Waterloo Public Library Digital Collections

The Chronicle Telegraph (190101), 10 Oct 1912, p. 7

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

§ on 2i s0e i ghre w PEp es oneme t #» gfi © Tay fons to him. :w fnst ceal itc portusity Witn.‘g. beating heart .and eager| â€""..__, eyes be searched the spot. ‘There lay the bear avd a Jittle distance away * vprons on the grass, clothed but whetb | © f er in her Â¥icht mind "or not he could " not tell, lay the woman. Foramoment| ind as he bent‘a concentrated, cager gake mss upon ‘her he thought she might have | â€"â€"â€"â€"~ fainted or that she might have. died. ; LOSing i Jand .Rerve and will â€"to have | trees, C dressed it before efther of these : #ith su things happened. She lay motloniess | over ro« under bis gaze for so long. that hail point fnally made.up mind: that comâ€"{ tween t1 M ro:*hn( him to go to |and the her assistance. | foods c He rose to his feet on the instant and saw the woma@n also lift herself. from the grass as if moved by a simiâ€" lar impuise. â€" Inâ€"higâ€"in F pation he bad. 'brhtzmrn m signs of the times. A<{sense of the overcast ky came to him suddenly as it did to her, but ‘with a difference. He ‘knew what was about to happen, his experience told him much more fln@;m,utd~W of ‘the pest than she could possibly imagâ€" 4ne, Bheâ€"must ‘be warned at once, she must leaye the canon and get up g.&g ‘higher ground without delay. Outy was plain and yet he did it not. ~He could not. ~The pressure upon him was not yet‘strong enough. . _A half dozen times as he watched her deliberately sitting there eating, he opened his mouth to cry to her, yet he could not Mnc;bbn_‘l! to: it. A strange tinidity tfl him} halted him, heldt‘.lq.- k. > A man cannot stay away fve years from men and women and be himeélf with them in the twinkling of an eye. And when to that instinctive and acquired relueâ€" tance against which be struggled in vain, be added: the assurance . that whatever bis message he would be unwelcome on sceount of what had gone before; he could not force himâ€" gelf to go to her or even to call to her, not yet. He would keep her un: der surveiliance, however, and if the worst cime be could intervene in time to rescue }er. He counted without his cost, ‘h‘s usual judgment bewil dered. So be followed ber through the trees and down the bank. Now he was so engrossed in her and so agitrted that his caution slept, his experience was forgotten. The storm in bis own breast Wwasâ€"so great. that it overshadowed the storm brew Ing above. Her way was easier than his and he had fallen some distance behind when. suddenly (there rushed upon him the fact that a frightful and unlooked fcr clondburst was about to occur above their heads. . A _llmnhu l-tpul » thunder clap at car rested bis attention.â€" Then, but not until then, he flung everything to the winds and amid the sullen and almost continuous peals of thunder he sent ¢ry after ery toward her which were lost in the tremendous diapason of igound . that «echoed and . reâ€"echoed through the rifts of the mountains. w;’*;ll.",fl;e"fl agzain and again â€"wome up higher. . wet obt of the ganon. â€" You‘ll bo.drowned." T But ‘be had. waited too long. The storm had d too‘ rapidly ; she was too far abead of and beneath him She heard rothing but the sound of a volce, sbrill, menacing; fraught with terror for bor, not a word distinguish able; scarce‘y to hor disturbed soul even a hun‘an voice, it seemed like tbe . wierd râ€"r of come wild spirit of the storm. ii sounded to ber over wrought"nerves co â€" u‘terly â€"inhuman th*t ghe on‘y ran the for‘as, They Make Good pooh arjnpuginnas, Sppmidiyr ty .m,mhn han two cent & . It will not fnt th‘owm or © name 1 how 1 w will send essm re e m mm ncte c ol h en tat, * o DICAL ADVIBER®" with explamatory illnstrat io "l:é k:gp ghm.uelvukin fine condition. ies mpern, id V Cly ons a ‘ igor follow 0e amcly use of the reliable REECHAMS PILLS _ WHE OHAIE at the place so memorable He was prepared * pty nhn'nl(cfi!fm rd be was careful so to conâ€" if h3 to give no possible opâ€" tor} ber to | digcover "his promjsed uis st mbitig nfi'w had view of theâ€"pool, and lookâ€" CYRUS TOWNSEND» BRAD} a â€"» + In bowes, 257 s Airectior t it you M COF Th really cnren all 1 will mail, free of any charge, my = Pinchatongt . aifeefohndey and this ‘cure you, my reader, fot yourself, Ti i garen fanaiep sijune aded 3""‘:‘.‘!.'“ ~â€"Men cannot womâ€" en‘s % :‘... know us T n ons t in m -&‘."-3‘!‘-,«- Wm placemen eo® C " + or Painful o4e, U ot Ovarian o | way. He set his teeth, he tried des Immly to hold on, he thrust out his ‘ right hand, holding her with the oth ; er one, and .clawed at the dripping rock in vain. In a moment the tor rent mastered him and when it did so | it setzed nimâ€"with fury and throw him ‘Ilh a stone from a sling into the ; seething yortex of . the . midâ€"stream. ; But in all this he did not, or would _uot, release her, Losing w«:gfl‘ Jor ne Tk es plunged stra‘ght ahead ° z trees, euttirs hfl.&g‘ e with superbuman agility and strength over rocks and logs until he reached a point wlere the rift narrowed beâ€" tween two wal‘s and ran deeply M and then the heavens mdmm floods came erd bo:t into ths open maw of that rast crevice and filled it in an instent. As the Coluge came. roaring down, bearingâ€"onward ths: «sweepings and Lot 1 tains, uuz:: a al ) of hel ite des te rising, falling, n m»fi-. now coming into view again, in the foamy: midst of the torrent. â€" He ran to the cllif bank and throwing aside his gus be scrambled gown.the wall to J k ®ain shelf of the rock over which the vising water Broke thinly. Ordinarily it was twenty feet above the bed. Bracing himself against a projection he waited praying. canon was here ‘so narrow that he could have leaped to the other â€"side and yet it was too narrow for him to reach her if the water did not sweep her toward his feet. It was all done in a second. Fortunately a projection on the other side threw the force of the torrent toward him and with it came the woman. Dr. Morse‘s: * Indian Roos Pills She was almost spent. She had been struck by a log uphesaved by some mighty wave, her hands were moving feebly, her eyes were closed, she was drowning, dying, but indomitâ€" ably battling on. He stooped and as a surge lifted her, ho threw bis arm around ber waist and then he braced himself against the‘ rock to sustain the full thrust of the mighty flood. As he seized her she gave way suddenly, as if after having done all that she could there was now nothing left but to trust herself to his hand and God‘s.. She hung a dead. wdsln{ on his .arm in the ravening water which dragged and tore at her madly.. He was aâ€"man of giant strength, but the struggle bade.fair to be too much even for him. It seemed as if the mountain behind him was giving. ll‘mehme&lmhnhlmmthon |‘sands to nothing.. But .what . are :.hnnc.m the eyes of God! The man ‘ in his solitcde had mot forgotten tc ‘pray, his" habits stood him in good ‘stead now. He «petitioned . shortly, !hohnly. in ‘brief unspoken words as ho battled through the long dragging zeconds.â€" Py Adrv "uf e Such was the swiftness of the mo tion with which they were <swept downward that he had little need to swim, his only effort was to keep hi headâ€"above water and to keep from being dashed against the logs that tumbled end over end ‘or whirled sideways, or were janmed into clus: ters only to burst out on every hand. He struggled furiously to keep ‘him self from. being: overwhelmed in the seething Radness, and what was harder, to keep the lifeless woman in his arms {rom | being strickon otf wrenched away. He knew that below the narrows where the canon widened ‘the water would subside, the awfu! ury of the rofn would presently ctazc I&:oeouum'a clear of the rocks in broad he might win to land with iidneys Wrong?â€"â€" i they are e in danger.â€" When the b od, t ;' ‘(:,;‘ nel Dlaprien Cl Stemes and d deadly Bright‘s the results ‘Dr. Morse‘s Indian M&c‘w a most effective Aniat vaiing e sul A thoroughly and :! Try g Fighting," clinging, struggling, pray ing, he was swept on. Heavipr Pad heavier the vc~~n dragged in an un consclous besp. "It would have been easier for him if he had let ber go; she would aesg.w_ ‘and he could then ekcape. idea"never onc#â€"0¢â€" curred to him. He had indeed with: drawn from his kind, but when one é found the ciur 1 mail, of with instt im 3 an‘s sufferiigs han miekhme and Thinthi or st you nothing ap* it and ; and give up the Nes %o the Pogrdont Fae. the n mmuymmn-g:n_nmu chanee of escape.. B Mi&umug Tos thiepet than ve wrmwuuwut m!&';oum s \ He â€" had stréeagth , Ehifting bis grasp to the woman‘s ifl.-iowutmmfl.hls»hvfl one hand>and swam 4 with the other. ‘The curront still yan. swiftly but with mo gigantic upheAving â€"waves as before. 1t was more e&8y to avoid floating timber and debris,.and on one Presently She Opened Her Eyes. side where the ground sloped someâ€" what gently the quick water flowed more slowly. He struck out desperâ€" ately for it, foreing himself away from the main stream into the shallows and ever dragging the woman. Was it hours or minutes or seconds after that he gained the battle and neared the ghore at the lowest e4ga? He caught with hisâ€"IOrearm, 86 the torrent swerved him around, & stout young pine so deeply robted as yet to hvol:.lé)noodthoflood. Bummontug the reservre of strength that is bestowed upon us in our hour of need, and, comes unless from God ‘we know not whence, he drew himself in front of the pine, got his back against it and although the water "thindered against him stillâ€"only by comparison could it be called quieterâ€"and. hi« foothold was most precariovs, he teached down carefully and grasped the woman under the shoulders. â€" His position was a cramped one, but by the power of his arms alone he lifted ‘her up until he got his 1oft arm about her waist again. It was a mighty feat of strength indeed. ‘The pine stood in the midst of the vmr..,nt:r “em_on the farther side the was but the waâ€" mmmng did not know what might be there, but he had to chance It. Lifting her up he stepped out, fortunately meeting firm ‘ground.: A tew paces and he remched solid rock above the flood. He raised her above his head and laid her upon the shore then. with the yvery last atom of all hi force, physical, mentai and spiritua) he drew himself up and fell pantin; and utterly exhausted but triumphan by her sidé.. ; s s ~‘The cloudburst was over, but .th rain still beat down upon them, th thitnder still t::'r;:‘shvo them, th: $ Bout then, bu: they vfi' safe, aliye, if the woman hac not died in his arms. He had don« a thing superhuman. No nurhiov ing conditions would have believed it He himselft would <have declared s thousand times its patent impossibilâ€" ity, lbrm'.mondshkmvowh sovar , then he thought of the fiask he always cartied in his pocket It was gone. His cfmhqimr'l.pdi. andorn; they had been ruined by hiw battle with the waves.~ The girl â€"la) where he had placed her on her back In the pocket of her hunting shirt h«â€" noticed a little ~protuberanice. â€" Th« pocket was provided with a flap anc tightly buttoned..â€" Without hesitatior. he unbuttoned it There was a flask, there, a Jittle silver mflr ‘by some miracle it had not been brok: en. ‘ It was balf full. . With nervous hands ‘he opened it and poured some of it down her throat;, then he bent over..her, his sonlâ€"" in his finct mhovluvmlo_do nex she opened hor eyes.._. .. ! "Look here," yelied Poeter in #r Ing éxcitement shd entirely obllvi to° hi# logemajestie, pointing #1 And there, in the rain, by that rag Ing torrent whence he | her :‘hmhmm» the power of his arm, in the presence of the God above them, this man and this women looked at each other and Mrfe for both of them wais no longer the same. A Wi!! Dash for the Hills, Old ‘Kirkby, who had been Jazily mending a saddle thoe greater part of the morning, had eaten his dinner, smoked his pipe and was now stretch ed but on the grass in the warm sin taking a map. Mrs. Maitland was drowsing over a book in the shadow of one of the big pines, when Pots, the horse wrangler, who had â€" been Wwandering rather far down the canon rounding up the ever strayIng stock, ‘enddenly came bursting into the camp. from the mo oo e y t CHAPTER VIL. held him in fgtoat b A Irfilett Be eath in spite the des rostrate . fromâ€" atumbled over ‘PLFTELY CUR se ciou A;um over the top of T3E r';:? "It‘i be a e:,mM aure have t out an‘ in a. Saary‘ 190. %u‘?&v Byâ€" this : timé" ‘wes .on his feet, the storm bad: stolem mg- tion of the canoun had completely hid its approach. At best the three in the camp could not have discpvered 1t until it was high in the heavens.: Now the clonds were already approaching the noonday sun. Kirkby was alive to the situation at once. He had the rare ability of men of.action of awakening with all bis fculties at instant: com mand. He did not have to rub his eyes and wonder where he was, and speculate as to what was to be dond. The moment that his eyes, following Pete‘s ~outstretched ~arm, discovered the black.â€"mass ‘of clouds ‘heâ€" ran toâ€" ward Mrs. Maitland ‘and standing on no céremony he shook: her" vigorously ‘by the shoulder. "Fruita thi;" fivt‘nl! in not patr, health as to completely overcome *"‘Truly ©Priitatived‘ in n wonderfol ‘We‘ll have toâ€"run for our lives, ma‘am," he said briefty, ~**Pete, drive the stock up of the hills, fur as you kin, theâ€"hosses pertikler, they‘ll. be more to us .an‘ them burros must take keer of themselves." 7 15 store every day Pete needed no urging. He was off like a shot in the direction of the imâ€" proviged ‘corral. _ He loosed the borse« from their |‘ckets and stariéd tjem up the steep trail that led down from the ‘hogback to the camp by the waâ€" ter‘s edge. HMe also tried to start the burros he had jhst rounded up in the same diréction. Some~of them would go and some of them would not. He had his hands full in â€" an instant. Meanwhile Kirkby ‘didâ€"not Unger by the side of Mrs. Maitland. "With inâ€" credible agflity forâ€"so‘ old aâ€"man he ran over to the tent where the stores were kept and began picking out such articles of provisionâ€": as â€"he ~could 5oc a box, 6 for $2.50 trial size, At dealers or scnit on receipt of price e o ie .g "Come overhere, Mrs, Maitland," he cried.. ‘‘We‘ll have to carry up or the. hill somethin‘ to keep us from starvin®‘ till we gctâ€"back to town. We m orter. camped â€"in . ‘this .. yere noways, but who‘d ever expect: ed anything like this now ?" "What do you fear?" ‘ asked, <the woman, joining him as she spoke and waiting tor his directions. ‘‘ "Looks <to me like a cloudburst," was ‘the answer. â€" ‘"Creek‘s prétty ful: now, an" it she does break everything below yere ‘I! go to hell on a run.". : It was evidence of his perturbation and ‘ankiety that he used such lanâ€" guage, which, bowever, in the emefâ€" gency did not seem unwarrantéd even to the refinedâ€"ear of Mrs. Maitland, "Is it possible?" she exclaimed, "*"Taint on‘y possible, ~it‘s . sartin. Now, ma‘am," he hastily bundled up‘a Tot of miscellaneous provisions in a small piece of canvaes,.tied it up and handed it to ber. . ‘"That‘ll be for you." MOTHER OF â€" LARGE FAMILY Mfi aapt»cnails tony, 1 3, grem aralysis andâ€"weakuness left me. J am bow well again and attend miy h-ma.igdmi-nmm'av:l Sanative Wesh have * donie me, I live on a "| farm andhaveworked 3 very hard.. 1 : t fortyâ€"five years 6 N J N it steange that I am t K 'g broken down AAXCANCXâ€"IY| with hard work and the care‘of my famâ€" Hy, mimd:v t«-flud Lydia ‘m zmbh pound, and that there be n& mmmmflffm-g“‘ they will take it as 1 have. J am ever without it in the house, â€" "I will say also that I think there is no better medicine to be found for young witle. My eldest daughter has taken C NEC O Lydia E. Pinkbam plood for paintol perl â€""'-I "" m'r;- i-..”A d Wany bobts the reoort m--:uâ€"bai ells How She wp"‘ H,“Hlâ€"- or Thoss m Take Seottyville, Mich.â€"*I want to tell you M Lydia E kanth (4. JOHN 1 say ‘‘Thank God Vegetable Com in add irreguias her. ation of t m i flle se postinnd d 8 Eol pnoce 4 néed ‘u faw minutes Mumfiomwm t A snn s "I have to leave the tents and all the things," said Mrs, Maitiand. â€" ,‘_‘l’umngz‘:t‘m&-,"gn“ mm.mw.a Af what I think ‘s ‘ to happenâ€"comes off, you won‘t bave no need of pothin‘ no . mote~> Oreat God, bere she comes." As he spoke :there was a sudden, swift downpour o% wain, not in. drops, but in a torrent." up hir owa. pack and motioning the woman to do Wkewise with her load, Kitkby caught her by‘ the band, ‘and halt 1ed, <halt the side of the canon. Th> canon wat muck ‘wider bere than further tp and there was much thore room and much more‘ space for~the water to spread. Yet, they had to hurry for their lives as it was.~ They had gone up scarcely a hundred. feet ‘when. the disgorge ment ‘of the hearyns tookplace. â€" The water fel} with such force, directness and continvousness . that. it altmost beat them down. (Itâ€"ran over the trail hounclaclbs bevec s Ond s‘ & a fenelbni actflachce sitinatitwlairc more‘ space for the water to spread. |; BALT_ LAKE CITY, Utah â€"United Yet, they had to hurry for their lives fStates Sehator Smoot, of Utah,. atâ€" as it was.~ They had gone up searcely m;l the Jand > Jaws in an address a hundred feet ‘when the disgorge |}Chterday before the National: ‘Irtiâ€" ment ‘of the hearyns €ook place. :: The J tAtiOn Co?iu_m. ""American : settiers water fell m.&. toree, directness # att emigrating by the thousands . to and continvousness . that. it© almostf Canadaâ€"and their going proves that beat them down. Itâ€"ran m trail, there is something wrong in our laws down the side of. the : m: in 5 that shouldâ€"be rectified," he said. He sheets Mka water falls. ~It required Ednmd he expected to see astop Mages. Bd ah t to the exodus to Canada. 5.0 ied e *4 "c0. 4 "Great Godi" He Cried.. "Where s tS Entd ?" The tents went down in an instant. Where there had been a plensant bit of meadow land was now a muddy, tossing lake of black water.© Sorhe~of the horses andâ€"most of <ths burtos Which Peto had been unabié toido anyâ€" thingâ€"with were. engilfed‘ in a. moâ€" ment. â€" The two on*the mountain. side could see them satwimming: for dear life as they swept down the canon, Pete himself, with a few of. the animals, was already scrambling up to safety. the old man‘s skill and addretsâ€" to keep himself andâ€" companion from los ing their footing and fafling down into the seething tumult below. . °. Speech â€"was impossible between the mof the falling rain ‘and. the inâ€" t peals of thunder, but by, perâ€" sistent gesture, old Kirkby urged the terrified, trembling woman up. the trail until they fAnaily reached the: top of the bog back, where under the poor shelter of the stunted pines theyâ€" jolied Pete with such of the horses 8 he had been abla to drive up. . Kirkby, taking a thought for the morrow, not: ed that tHere were four â€" of them, enough to pull theâ€" wagos _if they eould get back fo It. . : x After the first awful deluge of the dloudburst it moderated slightly, but the hard rain came down steadily,.the wifld rose as well, and in snite. of SOWING HIS WILD OATS P gs E Vn a f CS . W <orrtia d oo . & _»v“ P ar â€"" 7 4 { . Ca+ 4 T . | o z I _ DP Pn ‘,Oi 1 ."U ".\f I t ~~aue | Paai i. 5§ ~JMllm â€" yae xM h 12 I”‘ e .. ./ (eul j:(:. P o i MWM Ee t'."'.- \‘{ Noue " k *J *J > whookt 2 4 > How many. young men < ww es â€" ol lt s ut; lot‘:‘k.bgck on their LJy c ® A Pear) ) cearly 1i regret their ) l T 227 PE :; ~wild cats‘‘ in various ways, ' fpo®luePeal *~PNe Ne F.xcesses, vislation of naâ€" ‘ «T01 ture‘s laws, ‘‘wine, wonten | Ww / !5> | L. ts fJ and song‘"â€"all have their P "&. x M J victims, . You have reâ€" oul ze3 F formed but what about the 3 + & Pn p seed you have sownâ€"what nai "< "ws \harez, _ about the harvest? â€" Don‘t \.\-":':‘_ | | e \\ BBE â€" trust to luck;, !fgmm ‘:_,. ) y } t at. present within the * H s tiutches of any secret habit :. W e S OBE nge q bet® n h 4 are 7 e I] 20R es J (e" es ; ) 3 ©MS ons rorko" Zatlip y$ Â¥ mdhuh:;iuime:dim s e P * any private disease and you dare not flywm-rrhluhh&udd-ymrmohefiq out fmr:fl;mm%uflurm -olnmim lifeâ€" . K, & K. ARE YOUR E. ~Lay your case them confidentially and they wnlwqy..L.myummmue. m.09s mt vihiiey" CoMPLAMrs) Kione\ aud BUabor® Di Ons. KENNEDY & KENNEDY payâ€"~NoTce Cor. Michigan Ave. and Griswold S1., Detroit, Mich acks (To be Continuedâ€") l!!!)dfi!n follows: £ 9 DRS. KENNEDY & KENNEDY, Windsos, On+ REAPING A HARVEST OF SORROW YOU CAN PAY WHEN CURED ie ie ue i * 4 If unable to call, write no patients |Little Liver Pi STOP EMIGRATION TO CANADA Washington, Oct.~3.â€" J. : Pierpont Morgan, told: the Clapp ~ Committee investigating the contributions to the Republican campaign {fund Ahat _ he contriblited $150,000 to ‘the Republiâ€" can campaign fund in 1904."; Douglas‘ Egyptian Uniment Oid the Trick. o.)'(‘r A, Carman, one of Davisv‘i:?. i rio‘s uergcl.c?mng men,. writes; mt Aallin the hee ol? m; m‘ caught the wire, thus sprainidg my ankle, â€"!._ ... ._From the pain I thought my leg" was broken. ~I managed wgethqme’,ln?ui ing great am My father w over a mile drngfist'c. who sold him:a â€"bottle of plian ~Liniment, which . we ied â€"with . surprising results, for it relieved. thegin alimost Anstantly, and on the next day, Subday, I was able to put my slipper on. â€". _ _ Jpratned Ankle Saturday Worked Again Manday i k. Patrrbe ama i ore: helth ever had; I was able to work on Monday without the loss of a single day."| . _â€" â€"Accidents will happen, . Don‘t be without --bot‘t}c m-' Egyptian Liniment. * A 1.3 \@#5catall roquest. Ont. â€" It‘s the CLEANEST, SIMPLEST, and BESTâ€"HOME m-.-uy--myn-hd‘lmhnb what KIND 6f Cloth your Goods are made Booklet giving results f Dysing over other colors. Carter‘s ii-mW Ne RDSON CO., Limited Must Boar Signature of OURE gq10CK HEADACHE Send for Free Cofor Catd, Story Booklet, and See Pacâ€"Stzzile Wrapper Below Genuine oug M PP 2 Free sample on Co., Nepauce. g, 5) D C {s ie Mte Mcwe M %Wr{ ‘ ite. â€" Maney ap joun figtoninred i.2 wa â€" ) o .; ., i ‘('t)flc;o.â€" d foloa ,, oeame ‘.«‘: : y * * Block; next e new * Bt, B Ly: Wl. Ra:a felephone 581 4ONE 14 n8 8r., Warenr~0 sity . k t ~Fke reobich g':’.’pec?kl gh a1d.9u, sns tario, _ Note:â€"Night a newer â€" from the office, (det irparmmntmnztnts t i5 c PHox® 143 <4, l o at oo mt LAYTroN w. wrurs, _" _ C 1.D.8., D.1.8.; Dentist; Waterlo Hours Y to 5. Fridays 9&:1’., Fel. 18): ter April Ist will visit Elinira Sotuag ty fourth Friday in eae month, 1 to 6 pam. > on en nuw'ngm n a» t J. H. Engel, detmoccg,,,o0 By day of night answored U br of d y cnenodoad " h Yhies puonios, Rreuayorer Reares es EXPERIENOED veTEAi: ARY SURcgRKon _ 1.D.3. y Deontal 3urgeon," D.D.8, Toronta‘ Om ramily jona 4, wwa C > Offlce ~Past.Ofice, Bt Jacoba Ont . : We h x vliee mies is is "mame. " Gos ioh Office=148 Kimg 8t,. E. over ion Bank Ratrapoé: "Bnd Do; Licentinats ‘Of the Dental Snr-. University of: Toror floor, Wo‘- : Chami Beriin. . Telenhans s Phone 464. _ , Nib thoe tont, v ith. you. _ to ; debide it § in S‘"g‘“;l & H,icjt_.; ;:;x-g ;:go and ’7*' it Write for the large _ free of ‘thisâ€"schoo! and ~Â¥on : B. Mo# AppiiCh Ut Dr. de Van‘s Pemals PH Dr \Will <You ?: Contral Businoss Collage Specialtyâ€", â€" â€" _ _ Diseases ‘of the Bar, puy* roee on . S . huGanzss, °_ s s l > esA 9 {Suocessor Or. W. J..SCHMIDT. ToU can suookko s YOU CaN sUY 5 It 8i Uate of flm% Wt‘e(»\smhon. King 8t. _ Hm':o;:nu';sp .,i l William Geiger. _ DR. J. B ... i aaoadeo® : .... RN Lederman, D, D. &, onioal Hiock. King Bolicitor P1 8 & Erb m BITZER, B. A etc, U e Depush 1.D.3. to Conrad Bitagy. graduste of the Ontaria omed s arige P "(6e > +V00FY e . 807 QV“ W ebor voy J. Sime ver Do Mv‘v‘::s Waterloo catalogue uny auch vhich wa 2 Uike P1 t l won EY

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy