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The Chronicle Telegraph (190101), 30 Oct 1919, p. 9

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. | 4 J Out of Town Shoppers Will Find Big Values Awaiting Them at the Kitchener Stores Coâ€"operati in the Event. Merchants Will PAY FARES of out of Town Shoppers, SIX Shopping Days Which to Take Ad vantage of This Unusual Buying opportunity Monday Oct. 27thâ€"â€"â€"to Sat. 4 y y m PW PV se ritl e anten: i : ols ixa C lnk > im 234 J s \ * M unan PPA LA s _% THAT SONâ€"INâ€"LAW OF PA‘s. Hinued to strike pitilsss blows tnto which she put all her fury, her terror, her frayed and ragged nerres. The girl on the floor, from whimperâ€" tng, fell to crying hard, with great poissiens sobs of pain and bewilderâ€" ment. When at last the blows ceased, she lay still. The countess prodded her with her foot. "Get up," she commanded. Blt.-mw'l-d..' the giri‘s face. It was she who was has the greatest record for the greatest good Middle Aged , Women. North Haven, Conn.â€""Lydia M Pinkham‘s Vegetaâ€" ble Compound restored my health after ever{thin else had failed when passing through change of life. gben is nothing like it to overcome the trying symptoms." â€"Mrs. Frorxznox lsxLL4a, Box 197, Notth%‘ven. Conn, Dq None V.â€"CL was passing through the critical E.riod of life, being fortyâ€"six years of age and had all e symptoms incident to th&lelunge â€" heat flashes, nervousness, and was in a general run down condition, so it was hard for me to do my work. Lydia E. Pinkâ€" ham‘s Vegetable Compound was recommended to me as the best rcmedg:or my troubles, which it surely proved to be. I feel better and stronger in every way since Saking It. and tha an._cil _ CBnt 58 C C: "Shop in KITCHENER" Week LYDIA E. PINKHAM‘s VEGETABLE COMPOUND Are Here Told the Best Remedy _ _ for Their Troubles. T5 MC, i Sbaiiatitintic nc 4 2 M . ever{ way since it, and the aunnoying symptoms have disapâ€" "â€"Mrs. M. GoppEx®, 925 Ny.poloon St.. Fremont. 1 se OO TE S CPUC 70 CSA ‘â€"Mrs. M. Gonnn’, 925 N'.p:;’leol:.&l.l + Fremonl:.. 0.â€""I s€ "But what book? I have given notk» ing, madame. I swear it." ‘Then yeu admitted some one to this room?"* _ _ _ _ Gommmien ow ie "I Have Done Nothing, 1 @wear It* EYD!A Eâ€"PINKHAM MEDICINE CO. LYNN. MASs. BJ ~\Raumamomencmenss 22z TL 0. C u. a m 4 t Profit by the Season‘s BIG Merchandizing Event Well, Pa‘s Picture‘ll Save Him Just $200 |the room. So that was it, of |The girl was‘teiling the truth. "flrbh Then the com thingâ€"164 inoen Hat she pedlt Bs thingâ€"had known that would away, had knows of the window cleanâ€" â€"jers, had known of the safe, gnd her possession of the code, lua-n-uoouunuu the riding crop, then she smoothed the disorder of her hair and dress. The court physician, calling a haif hour later, found her reading on s chaiss longus in her boudoir, looking pale and bandsome, and spent what bhe considâ€" ered a pleasant baif hour with ber. Then at last he was gone, and she went about her heavyâ€"hearted preparaâ€" tions for the night From a coruer of ; her wardrobe she drew a long peasâ€" |ant‘s eape, such a cape as Minna |might wear. Over her head, instead of a hat, she threw a gray veil. A careâ€" !l-dl-lln.bmulthnwue.- sary. The sentries through and about the palsce were not unsceustomed to | such shrouded nme..:ppu.. out ]tnnlhnmtount,l perhaps to the room. Whst assurance had she that this very excursion was not & trap, and that in her absence the vault would not be looted again? It conâ€" tained now something infoitely val usbie apd incriminatingâ€"the roll of Inon nesk . ui um NR RE who clean madame‘s windows, No ons sise, madame." & - &mhhflb&“‘ looked furtively to see if her Augers were stained with blood. ‘The countess, muttering full to furious pacing Of ‘Chere ctame this afternoon the men left, she looked §Wout and FARE REFUNDING SALE | She submitted ungracefully, while : be bound a black ctoth over her eyea, iHe drew it very cloge and knotted it behind. In the act his fingers touched her face, and she felt them ~ 1d and clammy. ‘The contact sickened her. "Your hand, madame." She was led out of the carriage, and mcross soft earth, a devious course again, as though they avoided small obstacles. Onee her foot touched something fow and bard, like marble, Agnin, in the darkness, they stumbied over a mound. She knew where she was, thenâ€"in a graveyard. But which? There were many about the ) ‘Then commenced a drive of which | afterward the countess dared not ftnink. The figure meithér moved nor | spoke, Inside the carriage reigned the i most complete silence. Then the car riage stopped, and at last the shrouded ,flnre moved and spoke. ’ "Enter, madame," said a voice. | carefully The figure appalled her., It was not | mystery « sufficient to know that behind the of death horrifying mask which covered the aemâ€" . done. luu face and head, there was a buâ€" [ 8till m man figure, buman pulses that beat, ; frced th | human eyes that appraised her, She ; her nerve hesitated. } "Quickly," said the volee, ~ her head Bhe got in, shrinking into & corner : women, & uf the carringe. Her lips were dry, for long, the roaring of torrer was in her eare. , *02000¢0: The door closed. | _ "Now t "I regret, countess, that are to blindfold you." & hicutcived and convenient for th flm, mmmnmm-’,‘..:?..“.,w., flvemummm,mm“““‘~ mn&cm-nwdmflhh‘,mal-u-‘mi MM.MW”M!!M They sat, another incongruity among the stems, on plain wooden chairs. But in spits mm«m.wmm-v-,.aummmum not near the palace. Even by walking | The one who had brought her made bmu:uhomhdnuotbdu;mm late. mwlnquth-btck.m‘, Had she not known the past recerd M“Mm'Md&.Wh"dmuMmhmflonMM vumudmmmnm‘w.mflmmamqm eurb, with a driver wrapped in rugs to surround themselves might bhave against the cold of the February night, | aroused her scorm. But Olga Losehel and his hat pulled down over his eyes, | knew too much. She guessed shrew‘ ‘homnu-nowdbddoun. ly that, with the class of men wit. "You are expecting a passenger?" )whonuuyou!t.nmutmn "Yes, madame," | that their name spelled terror. ‘They With her hand on the door, the ‘must visualize it. They had taken countess realized that the fAincre was their cue from that very church, io already occupied. As she peered into deed, beneath which they hid. ‘The its darkened interior, the shadow reâ€" 'chua, with its sbrines and images, wolved itself into a cloaked and masked appealed to the eye. They, too, apâ€" Ogure. She shrank back. ‘pealed to the eye. ‘Their masks, the "Ent-r wmadas o Llaan c 2 0%.0% n $ ECEmUT, C _ A VHUeâ€"IVC8 ... !M"““'z‘l’ahfi!m ; mw the m;- casier he swelling started to go down i Ieonflnudhhntfl-&-u» ; disine, juproving all the time, and , now I tan wall about two miles and | do light chores about the place‘, ALEXANDER MUKXRO. 50c. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size 250. , At all dealers or sent postpaid by Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives Limited, Ottawa. Uniil fe Took "Fruilâ€"aâ€"tives" The Fruit Mediging my She shrugged her shoulders, And now Number Seven rose, a tall figurs of mystery, and spoke at length in s cultivated, softly intoned voice. The countess, listening, felt the volce madame, !f these papers are turned over to the authorfties?" It was Number Seven who replied. It was Number Seren who, durtig the hour that followed, spoke for the oth« era, None moved, or but slightly, Evidently all had been cgrefully pre arranged. "Look on the table, counteas, You will find there some papers you will perkaps recognize," She took a step toward the tablé and glanced down. The eode book lay there, Aiso the letter she had sent by Peter Niburg. She made no effort to disclaim them. 60A "I recognize them," sbe said clear iy. 1 . "Do you realise what will happen, two candies only, and these were stÂ¥ck Ihmmm-ouu.- | Iy removed from all semblance to the huwwsn that they were not even horâ€" rible. â€" It was as if they had been used, not to inspire tesror, bot because they {Mu?u‘mmm perpose, the sbadow. ransod in a ie Cc sermicircle, were nine figures, all m tioniess, all masked, and cloaked in binck. They sat, another incongruity, on plain wooden chairs. But in spits of that they were figures of Bread. The one who had brought her made the teath, Had she not known the past recerd dmubduohn.thonth.qnn bouffe setting with which they caose | out the sesn '”T“"""‘ piled in a corner, and in the «ult | could ces Uttlie When the touch ‘of his clammy Angers as he untied the knots of her bendages. He in n ie es id in faas the touch of his clamoy Aincors. u‘h: , ranged in a dE 12 Te the country," ; vaguely familiar, as were the burning eyes behind the mask, "It is our hope, madame," be said, "that you will make it unnecessary for the committee of ten to use _©._â€"s papers + We bave no quarrel with women ‘-D!o wish rather a friend than an enemy. ‘The committee of ten, to those who know its motives, has the highest and most loyal of idealsâ€"ty [Â¥ ‘TMe Countess Faced Them. By Wellington hoi d Neach ies Cook‘s Cotton Root MINARD‘s _ Linimeny DANDRUFF, _ Dentist, L.D.S., Royall Cplie ta" Buri’oon.. D.D.8., Toronts: sity. All branches of dentists tised. Office over Lang Bros Kitchener, Ont. DR. 8. ECKEL, L.D.8. D ; Graduate Chicago College of: tal Surgeons and Royal Dental Surgeons of Toronto, Office in new Moisons k Water)â€"0. D ntistry its branches Mon., and Conveyancer _ Office 1 Bank Building. Telephone Kitchener, Ont. hiibierqunerartateareethe 6 â€":<â€" c A. L. BITZER, 8, ’ (Buccessor to co:,'.‘ a u'b..o mu’. m 83-' Money to loan. Germas lceâ€" Pequegnat mm Market, Frederick St., onmop:t’wron_ an ELECTROTHERAPEU‘ 104, 5 and 6 Weber Cha 144 King St. Wm Phone 344w. â€" Reside King St. Hast, 8 tyâ€" 000 0 0 Diseases of the E _ Nose and Throat DR. F. G. HUGHES, Dentist. 1 Oddfellows Block‘ Wate DR. A. HOLM, D.3 (Chiropractor) â€" i BRANCH OFFICE â€" AT MR. HY. sEiLING‘® Mill St., Elmira J , Wed. and Fri., 9.30 & to 12.30 p. m. . D. 8. BOWLBY, -.Aa rister, Solicitor, N. J. A. HILLIARD, Toror --;-':w-'- Medical. D Oy

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