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The Chronicle Telegraph (190101), 13 Apr 1911, p. 7

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"1> 6t & C1 _ . RNRAAAAAALALPPIPPPNAPIPALMAIALAA "No, I don‘t. It‘s discipline he needs, _~&nd he‘ll get it good and plenty every â€" time he comes here." _ "Iâ€"I‘m afraid he may cease coming .here. That‘s the worst of it For his sister‘s sake 1 think we ought to try to put up with"â€"â€" "Put up! Put up! I‘ve been doing mothing else since he came of age. He‘s turned out a fool of a puppy, I tell you. He‘s idie, lazy, dissipated, impudent, conceited, insufferable"â€"â€" "I won‘t listen," hbe said. "Theyâ€" Austin andâ€"and everybody has been putting you up to this until I‘m tired ef it Do they think I‘m a baby? Do they suppose I don‘t know enough to take care of myself? Are they trying to make me ridiculous? 1 tell you they‘d better let me alonc. My friends are my friends, and 1 won‘t listen to amy criticism of thein, and that settles And yet be had promised Elleen to do what be could. What merit lay in performirg an easy obligation? What courage was required to keep a promâ€" #se casily kept? If be cared anything for hber, if he really cared for Gerald, he owed them more than effortless fulâ€" Wilment. So first of ail, when at length be bad decided, he nerved bimself to strike straight at the center, and withâ€" in the hour he found Gerald at the Stuyvesant club. The boy descended to the visitors‘ rooms, Selwyn‘s card in his band and distrust written on every feature. And at Selwyn‘s first frank and friendly words he reddencd to the temples and checked him. To whomi then could he go? Through whom could he reach Gerald? Through Nina? Useless. And Gerald had alâ€" ready defied Austin. Through Neerâ€" gard, then? But he was on no terms with Neergard. How could he go to him? Through Rosamund Fane? At the thought he made a wry face. Any advances from him she would willfully misinterpret. And Ruthven? How on earth could be bring hbimself to apâ€" proach him? If Alize bad done her best to keep Gerald away, she appeared to be quite powerless in the matter; and it was therefore useless to go to her. Besides, be had every iriclination to avoid ber. He had learned his lesson. "It‘s that little bangled whelp Ruthâ€" ven," said Selwyn between his teeth. "I warned Gerald most solemnly of that man, but"â€" He shrugged bis shoulders and glanced about him at the linen covered furmiture and bare floors. After a momxt he looked up. ‘"The game there is, of course, notoâ€" rious. Iâ€"if matters did not stand as they do‘â€"he fushed painfullyâ€""T‘¢ go ltraléht to Ruthven and find out whether or not this business could be "But not vicious, Austin, and not untruthful. Where his affections are centered he is always generous; where they should be centered he is merely thoughtless, not deliberately selfish. And, Austin, we‘ve simply got to beâ€" lieve in him, you knowâ€"on Eileen‘s Avstin grew angrie redder. "Eileen‘s account? Do you mean her bank account? It‘s easy enough to beâ€" lieve in him if you inspect his sister‘s bank account. Believe in bim? Obh, certainly 1 do. I believe hbe‘s pup enough to come sneaking to his sister to pay for all the fooleries he‘s enâ€" gaged in. And I‘ve positively forbidâ€" den her to draw another check to his "len‘t it? Well, why not? Do you expect me ‘~ dicker with him?" ""No; but, Austin, you‘ve always been & little brusque with him. Don‘t you though it was left to my discretion too. And I told him so Satly. I told him he wasu‘t 6t to be trusted with the coupons of a repudiated South "Hold ou, Austin. That isn‘t the way to tackle a boy like that!" There is always a causs for sick headâ€" qnhklvdou get better. A 25â€"cent box aches, hfl».-:L ‘sour stomach, of Fig Pills will do you $25.00 worth rheumatism aod othar diseasee. If you of good. Just you tmhun. For sale want to be well, cc.t the rost of the at all lâ€"ading chemiste. ovil Take Fig Pilis and see how Fuil, he shall not control one cent untii the trust conditions are fulflled, In Every Home Try for yourselfâ€"or in your home, ysiem . seromgtmeney 2p4 Vefrogiich system and refreshed and how surely and effectively they eaght to be on hand in home ready for nse at first sl‘n%ublr. This famous family remedy ha: proved in years and years of trial, its to correct physical trouble ard : ward off disesse. Why Fig Pills Will Make But this sufferin~ will soon be for gotten, and thore wi.l he no after couse quenees if relicf is obtained from a safe reliable, natural corrective medicine BEECHAM‘S _ PILLS there is sure to come physical suffering at timesâ€"suffering hard to bearâ€" suffer. ing which will be followed by scriovs d‘c‘km-ss. if the first syinptoms a:> You a New Person "It‘s only this," he saidâ€""1 am wonâ€" dering whether you would do anything An hour later be sent his card in to Rosamund Fane, and Rosamund came down presently, mystified, flattered, yet shrewdly alert and prepared for anyâ€" thing since the miracle of his coming justified such preparation. M "Why in the world," ehe said, with a fAushed gayety perfectiy genuine "did rou ever come to see me?" He touched a button. The man servaut appeared to usher Selwyn out. The latter set his teeth in his under lip and looked straight and hard at Neergard, but Neergard thrust both hands in his pockets, turned squarely on his heel and sauntered out of the moms yawning as he went. It bid fair to become a bard day for Kelwyn. Ie foresaw it, for there was iwore for him to do, and the day was {st from ended, and his self restraint wis nearly ethausted. ‘"‘Thank you, I have only a moment, and what I am here for is to ask you as Mt. Errol!‘s friend to use your inâ€" fuence on Mr. Errollâ€"every atom of your influenceâ€"to prevent bhim from ruining himself financially through his excesses. 1 ask you for his family‘s sake to discountenance any more gamâ€" bling, to hold him strictly to his duties in your office, to overlook no more shortcomings of his, but to demand from him what any trained business man demands of his associates as well as of his employees. I 1sk this for the boy‘s sake." "I am not aw«re that Gerald re quires any interference from me or from you either," said Neergard coolly. "And, as far as that goes, 1 and my business require no interference either, And i believe that settles it." nection with your firm. You bave every reason to be unfriendly toward we, but 1 came on the chance that whatever resentment you may feel will not prevent you from hearing me out." "Personal resentment," said Neergard slowly, "never interferes with my busiâ€" ness. 1 take it, of course, that you bave called upon a business matter. Will you sit down?" When Neergard came in and stood on the farther side of a big oak table Selâ€" wyn rose, returning the cool, curt nod. "Mr. Neergard," be said, "it is mot easy for me to come bere after what I said to you when 1 severed my conâ€" ret through the braiu‘s chaos and the hbeart‘s loud tumult and the clamor of puises rur wild at the insult Aung into his very face the grim jostinct to go on persisted, and he went on and on for her sakeâ€"on, he knew not bow, unâ€" til he came to Neergard‘s apartment in one of the vast west side coustructions bearing the name of a sovereign state, and here after an interval be followed his card to Neergard‘s splendid suit, where a manservant received him and left him seated by a sunny window overlo>king the ‘bilossoming foliage of the pork. ‘You are not standing by me very fast," said the elder man gently. "I said 1 was standing by my friends!"" repeated the boy. "Very well, Gerald, but it‘s at the exâ€" peuse of your owu people, I‘m afraid." "That‘s my business, and you‘re not one of ‘em," retorted the boy, infuriâ€" ated, "and yor won‘t be, either, if 1 can prevent it, no matter whether peoâ€" ple say that you‘re engaged to her"â€" "What?" whispered Selwyn, wheciâ€" Ing like a flash, The last vestige of colâ€" or had fled from his face, and Gerald caught his breath, almost blinded by the blaze of fury in the elder man‘s eyes. "I will let them alone if you will," said Selwyn, halting. "I can‘t stand by and see you exploited and used nn& perverted. Will you give me on chance to talk it over, Gerald?" "No; I woun‘t!" returned Gerald botly. "I‘ll stand for my friends every time! There‘s no treachery in me!" ‘"They are my friends," muttered Gerald, as pale as he. "You drove me into speaking that way." "Perhaps I did, my bey. I don‘t judge you. If you ever find you need help come to me. And if you can‘t come and still need me send for me. I‘ll do what 1 can always. I know you better than you know yourself. Gocdby." He turned to the door, ard Gerald burst out: "Why can‘t you let my friends alone? I liked you before you began this sort of thing!" "What?" whispered Selwyn. breath, his clinched hands relazed, and be picked up his hat and gloves. "What do 1 care what he is doing!" cried Gerald angrily. "And, anyway, it isn‘t likely I‘d come to you to find second husband!" Selwyn rose, very white and still After a moment he drew a quiet "Gerald"â€" "Ob, I know perfectly well that you dislike Neergard. 1 don‘t, and that‘s the difference." "I‘m not speaking of Mr. Neergard, Gerald. I‘m ouly trying to tell you what this mau Ruthven really is doâ€" tng." * Aait about Mrs. Ruthven‘s "Scow| if you like," he said, backing away instinctively, but still nervousiy impertinent, "and keep your distance! If you‘re anything further to say to me, write it." Then, growing boider as Seiwyn made no offensive move: *‘‘Write to me," he reperted, with a vrenomonus smirk. *Js safer for you 19 fgure As thy Correspongyet tag~ â€"â€" For an instant, aow, as be stared at him, there was murder in bis eye. Then the utter hopeless helplessness of his position overwbelmed him as Ruthvren, with danger written all over him, stood up, bis soft, smooth thumbs hooked in the glittering sash of his kimono. like a gentlemanâ€"but useless, quite useless. Bo the less said about invokâ€" ing the law the better forâ€"some peoâ€" ple. You‘ll agree with me, I dare say. And now, concerning your friend Gerâ€" ald Errollâ€"1 have not the slightest deâ€" sire to see him play cards. Whether or not he plays is a matter perfectly. indiferent to me, and you had better understand it But if you come here demanding that 1 arrange my guest lists to suit you you are losing time." Selwyn, almost stunned at Ruthven‘s knowledge of the episode in his rooms, had risen as be gave the man the lie direct. Ruthren stood quite stiH}, and after a moment the livid terror died out in For Selwyn had him fast, one sinewy hand twisted in his silken collar, holdâ€" ing him squirming at arm‘s lengtb. "Mâ€"murder!" stammered Mr. Ruth ven. my wife‘s corespondent. Lâ€"let go of mel W what the devil are you dâ€"dâ€"40â€" "No," said Seiwyn, "not this time But be vyery, very caroful after this." And he let him go with an ijuvolunâ€" tary shudder and wiped his hands co his handkerchief. "And what may your judgment in the matter be?" "I have not yet decided. For one thing I might enter a complaint with the police that a boy is being morally and materially ruined in your private gambling establishment." "Is that a threat?" "No. I will act, not threaten." "Ab," drawled Ruthven, "I may do the same the next time my wife spends the evening in your apartment." "Ohb, uo, I don‘t. Very chivalrous of youâ€"quite proper for you to deny it "I did not come here to ask a favor of you," he said coolly, "for that is out of the question, Mr. Ruthven. Buot I came to tell you that Mr. Erroli‘s famâ€" lly has forbidden bim to continue his gambling in this bouse and in your company anywhere or at any time." "Most extraordinary," â€" murmured Ruthven, passing his ringed fingers over his minutely sbhaven faceâ€"that strange face of a boy hardened by the, depravity of ages. "So I must request you," continued Selwyn, "to refuse him the opportunity of gambling bere. Will you do itâ€"volâ€" untarily ?" ¢ ‘Then I shalt use my judgment in the matter." "You lie" said Selwynm in a voice made low. by surprise. "I‘m not surprised If it‘s my wife you‘ve come to see," drawled Ruthven. "If I‘m the object of your visit, I conâ€" fess to some surpriseâ€"as much as the visit is worth and no more." The vulgarity of the insult under the man‘s own roof scarcely moved Selâ€" wyn to any deeper contempt and cerâ€" talnly not to anger. Rutbven‘s greeting was a pallid stare, but as Selwyn made no motion to rise he lounged over to a couch and, baif reclining amopz the cushiong, shot an Ingolent glance at SeliwryA, then yawned and examined the bangles on his wrist After a moment Seilwyn said, "Mr. Ruthven, you are no doubt surprised that I am here." But Rosamund‘s rose china features had bardened into a polished smile, and Selwyn stood up wearily to make his adieu. 3ut as he entered his hansom before the door he knew the end was not yet, and oncé more he set his face toward the iImpossible, and once more the baunâ€" som rolled away over the asphalt, and once more it stopped, this time before the house of Ruthven. tromely general, Captain Seiwyn? But you never can tell. Ask me." Bo be benat forward, his clasped hands between his knees, and told her very earpestly of his fears about Gerâ€" ald, asking her to use ber undoubted Inguence with the boy to shame him from the card tables, explaining how utterly disastrous to him and his famâ€" ly his present course was. i"colllyuldpur‘uukd. _ "Help us, Captain Seiwyn? Who is the ‘us,‘ please?" "Why, Gerald and meâ€"and his famâ€" 4y," he added, meeting her eyes, The eyes began to dance with malice. "His family," repeated Rosamundâ€" ‘that is to say, his sister, Miss Erâ€" tojl. His family, 1 believe, ends there, Joes it uot?" "Yes, Mro. Fane." "I see. Miss‘Erroli is naturally worâ€" ted over hiw. But 1 wonder why she did not come to me herself instead of sending you as ber erfant ambassaâ€" own erraud, for Gerald‘s sake, for anyâ€" body‘s sake, for your own preferably, and I‘ll listen, but don‘t come to me on another woman‘s errands, for I won‘t listen even to you." "I have come on my own errand," be repeated coldly, "Miss Erroll knew nothing about !t and shall not bear of it from me. Cau you not help me, Mre, Fane?" "Mâ€"murder!" stammered Mr. Ruthven. "I‘m going to write to her," he said impatiently, "Walt a moment, Nina. Don‘t speak of nnything pleasant orâ€" or intimate Just now, becanseâ€"because I‘ve got to bring up another matterâ€" romething not very pleasant to me of to you. It is aboutâ€"Alize. You knew ber in school years ago. You have al ways known her." + INA bad run up to towt for a day from Silver side and had telephoned Selwyn to take ber some where for luncheon.* Sh¢ urged bim to returt with her, insisting tha: a week end nt Silverside was what he needed to avert physical disintegra: tion. Here was the same minor undertont of unrest sounding ominously througt every line; the same illogical, unhappj attitude which implied so miuch and said so little, leaving him uneasy and disconcerted, conscious of the vagu« recklessness â€" and _ veiled _ reproach dragging him back from the presen! through the dead years to confron once more the old pain, the old bewil derment at the hopeless misunder "What is there to keep you in town?" she demanded. ‘"The children bave been clamoring for you day and night and Elleen has been expecting a let ter. _ You promised to write ber. Phil." 1 saw your husband this afternoon. He is at liberty to inform you of what passed. But in case he does not there is one detail which you ought to knowâ€"your husband believes ‘that you once paid a visit to my apertments. It is unlikely that he will repeat the accusation, and ! think there is no occasion for you tt worry. However, it is only proper thai you should know this, which is my only excuse for writing you a letter that reâ€" quires no acknowledgment. Very truly yours, PHILIP SELWYN. To this letter she wrote an excited and somewbat incoberent reply, and rereading it in troubled surprise, be began to recoguize in it something of the strange, Hlogical, impulsive attt tude which had confronted him in the first weeks of his wedded life. £1 standing between them. doctors, one and all, knew their bust ness when they had so often cautioned Ar. Rutbhven to avolid sudden and er cessive emotions. That night Selwyn wrote briefy t« Nrs. Rathven: . Then Selwyo went away with a shrug of utter loathing, but after be had gone and Ruthven‘s servauts had discovered him and summoned a physt clan their master lay heavily amid bis painted draperies, and cushions, hit congested features set, his eyes partly pis, were like two dark slits filled with hlaad 2l open and possessing sight. but the whites of them had disappeared, and the eyes themselves, save for the pu dizzily, bands outstretched for self support. \do CARTERS walk up stairs. & Last June, he received a sample of ‘"‘Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives". He used them and dates his recovery from that time. To-d'{, there is no man in Vancouver engry ng better health. e was building a bouse this fall and shingled a good part of the roof in a drivm; rain, without snfluinm bad effects". JOHN B. v, Mr. R. E. Mills, (assistant postmaster at Knowlton, Que.,) also writes : "I honestly believe that ‘"Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives" is the greatest Rheumatism cure in the world". ‘Try it yourself. 50¢. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size, At dealers, or from ?xmtiv.]hm rusll s Bick Hendache and rolieve ai! the troubles Inctâ€" dout to a hi‘‘ons state of the gystem, such as & o so 3 -"(â€"â€"- ; he could hardly appcared so weak that he could hardly | Dizzlners, ‘N:’m‘,‘" M, sating, Pain in the aating. Pain |n’i'ii‘u?1'o“;;e.' _ Whitle their m seme rkable sucress hs becn shown in curing Vancouv®®, B.C., Fcb. ist. 1910. "I am well ted with a man, known to thm-m.l& in Vancouver, Vichixil and New Wut-hultct, who for nearly aâ€"year was practically a from iheumli-n. He was so m with the disease that he found it dificult A nting this -nmyin’ccniylnlnl. w hile! gorrect al} disnrdersuf thestomach, atim "w';‘nml fepulate the bowels, . Aver if t Ache they would be almost pricel s to those who suffer from this distreretsg:complaint; be* fortn mately their gnodness cor a nc t« nd "ere,ana thore who onee try them will f ~d these lit"le pill« valnâ€" NOW IN PERFECT HEMLTH THANKS TO "FRUITâ€"Aâ€"TivEs® Ts the bane of «o many lves that hera is where we uiake our great i.A Our pills care (t whiâ€" othe rs do not. (mhLluhl.lmhl‘hmnMM m‘.“‘r!.'&‘e‘:?‘vf.'."u"»{.':" do not m or mn,&:.mm-p.m- carme kooucne 0. SÂ¥ hmex . Anting this annoyin; g_!mnllu_l! dbgdu'.'_w CRIPPLE FROM RHEUMATISM even turn over in bed. In «o many t ;'mg~c, Â¥ {il pot be wil: to co without them., tafter all sick hoad ACHE CURE Chapter 16 yet Csrter®s Litile Liver wable in Constipation, cart C t‘\o'bjl\h :.e.'?iflg thets Distrees a‘ter tle theie met 1 ‘ quite infatuated. And as soon as I‘ve | fastened on his collar and made sure that Rosamund can‘t unbook it F‘li try to make him shut down on Gerald‘s playâ€" ing. ‘This for your sake, Philâ€"because you ask me and because you must alâ€" ways stand for all that is upright and good and manly in my eyes. Ah, Phil, what a fool I was! And all, all my own fault too! ALIXE. His first knock remaining unanswerâ€" ed, he knocked more sharply. Then he heard from within the mufled crefk of n bed, heary steps across the floor. The dour opened with a Jerk. Gerald stoog there, eyes swollen, hair in disâ€" ordéer and collar crusbed and the while evening tle unknotted and dangling over his solled short front. For a moment or two he besitated, but he had said in his letter that he was going to do it, and now be rose, looked nround for his pipe, found it, flled and lighted it and, throwing on fis dressing gown, went out into the «orridor, tying the tasseled cords nround his waist as he walked. ‘This ended the sudden eruption of correspondence, for he did not reply to this Jetter, though in it be read enough to make him gravely uneasy, and he fell once more into the habit of broodâ€" Ing, from which both Boots Lansing and Eileen had almost weaned bim. Also he began to take long, solitary walks in the park when not occupiled in conferences with the representatives of the Lawn Nitro Powder works, a company which bad recently approach cd him in behalf of his unperfected exâ€" plosive, chaosite. Lying back there in his desk chair one evening, Selwyn suddenly rememâ€" bered that Gerald had come in. The; had scarcely seen ome another since that unbapy meeting in the Stuyreâ€" eant club, and now, remembering what be bad written to Kileen, he emerged with a start from his contented dreamâ€" Ing, sobered by the prospect of seeking Gerald. "Helto," said Selwyn simply. "May 1 come in?". now, and we see almost nothing of one another except over the card tables. Gerâ€" alid has been winning rather heavily, 1 am glad to sayâ€"glad as long as 1 cannot prevent him from playing. And yet I may be able to accomplish that yet in a roundabout way, because the apple visâ€" aged and hawk beaked Mr. Neergard bas apparently become my aslavish creatureâ€" ity. And it would amaze you, too, if I should tell you how many, many people heritance, for you are as sound today as you were when I first met you, and you shall not doubt that you could ever be anything else. Be the woman you can be. Show the pluck and courage to make the very best out of life. I have slowly learned to attempt it, and it ip not difâ€" cult if you convince yourself that it can be done. ® To this she answered the uext day: 1 will do my best. There is danger, treachery, everywhere, and if it becomes unendurable I shall put an end to it in one way or another. As for his threatâ€" incident on my admitting that I did go t« your room and defying him to dare beâ€" , lieve evil of me for doing itâ€"I can laugh |} at it now, though when I wrote you 1 was terrified, remembering how mentally | broken my father was when he died. + But, 3 you say, I am sound, body and mind. I know it. I don‘t doubt it for one momentâ€"except, at long intervals, when, apropos of nothing, & faint sensation of dread comes creeping. But I am sound! I know it so absoluteâ€" ly that I sometimes wonder at my own perfect sanity and understanding, and so clearly, so faultliessly, so precisely does my mind work thatâ€"and this I never told youâ€"I am often and often able to detect mental inadequacy in many people around me, the slightest deviation from the norâ€" mal, the least degree of mental instabilâ€" If Ruthven threatens you with divorce en such a ground he himself is likely to be adjuged mentaily unsound. It was # brutal, stypid threat, nothing more, ang his insult to your father‘s memory was more brutal still. Don‘t be stampeded by such threats. Disprove them by your calm self control under provocation. Disâ€" prove them by your discretion and sell confidence. Give nobody a single possiâ€" "What was the truth about hber faâ€" iber?" he said dogzediy. "Ie was ec centric _ Was be ever worse than that ?" "The truth was that be became menâ€" tally Irresponsible before bis death." "You know this?" "Allze told me when we were schoolâ€" giris. And for days she was baunte< with the fear of what might one da, be her Inberitance. That is all 1 knon Phil." â€" He nodded and for awhile made som. pretense of eating. but presently lear ed back and looked at his sister out of dazed eyes. "Do you suppose," hbe said heavily "that sbe was not entirely responsibh whenâ€"when she went away ?" "I can‘t believe it," be said, staring at vacancy. "I refuse to." And, thinkâ€" ing of her last frightened and excitec ®:tter imploring an interview with bin and giving the start}ing reason, "Whai a scoundrel that felliow Ruthven is," be said, with a sbndder. . ble reason for gossip. And, above all, Alixe, don‘t become worried and morbid "I hare wondered," said Nina simpily "Austin belfeves It." tbeard of your marringe." "What coucerned you?" "The chance of imheritanceâ€"the risk of the taintâ€"of transmitting it Her father‘s erratic brillianney became more than eccentricity before I knew bim. 1 Would bave tolid you that had I dreamed that you ever could have thought of marrying Alize Varian. Bnt how eould 1 know you would meet hber out there in Abe orient? it wasâ€"â€" your cable to as was like a thunder bolt _ And © wu sbeâ€"she left you se #«udden!yâ€"Phil, dearâ€"I feared the true reasonâ€"the only possible reaszon that ~ould be responatble for such an insane wct." There was a silence. His eyes shifted to his plate; remained Axed as be said: "Then you knew herâ€"fathert" *Yes, Phil," she said quietly,."I knew Mr. Varian." â€" "Was there anythingâ€"anything un usualâ€"about himâ€"in those days?" "Mave you heard that for the first time?" asked his sister. He looked up. ‘"Yes. What was it, Kina ?" Bhe became busy with her plate for awhile. He sat rigid, patient. one hend resting on his claret glass. And presâ€" ently "Youâ€"did you ever visit herâ€"stey at the Varians‘ house?" ~ "It was even farther backâ€"hber grandâ€" parentsâ€"one of them"â€" She lifted ber bead slowly. ‘"That is why it so That night be wrote to Aiise: "Inâ€"in her own home in Westches she said without meeting his us, Phil, when we a ie ‘ APPLICATIONS POURINC N EN Rlathams Veprable apried & uj ! and I did. â€"Today f am well and strong Already a new low tension line is being projected in York County from Port Credit through Mimico to serve the asylum and farms directly north. In a short time Brampton, Georgeâ€" town and Milton will be connected. In the meantime the following list of uses to which it is now being placâ€" ed in other farming districts in Eurâ€" ope and in the United States will be suggestive of what is to come. Ack any druggist. If the first bottiefaile Qm;wmn returmed. This is a strong statement to make, but it is exactly what Mrs. Thomas Taylor, of Blum, Texas, said in expressing her opinion of this remedy. "Dr. Miles‘ Restorative Nervine raised me from the grave and Thave much confidence in it. 1 can never say enough for your grand medicines. If anyone had offered me $100.00 for the seeond bottle of Nervine that I used I would have said ‘no indeed.‘" 3 / MRS. THOMAS TAYLOR, Blum, Tex. Nervous exhaustion is a comâ€" mon eccurence of modern life. The wear and tear on the nervous system"is greater now than at any time sinc# the world began. For sleeplessness, poor appetite and that ‘"run down‘"‘ feeling, nothing is so » * Dr. Miles‘ Nervine Your nerves are your life and lack of vital energy makeseaistenee a misery. â€" Dr. Milos‘ Nervine will tone up your nervous system. Churning. . | DR. J. E. HETT, Cream separators. Specialtyâ€" Milking cows. Diseases of the Ear, Cleaning cows (with vacuum | outâ€" | Nose and Throst. fit). Kirg St. East. these power lines at 2,2300 voltage, will be as common along the side lines of the farming communities of Ontâ€" ario as the independent telephone linâ€" esâ€"perhaps more so. The new _ bill, itself, provides that each section, police village or less, even a group of farmers, must be supplied by the township with a power line; the‘ latâ€" ter guarantceing the capital cost and collecting it in a given number of years trom the â€" individuals, like taxes. The cost will be infinitessional compared with prohibitive prices | of separate power piants for each of these groups.â€" And better still, every additional section that is added deâ€" creases the cost of power and maintâ€" enance for all the rest. A Tour of Investigation. © Demonstrators, it is understood, will be sent throughout the Province, to illustrate the methods in _ which power may be used. But first a tour of investigation will be made by Hon. Mr. Beck, Mr. P. W. Sothman, the Chief Engineer, and a representative of the Department of Agriculture, in Europe to ascertain the best equaipâ€" ment and methods for the use of power in small municipalities and on the farms. Raised Me J the Grave"â€"»â€". "Dr. Miles‘ _ For thirt: Ts it has been the stanâ€" M.R@ed;m'!w’-ms and has dard remedy for women‘s ills, and has positively restored the health of thouâ€" sands of women. Why don‘t you try it? and do all mz)own housework. I owe my health Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Compound and advise my friends who are affiicted with any female scomplaint to try it."â€"Mrs. Orvict® Rock, R. R. No. 5, Paw Paw, If you are ill do not dnfibn! until an operation is necessary, but at once take Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable The "'“""fi letter from Mrs. Orville Rock will gm how unwise .‘.‘..,‘:.""..f""““‘;fi.. S poreiien woes TS & 8 W it may be av b{*hkiu Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Y::;t: Compound. She was four w in the hospital and came home suffering worse than before. P{ia;. is hlgc :.wn statement. w w, ___uT'o ,..r. I suffered severely with a t.lg moome m mtmincemont. â€" I could wWOMEN MAY AVOID oy fakiny Tds iz Tiokhm‘s Ensilage cutting. Ploughing. Sprinkling system. Pumping (or irrigation. Repair shop. Crossâ€"cut saws. Meat choppers. Grist mills. Sellâ€"regulating incubators, ete. Lighting the house and barn build~ Lots of Uses for it. [C »nt‘nued from page 2) ‘Robt. Brickne | For the UGounties of WATERLOG and OXFORD. Satisfaction gusian ) teed. Address communications t# I‘reeport or busiaess left. in care of th@ Ubronicleâ€"Telegraph at Waterioo of The Daily Telegraph at Ber‘in will re ceive prompt attention ' Take a Persrfal Cou}\e at _ School or By Mail. Why spend month\«l{u dressmaking shop, where you do nothing but hem, overcast, sew on hooks and eycs, et€, â€"all the dittle things you already knew before you went there, where if you came here instead we would show you how to cut, put together, fit and finish cverything from plainâ€" ost shirtwaist to most claborate toiâ€" lette in 2 weeks. We bave taught thousands this method within the past 10 years and will give anyone $25 who can tell us where more _ is taught about cutting than by _ us, vither in â€" Canada _ or the Unâ€" ited States. _ Whether _ you _ be the wile or daughter of a farmer, la« borer, mechanic, merchant or milâ€" lionaire, you should learn dressmakâ€" ing. No accomplishment you can acâ€" quire will prove to you of _ such evâ€" ery day lifclong value as _ a practiâ€" cal knowledge of dressmaking. â€" It is needed in every home, just as much as to know how to cook a good meal. A few days‘ trial are given free of charge and if student _ finds it not all we recommend it to be, the have privilege to stop, there being no pay in advauce. Terms for _ complete course is only {1n infludes a perfect Glling syste® gtven free Next class to commenge Apul 3rd. â€" For farthcs patlioulats writeâ€"or sea us at our residents on Saturday, April ist Pnone No. 734, ring 4 Freeport, Ont "Dr. Lederman, D. D. 8. Licentiates of the Royal College a Dental Surgeons, Honor Gu?n'nt University of Toronto. _Office. firs floor, We‘ar Chambers, King St. W. Berlin. _ Telephone 202. (Renesst m lt es EPE P Janzen‘s Hlock Berlin, over trance between Knox‘s stor Dental 3 s, ‘ 1.D.8, All Branohes of dentatry worens anfol entnghe o0 ts m“& All calls by day or {Suogessor to Conrad Blhn:) Barrister, Solicitor Notary etc. Money to loun, German : Ufficeâ€"Pequegnat‘s Bi'(:c-i.- new Markety, Frederick Bt., ko ul Sooprela in cce 4 Wl vidit Elwira, ZiNjax Thursday lmlmi':'dny Mmth to Priter 1 pan) buos ro Ingiasr fitnau'gn okvecth . EHours 0 to 5. m F G. HUGBES,. . Dentist â€" Oddfellow‘s 8. D. U. 8. _ Gradgata S' E%f’fi““[&'g;flfloa&lm EXPERIENCED VETERIN: ARY SURGRON h ies o e e na> Royal College of Dental Surgeons of Dental Office above Mr, Chas. Fisch %&th_-onqhs.ul 3rd F ofi on o OHN L WIDEMAN A. HILLIARDL ) WELLS, 1.D.3. A. L. BITZER, B, A: ; TNHE MISSES EKLLISON, ~ Dress Making ____ C.W, WELLIPD, & Dentiste, Waterioo,. rs: 9 a. m. to 6 p. m. German spoken. Iseuer of Marriage Licenses Dentistry praciaced is tisb L. Waterloy 4; () D U M

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