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The Chronicle Telegraph (190101), 10 Jul 1919, p. 10

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JXA f After Bad Colds or Influena "What‘s the game?" "Watch me, that‘s all," Smoke bafâ€" fed. "I always told you, Shorty, that m deficient acquaintance with literaâ€" ture was a handicap, even in the Klonâ€" dike. Now, what we‘re going to do came out of a book. 1 read it when 1 was a kid, and it will work. Comeoun!" Sereral minutes iater, under a pale =~‘â€"~ming, greenish aurora borealis, the hurried back wicsout tne water, "They‘re cached right bere in his bin," Shorty said,. "But where? We sure overhauled it plenty." He stood up and pulled on his mittens. "I‘m goin‘ to find ‘em if 1 have to pull the blame shack down a log at a time." He glanced at Smoke, who, with an tntent, absent face, had not heard him. "What‘s eatin‘ you?" Shorty demandâ€" ed wrathfully, "Just trying to remember something, Every one should clcan houseâ€"internally â€"â€"and thus protect one‘s self from many d'nus.byhkingmgroflot. Inxative such as Dr. Peliets, which aro made of Mayâ€" mnha‘nd’jnhp. Take these Wm-iflndhdfifimmm aotion. cm'm'mmfi tation of bladdo> mdthhlth-;: oo in highh rolndiraty smm the wages Sriokâ€"gust deposit, un headache in the morning, mm worth‘s movements. Several times when he started out, water bucket in band, for the creek they casually apâ€" proached the cabin, and each time b= “"'&'fi‘ stom "Anirin" {antL -;.f)fifig‘zmm;byflg.rfi g‘uo.a,':hmmmm- -...“.';Snm..z’.."" or Tilimme pood ~herbbl lonk sutch 46 T. casting wut of the poisons from ,‘i‘?‘&&“fiwm T ooae 1t n e ho k Then Smoke and Shorty togetber inâ€" vaded ‘Weutworth‘s cabin, throwing him ous in the spow, while they turnâ€" ed the interior upside dewn. Laura Sibley bobbied in and franticaily joinâ€" ed them in the searcit Though the very foor was dug up. they discovered nothfmg. Anotber day passed, during which they kept a steady watch on Wentâ€" saving it all the winter for fear fllfl‘::uny. 1 only sold it so to be to buy a passage out of couptry when the river opens." «Despite the ceusation of potato juice, the two treated cases coutinued to imâ€" prove through the third day. ‘The unâ€" tFeated cases went from bad to worse. On the fourtbh morning three corpses §J0 Anely. ns s io couptry am he and 1. gre worth sorâ€" between us." â€"*I haven‘t any potatoes." Wentworth Vil give you $500 AA ind enc Wash The Kidneys! Look to Kidneys and Bladder1 ~Aâ€"ghve you was the only one 1‘d i #aÂ¥ing it all the winter for fear heaven‘t auy potatoss." Wentworth . fnelly. "Wish | bad. ‘That po KE BELLEW! the outside for two whole weeks.â€" in short, this burg bas crawled into its cave and gone to sleep. We‘re got to do something. 1t needs lvening, and you and 1 can do it. I‘ve broken with Wid Water, you know." Bmoke caught two almost simnita neots visions, One was of Joy Ga» teil, the other was of himself. is the midst of a bleak snow stretch under a cold arctic moon. being pot shotted with accurateness and dispatch by the aforuaaid Wild Wuter, Bizokas to CHAPTER X1K A Flutter In Egge. T was in the A. C. company‘s big atore at Dawson that Lucilie Arâ€" ral beckoned Smoke Bellew over to the dry goods counter. Bmoke obeyed hber call with mlacrity. The man did not exist in Dawson who would not have been fiattered by the potice of Lucille Artai, the singing soubrette of the tiny stock company that performed nightly at the Palace standing room now at the opera house. "That thousand dollars, d‘ye under stand that? That thousand dollars gold ESmoke bougbt that measly potato with. Come through." And Amos Wentworth passed the gold sack over. "Hope a skutk bites you an‘ you get bowlin‘ hydrophoby," were the terms of Shorty‘s farewell Cough up." "I dof%k understand," Wentworth quavered, shivering from recollection of the two beatings, hand and foot, be had already received from Shorty. ‘Things are dead," she compiained, with pretty petuiance "There hasn‘t been a stampede for a week. There‘s po dust in cireulation. ‘There‘s always "Who? Me?" Shorty stiffened for a supreme effort, "I ain‘t nobody. Wood ticks atn‘t got nothin‘ on me when it comes to humillity. I‘m a worm, a magrot. brother to the poliywog an: child of the blowfly. I ain‘t afraid or ashamed of nothin‘ that creeps or crawls. But travel with that mistake of creationâ€"go ‘way; man! 1 ain‘t proud, but you turn my stomach." _ son. A mjle down the trail Shorty overhauled him. And Amos Wentworth went away, alone, dragging a sled loaded with proâ€" visions ~ullcient to last bim to Dawâ€" "Gentiemen, I beg of you, listen to me," Wentworth whined. "I‘m a stranâ€" ger in this country. 1 don‘t know the trail. Let me travel with you. I‘ll give you $1.000 if you‘ll let me trave} with "A word of advice," Smoke told Wentwortb. "These men are getting well fast. Sborty and [ are leaving in a week, and there will be nobody to protect you when these men go after you. There‘s the trail. Dawson‘s eight een days‘ travel." "Sure," Smoke grinned "if Shorty agrees." There were no more deaths The most awful cases began to mend with an immedincy that was startling. "Nary a potato," Sborty told the whining, begging Wentworth "You ain‘t even touched with scuryy. You got outside a whole sack, an‘ you‘re tlondecd against scurvy for twenty years. Knowin‘ you, I‘ve come to onderstand God. 1 always wondered why be let Satab Hve. Now [ know. He let him live just as 1 let you live. But it‘s a cryin‘ shame, just the same." ‘There was no sleep in camp tha nigbt. Hour after bour Smoke and Shorty went the rounds, doling the life renewing potato juice, a quarter of a spoonful at a dose, into the poor ruined mouths of the population. And through the following day while one slept the other kept up the work. that‘s left Give me a fow. You can have the rest." s % "Ate ‘em up!" Shorty screamed. "A whole sack] An‘ them geesers dyin‘ for want of ‘em! ‘This for you! An‘ this?t An‘ this! An‘ chisl You swin=<. You hog!" ghastly face upward. balf a dozenâ€"and you can have the rest," he equalled. "Just baif a dozen," he wailed. "Just half a dozen. I was going to turn them over to youâ€"to tborrow. Yes, tomorrow. That was my idea. They‘re lifo! They‘fe Uifol Just half a dotent" "Where‘s the other sack?" Emoke slowly, haif doubled over, is »bou!â€" ders burdened by a sack, heary and unmistaka ble. Smoke and Shorty sprang at hi like a pair of famished woives. They hit him right and jeft at the same instant He crumpled down under the weight of the sack, which Emoke pressed over with his hands to make sure Then he felt bis knees clasped by Went drew back beyond the growing light und waited. 5o m They saw Wentworth rush out, stare wildly at the condagration and pluoge back into the cabin. Bcarcely a minute lwsaly they poured eroscne urer the luge. eltra drepching the goor frame and window sash Then the mautch anpd window sush ‘The» the wutch wus appiied. and they watched the wofth‘s cablu. "I ate it up," was the reply, untmâ€" eachably bonest "That sack‘s al ~Jdack London h this time Went *~â€"® to: make love toâ€"you, and if Ts io wake lors to ao ‘wihe Wwatee 44 it O your cuse.. You kuow tigs. 1 I~1 haven‘t veally broâ€" tep with WB Water thinks I‘ve a *‘}hh’t‘uaâ€"r t * " have Or hawen‘t you‘! & 'lm:l But it‘s between The severai dozen not yet gathered in ware in the hands of two persons. Never was a market cornered more quickly. In three days every known egg in Dawson with the exception of your bed#ide day an‘ night an‘ wipe your nosé for you, but I‘ll be everiastâ€" in‘ly dâ€"d if T‘ll equander twentyâ€"one hundred godd fron doilars on ben fruit for you or any other two legged man." "They‘re not your gollars, but mine, Shorty. It‘s a deal I have on. What I‘m after is to corner every blessed egg in Dawson, in the Klondike, on the Â¥Yukon. You‘re got to help me out. i haven‘t the time to tell you of the inâ€" wardness of the deal. 1 wili afterâ€" ward and let you go balf on it if you wunt to. But the thing right now is to get the eggs. Now, you hustle up to Blavrovitch‘s and buy all be‘s got. And then keep on.. Nose out erery egg in Smoke and Shorty "Bure," Shorty said gallantly. "What is it? Let ber rip." *I want you to buy eggn for me"â€" "Bure, an‘ Floridy water an‘ talcam powder, if you say the word. Look here, Amoke, if you want to go in for high livin‘ you go an‘ buy your own eggs." "I am going to buy, but I wanrt you to help me to buy. You go right straight to Siavovitch‘s Pay as high as $3, but buy all he‘s got." "An‘ I beard tell ouy yesterday that be‘s got a‘t nf 700 in stock! Twentyâ€" one hundred dutiars for hen fruit. Say, ESmoke, I‘d sure do anything for you. If you had a cold in the head an‘ was layin‘ with both arms broke 1‘d set by afterward, we‘ll let the fnside history come out. ‘The laugh will be on Wild Water. His turbulence will be some ‘ubdued. You and I share the glory of it. You make a pile of money. And Dawsorm wakes up with a grand ba, 11 o‘clock. Wild Water willâ€" be at the next table. He‘ll make:it his business to be there. "IT‘wo egga, shirred, TH say to the waiter. ‘Sorry, Miss Arral,‘ the waiter will say, ‘they, ain‘t no more eggs.‘ ‘Then ap cpusmud Waâ€" ter in that big bear voice 9, ‘"Wat And When be sees I‘m Auinguishing for egr~. ard I know bis uzind Hike a book arl L know bow to Banguish, what «1t ie Jo? Why, he‘ll just start strmpeding for the mans that‘s got the corner in eggs. He‘ll buy the corner, no matter what it costsa. "Picture: 1 come into ‘Slavovitch‘s at 11 o‘clock. Wild Water willâ€" be at the next table. He‘ll make:it his business eat two eggs." She paused fmpressiveâ€" ly, "Suppose, just suppose, somebody. corners egg»." Sbe waited. and Smoke reg:izded ber with admiring eyes, while in his beart be backed with approval Wild Water‘a ehoice of her. waiter says, ‘Yes, sir‘ and the eggs are brought Picture: WIild ‘Water looks sideways at me, abd I look tike a particolarly indignant ijcicle and summon the waiter. ‘Sorty, Miss Ar ral,‘ be says, ‘but them eggs is Mr. Wild Water‘s. You see, miss, heowns ‘em.‘ Picture: Wild Water, trinmâ€" pbant. doing his best to look anconâ€" scious while be eats his six eggs. "Another pictare: Slavovitch himself What‘s the n . > cr?" â€" â€" "Btupid! _\ .. know WiA Water N I like eggs ‘There‘s mmuwhmg son. "Sure Slavovitch‘s restaurant has most of them. Ham and one egz, $3; ham and two eggzs, $5. ‘That means $2 an egg. retail." "He Hikes egge too," she continued. "But that‘s not the point. I Hke them. 1 have breakfast every morning at 11 _ "Listen, He was to turbulent 1 broké our engagement, and he‘s going around making a polse like a broken Clsciplined. He needs it. Hosâ€"weol, the best way to put it is he‘s too turboâ€" leat. He broke out Inst night again, Bowed the floor of the M. & M. with goid dustâ€"all of:a thoussnd doilars. You‘re heard of it, of.course." "Yes; this morning. But still 1 don‘t Ctows ~ute, Mr. Smoke N-'izh‘“' s oo( * cce in malitee Serm "Neither. You make a pot of money, nfi-Q-‘Og“'b ter apd cheer Dawson up, and, best of all. and the regson for it all, he geto ‘"Hey, Shorty!" Smoke called across e main street to his partner and rossed over. "I want you to do meÂ¥ "You‘re n > following,"‘abe said. and buy it Understand? 4 & Y Thris.< J and it has ros * «seA certainly tho best medicine for women‘s ailments I ever saw."â€"Mrs. Sara SBaw, R. No. 1, Portsmouth, Obfc. Mre. Shaw proved tho merit of this medicine and wrote this lettor in otder that other suffering women may find relief as she did. Women who are suffering as she was should not drag along from day to day without 1::.”1\11-‘- his wife, an‘ they keep t on the hill bacts of the bospital |1 dbuld ‘a‘ got them eggs for two a thrgw if you hadn‘t butted In." I "And so could I,"" Smoke Iaughed, "it you‘d kept out. But it doesn‘t nmonnt ‘to fhything. We know that we‘ve got day Portsmouth, Ohio.â€"* I suffered from Irregularities, pains in my side and was so weak at.times I {}f} could hardly get What Lydia E. Pinlkham‘s Vegetable Compound Did | "BEST MEDICINE | FOR WOMEN®": A nrmber of people from Waterloo attende tu> funeral of the late Mrs. Eva â€" av, ® New Hambufg on Monâ€" *"Well, maybe it sounds ncredibie, but that good thing was Wild MWnter Charley.‘ He‘s iookin‘ to buy ecgs. He goes mround to SJavovitcb nn ofters him $5 an egg, an‘ before be quits be‘s offerin‘ $8. . An‘ Siavovitch ain‘t got no eggs. Last thing Wid Wate: says to Slavovitch is that be‘ll beat the neag offen him If be ever finds ont Siavoâ€" vitch bas eggs cached Awiuy mome wheres. Siavovitch bad to tell ‘m ne‘d sold the eggs, but that the buyer was "I just seen Slavovitch, He says to me: ‘Shorty, 1 want to spenk to you about them eggs. I‘ve kept it quiet Nobody knows i sold ‘em to ron. But if you‘re specuiatin‘ 1 can put yon wise to a good thing.‘ An‘ be dia. tou, Emoke. Smoke nodded and continued to nod to each question. "He‘s got one cheek half goue, where a bald face grizzly swatted him. Am right? He‘s a dog traderâ€"right, eb? His name is Scar Fuce Jim. That‘s so, ain‘t it? D‘ye get my.Grift?" © "Â¥ou mean we‘ve been bidding"â€" seven great big round fron dollars a throw, If you stand in eryin‘ need of any further items of information i‘m willin‘ and free to impart." "Go on," Smoke requested. "Well, that geezer you was dickerin‘ mor pothin‘ more or anything less‘n twentyâ€"eight eggs in that there pail netflnon the table, an: they cost, every right?‘ "Hum!" Shorty communed to himâ€" selt, "They‘s just exactly, precinely kindly just repeatin‘ over bow many eggs you said the man didn‘t seil to cabie on the tms uack of the bospital _ "TH get her today." Shortyâ€"announe od next morning: ~"I‘U ve back in a liffy, If 4.don‘t bust myseit ambovin‘ dust at her." in th:fim when Bmoke 1e‘ turned to ie cabin be found Shorty. Wthfi?.‘"lfix ty after soveral minutés id "Mn,fi:'.“m "How â€"did you get on with the wy* Shorty Am:;:-lhnguv ly toward a tin ‘ the taâ€" M Te d in 1 ie oo it he confessed. : . â€" "L effered $10 fnally," Smoks said, "and then the fellow told me he‘d a) ready sold bis eggs. Now that looks bad, Eloity. Somebody eise is in the myrket. Those twentyâ€"eight eggs are lruie to cause us trouble You see, the success of the cornmer consists in holding every last"â€"â€" He broke off to stare at his partner. A pronounced change was coming over Shortyâ€"one of agitation masked by imemseines. * It is a tonicâ€"food MMM.F‘ to an adult as to a child.* Build 'Ol-;l‘tmwâ€"-bvqfacu ____._ Seott & Bowne. Tuoronto.Ont 19.4 For Ohio Woman. and .then is :“Bltodc-g esactly thing ; In the morning ®moxe chanced upon Lucilie Arral nguin »: the dry goods ~ counter of t)= A. C. store. _ â€"â€", \ _ "It‘e wor.img!" tbe jnblinted. "It‘s working! Wild Waters been around to Slarovitch, trying to buy ot bally eggs out of hitm. Am: hy this time Slavrovitéh noas rold »im» that Shorty and 1 own the corner." f Licllte Artai‘® eyes «(«~kied with deâ€" lML "I‘m going to brenkfast right now," she cried. "And [‘ll ask the wniter for egfa asd be «o plaintive | when there aren‘t any as to molt a ‘heart pf stone. And vron kpow WHO Watat‘sâ€"beart in Angthing bet stone. He‘ll buy the corner if it coâ€"ts hiim one of ble mines. Hold oot tor a stiff Ogâ€" ute.. Nothin# less than $10 will satisty _ wa. lHpd If you sell for anything Yese, | _ Wd Water peused with aptifted pen as be was about to ~i@*. "Hold on," ‘he satd. "When I buy e=#« | buy good egge. If 1 flod one thad »gzg you‘ve got | to come back with the $10 1 paid for Smoke inserted the wird "good" in the contract. and Wint Woter gulleniy signed. received the trim} twu dozen in &A tin pail. polted on nis mittete and opened the door | Shorty cleared hi\ throat and perâ€" | formed mentai aritbmetic aloud. "Lemâ€" | me see. Nine bundred an‘ seventyâ€" three ininus nine, thit ieaves nine bun ‘m'od an‘ sixtyâ€"two. An" the whote llfiooun' match at $10 a throw wi; tote up just about nine thousand . !: bundred an‘ twenty iron dollars _ )j course, Wild Water, we‘re playin‘ | .it an‘ it‘s money back for bad wer | though they ain‘t none. Thats urs thing 1 never seen in the KJondikeâ€" a J6." "That‘s all right." Smoke "If‘e oniy fuir.‘" "Bo tbat yon can @ar y‘ _c onl cyI" "That‘s the idea i "Bnt that ain‘t bo«p ~ . ‘4. Rborty objected. "It‘sâ€"iPs tr«.. Smoke nodded concurrence) "Thats Oiferent. Wild Water. > thbught you jost waunted to eat them. Â¥Ydu see, we went into this for a apecula * E ‘The dangerous vine 0 Water‘s g.'- began to grow more dangerops. , Juym!onum"no-ldchup- | 17. "How muen?" » |_70B, not 1 dozen." Smoke repHed. , We couldn‘t seil a dozen We‘re not ‘ retailers; we‘re specuiators. We can‘t CHAPTER xx. Four Yeara Old. MOKEK wrote the document, S wherein Wild Witer ngreed to take every exsx delivered to him mt $10 per egz, provided that the two doten ndvinâ€"ed to bim brought about a _ reconciiation with Lucilie Arral. Wild Water gnaped "You‘re almighty swift with bustuess up here on the bill." be sald, with a t‘nt of a snarl. "We‘re only accepting â€" yor proposition," Smoke ns wered. "Ail right; brfeg on th« pnper; make it out bard nnd fast." \Wild Water cried to the anger of surretier. "i should say Miss Artai‘s worth the price of the eggs," XNmoke put in quietly. A "Wortb It?" Wild Water stood up in the beat of his eloquence. "She‘s worth a million dollirs. She‘s worth all the dust In Klondike. B that ain‘t no call for me to gambie $10,000 on a breakfast for ber. Now, I‘ve got a proposition. Lend me n couple of dozen of them eggs. I‘l} turn ‘em over to Slavovitch. He‘ll feed ‘em to ber with my compliments. Â¥he ntn‘t smiled to me for a hundred years. If them eggs get a smile for me 1‘l! take the whole boiling off your bands " "Will you sign a contract to that efâ€" fect?" Smoke said quickiy, for he knew that Lucille Arrul lisd agreed to amile. "Do you want ‘em ninetyâ€"six hundred an‘ twenty dollars werth?‘ Sborty queried. "Aw, Histen to reason," Wild Water Dleaded. "I oniy want a couple of dozen. | I‘ll give you $20 aptece for ‘om, What do 1 want with all the reat of them eggs?" "Look bere, you two," WiA Water said ‘in a burst of confidence. *T‘ll be perfectly honest with you, an‘ don‘t let it go any further You know Miss Arâ€" ral &n‘ J was engazged. Well, she‘s brokem everything off. it‘s for bep I want them eges. i want to give them to her on a pintter shirred. ‘That‘s the way sbe likes ‘em." Wild Water sbook his pead sadly and beiped fituself to the heans. "That would be too expensire, Sborty. 1 ounty want a few. }‘ll give you $10 for a couple of dozen. 1‘}} give you $20, but 1 can‘t buy ‘em nit" "Ail or none." wa» Smoke‘s vitimeâ€" Dreak our own market We‘ve got a bard and fast corner. and when we sell out it‘s the whole corner or nothing." "How many hare con piinl bow much do you want for them?" "How many nave Bmoke inquired. a balf hearted way "Rey. you («; canâ€" doâ€"mesa<gres t Aavor," ue ; what .a yearuin; But we‘re pot s give mg, about ‘a sell our buspita:. . Phey‘ cont nothing . tGe 1b ad~ Short them up ‘for him © Bot WI‘l Waute B4 a res.. . Mllli on the @@ye. SSTQff! «m . plained "I don‘t ~ 2in cuuked ! * Wud Water Gnist #0 bis own. pia: *bre wen of them v; aewered. <"} :; tor esn in is â€" %0¢ thet We huvs *y. Rhorty â€"=) "Thats f ght you Â¥dn see, we . m ut + of the way, Shorty. Wild Water‘s comâ€" ing up the hill, and he‘ll be bere in five minutes," Dr. Chase‘s, Nerve Food, 50 cents & bo? a ful?’trulmont of 6 boxea for $2.75, at all dealetrs, on Bdmanâ€" #on, Batee & Co., Limited, Toâ€" (Rev. 8. F. Coffman, Vinetand, Ont.. states: ‘‘This Is to certify that I know Mrs. ; Thwaités, and her statements are correet:") _ Mrs. Stephen G. Thwaites, Box 205, Jordan, Ont. writes: ‘"For about a year I was troubled with nervousness, and _ took _ doctors‘ medicine, but it did not seem to réâ€" lieve me. I could not sleep nor conâ€" tent myself to do anything. I had sever« headaches, was tired all the time, and afraid to stay alone. I also tried sevérii nerve medicines unt!l almost discouraged. At last I discovered Dr. Chase‘s Nerve Food, and found relief in this. I had only taken one box when I began to feel better. 1 continued using this treatâ€" ment until my nerves were reâ€" stored to perfect heaith. I think the Nerve Food splendid for nervous troubles of any kind, and cannot reâ€" commend it too highly." _ By formin& new, rich blood, Dr. Chase‘s Nerve Food naturally and certainly restores the vigor of the nerves. Sincé it works handâ€"inâ€" hand with nature, it cannot fail to be of benefit, and there is no reason why it will not help you just as it has the writer of this letter. This treatment for the restora~ tion of the blood and nerves is so Gifferent to most medicines that you may not reallze why you can be so cettain of benefit fromi is use. In order to maint«s: the vigor of the nervous system an abundance of pure, rich Nfl is necessary. When the nervous tem becomes exhaustâ€" ed and you are easily tired and suffer trom headaches, sleeplessness, irâ€" ritability or indigestion, it is because the blood is failing to supply proper nu't_.rmon to ‘lpu nervous system.. You hear people talking about Dr. Cnase‘s Nerve Food. You read about it in the newspapers. You wonder if it would benefit you. And while you are hesftating others are using it to great advantage. With This Belief Many Thousâ€" ands Have Learned the Exceptional Value of Dr. Chase‘s Nerve Food. It Helps Others Will Help Me mmflmmmchfi of frosty air and saw something made him cioseithe door hurriediy and dash to the stove. ‘The frying pan, still bot from the moose meat and bacon, he put back on the front lid. Into the frying pan be put a generous dab of butter, then reached for an egg. which he broke and dropped spiuttering thto the pan. As be reached for a secon® egg Sborty gained his side and clutched hhlmlnchltedlmp. "Hey, what you dotn :* he demanded. "Frying eggs." Sw: . * informed him, breaking the serond vue and throwing off Shorty‘s detaining hand. "Get out "Grub‘s ready !", â€"Made From ‘Fruit Juices 118 Contze 8z., Br. N.B. "I feol I must tell you of the great benefit I have received from your I have" heen a sufferer for masy years from Vislest Heedache*, and sould get no permanent relief. A friend advised me to take *Pruitâ€" atives‘ and ‘I did so with grouk success ; and now . :m entirely free :u'-u * * line. Auskaxoer snaw. bDs.a box, S/for $2.50, trial size 250. At all dealers or sont on receipt of "Shorty and 1 own the cornen"® (To be continued.) Qnotations given l‘ron_.m documents deal With a police and _ measures to . be against them. Copies of m Sin proclamation seized b:omho_d perary, deciared "the 1 Tipperary to a Sign Fein ; Area, placing the county undet Oof the Sein Fejn. The . ish orandum tells of meas " curb lawlessness, but, F July, 1918, "Increase in 10 2¢ 1958 ‘4 Deen so marked in \fi perary that the Gov: BC O en ming onl d n Gon from British sources in hmw issuance of a memorandum nounced in last night‘s cable patches. ‘The memorandum rec# series of lawless acts and quotes two documents seized by B authorities in Ireland. memorandum, setting forth the tlions in Tipperary Coufity, f in outlawing all Stun Fein . zations and frish voluntsers fre perary county, has been raceive If the Rodenberg ‘A‘Ct 4688 not pictures of boxing bom;; and _ Willardâ€"Dempsey . dffalr ‘is * Coiktr ed under the act as ‘boking‘ b then it is believed here‘ thitt the" tures may be shown M dther St if approved by < the State ; Cer Boards. Under ‘the Ohfop State the hout was consideréd to be & ing match. t Cclumbus, O., July7?â€"The Wl Lemp ey pictures muy never ho,! in public. In Ohio, at, least, will ont be placed on exhibition, Chio Censer Coard 15 d&y offg rejected the pictures as being to be exhibited in public. The probility of the picture® shown in other States fs belf@n depend upon what Cotstrrction be placed upon the Rg 1 which prohibits grlzatf?fl'xt being handled in interslfr6 com PRISONERS GEBT ... FREE BY MOB =< AT HANOYVE FIGHT PICTURES _ BARRED BÂ¥ \__ . OHIO CENS Berlin, July 8.â€"A mob attacke castle and detention prison at over Monday and released allâ€" p ers in the buildings. The guarda said, surrendered their arms W resistance. Some fighting ob between the crowds and the‘ y ment soldiers. » eb | J. A. HILLIARD, ** _ Dentist, LD.S., Royall College tal Surgeons, D.D.S., Tomm sity. All branches of den tised. Office over Lang Bros. Kitchener, Ont. ' DR. 8. ECKEL, L.D.8. Graduste Chicago. Colleg tal Surgeons ‘and 4 3 Dental Surgeons of Toront Office in new Molsons Water) o. D ntistry pract its branches. Do ‘gf New York, July $ â€"A *_. D. 8. BOWLBY, 8A., L, Barrister, Solicitor, Notar and ‘Conveyancer _ Office M Bank Building. _ Telephone Kitdhener, Ont. * ete. D. G. MciNTOSH, BARRH Notary, Conveyancer, <te., 1 St. East, Kitchener. Phone Market, Frederick St., Office upstaigg, King St. West, Conveyancer, of _ocu'.. Molson‘s King St. East, Specialtyâ€" O dve Diseases of the Rar, Nose and Throat. Harvey J. S s 2 ons snn nas o c DR. F. G. HUGHKHES, Dentist. i. Oddfeliows Block,‘ Wate Phone 344w. Residence A. L. BITZERL, 1 (Successor to Conrat 104 Weber Chambers, M Ailen Theatre, Kitchenir, . CHIROPRACTOR A. HOLM, D.â€"€, Money to loan. German CLEMENT & ncmmmaci 7 Yor~~za MILLAR: gile & anA Private Funds to to copy

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