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The Chronicle Telegraph (190101), 3 Apr 1913, p. 7

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i OL e "¢. _ SABLE LORCHA "l $ by ! 1Â¥ thought ! heard his teeth grit to Whusolon to suppress a ris Ahg rage. 1 certainly saw his hands ‘clench; and then, with an assumption @f indifference, he took a final puff ‘nt his cigar and tossed it, sparkling. ‘mmong the weeds of bis lawn. "And so he borrowed a rifie, and ‘t‘n with one of Cameron‘s own in jetruments of destruction proceeded ito destroy Cameron‘s game? Is that ;it? What did he shoot? A deer or :eme of those starvedâ€"looking white idogs that Cameron has following bim It was evident to me, now, that in ‘spite of the nonchalance he affected. my reference to the Chinaman‘s moaching, and his presence at Cragâ€" holt, had aroused his interest, and so ‘hoping to draw him out, 1 continued: "Your man told the lodgeâ€"keeper #hat you sent him over to borrow a :‘ "You don‘t mean to tell me you‘d lbelieve a Chinaman, do you*" he re ‘ "It wasn‘t for me to believe or disâ€" lbelieve. ‘The lodgeâ€"kezper believed , Phlegmatic thougn ne was, â€" some ithing very like a start followed upon my words. Then, as if to cover the movement, he shrugged his â€" shoulâ€" ers, and chuckled ponderously. ; "His visiting card, I suppose." ‘ "Nearly as good," I supplied. "The [bowl of his opium pipe." 5 At that moment Jerry came around 'tho corper of the house and stopped ‘abruptly, stupefied by surprise; for ifrom the open mouth ~of the glant ‘there issued a roar of bass laughter, ‘that reverberated in weird discordâ€" ‘ance through the night silences. ; "You bally idiot!" he cried, his gufâ€" Qn' ended. "I suppose no persons €xâ€" cept Chinamen smoke â€" opium, eh! {And that beirg so, no Chinaman but imy Chinaman could have made a tarâ€" Jget of a piece of an cld portrait and pl.rovned his pipe bowl at the foot of ‘m tree! Go on with you, you make Save Doctors‘ Bills i "Homething your Chinaman dropped beside the tree." Dr. Morse‘s Indian Root Pills "That‘s like saying, ‘I caught a twelveâ€"pound bass. Here‘s the hook and line to prove it.‘" "I have a scale of the bass." "A what?" ; cure many common ailments which are very different, but which all arise from the same causeâ€"a _ system clogged with impurities. The Pills cause the bowels to move m{:ldlarly, strengthen and stimulate the kidneys and open up the pores of the skin. ‘These organs immediately throw off the accumulated impurities, and Biliâ€" ousness, Indiiestion. Liver Comglaint, Kidney Troubles, Headaches, Rheumâ€" Dr. Morse‘s Indian Root Pills « Cor. Michigan Ave. and Griswold St., Detroit, Mick. Epige~â€" HOTIGE © .:‘ sn onl o esn ppppopoomeeeeee . mentin Windsor, Ont. If you desire to see us ally call at our Medical Institute in Detr mne "ml_‘in our Windsor offices which are for s se Send for Booklet on Discases of Men * THE GOLDEN MONITOR" FREE If unable to call, write for a Question List for Home Treatment Drs. KENNEDY & KENNEDY Laboratory for Canadian business only. DRS. KENNEDY & KENNEDY, Windsor, Ont. Write for our private address. sick!" ULCERS, BOI SWOLLEN GLANDS, BLOTCHES, PIMPLES, A!lfl‘%) ALL SKIN AND BLOOD DISEASES ARE COMPLETELY CURED BY THE NEW METHOD TREATMENT YOUR BLOOD IS$ TAINTED And then: By Horace Hazeltine OW § KW Be _ to our Canadian Correspondence Departâ€" eepooooenenememe . mentin Windsor, Ont. If you desire to illy call at our Medical Institute in Detroit as we see and treat aa" ReQ.nt® . inc _ Jerry ] "You look tired, Philip," she an nounced when I bad kissed her. "Was " it very warin in the city?" er eyer were ever quick to note infinitesima‘ changes in my appearance of well being "Not uncomfortable," 1 answered, | indulgently. "I had a very busy day, ! though. But I‘m not the less ft be cause of it." Trom. amupliner aed uies ho nc whether hereditary or acquired, our fie remedies and treatment neutralize m':ol- sons in the blood and them from the system. Our vast e in the treatâ€" ment of thousands of most serious and complicated cases enables us to perfect a cure without experimenting. We do business on the ay Only You mm'xtyn"l-n-y:’:mm sult us Free of Charge m:flrmu youmqnlegy our remedics remove 20. the Rew Methed Trestment the able be. of the New Method Treatment the skin comes clear, ulcers, pimples and blotches heal up, enlarged glands are reduced, fallen out::ir(m' in sgain. th:moyu lsocu:: bright, ambition and irm, and !!eummnmmw up to We desire to call the attention of all those affiicted with any Bleod or Skin Disease to im. C206 0 00 o 000 You can arraifice To rar Arter YOU ARE CURED There was little, therefore, in the line of reason, to convict Murphy of any knowledge of the matters which ‘had so disturbed us. And yet, as ! have said, I felt intuitively that he possessed an intimate acquaintance with the whole affair. The next day I spent at my office, in New York, busy with the bundred details that go to the making of a periodical which aims to focus popuâ€" lar sentiment to a righteous viewâ€" point concerning matters of national and social import. For the time be ing my consideration of Cameron and his strange problem was suspended. Now and then the subject recurred to me, dragged into the mental light on the train of Evelyn Grayson; but a} most immediately it was buried beâ€" neath a question of editorial policy or a debate regarding a contract for white paper at an extortionate inâ€" crease in price. And so, though the impression of intimate relationship persisted, 1 could find no point of contact, closer or more definite than through his servant‘s rifle practice, which after all might have been quite without moâ€" tive. who bad quickly joined me: "Didf‘t was ended, and I had boarded the train for Greenwich, the whole inâ€" volved enigma spread itself again before me, demanding attention. And in the midst of it, dominating it, stretching his great shadow over it to the farthest limit, appeared that frowsy red giant, Murphy, a mystery within a mystery; for, though hbe seemed to pervade it, there was no point at which I could discover him quite touching it. In vain I tried to detect a real conâ€" mection. I started with the letters. They bore no single characteristic mark of this uncouth creature. As an artist ho might have devised the curiâ€" ous silhouette signature, but there was something about thatâ€"some cunâ€" ning, inventive subtletyâ€"which 1 could not reconcile with the ogre I had played upon, stung to anger and aroused to curiosity. That he could either have conâ€" celved or executed the ruin of the portrait I did not believe possible. The conception, like the letters and tha signature, bore evidence of a craftiness too fine for such as he; and to fancy him, mammoth that he was, stealing uncbserved into Cameron‘s stury, was to fancy the incredible. find him, eh? Well, that‘s not strange. Having lost the bow! of his pipe, be‘s probably gone to borrow another from a laundryman friend in Cos Cob; and that, by the way, is about the nearest place for you to buy gas At the Greenwich station, I found my touring car waiting; my mother in the tonreau. My chauffeur touched his cap as 1 approached. "You may drive, Francols," I said, and 1 took the place at my mother‘s side. "We have had some little excite ment here," she bastened, eager to give me the news. "Old Romney called you up on the telephone about noon. I happened to answer it, myâ€" self, and when I told him you were in until six, it just seemed he couldn‘t walit to unburden himself. ‘Won‘t you Address all letters CONSULTATION FREE Nell Gwynne‘s Mirror. With the approach of the twenty fAirst of the month, which is to say the seventh day following Cameron‘t recelipt of the second letter, I ob served in him a growing nervous restâ€" lessness, which w‘ith praiseworthy ef fort he was evidently striving to over come. Of my visit to the red glanr: and the tragedy which followed it, t» was, of course, informed; as he ha been of the incident in the wood, in ,Cluding the finding of the bullet plerced plece of canvas. Every thing, save only that Evelyn was th: Aiscoverer cf the portrait remnantâ€" ;which Ithought best under the cir ‘cumstances to keep secretâ€"was tol: to him in detail, and with all the cir leumstantiality necessary to an intel [Migent discussion of even the minutes: ipoint. memenmmemmsoenemntenen him a recollection. He remem bered having seen the man once. I ‘was on the Fourth of July. Evelyi land Mrs. Lancaster, Cameron‘s house }tmr. had accompanied Cameron tc ‘what is called "The Port ‘of Missin; 'lim." m ‘resort for motorists, on th« summit of Titicus mountain. ‘The; ‘M lunched there and were returnin; Iby a route which took them over : ) ion of execrable roads, bu m wome of the most gloriou: jscemery in the whole state of Cor jmecticut. For a while they had bee: ng a stream, willowâ€"girt, tha‘ t babbling down over a rocky bed ch at intervals broke the waters a series of falls and cascades. At the foot of one of these they had the car and alighted for a er view, and so had come upon unexpected. Seated upon a great bowlder, hi: planted between the stones 0‘ ‘the stream‘s shallows, was a red headed, redâ€"bearded Colossus, in : sofled suit of khaki and a monstror etraw hat such as is worn »~ *â€" ing farmers. Cameron told me that all three of them made bold to peep over the painter‘s shoulder at his work, and then, though it was of the most mediocre quality, to shower him with laudatory andâ€" congratulatory phrases. picase ten . ... ..is viyde, he saic ‘that Mro Murphy‘s Chiraman we lound at daybreak this morning, lying dead, just outside Murphy‘s back doort‘" * "That is what he said. ‘Then hbe added that the poor fellow‘s bead had been crushed with some beary instru ment, and that Mr. Murphy bad been arrested on cuspicion and was in the Cos Cob lockup." "Found dead!" 1 cried, in amaze ment. For a full minute, I thisk, 1 sat in sllent amaze. ‘Then theories and con jectures in infzite variety gave chase, ore after the other, through my excited brain. But it was. more than ever difficult, 1 found, to reach anything like a satisfactory concly sion concern!itg the position the now lifeless Celestial and his accused masâ€" ter held in the chain of mysteries ) wished so much to soive. That they were both of them more or less imâ€" portant links, bowever, 1 had small doubk $ "Nobody knows him," 1 answered, unconsciously echoing the words voiced by the man in the catboat on the previous night. "Nobody knows him. But I‘ve met bim in a rathe casual way." "Did you know Mr. Murphy?" my mother asked. Ard all at once ] realized that her question was a repetition. In my absorption I had not heeded the original inquiry. _ "I can fancy how he thanked you," 1 broke in, smiling. "I suppose he said something very rude." "He said nothing at all. He simply stopped painting, and turning, fixed his eyes upon me. It was as if he saw no other one of us. He seemed to be making a careful appraisement of my every feature. After a moâ€" ment it grew embarrassing, and though I did not resent itâ€"feeling rather that we, ourselves, had been in the wrongâ€"I very speedily withâ€" drew. To my surprise he rose from his stone seat; and, palette and brush in hang, followed us up the little acclivity to the z~4. watching DAck into out Is the bane of so lulH in im jul lis Pn mabrvengrest boiee "Ourpllic corch woile ‘t:-‘b,uulp Liver Pilis are very small and "&'G"huuhnwrbmwml-l very easy to take, Oneor two a dose. Mw‘mbhunrzmw-u GA228B MEDICISS 00., YEW ToRL., ACHE CHAPTER V1. Cameron made no response. "Well," I added, in a tone meant to be reassuring, "I think we need have little fear of a continuance of this singular method of _ annoyance. Though we can‘t trace it directly to Murphy and hbis unfortunate Mongoliâ€" an, 1 thoroughly believe that one or the other was responsible. With the Chinaman dead and Murphy in jail, the persecution will cease. The threat contained in the second letter will never be erecuted. See if I‘m not right!" My hope of putting Cameron at ease, however, was not rewarded. He continued to exhibit signs of an al most constant apprehension. There was, indeed, a . sympathyâ€"stirring pathos about the nervous disquiet of this man, usually so impenetrably selfâ€"contained. And at moments, in spite of me, a suspicion gripped and held that he had not. been entirely frank; that somewbere in his past there was something unrevealed which might serve as a clue, if not an explanation, to the present. But these doubts of him were always transitory. . . $ wnd with sharpened appetites we drove back to Cragholt for dinner, he appeared stimulated by a newfound courage. The day had passed without untoâ€" ward event, and â€"I felt sure that my friend was gradually coming around to my way of thinking. Neither of us mentioned the subject, but it must have recurred to him, at intervale, as it did to me. And as the hours went by without a sign, the conviction grew that Murphy, with hands tied, was fretting over the coup he was deâ€" terred from compassing. The twentyâ€"first of September fell that year on Monday. My office deâ€" manded my presence, but I arranged affairs as well as possible by teleâ€" phone and devoted the entire day to Cameron. When 1 told bim I meant to do this he protested, pretending that he was quite without foreboding; while the unconscious tapping of his foot on the rug, even as he spoke, beâ€" led his words. We spent the better part of the day golfing over the Apawamis links at Rye, lunching at the club house beâ€" tween rounds, for as a specific for nerves I have ever found that game of rare benefit. In the present in stance it more than fulfilled my exâ€" pectations. Cameron, apparently at least, forgot everything save his de sire to outâ€"drive, outâ€"approach, and day‘s flood. One hundred babies have been botn in Columbus, Ohro, since last Tuesâ€" W‘ fi iN 24 HOURS BY DOUGLAS® applied the Liniment but twice, and in tweustyâ€"four hours we could milk without any trouble. ‘‘When nnfthin; goes wrong in our hams aratahiee this excellent Liniment Dou{lu'â€"-n‘?pthn Liniment on my stock. I feel it my du&iw write you. ‘"Our cattle were troubled with caked udders, so bad in fact that we thouet they would lose the use of them. We Here is the m;ou of Mr. Robert Harkness, a 1 resident of Tamâ€" worth, Ont.:â€" ‘‘Having had wonderful success with Douglas‘ Susceptibility to colds, sore throats, tonsilitis and such, indiâ€" cate impoverished vitalityâ€"lack of reserve strength to weather A spoonful of SCOTT*S EMULâ€" SION after each meal starts healthy bodyâ€"action like a small match kindles a great fireâ€"and more: it makes richk, heaithy, active bloodâ€"fortifies the tissues and stimulates the appetiteâ€"it START NOW (To Be Continued.) Douglas & Co., Napanee, Ont. objection to anything of the kind, and "Ob, I can‘t be troubled with inâ€" quests in my house. Here, what‘ll you have to drink*" Robert said he‘d have a drop of Scotch, which he did. "Have a cigar, too," said the host. After the consumption of two Bcotches and cigars the constable saig he thought he could get the inquest held somewbere else, but as he was leaving the landlord remarked:â€" "By the way, who are they going to hold the inquest on *" "No one as I know of, now," said the man in blue; "but it ‘ud ‘a‘ been me if I badn‘t had these drinks an‘ smokes." _ He:â€""Why stop there? An onion a day will keep everybody away." SEVERE PRESCRIPTION Doctor:â€""You have some sort of poison in your system." _ _ She:â€"‘"They say that an apple day will keep the doctor away." _ _ Patient:â€"‘"Shouldn‘t wonder; what was in the stuff you gave me?" HER ENGLISH BLOOD In a speech in the Senate on Hawaiâ€" ian affairs, Senator Depew, of New York, told this story: When Queen Liliuokalani! was in England during the English queen‘s jubilee, she was received at Buckingâ€" ham Palace. In the course of the reâ€" marks that passed between the two queens, the one from th> Sandwish Islands said that she had English blood in her veins. "How so*" inquired Victoria. "My ancestors ate Captain Cook." 8O SIMPLE! The fashionable practitioner threw a glance up the snowâ€"covered road, and rubbed his hands gleefully. His trunk was packed, his professional attitude was laid aside, and his carriage was due. But the assistant who was to act as administering angel during his ab sence did not share his master‘s good spirits. To him, Christmas loomed as a season of medicine, muddles, and mistakes. _ "I hope everything will go well while you‘re away, sir," he said,© nervously. perately. "Sure toâ€"sure to," replied the great M.D., seizing his coat as the carriage drew up. â€" "I‘veâ€"I‘ve had such little experiâ€" ence!" stammered the young man desâ€" "Nonsense! You don‘t need experiâ€" ence with fashionable patients," exâ€" slaimed he who knew. their ways, grabbing bis hat. ‘"They‘re as simple as A BC‘ Find out what they‘ve been »ating. and stop it. See what they‘ve isk ‘cm where they‘re going for the «lidaysâ€"and send ‘em somewhere Lyons Brook, N.S. ‘‘You are perfectly 7 free to use my name 5 in any way to benefit GIN PILLS, for they deserve the highâ€" est praise. . My back has never froubled me since taking GIN PILLS, and my wife feels mnch%eitet after taking GIN PILLS for her back. She thinks GIN ldJAMEs L NAUSS. Why shouldn‘t you or any of your friends who may be suffering with Backache, Rhenmatism, Lumbago, Sciatica, Weak. or Strained Kidneys, Burning or Scalding Urine, PlillÂ¥lll Urination or frequent colds in the Kidneys and Bladder, get the same relief that so quickly came to the Nauss relief that so qbu:ckly came to the Nauss home when they started to use GIN PILLS? s Remember, you buy GIN PILLS on our standing guarantee that they will cure or your money will be promptly refunded.; 5o0c. a bor, 6 for $2.50. Sample free if you write National D':f and Chemical Co. of Canada, Limited®, Toronto. 181 A GCRATEFUL PILLS will make a complete cure.‘" riwpe t \ires numorortuenour} SUFFERED . |t peoressionat 3 SAVED HIS LIFE A policeman entéred the house of a iblican one morning and informed Nova Sootia Man and Wife Both Bonefited By GIN PILLS * APPLES AND ONIONS backache, they are now deligbted to be almost free of the old trouble. the home life can be fiueued from the tter below. Where formerly both busband and wife were in more or less constant misery with UST how much difference GIN PILLS can make in COUPLE Canadian women are continually writ | _‘ ________ Ing us such letters as the two following, | ~~~~~~_~. > which are heartfelt expressions of gratiâ€" SCEI tude for restored health: J. A. Scell Glanford Station, Ont.â€"*"I have taâ€"| A. Weir, Mas ken Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Comâ€" | ters, Solicito pound and never | Offices: â€" Ups _tonnd any medicine | Hlock, Berlin. to compare with it |__________ For Years, Restored To Health LEGAL o by Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegâ€" JAMES C. HAIGBT > etable Compound. _ | BMUIEL 20. Souer to es CR m clamcc 22202 200 20 uzo __u___,, |fice, Letter‘s Block, Waterioo, Lk April 17th, 1421, Dort, Holland, sea broke in, 72 villages destroyed and 100,000 people drowned. â€" Railway connection with Bloomingâ€" dale was discussed by joint comtmnitâ€" tees on Saturday afternoon. Dean W. Sâ€" Ellis of Queen‘s Univerâ€" ti‘y, died of _ prewmonia at his tesi dence, Kingston, aged Mtyâ€"seven 1530, Holland, dykes broke, 400,â€" 000 lives lost. Chesterville, Ont. â€" ‘"I heard your| Barrister, Solicitor, Notary, PublM® medicines highly praised, andayear ago| Conveyancer, etc. _ Money toâ€" |a 1 began taking them for failing of womb| Office, Upstairs Cor. King and and ovarian trouble. Sts., Waterloo. E7 ** My left side pained me all the time |"___‘___________________________, and just before my periods which were MILLAR & SIMS . irregular and painful it would be worse. To sit down caused me pain and sufferâ€"| Alex. Millar, K.C. Harvey J. Sims ing and I would be so nervous someâ€"! D.C.L. Barristers, notaries, etc. O# times that I could not bear to see any|fice, Upstairs Economical Block, Kizg one or hear any one speak. l.thneh St. West, Berlin. . K would float before my eyes and I was| _________________________________", Nov. Ist, 1775, Earthquake _ wave at â€" Lisbon, â€" Portugal, 10,000 lives 1834.â€"Backergunge cyclonc, in the delta of the ~Granges, cost 100,080 lives. 1851â€"1866, continuous floods in China from Hwanga Ho River changing its course cost over 3,000,000 lives. Jan.â€"Feb., 1910, severe inundation in Paris. France which caused .$225,â€" HExRY CLARK, Glanford Station. Ont. May 8th, 1888, great flood in Canâ€" ton, China, 3,000 lives lost. July, 1905, Guana Juato, Mexico, overwhelmed _ by torrents from the hills, over 1,000 being drowned. Aug. 26th, 1883, sea;wave accomâ€" panying eruption of Mount Krubatou destroyed 8,000,000 persons. . â€" June ist, 1889, â€" Johnstown, Pc., inundated when â€" dams.butst, 2,500 lives lost. Sept. 11th, 1891, Spain, violent storms, causing great floods, 3,781 lives lost and 100,000 homeless. Sept. 8th, 1900, Galveston, Texas inundated by tidal wave, 5,000 lives lost, $20,000,000 damageâ€" 1911, River HwangHo again overâ€" fowed its banks, nearly 500,000 livâ€" es being lost. l GALTS TAXâ€"RATE than last year. The total estimates were reduced by the Finance Commitâ€" tee to $159,138, which, deducting esâ€" timated riceipts of $12,000, left the amount to be levied $147,138. In tluded in the appropriations is 93,173 for the establishment of a garbage system, and $44,490 for school purâ€" i “l‘ 'I‘.’m h for Lydia E. 44. bi. MRL RAROTD, N9. PRe Te Pinkham‘s Vegetable ‘Compound and (Successor to Conrad Bitzer.) * Liver Pills, for there are no medicines| Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Publis like them. I have taken them and I|ctc. Money to loan. German spoken. recommend them to all women. Youmay|Oficoâ€"Pequegnat‘s Block, mext §# publish this testimonial."" â€" Mrs. STEâ€"| Market, Frederick St., Berlin. Juns 1905, over 500 drowned in Natal when Umbilo River overflowed its banks. Galt, March 25. â€"At a special meetâ€" ing the Council fixed the tax rate for Galt at 22 mills, 1 1â€"2 mills | less Aug., 1912, severe floods : land. Norwich under water ©000000000000000000000 S 22 MILLS | DR. W. J. SCHMIDT . ;, | DENTIST â€" | Officeâ€"~43 King St. E. over Domir ‘ion Bank Entrance. 2nd Door West ‘of Post Office. * | Phone 454. â€" â€" _ â€" _ Berlia. @pejefefpep J. A. Scellea, B.A., LLB. J. J. A. Weir, Master in Chancery. Bartig Cor. King and Foundry Sts., BerkM®: E. P. CLEMENT, K.C. â€"_ _ _.%% Strasser‘s Block, Phone 143 King St., Wa Honor Graduate of Toronto U sity, Late of the Rideau St. Hospital, Ottawa, Member of ths College of Physiclans and Surgeone: of Ontario. Note: Night calls ans@ ered from the office. CLAYTON W. WELLS, _ . _ L.D.S., D.D.S., Dentist, Waterloo, _ Hours 9 to 5. Fridays 9 to 12 Teol. 18 _ ~ After April ist will visit Elwiss the second and fourth Friday in onth â€" Graduate under Dr. Still, the founder of the science, Editet. Jourâ€" nal of Osteopathy 1909â€"12%. Ostemâ€" pathy often cures where all else fails. Chromic comstipation, stomach disâ€" orders, nervous diseases, rheumatism, infantile paralysis, goiter, etc., sucâ€" cessfully treated. _ Electrical treatâ€" ments. Offices, Room 203 Weber Chambers, Berlin, Ontario. t calls by day or night answered. Dentist, L.D.S., Royal College Dem tal Surgeons, D.D.S. Toronto Univets sity. All branches of dentistry prie» tised. Entrance to office same +8# Concordia Hall,â€" over Lang Bros. EXPERIENCED VETERINARY « SURGEON. Te J. H. Engel, graduate of the OÂ¥ ario Veterinary College. Office residence, Queen St.hghou 298. fl Graduate Chicago Collego of % tal Surgery and Royal Collegâ€" i Dental Surgeons of Toronto. . Deatal Oflice in Fischer‘s Block, Watérion, Dentistry practices in all its Wrandl Issue® of Marriage Licenses. Office:â€" Pust Office, St. Jacobs, Ont. Licentiate ol the Royal Collegeo of Dental Surgeons, Honor Onfl University of Toronto. Office, floor, Weber Chambers, King St. W. Berlin. ‘Telephone 202. * ® Hours: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. i MINARD‘S LINIMENT DISTEMPER. King St. East. DR. WELLINGTON K. JACOBS, Osteopathic Physician. a F. G. HUGHES Dentist Oddfellow‘s Block, © Waterloc. Specialtyâ€" 8. ECKEL, 1..D.S:, D.D.8. CLEMENT & CLEMENT DR. WILLIAM GEIGER, DR. LEDERMAN, D.D.S. Conveyancers. Private Funds to Loan,. A. L. BITZER, B. A. SCELLEN &.WEIR JOHN L. WIDEMAN Diseases of the Ear, Nose and Throat. A. B. McBRIDE, OsSTEOPATHY. J. A. HILLIARD German spoken. R%

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