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The Chronicle Telegraph (190101), 2 Oct 1913, p. 7

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LA @ ‘The notoriety consequent upon the murder and suicide was hideously inâ€" ordinate. Inspired and stimulated by the sensational press, which did not hesitate to imply what it dared not state openly, the currency of falseâ€" hood and misconception at one period came close to being disastrous. As I had foreseen, the resemblance of Mcâ€" ‘;Nish to Cameron, coupled with the ‘umlngly convincing fact that the @ragedy had occurred in the Cameron jtown house, where the millionaire meas supposed to be convalescent, i gave excuse for persistent iteration \ of a rumor that, in order to preserve the feme nf a man regarded as ahove geprouch and at the same time to proâ€" Rect the line of securities in which he ‘had been interested, the story of a fusing likeness had been invented. No paper in the land would have the temerity to print this as a fact, h but again and againâ€"silly and imposâ€" sible as it must haw, appearc@.to all ng that time Miss Clement became s sister confessor, and so there rifted into our possession a host of acts which otherwise we might never ave learned. Strange, uncanny creaâ€" ‘ture that he was, he seemed to reâ€" ‘pose the utmost confidence in the [gray, sweetâ€"faced missionary, and fairâ€" lli unburdened his sinâ€"charged soul to her. Those of his fellow conspirators ?that she promised to protect, she proâ€" tected. Those that he believed to ‘have played him false, she protected likewise. Her reHgion was one in which personal justice has no dwellâ€" ing. "Vengeance is mine, I will reâ€" pay," her Lord had admonished, and to him she was content to resign the problem of retribution. _ Had I been more familiar with the Cameron town house and the town habits of its master, justice probably would not have peeh iTicaea wuw of having her way with two as lawless wretches as ever infested a commuâ€" mity, I should have known then that one of the drawers of that quaint old rosewood secretary was the hiding place of a 38â€"caliber Colt, and in all elfihood have had it removed before McNish was capable of searching for It. As it was, Mr. Bryan took no lit ;tle blame upon himself for not havâ€" 4ng been the first to discover it, though to my mind he could hardly ‘be regarded as recreant in failing to investigate a plece of furniture of so intimate a character. The death of McNish was instanâ€" neous. Soy, with a bullet in his abâ€" men, lingered for three days. Durâ€" the genuine Scott‘s Emuision _ at any onue -‘rgg 1323 test bloodâ€"maker and furnishes elements necessary for body nth, rich blood and healthy Horace Hazeltine Lorcha Sable HOomonNet e \AAQ y s 22893 20,® .O â€" His Sister Confessor,. Prepare to|hoped, we could sive no positive as enjoy its exhilaâ€"| surance that Cameron was yet alive. uns sts by w'::u'?zunmm-m mpbl M”Mtfl. nbnwmbfl.obu:rm pure and active to préeâ€"|the kidnapping from the yacht had 2 iÂ¥ c Ece eAN ts ues * rent co not yet been so much as hinted at, but Hrh-l::&':.””. I Hved, daily, in mortal dread that it Ti _ o . would be brought to light at the next uoosi.fim sickness | journalistic handâ€"sweep. Accurate in ts iomwill energize | formation as to Cameron‘s present od and create reserve | whereabouts was the news now most to endure ch.'.in' eagerly sought not alone by the press but b:pl Wall street as well; our failure i to supply itâ€"though excused by us on :I!fdlt:::'ve‘d.l not an the ground that in his present neryâ€" for forty years:; it containa ous condition, lt;u lnpat‘u:‘lytuc- s se essary to keep him sequeste rom t cod l“",‘ oilâ€"free from | interviewersâ€"was _ not unnaturally 6 *‘veffi;:c drugs. arousing a suspicion that we did not s Emulsion is nature‘s | possess it to supply. CHAPTER XXVI. Woman Is As Old As She Looks No woman wants to look old. Many in their effort to look youthfol resort to the "‘beauty doctor‘a"preseriptions. Their misâ€" take is that they visit the wrong department in the drug store. Beauty depends -? health. Worry, sleepleas ni hfi hendaches, pains, disorders, irresuâ€" larities and weaknesses of a distinctly feminine character in a short time bring the dull eye, the "crow‘s feet," Tock, drooping shouiders. aind the falterme sieg. ‘This famous medicine strikes at the very root of these enemies of your youthful appearance, 1t makes you not only look young, but feel young. _ â€" _ To retain the appearance of youth you must retain health. Instead of lotions, ..-a....l’;.s.u. ask your druggist for BT Your draggist can Nn eneâ€"conl stome ©Q oneâ€"cent stompe to Or. Ploree‘s Invaiide Mete! and Sur« gicat Institute, Butfaie, N.V. and trisl box will be matled you, DRKR. PIERCES :‘Favorite Prescription â€"â€"_ _4 n# And it was fiot until ten minutes later, when he came hurriedly into the room, that 1 remembered. The name, when I saw it, had at once struck me as familiar. I ssemed to know, even, that it belonged to & physician of reputed high standing, yet it was only at the instant of his entrance, when his penetrating steelâ€"gray eyes drilled into mine, that I associated it with the man to whcm I had gone, rot for any ailment, but to learn whoether my friend, in spite of his denicls, had ever been in Chin=. If the recogis‘tion was mutual, Dr. Addison gave uo sizn of it. His paâ€" tient demandel and received his imâ€" mediate aticat on. Hastily be adminâ€" istered a stimtulating bypoderin‘c, and then, himse‘f ascisted in carrying her to her room. â€" _ Whenhe rojoined me in the library, half an hour later, it zs with the glad news thet she had responded gratifvingly to treatment, and was slecping calinly. Affer thanking him for his proupteess end efficlency, 1 mt Rooscvelt Hosplizl For a moment. distressed and apxious, the names of other physicisps eluded me. In deâ€" spair, 1 opened the Telephone Direc tory, in hope of a suggestion, and the name of Addison leaped at me from the page. To my infinite relief he was in Msg*offce: ~hig electric was "at the door, and he would be over at once. stid: If, under the strain of the tragedy and the brutal publicity which folâ€" lowed upon it, Evelyn Grayson had not eventually succumbed she must have had borne up against a whelming sucâ€" cessionâ€" of nerveâ€"wrenching experiâ€" ences, refusing to entertain fear and fighting valiantly against discourage ment, but beart and nerves have their limit of ondn?-eo: and when, on the third day, John Soy was gathered to his yellow and white fathers, and a more yellow than white evening jourâ€" Loiat ul sufâ€" b‘i‘m-‘mg--n-m fraction after fraction and point after nal ventured, more boldly than had been dared bitherto, to make the imâ€" plication to which I have referred, Evelyn collapsed utterly. Having lifted her to a couch and rung for her maid I at once set about doing what I could to restore her to conscjousness. But her plight was no ordinary momentary faintness. Stubâ€" bornly she refused to respond to my efforts, and those of the maid when, after hours it seemed, she came, were equally unavailing. that, if possible, would As chance would have it, 1 myself came upon her, lying white, limp, and unconscious on the library floor, with the paper still loosely held in her right hand. The sound of her fall bad carried to me faintly as I neared the closed door, and a misgiving born of intuition rather than of any more defiâ€" mite cause had hastened my steps. Alarmed, I called up Dr. Massey, only to learn that he had gore to Bos ton for a consultation, arid that Dr. ‘Thorne, his assistant, was operating Tu Jr. Morse‘s iIndian Root Pills owe their singular effcctiveness in cuting Rheumatism, L umbago and Sciatica to their power of stimuiating and strengthening the kidneys. They enchle these organs to thoroughly fiter from ‘the blood the uric acid (the product of waste matter) which gots into the joints and muscles and causes these painful discases. Over half a century of constant use has roved conclusively that Dr. Morse‘s rndian Root Pills strengthen weak kidneys and at Cure Rheumatism "You dr: "Ob, yos, wpest er ~od, aimos a his gaze n He raised a Ceprecatory hand. "No, please don‘t," he pleaded. "Youâ€"canâ€" not temper it. I shou‘ld have taken his word, without question. I knew his love e truthâ€"1 protuably more than any one elsc. What right had 1 to conclude then, because of ccrtain ap parently | irveconcilable happenings, that his word was false?" "We are 2ll fallible," I said. "All but he," was his prompt reply. And then, leaning forward, with a etrained, cager look in those piercing cyes, his voice vibrant, he asked: "Goâ€"d Ged!" he exclaimed, and his face was as white as his linen. "Our best information is that he is {:n a steamerâ€"a trampâ€"bound for "hina, but we have no particulars, and torse still, no verification." "No," he contradicted, his tone softened. "On the contrary they have cpened my eyes to a truth that was long hidden; they have made a very contrite and, I must confess, a very unhappy man of me." "Unhappy ?" "More unkappy than you can conâ€" ceive, Mr. Clyde. For years I have misjudged one of the best friends Heaven ever privileged a man to have." ~ ="But, nmiy dsar <DSetor,"I Began, "you were not at fault, altogether; youâ€"â€"" _ "Is it trve that he is very i1? That he cannot be seen?" For a scruple 1 hesitated. "The newspapers have been misâ€" leading, I fear," I said again, and 1 judge my expression of countenance was as cryptic as my words, for my visâ€" fitor‘s look changed instantly to one of dire perplexity. "Confidentially, Doctor," I admitted, "we haven‘t the faintest notion just how he is. He may be in excellent health or he may have ceased to exist."" As I tock 2 seat opposite to him, I said: ‘"‘The newspapers have been misâ€" leading, 1 feur, Dr. Addison." "He is not ill?" he questioned. "You meanâ€"" ~You~are Mr. Clyde. Did you get any relief from the prescription 1 gave I had not expected the question and was unprepared for it. ~In venturing an evasive reply I stammered. "I don‘t suppose you even had it filled," he declared, with a grim smile that was at least partially reassuring. And I admitted that his surmise was accurate. Moreover I begged him to git down. â€" "I have a confession to make, Docâ€" tor," I safd, a litile shrmefacedly. "It is unnecessary, Mr. Clyde," was his halfâ€"pel:*> refoinder, rs he sank inâ€" to a chair Vefore the fireplace. "I rong the new srsors anrd I fave come w uncerstang many things in tne past few days." . Before I had quite conciuded, Miss Clement was announced, and when she was shown into the lbrary, in stcad of permitting the physician to leave, as he made offer of doing, I presented him and insisted upon his remaining. "I want you to tell Miss Clement about your patient, Doctor," I said. "Miss Clement is a very good friend of Miss Grayson‘s." It was neither fair nor consistent to conceal longer from one so justly inâ€" torested the whole truth, and so, withâ€" out reservation, I told Dr. Addison the story. Graciously he complied, making it quite clear that sedatives and sleep world undoubtedly effect a prompt reâ€" covery. + "Ard now Mi t wil 401 us something," I .amnfxmma a patiert, too, who died this morning, as you may have Sseen by the afternoon papersâ€"the Eurasian who was shot by McNish." ‘ Up to that moment I knew but little of what Soy had divulged, for the misâ€" slonary, in her two or three brief teleâ€" phoule talks, bad given us scarcely more than promises of important reveâ€" lations when opportunity could be made for a meeting; and 1 was impaâ€" tlent for the fulilment. She had chosen a seat at some little distance from us. but now, at. my soâ€" Mcitation, she accepted a more com fortable chair, which 1 placed in con fidential fuxtapositien with ¢yr owh Carter‘s Little Liver Pills. Ves3 omall and as ceay %o take as cogan, COVURE S1CK HEADACHE Must Mear Signature of See Pacâ€"illmile Wrapper Retow, "A B ADL\P & PJ ¢ s ptivatine l Since I Gof a Box of Gin Pilis conulu Cuvace $r., Cornwar1is, N.8. T "Buf the Chinese are just," the misâ€" sionary continued. "They discovered that a certain United States cruiser that had been warned of the attemptâ€" ed smuggling, did, on. that particular day, give chase to a lorcha, which eventually disappeared in the fog. So the enmity against Moran subsided, and, ultimately, this same Moran beâ€" came the most openly bitter of all the avenging horde that for over a decade and a half scoured the four corners of the globe; for it seema that McNish bad not only made off with his share . (_Nffieelpu of their joint enterâ€" 7 ‘but had left him with a ruining of "debts to settie as well. There wus something, too, I believe, about a Chinese woman whose loyalty to Moâ€" ran, McNish undermined, but 1 conâ€" fess that part of the story was not very clear to me. At all events Soy, the halfâ€"breed, and Moran, the Irishâ€" man, who appears to have been a rovâ€" Ing blade, a sort of soldier of fortune with some talent for painting, became the prime movers in this relentiess quest, in which they were backed by what is known as the Six Compantes. All the tongs, no matter how much at varlance on other points, were & unit in this instance, and unlimited money was always available to prosecute the "It‘s rather a long story," she beâ€" gan, in her sweetly quiet voice. ‘"And as it came to me piccemeal I‘m a raid "It, seems he broke his way out just as the lorcha was sinking. McNish had waited until he had gone to his bunk for his usual hop, and had chosen the hour he was slecping to get away and scuttle the versel. For five days Scy floated about on a bit of wreckage withcut food or drink, and was finally picked up by a proa and taken back to Macao at the mouth of the Canton river, where, after weeks of dclirium, he told his story of the lorcha‘s fate. From that day the search for McNish began. It seeims that he had a partner, an Irishman, named Moran, who for a time was suspected of having been in the conspiracy; for, you must remember, it was thought then that the sinking of the lorcha had been planned from the first, the idea being that it was simply a scheme to get the passage money from the poor coolies, and then drown them." ' "Horrible!" ejaculated the phyâ€" siciap, _â€" ed him. $ "Oh, yes, of course." "You kncw of. that, then?" asked Miss Clement. And briefly I ran over what Yup Sing had told me. "John Soy, 1 understand, was the cook whom McNish imprisoned in the galley," I added. it will be rather disconnected. You see this poor tcllicw suffcred horribiy at times aid when he‘was nct sufferâ€" ing he was under the influence of opiâ€" ates, so or..narily 1 doubt that it would be sa‘e to accept as fact a good deal said urder such circumstances. It appears to me, however, that in his case, these very conditions only strengthen the probabilities; for his mind seemel to hold only the one theme, and his statements could hardâ€" ly have becn either spontaneous or studied invsntiors. On the other hand, they were rather a sort of involâ€" untary recital ef the particulars of a subject which had engrossed him for years t~ the cxclusicn of almost everyâ€" thing else." > Dr. Acé‘son nodded his herd, enâ€" couragizgly. "I quite understand, Miss Clemert," he said. And 1, too, assured her that herreasoning .apâ€" peared to me logipal. "It was significant,"â€"she continued, "that so far as I could fix dates, he made no references at,all to any hapâ€" peningâ€"prior to sixteen years ago. The tragedy of that time.was the beginâ€" ning of what I think,I may call his mania. Everything he told me had to do with it. It came at the beginning, at the apex, and at the end of every revelation." "The traredy of sixteen years ago?" inquired the physician, "‘The trazedy of .what has beer mattac "*wa Sahjace messl ce vicclen4. ‘"About I was su much with a dfekihe) Lame ;lp.’ , that I could not stand was informed by a fil‘d{m PILLS. I got a box. It heiped me immediately. I _ mm GIN PILLS drive i â€"â€"â€"=4 away the pain every timeâ€"or your money pmm refunded. goc. a box, 6 for faso. ple free if you write National Drug & Chemical Co, of Canada, Limited, Toronto, MANGAâ€"TONEB BLOOD AND NERVE TABLETS help pale, nervous women to get weli.â€" 50c, a box. 199 is causing the pain. The whole trouble is with the Kidneys and Ewu must cure the Kidneys in strained Kidn'efl‘ as nothing else will. mva PM TC A.ilk effects of your GIN PILLS"." _ reach the part that is causin strained Kidne: _ B. C. DAVID. Liniments and asters won‘t cure *ha < .248 m sable Lorcas!" l $ {To in soatinnst.; unc iC D comfens tus, & rexuu2t of the ladies has lived for _ many Iis smuggled and sold in this country. years in the north and was usedâ€" to{Never in my life have I seen people this life, whilst the other lady and|so crazy for whiskey; not only the her child had Indian blood in their{halfbreeds but the whites as ~well. veins. The, ladies were in the waggon|l have . studied conditions around whilst we ha%to walk. It woulid be|these parts and it certainly shows rather difficuit to describe the fearâ€"|what conditions produce. It is . exâ€" ful roads. The great holes in _ the|treme‘ly disgusting to see how many road, the stumps, the ups and downs,|people in these parts live away from the cordurey and a flooded district |the daily newspaper and practically covering almost two miles with|away from the world. â€"â€"When _ one water. Our teamster was a halfâ€"|reaches Peace River Crossing you breed, who certainly was a good[!irst come in touch with the Peace one and seemed to know just how to|River country for immediately the get out of difficulty. It was a freâ€"|scene changes. The Peaco is there quent sight to see the horses fall in{joincd by the Smoky and then flows "the mud and you would at times alâ€"|bhundreds of miles north to _ Lake most think that they would disapâ€"{Athabasca. It is navigable for over pear. To see the hubs submerged was|8ix hundred miles. There are two common and I actually saw _ one|boats upon its waters plying between wheel disappear all but a few inches.|Hudson Hope and Vermillion, but The first day we were favored with|one has been out of business _ since 1good weather, but the second day |spring. Its boilers were burned out rains set in and the roads _ were |and the company has great difficultiés rather slippery. _ It certainly _ wasjin transporting rnew ones even if they ‘tough for a tenderfoot, but I was|are small. Since the boat was tied {game. llalf way our driver bought|uP I was enabled to remain there so _ On the way, however, we came across an Indian‘s place and secured fresh moose meat, which was rather a treat. â€" On nearing â€" the English mission we waited for the motor boat which was to take us _ across the Bay for a long:â€"time, but it never showed up and so the mail and my luggage were piled up on the bank and I was taken across _ it a canoc by two theological students. Although the trip across this trail was an exceedingly trying one 1 am none the worse for it, and have the benefit _ of the experience. It _ is amusing to hear the descriptions of others who have crossed it. A clergyman from Edmonton, who made the trip, stated that when he returnâ€" _ The drinking water throughout this|million is about three hundred miles 1whole district is miserable. I never |north and wheat has been _ grown tasted any good water until the|there for a long time in a _ small Peace was reached. A Ereat deal of|way, but sufficient to warrant a flour the water is from muskegs and all{mill in those parts for some years over the water is satuatedâ€"with popâ€"|past. A large area in those parts lar. All along the route the white|are prairie lands. The season there poplars are present and it becomes|is naturally very short, but the finâ€" imt.hc-: monotonous to see these trees|est wheat has been grown there. which are practically of no use in| South of Dunveyan is a small setâ€" these parts. I believe there will be|tlement known as Spirit River setâ€" some fearful forest fires throughout |tlement and south of that again . is these parts in years to come. Beâ€"\Grand Prairie, which is perhaps the sides the difficulties of transportationâ€"}finest prairie in _ existence. _ There we were accompanied by hosts of/are plenty of streams and lake® and mosquitoes and black flies, which neâ€"!the people who visited those â€" parts cessitated the wearing of veils. _ I|are loud in their praises. expected at the outset to get _ a| West of this is another fine prairie, taste of rough lije and I certainly |known as (Pouce Coupe and to the got it. The people throughout many jnorth around Fort St. John entendâ€" of these parts do not know the meanâ€"|ing to parts in British Columbia. I ing of comfort. The trip took us |would have liked to visit some _ of four â€" _ days and _ three â€" nights|thess parts but one of the boats was hard traveling. The return was madejout of business and the other one did in three days and three nights with|not have suffcient freight or passenâ€" the stage. 1 was able to ride all gers to warrant a trip, and _ since the way back and it was considerâ€" there is diffculty in October in getâ€" ably casier. One evening I slept injting out of this country I deemed an old log shack with the mice now‘it advisable not to spend too mwch ard then running over my face and/time in those parts more remote. awakening one fromâ€" his slumbers;|I gathered â€" considerable information and another night 1 slept in _ an}from various sources from people who Indian ‘Tepee. Our diet was rather{came from different parts and whose simple. Bacon could not be bought,| words can be relied upon that I have ham seemed to be unknown, but we|pretiy good information of the differâ€" secured some corned beef, bread andjent districts. butter, tea and coffee. A small loaf| ‘The Peace River country throughâ€" of bread costs 25 cents and butter |out is a splendid country outside of 75 cents a pound. Oats are $1.50 aigrowing wheat, etc., for grazing. bushel and hay $30.00 a ton. ! Here the long gsasses cxist. Cattle The first day we were favored with good weather, but the second day rains set in and the roads were rather slippery. _ It certainly _ was tough for a tenderfoot, but I was game. lalfl way our driver bought another horse from a halfbreed _ reâ€" turning the opposite way and then I managed to secure?a saddle and rode the balance of the way, whilst _ the other gentiemen walked. The second day we were rather wet, but . after pitching our tents and being able to change our clothing we were â€" quite comfortable. There are some _ stopâ€" ping, houses on the way where haliâ€" breeds live, but let me tell you there is but one room in which every one is crowded, and the sanitary condiâ€" tions are a fright. The flies are plenâ€" tiful and here you are supposed _ to satisfy your appetite. + Grouard, Sept. 15, 1913. jed to Em:l';'flou was perfectly satâ€" > isfied . with actions of his wile. Eaitor Chronicléâ€"Telegraph. He could stand all the abuses . she Bir.~â€"The last “',."' is ° 4| ight give him and he would be conâ€" strange a-.uLu its present state | t¢nted. . and those in east are absolutely | ‘You can plainly see from my ietter unable to understang it unless they |Bow difficult it is to get into the have come in touch with it. Those |Peace River Country. Beyond the Iivb‘ in the Western Provinces likeâ€"|crossing there streiches a vast and wise"do not understand it for before[fertile land where the roads are good one touches the fertils prairies of the|which will be described another time. Pesce..oneâ€" must pass..over hundreds | Although 1 have travelled a great of miles of thickly wooded lands. To |deal this is a different country altoâ€" make the trip from Grouard to Peace|gether {rom those 1 was acquainted River Crossing, which is ninety miles |with. Oce meets many hall breeds, and to return again, has been a task|and some squaw men. The Indian such as even old timers dread. ‘The|and halibreed will not steal. _ No trail is not fit for man nor beast|matter what may lis handy _ they and it is an awful journey. will not take anything. This is a This country was flooded with rain|strong virtue of the Indians, but not and the roads were in a terrible|the white man. The only thing they condition. Alter waiting at Grouard|might take is whiskey which seils for som: days I resolved to venture here for $10 a bottle. A short time along with a party and it cost $25|ago a halfbreed traded a cow and to see your grips and luggage on a|a call for a bottle of whiskey. This waggon and 1 and two other gentleâ€"|is a prohibition country but _ when in the party and a young girl. One ‘The Peace River country throughâ€" out is a splendid country outside of growing wheat, etc., for grazing. Here the long gsasses cxist. Cattle winter very well. For roots _ and vegetables the Peace River country can‘t be beaten. It will be about three or four years until the railâ€" road will reach the Peace, and when that takes place there will be â€" a great influx of settlers. The United States tarif bill treport was presented to the House of Repâ€" resentatives at Washington. An association for the reduction of the number of railway accident« has been iormed in Germany. _ The banks along the Peace _ River are very high, running from six hunâ€" dred to a thousand feet high. . The country along the sbanks is very rough but once the heights are reached the country is fine and level. Infantile paralysis has again â€" made its appearance in Montreal. _ _South of Dunveyan is a small setâ€" tlement known as Spirit River setâ€" tlement and south of that again is Grand Prairie, which is perhaps the finest prairie in _ existence. There are plenty of streams and lake® and the people who visited those â€" parts are loud in their praises. it proved a â€" good boarding house. Meals were served by a â€" Chinaman andâ€" a halfbreed. On the other side oi the Peace stretches a vast prairie. Far beyond Donveyan _ to the west and â€" ~many miles to the mforth. Then there are areas covered with wood and _ then prairie again. Tis claimed that a great area extends far north. _ Verâ€" million is about three hundred miles north and _ wheat has been _ grown there for a long time in a _ small way, but sufficient to warrant a flour mill in those parts for some years past. A large area in those parts are prairic lands. The season there is naturally very short, but the finâ€" est wheat has been grown there. easy to understand that a great deal is smuggled and sold in this country. Never in my life have I seen people so crazy for whiskey; not only the halfbreeds but the whites as cwell. RRBRe J J J J J _ _ . THERE Is ll pood D. & A. or a "Z Seesserssesssees Dominion Corset C+ Our catalogueâ€" we send it freeâ€" will help you choose the best for yours. Write for it today. La Diva corset W for every figure. . J. E. HETT Graduate under Dr. Still, the founder of the science, Editor Jour« nal of Osteopathy 1909â€"i%. Ostec= pathy often cures where all else fails, Chrome comstipation, stomach disâ€" orders, netvous diseases, rheumatiom, infantile paralysis, goite1,. etc., suge cessfully treated. _ Electrical troatâ€" ments. Offices, Room 203 Weber Chambera, Berlin, Ontario. A Pavid MeceMillian of Starkville lost hit barns, â€" the season‘s crops, â€"# thrash ng mill and a large woodshed by a spark from a thrashing emgine ul Post Office. Phone 454. DR. W. J. SChamiIDT DENTIST Officeâ€"43 King St. E. over in Bank Entrance. 2nd Doot Issuet of Marriage Licenges. Office:â€" lust Office, St. Jacobs, Ont, ‘Licentiate of the Royal College of Dental Surgeons, Honor Graduate University of Toronto. Office, first floor, Weber Chambers, King St. W. Berlin. Telephone 202. § Hours: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. * German spoken. Dentist, L.D.S., Royal College Dem., tal Surgeons, D.D.S. Toronto Univer sity. All brancbes of dentistry pracâ€" tised. Entrance to office same. as Concordia Hall, over Lang Bros. CLAYTON W. WELLS, % L.D.S., D.D.S., Dentist, Waterloo. Hours 9 to:â€"5. Fridays 9 to 12 Tel. 1231 Aiter April ist will visit. Elmirs the second and fourth Friday in each month, 1 to 6 p.m. r calls by day or night answered. LEGAL _ JAMES C. HAIGHT > Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Pub., Conveyancer, etc. Money to loan. Ob fice, Lettar‘s Block, Waterloo. Strasser‘s Block, a Phone 143 King St., Waterloo. Honor Graduate of Toronto Univerâ€" sity, Late of the Rideau St. GenerTg Hospital, Ottawa, Member of the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario. Note: Night calls answ ered from the office. Graduate Chicago College of n’ f tal Surgery and Royal College 3 Dental Surgeons of Toronto. . Dental Oflice in Fischer‘s Block, Waterlqo, Dentistry practices in all its brancke ario Veterinary _Colleie. Office and residence, Queen St. Phone 293. All St. J. A. Scellen, B.A., LLB, J.J, A. Weir, Master in Chancery. Barti@ ters, Solicitors, Etc. Money to lo28, Offices: Upstairs in the America® Market, Frederick St., Berlin. Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries, . Conveyancers. * Private Funds to Loan. % Office: Metcalle Block. k Cor. King and Foundry Sts., Berkis E. P. CLEMENT, K.C. f Block, Berlin. DR. WELLINGTON K. JACOBS, Osteopathic Physician. King St. East. MILLAR & SIMS n Alex. Millar, K.C. Harvey J. Simg (Successor to Conrad Bitzer.) Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Publis EXPERIENCED VETERINARY * SURGEON. _ J. H. Engel, graduars of the Ont. Office hours 9 tofz; 1.30 to 5. Closed al} day Friday. 200. NPWRCCRUORE, MDDEICUE, UUC w , Upstairs Economical Block, King F. G. HUGHES Dentist Oddfellow‘s Block, Waterloo. Specialtyâ€" Diseases of the Eat, Nose and Throat. S. ECKEL, LD.S., D.D.S. DR. LEDERMAN, D.D.S. DR. WILLIAM GEIGER, CLEMENT & CLEMENT CLAYTON W. WELLS. $ A. L. BITZER, B. A. JOHN L. WIDEMAN SCELLEN & WEIR Dentist, Waterloo. OsSTEOPATHY. DR. J. E. HETT J. A. HILLIARD Telephone 121.

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