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The Chronicle Telegraph (190101), 4 Oct 1917, p. 9

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f BY STEWART EDWARD WHITE. 3; Copyright, 1913, by Doubleday, Page & Co. ho n en t t es i l0 ucce en e t ie e t 0 ns EL0 t MB 0. P "If you hbad broken my arm that‘ time I should not have taken you," be remarked suddenly one evening. "Shouldn‘t blame you," said 1. "No! I wouldn‘t have wanted that kind of a man," be continued. "for I should doubt my control of him. .But you gave up." * This nettled me. "Would you have had me or any man bruteâ€"enough to go through with it?" I demanded. "Well"â€"he hesitatedâ€""It was agreed that it was to be fight, you remember. And, after all, if you had broken my arm it would have been my fault and not yours." Two young fellows used occasionally to join us in our swooping, plunging perch. ‘They were as unlike as two menâ€" could be, and yet already they had become firm friends. One was a slow, lauk, ague stricken individual from somewhere in the wilds of the great lakes, his face lined and brown as though carved from hard wood. his speed slow, his eyes stcady with a veiled sardonic humor. Iis companion was scarcely more.than a boy, and he came, 1 believe, from Virginia. | He was a dark, eager youth, with a mop of black shiny bair that he was always tossing back, bright glowing eyes, & great enthusiasm of manner and an imagination alert to catch fire. ‘The backwoodsman seemed attracted to the boy by this very quick and unsoâ€" phisticated bubbling of candid youth, while the boy most evidently worshipâ€" ed his older companion as a synabol of the mysterious frontiet. The northâ€" erner was named Rogers, but was inâ€" variably known as Yank. The southâ€" eroer had some such uame as Fairfax, but was called Johnny. and later in California, for reasons that will apâ€" pear, Diamond Jack. Yank‘s distinâ€" guishing feature was a long barreled |“pea shooter" rifle. He uever moved ten feet without it. | Jolhinny usually did most of the talkâ€" Ing when we were ali~ gathored toâ€" gether. Yank and I did the listening and Talbot the interpellating. Jobhuny swarmed all over himself like a pickâ€" pocket aund showed us everything he had in the way of history, manners, training, family. pride, naivete, expecâ€" tations and hopes. He prided himself on being a calm, phiegmatic individual, unemotional and not casily excited, and be coustantly took this attitude. It was a lovely joke. We had many long. quiet talks up there, but in thein all 1 learned nothâ€" ing, absolutely nothing, of my companâ€" jon. * "Of course," said be, "it won‘t be netessary to stay out more than a year. They tell me I can casily make $1,10° a day. But. you know, i am not easily moved by such reports"â€" be was at the time moving under a high pressure. at least ten tnote an Just new, however, I looked on the er ners of these contraptious with en vy and thought ourselves at a disad: vantage with only our picks, shovels and axes. As we drew southward the days beâ€" came insufferably warm. but the nights were glorious. Talbot and 1 liked to sleep on deck and generally camped down up near the bitts. ‘The old ship rolled frightfully, for she was light in freight in order to accommodate so many passengers, and the dark blue sea appeared to swoop up and down beneath the placid tropic moon. in one thing â€"they had all been devised by men who bad never seen any. but manufactured gold. 1 may add that 1 mever saw a machine of the kind aeâ€" tually at work in the dizzings. ue i on ol dnc iB Bd Bc ids dnc ind ts w lt ud l l 00 0 e t old l sn i t t 0 00 of the finest Teaâ€"producing country in the world. "If you had broken my arm 1 should not have taken you." bourâ€""I sball be satisBed with three zflnfl a day. AHowing 300 working #‘to the year, that gives me about Fresh from the Gardens o â€"â€"_â€" PBA 00 0 B 74 Sealed Packets Only. Try itâ€"it‘s delicious. â€" BLACK GREEN or MIXED. GOL D "Ohâ€"yesâ€"weil, make It a year autt a half, just to be ou the safe side." Johnny was eageriy anxious to know everybody on the ship with the excep tion of about a dozen from his own south. As far as 1 could see, they did not in the slightest degree difer ex:â€" cept in dress from any of the otber thirty or forty from that section, but Jobuny distinznished. He stiffened as though Yank‘s gun barrel had taken the place of his spine whenever one of these men was neur, and be was so eoldly and pointedly courteous that 1 would haveâ€"slapped bis confounded face if he had acted so to me. "Look bere. Johuny." 1 said to bin one day. "what‘s the matter with those fellows? They Jook ail right to e What do you know against thoem?" "L never laid eyes on theimm Lbefore t my life, sir." he replied, stifening per ceptibly. Of all overworked women probably the housewife is the hardest worked. She has so much to attend to, with very little help. â€" Her work can be lightened if she knows the value of system and she should i try and take & short rest in the daytime. | A physician who became famous almost ; around the__world, Doctor Piecrce, of | Buffalo, N. Y., the specialist in woman‘s . discases, for many years practiced mediâ€" ‘cine in a farming district. He there obâ€" | served the lack of system in the planning | of the work. _ 2 "Take that kink out of your tsco! 1 warned him. | "That wou i w« worth n cent with me!" Be langled. "I beg pardon. They are not sent men." "I don‘t know what you me:» gentlomen." said Lo "It‘s a wide > Rut lots of us bere areu‘t se Far, far from it But you seem to like uns." He knit his brows. "I can‘t exp‘ain. . They are the cla=~ of cheap politician that brings into dis repute the chivairy of the south, sir‘ Talbot and 1 burst into a shout e laugbter, and even Yank, leaning at tentively on the long barrel of bis pes vide, grinued fxiutly.> We eaught John ny vpâ€"on that word, and he was game enough | to take it well. _ Whenever something prftticular had bappened to be also southern we called it the chiv alry. The word caught hold, so that later it came to be applied as a gener ic term to the southorn wing of vena politiciins that early tried to contro‘ the new state of Californin ! _ If you are a sufferer, get Dr. Pierce‘s i inusi confess that Jt i haa nee. Johnny 1 should bave stepped mor: carefuliy with these mon. . ‘Fhey wer a dark, saave lot and dressed well. (}: fact. they nnd a half dozen ebvions‘s professional men alope in all that shir wore â€" what we would eall cixilize clothes. _1 do pot kyow which w more incongruotus, our ewin red shirt or the top hats, fowing skirts and lizt pantaloons of these quietly conrteon gentlemen. | They were quite as we armed as ourselves, however, wearit their revolvers beneath theis anmpi or carryingz short double pistois | ‘Tlw treated Jobimy with an droimesBy e agzerated courtesy and paid fiore : tention fo his hish airs. 1t va> eb ous, however. that he Was mileet a l'n.h‘?‘ Taibot from the If it is a headache, a backche, a senâ€" sation of irritability or twitching and untontrollable nervousness, something must be wromg with the head or back, a woman naturally says, but all the time the real trouble very often centers in the organs. In nine cases out of ten the geat of the difficulty is here, and a wome n should take rational treatinent for‘ ite eure. The disorder should be treated steadily and systematically with . Dr. Pierce‘s Favorite Prescription. _ For diseaes from which women suffer "Favorite Prescription" is a powerful re storative. During the last fifty years it has banished from the lives of tena of thou sands of women the pain, worry, misery and distress caused by these diseases . ud Inew ever e Jot and dressed well. [ ud a half dozen ebvions! men alope in all that shi we would eall eivilize doâ€" not kuow which swa i aewi 11 and ais ironical colments ou tae van wus points of discussion somebow conâ€" veyed no sting. He was continually accepting gifts of newspupersâ€"of which there were a baif a thousand or so brought aboardâ€"with every appearâ€" ance of receiving a favor. These paâ€" pers be carried down to our tiny box of a room and added to his bundle. 1 supposed at the time he was doing all this on Moliere‘s principle, that one gains more popularity by accepting a In the early morning one day we came in sight of a round, bigh bluff running. away. ‘The ship‘s man told us this was Chagres. This news caused a curious disinte gration in the ship‘s company. We had heretofore lived together a good huâ€" mored community. Now we immediâ€" ately drew apart into small suspiâ€" clous groups. For we had shortly to land ourselves and our goods and to obtain transportation across the isthâ€" mus, and each wanted to be abead of his ueighbor. Here the owners of much freight found themselves at a disadvantage. I began to euvy less the proprietors of those enormous or heavy machines for the separation of gold. Each man ran about on the deck collecting bustâ€" ly all his belongings into one pile. When he had done that he spent the rest of his time trying to extract defiâ€" nite promises from the harassed ship‘s officers that be should go ashore in the first boat. favor than by bestowing ‘Falbot and I sat on our few packâ€" azes and enjoyed the scene. The ship came to anchor and the sailors swung the boat down from the davits. The passengers crowded around in a dense, clamoring mob. We arose, shouldered our effects and quietly slipped around to the corresponding boat on the other side the ship. Sure enough, that also was being lowered. So that we‘and a dozen who bad made the same good guess, were, after all, the first to land. We beached in the mud and were at once surrounded by a host of little, brown, clamorous men. Talbot took charge and began to shoot back Spanâ€" ish at a great rate. Some of the litâ€" tle men bad a few words of Englisb. Qurâ€"goods were seized and promptly disappeared in a dozen «irections. I tried to prevent this, but could only collar one man at a time. All the Americans were swearing and threatâ€" ening at a great rate. I saw Johnuy, tearing up the beach after a fleet naâ€" tive, fall flat and full length in the mud, to the vast delight of all who beâ€" held. Finally Talbot plowed his way to me. "It‘s all settled." said be. "I‘ve made 2 bargain with my friend bere to take us up in his boat to Cruces for $15 apiece for four of=us." "Well, if you need two more, for heaven‘s sake rescue Johnny," I adâ€" vised. "He‘ll have apoplexy." j We hbailed Johnny and explained matters. Johnny was somewhat put to it to attain his desired air of imâ€" perturbable calm. â€" "They‘ve got every blistered thing I own and made off with It!" he cried. "Confound it, sir, I‘m going to shoot every saddle colored hound in the place if I don‘t get back my belongings!" fur through these swamps, if they do try to steal, and I don‘t believe they‘re stealing anyway. ‘The whole performâ€" unce to me bears a strong family reâ€" semblance to hbotel runners. . Here, compadre!" "Well, keep calm," advised Talbot "I dou‘t know the game down here, but it strikes me they can‘t get very Thereupon, our minds at rest, we reâ€" inrned to the landing to enjoy the wcese. ‘The second ship‘s boat had beached, and the row was going om, worse than before. â€"In the seething, cursing. shouting mass we caught sight of Yauk‘s tall figure leaniny «mpefâ€" turbably on his ride muzzle. We made our way to him. He talked a few moments with his Loatman. 4 That‘s right," be told us then. "Come on!" We walked along the little crescent of beach, looking into each of the boats in the long row drawn up on the shore. They were queer craft, dug out from the trunks of trees, with small decks in bow and stern, and with a low roof of palmetto leaves amidships. By the time we bad reached the end of the row we had collected all our efâ€" fects. Our own boatman stowed them in bis craft. "Got your buat yet?" Talbot shouted at him. "(Got nothin‘ vet but a beadaehe i»p the eanTs," Sammt rana. "Come with us, then. Where‘s your plunder ?" Yank stooped and swung to his shoulâ€" dep a small bundle tied with ropes. "She‘s all thar," said he. These matters settled, we turned with considerable curiosity to the village itâ€" self. It was all exotic, strange. . Eyvâ€" erything was different, and we saw it through the cyes of youth and romance as epitomizing the storied tropics. Johnny and 1 wandered about comâ€" pletely fascinated. Talbot and Yank did not seem so impressed. Finaly Talbot called a balt. ‘This i< all very well. If you kids like to look at yellow fever, blackjack and corruption, all right." said be "But we‘ve got to start pretty soon after noon; and in the meantime where do we eat?‘ A Tropical River. E returned through the town. It was now flled to overflowâ€" ing with our, compatriots. They surged every w here, full of comment and curiosity. The haif naked men and women with the cigars "They‘ve got our stuff, too," I addâ€" the wholly naked children and *~* CWronicle Telegraph, Waterlo® â€" October 4, 1917 ~~~~~ CHAPTER IV. FELT LIKE A NEW PFRSON After Taking Only One Box Of East Surr Harsou®, N. S. "It is with gredt pleasure that I write to tell you of the wonderful benefits 1 have received from taking "Fruitâ€"aâ€" tives". For years, I was a dreadful sufferer from Constipation and Headâ€" aches, and 1 was miserable in every way. Nothing in the way of medicines seemed to help me. Then I finally tried "Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives" and the effect was splendid. After taking one box, I feel like a new person, to have relief from those sickening Headaches". Mzs. MARTHA DEWOLFE. Talbot‘s earnest Inquiries finally get us to the Creseemt botsl 1t was a hut exactly like all the rest save that it bad a floor. From its uame 1 s¢ppose it must bave been kept by a white man, but we never zot near cuough through the crowd to ind out. With out Talbot we should have gove bun gry with many others, but he inquired around until we found a native willing to feed us. So we ate on an upturned hencoop outside a native but. ‘The meal consisted of pork. bread and waâ€" He and I reâ€"entered the village, but a fiftcen minutes‘ search failed to disâ€" close our man. ‘Therefore we returned to the beach. A crowd was gathered close about some common center in the unmistakable restless manner of men about a dog fight or some other kind of a row. We pushed our way in. 50c. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size, 25¢. At all dealers or sent postpaid by Fruitâ€" aâ€"tives Limited, Ottawa. vor enifvenea. We strolled to the beach at the hour appointed with our boatman. He was not there, nor any other boatman. Johnny and Yauk were backed up against the palmetto awning of one of the boats in an attitude of deadly and quiet menace. Not two yards away stood four of our we‘l dressed friends. Nobody as yet displayed a weapon, exâ€" cept that Yank‘s long ride lay across the hollow of his left arm instead of butt to earth, but it was evident that lightnings were playing. ‘The boatâ€" man, who bad appeared, alone was saying anything, but he seemed to be supplying language for the lot. _ "Never mind." said Ward. "I‘ll know him if I see him. 1‘ll go look him up. You fellows find the boat with our things in it." Jobnny‘s teuse, alert attitude relaxed a little when he saw us. "Well?" â€" inquired _ Ward _ easily. "What‘s the trouble?" "Yauk and I found our goods dumpâ€" ed out on the beach and others in their place." said Jolhnny. A PERFECT MEDICINE FOR LITTLE ONES "L know nothing about it,". replied one of them shortly. "We hired this boat, and we intend to bave it, and no whippersnapper is going to kecp us from it." Baby‘s Own Tablets are a perfect medicine for little ones. They reguâ€" late the bowels; sweeten the stomach thus drive out constipation, indigestion break up colds and simple fevers and make teething easy. Concerning them Mrs. . John Babineau, â€" Brest, N.B., writes, "I have used Baby‘s Own Tabâ€" lets and have found them a perfect medicine for little ones." The Tabâ€" lets are sol&â€"by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from the Dr. Williams â€" Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Coal dealers report receipts to date in excess of last year, but there are still large numbers of citizens with practically none in their cellars and no assurance as to when they can get a supply. This signifies a rather unâ€" equal division of what is here. "So you proceeded to reverse matâ€" ters. How about it?" he inquired pleasantly of the four mon. "L see." said Talbot | pleasantly "Well, excuse me a moment while 1 talk to our frieud _ Ne addressed the man in Spanish and received sheort sullen repie® Le says." Talbot es plained t ns,)zl-hm beâ€" never sawou hefore Jn his 1f MINARD‘S _ LINIMENT _ CURES DANDRUFF. (To be Continued.) o bre hevier sawou i1 cever agreed to From "Ye Olde Sugar Loafe" of grandmother‘s day, to the sparklingu“Extn Granulated" in your own cutâ€"glass bowl, Redpath g‘;:’;a:'xpand three times daily, for over half a century, on of Canadian tables. . widhi ie Oc t tss lt td e ts lt l ho t e t Bupposing that you keep a cow that gives five thousand pounds of milk in a year, for which you receive seventy dollars cash, how much profit does that cow make? This is not a riddle but simply a query that every dairyâ€" man should be in a position to answer. Leaving aside the "higher accounting" side of revenue and expenses per cowâ€"those persistent items of rent, interest, taxes, depreciation, ete.â€"and taking only income from milk or fat and cost of feed, are you then in a poâ€" sition to say definitely that each cow you keep does make a good clear proâ€" fit above feed cost? Whether the feed is valued at forty or eighty dollars, whether the income is fifty or one hundred and twenty dollars is there such profit that a fair return is made to you for the lahour expended? For if revenue and <xâ€" pense just balance showing no margin of profit at all, there must surely be something wrong; your labour has to be paid for. + ; pense just balance showing no margin| Dr, . Klotz is the third son of Otto of profit at all, there must surely be|Kiotz, Waterloo County pioneer. He something wrong; your labour has to/was:â€"the winner of a scholarship at a be paid for. > public examination in this city in 1865 Milk jand feed record forms may belwhich entitled him to free tuition at had free on application to the Dairyithe Galt Grammar School. In 1869 Commissioner, Ottawa, so that the proâ€" he matriculated at the University of fit made by each cow may be ascerâ€" Toronto in Engineering and Medicine tained. Perhaps some cows wod!ldang won the $120 scholarship.in the show profit if fed better, some won‘t.jatter. He graduated in Engineering Many men in all provinces on the COWfrom Michigan University in 1872. Afâ€" testing register at Ottawa show thirty ger spending some time in private exâ€" and sixty dollars clear profit per cow ploration of the north shore of Lake above feed cost. You may have made guperjor Dr. Klotz was in private pracâ€" more than that, if you made les8, W@Stjce in Guelph and Preston until 1879 it entirely the cow‘s fault? when he accepted a position in the e e Dominion Government service. Dr. THE MARKETS AT A GLANCE. Klotz was a delegate for Canada to the f ; Femmac ucce Hague in 1907, at Zermatt in 1909, at The following comment on the marâ€" Manchester in 1911, and was in Engâ€" ket situation as regards food stuffsland on his way to Petrograd in 1914 will appear in Canadian Grocer thisas delegate for Canada at the Internaâ€" ‘week: + tional Seismological Association meetâ€" _ In no line of grocers‘ ing when the war broke out. Dr. Klotz supplies has there been is a brother of Jacob Klotz of Ahrens Hogs showed an advance during the week, as did butfer; indeed the market for this commodity is extr‘emely strong though from just what s(:rce the deâ€" mand springs, the trade Has not beon able to fathom. Eggs have been pler. tiful during the week, and consequent ly there has been no change in price. The general feeling, however, is that an advance is probable, and that in the not â€"very distant future. Honey has advanced in price, and the end of the advainces is not yet in sight. The supâ€" ply is exceedingly short and the deâ€" mand more than ordinarily good. to come near a full pack. Coffee shows graph an easier feeling on the primary marâ€" _ _ _| kets, but this feeling is more or less offset by increasing freight rates, so that little d&line in prices is to be exâ€" pected. Tea on the other hand is deâ€" cidedly stronger and might show an advance at almost any time. I In no line of grocers‘ ing when the war broke out. Dr. Klou‘ supplies has there been is a brother of Jacob Klotz of Ahrens any very notable changes during the street. | past week.â€"The season is usually conâ€" ooo en mm 1 sidered a dull one by the trade, and ANNOUNCEMENT certainly it has given no sensational h o maina a c rice of news demonstrations during the past week. ha':hc‘:-pmo:‘le:s:gmpe:al:atonew sitmm Changes there have been, but thesein Canada in that the newspaper buyâ€" have been of a limited character. Riceing public are showi‘ng n:orc:,‘ d“(illl:nl‘- has shown a stronger feeling, and is ‘DAtion and care in selecting their showing advances on practically all'lj: i:,’{dr?fi:;:‘g':g:.l;:;;:;n::z f;:)l;:‘ne:t- markets, and tapioca is quoted as verythe price represented by the lowest scarce. Peanuts, too, are scarce and valued coin in our currency, namely, have advanced two cents. The report the oneâ€"cent piece. in Canade i of the canning situation is far from fa:?mhfnplz). re(:::‘i:;:eg'd:?:;y u?e i’l‘vrl; s:ocl: satisfactory. Beans, the latest cOMâ€"trage. The World‘s market prices modity to be reported, are only a 12% are accurate and accepted by both buyâ€" per cent. pack, which will leave large®" 1{“:“’ :;":l‘;i "“) (i):tal:o;norning vews e e 0 e margins _ in “P orders. Tomato ‘“dpaper is received gn almost all rural corn prospects are far from encouragâ€"routes on day of publication, and can ing, while fruits also are not expectedbe obtained with the Chronicle Teleâ€" The first draft under the Militia serâ€" vice act is to be called qut, according to present arrangements, on the 10th of October. ‘ Customs returns for the Dominion for the past six months showed a gain of more than eighteen millions over the corresponding period of last year. Fish has been scarce with a tendenâ€" cy to stronger prices, though halibut is the only variety that actually shows an advance. â€" Business during the week in all lines has been reported uniformâ€" ly good. Potatoes during the week have been in good supply and ranged much lo: wer, and will probably go lower still. Fruit has been plentiful during the week, especially in the softer fruits. _ On The Farm wWA$s IT THE COW‘S FAULT? DR. 0. L. KLOTL _ © o cmmIT Been Appointed Chief Astronomer for Dominâ€" \ ion Observatory. Ottawa, Oct. 1.â€"Dr. Otto Julius: Klotz, LLD., FR.AS., has been .pi pointed Chief Astronomer for the Doâ€" minion Observatory. Dr. Klots enterâ€" the service of the Dominion Governâ€" ment in 1879, and since 1908 has been Assistamt Chief Astronomer. Born in Preston, Ont:, and educated in the Galt rammar School and the University of oronto Dr. Klotz has held many high sitions in the literary and scientific world of the Dominion. He is the auâ€" hor of numerous authoritative works n scientific subjects. WAS BORN IN PRESTON mom uOW LAAT l""“m" "“”l not work. o thin, pale % weighed . agha pounds an |}%& bed mos p l l time. I b l S l| ing Lydia K Je " ham‘s V e e }“« KS es!)] Compound "/ TA s .2 uB ‘ months 3. *@" "y~/ â€" Lf | weighed 13 2 L. PE * '\lfl!' ‘ do .“ + . es aew!)J Compound and five . 7# ;:. fu mt;nh:; :8::. tenrd: vâ€" F M > * *fi vo® pou 4 £ “w‘i‘" I do all the houseâ€" work and washing for eleven and I can truthfully say Lydia E. Pinkh‘::d\:eg- etable Compound has been @ end to me for I would have been in my grave today but for it. I would tell all woâ€" men suffering as I was to try your valuâ€" able remedy.‘"‘â€" Mrs. Wa. GrEEN, 332 8. Addison Street, Indianapolis, Indiana. ‘There is hardly a neighborhood in this country, wherein some woman has not ‘found health by usirig this good oldâ€" fashioned root and herb remedy. If there is anything about which you ’wonld like special advice, write to the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Her Health Restored by Lydia Indianapolis, Indiana. â€" " My health was so peor and my cohstitution so run is down that I could '"" ””l not work. I was P thin, pale and weak, &;figfl weighed but 109 utd Cl pounds and was in I';*fi bed most of the 6 .mt time. I began takâ€" td lll ing Lydia E. Pinkâ€" Sppaiiie: ~ ham‘s Vegetable WIFE T00 ILL TO WORK IN BED MOST OF TIME E. Pinkham‘s at $5.50, »% Conveyancer, etc. Money to I Office, Molson‘s Bank Building, W Cor. King and Foundry Sts., Kitcheng® E. P. CLEMENT, K. C. etc. Money to loan. . oau‘fi'.g Offlceâ€"Pequegnat _ Blocgk, Market, Frederick St., Kitchener. D. G. McINTO8H, . BARRIO@TAR, Notary, Conveyanser, ota, 13 Web D. 8. BOWLBY, B.A., L.LBR Barrister, Solicitor, .Notary P and Conveyancer. Office Mercl Bank Buildine. Telephonse No. Kitchener, Ont. â€" Kitchener, Ont. .. Graduate Chicago College Dem tal Surgery and Royal 0‘- Dental Surgeons of Toronto. M Office in new Molsons Bank hllll, Waterloo. _ Dentistry practices in its branches. Dentist, LD.8., W tal Surgeons, D.D.9. , ' sity. All branches of dentistry pme tised. OfMce over Lang Bros. ster®, Kitchener, Ont. SEE E. A. REID & CO., 43 Kast THE EMPLOYER‘8 AS80OGIATION _ OF WATERLOO COUNTY FREK LABOR BURHAU 59 King St. West, Kitchener. â€"~>, We have vacancies fot men and W# â€" men in all lines of work. If y&ém out of employment communicate us at once. . No charge fof t ‘ tion of services renderéd. WFRIE, SERBTCE M URRRUERZ. sters, Solicitors, Etec. Money Offices: Uvstairs in the A Block, Kitchener Kitchener. er St. E., Kitchener. Phone 198. LLB., W. H. Gregory, nomical Block, H __ Digeases of the Kaz, Nose and Throat. King St. Hast. > Ki sttR CLEMENT & CLEMENT C3 Barristers, Bulicitors, Notarie® _ St., Kitchener, Phone 387, for bas gains in Real Estate. Open eveniags Office Hours 9 to 12, 130 to & wa . King Street C _ Office, Waterioo Mutual Bullé M‘ Ing. Established 1864. MILLAR, SIMS8 & GREGORY A. L. BITESAR, 8. A. (Successor to Conrad B/ FIRE INSURANCE COMmMPANY THE MERCANTILE Head Office, Waterloo Subscribed Capital ...$250,000 Deposit with the Dominâ€" ton Government ..$10@,698.00 DR. 8. ECKEL, LD.8., D.DA WM. McNALLY, B.A., LL.B. DR. CLAYTON W. WELLS All polities guaranteod _ by the Lancashire Insurance Cam® pavy with Assets of $29,880,â€" Professional GENERAL INSURANCE AGENT Private Funds to Loan. SCELLEN & WEIR Business Cards. Barister and Solicitor 28 King Street East, JAMES C. INCORPORATED 1418 Bicex. Say se We J. A. HILLIARD . Alfred REAL ESTATLR "~ PXGE NINE Phone 1

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