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The Chronicle Telegraph (190101), 27 Nov 1913, p. 7

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By certain economies I had managed to hide away a few hundrcds for «emergencies, and in addition to that Y. had in the savings bank $5,000 which had come to me from _ my father‘s estate. That, however, I reâ€" _ 1 would wave my hands in *RBut he speculates upon the and all that, and while such things as par I know that you ar zut them. Besides, he is humorist. How could he & wife in the dreary, money! fodst" ‘"There he comes now, UHown the walk back of us," she would assert, withent even: a glance around. And eure enough it would be Bruce, a cigar in kis mouth and a bundle as big as a peck measure wrapped up in paper under ~his arm. 1 always mt my physical senses were parâ€" th ly alert, but she would invariâ€" ably announce his coming before 1 knew he was within gunshot. Hearâ€" ing ,intuition, instinct or sixth sense, I know not what it was, but at times it struck me as almost uncanny. Up to us would come strolling with a smile and audacious "Hello, little sweetheart," and a nod and an offâ€" hand "Howdy, old man,"â€"to me; and standing before us with his feet wide apart, would grin at ber like a goodâ€" matured puppy. Then I would see Clflgifi eyes begin to light up. With a studied deliberation that would keep her in squirming suspense he would gradually open the bundle and raise it on high. Then suddenly he would pour a pailful of roses, carâ€" mations or violets over her head and send them tumbling into her lap and down on the grass in a waterfall of fragrance. And at that she would ut ter a little cry and go down upon her knees as she gathered them up by the hand{ul, scolding him like a magpie for his extravagance, and stopping after every few words for a rapturous smell of each captured treasure. And that would be my reward for my lecâ€" ture on the sin of extravagance. _ Then, regardiess of my presence, | "MOw much did it sink?" | ake he would sit down and begin to make love to her. NoOr woOuld he GO thi8 M | ____...soocuse.â€" ocm the lwny that any other civilized man _ would go about such a thing, but » cp;l:ly nndl notoriously in the filibusâ€" Df’ MOI‘: % t Pill tering fashion in which he did everyâ€" S thing. She elways seemed helpleu;lndi“n °° before his extravagant compliments, | . are not a new and untricd remedyâ€" while, as for myself, I would watch _ our grandfathers used them. Hailf a him in silence unable to make up my century ago, before Confederation, elnes, . Aner he our Shhen m thalhe: in gemidl aoein thie t amena Aiiigh e or N a would insist that she go with him ; _ day, and were the rcco%medlcut.c in over to the boulevard, where they ‘ thousands of homesfor Constipation, could lLtnonra benl::h and picl; out an | Ingifi;;mn. B'S‘i?'"fi‘fifi?f";: automobile from those going by, such an ney and Live ubles as he was going to purchase for her‘ _ day they are just as effective, just as especial benefit. At first she would ;hable l:fle‘\:r. ‘:éig:Mh'n‘ bettes demur, but would finally say, "All s yet levi as right, if Tom will go, too." Whereat ° he would lnugl: and say to me with -n‘: Cuaure Common T1l1s emdacione wink: wife he will settle down so hard that you can hear the echo." 1 would wave my hands in protest. *RBut he speculates upon the boardâ€" and all that, and while I do not such things as particularly I know that you are utterly Against them. Besides, he is a finanâ€" @ave what he throws away when he is prosperous they would never come to want. And I am not sure, after all, but that it is better to have a lot of imoney part of the time and none the west than to have only a little ali the garded a good deal as a trust fund which was to be left unused except in case of last resort. So I would take muother tack and try and impress her with the. greater virtue of ultimate achievement through industry and @©conomy rgther than by mowing your way through the ranks of your fellow men. From ‘her quietness I would think she was becoming converted unâ€" "‘What is it this time, Bruce?" she would gasp excitedly. & wife in the dreary, moneyless perâ€" fodst" ‘ "I‘m sure I don‘t knowâ€"that would be his end of the bargain. But 1 do know that if he had a wife who would *‘That would quiet me for a time. ! ‘had to depend entirely upon my salâ€" ary, for being under heavy bonds 1 could not have speculated had I cared to and still retained my poel «ared toâ€" and still retained my poelâ€" tign if the fact became known. Stil!, T he Cheerful Life of: a sudden she would give a 58 DR PIERCE‘S _ i+ Favorite Prescription Pr. Pierce‘s Pleasant Pelicts regulate and invigorate stemach, liver and bowels. Sugarâ€"coated, tiny granuies, 1t is the right of everyone to live and enjoy the cheerful life. We owe will restore health to weakened womankind. Dr. Pierce‘s Favorite apcaipt of ogo cent s i# envy and malice. Sold support of a man other than himself without wishing that he had horns. He may mot particularly want the woman himâ€" self, but the sight of it breeds a sneakâ€" ing desire in him to go out and hook fore was not jealous. But it always left me feeling sort of disgusted. I don‘t believe it is in the male nature for m child reposes in the toy savings bank in which he had deposited his treasure. It was a dogged enough looking contraption, and around ‘it re welve the principal characters and events of this history as a moth cir cles a flame. Behind the portly doors were kept the integrals of his fortune; the mortgages, leases, deeds and notes that were the material evidences of his possessions. While it was nearly always practically empty of cash, at remote intervals, and for a few days at a time only, it contained consider: able sums in specie. This last hapâ€" pened when he would collect the mon:â€" ey on a mortgage or other security, and because of not feeling well wou‘d receive payment at the house instead of the bank. Once in a long while this would chance to occur after banking bours, or on & Sunday or holiday, and in that event, after the payee had deâ€" parted, he would give himse!f over to a.revel with the currency with all the delight of a child fondling a new toy. He did not seem to care for gold as the stereotyped miser always has, but would nose around among the bundles of greenbacks with the seeming fascl nation of a feline for catnip. It.was during one of these scenes that our quarrel occurred. In my uncle‘s large front room there was a safe that he had picked up somewhere in the dark ages of his youth, doubtless upon some foreclosâ€" I happened to meet Bruce ons day at our noon luncheon. It was Satur day afternoonâ€"and my work was finâ€" ished for the week. He came in:o th place where I sat and dropped heavi‘y into a stat beside me. His appearance caused me to whirl upon him. His face was drawn terse as the skin of a drum, his eyes were beavy a though with a great wearin<ss. anc his bands aspen in their shakin s . He had the hauntcd look of a man wh has been crushed, soul and b:dy, b some appalling disaster. _ Marvelling ure; and it was one of the simpliciâ€" ties of his complex mind that he should cling to it with the faith which at the evil transformation which hsd come over him, I let my hand iall upor his shaking fingers. "What is it, Bruce?" I cried, shap ly. He blotted the persphation from his face and answered me, h:ars> af a crow. good and was going to quit at fift thousand and marry Clare." He burs into tears. "And now I can‘t mar : her, for 1 a. ruined, busied, blow up, shot to picces. If suy one sh\â€"u~> give me ar sutomobile 1 couldn‘t ‘ai the wind to iill its tire~." His h : dropped forward. and wip‘ng his ev« dry, be sat with chest bea.ing. stared at bim. "It is all up. They have wipcd me out clean as a whistle. Had every thing I could rake and scrape â€" or ‘System‘ stock, and she has gon straight to the botiomest pi< of infor po. And I was forty thousard to th leta cr “i"‘"'&"aw‘““ t or mai CHAPTER IL. "Look at me, you beauty. Of course you don‘t know how I got you, but I‘m going to tell you. I schemed for you days and laid awake for you mnights. I sweated for you and set traps for you and denied myself for .you, and finally I got you. You led me & pretty chase, but in the end 1 cap tured you because I had my soul set upon you. And why did I want you? Because you are the concentration of stored energy. All I have to do is to turn you loose in the world and sit back in my chair and watch. In a minute a hundred men will jump forth and bammer and saw and toil from morning until night. And the results ofall their labor will be mine, beâ€"| cause while they work for you, you | belong to me. 1 could buy men,.woâ€"| men or souls with youâ€"but I won‘t. I am just going to breed you. I am going to breed you until you get me another like yourself, and then I am going to do it all over again. And you will never get away from me on this earth, either." He turned to me with that disgusting leer of his. | Uncle Abner was still nosing around among his stacks of currency as 1 entered. He glanced up at me quickâ€" ly as I opened the door, then, ignorâ€" ing meâ€" picked up a thousand dollar bill and began talking to it. . ‘The pathos of the appeal touched me, but I shook my head. "No, Brace. I can give you nothing to speculate with," 1 replied quietly. He got up with a despairing shrug of his shoulâ€" ders, nodded a hurried goodby, and was off on what was doubtless some last despairing quest. I saw no good in attempting to detain him, and therefore made no effort to ca‘l hir Thoughts of what he had told me filled my mind to the exclusion of all else. It was bad news, very bad news, indeed, and 1 knew that Clare would feel it keenly. Loving Bruce as I now knew she did, she would take his troubles deep into her own heart. And it was a miserable shame, too. Forty thousand dollars was a magnificent start along the road to fortune for a man only twentyâ€"eight years old, and it would probably be many years beâ€" fore he could climb that high again. The suddenness of the catastrophe was a distinct shock to me. For an hour I pondered over it deeply, then, arising, I took my â€" own departure homeward. "But I‘ve simply got to get ten thouâ€" sand for a month or two, I tell you, and I‘m going to do it." Then sudâ€" denly subsiding, he turned to me in helpless importunity.. "You couldn‘t spare me anything in the shape of an advance, could you, old man?" "Tom, how many N these beauties have you saved up?" s "Not any. And it doesn‘t look as hough I ever would at the price 1 pay you for secondâ€"class board and lodgâ€" Ings." He leaped to his feet in a quivering rage, for the moment made speechless by my unprecedented inâ€" solence in daring to resent his insults. But his volce. came to him soon enough. Grimacing like a chimpanzes he fairly squealed in his anger. "Secondâ€"class lodgingsi You never bad enough morey in your life to buy & quarter of it. And you never will have, either, you spendthrift. If I didn‘t charge you for your living you would have just that much more to go to the dogs with. You ought to thank me for it. Secondâ€"class board! You will be glad to get a bone to gnaw yet, you puppy." Suddenly he subsided to a sneer and began smoothing my coat over like a prospective buyer of old clothes. "lt“l'tl?:fl“'t“b Seunted â€"pronged the a on‘ af mad soundedâ€"d like a of lead in a vacuum, 1 was wiped out before lmunll‘l-o'uden-tuufi Oh, the miserable shame of it! unspeakable!. .Fool unmentionable! Idiot unutterable! Ass! Idiot! Fool!" Shocked but helpless, I surveyed him in silence. Presently his voice srose again, this time angrily. "But that stock is only temporarily knocked down, and is bound to come up smiling long before the count. it was that damnable published lié that started the panic, and the scare will be over in 2 hours when the truth is known. If ! only had $10,000 more 1 could get back in good shape in no time. Bulun!lmm'u‘dfl.l oneâ€"tenth of that sum:. ,I‘m an Glleyâ€" infesting, freeâ€"lunch, pauper who can‘t even sell his soul because Old Nick figures he‘ll get it anyway free gratis. And there is our dear Uncle Abner sitting up there in his den this very minute plowing his fingers and nose through $40,000 that he has just colâ€" lected in currency. 1 was up to see him in a dying effort to get him to stake me, but he only grinned at me like a totem pole and kept on countâ€" ing the bales of yelow backs until I wanted to yell and had to run away to get shut of it." He got upon his feet, and in his anger banged the taâ€" bieâ€"withâ€"a â€"metaiâ€"objectâ€"which be tad tightly clenched in his fist. 8C "A hundred and twentyâ€"five dollars‘ worth of dry goods on your back as you strut around the streets! And on your salary!" He popped up like & jack inâ€"theâ€"box and stood before me, scarecrowâ€"like, with arms outâ€" stretched and his clothes hauging in :h.pelfsl pouches from his slatâ€"like rame. ‘‘This. suit, how much did it cost you, huh?" "Fifty dollars." "And the rest of that trouseau that you wear around in the mud, includâ€" ing the overcoat?" / "I don‘t know. I never figured it up. Probably seventyâ€"five more." _He sat down with a thump and eat glaring at me as his voice gradually rose again. "Look at me! ‘This suit cost me nine dollars and I have worn it for a year. My shirt cost forty cents, my collar six and my necktie eight. Mean to say I am not as well dressed as you?" "That is a matter of personal op n lon. Anyway, it is none of your bysiâ€" ness so long as 1 pay you for my liv ing. At any r&te I have never had to ask you for money." He reached forâ€" ward with his long arm and began thumping me on the chest with his bouny knuckles. "Hey! Wouldn‘t you though if you thought you could get it‘ Wouldn‘t you though, Mr. Peacock, with your tine clothes, if you thought you could whced‘e a dollar out of me? But you FRBIWC Â¥rme Vincls\ Ahnan atn‘s bost [ A middleâ€"aged. woman, under _ the} influence of liquor, attempted to comâ€"{ mit suicide on Saturday night by throwing herself ‘across the Preston |& Berlin street railway tracks about ja mile south of Berlin. â€"A iarmcri passing saw {he woman‘s predicament | and succeeded in puiling her off beâ€"} fore the car reacred her. The woâ€"‘ man was taken charge of by her resâ€" cuer until she sobered up after which . she went to her home. t _ The announsoment of the Hydro arm was aâ€"tattoo mark with â€"the Electric. Commission at Toronto <câ€" initials "J. T." This was identical specting the excellent surpluses tsâ€" with ome on his son‘s arm. On â€" the ported by the various municipalitics nose was a mark similar to one his in the power zone, was read with inâ€" son bore, and besidis this there was terest at the offices of the Light asimilarity in the tecth; his _ son Commission. ~~ ‘has lost one eye tooth and two lowen The writer was informed teeth, and these teeth were also missâ€" that it was difficult to ascrtsrin en iug ffom the mouth of the cotpse. what basis 50 per cent. profit _ was Lastly there was on the le; of the arrived at, as it was geneâ€"aily corâ€" Cotpse a scar from a burp _ similar sidered that the profits would not be to a mark on his son. very great owing to the presont lew i s 4 i rates. It was kfmwn, however, that _ only Difierence in Hair. the Berlin plant would make a g£00od With so many remarkable points of showing and the exceptionally large resemblance, in addition to the ‘generâ€" increase in powet consumption, it al appearance of the body, both in was stated, will result in a sutstanâ€" stature and features, he was convincâ€" tial reduction im the rates. ed that it was his son. The only difâ€" As the rates are fixed by the Hyâ€" ference was in the hair. his son‘s b«~ dro Commission it is not known as ing very dark, and that of the corpse yet what reduction will be made. _ inclined to a brown shade, but it was | ooo rdomess mortommummem, explained that the action of the waâ€" OR THEY‘LL BE THROWN OUT. |ter might cause this, and in view of â€"â€" ‘all the other points of resemblance (Boston Transcript.) this was not seriously regarded. é : Mr. Thompson made arrangements Sheâ€"Do you love me for myselil for the convoyance of the body to alone? _ this city, :and it arrived yesterday. iTeâ€"Yes, and when we are martied After being prepared for burial it was I don‘t want any of the family thrown taken home. and arrangements were in. - moadn Int ite husial $ »numynur nuwen . .. , _ Must Gonr Signature 6f } ATIEMPTED 10 â€" _ COMMIT SUICIDE WILL MEAN _ _ REVISION OF RATES Carter‘s ! Little Liver Pills, > vuvugh to let you have it. T‘d rather trust it to Bruce, for with all his fool iIshness he has got twice the sense that you have. He takes chances and some day may win a fortune, while you only spend, ‘spend, spend. Get a seut from me! I‘d like to see you." With a quick run he gathered up the morey, shoved it into the safe, spun the combination until it rattled like a roulette wheele and faced me again with his nose wrinkled. I faced him m a boiling rage. For while 1 bad always cherished the natural and legitimate hope that I, as his next of tin, might come day profit by reason if his accumulative instincts, he could rave left his money strewn broadcast throughout the house from the time I had first come to live with him and { would not have touched. a dollar of it, even had I known I never would be >ven suspected. Furthermore, none Lad a better reputation for honesty han myself, and his everlasting treatâ€" ment of me as a potential thief had tlw-y“s nauseated me. Not caring nus n dn t Ne how he might regard the act, I drew| Hamilton. Nov. 19..â€"To walk into ;%?:kt:ygnt: ftl?x: glr;:n: dtizr from my,his home where the members of _ hit n che da4a fore him. It was the only el(eg'1 btl: 3@“'""?{.“"?‘ E fipposad in contain his dead house I had ever possessed, and “s,bo y, which had been cast up by the surrender left me without means ofliam:ly were gathered about a cusket entrance, but without another word I‘W@te"s Of Lake Huron, following the stalked out into the open, banging Storm of last week, was the remarkâ€" mndioor behind me. Never had I‘able experience that befell _ John fhow a': Ifl'ltl:g;z :tilflr:ln(;]mmmood than Thompson, 423 North John street, y way downlown: UE e trees 0fl:this evening. His appearance turned * ‘lhe house of mourning into one â€" of UT® be: soutimur® ; , linr and it was amelly +1A At ‘the Very small ond as otay â€" te take as cagarn, OURE SICK HEADACHE. See Facâ€"Gtmile Wrapper Below, Â¥B . | PAW IN MY BACK : e e i o is _ On Monday Thomas Thompson reâ€" ceived a message from his daughter at Sarnia that her brothet _ John was aboard the steamer James Carâ€" ruthers when it sank last week on Lake Huron. _ He at onee left for Goderich, where a number of bodies from the Carruthers had been washed ashore and were in the niorgue. He reached that place late at night, and was at once shyvn ‘a numbetr of bodies that lay there awaiting identiâ€" ficution. He noticed that the toes on the foot of one of the corpses were crossed, as were his sons, and deâ€" cided to further examinc it. (On the arm was a tattoo mark with the initials "J. T." This was identical with one on his son‘s arm. On _ the the house of mourning into one | of joy, and it was quickly rid of the stranger‘s remains and the emblems !o[ death which ‘were in the room along _ with the body _ that _ was brought back from Goderich by the father yesterday. The living son‘s entrance into the house where _ he was mourned as dead was a great shock, as the. members of the family were unprepared for such a happenâ€" ing, but it was such a shock as they could casily bear. al appearance of the body, both ini About 5 o‘clock this evening John stature and features, he was convincâ€"| Thompson walked into his home arter ed that it was his son. The only difâ€"!baving read that he was dead, and ference was in the hair. his son‘s b«~|iooked at the remains that were gupâ€" ing very dark, and that of the corpse posed to be his. The resemblance inc- inclined to a brown shade, but it was tween his face and that of the corpse explained that the action of the wa-les striking even then, and it _ was ter might cause this, and in view nf;not difficult to understan(l how the all the other points of resemblance fathet and other members _ of the this was not seriously regarded. ‘famil_v were deceived. The son info:rmâ€" Mr. Thompson made arrangements ¢d the members of his family that for the convoyance of the body to be had read while in Toronto that this city, and it arrived yesterday.ihe was reported dead, and did . not After being prepared for burial it was: Ttath this city till toâ€"day, not having taken home, and arrangements were in the meantime sent word . to the mada for its burial toâ€"morrow mortnâ€"| family that he wis alive. SAILOR TURNS UP ALIVE John Thompson Finds Family Around His Casket at Hamilton Home REMARKABLE â€" LIKENESS the Kidneys cause they never rpelshindl metiuirran ue-nsmfl pain. The whole trouble is with the Kidneys strained Kidneys as nothing else will. away the pain every timeâ€"or your money promptly refunded. soc. a hox, 6 for $2.50. gll:{ple free if MANGAâ€"TONE BLOOD AND NERVE TABLETS help pale, nervous women to get well. 5oc. a box. 199 twelve back and Bips are all gone Ucannot effects of your pain. GIN PILLS goc. a hox, 6 for F.Eo.’ Sample free if you write National Drug & Chemical Co. of Canada, Limited, _ Toronto. CuvrcH St., CoRNWALLIS, N.S. ‘About yuuju i ho suffering *5 & was so ( o d emaiman t not stand up s t. I 3 i-lo?ud by a friend "‘Em PILLS. got a box. It helped me immediately. I _ GIN PILLS®". _ B. C. DAVID. Liniments and Father "Identificd" the Body. won‘t cure [ J J TT D _ J J _ _ _ I THERE is ll uxd D. & A.or a °C in Co., The remairs which were . brought from Goderich were removed to Dwyâ€" et‘s undertaking tooms, and will likeâ€" Iy be sont back to Goderich, where the chances of identification will be better than nere. He explained thatr #e did not sail on the Carruthers, but left here on the Canada, which be left whean _ it reached the Welland Canal. From there he made his way to Montreal, and then went back to Toronto, where he read what the late Mark _ Twain called the "exaggerated report of his death." ing. Many floral tokens were sent by . friends of the family, and a number of spiritual bouquets were laid on thef coffin for prayers for the tepose of j his soul. | Mrs. John West of Galt is the possessor of a lemon tree, whichk is out of the ordinary. The tree beats ripo fruit, _ which is by no means small, one of the i:mozs â€" cut _ of measuring 12% inches around, â€" and there are six more on the tree â€" tally as large. The fruit hangs om one sido while the otbher side is _ in bloom. * Do not get out of patience or scold or shake your baby for crying. He does not do that to be uglyâ€"that is not a baby‘s naturcâ€"he wants _ to laugh and be happy but when he crics that is the way he takes of tellâ€" ing you heis in pain; that bis little stomach is out of order or that his new teeth burt him. Instead of being cross give bim a dose of Baby‘s Own Tablicts and you will soon see him laughing . and happy again. The Tabâ€" lets sweeten the stomach; _ make teething painless; breaks up _ colds; cure comstipation and expel ‘worms. Sold by medicine dcalers. or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Wilâ€" liams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. G4ALT‘S LEMON TREE. o scnoms‘% . o apg NO PLANS ARE DEFINED Late J. I. Carter, Wealthy Sarâ€" nia ManufaQurer, Founds The deceased had ailready estab lished scholarships in the schools oi the counties of Lambton, Huron Perth, Middlesex and Wellington. TORONTO, Nov. 20.â€"By the wil | _ WEIR of the late J. 1. Carter, manufacturer SCELLEN & x Sarnia, $100,000 is bequeathed for| J. A. Scellen, B.A., LL.B j the purpose of establishing scbolarâ€" | A. Weir, Master in Chancery. ~BaFI ships in the High Schools of Ontaric.| ters, Solicitors, Ete Money to ‘lo Th h t scholarship foundaâ€" a i i _ This is the Orst scholarship foundaâ€" | Offces: Upstairs in the AMOIH 1 Brant, 2 Bruce, 3 the Unite® Counties of Dundas, Sttrmont and Glengarry, 4 Elgin. 5 Essex, 6 Grey, 7 Haldimand, 8 Hastings, 9 Hwron, 10 Kent, 11 Lambton, 12 Lanark, 12 Leeds, 14 Middlesex, 15 Ontario, 16 Oxford, 17 Perth, i8 Renfrew, 19 Simcoe, 20 Waterloo, 21 Welland, 22 Wellington, 23 Wen‘worth, 24 the County of York, exclusive of the city of Toronto, and, 25 the City of Toronâ€" to, which for the purpose of the will, is treated as if it constituted a sepâ€" arate county. This is the fOrst scholarship foundaâ€" tion ever given to the Department of Education, and it bas not yet been .eâ€" cided bow it will be used. The bequest is to be invested ii Ontario Governmeot securities, and the whole of the interest thereof at per cent. per annum, shall be applied yearly in perpetuit in payment of three scholarships in each of the enumerated in his will. These threc scholarships shall be open to comâ€" petition in erch of the named coun:â€" ties, by all the pupils of all the high schools and collegiate institutes in that county. K The candidate who obtains the highest marks on papers for entranc« into the faculties of education or fo: honor matriculation in arts shall re ceive $100, the second {60 and the third $40. The awarding of these scholarships annually on the basis hereinbefore mentioned shall be as follows: Resemblance Seen to be Close When Baby Cries Sailed on the Canada I9% : Graduate Chicago College of _ ttal Surgery and Royal College Dental Surgeons of Toronto. DÂ¥ IOmee in Fischer‘s Block, Wateé | Dentistry practices in all :its brd David McMillian of Starkville lost his barns, the season‘s Crops, & thrashing mill and a large=woodshed by a spark from a thrasBing emgine. DR. WELLINGTON K. JAGOBS,~ Osteopathic Physician. ./ Graduate under Dr. St!ll, .= foundet of the science, Editor :J nal of Osteopathy 1909â€"13. OW# pathy oftem cures where all elsd fal#. Chromic comstipation, stomach _ dÂ¥ orders, nervous diseases, rheumatiom, infantile paralysis, goiter, etc., 9@# cessfully treated. _ Electrical treat DR. W. J. SChwiIDT .& DENTIST Officeâ€"43 King St. E. over Domfla in Bank Entrance. 2ad Doot . We#s$ uf Post Office. Phone 454. % % w Berlin. Office:â€" Pust Office, Licentiate of the Royal Gollege : Dental Surgeons, Honor Gradum University of Toronto. Office, first floor, Weber Chambers, King St., W Berlin. Telephone 202. â€" C Hours: 9 a.m. to 5 pm. 4. German spoken. a1 CLAYTON.W. WELLS, i L.D.S., D.D.S., Dentist, Waterlo@.. Hours 9 to 5. Fridays 9 to 13 Tel. 191 Alter April ist will visit Elmira the second and fourth Friday I.? month, 1 to 6 â€"p.m. 4sl EXPERIENGED VETERINARY*‘ SURGEON. y vil J. H. Engel, graduate of the Out ario Veterinary Colleg. Office residence, Queen St. Phone 298. calls by day or night answered. . ~@ Dentist, L.D.S., Royal College. Dew tal Surgeons, D.D.S. Toronto Univerâ€" sity. All branches of dentistry pracâ€" tised. Entrance to office same .A# Concordia Hall, over Lang Brog Hlospital, Ottawa, Member of the College of Physicians and Surgeops \. of Ontario. Note: Night calls lfi s ered from the office. * s LEGAL â€" JAMES C. HAIGHT Bartister, Solicitor, Notary, P Conveyancer, etc. Money ::u fice, Letter‘s Block, Waterlog. . : DR. WILLIAM GEIGER. Strasser‘s Block, Phone 143 King St., Wat Honor Graduate of Toronto U sity, Late of the Rideau St. G ¢:L0{0{L0{0kefeo{e.qp Conveyancers. â€"~> Private â€"Punds to Loar. Office: Metcaile Block. Cor. King and Foundry Sts., E. P. CLEMENT, K.C. Ales. Millar, K.C. Harvey J. D.C.L. Barristers, notaries, ete. fice, Upstairs Economical Block, St. West, Berlin. $ (Successor to Conrad Blt-‘.i Barrister, Solicitor, Notary ctec. Money to loan. German sp Offliceâ€"Pequegnat‘s Block, next Market, Frederick St., Berlin. * King St, East. CR DS. Offices, m 22: Weber M Office hours 9 to 12 ; 1.30 to 5. Closed all day Friday. CLEMENT & CLEMENT... Barristers, Solicitors, Moté#IG Specialtyâ€" â€" Discases of the Ear, Nose and Throat. Dentist Issuet of Marriage Licenses. * 8. ECKEL, L.DP.S., D.D.S. DR. LEDERMAN, D.D.S. CLAYTON W. WELLS. A. L. BITZER, B. A. JOHN L. WIDEMAN Dentist, Waterloo. MILLAR & SIMS OSTEOPATHY. J. A. HILLIARD F. C. HUGHES Telephone 121. Waterloo. , St. Jacobs, Ont E. W. CL (u® Jig 41

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