables body to obtain without loss or waste the benefit of the nutrition provided in food. ‘The "Dis covery* contains no alcohol and is enâ€" tirely free from opium, cocaine and _ all 1 n ; you for renipeneant prmne hsn bm&w-yflmzbq. He was taken with when he was a year and a bait old and he was under the doctor‘s treatment for lnla‘ynn We spent all we made for docâ€" tor‘s and it did no good. He could eat only a little milk and cracker, and some times even all day, and I gave flfi:dfilm*l:z ever Sep ie batks h‘mrxbâ€"dued and on over one day I Dr. Pierce‘s Golden Medical Discovery recommended for indigestion. . We bought some -ldmuhwwy. He had been treated at by a good doctor and at Bennefjtsâ€" ville, 8. C., and at Currie and Luamberton and Maxton. ..awflmxkndhnmu-e. We gave him two les of Dr. Pierce‘s Golden m&lmmuumm. He is well as can be and can eat anything that he wants and it does not hurt him. _ He has not been sick uh’d-cndnh-hcaunmyunmhe took your medicine." A Thankful Mother., "I have felt it my duty for a long time," writes 2i o d'a:.’&nfil ces "to tell you of the cure effected by m'mldhlnw'l-fl"h-“ 'hthea-edurflukboy,mn.m seven years old. When he was two months ummmmcdm-dlmldm his lungs and in throat. His tonsils enâ€" m-fl-&-hmtwmoflwid the doctor operate on themâ€" we had the doctor take tonsils out and he made bad hwukdl;‘lfh‘tnmhmlnvhdkmu sick, and we tried we could hear dwwmm-w-w.u -.flymdx-“ ou'?n‘&::c e years h was mm-w.eqafiegumw%m Stratford, Oct. 6.â€"George E. Kalbâ€" fieisch, a carpenter, fell from a house on whichk he was working toâ€"day, a distance of 30 feet, alighting on his feet, but slipping on his face, which was badly cut. Several bones were broken in his fect. It is expected he will recover if something unforescen does not set in. on mm eme i NPR EEIE about him. He fourth so -uuy“m 'l-on; bo'z Tok qo w s fi-w eaging God 16 ncelr'-. g:l?l : see he was getting so would go to and begying God to -pnlf-. m!mmhwmhrn mucitworse; he was just as as be be, his kidneys bee-mluaudl his I had read a book about Dr. Pierce‘s mediâ€" . It seemed to me that this was the ve! medicine we wanted, and I told my hm& muzfimflbflymeofbr.flent'ln I nl“mllmldhdpurh% + ‘ on wt,nndwhhlhe'mwheunmin; e wave him your medicine three times a day It may be & piece of superflous adâ€" vice to urge people at this season of the year to lay in a supply of Chamâ€" berlain‘s Cough Remedy. It is alâ€" most sure to be needed before winter is over, and much more prompt and satisfactory results are obtainâ€"d when o e Oe e s se E 1 had read a book about Dr. Pierce‘s mediâ€" . It seemed to me that this was the ve -edkfinwenuud.-ndltddnyhmi mu:fimmmcdw.m-n I nlnnltlnellwuldhdpurho& He sent and got some and we commenced wi the ‘Golden Medical Discovery‘ on Friday wmmtu~nm'meunmm; -:l c've hlny:rndidnemthflr:e thn:li- day a was able y, and in one mm:g‘:xfl-e hemngmdt:khglfi rnndn-u cough was woul. gifi_ m‘h‘?flg’t‘slm_‘l_n;l he taken as soon as & cold is contracted and before it has become settled in the system, which can only be done by keeping the remedy at hand. This remedy is so widely known and so alâ€" together good that no one should hesâ€" ‘itate about buying it in preference to FLOWER, FRUIT AND HONEY SHOW. A novel method of advertising the Provincial Fruit, Flower and Honey Show, which will be held in Toronto, November 15â€"19, has been devised. The frait growers and forists interâ€" ested have decided to give apples and Nowets free to every person who atâ€" tends the exhibition on two days of the show. It is expected this will greatly increase the attendance and add greatly to the interest ~taken in Mv.zm.,o omm u‘“." r::lmkm hwe keepors. â€" Brc r""&.‘::‘ 1t is expected 1 ‘The fruit growers, with the idea of increasing tga demand for froit, â€" are arranging to distribute free of cost, neatly gotten up bookiets, containing nutmerous . recipes for the eeoln& ": ete., of ~all varieties trait, as apples, .::"'""" Tine ot Fork is. leing Tollewsd ty the ies Xeniinties . MIM--IJn ta SOME SEASONABLE ADVICE # narcotics, * â€" & A Woandertul Things BONES BROKEN IN FALL other. It is for sale by all drugâ€" done to make the show of as dibcational value as possible. sxpected it will be a strong h its way, to the big Winter N. Â¥. Tribune:â€"â€"Bee have ‘mnhcfl-h-m to _produge a stingless bee. ‘They exâ€" :!mbwflbh‘“ American bees with the Italian. { Much in this direction has been acâ€" | complished in Arizons, where the |noticeable strain of the native stock ing but is not rated so good a . honey The new bee that has been : deâ€" veloped is not s0 pugnacious, and is less inclined to resent any interferâ€" ence by stinging, and at the same time he is almost as good a; honey maker as bis Italian ancestors. The tiny weapon of defence has alâ€" ways proved a great menace to the apiarist and there are many instances in which it has proved faial to man and beast. A fight of locusts got in among the bees at Mahableshwar, India, the other day, and the result was someâ€" what alarming. Aâ€"swarm of angry bees surrounded Mr. and Mrs. Atkins, who were driving past _the apiary. ‘They were both severely stung, and the ponies that were hitched to the vehicle. died as a result of the attack made upon them by the bees. _ A valuable horse belonging to Wilâ€" liam ‘Mendelsohn, of Ventura, Cal., was stung to death by angry bees. Mr. Mendelsohn had located his bees on & ranch near the town and while absent had tied his horse near the hives. ‘The bees attacked the animal in swarms, and he died soon afterâ€" ward in agony. Bud Summers, of Huntsville, Mo., was driving along a country road the other day when he and his horse were attacked by a swarm of bees. The assault was so effective that Mr. Summers fied to the nearest house. His horse tore the buggy and harâ€" ness to pieces and fell down helpless and bleeding. He died an hour afterâ€" ward. Mr. Sdmmers thinks he would have been stung to death but for the help given him by the family in whose house he sought refuge. As it was he was terribly disfigured, f "Stinging is not the impulsive and furious action on the part of the bee that many persons think,"" said a bee culturist. " I have often watched bees sting, and they all go about it in the same way. ‘‘Take them, first, in a slow and careful sting, where they have plenty of time. Here they study the ground that is to be punctured with minute attention. ‘"‘They have a pair of instruments called palpiâ€" wonderful instruments full of fine bairs, cach hair terminatâ€" ing in a delicate nerve â€" and with these palpi they will sound the piece of fiesh as perfectly as a physician will sound a patient‘s lungs. _ They can tell precisely in this way whether or not their sting will penetrate without meeting any obstruction or coming to any harm. ‘‘The bee, if it seems good to her at the end of her examination, turns, darts in her sting, and at the same time injects into the wound a tiny drop of clear pale green venom. If she has time she withdraws | her sting, circling around and around the wound, screwing out the little weaâ€" pon as a carpenter screws out a bit. . ‘‘But if she has not time, if her life is in danger, she flies away at once," fRavihg ~both â€" poisoinâ€"andâ€"sting. Thus maimed, she dies in an hour or two. | â€"There ars other canses, hnt no mat« ter what the cause or what the kind oft piles, Dr. Leonha.:dt‘s Hemâ€"Roid "It is only upon the drones of the hive that the average bee uses her weaponâ€"not one bee in a million ever stings a human being or an aniâ€" malâ€"and when she attacks a drone it is easy to withdraw her sting again, and thus no harm comes to her. ‘‘When she stings a man, though, tWike is more danger; but even here she reconnoitres with her palpi first and finds time in many cases to get out her sting and escape uninjured." Chicago News. People would me:t with fewer disâ€" appointments if they didn‘t expect more than they desecse. A wise girl always pretends to be a little more daffy than the young man she is planning to face the parâ€" son with. s One of the hardest things to find in this world is a friend who isn‘t hard up at the same time you are. â€" When there is nothing left to fight for we may hope for universal peace. When an outsicer insists on fair play it is usually an excuseâ€"for meddling. Pluck is the stepfather of success. Love is elastic, but if stretched too far it becomes hate. + ‘The higher the price of meat the more food we have for reflection.. . In a group of towns of similar size Berlin made the best showing in cusâ€" toms receipts for September. The reâ€" turns are: BetHKÂ¥ .......... .....«_ ...« Â¥00,818 90 Stratford ......... ......... ... â€" 18,004 75 CGubligh .,.....â€" ........ ««..." 16,00°04 BetHK â€"......... .....â€"s_..«..cc. Â¥QU,818 90 Stratford ......... ... ... 18,004 75 Gutlgh ...« ........ «... " 40,000@04 In August Strattord led with Berâ€" lin & good second. â€" ‘The customs receipts for the whole Dominion for the month of Septemâ€" ber aggregated $3,002,449, being an increase of $145,743 over the same A prolific cause of piles is the use e(onhflhnl pills of a drastic, violent nature. a â€"Followed by a reaction on account of the resinous, dryiog properties they contain. . C ioh : : ol month of last year SOME CUSTOMS RECEIPTS POINTED PARAGRAPHS be relied upon to cureâ€" to stay PILLS AND PILES the native stock er careful breedâ€" THE SECRET OF GERMAN ADâ€" VANCE, A series of reports, submitted by consuls of the United States in Gerâ€" many, give bighly intercsting details of the system of industrial education‘ which has contributed so largely to the phenomenal success of the German empire in manufactures and commerce. Attendance at the public school is compulsory for every child cn reachâ€" ing the age of six or seven yeats. At the age of ten the aptitude of th> puâ€" pil and the means and position of the parcnts decide whether he shall pass cn for higher education or go into a trade or tecknical school. In the forâ€" mer case he is preparcd for a gymnasâ€" ium course to fit him for a learn>d profession. In the iatter he is given a course of training to enable him to become an artisan, skilled textile worker, machinist, mechanical enginâ€" eer or handicraftsman. There are also schools to prepare pupils for business careers and industrial high schools, where arts connected with manufacâ€" turing are taught. The object of the system is to give every child a chance to prepare himself for some useful career in life, according to his abiliâ€" ties and the future which the position of hbis parents may open to him. Most attention is given to the indusâ€" trial and business schools, as these have the largest attendance, and it is desirable that the youth of th> nation shall be thoroughly instructed in pracâ€" tical and productive methods. It is not the mere technicalitics of a callâ€" ing that such schools provide. Th: workshop is the place to acquire that. It is rather the principles that lie beâ€" hind such work and the co ordination of the mental and physical processes by which it bas to be accomplis hed Moreover, these schools do not sent out mere mechanics, as the workshop does, but educated men. It is perhaps in closely combining a goof, all round culture with mmmt'as' employment that the German system has its chief advantage over our own. in h‘s reâ€" ecnt address before the Cntario Eduâ€" cational Associaticn, Dr. Peterson said . "Of all countries, Germany is the one that has most reason to he conâ€" tent with her educational system. . . .~ The Germans have very little sympathy with the modern view that "th> best mcde of preparingz the young mind for its future work is to direct it at an early age, before a basis of really sound knowledge has been Idic towards the special studies or purâ€" suits which are to occupy it in after life.‘ They would rather incline to the converse proposition, namely, that ‘the more special the occupation of the man, the more large and liberal should be the studies in which he is trained." wWOODSTOCK HAS Woqgdstock, Oct. 3.â€"The population of :v‘gustdck is 9,424. The assessâ€" ment is $3,308,975. _ The population last year was 0,279. Thus the inâ€" crease this year is 145. In 1903 the assessed value of the city was $2,â€" 945,350. By aiding to climinate ‘ Unsiess and poiscvous mwatter, [ , «Just as neture does, Uterty from the blood, T he users of this reguiator Have a sovercign remedy K.ven in cases of severs Invoiving the entire system. Do not despair, Nor ; dfe with substitutes. E.fect a cureâ€"not a temporar YÂ¥ relietâ€"and stay cured. Put up in boxes, 30 pille, 300 In drug stores everywhere, Linger notâ€"danger awaite, L,et not foolish delay be yours, And be guided thereby. PERFECTION CREAM SODAS were a theory. Toâ€" day they are the mos deâ€" lighiful cracker facts in Canâ€" many tons a day are baked to satisfy the demnand. Mooney‘s Sodas went out to fresh, crisp, creamy deficiousâ€" She Crackers That Took Canada By Storm. » A year ago, MOONEY‘S NEW YORAN, N. Y., AMD winbsCR, on‘t. (Montreal Witness.) 9,424 INHABITANTS e Toan Blgos, Boriin. a C Pnran ons abllotnen, hncaries Public, C# ® a ‘a U:avu“flahflu“-‘m“ xd K oundry streeis, B C u‘::o.,.l‘a'la--h".:l't 1 Emab . > Mow. & FLINTOFT. e dpresoass iess Noane "ole VY + Barrister, ets W fatinise. mrtictor. Nomey . Connee Jl WEBB, M. D. w % geons and A eye and ear Lreated. 0&(0â€"2‘:: residence z?-tsuves WaterI00, a suort ,é of the late Dr. Walden‘s residence. in R. W. L. HILMJAKD. &n Hon:‘r ':;-unt‘ of ‘l;rnto UM: flu + (“‘“. “.m ' Ba. and A.coucheurs of Ontario. m in disea e# of the nose and throut alicnic n given to the use of the cas 8. [)R, DAME. Specialist in medical aud su gica! diseases of the Kye, Kar, Nesse P.l Throat £XCLUNIVELY. A graduate 0 Royai Loudon @pthalmic and Golden Square Kar, Nose and Thre«t Hespitâ€"is, London, Kng land, Also itoyal aud Imperial Sye, Kar, N aod Throut Huspitals, Vienna, Austris. be consultec at the \Talper Mouse, Tuesday and Friday afternoons and .v-a Telephone 252, Gait, Unt. n=â€"I,, nermatars ictatee ies Cl j:_'_-nl kconomical Blook, 4 Bb West Dentist, L.D.S., Royai Coilé; gu.w Surgeons, ).D.8. Toronte Unlv-& AJlbranches of dentistry practised. Jausen‘s Block, Berlin, over Smyth Store. Entrance between Fehrenbach‘s ler and Stuebing‘s grocery. Ofice on King Stroek, Opposite Wosllea M lis Fhone 210. W. R.Wilkinson, L.D.$., D.D. 8 > ow c2ll CC 70 E+ BMCZ Waterioo, "Will vist Kimira, Ziliax Mouse the secord Thureday and Friday and feurth Thursday and Friday of each month (Thursday p.m. to Friday 1p. m. ODONTUNDEKR e painless extraction of teeth. ‘The Waterie Me will be closed every Friday afterass W ate:loo. ]OHN L. WIDEMAN ol t Uiousses ® Isener arrisge Lices Officeâ€"Port Office Bt. Jacobs, Oat. CKRIS'R)PIIR WOLFE, Jn .Painter and Paper Hanging. Will a der ake contracts for painting and paver hang ng in Town and Country. Firstâ€"slaes work guaranteed. Charges ‘reasonable, Apply a residence, otrner of Queen and 1tincess @t», E. CLEMKNT KE C. _E W.CLAMENT w 41LRA Phone 482. Vz.f*.m a full Hne .ll"l' »-'-;'tq: .'.u ® bber" sw market to.c aY. lq;“ ected by per pire am Tangle foot â€" pRUSSECG No chares IE Authg ‘mut Auorinies every 8. C. T. NORCKER, Medallist of" Teronte entiate of the College of 1 X â€" Ray and Electrie Currents the diagnosis and treatment o suitable A. HiLLIARD G. HUGHES. DENTIST. Ofice Onen Daily, Office: Canadian Block, Berlin. for the Aiy Dentist _ Office in Oddfâ€"low‘s Blook bbacce 53â€" * Aubop MISCELLANEOUS Fiypad And all kinds of MEDICAL DENTAL DRUEI BERLIN

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