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The Chronicle Telegraph (190101), 26 Oct 1922, p. 9

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. More than 50 Million Packets "SALADA" have the sanction of <=d npon our union, why should we wai‘ for tnat of man? What s the worl1 to you, or to me? Who around us knows anything of that old tragedy of hearts? And, even if it wore known, could but it is dead that died with "You never did!" said Loyd: tyn slowly, relieved beyond n ure. "Real love is immortal as soul. It cannot die." She hung her head and did answer. He kneeled beside her took her iey, unreponsive hand. "Bebe," he said gently. "do think that such love as 1 bear line th th t In th ed, put la to wa until would but my Wil here with m« TN 8 prom na tell you wl will come your wife when I am one al ready ?" vou She shrank farther away from him back among the embroidered cush jons of the sofa, and trembled YL don‘t know almost inaudibly. The Lady of St W T1 wht ki Are Sold Annually. AskK your grocer for a packKet toâ€"day. al No. n ham 10 H bad wi PL h D) Heiven 1 could forget D it! My darling, if 1 OF DELICIOUS ad and did not th she angwered How can I be D Beaufort Park ight rtal as the BY WENONA GILMAN 1 you it (4 in her and "p 12 A. vdâ€"Mos 1y W mens tid ArD you you irt | 419 4 (snar "Porty years I suffered. One leg raw "I have it at last‘" she \\hhp'l“d,‘ am!'m}:nwr. Sn living man cenld h arely aving o | lieve what I anffered. [t was D.D.D, her lips barely moving over the | that relieved me, and for Three years J words. "I will escape! I will Hnd‘J haven‘t bad a sign of ecrema." ; is These words are taken from the letter of Ruoâ€" some one in this great city who Will| gos @arrett, Chestervilie, Ontario. Mr @arrett be good enough to take me to the| will anewer any questions you care to ask hind. | _If you heven‘t tried the cooling, hemling Amer{can mi{nister. I will tell him| D. D. D. for sktm disease we shall be gind to sell you a bottle loday on our personal guarâ€" my story and he will take care Of aptes. $1.00 a botile. Try D. D. D, Soap, too, Eoteassccu.‘~ TCP TD T BR He will not refuse. At least It is a s P s\ An expression like the siun slow ly escaping from the obstruction of a cloud passed over the lovely face It was transcendent in its wonder ful beauty "I have it at last‘" she whispered, her lips barely moving over the words. "I will escape! 1 will find what should we care? For months now we have lived in Paris, yet Eticnne Millet is our only friend: id he She had now R ild 1 H snatch m sure What i it 1t W ild () it There is no long h NC ungrateful. but be your wife if would sunction ner th n hand from matter about her e gasped. to let me ur w fe H fr mb al 11 rribl m 1 lik h H ind "@ "Raw From Eczema the n h Doctors Do Their Best" and, as though fearing he had been deceived by an optical illusion, the man looked again. Then with a repressed exclamâ€" ation he sprang to his feet, seized a An early dusk was making cavâ€" erus of footprints annd cataracts of small jets of water that spurted into the street from a defective sewer, But Bebe was not unobserved. From an upper window a pair of sad, longing eyes gazed yearningly, and as they gazed the expression changed to one of intemse surprise. is not a moment to be lost. 1 must go now, now while his anger has thrown him of his guard." Even while she spoke to herself she rushed breathlessly to her wardâ€" robe, took from it a long clomak that enveloped her, piuued on her hat and veil; then noiselessly locking her door from the outside, she slipâ€" ped quietly down the stairs, and almost without a sound let herself into the street. later the precaution to make me a H is following the direction she bhad W It At ing y CHAPTER XXX BEBE‘S SECOND FLIGHT m qulr it 1 nt rinl 11 e time to overtake h ntently h mdure it longer Ma walked more ng noT Al it th th a man med to be thle. W i writh tim 11 M 1 can in c uD UE later lim he S1 {| fer y« Teacher â€"â€" Henry, if you had three apples and some ona gate ou five more, what would you have. Henryâ€"I guess I‘d have a pain in my stomach. â€" M 4 s | ington. dry reply sind yow‘ll soon dig bim 5p." The farmer seems to have been L ! uuttraded. He has come to the point where he needs some tariff THE LEAST OF HER WORRIES.| protection against a few products. 50c a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size 25¢ At dealers or sent postpaid by Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives Limited, Ottawa. "Fruitaâ€"siwes" will always â€" relieve Autoâ€"intosdestion asthese tablets, made from frud% julces, act gently on thi« bowels, IÂ¥#é@meys and skin and kee; the blood pure and rich. As a result, there is Headaches, Indigestion, disturbed Stomach, Pain u the Back, Rheumatism and Eczeme and other gkin discases. Autoâ€"intoxication means selfâ€"poisonâ€" Ing. Many people suffer from partial Constipation or insufficient action of the bowels. Waste matter which should pass out of the body every day, remaing and poisons the blood. WHAT CAUSES HEADACHES ? M plan M AT Al Tt W "Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives" Prevents UNEXPECTED ANSWER NOT GIVEN A C A HARDENED H ON EASY STREET. her "Children, a planet is ing we live on Name an golfing novie 11 TWO OF A KIND Tlud â€" Regice Hea Smiles D NOT UNLIKELY GOOD WORKER in Shu My Grandfadder, he vuss THEY DIDN‘T FOR VALOR. forgot myself t niv to my wif Your Grandfather." re. vee lived on him t 1t M ent nt Of it after missing time and disâ€" turned to his rave a brother ivs this game FELLOW HANCE lubte it Gile 1 b it inks that OV L4 tl us d fity 1y Th had k to mgrat mat d M uldn‘t n P1 pall usl But had ind sh th 001 th he t when pa lof of D tu it is mot quite possible yet to & the two parties to lie down togeth on the same tariff bed. Not ev in the agricultural bloc. You see, the tariff isn‘t essenth y an agricultural question, ammugh] it of course affects agriculture. So} the bloc members and the Farmi Bureau leaders very wisely agreed : right at the start not to touch the’ tariff problem as a bloc. Tarm’l has never been discussed at a single meeting of the azricultumll block. t Now a new bloc hax arison in the Senateâ€"a soâ€"called agriculturai tarif bloc. Jt Includes some twen tyâ€"five Senators, all Republicans, and â€" mostly from _ the mountain States and the Pacific coast, but for some unexplained reason inâ€" cluding Semator New of Indiana, Senator Willis of Ohio, and Semator fertil good. . And what could to buy Yet Congress has liberally pro vided him with a nice, fat, new tarif on neartly all agriculcural that protection against a few products, such as wool from Australia, frozen eggs from China, lemons from Italy, und hides from â€" South America. Except for these products and a quan It bids fair to prove true again toâ€"day, when the farmer admittedly has the votes and the power in Congress to get just about anyâ€" thing he wants "If the present Tariff Bill goes through, it will impose a charge on the American people of between five and six billion dollars in exâ€" cess of the actual amount neces sary . to â€" offset wages here and Silver, head of mers‘ legislative It was so all through the yearl‘ when the farmer‘s voice was slrong( in conndemning the tariff, yet his | vote was too weak to upset it. ~‘The following article in reference to the U. 8. Tariff as it affects the farmer in the neighboring Repub lic, appeared in a recent issue of the New York Outlook and will be of interest to our readers:â€" It was so in the 60‘s, when the farmers entered into a deal with the Easterm manufacturers to outâ€" vote the South and put through a programme of protective tariff and free Western lands. Every time the farmer touches the tariff he gets burned. ped ay it Bu W nsumers Th lal IS Dt pl pt lucts n 11 the produc icts. The farmer caw‘t say the tariff makers in Congres: ‘alid anything for him. The; They have been most gou â€" with their tariffsâ€"on frm W1l g0 aguan but wh likely will are asking nt. duties of should how "GOLDâ€"BRICKED" AGAIN ON THE TARIFF ? n mad in this to overcom thing more for the things and receiving tarill ly diffieults t the a »du the M in mocrats h amimonium . sulphate, a material, â€" at the very uducers are selling large ibroad. â€" Glove manufacâ€" asking several hundred ha t the h the tw ndustri ud th to th or likely t« h wo the farmer P ind i1 of purpose ol Tal country. FFor »f twelve dollar the job ol the difference in abroad," says Gray tiâ€" organized farâ€" io‘ ‘lles at Washâ€" iL runous fir isk, has it Db tariff| makers baving done rer thin to t sonle all agricuiiut th the diffe ps that bring iff protection iverage farmâ€" Lurn iff his ind in pi i t tarift abroad. But in By 0. M. KILE 17c ul have th 0i of gloves be made arek on th m th certain paying â€" purpose he has Can d ben mpeti ut in ol chi gnifl tC D mai hold tlal Aud this 1Â¥ all m ug in ed It will only b now until thi and he may yet learn how to handle the tariff without getting burned t bourd that will make scientitic deâ€" terminations as to just what duties must be laid to mauke up the difâ€" ference between labor costs here and abroad, investigate special exceptâ€" Bu want high bigh tariff ducts." Right there the farmer w traded. Whether or not he c prove his position before the BHJ is finally passed remains fuor the same tariff protection the manufacturer gets." This statement was later corrected to read, "We insist that tariffs be such only as ure necessary to overcome the difâ€" ference in the cost of production in this country as compared with costs in foreign countries." But the damâ€" mage had been done. The manuâ€" facturer said: "All right. we are perfectly But this is not an agricultural organization. Certain agricultural groups, like the poultrymen, the wool men, and the butter producers, who want high tariffs on their proâ€" ducts are glad enough to accept the help of the tariff bloc. But the big and powerful agricultural or ganizations like the Farm Bureau and the Grange take little notice of and have very little to do with the tariff bloc as such. The reason is that«all the bloc‘s efforts are to Increase tariffs; They are doing noâ€" thing to get schedules cut down on the products the farmer and the consumer have to buy. ‘ The opportunity for this unsatisâ€" factory situation arose when cer tain farm organization leaders, with more vehemence than logic, assertâ€" ed last fall, "We are going to ask Keyes of New Hampshire . Its chairman is Senator Gooding of 14â€" aho, and it includes several memâ€" bers of the regular agricultural bloc, notably Semators Capper and Ladd. It holds regular meetings and works on the Senate tariffâ€" making committee with considerâ€" able effect. on ud Senator Gooding siy Give the famer a little more Senator Ladd What the farmers organizations e working for now is to take the riff out of politics. me kind They want a ifi South Cananks to Long 1h without a large stoc salers for our needs. "We eall up customer pointments for tryâ€"oi A wellâ€"known firm of Ottawa often use Long Distance in p ff Bill to Congress to enact Longt Xpect Tried trade id this rule, and then present be ena« willing to 1 of tariff tariffs: ig Distance brought us ct to enlarge our factor ed Stationâ€"toâ€"Station se factory for selling goo inks to Long Distance too, on fal Some quotations from recent reports l io Cliothing and Furnishing sales are increased by Long Distcsce will nonâ€"partisan tariff We can tell you how to eppiv Long Distance to almost «n > business F. 8. ROUTLEY, American Farm &E\ while longer ur farm pro 4t 1( of politics Tariff may hay tuke. We Not unc omp you the 4+ t ons T4 I" "T "€. "!‘f‘ ) to he out in outside tow ince. we of good 71â€" sery goods 3454 Marager DR. S. ECKEL, DR. J DJl ob Returning _ to London _ recently from Europe, wherse they participatâ€" ed in the ceremonies attending the International Eucharistic Congress at Rome, and subsequently toured the Continent and British Isles, Bisâ€" CLEMENT, HATTIN and SNYDER, law offices, Waterloo County Loan Building, corper King and Founâ€" dry Streets. Phone 77, Kitchener, Ont. SIMS, BRAY and McINTOSH. Harâ€" vey J. Sims, LL.B,. George Bray, BA.; D. G, Mc Intosh; Barristers, Notaries, etc. Office, upstairs, Economical Block, King St. West, Kitchener. JAMES C. HAIGHT, BARRISTER, Solicitor, Notary Public, Conveyâ€" ancer, etc. Money to loan, Office, Molsons‘ Bank Building, Waterloo. D SCELLEN and WEILR. J. &A 8OKLâ€" len, B.A., LLB.; J. J. A, Weir, Master in Chancery, Barristers, Solicitors, Etc. Money to loan, Offices, upstairs in the Huehn Block, King West, Kitchener. ind DK J L HRTT, SPRCIALTY, DiBâ€" eases of the Kar, Throat and Nose. King St. Hast, Kitchener. Graduate Chicago Co tal Surgcons and F. y Dental Surgeons of 7 tal office in new M Building, _ Waterloo, practices in all its Iw R. J. A. HILLIARD, DEXNTHST L. D. S., Royal College Deuta‘ Surgeons, D.D.S., Toronto Univerâ€" sity. All branches of | dentistrs practiced. Office Weber Chamâ€" bers, King W., Kitchener, Ont. . §. BOWLBY, B.A rister, Solicitor, ) ana Conveyancer. ant‘s Bunk Buildin 5 Holm Apartments, Young Bt, Phones, Office 1323J, H, 1383W. tor, Notary Public, etc. Money to loan. German spoken. Office, Pequesnat Block, nest to Markei, Frederick St., Kitchener. L. Bitzer, BA, SUCCKSSOR to Conrad Bitzer, Barrister, Solict G. _ MeINTOSH, BARRISTKR, Notury Conveyancer, etc. 13 Webâ€" t StL East, Kitchener. Phone 190 P the ELECTROTHERAPEUTIET BIHOP FALLON HOME M , Kitchener, Ont Ie DR. A. HOLM, D. C. GHIROPRACTOR F. Fallon, Mgtr. M. J. Brady v. Father Leonard Forristal ndered a splendid reception Roman Catholies of Lonâ€" ‘he Bishop and his fellowâ€" is â€" visited â€" Karisbad â€" spas ie woeeks, and during their ubserved conditions in Juâ€" l0 Austria,. Germany, Itlay, Belgium, England and Ire d tiul h yÂ¥ DENTAL th HUCGHI isiness that we le to carry on call un wholeâ€" writes to wri muik tes, "MU writing. it +S., DDS, wlege of Denâ€" yal Colieg: oi Toronto, Denâ€" Jolsons‘ Bank >. Denti try anches lice very 00, ENTLST Public Merchâ€" viephone y® Jat 9:

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