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The Chronicle Telegraph (190101), 25 Nov 1915, p. 11

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\By 2 ~ . | GeorgeB arr «â€"â€"~ MeCutcheon |‘*I have been restored to health by taking ‘Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives‘. For two years, xpuwmkm matism and Stos Trouble. I became A Fool and His very weak, had frequent dissy spelis uid when I took food, felt wretched mhd sleepy. L suffered from Rheumaâ€" fiwfimk my back aend joints andâ€" my hands swollen. .A friend advised me to try ‘Fruitâ€"aâ€" trea! and from the outset, they did me n.{é*twmmm hbox, t I was well and I persevered in the treatment. I can truthfully say that ‘Frultâ€"aâ€"tives‘ is the enly medicine that helped me. & ... _ LOUIS LABRIE, AIFRUITâ€"Aâ€"TIVES" is the famous xuu-wfimfidlifitn- §i0e. a box, 6 for; $2.50, trial size, 256. ‘At all dealers or sent on receipt of price by Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives Limited, Ottawa. | _ "I thiink it‘ is safe to assume, Dowâ€" ever, that.it is not ajeant for‘ publicaâ€" tion,", said!be. . ‘It strikese me As being u bit too personal. There are parts of it that 4 doo‘t belleve sbe‘d dare to put into_print, although sbe reeled them off to me without so much as a biush *Pon. my sga}, Ar. Smart, 1 never was so embarrassed in my life. She"â€" "Never mind," I. interrupted bastily. "Don‘t, tell tales out of school." has i tor Bs hoi tsA UD VE .He was silent for a moment, fAngetr ing "his tig eyegiasses nervously. "It may‘piease you to know that she thinks you are an exceedingly nice man." q‘:«,u.m-zr 1 rogred irascibly. 88 if 1 like being called an omm’ nice man." _"*They were my *ords, sir, not bers," bé éxpiained desperately. "I was mere Iy.putting two and two togetherâ€"form ing an opinion from ber manner, not from ber. words. W m‘?..nnflon everfthing yon do for & ‘thanks me if 1 call her atten log.to anything she may bave forgot: tem. She certainiy ‘appreciates your kindbets to the baby." > _ Ahat is Astreufely gratifying," said ‘HMe besitsted once more. "Of course you nnderstand that the divorce itseit is Absoiute‘ It‘s ouly the matter of the hild that remains nnsetied. The"â€" [ fairty barked .a nim. "What the miachief, do you mean <by that, sir? What has the divorce got to P with 18 3" _ MA great dent, 1 sbould say." eaid he, with the rare, alsouet supethnman D1 tefite that bis made him so vaiuable u@. what, bas to tpe. W my : soul!" was all that 1 ‘eny. . m'-nwn off the door mekily M‘m« instant 0 0 000 _ ? T mels from the TENEPNONE TMD! ‘ ‘nre nere, «ir, and (be electricians. m are they ‘to begin, air?" s Thetn to walt," «aid 1. lhen d Wirtied to the top of the enat wing to Timeit! In five<minutes all -w-.1 distress will go. No indigestion, artburn, sourness or belfllng of i8, acid, or eructations of unfiigested no° diksiness, bloating, foul e t! or: headache. Fape‘s Dispepsin is noted for its éed in regulating upset stomachs. i ra tharntse woert 100 besace i iy in. the. hole * and besides it harmjesss .Pot an ond to no:ul o w y gotting a large Ryâ€"cont amee ~of Pape‘s Dispepsin € rag stome. You realite in . meediess it is to sufâ€" . JHE. ADVICE "HIS FRIEND "Pape‘s Diapepsin" digests 300C iins food, ending aM stomach migary in five minutes. ACID STUNACHS 'bun OR INDIGE&STION i)q PM from the telephone com on, dyspepsina or any ... It‘s the quickest, ap estepsion phone belbs fuici study . She chougBt #t #would. t« \~ alee, so | returned wih. insttuth> tor the men to put in three insiqai «l â€"@ne in ber r00is. Ohe M w.ibe ind + in the bbtier‘s pantry. °11 scemie! wery joily arrangement all nawssss wr the erecume perl syriem. is a.8 finfl:*m. wEtpt s r"- I were is o0 work on my te Wwere «ta~ “.lummuu the wal} bard by. We poused by sslei { It was um 10 s0vute t). > sound. & weased nimost ubi«) .. atety. Orst thought wa« this th // mn:- were drilling a ho lfl* wall into my study Lh« came sbarp rata‘ta tat once more .!’_-__'0 louked about us in. !~« derment the portly facade of Lodwig the Red moved out of aligament with a beart rending squeak and a long thin ‘sizeak of biack eappeared at the innof edge of the frame, growing widerâ€"and bleackep it anythingâ€"before our startied . *Are you as howe?" inquired a voice that couldn‘t by any means have emaâ€" *t-.odndwnm in bis: hours. ; lwhuwflwm‘ retary‘s eyes were glued to the magle portrait. * .. "By the Lord Harry!" 1 cried. "Yes!" The secret door swung quietly open, Iaying Ludwig‘s face to the wall, and in the‘ aperture stood my amazing meighbor, as lovely a portrait as you‘d see in a year‘s trip through all the galleries in the world. Sbe was smilâ€" ing down upon us from the slightly elevated position, a charming figure in the very latest Parisian bat and gown. "I am out making afterncon calls," said she, Her face we Aushed with e&â€" aux;nduneom ewilt you put a chair here so that 1 _ "How stromg you are!" she said ad» miringly. "How do you do, Mr. Poop endyke! Dear me,, I‘m not a ghost, Then be felt of bis heart.‘ "My â€"Go€, 1 don‘t believe it‘sâ€" going!" ‘ Together we inspected the secret doors, going so far as to enter the room beyond, the couptess peering through m-mmm‘ To my amaze» ment the room was Wbsolutely: bare Bed, trunks, garments,, chairsâ€"everyâ€" thhs.hhtt.hldnnhhfll-lt'hfl- ed away by an all powerful:â€" genie, "What does this mean?" 1 cried, W M9e0 ols siomine comtiee now tbat: I nn'u'umf';_d» said â€"s6 repely. "Mar and*Radoiph mored orâ€" erything up this afternoo8." ‘.Poopene dyke and 1 returned to the study, I for one was bitterly disappointed. "I‘m sorry that 1 bad the phone put in," 1 said "Please don‘t call it a phone!" she obfjected. "1 bate the word pbone." SCBS‘+ 1 glared at him. What right had he to criticise my manner of speech? He started to leave the room after a perâ€" functory scramble to put his papers in order, but she broke off in the middle of a sentence to urge him to remain. Bhe announced that she was calling on both of us. "Please don‘t stop your work on my account," sbe said and promptly sat dowmu at bis typewriter and began pecking at the keys. "You must teach me bow to run a typewriter, Mr. Poop /m.‘ |.n.||n.upootu.ehclel mouse before long, Abd i know father come a stenographer." He blushed abominably. 1 don‘t beâ€" Heve I‘ve ever seen a more unattracâ€" tive fellow than Poopendyke, _"Ob, every eloud has its silver linâ€" ing," said be awkwardly. "But 1 am used to gold." said she. "What do 1 do now?"* He shift and the space for ber. scrambled the whole alphabet across his neat shee@? but ne didn‘t seem to Uhe Was Bmiling Down Upon Us. As Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vege Ohio. â€"*L wane ET m n en igde £ with a severe case of organic weakness. I had backache, pains in my hips and .....,nu-c.m-.a-n-. lassitude, had fl.u.fid and I was always I was hardly able to do housework. (I had taken Lydia E. zn-. ‘s V.‘oublo‘ce- o on one other dccasion, and ‘it had h ..;oolunklnfilfl“t“ ‘ ~antil now L like a new woman. " You have my hearty consent ar v4. h 2e k re. wougg m o ied woman. " You have consent en ds women."â€"Mrs. Orpia TurNE®, 431 Wayne St., Pique, Ohio. Women who are suffering from those distressing ills peculiar to their seX wmmm.unvwhl Pinkham‘s Vegetable Com| wr store their health. If you want special advice vfltotonymlphkhanlod- icine Co.. (confidential) Lyn», old 1 B s us Th batrreniamar® ~Capore PE d Mass. Yourletter will be opened, read and answered by a woman | AicsAvar e IP cramb ul o# pOve, and held in strict confidence. 1 ‘bowed Wery :ow, . "You may be: quite wure, countess, that i shail dis. miss Mr. Poopendyke the instant you apply. for bis job."" "And i shail most cheerfully abdi cate," said ne. ‘Billy ass! 1 couldn‘t belp thinking how infnite iy more attractive and perlious she would be as a typist than the exce! ient young woman who had married theâ€"jeweler‘s clerk and what an im provement on Poopendyke! "I came down to inquire when you would Hke‘to go exploring for burled treasure, Mr. Smart," she said afte‘ the cylinder bad slipped back with a bang that aimost startied ‘her ot:: .."m‘m-uu-dncw ap typewriting then and there forever . "Never put off till tomorrow what you can do today," quoted 1 glibly. _ She looked herself over. "If . you knew how many times this gown hbad to be put off . till tomorrow, 7oU wouldn‘t ask me to ruin it the second time I‘ve had it on my back." "It is an ancommonly attractive A NEW WOMAN "wut it joffy, M# Start? if Mr. treasure quest?" "Tomorrow is Sunday." "Can you think of a better way to will it?" + y "Yes, you might have me ‘down here for an old fasbioned midday dinper." ‘(‘To be Continued. , RESPONSIBILITY Social Democratic ,moveinent is the antithesis of the Prussian state that Prussia has built up her power es a state of soldiers and officials, and that the strength and power of Prussia rest on these soldiers and officials. He also tells us that one of the two great problems of the German Empire toâ€"day is fighting the social â€" demoâ€" |cnuc movement, the expansion . of Germany. Von Buelow says it is es sential to the life of the monarchy and the State that the social Demoâ€" cratic movement be defeated. . It is so vital to the life of the state that the Government must not leave it to the other political parties to fight. The state itself must wage the . war. Against whom? Against the masses of their own people struggling for liberâ€" ty "and for a larger measure of self government. The Government of Gerâ€" many has made: war on human liberty within her own borders. : She is now pendyke ; be able {Continued from page 2 OF DEFENSE WeXhles, MBdredey Novenber 3, WB ME N government in the present conpede «mew rights to parliament, but to rouse the political interest of mdnn-dbm"m l""“““‘.“‘y & policy, â€" great in its aims and @DOFâ€" getic.in the means it employs. The criticism, to which every policy that is not coloriess must give rise, does is aroused. The worst thing in poliâ€" %W. & general an" ® M 4 ‘tny in Contrast. _ By way 7m. -ingun the history/ of the struggle between Democracy. and Autocracy in Great Britain? â€"â€" From the nfl:‘ times our fathers have resisted right of the Crown to domingte and conâ€" trol the Government of the country; they have resisted the right of n-| military to control the.civil power, In ‘the days of Oliver Cromwell ur‘ fathers settled once and for,all, . for the Angloâ€"Saxon people, the question of the divine right of kings, and . Of the supremacy of the civil power, Bo strong: is the. control which the civil authorities. of Great Britainâ€"the peo pleâ€"exercise over the military armâ€" in contrast to Germany where the military dominates the civil power~â€" o e SA s s es +4 s k that His Majesty, Mr. Asquith and all his government, could not mainâ€" tain a standing army of ten men without the consent of Parliament. So absolute is the control which Parliament _ retains over this m‘iVi-‘ lege that they: never extend the z:;m of _ the Executive to mainta a stending army beyond one year, at ,a time; and in the act by Alch this extension is granted,: they specify the exact number. of soldiers that thay be maintained. * s From the days the rights of the Britain have been stea0l) creasingly enlarged. The tory of the develonment . ish constitution is a hist ever enlarging wwer and the people over the mana their own alair®, Toâ€"day tain~<stands as the krea‘ tive ‘~Effect on thes Two NaWAbne Now what has been the result cupâ€" on the two nations themselves* ‘In Germany, Prince Von Buelow ugain being the witness, the people do not possess the faculty of government: he says, ‘"Ol the many '?Mt talents possessed by the Gorman people, the trlent of government has been denâ€" ied them.‘" Naturally and inevitably: denied themâ€"if you deny to men: the right to share in the _management of their own affairs and ‘to develop the faculty of government," you will find the ‘men without ¢gBat faculty, In that one sentence, Pmince Von Bueâ€" low passes â€" one of the most severe| . jodgments which an be passed on the o autocratic â€" and thilitarist form _ Of|g government in Germany. What â€" bas|f been the result .in Great Britain? The|o people, by the practice of self . goyâ€" t etnment, have learned how to govern|t pot â€" only themselves, bub aâ€" worldâ€" h wide Empire. Throughout the Emâ€"]; pire we â€" enjoy free government and | j representative institutions, and _ the|t Imperial Parliament is recognized by | t all nations as the mother .of free parâ€" liaments the world over, and the greatest bulwark of democracy and |; {ree â€" government in the world to.|l day. Democracy fought and won its| battle in Great Britain. It fought | ! and lost in Germany. Militarism and I absolutism won the viectory in Gerâ€" : many over their own people. They |, are _ now sceking to preserve their | position in their own country _ and| carty out the ideals for which they | stand by endeavoring to impose their | will and their ideals upon others by the might of the sword. Shall We Accept Alien Kings? | Back of this world coniflict lies the |issue â€" for which our fathers fought |and for the triumph of which they ; | gave aheir lives. Our fathers would â€"Inot accept the tyranny of their own ‘|kings. Shall we, their sons, gubmit â€"|to â€" the â€" greater tyranny of â€" alien : kings? _ Militarism and Democracyâ€" , | these two great Empiresâ€"now face _|each other in this, the supreme conâ€" |fict which Democracy has ever faced. t\ Professor Delbrooks, who succeeded ~| Treitschke in the chair of history, in f| the University of Berlin, said as late ; as 1914â€""It will take another Sedan, |effected not by us but on us, before =|the army and its officers will recogâ€" I nize â€" the supremacy of the German Parliament." The,path of liberty for s at the conclusion of bis ""Is " is not the Outy of, | the the CGerman people themselves, . the the only path of liberty, lies in the overthrow of, militarism and absoluâ€" tism in Germahy. On‘the other hand the â€" only path of continued freedom for us rests in our pressing this war to a victorious eonclusionâ€"for only thus _ can we preserve the liberties our fathers won for us. PRUSSIANS WILL MAKE NO COMPROMISE. Students of political conditions in Prussia must realise that the miliâ€" tary autocracy will not willingly yield to or make any compromise with the forces W elr awn couhtry. clares: "If the Government renounced the flm:n the Social . Demo crats, woud take it to mean that they had yielded to the forces of revolution. â€" The one hbope for real C:’.'{“' liberty in Germany is to the power amd destroy the presâ€" tige of this military autocracy, and tluflunwv «w the forces of to assert themselves and bring the government of the country under the control of the people. The best guarantee of the fnal overthrow of the menace of Prussian militarl ys of Oliver Cromwell, he democracy in Gréat een steadily and _ inâ€" rged. The whole hbis velonment of the Britâ€" n is a history of the Wower and control of r the management _ of ire, Toâ€"day, Great Briâ€" s the great representaâ€" y of the world. the Two NatioB®« It hui- -u-ld Â¥very) tikt C ne form,| ) u--n-.-m-t-qsm o in J macp REFC T pie es ioi SHo Ee * *" will be found in the full and control of the German m.m * The military authorities in C . by & 1 campaign d*m sen succeeded in convincing the mass of ‘the German that the Germen Empire. was attacked Iby resolute n‘o.ho who nhll" overthrow, an v.la must y for the flm?l" . } Socialiste are mmnk One of the most significant Teatures of the present situation : is the > inâ€" creasing evidence that some" of: the leaders among the Bocalâ€"Democrals are voicing their protest against . the nrosecution of b:m.vur of aggression against the 1 of the people of wurope: and when we ‘realise that they have not ‘ the freedom of the Press, or of Speech or of Assembly in (Germany, as we:understand and enjoy. these privilages, we can appregiate how much more such a protest meass there th&N With M®B .. 0 slsc juragil Foremost among thes¢ s Dr. m Liebknecht, one of the greatest leadâ€" ers of the Social Democtatic Purty in Germany, who, in the last <@lection, carvied the Kaiser‘s own constituency of Potsdam in face of the Government nng t:e :?en tl'motlllt.y of. the Ktu:;r and the direct . campaigning . of the Crown Prince. . He has had the cour LETER PAREmT s Coomnd Pnmt d uoo age of protest in the * Relchstag against the acton of his Government in embarking upon this war against the libertes of other people, but they would not.allow him to speak, .He handed in his speech in writing, but the President refused to insert it, in the records. And no wonder. He deâ€" nounced the war as having been "pre pared by the German and Austrian war parties, agting together in . the darkness of halfâ€"absolutism _ and . seâ€" cret diplomacy." _ He declared _ that "Germany the mosi. consplouous . @xâ€" ample of political reaction, has no mission as a liberator of nations." He eloped with notable protest:â€" , "Under protest against the war; mn those who‘ are responâ€" ‘{ 7 for it and have ¢aused it; against the capitalistic ‘ purposes., for wheh it is being. waged; ##â€" _ ainst the planx, : ation; ag _/ ainst the viol j E ‘the : neuâ€"‘/ trality of Belgium, Luremâ€" burg: against the absofute reign of the rights of war; m‘»me | sgcl‘:ldud golltlcnll‘ Tok the. Jt the ear duty, of w e sn P ernment and the ruling . clrn'i stand guilty, I shall votg Against the war credits asked for."‘., u... .. "Vorwaerts," the organ of the Soâ€" cialâ€"Democratic Party, | tells us tb?,t democratic control by the people would have prevented the war. The social democrats claims that when the war opened, the Government of Prusâ€" sia promised to abolish the three class ifranchise which deprives the workers |of any real representationâ€" in the {trenmches, the Government repudiated |the promise; and Dr, Liebknecht in |the Prussian Dijet, uttered his stern ; denunciation of the Government for ‘lits betrayal of the German soldiers. |He said, "Our soldiers will ‘clench ‘|their fists in the trenches as they |hear of their betrayal." * K Protest Will Become Stronger. ‘| ‘As the German people come to realâ€" ‘|ise that the awful sacrifices they have â€"\ been compelled to make in blood and s\ treasure were not required for the deâ€" t\ fence of the Fatherland, but ‘l:u’nu- ;| fy the military and political tions _|of their rulers for. worldâ€"power and conquest, and I?norlnr that militarism "land autocracy might stréngthén their "{hold in Germany itgelf,, the protest d\ will become stronger, more wideâ€" vy|spread and mote lnlhu;r: and when ;\ the prestige and power of the German y [ military forcen have been brokenâ€"as they must be broken in the interests of human libertyâ€"}he German people of human lllwr“dhe German people themselves, if posses the spirit of their fathere of 1848, will demand the overthrow of that autocracy which drenched: thoir ‘own ‘ fand . with ‘blood, ; and local treatments in which is a Farms for Sale CHRONICLEâ€" TELEGRAPH It enters over 3,000 homes evâ€" ery week and covers the field thoroughly. AUCTION SALE BILLS During the year 1914 fi'fi: per carried more auction Arg ts th '.I: ot?“ men an & er in Waterloo County m printed here on short mm.n mt.up.flfll Give us your order. Alex. Millsr, KC.,| Officers and Directors:â€" THE MERCANTILE Head Office, Waterioo Subscribed Capital ..$250,000 Deposit with the Domin=~ _ _ OO OUUOONONNribDNONN OOE George Diebel, President, Waterioo ~Allan Bowman, Viceâ€"Pres., Prestom, Dr. J. H. Webb, ® Waterloo J. Howard Simpson * Gueiph J. L. Wideman, > St. Jacobs Jamés Livingston, * Baden P. E. Shantt, = * Preston 8. B. Bricker, * > Waterloo Richard Roschman, â€" _ Waterico L. W. SHUH, B. E. BECHTEL, M-nu:or‘ inspector. C. A. BOEKHM, District Agent. Incorporated in 1863. TOTAL ASSETS, 318T DEC., 1914, OVER $860,000 Waterloo Mutual Fire Insurance Company The throniolsâ€"Telegraph . Bo You Appreciate First __ _ If so have your wants supâ€" plied here. We always keep on hand choice Beef, Pork, Lamb and Homeâ€"made Sausage All policies guaranteed _ by the Lancashire Insurance Comâ€" pany with Assets of $29,636,â€" 465.00. 4 Alfred Wright, Seoretary. C. A. BOEHM, DIST. AGT. Waterloo, Ont. , Phone 249 Why not buy your meats here and get the best ? EDGAR FISCHER Successor to J. B. Fischer. Phone 243. Waterloo jon Government ...$156,698.00 Wrappers Butter INCORPORATED 1875 CRRONICLEâ€"TELEQRAPN Waterioo, Ont. from us. The best quality of paper used and prices reasonable. Waterloo Order Your COMmPANY Class * Meats Cor. King and D;. G. MeINTOSH, (Successor to Conrad. BH Barrister, Solicitor, VA etc. Money to loan, Go#fm Odice Pegvernat , Blodks" D, 8. LBY, Barrister, & and Conveyancer, 6 Bank Building. â€"~Telophon® Berlin, Ont. * M barrintay , Block, Berlin. . . Graduate Qm autn) Suvgeons of ‘ um ur £ Office in Fiacherh W\ Dentistry practices in all its 2 & s tal D.D.8. ofi d IE Dt ot tised. Entrance ‘to ofice Osteopathic ‘ Graduate under Dr. € . dur of the science,â€" Editor Osteopathy 1909â€"13. » often cures where all else Chronic constipation, n on pane tile 8, Â¥ ‘ cessfully treated. ments. Offices, Room 203 w»cn-na Berlin, Ont, C £7 THE EMPLOYER‘8 | L h o Warentoo county & FREK LABOR BURMAG . . 59 King St. West, seriitu~.*~ We have vacancies for men and men in all lines of work: ~It P out of employmiht us at once. o charge tion of services rendered. . _ . >‘ o Ailircose of tho To: 1. 1 Diseases of the Waz, ~‘_ i Nose and Thromt.. c}. 2 4 SFE E. A. REID & CO., 43 Kust DR. WELLINGYON K. J Office Hours CLEMENT & ; v! ‘This is ms training ac . thorthand and N o Insrueecfo n are wo Pikte Ariuaies wm:q.oflmnl and ade If it Interent DR. 8. ECKBL, 5s nin Tomi. o9§ DR. CLAYTON W. W P JAME § C. FALL TER From Aug. 30th _5 BENTHAL /#3 Business UCards.. ~. % D. A. McLACHL L. 817 SEA, 8.A# J. A. “'\-‘l‘u ‘m‘e.mr,* t n Tele! t SR 08 ‘.’ '*l“. P C css ® REAL E8TATR &:‘ iÂ¥ w in x ki twilles ve 3 %2

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