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The Chronicle Telegraph (190101), 19 Dec 1912, p. 15

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ce rtholess.. _ OFf . k eatest satisfaction. is &tw-z{ ~-_:~:~'13-.3 ) m‘/ | lt Mel owever, did ~not BA * or fight es ‘this man Joved her with m lovre that was greater ever than he own. The moon, in the trité aphorâ€" jem, looks OR many brooks, the brook ;.umflcmmum in winning her affection for himâ€" f from the hundreds of men she knew, was the greater; in many years : had only seen this one woman. she should ‘be everything to g.lcwudthIotmly woman but womankind. He had been a boy practically when ‘he had w himself in those â€" mountains, and in all that time he had seen noâ€" body .like Euid Maitland, .Every arâ€" wel had ‘been exploited . to # why she should love him could be turned about to account for his passion for her. They are not necessâ€" ary, they are all supererogatary, idle words. To him also love had been born in an hour. It had flashed into existence as if from the fiat of the Divine. . Ob, he had fought against it. Like the cremites of old . he had been scourged into the desert by. remorse and another passion, bur time . had done its work. The woman he first loved had ministered not to the spirâ€" Stual side of the man, or if she had 6 ministered in any degree it was beâ€" eause he had Jooked at her with a glamour of inexperience and youth, During those fivre years of solitude, of study and of refiection, the truth had ‘gradually unroiled itself before him. Conclusions vastly at variance with what he had ever believed possible as to the woman upon whom he had first bestowed his heart, had got into |being and were in solution there; present woman was the precipitant brought them to life. He knew mow what the old appeal of his ‘wife had ‘been. He knew now what the mew appeal of this woman was, ‘ !"Au huniarfty two things in lito are ml! intermingled, body and soul, ‘Where the function of one beâ€" gins and the function of the other ends no one is able to say.. In all human passions are admixtures of the earth earthy.., We are born the ons of old Adani as we are reborn the sons of the New. Passions are complex. As in harvest wheat and Aares grow together until the end, so ‘love earth and heaven mingle ever. He remembered & clause from an anâ€" marriage service he had read. my body I thee worship," and every fibre of his physical being, he loved this woman. . 1t would be idle to deny that, imâ€" possible to disguise the facts, but in ;_‘: -dulfl‘:?“of passion the preâ€" pC ent was mental and ;", ritual; and just because higher and Boler ‘things predominated, he held Beér in his heart a sacred thing. Love is like a rose: the material part is the -;' iful blossom; the spiritual factor is the fragrance which abides in the Fose jar even aftor every leaf has fadâ€" ;flw,'e'r which may be expressed from the soft petals by the hard cirâ€" â€"&x inces of pain and sorrow until ‘ is left nothing but the lingering erfume of the flower, ‘ His body trembled if she laid . & hand upon bim, his soul thirsted for ’ present or absent he conjured ‘befi his tortured brain the sweetâ€" Hexs that inbabited her breast. . He bad been ciearsighted enough in anâ€" 4 ,‘9‘ the past, he was neither clearâ€" sighted nor coherent in thinking of the present. He worsbiped her, he fuld have thrown himself upon his Enees to her; if it would have added 10 he fl':;hcn #he could _ have #illed him, sinilitig at her. Rode she Sound Slieep us impossible to the bilious. Housness yieldsâ€"and headâ€" sour stomach, indigestion go wmmn regulated and and kidneys stimulated by BEECHAM‘S _ PILLS *a6 yet ; pDggre in its & 1 C 0_ late of the wa exist t;ghhbifl. he have unâ€" paved the way and have been of the privilege. . He longed to compass her with sweet obserâ€" servances. m‘btflimimd upon him for his long it had summed up in this one womtan all its cherm, its besuty, its romance, and had thrust ber into his very anus. Hisâ€"was one of those great passions which Muminate the records of the past. Puolo had not loved Francesca more. . i Ob, yes, the woman knew he loved her. â€" It was ‘not in the power of morâ€" tal man no matter how fron his reâ€" straint, how absolute the imposition of his will, to keep his heart hidden, his passion undisclosed. No one could keep such things secret, his love for hber cried aloud in a thousand ways, even hfs look when he dared to turn his eyes upor her was eloquent of his feeling. He never said a word, howâ€" ever, he held ‘bis iips at least fettered and bound for he believed that hondr and its abligations weighed down the balance upon the contrary side . to which his inclinations lay. He was not worthy of this woman. In the first place all he had to ofâ€" fer her was a blood stained hand. ‘That might have been overcome in his mind; but pride in his self punâ€" ishment, his resolution to withdarw ishment, his< resolution to withdraw such time as God completed his. e%â€" piation and signified his acceptance 6t the penitent by taking away his life, held him inexorably. The dark face of his wife rose be fore him. . He forced ‘himself to think upon her, she had loved him, she had given him all that she could. He reâ€" membered how she had pleaded with him that he take her on that last and most dangerous of jourreys, her devoâ€" tion toâ€"him had been so great she could not let him go out of her sight a moment, he thought fatuously! And he killed her. In the queer turmoll of his brain he blessed himself for everyâ€" thing.. He could not be false to his purpose, false to her memory, unâ€" worthy of the passion in which be be» lieved she had held him and which he believed he had inspired. ® If he had gone out in the world, after her death he might have forgotâ€" ten most Oof these things, he might have lived them down. Saner clearâ€" er views â€"would have come to him:; His morbid self reproach and self conâ€" sciousness would have been changed. But he had lived with them alone for five years and now there. was no putâ€" ting them aside. _ Honor and pride, the only things that may«successfully fight against love, overcome him. He ‘The Dark: Face of His Wife Rose Beâ€" fore Him. could not give way. He wanted to, every time ho was in her presence he longed to sweep her to his heart and erush her in his arms and bond ber head back and press lips of fire on her lips, 4 But honor and pride, held him back How Jong would they continue to ¢xâ€" ercise dominion over him? â€" Would the time come when his passion risâ€" ing like a sea would thundet upon these artificial embankments of his sou!, beat them down and sweep them away? * At first the disparity between their situations, not go much upon account of family or of propertyâ€"the treasâ€" ures of the mountaing, hidden sincs | ereation he had diseovered and let lie ~â€"but because of the youth and posi« tion of the woman compared to his own maturer years, his desperate exâ€" perience, and his social ~withdrawal had reinforeed bis ‘detarmination to live and fove without a sign, But he hadâ€"Jong since got beyond this. Had he been free he would have taken her like a viking of 6ld, if he had to pluck her from anfid a thousand swords and carry ber to a beggar‘s hut which love would have turned tc a palace. And whe would have come with him on the same conditione. He did not know that. Women have learred through centuries of weakness that fine art of concealment #Â¥ €* W @sinty, would he control himseif thent | . At.fl.mmbmu *% Of her way, but she had compelied $ him to come in.. The room that, was kitchen and bed room and store room for him was cheerless and somewhet cold. SBave at night:or when he was ceal such from Ber. H traukly .mgsm’:-‘u Mifls, indeed there was no ity of avoiding the discussion topics. On but two subjects was he ent of ‘his ~and the other was the why and qzzg ot h: lonely life. She knew per tuire that he loyed her, but she had no fuint syspilcion ever as_to.the reason way he nad necome « recmsei He had never given her the slightest clew to his past save that admission that he had known Kirkby which was in .itself ‘nothing definitive and which she never connected with that packâ€" @ge of letters which she stillâ€" kept with "her. The little piHles of manuse had noted were books that written. He made ho effoft fertile to be satisfied with manual labor alone, the books that he had written were scientific treatises in the main. One~was a learned discussion ef the fauna and flora of the moun tains, Anothér was an exbaustive ac sount of the mineral ~ resources and geological formations of the range. He had only to allow a whisper, a suspicion of hls ‘discovery of go‘d and silver id the mountains toâ€"eseape him. and the canous and erests alike would be filled with eager prospertors. Still a third work was a sctentific analysii of the water powers in the camons. remaining in which he ‘simp‘!y â€" disâ€" cussed the mountains in the various seasons of the year; when the snow® covered them, when the grass and the moss came again, when the flowers bloomed, when autumn touched . the trees.‘ Thereo was the soul of the man, poetry expressed in proge, manâ€" like but none the less poetry for that. This book pored over, she questloned ‘Those were happy evenings. She ®p one side of the fire sewing, her finger wound with cloth to hold his glant thimble, fashioring for herself some winter garments out of a gay colored, red, white and black ancient and: exqu‘sitely woven Nayajo blankâ€" ot, soft and pliable almost as an oldâ€" fdshioned piece of gatinâ€"priceless it she had but known itâ€"which he put at her disposal. While on the other side: of the zame homely blaze <he made for her out of the skins of some of the animals that be had killed, a shapeless foot covering, half moccaâ€" sin and wholiy leggin, . which she could wear over her shces in her short excursions around the plateau and which would keep ber feet warm and comfortable. He had ‘willingly allowed her ‘to read them all. Much ofâ€" them sh¢ found‘ technical and, aside from the fact that te kad written then, unin teresting. But there was one book WMWn about it; they discussed it as they discussed Keats and the other posts. She determined to end it, deciding that he must confess his affections. She had no premonition of the, truth and no consideration of any evil conâ€" sequences held her back. @he could give free range to: her love and her devotion. She had thw ordering of their lives and she had the power to éehd the situation growing more and more impossible,; . Sbe, fancied . the matter easily terminablé, Sho thought «he bad only.to Jet him see her beart in such Wway$ as a maiden may, to bring joy ‘to his own to make him speak. She did not dream of the re ality. » . By her permission he smoked as he worked, enjoying the hour, putting zside the past and the future and for a few moments blissfully content. Sometimes he laid aside his pipe and whatever work he was engaged upon and read to her from.some immorâ€" tal noble number, Sometimes the enâ€" tertainment fell to her and she sang to him in her glorious contralto voice music that:made him sad.. Once he could stand it no longer. At the end of a burst of #ong which filled the litâ€" tle roomâ€"he had risen to his feet while she sang, compelied to the erect position by the magnificent melodyâ€" as the last notes died away and she smiled at hlm triumphant and expecâ€" tant of his praise apd his approval, he hurled himgelf out of the room and into the night, wrestling for hours with the storm which after all was Â¥Ut a trifle to that which raged in bis besom, â€" While. she, left alone and de gerted, quailed within the silent room till she heard him come back. . Often and often when she slept quietly on one side the thin partition, he lay awake on the other, and someâ€" times his passion drove him forth to wool the fever, the fire in is soul in the jcy, wintry dir. The struggle wikhin him preyed upon him, the keen loving eye of the woman searched his face, scrutingzed him, looked into his heart, saw what was there. Une night, therefore, a month or more after she had come, she. rg wolved to end the uncértainty, She believed the caziest and the quickest way would be to got him to tell her why he was there. She naturally surâ€" mised that the woman of the plcture, which she bad never seen since the first day of ber arrival, was in some measure the canse of it; and the ouly pain she had in the situation was the keen jealousy that would obtruda Tesron diuie rorit Eie s oi in n great "Pruitâ€"aâ€"tives‘" which C t h °‘3m'gdu}:'~!w.. P o’ Forsix &E:.: suffered from dreadful Kuhy- . s My lm and. lower part nLhody were fearfully swollen. ‘n;s!- my side ud'l:hp would be so bad that Iâ€" would faint the agony, Five different doctors attended . ime and all said it was Kidney Disease and gave me no hope of getting well. â€" â€" . _ Itself af the thought of that woman. She remembered everything that he had said to her, and whe recalled that he ‘had ‘once made the remark that he would treat ker as he would have his wife treated if he had one, thereâ€" fore whoever and whatever the picâ€" ture of this wotian was, she was not his wife. She might have beenâ€"some one he had loved, but who had not loved him. She might have died. She was jealous of her, but she did not fear her. _ A ‘kind peighbor visited. me and mentighed the case of AMrs. Fenwick who had been cured of a sickness like mine.© T took "Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives" and in â€"a nhmtthu.!b?lntotecl betterâ€"the swelling went down â€"the pains were easierâ€"and soou I was well, > ~I heve gained over 310 pounds since taking "fl%&th"â€"ifl -'tn’i ldg'nda look upon my reco asâ€"a miracle.‘* * "(MrSs) MaACCTEâ€" JANNACK. "PRruitâ€"aâ€"tives‘ are sold by all dealers at 50:: _b-x.,élvtpt}a.?o, t;hf;i;e, 250.« or sent on receipt of price by Fruitâ€"3 tives Limited, Ottawa. After a long and painful effort the woman had compleied the winter guit she had made for herself, He had adâ€" vised her and ‘had ‘Welped her. It was a belted tunic that foll to her knees; the red and black stripes ran around it, edged the broad‘collar, cuffed the warm Sleeves and #arked the graceâ€" ful waist line. It was excessively beâ€" coming to her, ; He ( _ down in to the pahey, M.Fwnfor a final Inspection of the burrns‘ before the night, ‘which protised to be‘ severe, fell, and l,é had taken advantage of the opportunity ito put it on. ; _ She knew that she was beautiful; her determijnation to make this evenâ€" ing count had,brmt'ln‘ unusual color to her cheeks, an . unwonted sparkle to her efe, ‘She ~stood up as she heard him enterlithe other room, she was ‘standing erect as ho came through the door and faced her. He had oply seen her in the now someâ€" what. shabby «blue of her ordinary camp dress> before, and. berâ€" beauty lairly smote him in his.. face.â€" He stood ‘before her, wrapped in his fur great coat, snow and ice clinging to it, eftranced. The woman smiled at the effect she produced. ‘Take.off your coat," she said gentâ€" ly approaching him.. "Here, let me help you. Do youâ€"pealize that I tave been here over a mofth now? I want to have a little talk â€"with you, I want you to tell meâ€"something. ‘The Kiss on the Hand. "Did it ever occur to you," began Enid Maitland gravely enough, for she quite realized the serious nature of the impending conmversation, "did 4t ever occur to you that you know pree tically all aboutâ€"me, white I know practically nothing about you!" ‘The man bowed his head. , "‘You may have fancied that I was not aware of it, but in one way or another you bave possessed yourself of pretty all of my..short and, until I met you, most uneventful life," she eontinued. 4 4 Newbold might have answered that | _ A7Â¥. MINCS FICaTE Remedy there was one subject which had been | cured Mrs. C. C. Gokey, of a stubâ€" casually introduged. by her upon one | born case of heart disease, such as vccasion and to which she had neve" | thousands art now .‘M‘ with. again referred, but which was to him W what she says: the most important of all subjects con» | . 1 Dr. nected with her; and that was the fiaâ€" M a ture of her relationship to one James heart for n%‘ Armstrong whose fame, although 1 so he had heard it but once, he had not i s whoh ay I forgotten. ‘The»girl. had beon frankâ€" . ness itself In nsnwr. his deft leads | . ol when ‘he talked with her about herâ€" 0 short of breath that self, but she had whown the same reâ€" e a ticence in recupfing . to Armstrong | > that he had displayed in questioning Tuad mare € her about him. _ The statement | she of the had just mhade as to his ueqml:hneoi | see a Im with ber history was "therefore suffâ€" y 3Â¥, *,. clently tear the truth to pass un | x & challenged, and m‘e.oo:‘wa he gravely | was â€"m bowed in acoulese 6 "I have '!ghhol! nothing from you," u4 C/C, GOKEY, Northheld, Vt, went on the girl, "whatever you want you have any of the z-mu ed to know, I have told you, 1 had | Mrs. Gokey| mentions,: it is your nothing to conceal, as you have found | duty to protect yourself. i. out. «Why you wanted to know about T€. L mu dot tulty sure:" Dr“lldflou_tllqdy. "It was because=" burst out ‘the man l-nt:rmy. and then he stopped abruptly and jJuat in time. VIILICÂ¥HFR. PM WEÂ¥ Â¥ .| bers, which, if arytuying. was worke, $ 3 un l angt ’J‘hoblâ€"wu 8O 0 t }m Ll:..de““b' p Om ob @u e «Eraitâ€"actinis" Cured Mer Rdraps . ~| "H8e! pmid d onl L onl is ben (To Be Continued.) CHAPTER XV1. be \kinc talte â€"‘1 then 1 ‘Dotorâ€""Put Little CGilbertâ€" Isstened on to 1 Howeln:>~"Aâ€"gocd Gcal Gepends 6Â¥ the formution of early Kabits."~ Powe!!:..~*I know it.~ When I was a buby my mofthir hired a woman to Wwhee} me ebout azd I have â€"been purh» eil for money ¢ver since." .:utwngu uovs ages,> "do â€"you â€"4 wwe«d'm‘: The motorist cmergod from bener«i the car and struzplzs for breath. His heloful { fritnd. holding the hicun, hbeamed upan him. "I‘ve Must ziven the cylindor & thas ough ofling, Dick nelpful €riend. _ "Cylludert" ga> odly.. ‘That was was my cort" Mis. A.:~ "If my poor dear father bad. not bees. killed in that accident, "o wou‘d bate been one hundréd y«ars ald toâ€"day." A P Mrs. B..(wishing to symj with her friend): "Yes; but ¢ he‘d Mived nill toâ€"day, he would been dead long ago of old aze." After watching for some time an apprentico swinging bis hamimner in a most leisurely way, the manager of an engingering works approached and took the hanimer from the youth, siy: ing "Look here, my boy, when I sce a man take his hammer by the end of the handle and strike proper biows like that, I think that man .worth $3 a week; but, when a man takes hoi by the middle of the handle like thit, give him only $5 a week, and he :s dismissed ~whenever . we ‘get slack, "Please, sir," inquired the &porenâ€" tite, "where ought 1 to hold Jt fo= my §1a week ?" > 000 â€" Dr. Miles‘ Heart Remedy. |‘*\ is what you need. | If the first botâ€" n.1..h; tle fails to benefit, your money is | (;.,;;; returned. Ask your druggist. that & w 08Q4, Tert9%M G@Ms undc: cured Mrs, C. C. Gokey, of a stubâ€" born case of heart disease, such as thousands are now nflufu with. Reag what she says: 2.‘.‘."....'. Eflh '&'D'".Efi years lldmn-::'&c Do you realize it is better to be safe than sorry, that it is the best poli¢yâ€"to lock the stable door before the horse is stolen? "I Suffered Intense Pains in My Left Side." 4 Dr. Miles‘ Heart Remedy e o teg o fesp taey Paly d ied mcx; GOKEY, Northfeld, Vt, THE WAY HE HOLDS IT THE HELPZUL FRIEND ALWAYS HARD UP * sald the anind ALIVE OR DZAD rl"â€"ga‘d the totorist heat at wasn‘t) the cylindee} 1 uoon .two elderly lg\ies Interested, telling each famnily troubles, et:., when g conversation paseed beâ€" [23 d the w 0 N31 BM TY tâ€"can‘t, doetor.. It‘s the cylinder & old man,". sai sympathize “:':i Carter‘s c 2 Little Liver Pills. d have the l Biliousness Iy it January 6. The byâ€"law grants . the Stratiord Railway Company a twenâ€" tyâ€"five year franchise, and leaves the buiiders . free to Obtain their power elsewhere than â€" from the Hydroâ€"elecâ€" t‘on ‘Comtmission:if chcaper. It proâ€" vides . for: Construction to begin by Jin> 1, 1913, if the byâ€"law is confirmâ€" cd by the Legislature. P The â€" muchâ€"discussed"power â€"clause was etplained © by the City Solicitor 2s requiring the consent of both Cownâ€" ¢il and ratepayers before the company can gell or lease electric power in the city. The Canadian Northern _ Rail way, through Sir Wm. Mackenzie, has pledg>d itsell ‘to build the railway. STRATFORD RY. BYâ€"LAW GOES 10 THE RATEPAYERS Stratford, © . Dec. 11. â€"At a specxl;_ session to nighty the City Council «B an unaniivioUs cvote gave the. straet railway â€" by:law â€" its secoul’um and it will go to the tatepayers. on Yary email and as cscy %e take as srgam BOGUS CHEQUE GAME ATTEMPTED AT STRATFORD Stratford, ~Dec. 11.â€"The. bogus cheque game was again tried in Stratâ€" ford toâ€"day, ‘when a young man, & Jewâ€"by his appearance, calling himâ€" self Sanm Ornstein. and giving Toronâ€" to as his ~ home. was arrested after attempting to pass\ a Bank of© Comâ€" merce check for $14.50.on J. D. Mcâ€" (rimmon,shoe metéhant. The cheque hore the name. < E. Wileon, and : was endorsad H. Dewar. "At another store the same check was pressnted,;~ and the man gave‘his name as ‘F. Rodgers ol London. . ‘The police beliove they have captured ‘tho swindlet, who . has te‘n operating in Rrampton, Berlin and Milverton,:as the description talâ€" Nes .: with that of Ornstein. He is awaiting a heating in the local jail. Dr. Morse‘sâ€" " Indian Root Pill DAIRYMEN TO BREAK AWAY FROM GUELPH Guel;h, D.c. 13.â€"Threats of a 83â€" lovs split _ in the exhibjtors of live stock at the Provincial Winter Fai were made by. the dairy cattle man at a ma.ting ‘held this morning. â€" Canâ€" ada s leading breeders . werte ptosent, end a unanimous decision was reach ed to break cleas away from Guelph, and to foun@ an annual national _ exâ€" Libition in ‘Torento similar to [ the great â€" national _ dairy ~show ~of Chiâ€" cago. The details of the stheme have not yet ‘been worked out, but 5t was deâ€" tidud«+that all the conventions of the dal?m'l assotiations would be held in Teronto, and that exbibits of B6t ter and cheese would be one of the featires allied with the cattle show. the accor Guciph that ther is certainly one of thr most disgreeâ€" able ailments which flesh is hoir to. Coated tongneâ€"Litter taste in the mouthâ€"* nausea â€" dizzincasâ€" these combine to make life a burden. The cause is.a disordered liverâ€"the cure Dr. Morse‘s Indiax Root Pilts, They go -migfiu to the reot of the trouble, put the liver right, cleance the stomâ€" ach and bowels, clear the tongue and take away the birrer taste from the mouth. â€" At the i..â€"t siga of L.iious ness take # Must Bear Signature of OURE 31CK HEADACHE. See Pacâ€"Stmile omm To is no Nope of xisting conditions GCenuine PM Ain d;88aAU lation offered '.m | m"""‘ , Fon AiLJOUsNES® | POR TRHPID LIVER, © Fok coustiparions FOR SALLOW SKIK: OR THE COMPLELION offiered _ at . the rir, and they feol + of $mprovement show. with ,~â€" the Batrister, Solicitor, Notary, 'fl Conveyancer, etc.. . Money to : Office, Upstairs Cor. King and: a Sts.. Waterioo. ie §3 ‘ (Successor to Conrad© Bitzer.) â€"â€" Barrister,. Solicitor, Notary Public ’etl:. Money to loan‘: German .spoken. Qiiceâ€"Pequegnat‘s~ Block, nextâ€" to | Market;. Frederick St.. Betlin. / â€"_â€"~_ Strasser‘s . Block, °_ t Phone 143 King St., nm& Honor ‘CGraduate of Toronto Univerâ€" sity, Late of the Rideau‘ 8t. i Hospital, Ottawa, ‘Memberâ€" of lCoueg& of â€"Physiclans and Surg s [ of Ontario. : Note: Night calls answ» |ered from the office. 200. oo Alex. Millar, K.C. Harvey J. ? D.C.L Barristers, notaries, etc. : Ofâ€" fice, Upstairs Econonticalâ€" Block, King St. West. Berlin. & » ‘~~ CLAYTON_W.. WELLS, Atâ€" L.D.S., D.D.S., Dentist, Waterloo.‘ Hours 9 to 5. Fridays 9 to 12 Tel. 121 After April ist will visit‘ Elmira the second and fourth Friday in cagh month,‘1 to 6 ‘p.m * Graduate Chicago College of : Demâ€" tal Surgery and Royal College ot Dental Surgeons of Toronto. m Oflice in Fischer‘s < Block, Watet Dentistry practices in‘ all its branclâ€" ~EXPERTIENCED VETERINARYq SURGEON. C J. H. Engel, graduate of the ario Veterinary Collogimom residence,; Queen . St. 293. | calls by day or night answered. | ;. Dentist, L.D.S., Royal College Den tal Surgeons, D.D.S. Toronto Univer= sity. All branches of dentistry pracâ€" tised. Entrance to office â€" same _A# Concordia Hal!, _over . Lang Bros, store. 9OR Issue: of Marriage Licenses. _ Office:â€" Pustâ€"Office, St. Jacobks, Ont Licentiate ofâ€"the Royal College I‘i_ Dental â€" Surgeons, Honor . G: ite University of Toronto. Offce, / foor, ‘Weber Chambers, King St. Berlin.. ‘Telephone 202. <@ Hours: 9 am to 5 pm. < 0. ‘ Graduate. ‘under> ~Dr. Stl, . the founder of the science, Editor ~Jour» nal . .of .Osteopathy â€" 1908â€"12. Ostesâ€" pathy often cutes where all else fails. Chromé constipation, â€" stomach . {sâ€" orders, nervous diseases,. rheumatisi, infabtile paralysis, goiter, etc., sueâ€" cessfully treated. â€" _ Electrical > treatâ€" ments: Â¥ leas DK. W. J. SCHMIDT pENTIST Officeâ€"48 King St. E. ~ver. Domin lon Bank Entrance. 2nd Door W ol Post Office. 4 . Phone 454. â€" al 8 % â€"A reliable Prench reguintor ; never fade, T pllls -r‘? n:o:.‘nnlly ‘po"::'l‘-l d t enerative ‘or. 0 aly a m I0 cheap lmuno'n‘. :ét.:o' o are a box, or theee for a TL Sesheil Srag Us.. t Dr. de Van‘s Female Pilis MINARD‘S â€"LINIMENT â€" CURE@ DISTEMPER. Specialtyâ€" : Diseases ‘of the Ear, Nose and Throat. King St. East. o d o8TEOPATHY .. d PR. WELLINGTON K. JAcoBS, Osteopathic Physictan. C Offices arrister Dentist 8. ECKEL, LD.S., D.D.S DR.. WILLIAM GEIGER, DR. LEDERMAN, D.D.8 Private. Funds ',0%, w Office: â€" Metcalie ok. . [ing and Foundry Ste:, Borlin Berlin CLEM ENT JOHN L. WIDEMAN MILLAR & SIMS Ma i t F. â€"G. HUGHES DR. J. E J. A. HILLIARD Room 203 Weber Chambers} Berlin, Ontario. _ s: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m German sppken. B. McBRIDF BITZER. B. A Waterloo Oddiellow‘s Block, E. W.. CLEMEN® LEMENT HETT Berlin: wa

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