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The Chronicle Telegraph (190101), 4 Apr 1918, p. 9

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The Vision. 74 THIN ten hours men were at work rebuil‘ing. Within ten f days the burned ared was all rebuilt. It took us just about the former period of time to determine that we Wey‘d be unable to save anyâ€" thing frW® <he wreck and about the l imtter perted for the general public »to Ianug it out. uie 5 pushing a passage through the byâ€" standers, contemplated three jagged, tottering brick w:=i!s, a heap of smolâ€" dering debrit .ud a twisted tangle of jron work. ‘This represented all that remained of the Ward block. ‘The chihee of Wind that bad sated the shantics had_destroyed our fortuhe. ug. A few wisps of stll 6 a few codls glowed, m beside nothing ‘ remained to indicate the laying out of the former plan. over across a dead acreage of .rose‘ here aud there the remains of jsolated brick walls They looked :fi: the eddring mists and smoke Ke ‘tuicient ruins separited by wide A gatred dully avtoss the Wwaste arca, taking deep breaths, resting. my mind nurmgb. ‘Then zradually it was borne in or me that the Plaza itsélf ookéd rathâ€" er more empty sided than it should. A "Caun you make out where Higgins store Irll"‘ one of them hailed me. "I dgg n nttle knunty nest door an:! some gold dust Figure 1 might pan it out of the ushes if 1 could only Ond the cold band gripped my beart. i began to skirt the smoldering embers of the whauties and wooden warebouses tryâ€" ing to follow where the streets had been. Men were prowling about ereryâ€" where. blackened by snioke. their clothâ€" tig: torn and burned. ffifii‘lln was full of people. I made hym to the northerly corner and, Talbot made desperate efforts for a foothold ard.in succession interviewed all the big men. They were sorry, but they .were frm. Each had been hard hit by the fire; each had himself to cover; each was forced by circumâ€" stances to grasp every advantage. Again they were sorty. â€" "Yek, they are!" cried Talbot. "They just reach out and grab what ought to be fiy profits. Well, it‘s the game. 1‘d do the same myself." RBy that night we knew that Talbot had lost every plece of property hbe ownedâ€"or thought he owned. The deâ€" strtiction of the Ward block swept away every cent of income, with the exception of the dividends from the Wharf company stock. ‘These latter could not begin to mect the obligations of interest and agreed payments on the other prope:ty. The state of affairs became_commonâ€" ly known in about ten days simply be eause in those rapid times obligations were never made nor money lent for tonger fertods than one month. At the end of each thirty days they had to be renetred. KNaturally ‘Talbot could not renew them. 3 We knew all that long in advance, and we faced the situation with some fitmor. "Well. bors," said Talbot, "here we are. About a year ago, as I remember it, our assets were «@ bundle of newsâ€" papers and less than $100. Haven‘t eten got a newspaper now, but I féckon among us we.could just about serape up the $100." * uen on lip uit ol ut will be the g raie, on _ ay wa llm that br mm f‘u;m Nimsell arch or Aj rarly all hi ve months n h%:ha greéat test of a life and death on ‘ho Western front. In the ay walks of life, it is the spring t thiat Hlmhlll ‘U;‘Otnh. .(’)ne of the ns why the runâ€"down man A hlnmn in a bad state olahenh.h im arch or Aiprll. is because he has spent r‘rly all his hours for the (-ast four or ve months penned "fr within the walle of housd, factory or oflicn. It is the reaâ€" gon toi our diminished resistance â€"that I8, lack of ontâ€"door I!fr, coupled with pethaps overâ€"eating, lack of good exerâ€" ¢lse, insufficient sleep, and constipation. In other words, we keep feeding the furnace with food but do not take out the "clinkers." and our fire does not burn ln"lx,h'.ly. Always keep the liver active. here is nothing better for health than rlflng an occasional mild lazative, perâ€" lxs once a waok ; such a one as you can get a* :h‘ drug store, made up of Mayâ€"apple, jalap, aloss, (sncarâ€"conted, tiny, easily faken), which has stood the gt of fifty years of al;\pmvalâ€"n:mely. Ir. Pierce‘s Pleasant Peliets. But for the T'SPrlng Fever." the {nm-rll runâ€"down eohdition, ‘the lack of ambition. the * Bine8," one should. tike a course of sreatment every sprin!: such a standard tonic as Dr. lrrn's Golden Medical Disâ€" edvery. how td be had in tablet form in fifty:cent vials. Watch thv1;mvln go Ing along the street. here‘s no v‘;m vmm‘y. A vitaltzing tonic such a#, this vegetable extract of Dr. Pioree‘s aim you the power to force yoursaif action. . The brain reponds to the mew blood in cireniation, and thas you‘re réady to make a fight against .flla*a- tion which holds you in bondage. Try now ! Don‘t wait! Toâ€"day is the Ay to n. Gain a little "pep," and ll’.h 100 ive. Vim and \-immf are the Wa¥¥nvd) ant.hankine af a haalths hoiÂ¥ laugb and live. Vim and vitality are th®e _ "fpyo Military Se Mitfeal ont poothon 0 n heallly Pel‘ ncrotore. nondns " inctrnctione . i8 a éyn ..‘.8{.",':..}3",.‘,‘.'. h‘fi.‘mg eour’- Registrars in take immediate steps ims‘that comes with good th. to call up such men. _ I hid no time to help him and left ind prowling around seeking for a "I‘te got nearer $2.700 in my belt," I ~IN THE SPRING GOL D ed fercely and completely and in ‘uf food had died down to almost CHAPTER XXXH. 14 BY STEWART EDWARD WHITE. Co~ryright 1918, by Doubleday, Page & Co. rap i nAfi un t 10 s isnn 0t ts c id I listened to this speech with growâ€" ing indignation, and at its conclusion I rose up full of what I considered rightâ€" eous anger. My temper is very slow o rouse, but when once it wakes it takes possession of me. "ILook hbere, you fellows," I cried, very red in the face, they tell me, "you answer me a few questions. Are we or are we not partners? Are we or 22g we not friends? Do you or do you not consider me a low lived, white livered, mangy, good for nothing yellow pup? Why. confound your â€" pusilianimous souls, what do you mean by talking to me in that fasbion? For just about 2 cents I‘d bust your fool necks for you â€"every one of you!" 1 glared vindicâ€" tively at them. "Do you suppose 1‘d make any such proposition to any of youâ€"to ask you to sneak off like & whipped cur, leaving me to take the"â€" *"We‘re tailked that over, Frank," said be, "and we‘ve come to the conciuâ€" wlon: that you roust keep that and go home, just as you planned to do. You‘re the only man of us who has managed to keep what be has made. Jobuny falls onrbo! and leaves his in the bottom of the Sacramento; Yank gets himself busted in a road &gent row; Iâ€"1â€"well, 1 blow soap bubbles. You‘ve kept at it steady and strong and reliable. and you deserve your good tuck. You shouldn‘t lose the fruits of your labor because we, each in our manner, have been assorted fools." "Hold on, Frank." interposed Talbot soothingly. "I didn‘t mean"â€" ment, then ‘Talbot spoke up,, picking his words very carefully. "Didn‘t you?" I cried.; "Well, what did you méan? ‘Weren‘t you trying to make me out a quitter?" 1 had sue ceeded in working loose my heavy gold belt, and I dashed it on the table in front of them. "There! Now, you send for some gold scales right now and you divide that up! Right here! Hang it all, boys," I ended. with what to a cynical bystander would have seemed rather a funby slump into the pathetic, "I thought we were all real friends. You‘ve hurt my feelings." It was very young and very ridicu lous and perbapsâ€"I can say it from the vantage of fifty yearsâ€"just a liitle toschieg. At any rate. when 1 bad finished my comrades wére looking 14 all directions, and Talbot cleared his throat a number of times before he replied. > "Why, Frank," be said gently at last, "of course we‘ll take itâ€"we nevet dreamedâ€"of courseâ€"it was stupid of us, I‘ll adimit Naturally I see just how you feel." â€" "It comes to about $700 apiece, don‘t it?" drawled Yank. "What are you going to do with your shares, boys?" asked Talbot after awhile. "Going back home or mining? Speak up, Yank." "I‘ve been figzering." he replied. "And, when you come right down to it, what‘s the use of going back? Ain‘t it just an idee we got that it‘s the proper thing to do? What‘s the matter with this country any wayâ€"barring mining ?" "Barring mining?" achoed Talbot. "The deuce with mining!" said Yink. "It‘s all right for a vécation, but it ain‘t noways a white man‘s stiddy work. Well, we had our vacation." The cotmmonplace remark saved the situation from bathos, as I am now certain shrewd old Yank knew it would. "What then ?" * "I‘m going to take up a farm up thar whar the Pine boys is settled, and I‘m going to enjoy life reasonable. Thar‘s good soil, and thar‘s water; thar‘s pleasant prospects and lots of game and fish. What more does a man want? And what makes me‘ sick is that it‘s been thar all,the time and it‘s only just this minute T‘ve tome to see *Then you‘re not going back to the mines ?" "Not any!" stated Yank emphatically, "Nor home?" "Mines for you, Johnny, or home?" asked Taibot. "Me, home?" cried Johnny. "Why"~ he checked himself and added more quletly: "No; I‘m not going home. There‘s nothing there for me but a good time, when you come right down GATEGORY B _ MEN OF CLASG 1 T0 DON KHAK! "A military defmand for men _ for railway construction and other simiâ€" lar work has arisen, and it has, thereâ€" fare, become necessary to draft all men in medical category B. in res pect of whom no other grounds for exemption exist. "The Military Service Conncil is, thorniore. issning _ instructions _ to Ottawa, March 29.â€"Responding to a, demand from the military anthoris ties, the Military Service Council has decided to call up for _ service men in medical category B under the Military Service Act. Category B men. are liable for overseas, but not for commbatant service. They are being called out because of the necessity of securing more men for railway construction and similar service. The official memorandum follows: An embarrassed silence fell for a moâ€" Yank spat accurately out the open had some sort of an idea of extending this express service next year." "And you*?" Talbot turned to me. "I." said I firmly, "am going to turn over my share in a business partnerâ€" ship with you, and in the meantime I expect to get a job driving team with John McGlynn for emough to pay the boui. Illlll while 'you :'uflo And that goes," I added warningly. ‘Thank you, Frakk," replied Talâ€" bot, and I thought I saw his bright eye dim. He held silent for a moment. ‘"Do yeu know," be said suddenly, "I believe we‘re on the right track. It isn‘t the gold. That is a bait, a glitâ€" tering bait, that attracts the world to these shores. It‘s the country. The gold brings them, and out of the hordes that come some, like us, will stick. And after the gold is dug and scattered and all but forgotten we will find that we bave fallen heirs "Besides which I quit mining some time ago, as you remember," went on Johnuy, "due to an artistic aversion to hard work," he added.. "Any plans?‘ asked Talbot, "I think I‘ll just drift up to Sonoma and talk things over with Danuy Ranâ€" to an empire." fresh gold is easy to get. but almighty hard to Leep." "You never said a truer word thin that, Johnny," I put in. (By W. A. Willison, Correspondent of| Hogs in Alberta. O L. DEVfiL the Canadian Press in Flanders.)‘ 2Lz * t Canadian Army Headquarters,| There is an increase of 35. per| drrg March 30.â€" From early last â€" nighticent. in the hog pofiulat!qn of Alberâ€"| The until six this morning the noise of ta, Hon. Duncan Marshall declared‘|the im; guns has been â€"persistent upon the@t a méeting of Alberta stock breedâ€"}Dr Hu whole front from the south to Hill°"s: §8 ® _ cattle a 70 in the north. _ Steadily for overi At the same meéting, G. H-;HL};";QD""’ bi trench mortars and machine guns;‘ mo en _â€" ; % maintaincd their fire on thousands of; e q yards of front against the enemy: ; trenches, _ support and assembly: ' ki "Y36 reas, communications and strong: k ~oints. At eleven o‘clock and again & at five thirty our â€" artillery fire in & s creased to battle intensity, the enâ€" $ ; . emy assembly and . concentration A K reas and communication roads beâ€" k f h ‘ng rakbd with creeping barrages.; The intensity and duration of the: ire was such that no enemy attack@ P bys Aeveloped north of Oppy. Foe Raiders Foiled. ; d k 4 Before, the great battle began two| ( ) A" $ nemy attempts were made to raid d 4 \ , our fines. _ At one point an enemy} F party was sent over to see if â€" our; ;\ « Dear c front line was occupied. It was!i _ _\ challenged by one of our bombing: \, Â¥ at Hom' patrols. _ The enemy attacked the| g comulif & ' vost. ‘In the fighting which followed | 3 _ <@# C £. *"~"yâ€"" ‘he boche was driven out of our} :; _ f f trenches by rifie fire and pursued byg â€" & KGOP a Canadian bombing squad. Two : ~ * prisoners were captured and numer ; _ . or “l ous casualties were inflicted on the |\ A Hun. Our casuaities were nil. Ass 7 t 8"”“ to It. And mines? It strikes me that GANADIAN FIRE _ â€" REPES ENEMY Another raid against our positions was completely defeated, with estiâ€" mated enemy casualties of twenty. The raids were preceded by heavy artillery and trench mortar barrages. A Perfect Treatment For This Eczema; so bad that my clogKd Wwould be wet through at times. For four months, I suffered terribl® I could get no relief until I tried *Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives. and ‘Sooths Salvg‘ The first treatment gave me reliet, Altogether, I have used three boxes of ‘Sootha Saiva‘ and two of ‘Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives‘, and am entirely well" G. W. HALL. Both these sterling remedies are sold by dealers at 5Mc. a box, 6 for §2.50, or sent on receipt of price by Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives Limited, Ottawa. "Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives‘‘ is also put up in a trial size which sells for 25¢. Perhaps you know a man or woman whose life is made a torment by Rhenâ€" matism, Backache, Sciatica, or Swolien Joints. Dow‘t let it continue, for Gin Pills wi‘l surely bring that longedâ€"for relief. Y.«1don‘t have to buy Cin Fills to try the:n. Write fo: a fâ€"se nmxl;. Address the National Ing & Chemical Co. of Canada Timited, fnflmto; or if you live in the Unitel stites wnte to NiDraâ€"Co inc., 208 Mam 3t., Baffalo, AT 60 ENJOYING PERFECT HEALTH By the time a man or woman is 60, the kidneys and bladder feed a little help to keep them in good working order. Rheumatism and backache so often accompany the later years of life, most people have an idea health and vigor finnnot be expected much after the itieth year. ® As amatter of fact there is no basis for these fears, we could show a number of lem-r;'fmflhg our contention that if GIN PILLS are takeh to keep the urine normal, prevent colds settling on the kidneys or bladder, and ward off Rhewâ€" matic atticks, almost everyone can enjoy perfect health at this late period. To quote from a letter received from a prominent Consulting Engineer of New York Cityâ€"*Your gemedy I find, at 0) years of age, to give Frfect relief from the Kidney IH(F Bladder troubles incident to one of my age." $00N RELNEY . (==â€"â€"ss#=â€">=~>= THE END. "* % ‘ I A bunch of steers from . Carstairs ‘uu on Calgary market ‘for .$12.25, the â€"highest price ever paid there. They were all grain fed, and m ed about 1,700 pounds. One larly big steer tipped the:> ~soales ‘gt 1,820 pounds, gnd realized $220,60, The total revenue of all urlc':l‘lx?‘ al products in Alberta for 1917 f ed thu::ormour siim of $261;08%.â€" 954. This was an increase of _‘ more‘ than â€"wingty million dollars over the total revenue of all agricuitural , ducts in the Province for the mgg ing year. . fic BRITISH EGG AND ‘ . GOâ€"OPERATION FOR INCREASED POULTRY IMPORTS.! rRODUCTION OF FOOD STUFF. In â€"916 Britain‘ imported 15.386% ; ‘Canagiansâ€"a ‘re;tâ€" many _ Canaâ€" 448 ‘Ibs. of dressed poultry, of which{atinsâ€"haven‘t yet realized that we 6,1744,976 Ibs. went from China -m‘l.“e at war. The same extravagances 5,890.610 Ips. from the United StAt! ;. ; 2 »o4 sbohos The numn tm In 1915 British imports _ of | Trish egegs were valued at nearly $24,000,â€" 000. Danish supplies of the same totâ€" alled $9,317,000, and Russian $8,749,â€" An Amerfean poultryman says he} finds that it pays to keep a dish‘ or hopper of good dry bran always within reach of the chicks. It preâ€" vents excessive hunger should the feeding hour be delayed, makes~ the" best material for the growth of bone and muscle, and as it is always dry | cannot sour or ferment or be eaten too rapidly, * ' The following disinfectant white, wash may be used to put _ the pouk try house and fixtures in a canitary condition: Five. quarts cream of lime, one quart keroseme; one pint. coal tar disinfectant an@ equal ‘ parts . of water. This is applied with .a force: pump if possible, as this method will drive the material into every part of the interior of the house. The doors, and windows are left open for a uple of hours,." iy\ order vfllat&': thea. house may become,thoroughly dry. ‘ Hogs in Albefta. y»y , . _ In 1917 China exported 44,944 cas, es of fresh eggs, 12,347,867 Tbs. of iyo- zen eggs, 7,692.000 Ibs. of liquid eggs and 2,352,000 Ibs. of Gried. It is reported 100,000 dozen eggs were recently exported fromâ€"Califorâ€" nia to Wellington, New Zeslq\dgqng sold readily on that market at 54c & dozen. There is likely to be:â€"a, good market for United States and Canaâ€" dian‘ Pacific coast of freshâ€"gathered eggs ~hout next May and June, the off season in New Zealand. ‘ WHITEWASH FOR LBERTA‘S FARM REVENUE INTERESTING EGG FIGURES. BRAN AS CHICKEN FEED. POULTRY HOUSES. FOR â€" 1917. and Garden râ€" | The ‘purpose of pure breeding is d‘j the improvement of grade herds, says 4â€"} Di ‘Hubert‘ Work of Colorado. _ All _{cattle gre scrubs unless they have a T“ re bred gire or dam; then they 4â€" ‘goco'm_e grades, and it _ necessarily i: Matching chicks in incubators is the better way, for several reasons. | Among these may be l:nuolod the ’ orm chance en the chicks .‘%w qfhto‘ethuv:ll of one ‘lt“o’ .3 under‘ e uxqoeqn‘ulou \iwhicks‘ are hatched with hens m j are Nsually of several sizes, and unâ€" Jess particular attention is given to them, the older ones take most of the ]féed, run over the smailer anes and rease in size at the expense of the Lyounger flocks, . _ :+ Canadiansâ€"a great many | Canaâ€" \@fansâ€"haven‘t yet realized that we ‘are at war. The same extravagances |â€"in food and clothesâ€"the same inâ€" idul:enmâ€"in amusements and idleâ€" «nessâ€"and the same lack of concenâ€" | tration of effort are in evidence and, lln many cases, to a grefiter extent than they were in late 1914 and early 1915. Are we going to waken up, and when? After the Huns have won? Or are weâ€"all of usâ€"going to help beat 't.hem? We,all of us, are asked this : year to save our money to help in future Government Loans. There will have to be more, probably many of them, 1 and vse all of us, are being â€" asked, begged, to help increase and conâ€" â€"serve our food supply. ment#k Farm at . Lacombe, claimed that a saving of 100 per cent. in the production of pork cofld b effected by the use of rape pasturage for hogs. INCUBATOR AND UNIFORMITY i cary. But that ideal condition, absolâ€" tely necessary for a perfect effiâ€" ciency in Food Production, isn‘t posâ€" sible without a long educative camâ€" paignâ€"and in the meantime our solâ€" diers, our friends, our allies are hunâ€" There are thousands of men, of boys of women and of girls in Canâ€" adaâ€"in Torontoâ€"who, if they would Sorego selfishness for a few . months, could be induced to help wonderfully in this w rk of increasing food proâ€" duction. A better understanding, more coâ€" operation . between the urban and rural population, is all that is necesâ€" Can‘t the urban population this summer â€"commencing in Aprilâ€"the men.. women, girls and boys, throw off this selfish state and realize that all farmers aren‘t "pikers," and can‘t the rural population realize that all cty people aren‘t ."dubs," and that even a "dub" by kindly encourageâ€" ment might belp. Even that preliminâ€" ary stage of co operation would work wonders. _ We, al of us might, by | slightly tightening our.belts, save others from tightening theirs: too painfully, and might have an excuse for feeling, when the Hun is whipped; that we helped in the whipping. f DEVELOPMENT DEPENDS . 9 ~ ~._ON PURE BREEDING. Mrs. Tells How She w.c.'En.vl.,a. E. work !c-oullkmu'ighlg others if they will give it a fair â€"Mrs. LizziE CoURTNEY, 108 8th Ave., West, Oskaloosa, lows. _ _ _ eept hn ani frie e ham‘s Vegetable ound, a trial. For rdd vice Z:fig E. Pinkham edicine Co., The result of its long upcrr:& is ut your service. follows that the greater number of pure bred crosses the higher grade. . It is possible though the use _ of pure bred sires to practically breed out the 50 per cent. of blood imparted to the offspring of the first cross, but it will never be possible to regisâ€" ter as pure bred such a descendant no matter how far removed, because it is not possible to fix a starting This weakMess in the beef producâ€" ers‘ business, as illustrated by Mr. Holtby, was recognizdd by beef breeders several years ago, and to meet the new demand for a steady income, they started to develop dual purpose strains of cattle. In I-ch:t months, however, beef priceés have soared high, the demand for animals of Beef breeding has soared proporâ€" tionately, and we notice that _ men who once claimed to have dual purâ€" pose herds are _ now painting the "dual purpose" of their farm signs and hglfig it out of their livte stock advertisements. With a return to norâ€" mal conditions, KHowever ,the demand for a ‘cow that is a stel&y income maker will again claim preédominance, and beef breeders will be again specâ€" falizing in dual purpose strains. At best, however, the dudl purpose cow represents only an endeavor to breed into a beef animé4l a portion of the outsanding merit of the dairy cowâ€" her ability tb make a good income for ten mohths in "the year. Experienced dairymen will continue to prefer the real thing, the dairy bred cow. Canadian Senior _Two Year Old Record Broken. Preliminary yeports indicate that the senior twoâ€"yearâ€"old butter record HRADUATION ‘ EXERCISES AT YT. JOHN‘S CHURCH For practical dairy purposes a cow with three, four or more pure bred crosses is nearly as productive as a pure bred, providing the very best sires have been used, and . can be procuredâ€" at much less cost, but the strair of scrub blood remaining is alâ€" ways an elément of uncertainty in determining the value of progeny. The more uncertain the breeding of a dairy herd, the more importart it is to cross with a.purg sire of outâ€" standinkg merit. L aU. No dairy man who saves his heifer calves can afford to use other than a pure bred sire, otherwise his cows will always be scrubs and their proâ€" duction limited. The butterfat conâ€" tent if milk mat be bred into cattle it cannot be fed into them. The Dairy Farmer‘s Advantage. The dairy farmer has only one adâ€" vantage over the farmers who favors beef cattleâ€"that in itself is sufficient to gounter balance many disadvantagâ€" esyâ€"he does not "put All of his eggs in one basket." _ The .situation was, well illusrated bf R. M. â€"Holtby, of Port Petry, when chatting with _ an editor of Farm and Dairy _ recently. "A friend of mine down in _ Quebec started in Angus cattle at about the same time that I started in Holsteins" Mr. Holtby told us. 1 jollied him about his Doddies, but he stuck to them for four years. One cold mornâ€" ing this winter he came up from Quebec to see. me. He stepped in the barn to look at my cattle. ‘Come on into the house and get warm,‘ I sugâ€" gested. _ ‘You are not interested in these® cattle.‘ He replied that he didn‘t know but that he was. Then he made a confession. ‘I will have nothâ€" ing to sell from my herd until I get it well built up but bull calves, said he. You have the calves and you are getting the milk as well‘ He bought four cows to take home with him." held by Alita Posch slnt;e 1902 has at In«t been brfisen. The ‘heifer, Lakeâ€" view Dutchland Calamity Rosé, ownâ€" ed by Dr. F. A. Heslop, Freeman, Ont., has made 29.01 Tbs butter in seven days, and at last report . was still gaining. it is expected that she will teach 30 Thbs; before her test is comple&d. She is a daughter of Dutchland Colantha Sir Morm, sire of the genior three year old champion, Lakeview Dutchland Artis, 34.66 Ths. The graduation exercises of . the Lutheran Seminary, Waterloo, will be held in St. John‘s Lutheran Church, Waterloo, Rev. E. Bockelmann, pasâ€" tor, on Wednesday evening at 7.45 The sermon to the graduates vm be preéeached by Rev. E. Hoffman, D.D., Toronto. Addresses will be made by the graduates, the Rev. F. W. Hirdie, A. A. Zinck. H. Wahl, and O. Neeb. Special music will be provided by St. John‘s Choir and the diploma will be presented by the President . of. the ll?mlnlry Board. The whole service will be conducted in filin, A corâ€" dial invitation is extan to all. I yeAns J. A. Scellen, BA., LLR, 'bir.wut" l.lu: Chancery, ters, b&‘tfl- â€" w Offices: ‘Upstairs in t Block, Kitch:ner. Barristers, Bolicitors, m Conveyancers, *~ *4 Private Funds tp Loan. .|. Office: Metcalle Block. Cor King and Foundry Sts., Kitche E. P. CLEMENT,â€"K. G° E. W. CLEMENT. % W. P. CLEMENT. / > & _MILLAR & S!M8 : * . . asd OB Alex. Millar, K. C., Harvey J. 8 LLB., Barristers, Notaries, ete. O upstairs Economical Block, K (Successor to Conrad ot:) Barrister, Soltcitor, ) A etc. Money to loan. Gm Officeâ€" Pequegnat Block, ~ Market, Frederick St., Kite . omm mm mm omtemmmanpmmmnneaiinianni D. S. BOWLBY, B.A., L.L.8. Barrister, Solicitor, Notiry Pi and Conveyancer. _ Office Mereh Bank Bullding. _ Telephone No, Kitchener, Ont. . 5134b West, Kitchener. Notary, Conveyapcer, otc., 1 St. East, Kitchener. Phone THE EMPLOYER‘s Auocmflq OF WATERLOO COUNTY FREE LABOR“B%H,, a 59 King St. West, .K .%:-i'f' We have vacancies for men men in all lifes of work. . If yOH out of employment communica us at once. No charge fof, tion or services rendered. â€" Graduate â€" Chicayo* College ‘of & tal Surgeons and~ Roya!l Cole@ Dental Surgeons of Toronto. : D& Office in new Molsons Bank Build Waterloo. Dentistry |pâ€"acticed Jn its branches. Dentist, L.D.S., Royall Collog tal Surgeons, D.D.8., «Toronto U sity. All branches of dentistry tised. Office dver, Lang Bro#.~‘f Kitchener, Ont. s $ mice What you learned about storé 6ff ings last week may be of. small i tical value to you today. . For eÂ¥ day brings néw retailing condition â€" me of them adverse, otl ars #%Â¥ able, to. the "ultimate coffeurt ¢."> know today‘s store offerings, read day‘s advertisements. t Barristors, Boliciior, Not### veyancer, ete. _ Money ° lice" Matson‘s‘ Batk ‘Bu‘!t Specialtyâ€" Diseases of the Ear, Nose and Throat,. <|. King St. East, D. G. MciNTOSH, BARR Dentist, Waterloo. â€" h Office Hours 9 to 12; 1.30 to 6. Closed all day Friday,> < Telephone 121. _ . _ * THE MERCANTME Head Office, Wlt.rhd Bubscribed Capital ,..8850,000 92 Doretiumt »44be,c00,08 “’:n L:lm:mc;nuhl BJ CaS néurande pany with Assets of ~x Dentist | ~ 3+ <x# Oddfellows Block,‘ Waterloo;, DR. 8. ECKEL, L.D.8, D.D.8 ~ Grand Theatre, Kitch Phone 344. Residénce‘ 104 Weber Chambers, Alfred Wright, Boete C. i. bormn, DIST. A Watétloo, Ont. * PWask CHIROPRACTOR, A. HOLM, D..C. DR. CLAYTON W. WELLS CLEMENT & CLEMENT €5.00. Business Cards. : > JAMES C. HAIGHT. SCELLEN & WEIR A. L. BITZER, B.A. INCORPORATED 1t# © DR. F. G. HUGHES, J. A. HILLIARD, D. J. E. HETT Cards:=© Medical. Dental. |‘.=©

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