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The Chronicle Telegraph (190101), 15 Feb 1912, p. 7

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CK\s the and for a few moments URG over man, e e e morty &l&“}b ou fi down stream : jm bis head M‘MJ . swam. , . adving §m~ mmm energy young life battling against death, so that before they had half cross:d from shore to shore, Combe and his horse were level with Protheroe, and making some sort of@ breakwater for f‘thwuwm‘mhfic was still in the and Combe could see the pinto‘s head sinking lower and lower. If the doctor stayed where he was, the horge embarrassed his> weight, must drown, and in xuum.mmmm make his voice heard in that swirl of waters. â€"On the bank, the noise was as the indistinct roar of & mob, but in midâ€"stream each voice became distinct, Andividual and hostile. He beard the waves roaring at Isim, he could feel the undercurrents pulling separately at him, he knew what they wanted, and the fury, and the number of them daunted him. â€" . â€" His only chance was to cling to his horse; his only hope of saving Proth: etoe seemed to be to let go, and .if possible, drag the doctor out of . his saddle. o2 ies us PE s " But at the last moment Protheroe seemed toâ€"realize what was required of him, and slid out of the saddle, holdâ€" wn to his horse‘s mane, and swimâ€" a8 Jim swanms 0080000 ~00 By this time both horses bad drifted below the level of the ferry, which was now crowding with men, gesticulating and apparently shouting to the two dn the water, and some of the more sober among the lantern bearers lnvlnfigot the ferry out towards midâ€"stream, were endeavoring to let a. rope down. t¢â€" wards the doctor. § But it was hopetess fishing: The tine was not long enough, and the castâ€" Ing of it inaccurate. Neither Jim nor the doctor attempted . toâ€" avail themâ€" selves of it. wixe Side by side, stunned by the noise around them, they battled with the Fraset, whilst though the‘farther bank seemed to come no nearer, the red lights of Soda Creek grew more dim and distant, and, the figures on the terry more indistinct. Luckily for the â€"swimmers there was even less ce in the river than there tad been in the morning when Combe. crossed it. ‘The frost had not held in the upper country through which flow the tributaries that supply the Fraser with its first ryn of ice, but there was cnough of it to add to their difficulties.. Suddenly the light of Soda Creek went out altogether, and the dancing lanterns on the ferry disappecred, and at the samp time. a new. sound struck upon their ears, a dul}, grinding noig», which grewâ€"louder and more distinet with overy second, that passed. They had drifted past a bend in the river, and at the next, to which they were being hurried, the ice was packâ€" the.‘ If they got into that pack before mchlng the further shore, it would be end of them. The horges, Bpent W. must go under in the churning d grinding ice. mss ies ~/ e ~a in Btraining his eyes to the utmost, Tombe thought that he could jurt disâ€" tinguish the line of the farther bank. It wag nearer than the ice pack which nmld hear in . the dark below him, was it near enough? They were being carried down stream many yard 1 for every foot which they made in the direction of the shore, It was mt one of those positions in which th is miade doubly hard by the temptation to against it. Defth itself is not so very dreadful. Natur> full of bogies to coeree herâ€"wilf ghildren, and the last bogle of all, vse ,rllr to make us play out our innings ‘to the end, is possibly the most gentle tranud amongst them, but that struggle in the dark mgainst the Irresistible waâ€" mm life afid saufety so near at , was bitter to w&xd at the yery olimar of it Jim‘s "gave in ~and turned its bead down stream, In a moment they were facing to watds their death, After all that long sthbborn fight Againet â€" the<stream, with the shore almost within reach, the fatlture of [ :v;:s;ounx‘;nhnd tuined <p &lone 1t in #‘ that [Combs would> have given in thep a 3 i8 gown quletly f rather than t Jonger a p ta ble, mmdnt of m t atill atrugeling, and lously , rowecd him tgâ€"one morg gtrike It in the Tag imont ungm with :omlr the bcast serin, But it was 16 wr ngku to shout toâ€"tas horeg, biitâ€" with bi« free‘hand be wq& gtrike It in the face, and drag its h most um: with the other, untll in air beast turned ny stream But it was. tot l“h m lu; , for be eould b.ar th# ice ‘tee mfimt & bis bre‘s, and He s WH!l from ‘a stubborn rmination "k“ to the Jest Inch. Mite gewaid â€" EÂ¥cacded {h hopes. pivnged Into the Frasr it had seemed to Comb; that L“?d kiw W‘“g Immens»e ciforts ° ~qubt m to rewsin stationagy, vpon & EM@ of ading. wa er which carri.& towarts ibeâ€" loe ‘pack, but na #or the first time the long Jean â€"he Gbn- of) ading wa‘er. which cardi«d towarts ibeâ€" loe ‘pack, but nz for the first time the long Jean he which Had bor:d down upon him, p-m im always.â€"véeaâ€"or -w« «ter ."mau tor#e abead. There no of it. Ax & ~They had reached t grow clcarer, the roan atruck NAâ€"DRUâ€"CO LTRNDERTOOT S WOOHNG marE .‘ I'.': * tw . + he 8} ,""-"E tainly appreglate it ... ... [._d at de oo Pades. . 0. h oked ob C i Au IVE PHILLIPS WOI moments the on Aâ€" > wtbormich c B n Catribco river at th: d:nd, Cog By what secmed a miracle, the pinto had jugt made good its footing on the very last point between it and (the swirl which ‘d ‘to the ite jamb, b:,t the doctor ves too spent to profit his horse‘s go~d lack, and though Jim grabbed him es he was awept.by, he could do no more. a For what sce ved to him five of the longest minvt‘s be bad everâ€" known, the water ershed bim against that rock tooth, whi st h‘s arm was recked with the pain of keeping his (ingers erooked in that bund‘e of wet elothing, which swayed with the curront, but which he bad not strength to . drasg He éould hold onâ€"to it, he would g> with it rather than 1.t go, but he could not find the strngth neededâ€" to draw it to his own p‘as. of saicty. Jim felt his booy slipning away from :2: rock which shelterâ€"d him. Gently, istently, like an anglcr who puts all the strain be dars upon & lightlyâ€"hook ed fish, the waters drew him from his hold, and thn t>re came one of thoâ€"c strangée chuck!ing sounds which wat i makes amongst the boulders. + In his lightâ€"headed wndltr L was to Combe the iaugh of a devil who wins, and it tovuched some spring in his bature, of which for the mo.nent he had lost control, the stremgth cam back to his mivscles,.â€"and with a last desperate effort h= drew Protheroe ic him; dragged him sometow to the river‘s brim, and dropped him there where the waters !apped over the firs boulders of the dry land. "I For a long pause there wis silence. but for th=â€"=ravings of the â€" river, baulked of its prey, and the lHittle wind, which wined like a wolf amongst the sage brush along the cliff‘s edge. _ Utterly â€" spent, th@? ~two men lay where they bad fal‘>n;, as did the pin‘o. Only the rcan stood upright, and ever his strong knces wére bent, his heac hung, and his who!> body was shaken with shivering fits. Combe was the first to recover. Dragging himself to his feet, he wen‘ over to the doctor‘s horse. "You‘ve got to get up, old fellow," h said, "or you‘ll die on our hands, and we can‘t spare you yet," but the poor beast lay with hcad stretched aloos the ground ar4 took no notice of him. It had made up its mind toâ€"dles. â€" "Can you help, Doc?" Jim asked, bu the doctor shook his head. and day stll, nor was it until neariy an hour ‘ater that Comb» contrived to get his companion and the two horses up to the top of the cliffs, upon which he built a roaring ‘fire, not only for the sake of comfort, but as a sign to any whom it might concern that they had survived the river crossing. "And now, Doc, I guess you might as well: ger along towards the ferry, There‘l} maybe be someone there still, unless they‘ve all given us up for dead. You will have had about enough for one while, 1 expect." F "What! Give up the run when I‘ve jumiped the big brook? Not much, Jinu ‘Then you mean coming on?" "I startcd to get there, and I‘m going to get there with both feet, my son, as‘ you would say in your picturesque {ashion." Jim pulled at his pipe in silence for some time, thin in a shamefaced way be caid: * ~‘"I owe you an apology, Doctor," "g;or abduction? ‘Yes, 1 believe tha! there is some trivial, penalty attached to that form of amusement." © ;?fi.‘““"“’"‘t“’“‘" ean‘t be helped, .I â€"suppose that nmmn-gmmmmm at Braithwaito‘s." . oR is "flfi'"' it we start now we whould be w*~ _ CHAPTER XVi Jim . Combe‘s departure + W“hblflhdme s o " were . no :2::!:5 a e corval; ‘afie necessary â€" was . tha l&rcfiufli’m‘lfl"- movement caused him exoruciat 'mmmm’hm r{ect ‘bandages in which his body was swathed, and though he took his puniahment with set lips, nevet trig om pla ationt ty es under restra a last degres, hat those barhing ugh hberâ€" idto hetr she was By no 8 I w aig +4 thre ol a furious storm im wask '; were cr’nh“ulnuh%fl § solld> subs(ances were being whiried under her spread ove the man w about by s0°=+ wards her ve "vit must mave been such a stand L don‘t think Jim has his equal as & horseman." e iss oz _~*That in what they say abou but I don‘t suppose that he wo aby go0d in your country." .. â€"â€" then with & » % would be m-t The better the class the more he wowd shine in it. Sitting a fence ten‘t as bard as sitting a buck jumper, Seemâ€" ing is not nn%:h.wu doing," and be irrit@bly at the bedclothes which encompassed him. | "Buffering is harder than either," said a quiet voice at his elbow. "Km make Mr. Anstruther take this, don‘t let him worry about Jim.. Jim is quite able to take care of bimself‘ .. ~Jim‘s best friend was his woret adâ€" vocate.~ it was just that abllity to take care of himself which told against â€"him with the woman he loved; just the helplessness and dependence of An: struther which appealed to Kitty. > 1t almost seemed as if quiet of the. sickâ€"room had leaked through the log walls, and pervaded the whole ranch, but nature itself. Even the storm had quieted down after that one wild i#ght. _ « (ihe Asâ€"the house lay € lower than the lurro-ndiz. itry, 4t was wrapped in a vell % and above which the showed, patched ~with siqw, which emphasized the great ‘distarices, ::: t::s beggarliness of the. November thills. a It was the time of the year in which, to a girl like Kitty, the contrast beâ€" tween the sheltered Hfe of the O‘d Country and the homelessness of the new would be most apparent, and as she dwelt upon this, looking hour after hour into the gloom outside, the only relief toâ€" harthoughts was the nece:â€" sity for waiting upon the man who had become to h*r typical of England. To her, in the midst of her roverie, came Phon, the Chinese cook. "Missy Rolt here?" & y "No; isn‘t she with the Boss?" "No can find ber.. Ole Mary come, want some clothes. Heap cold,‘ and the Chinaman gave a sympathetic shiver. "You go find Missy Rolt; m plenty busy cook him grub.‘ 7 Kitty looked at Anstruther, . Appar ently he was aslieep, so hnwrlng the cook, she went down to the library, where Rolt and his wife were slmug.t "Poor old soul; what a day for her to come," was Mary Rolt‘s greeting of the message.> | . â€"â€" Oe "Just the sort of day to make ons want more clothes, dear. Have you .-zln-. to :ln her?" asked Rolt. can something, I expect. I am rather glad that she has coms, aren‘t you, Dick? Itâ€"looks as if the trouble with her people is blowing over." â€" %, â€"â€""Perhaps; but the fact that an in dizn begs of you means nothing. » You know what cultus potlatch means." l_;:‘m'.; ;‘ug.:u( is a mz; znnlxh w, bu! '.llu 0/ &rstefui and murl@'ef E> Her husband siniled: He was not quite certain ':mould be .. the greater ~miracle, that anyone shou‘d w Mary Rolt, or that an ‘Indian be grateful. He had known Inâ€" dians for a lifetime, + _ ‘ After his wife had loft the ropm her mission of charity, ukln? K’i&; with her to "rummage" in the old amhu box.“mu:o- u:':‘ ‘:oe dqm:‘: me, amoki an neteuy Taie mor chaqrtn) thek, .. o A good many of hisg castleg in the air had fallen since Anstruther‘s ar yival, and, without Jim‘s help he did not feel as sanguing of ultimate suc cess on the Risky as he had done. _ A sharp ery called ‘him back from the future to the present, es _ "What is it," he called, opening door. 5 £ & wife trom the lumber room. "It must have been Mr. Anstruther who called. :m-aumm" with me, looking out someâ€" tl!."“fotoldllm. he ought not toâ€"" p-tu&hhgoh&houdhkwfle ‘u’.‘emmne roomthor.whm ty was already x over Al struthéer." . _‘ "â€" i K281 â€"~"He has fainted again," she x chafing his hands helplessly, but &s‘ she spoke consclousness Mnrug to him. mss 4A h ty Talutiy. â€" "I giveâ€" so my FI,NO, I:;t when rm!fim ’p‘} g\rm t T NA# , qB ‘off, Eisace mad Shuithe To w can‘t. do: anything without fainting,‘ ,nq !9 M his eyes weatily, almoat fitfi he were going to Wlustrate his words. P o * ~"What did you want, old fellow?" Toras 14 e en & very capsless v4 Jn NK B : : > .. > .0. . hn l o Nea lt Wlflcfl is hand in dopra Â¥ €e. 1 don‘t want so much looking after, but when Kitty was :3: I thought that 1 saw someone 11 Aittle: room." "? my bath reom?*. . . *Yes, Kitty sits . there sometimes When she wants me to stop talking ard #leep. and 1 thought that she had come when she gleep, an hack." "There is no one there now," sild Itolt, coming: back from the room, "Who did you think it was?" . ..‘ . "I don‘t know." 1 saw sonjeche p#i mmfimmn-’. |1 . you know w s ”k‘-mrmmm >"NMo ; 1 only saw the face, or thought nlum”’n‘pnmm- HAkN% Tanmey." 000. T. . _ "He is a fraud, Kitty," d with a goodâ€"humored Iaug »d vou back. and Invented "I dont know, dear, answered w at your pardon," he murmured s« buig on a n decided R 1 . very l:“‘ M‘ his his wite | "Pruitâ€"aâ€"tives‘‘ and . them a trial. J took d of **Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives" 2 me‘fec} like a new man. I c kinds of heatty foods without and am no longer coftstipated ished wood of the sia‘t@ worch a vivd imagination it bave made into the outline of a Wet mocassin, but the Boss dUsregarded . . 1e t Pm * LEMUEL, A. W. BROWN. -xm‘h&u UFraitâ€"aâ€"tives" as° a mediéine.. . It hbas indeed performed what ‘have seemed Yike miraculous ‘curés: in irundreds of cases of chronic Indig« _~Five minutes later when he met his wife downstairs, he asked whether she had found amything for the old woman. ._"Yes, 1 mide up. quité a bundle for her; a warm petticcat and all sorts of Rruitâ€"aâ€"tives‘ is fl;'c]u!‘y medicine 1J relfable waiee . olo a hare io & or fi.'o. or trial size, @5¢. ~ At ufiukfl or from Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives Limited, Ottewa. thick things, Kitty‘s and mine; but the ”'.."’ old thing ‘has gone without Rolt looked graye. ‘ ap ."Oh, you need not frown, Dick. We were rather long, I know, but it is #o hard to decide what qne~really ‘bas done with, and if the old woman didn‘t get her clothes toâ€"day, she will get them next week when she comes to zive the house its mionthly scrubbing." Rolt looked out over the darkening landscape. The November day was drawing rapidly to a close, and he knew thai old Mary_had seven miles to trudge back to her rancherie, but it was curious that she bad not weited. He could see the trail which led to the guich through which ran Mary‘s road home, but there was no sign of Mary, Old as she was she must bave moved guickly to have â€"gained °the shelter of the gulch miready, or she pould not bave waited long for thore elothes. t . $ A question which Rolt wanted to nsk was suppressed beforo it left his lips. Instead he asked his wife how long it was since old Mary had given :}l‘w ho:fu one of her. "thorough scrubâ€" ngs." 3 x5 "More than.a month, I‘m afraid, but you know they have all been away from the rancherie. Why?, Do any ot. the rooms want ‘Scrubbing vyery badly, old n;::?"w' i ; "Ob, no, ‘m make a good deal. of mess with myhébln,;x bath room, but you and Kitty k after‘ the top floor, don‘t, you,â€" little woman. It is always as clean as A new pin in spite of my efforts to the contrary." K\ SA aos "What a delightful old humbug you are, Dick, where I am cancerned," she said fondly.. "I did not know that you would miss old Mary‘s ministrations, She cleans the whole house once a month, upstairs and. down, <but we ought to have kept up appearances. at any ntr in her absence, : Iâ€"will go and see to it at onee,".~ !. _~ ._~ > > This was more than Rolt had barâ€" gained for. He had obtained the inâ€" formation he wanted without alarm ing ber, but by suggesting a fault where he know none existed. f However, he followed hbis wife to the room, andâ€" was reljeved io be. ABSOLUTE SECURITY, Carter‘s Little Liver Pills. dary t:< FWMMI§h:â€". â€"<<; : . | Mary in bis reom, though she appaf‘ FBWITâ€"Aâ€"TMES" CURED BM â€"â€" | .. nt Mtar everyibulg Pavetaly‘ rith Avoxbat®. K. H.? October. isth. l his eve. BÂ¥ Goorl:’ 'lni;;‘t': Must Boar Signature of OVAE S!OK HEADACHE. 8606 Pacâ€"Simile Wrapper Below. Qenuine ave made dn eat all suffering, und â€"â€" quiet served that contrast as possible 4o the grimâ€" world outside. he A wood fire glowed rrily ‘on the wide hearth, ‘and t;: t of it. was w by the Â¥ ~glass that coslly in the theâ€" roseâ€" colored cretonne hangings. ~ R "Do want.al} the blinds drawn, l‘nnk?!‘m usked with her band on the last of them. & "Not unless you wish At." "Well, then, I‘ll leave this one unâ€" drawn. <! alwayssnuggle. into m more cosily when‘I can ‘peep out Sown the. railey, from.where you 1e wia you without "moving* Amnlt"g make the fire feel warmer and the room more homelike." . _ K â€"_"It always feels homelike where you are, Mrs. Rolt," .t ~ booher She curtseyed toâ€"him with a laugh; and then, turning to Kitty, who had just entered the room, bade her ; be q%fl&%flmfi‘ P § see, 4 °> > B y + “mthwtthmhhvlm and then: with a few deft touches re« arranged some of the sllver, * Kitty for the nonce had donned.cap and apron, and Anstruther was. not the first to discover more charm and coquetry in a maid‘s cap than in Bet mistress‘s tollette. C + wl "Does the family expect to be walted on or does it atretch?" she. asked, saucily, L "What do you mean, Katherine?" . "Where 1 was last, the femily hed to be waited on when it had a pariy, but when it was by itself it atretched like this," and reaching seross the table she possesed herself of & salt cellar. [ "You went as & ladyâ€"help, 1 supâ€" pose, retorted . Mre. Rolt, s "all Indy and no help, like m CAML "What was her story?". asked struther. â€" VA e 29 MEEIUIEC+ "Oh, she came out to the poor dear. boys, her muu?lfl eould :‘ot mordmm.hl;m m::b. ‘;‘Qfl" gged un came, ‘ & exactly ninetyâ€"nine different things, each of which was, "the only thing she never could do,": and ‘ actually, guessing who it was who cleaned the boots, she put hers outside her Bedâ€" room door every night." *And}" .__: * / “And’?" On, and she. married,â€"of o(mne..adhormmd?w” they did ‘whilst mm with _ them, éxcept that her hus cleans her boots now." But Anstruther was not listening to Mrs, Rolt‘s libel on ladyâ€"helps, . Inâ€" stead, he was rm;:wg through. the uncurtainc w at the foot of hia bed. to which the others had their his bed, to which the ©PRTI® HMD "TV! backs turned. ¢ "Who would g campliug down the valley toâ€"night, Mrs. Rolt?" ‘he asked. "In the hay meadows?" No one." "Is not that a fire? Surely, my eyea are not playing me.â€"failse again?" The Boss turn.d lasily in uts cbair. "Yes, that is a fire sute enough. There are two of them. Do you 86e that little one {mt beyond the first?" Suddenly Rolt‘s face changed. He sprang _ toâ€" the window, took . one searching glance down the valley, and then turned sharply ‘: his wife, I‘s face working with feeling which he strove to control; _ .: C l . "Mary; J«‘:T%l to speak to you oask?" ud‘ laying nie Band on Rit m . ty‘s shoulder as hrpzné. he whis pered, "Keep him quiot whatever hap pene. tntyoflm”‘gfllithofol- owed his wife from roomt. Qace mldno the hhlmbmr ® . \ "It‘s. our y â€" M.,g:!;‘.d'l‘lmle devila $ our m- g? feed.= Keep cool f and tell the men in the I‘m off to the mess house to get the ba)lt, breeds. . Keep (your ‘heatrt wve‘» stop them before: they can muchk ow ts rack ASâ€" hC W out of the &"R’iu'?‘"ex a4 he passed out of the Mary © Woit‘s beart a:k as ste saw blguine 1a he wrould have hed her ‘do it, with the rm and when the. men h v after their master, sheâ€" went . i6 the :slok coladirmene = "ut * *‘ WOODSTOCK.â€"Sectetary R. . S7kâ€" dnc s tm mt s ud a lothet ~Hon. L P. Hekigr , ® tal, _ in w yays <that %fl to theâ€" ‘"Flying Post® train from London to. < Tor« onto is fAnal and irrevocable. â€" Its conâ€" : would â€" mean ~a disturbance heâ€"gconomy of the post office ‘ doâ€" cbment. â€" The: Government, he says, one on of the community with !.C\ * â€" P ., '.‘ Sedentar exercige, ‘ tood, : 00 0h, â€"a@ â€" torpid : liver, worry ab are the most comâ€" K AQ NB TNCRE ASED l"lleNG g:}‘m BJ net © Mary ° Roit _ "â€"! dino r hat night for the of them be droom,. â€" busying â€" in the pretty place as vivid s .~No, it L?‘L ,floro": HAPTER XV (Ta be Continued) fi': of ou! in, and there <was else. . which â€"she the door k man‘s the poor DIS CHURCHBHILL WAS H f in PiLfist .~Belfast, ..Feb. 8.â€"â€" : An . crowd, mostly imill bands, l')mlolm and mmwh" A hooting mob surrounded :z no serious> trouble burchilt passive. A&wr&mw day, turning the park where. meeting was held into a bog. a The streets were thronged _ and Churchili‘s progress to the park â€" at the dinner hour, was interrupted sevâ€" _ndtimu:{ewoml‘nn,thpolh having trouble in clearing the .. way tor the auto. ~ Unionists sympathizers ~ carvied an elhigy of Churchill through the streets on a pole, while Nationalists â€" bung effigies of Lord Londonderry: and Sir Edward Carson on wires _ near ; the In his speech Lord Churchill < . deâ€" clared Britain‘s â€"present parliamenâ€" tary methods are not sufficiently teâ€" presentative of the provincial life . Or national. Home Rule fur Iréland he regarded as the first milestone: along the road to eventuat unity .â€" of the Englishâ€"speaking races. & & _ Although there was much ; exciteâ€" Yrent and much noise toâ€"day it was no mote thanâ€". provided on â€". many ti#elfth of July demonstrations > You are probably aware that pueuâ€" monia always résults fromy . a _ cold, but you rever heard of a cold . reâ€" sulting in pneurhonia when Chamberâ€" lain‘s Cough Remedyâ€"was used. _ Why take the risk. when this remedy â€" may be had for a trifle? For sale by : all dealers. . ‘ ALL DRUGGISTE . se Prof. ‘ Doreawend,. of Toronto, begs to announce that he will be at the Walper House Hotel on Friday, Feb. 16th, with a complete display of the newest London, Paris and New York creations in hair goods. You are inâ€" vited to call and inspect his goods. TORONTO:~â€"Victor : O. Mastronatâ€" di, who caused.a sensation .:in . the local Kalian colony a few . weoks ago with the annuuncement that : he inherited a fortune of about . $70,000 from‘an uncle in Ruenos Ayres, _ was srrested this morning on a charge of getting money through false pretencâ€" es. He was arraigned in the police court this morning and pleaded ‘"not guilty," and.was remanded _ for "a week. ~~OTTAWA.â€"Hon, _ Â¥. W. Crothers, minister of labaor, has been appointed chairman of the board of conciliation lfi:thwdmto between the maintenâ€" ance of waymen ard the Pere . Marâ€" quetto Railway. Wallace Nesbitt, K. C.,â€"represents: the company, and J. (t.â€"O‘Donoghue the men. "" uotiugaL * ey Fl.ya- E. â€"Pinkham | ‘s MR. CROTHERS IS CHAIRMAN m nt':‘.;;l‘fiz give you m nedicines, _ Last Oefiocr I wrote to o4 for as I was completely run h, had bearing down nnufion:} s the lower part ® ,,.@ . pak 49: t S er C : & ® j gan â€" ts v! u::‘ took Lydia E. Pinkham‘s ;3. ufmm wmmm ‘ _ Another Woman Cared women WELL AND SIRONG IMPORTANT TO LADIES M a ARREST MASTRONARDL us postal for E&fififlr as I did a i hon w nibiish U 0t ~ After mowo !l‘! Roven. "tht "um stronger in every 3;'." E. Pinkham‘s An enormous is, . greeted hill, . â€"Rirst and wile at his auto resulted, Boaitrice Cloorve Chompers , Ki M new Ilr;ze.mwg qé‘ 3 f " ,’? Dr. William Geiger, _ l'rw.m; ts .>> PRON®E 148. King Sr., Waren 00. Honor Graduate of Toronto Univer: sity, â€"â€"Late of the Eideau St. General Boophd& gbt;‘d'“' E:;nbwi( College clans and Suew t On NotE:â€" Night 6 fm:.i&ooflg:.. ight calls ipacao bok o. M (}LAYNN W. WELLS, _ LD.S.., D,D_s_ , Dentist, Hours 9 to 5. ‘Fridays 9 to 12," After A; 1st will visit i second mp;fl fourth m.?z’ h month, 1 to 6 p.m, ds af Nrasiayail c 1. Coanencrnls Reyal Oollege of Dental Surgeons of Toar LDental ‘Ofice in Fisshor‘s Block, 'ug Visits St, Jacobs every Ist and umg the month, . Dentistry practwed in all 1 8. E taes u0. s oi i , oradust EXPERIENCED VETERIN ARYjjSURGKON _ t Tt mave w 2. Sn et e anzen‘s Hlook Berlin, over s C :m-o.humtnum ler i € ___ Iesuer of Marriages Licanses Hental e, ~Honor +Gradusmis U Toronto. Etm en Hours: 9 a, m. to 6 P. D. Robt. Bricknell . â€" Fo# the Uountics of WATE ahd, OKRORU:. Satinfadtion gnaros P o oi on recamnt ue Ext kn e PR re celve pronipt .gunpno: 8. MoBR {Sucsessor to C Barrister, SoHici: Pnove No. 734, PRIY 4TE ruuumm Prbipre ies wegiggees.. " or, King snd Foundry Stz., J Our classes aretnow larger | thamw ever before but we have a our quarters and we have fon a few more students. You may em»â€" :;:ay time. Wi:..h:v‘:w of ' oxprkt:d t our courses are the best. ~ Our ‘gradeoâ€" ates succeed. ~ This week three reâ€" cent graduates informed us that have positions pa; $65,87 5. mtn_"g per month, \cntn three ILLAR& Slits OBX L. WIDEMAN in Fleotric Restorer for Men Specialtyâ€"= â€"â€"~ _ _‘ Discases of the Eat, Professional â€" CFAander, oi â€" HUGHES, Dentist u, Contral Business College â€" Réaoe x Barrister, lement & Dr, Lederman, D. D. & $#A ~ _ LALKGC a24eut. . Ke momical Hiock 81. L. BITzZ DR. J. BE STRATFORD, OXT atale Uddfellow‘s ring 4,.Freeport, Onk onrad Bltzey Office Auctioneer Te Sor of ht W C Waterioo Ofing

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