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The Chronicle Telegraph (190101), 19 Aug 1909, p. 7

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t= Ei: CBM CSAE 20 es Baroness D fa3 ;m whom _ + Imughed at 1 . _ "Well, I‘m es ride, and 1‘ J’% _ 3y. In two 2o ts W ®‘ groof & bor * * Bophy had ‘been thinking. Neither . cagn f courage nor her cunning forsook h ‘Bhe waved the document away. Te takeyour word, captain? You‘re hss n mistake today? 1 really am E;.ggi‘ is Dobravaâ€"not somebody ols# _ . uwwith whom.you bave a feud?" Bhe iess o l l ‘_ aughed at him gayly and went on: &4 fell, I‘m ready. I‘m dressed for a _ ~ride, and 1‘ll ride with you immediateâ€" e fi two minutes we‘ll be off." She _ saw a‘ groom in the road staring at the * ~Stmnoners and called to him to bring het n are :_.,, s $ y‘ . ::> pound: â€" P » ‘;' “ tho h: 6 yfl : k# EÂ¥ to warn the. prince. wAÂ¥ / they bad the thought E/ â€"rould have been useless P MHéfY \. uniess it had chimed in PRA with Mistitch‘s will. & fi < M men could have § £L\\ \ been : on _ them ~before MCY â€" s i to saddle e _ 0 .. If the Pss * ; tion Tez a bortt dle ie NC( _ _ eastle was caught nap Peter Vassip ping in very truth! ue y for=" Bophy stood forward a .« ward _ and in front of ber comâ€" vs,.‘jmfl Her hand restâ€" * 9 05% â€" "@@ on the little revolver w‘nflr bad given hor. / un the company. The foremost < The figure of their commander now appeared. He rode to the foot of the €auseway, ‘then distmounted and gave hils borse to the sergeaut who attended him. Lis men followed and drew up In the road, blocking the approach to the castle. â€" Big Mistitch begin to nscend the causeway, a broad smile on his face, "It was a great moment for Captnin ITerculesâ€"the day of revenge 'fi;hkh he had waited in forced paâ€" anee and discreet unobtrusiveness. 1t ‘was a critical day also in view of the Instructions he bad. To do him jusâ€" tice,â€"be was not afraid. . .4,;%:.' and knew. This must ‘have : the news that Zerkovitch f that be bad galloped on to ‘Aelf the prince at Volsenl. . Bome event =â€"some unknowb aod untoward turn of J Aort loosed Mistitch on them! What was allâ€"she bad time toâ€"realize beâ€": *’gm honor of ade i Daroness Dobrava?" â€" _ _.. oep® *You know me ,â€"1 think, Captain . . 4 know you." _~ o_ _ * HGue Journey together will be all the jg-nu for that." \_ #Â¥your business with me, please?" . . "I bave it In command from bis majâ€" esty to escort you to Siaynaâ€"to the palace and dnto his presence. The king himgelf will then acquaint you with bis wishes." #Â¥ou‘re a strange messenger t send." "That‘s n point to put to my superior fficer, Colonel Stafnitz, who sent me, Abgroness." _ _ s cA ~Sophy pointed at his men. "You ride gtrongly supported!"* "#Agaju the colomel‘s orders, baronâ€" was. 1 confess the precautions seemed to me excessive. 1 bad no doubt y9ou would willingly obey his majesty‘s gommands. Here, by the way, is the whritten order." He produced the order The king had signed before his death. W obedience by no means d Mistitch‘sâ€"book. It forced. him either to show his band or to ride off PTRR l 22 Cooriy i y oc irnen o im ’ 'm”’ .v:hs-vâ€"l'n;â€"{h; prince to hbis s, and, in a !ittle while, to his reâ€" @-m you. You have some *Kome," said Sophy. Her borse was Jed out into the road. _ ‘ C ay _fl'mw'll_:! ;fl 'â€"d-lnâ€" to acquaint his *XRet t all ts at all necessiry. . Baron vyon follbrandt can do that Inter on." Mistitch Jooked puszled. Sophy smilâ€" e4. Her Intaition had been right ‘The m“‘-'ulhht,hrlfl!fll blind. â€" The prince was the real object bussare of t king‘s guard, egio in the army. . The "bey hated bim for it. But 3 colonel. On they their biue tunics and allver made a brave â€"show in the . â€" The ¢fieer in not see him yet hecl oo e %’% hiae % amilâ€" of ine move Wis(itcb. *# Gre my borse is 'IWJ”,,, aturt t once, cuptain." she said. â€"_ * "I‘in Instructed: to espress to the prince regret that it should ‘be nece# sary"" L n o â€"toeea "The regret will be conveyed to him: Come, captain!*, ks But Mistlich barved ber. way,~.> â€" "IIls royal hbhmflhmlgl‘""' he agked. is voice . angry pow. He feared thmm 'm 1e saw that Sophy gug( with . bim. How would he and his escort look ridâ€" Ing back to Blavna with nothing to show for their journey save the cap, ture of one unresisting 'oml-lx min . whom they dared .not harm w the prince remained Tree and might beâ€" come all powerful?© â€" _ C3 e es _‘ "I‘ll see that for myself!" Afistitch eried, taking a step forward. 0 If he had been you‘d bave kno#n it by now, 1 think," smiled Bophy. *"No. the prince isn‘t at the eastle®" . . Peter Vassip sprang. forward and barred the way. OMistitch ‘raised bis mighty \ arm, ~but Sophy‘a volce ramt out gayly: > "Notisense, Peter! There‘s nothing to conceal. Let the captiitu pass." l Her. words stopped Mistitch. Ne feated a trap? | Maxâ€"saw It and mocked him. â€" "Don‘t be safraid, eaptair . Take fifty men in with you. "The ga.rison eonsists of a lady in bed, an old mt and five femate gervants." * Sophy beard and Wughed. Even the troopers began to laugh now. . Mistitch stood on the top of the: causewny, ir resointe, bafiled, furions, > But behind his stupidity Iay the cun: ning astuteness ‘of | Stafnitz, tbe. ir genious bit of deviliry.~ Mistitch‘s name availed where lils brain could not. Fot the mqment the p&ince made little of the crown which had become his, When he heard Zerkovitch‘s news. bis over "gu od_ migitâ€"be_espoeed to the pow "aud the nsults pf. Mititch, Sorht \was praoynig" a siiTrut Bame for him but he did not know it. â€""I bear something." said Peter Yas sip ngain, whispering to Mas yon Loll brandt. # 3 m\â€"';sâ€",”there whs the gailoping of horses on the Volsent road! & .9 | E king had died yesterday, yet mone had told bis heir! Mistitch t had set out for Dobrava with * fifty men to walt.for the kha who was dead. ‘The dead king wou ‘ never go to Dobriva, and no tmessenger came to the new king at Prasiok! Zerkovitch‘s news was enough to | raise the anger of a king, and Serging biazed with it. But more potent still was his wrathfol fear as be thought of Sophy at Prasiok in the power of Cap tain Hercules. f 1 He had his goard of twenty mounted | men with him. With these he at once ‘ get forth, biddimg Lukovitch collect all | the men he could and follow him as speedily as possible. If Mistitch had ; really gone to Dobrava, then he would ;‘ find him there and have the truth out , of him, bot if, as the prince hardly .‘ doubted, be was making for Prasiok _ Colouel Stafuits had not miscalcu lated. w4 . Now Mistitcb beard the sound. Iis bheavy face brightened. He ran down the causeway loudly ordering his men to mount He was no longer at a loss He had his cue nowâ€"the cue Siafuits had given him. stepned th there was time to Interceptâ€"him, time to ‘carry off Sophy and the other inâ€" mates of the castle, send them back to safety within the walls of Yoisent and himself Tide on to mect Mistitch with his mind it ease. “I'loTy-iâ€"nâ€"s:n“i;fkorlu'h'l Information, he nssuimed thit the troopers bad not started from Slavoa til} 7 in the moroâ€" ing.â€" They bad started at 6. e reckâ€" oned also on Zerkovitch‘s statement thal they were but fifty strong. They were a bundred . Yot. bad. he known the truth, be cou}d not have used more haste,. and he would not have waited for another man. . He stayed to tell no man in Volsent the news about his faâ€" ther except Lukovitech.. But as his twonty rode out of. the gate ‘behbind him he turned his head to Zerkovitch, who trotted beside bim, for Zerkovitch neither could nor would rest till the game was played. and said, ‘Tell them that the king is dead and that 1 reign." Ferkovitch whispered the uews to the wan pesxt him, and it ran along the Hne. â€"A low, stern cheer, hardly more than a murimmured assurance of loyalty and sorvice, came from the lips of the men in sheepskins. $ _ Mistitch saw them coming and turnâ€" ed to his troop. He bad time for a litâ€" tle speech, and Stofuits had taught bim what to say: "Men, you are servants of the king dnd of the king only. Not even the Prince of Slavna can comâ€" mand you â€"against the king‘s orders ‘The king‘s orders are thit we take Baroness Dobrava to Slavna, no matâ€" ter who resists. 1f need be, these orâ€" ders stand even against the prince." Stafnitz‘s soldiersâ€"the men he petâ€" ted. the men who had fclt the prince‘s stern handâ€"were only too glad to. bear it ‘To strike fqg the.kipg apd_ryet against the hated prineceâ€"It “wu) luxâ€" ury, a bappy and unlooked for Natiim s nizing of their duty and their pleasy ‘Their answering cheer was loud and 1t struck harsh on the ears of the adâ€" vancing prince. His face grew hard and strained as be heard the shouts and saw the solled body of men across the piath, barring access to his own castle. And within a yard or. two of their ranks by the side of the road sat the Agure which he knew so well and | so well.lored. "â€"~Now EHilstitch played his card, that move in the game which Sophy‘s cool ‘#ubmission to bis demand had for the" moment (hwarted, but to. which the prince‘s beadlong auger and fearâ€"now gave mn opening. the opening which Stafoits bhad from the first foreseen. It wonld need little to make the fiery prince forget prudence when he was tace to face with Mistitch. It was not a safe game for Mistitcb personallyâ€" both Stafaits ‘and he knew thatâ€"but Captain Hercules was eonfident. He would not be caught twice by the Vol sen! trick of sword! The satisfaction of his revenge and the unstinted â€" reâ€" wards that his colonel offered made it worth his while to accept the risk and rendered itâ€"grateful to Ell beart. Sophy sat smilttigr She would fain have averted the encounter and had shaped her maneuvers to that end. It was not to be so, it seemed.. Now, she did not doubt monseigneur‘s success, but she wished that Zerkovitch bad not reached Volseni so quickly; that the prince had stayed behind his walls till his plans were ready, and that she was going a prisoner to Slavyna to see the king, trusting to ber fmce, 5 tongue, ber courage and the star of WB fortine. Never bad her buogant welf confidence run: bigher. On the top of the catseway Max yon Hollbrandt looked to his revolver, Po ter Vassip loosened his knife in I‘s leather sheath. A window above the ite ape and Marte rnm(ch'l t face looked out. woâ€" servants jostled old Vassip in the 4 Tz’m stood ontside stables, one moved. Only the z\'fl Hitle troop came on. When , were Bfty sards away Mistitch eried to his men, "Draw sworda!" and hirmself pricked bis horse with bis epur and rode ap to where Sophy was. . Mistitch drew his horse ap paralle! to Bopby‘s, head to tail, on ber right si18, between ber and the approaching forbe. ~With the lnstinct of hatred she abrmukawny from him. 1t had all been forescon and rebearsed in Stafoits‘s Mb unceusingiy : Toe tm is cond The king is dead! ‘The king is dead!t" %mmfi&nfififl at His men followed bim and dashed, with a shock, against the troopers of Mistitch‘s escort. As they ldlthyuhd.“laacllniw glus!" They â€" had unborsed a do# zau'sn‘dlurcrm-hn redalized that they met with no reâ€" #A Mistiteh‘s men ~were paraâ€" to fight against the king! ‘The magle of the name worked. Theyâ€"dropped the points of their ewords. ‘The Volseni aus, hesitatingto strike men: whoâ€" did not defend themselves, puzzled and in doubt, turned to their bailiffâ€"their king g-muumh:” faie man m m ne 1 R grassy " side and sprang .& save for: & :t-‘:rhh her crusbed wristâ€" Sbe m’il.' The: .'::- f & was a moment none moved @ave the two )mmwbmn ~‘The fAght of the Street of the Founâ€" tain fell to be fought again, for when Peter Vassip was darting . forward, in band, ‘with a spring like a mountaia goat‘s, his master‘s volce galled, *"Mine, Peter; mine!" It was the old cry when they shot wild boar in the â€" woodsabout Dobrava, and it brought Peter Vassip to a stand,. Max vyon Holibrandt, too, lowered bis pointâ€" ed revolver. . Who: should stand beâ€" tween his quarry and the king, beâ€" tween Sophy‘s lover and the man who had so outraged ber? Big Mistitch was the klog‘s game nud the king‘s only that day. _â€" Mistitch‘s chance was gone, and be wust have known it Where was the gergeant who had nudertaken to cover him? He bad turued tail Where was the enveloping rush of his men, which should have engulfed and paralyzed: the enemy? Paralysis was on his men themselves. ‘They believed Zerkoritch and lacked appetite for the killing of a king. Where was bis triumphant reâ€" turn to Slayna, bis Invrels, his rewards. hisâ€" wonderful swaggerings at the ' Golden Lion? They were all gone, Evenp Mistiich jell with a mighty crash, shot ~= ===â€"~ through the head i though he killed the king, there were two dozen men vowed to have his life. They must bave it, but at what price? His savage valor set the figure high. It was the old fight again, but not in the old manner. ‘There was no delicate sword play, no fuctuatihg fortunes in the fray. 1t was all stern and short The king had not drawn his sword; Mistitch did not seek to draw his. Two shots rang out sharplyâ€"that was all ‘The kJog reeled jy. his saddle, but walnâ€" taumed‘ tiis seat. ‘Big Mistitch threw his hands above his head, with a loud cry, and fell, with a mighty crash, on the road, shot through the head. Petor Â¥assip ran to the king and hoeiped him ta dismount, while Maz yon Holibrandt held his horse. Sophby burried to where they laid him by the roadside. _ "Disarm these fellows!" .cried Zerkoâ€" vitch. C But Mistitch‘s escort were in no mood to walt for this operation, nor to st1y and suffer the anger of the king. With their leader‘s fall the last of heart was out of them. Wrenching themselves free from such of the Voisenians as gought to arrest their flight, they turnâ€" ¢d their horses‘ beads and fied, one and all, for Slayna. The king‘s men atâ€" tempted no pursult They clustered around the spot where be lay. â€"*"I‘m hit," he said to Sophy, "but not badiy, 1 think." Stop That Cold Ifeatinvecptects :'?'5‘33%1‘""‘# "Toa, "a Rroventics T hegohing" Rice To? fi#fl%&i $A é’r"*fi; f!ll'll'."tâ€"-“ ll-u-"w'-;; lâ€"P'.-l; ‘-fivvflfi: E ifii‘a mlklm“m also mave '3[ fi Te i al & ;a z c ist on your yos i8 â€" (To be continued.) 'ko-_'u':. Q--h W , uc.“:: a child was borm to their second }rm‘ufi had ‘been . more or.fi current for two ‘years. -” l en s " . uis tone +1 To k w:"fl’- gate es f re dn‘ nader That T\ nalrh 1â€" hus" je i .flk;;.éu.;« T “ e ‘ w{rwi-- onday, the “.f‘ ‘.r,d"é‘ ,,"l <fl ‘ ",é , a 19â€"yeatâ€"Obd.. : ; had very recently. given bitth to & child, and also _ Elien Robâ€" inson, & * years, was about Jbe « . Un the . same â€" day, wever , had gone to Warâ€" ren and was not present during the Grandmother‘s Story "at Inquest. â€" An inquest was held toâ€"day at Watâ€" ren before Coromer Dixon as to what caused the deathâ€" ol the baby born to Jessi¢â€"Robinson on Aug. 7th â€" last. E. A. Wflfht related the facts as above in ‘his evidence. ‘The only â€"memâ€" tets of â€"the. Robinson family prescat were. Mrs. Robinson,. their gon John, aged 21, and their daughter, Maggic, aged 14. The daughters Jessic . and Elien were unable to attend. __Mrs. Robinson swore that she ~was the mother. of ‘ten ‘ _ children, _ the eldest aged 21 and the youngest Tour. A child had been born>to Jessie ~on the 17th day of March, and one to Ellen on March 24th, 1908. The children were dead and had been burâ€" ried in the gardén. A second: child. had been born<to Jessic on the 7th day of August, this year, and it had died and been buried. _ No â€" ~doctor or minister had attended. at . either ol the births, deaths orâ€" burials. She swore that the children had: died on the day of birth, and James Robinâ€" son, her husband,â€" had buried ~â€" at: tnree: In answer to the question‘ ‘"Do you know what caused«the death of : the second baby of . Jessi¢‘s?"‘ she did not answer, the Court advising her sue need not if she desired not to. In answer to a juryman she stated that the child had not been washed or dressed and had lived an hour only. Maggie Robinson, the _ fourteenâ€" yearâ€"oldâ€"daughter, said she had only been home â€" two weeks, and _ knew nothing of the babies. She made a serious charge against het father. John Robinson, :the twentyâ€"yearâ€" old son, had known of the birth and deaths of the first babies for over .a year and knew of the birth of Jésâ€" sie‘s second baby the next day. He _ This wasâ€"all the â€"evidence, and â€" Mrs. Robinson‘s sworn statement was inâ€" troduced. In it she accused her hus band of being the father or al} the: children, and saia: â€" "When _ my | daughter Jessie gave birth to a baby boy, about an hour afterwards 1 placed the baby between two matâ€" tresses in order to kill it. Upon the birth of the second baby, whose mother was Elien, on che 23rd day of March, 1908, I was in the room when the child was born, Tb was a boy. My husband was with me. I partâ€" ly fainted, but when I came to myâ€" self I placed the baby between two mattresses in order to kill it the same as I did the other one, which I did."" Both babies were put â€" into boxes and buried by the father. Grandmother Put Under Arrest. John Robinson ang his wife and family. moved to the Township _ ot. Hugel, lots 9 and. 11, concession 5, nine years ago, coming from Beachâ€" burg, near Cobden. Th:g:mily is in comfortable circumsta + The district in which they resihe is a large settlemcnt about seren ailes from Warren. Robinson has a good farm, and his crops toâ€"day are in the very best of shape, The house in which they live is small, and consists ‘of practiâ€" cally only two rooms, and it is stated the family all slept in the one room. Robinson himself is a man of about 50 years, while ihis wife is about 45. The whole family is educated. The daughter, Maggic, returned last week from an cight months‘ visit to Beachâ€" mother. The finding of the jury was that theâ€"child born to Jessie Robinson on the 7th day of August, 1909, had come to its death from causes unknown to them, and an autopsy was ordered on all three infants‘ bodies. Robinson is not at home, his clothâ€" ing having been sent to Sudbury, where it was stated he had hired with an employment agent to go to the busy. The mother of the family was arrested at Warven im@“flj atâ€" ter the proeeed\nr. ot corener‘s jury, chatged with infanticide, and the prelminary proceedings will be held there toâ€"morrow before Reeve Keelinz. There is not the least apâ€" pearance of lunacy in either husband or wife, and the actions of the latter are attributed to her desire to shield her husband and family from _ cxâ€" osuce and disgiacye QUARANTINE LIFTED Aftor, n arly three wee‘s‘ close conâ€" fnement, thy Woodstock Geberal Ho# | F‘al was Jast night | rclsased from quarantine â€"and the card which has warned people away from the premisâ€" (s was removed. The building and prem‘s‘s have been thorouphly disinâ€" fected, and it is thought that there is not the slightest danger of th: reâ€" aprearabce of the discase as the inâ€" t râ€"al allowed . | for : its develoâ€"mest siice â€"jcolation, bas passed wilhsut. any further casus. ~‘The stmictest proâ€" tautions bave been obssrved th ough out the quarantine and it is now felt Mf cause for: alarm has been toâ€" woed and that the: s 1007, e Sm SE Ee es n ¢ "Read how "Little Digesters" cured wee‘s‘ close conâ€" lr."';:dy. F ock Gobéral Ho+ two years I suffered with Indiâ€" t gestion, and obtained no relief from rcl>ased from | anything I took, including several â€"card â€" which has :sul;t'iouhomymd-utp‘yidns from the premisâ€" very meal was followed by acute pain Thr building and wntil I feared to eat, consequently thoroughly â€" disinâ€" | pmat"" id Digesters o were recoun ought that there | mended to me by a friend and I tried danger of th: reâ€" | them with remarkable results, two iscase as the |u-'.tull¢l-’hflyen1’-o. It is three â€" 1t\ develovment | monthasinee T took any, and I has s s passed wilthout "'"".'i'l""""’"‘" ‘The stactest breâ€" | mend them: to anpeedy sofferiar with obssrved !lmfi 1# ° #. TH i ho m 8e Rit . un ganne are n Porinie: Eus â€" ue i us We esw / w ; 'm‘m < i Removed by ham‘s V egeti ~ wi w44 it apite meet prra ul Wtydocwnnhn a tumor, nextmetemetes U 09 Nss ved, as it wou‘ld dia E. *sV E I took it yflh Ts, and still tfl it at and both my hasâ€" band m claim that it was the . means os.d.:l.";"- life, T highly â€" recomme u‘m * Mrs, Oricra BRADLEY, W Ave., Winnipeg, Manitoba, ‘ m of ‘,'ho greatest triumiphs ‘of L E. Pinkham‘s V: Come m is. the mufiqryfim‘l muâ€"@%\g have‘ is i Simiivenient, don‘t wBit for n ment, don‘t it for Aiinage ie mntrote of x hoopttal opore. TO O of a 0 uon.“fic try 1,;3:' E. Pinkham‘s &p table Compound at once. aAA ~ For thirty years Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Compound,â€"made from roots ng;erbo. has beonthestandard remedy for female ills, NEARLY DROWKED !N KEG. The little eleven monthâ€"old~ daughâ€" ter of Mr. and Mrs. Geo. E. Brash, Colborne sfréet, London, had a .narâ€" row escapeâ€" from. drowning Tuesday evening, by falling into a keg . of water, and only after. one and> & half hours‘ work did they succeed in restoring her to consciousness, . Mrs. Brash was out in the yardâ€"examinâ€" ing some cherry trees, and the Im.le'1 pirl was sitting in the yard neaf the: doorstep. Mrs. Brash says that <she> looked around at the child two or three times and it was safe in the yard. The next time she looked all that she could see was the child‘s little lfegs sticking up out _ of the keg of water. The ‘zeg was standing near where she had left the child, and it must have crawled over and climbed up. on the side and fell in. ~The footprints. of Dyspepsia hv.:! ‘been ‘cCirectly traced to the Stomach nerves. <When these ‘"inside | nerves" | fail, indigestion and stomach distress mus$ surely result. For this, drugâ€" gists cverywhere are supplying a preâ€" meription known as Dr. Shoop‘s Resâ€" torative First, these tiny inside Stomach, Heart and Ksidney _ nerves lail... Then gas ng, \Heart palâ€" pitation, ofr failing Kicrigys â€"follow. Don‘t drug the Stomach,\pr stimw> lato the Heatt or Kidneys\That is , wrong. â€"Strengthen these failing nerâ€" . ves with Dr. Shoop‘s RestoraNive. It is the nerves, not the organs \that are calling for help. ° Within\ 48. hours â€"after starting the Restorative, you will realize the gain. _ A tesy will tell. Sold by all dealers. Opinions differ. _ One man thinks successful farming consists in making ' a farm profitable from average land, the soil being left, meanwhile, as rich as when he took charge of it. _ Anâ€" other would define it as making monâ€" ey out of land regardless of the ferâ€" tility left in the soil.â€" A third would say that it consisted of making mionâ€" ey out of the land, and building up the fertility of the soil, so that it will become more and more producâ€" tive all the time. The last is _ cerâ€" tainly the best. It immdicates the triâ€" umph of good judgment and skill. It means that ‘an agricultural _ section which follows this plan never knows what hard times really are; that the farmers will have the maximum _ of comfort and luxuries and that _ the whole region will inctease in | wealth and influence as the years go by. It is highly important that this problem be considered in its entirety, as it is just as casy to graw geood crops while increasing the fertility of the land as it is toâ€"be continually _ deâ€" pletiang the soil, WHAT IS SUCCESSFUL FARMâ€" ING? DARE YOU EAT HEARTLY ? _ Or Is Every Good Meal Foltowed By Discomftort? 14 .s:l cg,:n'b?n are we that *‘Little era‘ cure m eve timeâ€"for every personâ€"for YOUâ€"-Qb?t we will give you your money â€"back wm{on a word if lhe{):ddl.h i Zon can enjoy A earty mea of m‘tood fime’ times a day, if you take a tablet after each meal. _ _ I could uot live more â€" than" six /‘ on be Bat E. Pinkâ€" were th. ~‘&'ut:':Ԥ"§.fl i ... Barvister, Solicitor, Jonveyaacer,: etc. ~ Office North, Berlin. Telephoi orly Peterso«‘s office, s office, 80e.00 : upponttetionct A BNEBEI ATII nn-c-&% ~5 rister, Solicitor ‘Noti ry | * w .'!&B!.l‘!.mwlqg Forman spok n now Markct Prodprick St., . F G. HUGHES. _ â€"â€" E’?E 5 modks _ EL hests ~CeW W p Us stist", Waterloo vfim.u : iomniate 'Z"g‘e?}flv‘gé Thusday 1 p.m Friday i p.m. 'Jh: exractivn . < '&":2.3. Officé will be slosed g. Kok 1 D. 8 p. D. is _ Graie Royal College of Dental Burgeons of Tore Dental Ofice above Mr, J. Uffelmaen‘s Visits St. Jacobs every ist and 3rd Frmday the month, Dentitry practiced in all EXPERIENCED â€" VETERL ABY SURGEON _ Cor, King and Foundry & P. CLEMENT.K.C, ® Wetecinac Bol e nalt 0t 0n BA RRIGT&RS, , M.+~ORAM â€" . school in Western Ontario with no superior in Canada. _Taree depart> ments; a 2Â¥ OHN 1. WIDEM es * l-n-:}'lluu-nl“ fllceâ€"Post Offlce, St. Jacobs, Ont After twentyâ€"two years of solid wortwohnnlooom;rlm.& t ost and most success(ul practical training Ciomantgés Uommercial, Shorth ind and â€" $ We assist :l-duhl?l’ 7 busiticns 2e e ass 0 Y L thorough trainiog. fi :\:r"r::omn at once. ...' Chas. Knechtel® Architeot * Pa‘ents rolicitingâ€"fer Canada and she United States. k Specialtyâ€" & Diseases of the Ear, Nose and Throat. King St. East. WELLS, LL.D.3. Oficc: 31 Courtland Aveune, § . rear Victoria Park Gate, _ $ Berlis, Ont. 40 Reape x c Fall Torm From Sept. ist Eilliott & McLachlan, METOALINE DR. J. E. HEDT, STRATFORD, ONT. Principal v wee ol Berlin. "____ L43

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