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The Chronicle Telegraph (190101), 9 Oct 1913, p. 7

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w 6 enres 0) revencemrmn ue on /‘A 18. m:\‘.».\’ay:;\'r:{:;-;z'v.- + 3 #] :fi ,| A" footman, appearing at this junc- ut & with the inevitable tea parapterâ€" §,: F Ha, lrnitgljruprted temporarily the curâ€" t4 W\ period. Dr. Addison, whose profesâ€" wlonal engagements were being topâ€" & pled over one after another, politely rged her to continue, directly her cup *‘ was in her band. ; ‘\; "Think, Miss Clement," he said, _.~ fwith an ingratiating smile, "of the rapt udience you have! I trist it is at ;nc'e an inspiration and a compensaâ€" . Do You Feel Chilly k9b Once more I exchanged glances with the physician, for scarcely half an hour before, I had told him of the scar E‘a.r McNish‘s left shoulder blade, rcâ€" ved as I had been told, in Buffalc. ‘Ln“lorun fied from Peking after this counter, not knowing whether his @enemy were dead or alive, and for jawhile, I believe, ‘laid very low,‘ as they say. In spite of allâ€"the efforts of the combined Chinese orsanizaâ€" ftions, McNish, warned now of his conâ€" wstant danger, eluded their search, but mt length Soy himself succeeded in tracing him to Canada and thence to (Buffalo. There Moran came, postâ€" ‘haste, and once more there was a street encounter. Moran was arrestâ€" lec. and. MeXizl» chareod Liz aolch oo "Oddly enough, Moran happened to fbe in the city at the time and every mrrangement was madeâ€"to capture th ]%nmumm Canton for some exquisite torture deâ€" mvised especially to fit bis crime. In mome way, however, the intended vicâ€" tim got wind of what was proposed, and came within an ace of escaping unscathed from under their very finâ€" gers. Indeed, he did escape in the end, but not before Moran had very nearly ‘put a finish to him by a knife thrust 4n his back." â€" j The doctor ard I exchanged glances. {It was odd how confirmation of the werror he had already avowed should thus come about from the lips of one who knew nothing of his story of a ahattered friendship. . : fIt surely is," was the good lady‘s ;prom’pt ackncwledgment. "And, by the ;way, I must not forget to tell you how ;thll man, McNish, actually had the temérity to return to China a few ;ye.n ago. He appeared to think jeither that his crime had been forgotâ€" jten or that knowledge of it was Iimâ€" Fted to the Southern provinces, for in he early fall of 1903, under one of bis tnnny'auasas. he ‘arrived at Peking, Bby way of the Transâ€"Siberian Railâ€" ent of Miiss Clement‘s narrative. But iour interest was such that we limited 'he cessation to the briefest possible Feverish ana Ache all Over Enn'fll enrich and enliven similation and assist nature to &k the inflammation and the sensitive membranes which are affected. Scott‘s Emulsion will raise your standard of health to correct catarth. CLAIARRHZ }s nese! impaired? Does your throat get husky or clogged? :» Moderh science proves that HAVE YOU 7/ CATARRH? / olden Medical Piscovery Horace Hazeltine Sable Lorcha into bronchitis, méuin(;ni; or 'ca-tx;;rfl.“"l'fa;“r-e‘l'i'l'sl;‘l‘l;:; ative and tonic which has proven its value in the past 40 years is Reatores activity to the liver and to the circulationâ€"the blood is furinod. the digestion and appetite improved and the whole body eels the invigorating force of this extract of mative medicinal plants. _In consequence, the heart, brain and nerves feel the refreshing influence. For over Cle)d{nn this reliable remedy has been sold in liquid form by all medicine dealers, It can now also be obtained in tablet form in $1.00 and 50c boxes. If your d’r:s‘!u doesn‘t keep it, send 50 oneâ€"cent stamps to R.V.Pierce, M.D. alo. Feel worn outâ€"blue and tired ? Don‘t let your cold develop The Common Sense Medical Adviserâ€"a book of 1008 pagesâ€"answers all medical questions. Send 50c in oneâ€"cent stampe to R. V. Pierce, M. D. DR. PIERCE‘S seen or herrd, simply by using this ether of invisibility. It was he who delivered the three ictters. It was he who cut the head froem the portrait, and it was he who broke the mirror; and yet no one saw him on the grounds or in the house, and indeed there were very fow who saw him in the vicinity. Again and again, he asâ€" sured me, he covld have taken his vieâ€" tim‘s life but that he was infent on Dr. Morse‘s * Indian Root Pills But it was Miss Clement who was most convincing. "I have never seen either it or its effects, Doctor," she said, "but I am willing to believe even more marvelâ€" lous things than that where the Chiâ€" mess are concerned. You must rememâ€" ber that as a race they are most jea lous of their knowledge as well as their possessions. Just now, after all their many centuries of & civilization greater in some respects than our own, we are beginning to learn someâ€" thing of them and their ways, and I should not be at all surprised to disâ€" cover that in chemistry, in medicine even, they have forgot‘en more than we know. Soy assured me that not only for days, but for weeks, he himâ€" self came and went about Mr. Camâ€" eron‘sâ€"or, as he called it, McNish‘sâ€" ‘‘There can be no doubt about its existence," I answered. "I myself have experienced its effects, though I have never actually seen it put in operaâ€" "Incredible!" he exclaimed. "Can it be possible that there is such an anâ€" aesthetic as this, and we have never even heard of it before?" Sick Headachesâ€"â€" "Yes," I replied, "I have told the doctor." "What you don‘t know, though," she added, "Is how it was managed." "We have been told aomethlvné about amyl pearls," I suggested. With as much clearness as possible I explained to him what I meant by using this admittedly inaccurate term. "It was plainly evident to Moran," she pursued, "that McNishâ€"or at least the gentleman he supposed was McNishâ€"did not recognize him, and his delight at this discovery was unâ€" bounded; for it gave him opportunity. quite unsuspectedly, to arrange all his plans for a most ingenious campaign of torture. What that campaign conâ€" sisted of, of course, you already know, Mr. Clyde, and I presume Dr. Addison does, too." "Amyl pearls?" I{ueried Dr. Addison, curiously. > She came now to Murphy‘s soâ€"called chance meeting with Cameron on the Fourth of July, of which Cameron himself had already told me. I would have saved her this recital, but it was new to Dr. Addison and so I allowed her to proceed. The missionary having paused to sip her tea, Dr. Addison asked permisâ€" sion to smoke a cigarette, which she readily granted. _‘ "On Moran‘s release from prison," Miss Clement continued, fortified by the fragrant Oolong, "he appears for the first time to have considered the advisability of adopting some sort of an incognito. Prior to this time he had, Soy told me, been carefully clean shaven and closeâ€"cropped. Now he grew a beard and wore his hair long, and, in addition, he doctored it with henna until it became a flery red. He also changed hbis name from Moran to Murphy, and instead of frequenting the busy marts of men, he retired to an isolated country place on the Cos Cob river and posed as an artist. He employed always a Chinese servant, and at least once a week. wihout fail ne visited Chinatown, keeping arways in touch with the powers there, which to trace McNish." was that Moran was convicted and sent to prison for a term of years; and once again the earth seemed to close over McNish." The discrepancies between Miss Clement‘s narrative and that of Yup Bing I did not regard as sufficiently vital to raise a question over, yet I must admit that I could hardly foreâ€" see a conclusion without a much graver antagonism of facts as I knew sault viik" TXvent" to. K0. "Â¥he ‘result are not caused by anything wrong in the hea}, but by constipation, biliousâ€" noss and | indigestion. _ Headache powders or tablcts may deaden, but cannot cure them. _ Dr. Morse‘s Indian Root Pills do cure sick headâ€" ache in the sensible way b{mmovinfi the constipation or sick stomac which caused them. Dr. Morse‘s Indian Root Pilis are purel{ vegeâ€" table, free from any harmful drug, sale and sure. When you feel the headache coming take t . ami "Paraon me." J returned, insistent ly, "but you do not realizs, J fcar, what minutes even may mean in this mat ter." "What steamer?" I cried, suddenl; realizing that the one reslly vital plece of information we should have ob tained, had all this whil~ been d« layed. "What stcrmer? D4 be giv. you the nam» of it ?" "No," st!l1 very calm, "I really don‘t. The stesmer bus been at fcAa .n6G# twentyâ€"five days. It is bonna tor Hong KOPL.. it "re was a chance of overâ€" "No, I did not know that," I admit ted, & little crestfallen. "What foi lowed ?" "You remember I told you thai Chinatown was in a state of frenzy the next da;? Ycu can understan« now, why. Soy,.of course, reportec that McNish had escaped from the steamerâ€"" , "In just a menert, Mr. Clrde," she RaJd, with > emile that I confcss exas perated me "But McNish did recognize him as soon as be lsid eyos on him in thif house. I saw that myself, you know Miss Clement. He recognizcd him and was terror stricken." ‘"You did not know, I suppose, Mr. Clyde, that that was not their first meeting," she explained. "Soy met McNish on the night you found him It was he who assaulted him, some where about Seventh avenye and Fif tieth street, and would have killed him then had not the police arrived at the moment. The officers probably thought McNish was intoxicated and let fim go, seeing that he could siand, and so he staggercd on to Fifth avenue; anc there you discovered him." Miss Clement smiled tolerantly. She *vas armed at all points. years McNith had never once seen Soy. Ile thought he hrd perishes with the rest whon tha Salge Lorchs went cewiar. /rd so Soy decided tha: in oilskins, apprvenily unconscious, in en open boai oiff the New Englané coast, there was not one chance in ter thousard thit McNish wou‘d connect him with the cock he badsleft for dead In the South China sea." "Over ard over assin. It was l= who learned .of the inieaticn to tak tne crvise. At fiisi they thought the) would hbave to change their p‘ans anc carry their exomy off beicre he had t chance to taze to bis yacht. Eut Sor malutained <hat that would be toc crudo a metaod; whereas to let hin. thinksilat se Lisd escip~d anrd was safo away, rod thor, at the very mo ment of his tmuirti, io enatch hin from sceming securiiy, would be the very reJrem ut of ervcliiy the avenge: so much des vred. Avd goa ithe proper tiee wore socurcd at s>me frbulous figurcâ€"I forpst jrst wict they pail for thai fust power briiâ€"‘he scene wos set, and the grent act of the drama, wilh Soy still the stor, was carricd to a success‘cl climax." "Buai," I n.le question, "I don‘t see how Scy cciod take such a risk. If it had beca Mexish instcad of C:meron. he ceriziniy would have. recognized him, whon he was brought aboard frem the dizabicd dory." + "I thought so. And Moran kille the Chinaman who worked for him." "No; there you are wrong, Mr. Clyde." "Then who did?" "Boy himself. He learned of how that boy, unable to control his hatred of the man who had slain some one or more of his kinspeople, carried back the head that had been cut from the portrait, borrowed a rifle from Mr. Cameron‘s own gamekeeper, and shot the canvas full of holes. It seemed to Boy, then, that inâ€"spite of all his and Moran‘s careful preparation this woulé surely invoive trouble, and that one more their quarry would slip througt their fingers. And to prevent the pos sibility of any more unrestrained fer vor on the boy‘s part, Soy beat him tc death." â€" â€" "I know Soy, or Peter Johnson a he called himselfy managed the kidnay ping from the yscht," 1 said, "but shall never understard how it wa: done. Did he speak of that?" ® Infffctfig a punishmen? nforé protract edly horrible than mere sudden death." "Who wrote the letters?" I asked. fmd FL insl Dos Suil fris "He thou?‘t of 1hai, but you must Tu the bane of so many lives that here is where nmn*‘:og‘-'.lo.thv& Our pills cure it waile Carter‘s Little Liver Pills are very omall and “!‘;-'y-l::::-lcu v&m::r% -otp.i or E_mhtbyt‘km“phndr:h suffer from nately tieir goodness does Rotend here.and those i ne e e so wa * Sike io ao tefuy ripe thet they will pot be wite h. "_d “‘ I am ectly cured of Kidney comâ€" l:d-l-l-o;w" omntoerosentmemines |Pirtane m on rasoarer |d, e areus h ing the first Pill I obtained reâ€" |the Experime in e Bide 26. most | lief, and now after three mouths 1 feel | 1;, thor Sotnarhable vatcesy caring â€" | as well as ever, Authot. I suffered ten months and the Physiâ€" | t0"> of Domin/ . _| cian attending me advised me to go to Wlfl | 53 Nistoxin HMospital at Halifax, as, | study e f Liver ato © could do nothing more for me. 1 v years. a L&“‘!’" ie Lipnyes Efi?yudtht:i:?d‘:m“ol-oi-;mfi!thcu ® h, f Jgin + ¢g & siâ€"}) I Soo en s Oe id oeeekionarh. ettatimetne® (i@nc, and. strictly , followed my. pbysiâ€" / formation., ob 4 .fi‘ the bowels, bveni‘they only ACHE ?g- system, ench as the aysicm , $lCa 48 §»‘ 34 2 '-E A remarkable confession was made by a dynamitet | arrosted in _ New Yotk. Wisdom, 1 suppose, would have dic tated the advisability of securing some badge of authority from my own govâ€" ernment befcre setting forth on a‘misâ€" sion involving go delicate a point of International maritime law as that which was here embraced; but the saving of time was with me, just then, the paramount consideration. The loss of a day meant the possible missing not only of connections, but of the main object of my journey; and so, armed with nothing more potent than good health, strong determination, and a wellâ€"filled purse I boarded the Kronâ€" prinz Wilhelm and starteg on my diagâ€" onal race to head off a quarry which already had twenfyâ€"five days‘ start of tortuous involutions of official red tape deterred me. After all, I believed that if "Cameron. was to.be reseued from the gruelling slavery of servitude on this British freighter, the work must not be intrusted to the personalâ€" ly disinterested. Thereupen 1 consulted calendars, steamer schedules, and. Continental timeâ€"tables. By the fast transatlantic liner sailing cn the morrow, I could make Paris in six days. Fortyâ€"cight hours later I could be in Brindisi. If good fortune followed, less than four days more would land me at Port Said. It was now Monday, November 23. Twelve days hence would be Decemâ€" ber 5th, and the Glamorganshire, her agents had told me, could not possibly reach there before December 6th. The margin was not wide, but it seemed to me sufficient, and the thought of furâ€" ther inaction, now that the trail lay bare, was nothing less than unendurâ€" able torment. * I dare say it was exceptional that I sectured all this information with so little trouble, and without giving any hint as to why I desired it, but merely on the statement that I was Mr. Clyde, of The Week. & ganshire would call at Algiers in a few days; and for a while I considered the advisability of communicating with the United States Consul at that port, through the State Department at Washington. But a knowledge of the Another minute, and ‘Bartlett Brothâ€" ers were on the wire. No, the Glamorâ€" ganshire did not take the South Amerâ€" ican route. Her course was through the Mediterranean and the Suez Canal. She carried no passengers. She was British. She was very slow. She had called at the Azores and then at Gibâ€" raltar, where she had been delayed in coaling. Yes, she would make seyâ€" €ral Mediterranean ports. If all went well, she would reach Port Said about December 6th. Certainly not before that. Probably a day or so later. What I sought, first of all, was corâ€" roboration. Did a steamship, named the Glamorganshire, sail for Hong Kong on October 28th? In less than five minutes, the facts were mine. SBuch a stcamer had sailed for the east on that date. Her agents were Bartlett Brothers. Thefr offices were in ‘the Produce Exchap(e‘ Building. ‘The Tortoise and the Hare. Although Miss Clement‘s interesting chapter of disclosures was by no means ended with the name of the steamer and its date of sailing, it there came, so far as I was concerned, at least, to an abrupt intermission. For, as though the delay and inaction of the past month but served to swell the flood of my eager energy, the tide, so long checked but now set free, careering like an unleashed spring freshet, overrode all barriers. With scant apology, I sprang to the teleâ€" phone, and if Miss Clement continued her conversation with Dr. Addison, I was deaf to what she said. "The steamer is the Giamorganâ€" shire," she said, quickly: "A freightâ€" er; a tramp, I suppose; bound for Hong Kong. She salled on Wednesâ€" day, the twontyâ€"cighth of last month, and Mr. C2zmeron was put aboard, halfâ€" drugged, as one of the crew." (Sgd.) LEWIS MACPHERsSON. Sold by druggists and dealers everyâ€" where at 50e a boxâ€"6 for $2.50, or seut direct. Write for sample, free if you mention this paper, . ~ _ And then, for the first time, apparâ€" ently, Miss Clement secmed to appreâ€" dg_!_e_them was a real urgency. Tow, or next day, or even today, it may put into Rio .We must telegraph the United States Cofsulate at every possible port." learned "There‘s every chance of overtaking it," I interrupted onee aza‘n _ "Tomorâ€" M”Mfllw’|’ : VÂ¥ _ WUUUEVIOV U ‘ d ho Autmsortrectito d & Complaint, Gin Pills Cured. | ****®***%®*®*eccccccsecescsesecseee88s8s8e8esese 00e |0+0+0+0+0+0+0+0+0+“u (To be sreripnré : CHAPTER XXVHI. Posr Thing "Dcesn‘t it humthate you to have to go through life this way?" askeu the sympathetic woman, as she pur chased a photograph. "Yes, wa‘am." replied the bearded lady. "If ‘\ sasn‘t for the wife and kida 24 <+ 0Â¥ up the job toâ€"day." (2) The breed _ of cattle _ chosen will be readily admitted to be _ an essential factor to suocwess. The authâ€" ar is convinced, however, from . his experience, that there is no "best" breed and says "(enerally s;eaking, the best breed is the breed the man likes best." Several breeds are menâ€" tioned which would be â€" likely to prove suitable where the milk is shipâ€" ped to a cherse factory or to a city and others given where butter is to he manufactured. The charactor _ of the farm and the abundance of _ forâ€" age will also affect the breed chosén. (3) Stables and care and manageâ€" ment of the herd. (4) Milking and care of milk. (5) Feeding methods and rations. Under No. 1 are discussed quesâ€" tions of prime importance, which arise before the wouldâ€"be dairyman takes up the problems of dairying proper. The location and area of a farm best suited to his purpose, the nature of its soil, the most suitable crops to grow and rotations, to folâ€" low are treated of. Suitable _ rotaâ€" tions are given for all parts of Canâ€" ada, and a diagram is given showâ€" ing arrangement of fields under _ a three and four year rotation. The diagram also shows a good arrangeâ€" ment of the farm buildings, runs and paddocks. nteRkesssrseueece0000se00s ressessseeneenmneseresercec cur from time to sime. The subject of Milk Production is treated under the following heads:â€" (1) The farm chosen, the rotations followed and the crops grown. (2) The breed of cattle selected and the breeding methods followed. $ HUMOR OF THE HOUR } Wretch! When you courled mg you said one word fros me would make your life happy. OJure l did., but you went and sa~d the vrrorp word, Quiâ€"t Domestic Science Milk ~Production rying problems which ocâ€" "Yes," rep‘icd the land‘ord, stroking bis chin fele ively, "seeme a pretty encd Idei: bot evests with fireâ€"escanes pay in advavce at this hotel." Could be Us:d Otherwise A tall, gauntâ€"looking man entered an hotel and spplied for a room. ‘The price hbe was willng to pay entitled him to lodgings on the top floor of the house. Among his belongings the proprieter notived a coil of rope. Upon being asked what the rope was for. the man rep.ied: "That‘s a fireâ€"escape. 1 always carry it with ime, and in case of fire 1 let mysoi‘ down from the window." l Stable Hygiene and the treatment 'o( some of the more common troubles jto which dairy cattle are subject is ‘dealt with in Pari 6. A _ list _ of remedies likely to be requited is given ]and also brief notes on some diseas es. Don‘t feed your grandpa cherry pie If it is full of pits, For, if by chance, he swallows them, He may indulge in fits, While his appendix might be put At once upon the fritz. The results of 20 years‘ experimenâ€" tal work with dairy cattle at the Central Farm follows. These will be fourd to illustrate and justify the conclusions drawn in former sections It is now being issued to the Exâ€" perimental Farms mailing list. Those not on this list, who desire a copy, ma~ obtain it by addressing the Pubâ€" lications Branch, Departimment of Agtiâ€" culture, Otiawa. The publication is profusely illusâ€" trated with diagrams and plates and is provided with a very complex in dex. Many farmers in all parts of Canâ€" ada were communicated with as to their feeding methods. The replies of a largo number are included in the bulletin and also the author gives some rations which he suggests as being suitable for different parts of the Dominion. In "Some Notes on Foeds‘" those most commonly used by dairy farmâ€" ers are taken up as to their palat ability, economy and quality. readily understood by all. Various ‘‘Feeding Standards,"‘ that is, the amounts of protein, carbohydrates. and fats required for maximum proâ€" duction and the amount of each in various feeds are given along with instructions on the making _ up of rations from feeds on hand which will conform with these standards. Under Feeding Methods and Rations the whole subjéct of feeding the milk cow is taken uDb, what, when _ and how to feed being fully discussed. Following this is a section entitled, ‘‘The Philosophy of Feeding," in which the question is gone. into in more detail and in a more scientific In Milking and Care of Milk _ will be found advice on the economical and cleanly handling of that product, includiog care of utensils, _ milking machines, brushing, washing and clipâ€" ping of cattle, etc. ction | PROFESSIONAL in Canada }% CARDS HE got an AnSwWER BY WiRE Hint to Hossewlves air and | fice, Letter‘s Block, ; -‘--'.- -‘. David McMillian of Starkville lost his barns, _ the season‘s crops, a thrash ng mill and a large woodsbed by a spark from a thrashing efigine nal â€" of (;?eopnhy 1909â€"1%. Ostec= pathy ofteft cures where all else fails. Chromic comstipation, stomach dis orders, nervous diseases, rheumatism, infantile paralysis, goiter, etc., sus» cessfully treated. _ Electrical troat ments. DR. W. J. SChatIDT 9 DENTIST Officeâ€"43 King St. E. over Dominâ€" in Bank Entrance. 2ad Doot West uf Post Office. Phone 454. % % » Berlin. DR. WELLINGTON K. JACOBS, Osteopathic Physician. Graduate under Dr. Still, the founder of the science, Editor Jour» Licentiate of the Royal College of Dental Surgeons, Honor Graduate University of Toronto. Office, first floor, Weber Chambers, King St. W. Berlin. Telephone 202. s Hours: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. [ German spoken. Issuet of Marriage Licenses. + Office:â€" l‘ust Office, St. Jacobs, Ont. sity. All branches of dentistry pracâ€" tised. Entrance to office same &s Dentist, L.D.S., Royal College Der tal Surgeons, D.D.S. Toronto Univerâ€" Concordia Hall, over Lang Bros. J. H. Engel, graduar of the Ontâ€" ario Veterinary Collefie. Office and residence, Queen St. Phone 298. Al calls by. day or night answered. * Alter April ist will visit Elmira > the second and fourth Friday in each month, 1 to 6 p.m. Â¥ : Graduate Chicago College of Dem» . tal Surgery and Royal Collegs of , Dental Surgeons of. Toronto. Defital . =. Oflice in Fischet‘s Block, Waterlqo, 4 Dentistry practices in all its branclk CLAYTON W. WELLS, # L.D.S., D.D.S., Dentist, Waterloo. Hours 9 to 5. Fridays 9 to 12 Tel. 121 Strasser‘s Block, * Phone 143 King St., Waterloo. Honor Graduate of Toronto Univerâ€" sity, Late of the Rideau St. Geneva Hospital, Ottawa, Member of the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario. Note: Night calls answ ered from the ofiice. . (Successor to Conrad Bitzer.) s Barrister, Solicitor, Notary. Publis etc. Money to loan. German spoken. Officeâ€"Pequegnat‘s Block, nest to Market, Frederick St., Berlin. _ Alerx. Millar, K.C. Harvey J. Sim# D.C.L. Barristers, notaries, etc. Ofâ€" fice, Upstairs Economical Block, King St. West, Berlin. â€" Offices, Room 203 Wober Chambers, Barristers, Solicitors, Notarles, . Conveyancers. y Private Funds to Loan. ® Office: Metcalle Block. Cor. King and Foundry Sts., Berlin. E. P. CLEMENT, K.C. x E. W. CLEMENT. A. Weir, Master in Chancery. Bartri# ters, Solicitors, Etc. Money to loas. Offices: Upstairs in the America® Block, Berlin. 6 ¢Lefefefje{ep Office hours 9 to 12 ; 1.30 tn 5. Closed all day Friday. King St. East. EXPERIENCED VETERINARY SURGEON. Specialtyâ€" Diseases of the Ear, . Nose and Throat. F. G. HUGHES Dentiszs Oddfeilow‘s Block, Waterloo. S. ECKEL, L.D.S., D.D.S. DR. LEDERMAN, D.D.S. DR. WILLIAM GEIGER. CLEMENT & CLEMENT CLAYTON W. WELLS: JOHN L. WIDEMAN w 6n w ty gomems A. L. BITZER, B. A. Dentist, Wat OSTEOPATHY. J. A. HILLIARD MILLAR & SIMS Telephone 121.

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