i town in response to & message from the American executor aud was told of the will which bad ‘been fled in ngland, the home land of the testator; To say that this debonair, good look ing young gentieman was <Anbbergasted would be putting it more than mildly. Mr. Bowen?" he gasped, bewildered L it ‘measidâ€" Bout to you. at the end â€" of the yes to do but.to notify two of tno terma in the will. 1f the @tvorced and . married agnio at :l::m’:;,h“ Sir Jobn Over to the Ma whatever they: are. â€"I~think i <*% wouldn‘t give up my wife for all the islands in the universe. "T‘bat‘s setâ€" Hed. . You dor‘t kpow how happy .we are. She‘s the"â€" "Yes, yes, L know," interrupted the wily Mr. Bowen... "Don‘t tell me about It. Go‘ and see Judge Garrett, over in the K. building. They say he expects bcunbnck?’-'m grave to break big own. will. Ten lï¬u?- later an excited young man into an office in the K. *Yon have to fight it jointly," siild J\ Garrett after extracting the wheat from the chaff of Browne‘s reâ€" marks. ‘ou can‘t take hers away from her, and she can‘t get yours. We wW#ust combine ‘against the ; natives. Come back tomorrow at 2." sledding for you "Good Lord! . Weil, then,: who is the best will breaker. you know, please? Bomething has to be done right a way." "I‘m afraid you don‘t grasp the sitâ€" uation.. Now, if you were not married "AÂ¥s as sound as the rock of Gibraitar." Promptly at 2 Browne appeared, eager ¢yed and nervous. He had left bebind him at home a miserable young woman with red eyes and choking breath who bemoaned the cruel conâ€" wiction‘ that she stood between him and fortune. "But, hang it all, dearest, 1 wouldn‘t marry that girl if 1 had the chance. T‘d marty you all over again today if 1 conld," te had cried out to ber, but abe wondered all afternoon if he really meant it. It never entered her head to wonder K Tady Deppingbam was old of young, protty or ugly, bright or dull. tar," be announced dolefully. "Â¥ou don‘t mean it!" gasped poor Bobby, mopping his <finé â€"Harvard brow, his six feet of manhood shrinkâ€" ing perceptibly as he looked about for a thair io which to collfpse. "Câ€"an‘t "IIl do it!" shouted Bobby Browne, pne time baifback on bis college eamyâ€" sa. "Break the will for me, Mr. Bow» an, and I‘ll give"â€" P Zudge Garrett had a copy of the will in his hand. He looked dublous, even 'fl?t be an edsy matter to prove sither of these old gentiemen to have been infanc, but the two of them toâ€" gether make it out of the question." "Darbed unreasonable!" "Consal an attorney. a;,rged Bowen promptly. #t be snuashed ?" "I meanâ€"ob, you know what I mean â€"the conditions and all that. Why, the "What shall 1 doâ€"what can i do, "I ean‘t break it, Bobby. I‘m its ex *I#‘s as sound as the rock of Gibralâ€" "What do you mean, sir?" indig caused by the accuâ€" mulation ‘of waste Within the body. _ Dr. Morse‘s Indian enable the bowels, the kidneys, the lungs and the pores of the skin to throw off Eenune pravent or cure Roo' Plll.n Sickness is usually yCl By GB The Man From AAPAMKNPALPS N PP\ANLNADLA &\ &5 ‘Young Mr, Browne went awiy at dusk, half reeling under the responsiâ€" bility ‘of existence, andâ€" eventually reached the side of the anxious young woman uptown. He bared the facts and awnited the walil of dismay. ' Over the opposite side of the At» lantic the excitement in certain circles was even more intense than that proâ€" duced in Boston. Lord Deppirgham needed the money, but he was a whole day in grasping the fact that hisâ€" wife could not have it and him at the same time. ‘The beautifol snd faskionable Lady Deppingbam, once little Agnes Ruthven, came as near to having hbysâ€" teria as Englishwomen ever do,‘ but she called in a lawyer insteadâ€" of a her social duties (and they were maby), ignored ber gallant admirers (and they were many) and> hurried ‘back and forth between home and chambers so »Igorously that bis lordsbip was sel« dotn closer than a day behind in anyâ€" thing she did. 3 There was a great rattling of trunks, a jangling of keys, a thousand goodâ€" bnnwmmhbï¬ hame were racing away for the "Please leave ail the details to me, alr. Browne. 1t may not be necessary for her to die. ‘There are other alterâ€" natives in Jaw. Give the lawyers a chance. All you have to do is bg yourself on that island and stay until we tell you to get off." "I think Jt will be perfectly jolly!" she cried instend and kissed him rapâ€" turously. â€" ing her trunks now for a long sty in Jdpat. You have farther to go than she, but you must get over there inâ€" side. of sitty days. â€" You can‘t tell what may. happeo in the next â€"six months," ~ $ . "What â€"do you mean ?" ¢ "Well, it‘s possible that you may beâ€" come a widower and she a wid"â€" 5 â€". "Gocd beaven, Judge Garrett! {imâ€" possible!" â€" gasped Bobby Browne, clutching the arms of bis chair. “No(hh’ is impossible, my boy." 7 "Well, if that‘s what you‘re counting on you can ‘count me out I won‘t speculate ob. my wife‘s death." f "Rut, man, suppose that it did â€"hap/ pen!" roared the judge irascibly. "tea should be prepared for the. bestâ€"I mesn the worst. Don‘t look like a rick dog. You go to the isiand at ence. Take your wife along if you lke. You‘ll find her ladyship there, and she‘ll need a woman to tell her mhguto. 1 don‘t think we‘ll hare any ble getting the British beirs to join in the sult to overthrow the will. ‘The only point is thisâ€"the is landers must pot have the advantage thtywr%mhmmm to them. ow, I‘H"â€" * of Japat, somewhere in the far south sens. excitement attending the mu-wymn‘:-“ had not yet spread to the grand "duchy of lm'nom-“: parenfly lost as it was in the of amall units which went to make up a certuin empire, one ‘of the world powers. ‘The Grand Doke Michaet disâ€" dained the world at large. He had but iittie 4n u-:vli na that moved eonfinas of "Or the islanders push me off," jugnâ€" briously. P "Possibly they did consider it, my boy. â€"It looks to me as if they did rot care a rap whether it went to their blood relatives or to the islanders. â€"I fancy of the two they loved the isâ€" landers more.â€" At aby rate, they left a beautiful opening for the very comâ€" plications which now conspire to give the uatives their own, after all. It‘s necessary for both of you to be on the ground according to schedule. You idust go to the island, wife or no wife, and there‘s not much time to be lost. Lndy Deppingbam won‘t let theâ€"grass grow ‘under ber feet if I know anyâ€" thing about the needs of English noâ€" bility, ard T‘ll bet my hat she‘s packâ€" "But I don‘t like the suggestion, that my wife will be obliged to die in order"â€" i "Thinking? â€" They . weren‘t <thinking of anything at all. ‘They weren‘t caâ€" pable. Why didn‘t they consider the possibility..that things might turn out just as they bave?" "But ‘ the will provides for a six mouths‘ > courtship, ‘Mr. Browne,â€" I‘m sorry to say.< You might learn to love a person ib less time and stll retain your mental balance, you know, espeâ€" tiaily if she were pretty and an heirâ€" ess to half your own fortune. I dare say thatâ€"is what they were thinking about." * lutely Inckadaistcal, uneme bie to the taounts of people were thrifty, ognnnm. INTRODUCING HOLLINGSWORTH CHAA® stationary in their loyalty to inemotional, impregna d & C+ His "When I‘m forty," Chase was wont to remark to envious spendthrifts who touldn‘t understand his philosophy, "I‘l!l have over a ‘hundred thomsand there, and if I ifte to be ninety just think whatâ€" I‘ll have.. Moreover, 1 wflmflhnn-m 1 poor wife with rich rélatives, is a terrible strain, you know, You Anve to live up to your wife‘s remâ€" (Ivad. If you don‘t do anything else." m-:m-nmu-hu- legacy at the death of his maâ€" x:mm«,.mxmmy in the far weut. Chise had been the representative of the A merlean government at Thofhetg for‘ siz ~months. The American flag foated above his doorway Ih the Fricdâ€" ricbstrasse, but in all bis xï¬x months of occupation not ten Anmfericans had crossed the threshcld.®â€"He was a vig orous, bealthy youug man, and it may well ‘be presumed that the situation bored him. ~ e# »was hiot: a politickin; no more was he an, office seeker. He was a real soldier of fortune‘in search of.affairsâ€"in peace or in war, on lsnd or at sea. . Possessed..of a . small â€"inâ€" come sufficiently adequate to sustain life if he mapaged to advance it to the purple age, but wholiy incapable. of supporting. him as a thriftiess diple mat, be was compelled to make the best of his talents, no matter to what test they were put. Bclefleollm twentyâ€"two, possessed of the_ worthy design to earn his own way without recourse .to the $4,500 income from a certaino trust fund. His plan @lso incorporated <the hope to suve every penny of that income for the possible "rainy day."â€" He was now thirty, In each of several New York banks he had something like $1.000 drawing 3 per cent interest, while ne picked his blithe way through the world on $2,500 a year, more or Jeas, is chance ordained. _ After leaving college he â€" drifted pretty much over the world, taking pot luck with fortune and clasping the hand of circumstance. . There had been hard romds to trave! as well as easy ones, ‘but he never complained. He ‘swung on (brongh life with the héart of a soldier ind the confidence of a pagan, :He innthed business, and he abbhorred trade; He was an orpban and bounden to mo man. . No one bad theâ€"right to question his actiork after hia twentyâ€" Orst @nnfversaty, < He wont in for Jaw at Yale and then practiced resticasty, vaguoly, for two years in Baithnore ~Ifl‘« ï¬.&‘. mh Ol' his father‘s &A Jaw: of distinetion. Tiring of the hv’;nh and reporta in the old r’- office. he anddeniy & his ealling and wet forth to see € ï¬hfl befure | his r know had left he wae r‘ of tm . n. Inâ€"course â€"of Be served as a wur correspondent for one"Â¥f the great oewsnapers. acted tie or notoing to ao witn tms fiarraâ€" tive.. Indeed, were it not for the fret that "the (gradd. duke possessed a charming and most desirable daughter the Thorberg dynasty would not be mentioned at all. The grand duke‘s peace of uh(.n been. severely â€" disâ€" turbedâ€"so -y:g- y, In fact, that he was â€" transferring lifs ~troubles to the emperor," who, is .turs, felt obliged ‘te communicatewith â€"the. United States @mbassador, > who, â€" in "his â€"turu, had no other alternative than to take sumâ€" med‘y action in respect to the indiscre tions of a fellow countryman,. Chase‘s consclence was even and serene, and he was resigning his post. with the confidence that be had, performed biy obligations as an American gentleman sbould, even though Abe. performance had .created an estracrdinary ‘comipe tion.. Chise was new to the old world and "its customs, especially . those igâ€" orous ones which surrounded royalt» «nd denied it the right to renture Into the commonplace. â€" ‘Dealers everywhere have "Fruitâ€"aâ€" tives‘ "at 56c. a ‘:x.‘ 6 for 330 or trial size, 25c. or sent of receipt of price by Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives Limited, Ottawa, _ » As Mr. Pitt says ‘‘Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives"" is the greatust beadachecure in the world."~ _ "L did so, with what I amazing resilts. They completely cured me llli since then â€" (nearly i"â€â€˜;‘ ago) it is only necessary for me § tak one occisionally to preserve me in my present good health. I was 65 years old {ulefdly and have been a general store eeper at the above address for twentyâ€" five years". WM. PITT He did not refer to the chance‘ that EY ce DICTIONARY " | Ir+ng â€"MERRIAM wEeBsTer to ‘!l‘o Only :av nunabridged dicâ€" § Couraing the pith and. sexente % of an authoritative m 3. | [ ~Qgvers every field ot rs edgo.: An in a 5. | _ single book. .‘ | [ mhe Ouly Dictionary with the :« | [ New Divided Page. Rd m 'm l 7“ m‘ "Ever see her? . Well, you‘re someâ€" thing to live for, gentiemen. I‘ve #een her but three times, and. 1 don‘t seetn able to shake off the spell. You‘ve never seen such hair. Gad, it‘s as near like the kind that Henner paloted as anything buman could be, exeept that it‘s more like old gold, if you can understand what 1 mean by that. Not bronze, mind. you, nor the â€"raw red. butâ€"oh, well, I‘m not a govelist, ‘so L ~can‘t baifway ‘describe 1t She‘s rather tallâ€"not too tali, mind youâ€" ve feet five, I‘d sayâ€"whatever that is l':.u the metric system. . Slender and rellâ€" dressedâ€"ob, that‘s the strg thing of ail! W‘;}l‘dr-ud! 'l‘m a princess being well dressed! â€"I‘d say she‘s twentyâ€"two or twentyâ€"three years of ageâ€"not a minute older. 1 thinkâ€"ber eyes are a very dark gray, nimost blue Her skin is like aâ€"aâ€"ol,â€"let me see! What is there that‘s as pure ind .soft as her skin? Something warm, and pink, and white, d‘ye see? . Well, never mind, And her swifte! And ber frown? Â¥You know, I‘ve seen both of Sem,: aud as attractive as the other. . Shw‘s a real princess, gentlemen, and (the prettiest woman l‘ve ever daid my eyes upon. And to think of her ns the wife ‘of that blithering little ass. that of a Kurl Brabeta!~ She thes bim, I‘m sure~â€"1 know she does. And she‘s got to matry him:! That‘s what she gets for being a grund Quke‘s drughter. â€"Brabets is the heir appirent to some duchy or other ovel there and is supposed to be the catch of the season. You‘ve heard of bim. He was in Paris this season and cut quite_ a figureâ€"a prince with real money in his purse, you know, | wonâ€" der why it is that our American girle ean‘t . marry the princes who bate monéy. instoad of those who hare none. athnt!wfluy of our girls such bad luck .as Brabets! I‘ll stake my head be‘l} â€"never .forget me!"* : Chase eoncluded â€" with _a â€" sbarp, ~réfjective laugh in which bis bearers joined. for the escapade which inspired it wis beâ€" Ing slyly discussed in every embassy hn ruanten on s nvds che Rap commissions © h':Efluv" army ‘and serve her faithfuly. <~He saw the ‘princess for the first time ~that afternoon, â€" and he . was bowled over, to use the expression of his English ~frlends â€"with whom he dined that uight. Shewas the frst woman that be bad ever looked upon that he could describe, for she was the only: one who had impressed bim to that estent.. This is how be pictured ber at the American legation in Puris a few weeks later: gressman, â€" and way donnected sought the inï¬ then the recon _ When he first arrived io. Thorberg to assume his sluggish dutles he was not aware of the fact that the grand duke had an unmarried doughter, the Prinâ€" gess Generra. ~ . She was visiting_ in 8t.. Petersburg or Berlin or some other place when he reached his post of duty, and it was toward x:moc his â€"Afth mouth beâ€" fore she to ber father‘s palace io ’l‘hoth? He awoke to the tm portance of "the occasion and took some slight interest in the return of â€"the royal young lady, even going so far‘gs to follow the crowd to the raflway staâ€" tion on the sunny dune afternoon, a# & pl-nluz Â¥arlation fron ons occupallons be and foll .~ At the eud of fire months .he leatbed Thorberg; he hated the: inhabitanis; tï¬hm'm' t the sting of ropal ; ‘he. had no real friends, uo boon companious, and he was obliged to be good! â€"What wonder, then, that the bored, : guffering. . vivacious.. 3tr. Chase seized the fOrst opportunity to leap headforemost Into the very thick of a most appalling Indiscretion} For days he swung bmhowm:t the streets, the hangdog: lc gone from his eyes, always boping for anâ€" other glimpse of the fair sorceress who had worked: the great transtforâ€" mation. It was two weeks before he saw her the second time. He was more enchanted by ber face than teâ€" He was neariy thirty when the di; )o aticâ€" service began to appen! to tim _ 8000 Hlustrations, Cost noar eï¬ im IAâ€"-I':-' mnh. onths .he lqatbed the hhglum: > sting of ropal real friends, uo per sta=ips 0u ng â€"Ore epidemic bas been acce ted geâ€"â€" erailly as proving the charge agairs\ natural ice. (This was at the" St. TLawrence State Hospital, O1gonsburg, .Y. Pr. H. W. Hill, Epidemiologist of the Minnesota State: Boar of Health crecently went carefully ~ er the evidencé ta:en by tie physicias i« chatge of the Wospital. He â€" found from their statement thit three cases came down with temperatures of 103 degrees to 104 degrees F. on Oct. And. ~Within four s â€" five more hel come dowm>~ Six days before the Airst case, ~or September 26, the ice house, to which the infection was atâ€" tributed, was first opered and put into ttse.. . ‘Typhoks does not begin with a temperature ~ of 103 to 104 dagrses. Caces might. casily te‘ first found with, that temperatire, becarse t P# tient does not u.uwally go to bed unâ€" til after being . sick for several days. Typhoiw requires an average of two weeks from the time of infectien beâ€" fhre any symptcms whatever doalo}. Tipreflore these typhoid patients â€" acâ€" tually took ‘the typhoid bacilli _into theirâ€" systems about. ths middle of Septemberâ€"at least teh or fifteen days before the ice house was opened.â€" So the ice could fot have been the carse ol theâ€"epidemic: This remo es from Jarelul studies of the reports of State and City Boards.of Health, however, show that these Three ate the _ very moriths when there are fewer cascs of typhoid tharn any other tine :l the year. . ‘The figures on typhoid for tic State. of Ilowa Tor 1910. show an ar~ erage _ ol 24.5 deaths for‘ . Januory, April, 21 for. Mayâ€"Augist, cal 46.7 for Septemberâ€"December. _ The fewâ€" ¢st number of ~deaths from typhoid occurred in months when the . most icc was used. â€" During the sxtreme lvat of the past w6 or three weeks tast quaitities a° ‘atural ice have been conscmem® to wool _ drin‘s amt preservé {oo‘. 1ts se has given surcease â€" from the efâ€" cols ofâ€" the high temperature and no 11 effects whaterer have ‘follooe.* this onsump tio: of hrndreds . of thousands 1 toms of (natural ite; overwtelming roof ‘of the falsity iof the @.bâ€".â€" reâ€" cute~ statement that ica may conâ€" ey ~ discase and ‘that ito use should e sparing anad with most carelul preâ€" autions to.avoid eAtagiont. | In te nonths .Juno‘ to" August inclusi<e, 70 ‘er cent of the natoral ice supply of the country. is used.. If natural ~ice »wet caused ‘typhoid fever, the disâ€" caso it has been charged with spreaiâ€" ibg, then there should be a â€" nota‘ls incrcase in cases of .$yphoid . in the months of _ June, July â€"and, Aug st. â€" Obase sat at a with the + stigne Jort Baet Tb¢ mak accornid : the princess ber party. "In "W.aï¬'m'ï¬m-z man. borg bred e could sot cob nuer countless impulses to took at the Aower face of the roya) auditor. Grd@ually the program led op to the feature of the evening, the rendition of a great work under the direction Af a famous lender, a special guest of the ~Right ‘in your â€"bucstost season when you have the loast time.to spate you are â€"most likely . to take â€" â€" diatrhoca and. â€"lose â€" several days‘ time, unless you : have Chamtetlain‘s. Colic, Choâ€" €ra and Diarrhoca RemeJy at â€"hind and take a dows on the first apjycar ance of the discase, For sae by all dealers. adu Suct, . ever jwaire: the irtigtg oAgds Dox, hor in P : ‘look fig steadily ent ed\by the maâ€" sic. ‘ ahe ‘aud looked qmï¬mm"m t y a y employed. .A Iittle fush mounted to ber brow as she quickly: resunied Jher former attitude, Chase cursed bimself for a brainiess Jant To bex (ha o4 m t ate t# 11 at M&w ca ogr nnm:' our Widdsor offices wh Drs. KENN Cor: Michigan Ave. OTICE apt t on w / MEN=~YOU NEED NERVE ins. KENNEDY & KENNEDY NATURAL ICE Mich At Fasua . : iniqerna $ t Mdomw-.â€be ll.“h nl-o::l of them wl fp-flulh‘motp a young men. . Unsstural Draing sap their vigor and vitality and they néver o e ommppmenameane you us wnd woak, despondent sad gloomy, ..lh:lm:k'l): unE-;Eï¬. ‘lo of m‘ : I M Mru?«m.ufl dremms, ..x&‘;‘.‘. in urine, nm on the face, eyen mnhnmb.uww‘.e-.;mp andstrong‘h, tired m'nl:: restioes -:\u. 2 uunn.mw.wmlflrh:x EARLY â€" INDI8SCRETIONS AND EXCESSESâ€" HAVE UNDERâ€" MINED YOUR SYSTEM “â€ï¬‚umvm}fl'-‘m.“ E1k We qusrantee curable cases of hemious besiuTy, YARICOSE vENs, ‘ANMD SKIN DISEASES, GLEET, mflmm o is is an Dissases of Men. If unable ty‘ call ï¬un-.-n--h#“mb & KENNET that ease Vise: €ria tien ‘Booth‘s Kidrey Pills are for© sick kidneys in old or‘young and are guarâ€" anteéd by the proprietors, The R. T. Booth Co., Ltd., Fort Erie, Ont. Sold everywhere 50¢ box, Free trial scht on reauest. defines case in which natural . â€" ice had been‘â€"found guilty.. â€"Dr. Hill de cliuesto comsder. ice as a â€" factor in . sprec tng cisease. The Massachuâ€" scbts State Board of Health after in resligation, Ceclared .no case ol .. dis €aso pad cever en trccsd. to ice. Br Eugonc H.. Portor,: Meéâ€"lcth Comni: sigur ol â€"New Yors State says bx evider«c > in 2ll ceses wiore Jos has beeh ~"si C« asa coriiet of~tv hoid .r/ggl/f'»‘ hidnci N2 o a sketch and dos on may e e rnnn, ie oniainn Coe nbmiat ah ons strietly cout ‘al. NANDBOOK on Paten * Pavents takeno MWce £* recefre cial notics, without « * CICRTE ingricant, «Thece â€"facts ‘ate public.. which ‘by e unwerranted _ ~concl that ice â€"may conm:er fnil PL fnsl Dos, _ fnall Prim, tï¬hidi-u""lcz‘ that here is where wonabe cor groak r pllle cuseit while ;}-‘:“ M on ipriien chring Trgd i 'i e EAD How to Live Long io mt 4+ erpftument. Contlit & FREE OF. CHARGE Â¥, Windsor, Ont m e ‘emmam | 0 > C B. B 8. Bs wi AOH E UObRiarts Cor Detroit, Mich tor,â€" <HMelch Comni Yors State: says b: cesc wlore Jos ha n turiiet of~tv hoid rreanor rrespor t §€ t e to dock Licentiats of the Royal € D ntal â€" Surgeons, â€"Hagor _ University of Teéfonto. ~~Offi floor, WeL, Qhambers, King Berlin. â€"Telephone 202. * +. Hours: 0 a, m: to 5 p, 8t German spokep, â€" y mnt urth, I;; M‘ .. i{Buosessor to Cn +. Barrister, Solicitor Notar otc._ Money to Jon,. Germa Oflceâ€"Peq 2 ~ Binck, _ nwlukem k Se., ta "riday 1 puos.) C Ertesstion srieoth, Ptours n i & 9 E, hie u&ga RoyalColl go of Déital Surge Jantal,Ofllce above Mr, Chag," %hlmhcm_uï¬ï¬‚l For the u%?gu.- 6 A‘ and oxmag Sat‘s ction . toud. _ Address communic Freeport or business h , .c Ulmiebf.hm†: ‘ 6 Tac Daily Telegraph at elilar isive prompt attention, ~ _ ‘_‘;, e Prione No. 734, ring 4 01 Ant Oeeont _ DDS. 1 com m - ,Ai " Learn Dress K EXP&RIENCED ‘m ARY SURGE Robt. Brickn Our graduates are im ie nere men ctate tbat theysats Studenta from the clese +686 piaced . recentty at #4 E $70 per month. A graduata expeilente was ed _re Olg) per annum. 1 grad ture positions. ‘The deman 3»: was aix Time» morh nating. . We have three depi Get our free catalogui : T; A, Ne youn. + w1i08MAn, fagvikes Yilooâ€"Post Ofice, â€"Bt :u‘-u“i d w, vaers Lps FÂ¥â€"® ... . 0.W. WBUuLs D Dovtiâ€"t®, Water w[e 5i 0 0 rialt toaira. Pillia® Bowse, Uhaead Fridagy fe s aa ena s o l O Oe ano anth Chronicie=Tel Th A. HILLIARD Contral Business Liser :ad ~Auot 0. HUGHES. : {n; * T0 vtaiadogl PRIVATK FUSNS *Dr. Lederman, D. D The Best Sch M Clemont & i 8 TR \T J3 3, *O% ich everything in ildren‘s garmonts in‘ tor l:ll course‘ is | fectâ€"6 chart zt dl:l.‘ï¬. M > on Monday, May e tlon ett.. see us at. 1 t .. L. BITZER,. B :)‘m. ENT, C.0.) ® r. etc. . Oflce . 5. rlia‘ Tedephong ventist L. D.% D POS$ foat Hignk. Solicitoy NaK| 8t« 11 1d Chirmals