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Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 27 Nov 1924, p. 9

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A GREEN TEA waro is superior to the finest Japans, Young * Hysons or Gunpowder. Try it today. ; FREE SAMPLE of GREEN TEA UPON REQUEST. **SALADA,*" TORCXTO * _ Chatham, Ontario.â€"‘"I started to get i en od , was at Fort o‘ God for a week. Then Chapter XXI Continued. she came to ChurchiHl, where we c 00e nc oo ce saw here. The scheme was that ‘This is not a time for 1ON8 €*~ prokaw should bribe the ship‘s capâ€" planations," said the artist, 8t ;n to run close into Blind Eskimo holdipg back his hand. "They C201 point at night, and signal to Thorpe come later, Phil. But tonightâ€"NOW ang Rileen, who would be waiting. â€"you must understand why I CaU 1; worked, and Eileen and Thorpe not, shake hands with you. We baVe came on with the ship. At the landâ€" ‘been friends for a good many Y°ATS. ingâ€"you rememberâ€"Bileen was met In a few minutes we will be °P py the girl from Fort o‘ God. In emiesâ€"or you will be mine. OUE order not to betray herself te you thing, before I go on, I must 48k she refused to recognize her. Later of you. I demand it. Whatever she told her father, and Thorpe and passes between us during the nl?x: Brokaw saw in it an opportunity to ten minutes, say no word @&AIDSt strike a first blow. Brokaw had Hileen Brokaw. I will say what Â¥O4 prought two men whom he could might sayâ€"that for a time her sOUl trust, and Thorpe had four or five wandered, and was almost lost. BUt others at Churchill. The attack on it has come back to her, strong 'm"'lhe cliff followed, the object being pure. 1 love her. Some strange f”‘"‘:to kill the man and take the girl has ordained that she should lo'e!unhnrmed. A messenger was to take me, worthless as I am. She is t0 the news of what happened to Fort be my wife." '0‘ God, and lay the crime to men Philip‘s hand was still across the who had run up to Churchill from table. . lyour camp. Chance favored you "Gregeyâ€"Greggyâ€"God bless you!" that night, and you spoiled thelr! he cried, softly. "I know what it is plan. Chance favored me and I found to love, and to be loved. Why should Eileen. !t is useless for me to go I be your enemy because Eileen into detail as to what happened after Brokaw‘s heart has turned to gold, that excef;_ to s:;y thisâ€"that Wiieen and she has given it to you? Greggy. knew nothing of the pr'oposed atâ€" shake"" itack, and she was ignorant of the "wWait," said â€" Gregson, | huskily. heinousness of the plot against you, "Phil, you are breaking my heart. and that she was almost as much a im t C000 202 wll y a:a tool of. her father as you. Philâ€"" "Gregeyâ€"Greggyâ€"God bless you!" he cried, softly. "I know what it is to love, and to be loved. Why should I be your enemy because Eileen Brokaw‘s heart has turned to gold, and she has given it to you? Greggy. shake!" "Wait," said Gregson, huskily. "Phil, you are breaking my heart. Listen. You got my note? But I did not desert you so abominably. ! made a discovery that last night of yours in Churchill. 1 went to Eileen Brokaw, and toâ€"morrowâ€"some time â€"if you care I will tell you of all that happened. First you must know this. I have found the ‘power‘ that is fighting you down below. I have found the man who is responsible for Thorpe‘s crimes, the man who is responsibleâ€"forâ€"thatâ€"inâ€"there." Received Much Benefit by Taking Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Compound HER NERVES BETTER NOW weak after my second child was born, yrzâ€"â€"â€"=â€"==â€"=â€"â€"â€"1snd kept On §OttiMG He leaned across the table and pointed to the closed door. "And that manâ€"" "Is Brokaw, the father of my affianced wife‘!" "Good God!" cried Philip. "Gregâ€" son, are you mad?" "I was almost mad, when I first made the discovery," said Gregson, as cold as ice: "But I am sane now. His scheme was to have the governâ€" ment annul your prdvlsional license. Thorpe and his men were to destroy this camp, and kill you. The money on hand from stock, over six hunâ€" dred thousand dollars, would have gone into Brokaw‘s pockets. There is no need of further detailâ€"nowâ€" for you can understand. He knew Thorpe, and secured him as his agent. It was merely a whim of Thorpe‘s to take the name of Lord Fitzhugh instead of something less conspicuous. Three months before Brokaw came to Churchill he wished to get detailed â€" instructions . to Thorpe, which he dared not trust to a wilderness mail service. He could find no messenger whom he dared trust. So he sent Eileen. She ble Compound and took four bottles of it Igave birth to a b.hy%&hd& day of September, 1922. 1 am still doing > Aud wpwux.un-;. OOE 7 -n6'u-w- own work . cours T lon‘t feol well cvery day because 50 shan 1 mt my tam T houl hne.""I But when 1 E;'%::.'&Tfifiii”l until cured. My nerves are a lot better nhe-'t::dh&t.b:g.nmydmuyw Yummwhktmunm ::h:"tflntmv ** s Soaes ts f Ron‘s Street, Chatham, Ontario. â€" Mrs. Carson is willing to write to any FLOWER â€"_â€" By James Oliver Curwood. NARHHIN the NORTH For the first time there came a pleading light into Gregson‘s eyes as he leaned across the table. "Phil, if it wasn‘t for Eileen I would not be here. I thought that she would kill herself when I told her as much of the story as I knew. She told me what she had done; she confessed for her father. In that hour of agony I could not keep back my love. We plotted. 1 forged a letter, and made it possible to acâ€" company Brokaw and Eileen up the Churchill. It was not my purpose to join you, and so Eileen professed to be taken ill. We camped, back ver, and I sent 0 wo Indians back to Churchill, for Eileen and I wished to be alone with Brokaw if the terrible hour which was coming. That is all. Everything is sevealed. I have come to you as quickly as I could, to find that Thorpe is dead. In my own selfish~ ness I would have shielded Brokaw, arguing that he could pay Thorpe. and work honorably henceforth. You would never have known. It is Eileen who makes this confession, not I. Phil, her last words to me were these: ‘You love me. Then you will tell him all this. Only after this, if he shows us a mercy which we do not deserve, can I be your wife.‘ ‘‘There is only one other thing to add. I have shown Brokaw a ray of hope. He will hand over to you all his rights in the company and the six hundred thousand in the treas ury. He will sign over to you, as repurchase _ money for whatever stock you wish to call in, practically his whole fortuneâ€" five hundred thousand. He will disappear, comâ€" pletely and forever. Eileen and . I will hunt out our own little corner in a new world, and you will never \hear of us again. This is what we have planned to do, if you show us \mercy." * Philip had not spoken during ‘ Gregson‘s terrible recital. He sat| like one turned to stone. Rage, wonâ€" . der, and horror burned so fiercely in his heart that they consumed all| evidence of emotion. And to arouse him now there came an interruption | that sent the blood flushing back to his faceâ€"a low knock at the clgsed door, a slow lifting of the lftch the appearance of Jeanne. Th her tears she saw only the man she loved, and sobbing aloud now, like a child, she stretched out her arms to him; and when he sprang to her and caught her to his breast, she whispered his name againm and ‘again ‘and stroked his face with her hands Love, overpowering, breathing of of heaven, was in her touch,. and as she lifted her face to him of her own sweet will now, entreating him to kiss her and to comfort her for what she had lost, he saw ‘Gregson moyâ€" ing with bowed head, like a strickâ€" en thing, toward the outer door. In that moment the things that had been in his heart melted away, and raising a hand above his head, he called, softly: ‘Tom Gregson, my old chum, if time, as he passed through the door Both Philip and Jeaune were sient for some moments after Gregson had gone; their only movement was the gentleâ€"stroking of Phiip‘s hand over the girl‘s soft hair. Their hearts were full, too full for speech, And yet he knew that wpon his fu!l strength depended everything now. ‘The revelations of Gregson, whica virtually ended the fight against him personally, were but trivial in his thoughts compared with the ordea! which was ahead of Jeanne. Both and, ~with ‘the exception of mo one but he knew of the secret that had died with them. He could feel against.him the throbping of the storm that was passing in the girl‘s heart, ‘and in answer to it he said nothing in words, but held her to him with a gentleness that lifted her face, quiet and beautiful, so that her eyes looked steadily and unquestioningly into his own. "You love me," she said, simply, and yet with a calmness that sent a curious thrill through him. She still looked at him, without speaking, as though through his eyes she was searching to the bottom of his soul. "Beyond all else in the world," he replied. "And you know," she, whispered, after a moment. \ He drew her so close she could not move, anq crushed his face down against her own. .‘ "Jeanneâ€"Jeanneâ€"everything is just as it should be," he said. ."I am glad that you were found out in the snows. I am glad that the woâ€" man in the picture was your mothâ€" er. I would have nothing different than it is, for if things were differ ent you would not be the Jeanne I know, and I would not love you so. You have suffered, sweetheart, and I too, have had my share of sorrow. God has brought us together, and all is right in the end. Jeanneâ€"my sweet Jeanneâ€"" Gregson had left the outer door slightly open. A gust of wind openâ€" ed it wider. Through it there came now a sound that interrupted the words on Philip‘s lips, and sent a sudden quiver through Jeanne. In an instant both recognized the sound. It was the firing of rifles, the shots coming to them faintly from far beyond the mountain at he end of the lake. Moved by the same impulse, they ran to the door, hand in hand. C Rrermemmersmes "It is Sachigo!" panted Jeanne.| She could hardly speak. She seem | ed to struggle to get breath. "I had forgotten. They are fightingâ€"" s MacDougall strode upâ€" from his post beside the door, where he had been waiting for the appearance of Jeanne. "Firingâ€"off there," he said. "What does it mean?" 3 We must: wm%d see," replied Philip. "Send twokof your men to investigate, Mac. I will rejoin you after 1 have taken Miss d‘Arcambal over to Cassidy‘s wife. Druggists Say Ladies Are Usâ€" Published by arrangement with The British and Colonial Press, Limited. Few Folks Have Gray Hair Now Hair that loses its color and lustre, or when it fades, turns gray dull and lifeless, is caused by a lack of sulpbur in the hair. Our grandmother made up a mixture of Sage Tea and Sulphur to keep her locks ° dark and beautiful, and thousands of women and men who value that even color, that beautiful dark shade of hair which is so atâ€" tractive, use only this oldâ€"time reâ€" Nowadays we get this famous mixture impfoved by the addition of other ingredients by asking at any drug store for a bottle of "Wyâ€" th‘s Sage and Sulphur Compound," T:Mch darkens the hair so naturally, so evenly, that nobody can possibly tell it has been applied. You just dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one emall strand at a time. By morning the gray hair disappears; but what delights t.ho‘ ladies with Wyeth‘s Sage and Sulâ€" phur Compound is that, besides beautifully darkening the hair after a few applications, it Al:o.‘y'lncl back the gloss and lustre gives i; an appearance of abundance. ing Recipe of Sage Tea and Sulphur (To be Continued.) n “fll my"mâ€"'â€"”w-'-::m\ MWJ;-.VMM‘ tos fre the bile here last week," said an angry| 114 King West. â€"~ Kitchener forward to greet him, "and he says| CLEANING AND PRESSING| ®*** *# West. Kitchoner. you told him if anything broke you | â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" / j(YBS C HAIGHT â€"BARERISTER, would supply a new part." Men‘s and Ladies‘ Suits, Dyed, ODry| Solicitor, Notary Public, Conveyâ€" @"Certainly," . said : the clerkâ€"| creaned and Pressed. Latest sanitary| ancer, otc. Money to loan, Office, "What does he want?" _ | steam pressing. 4 Molsons‘ Bank Building, Waterloo. and about half a yard of cuticle," said the man, "and he wants ‘em right away." "What does he want?" "He wants two deltoid muscles, The Right Thing "My client," declared the !iut lawyer, "is willing to do the right "I don‘t know. The next q tion is, what is the right thing? ‘"Well?" "And I fear that it will take a long lawsuit to settle that." * _Bound To Win "Jack proposes to every girl who gives him a chance." "Habit?" She Cured Him "Did you ever catch your husâ€" band flirting?" "Only once." | "What did you do to him?" "Married him." Overworked Mr. Smith (to wife, who had been to see doctor)â€"But why are you so angry with the doctor, dear?" Mrs. Smithâ€"‘Why I told_ him I was tired, and he asked to see my tongue. Previous Engagements â€" This story is going the rounds in London: The wife of a member of the Labor Government received an invitation to tea from a titled society hostess. When her husband read the invitation his democratic instincts came to the surface with a rush and he immediately wrote the following reply: "Dear Countessâ€"My wife and I beg to acknowledge receipt of yours of the 4th inst. We â€"are reâ€" fusing your invitation for three reasons : (1) I do not drink tea. (2) My wife only drinks tea with her friends. (3) The day for which you ask us is washing day." A Thrifty Scotchwoman It ‘would probably itake many generations of undesired ond unâ€" desirable adversity to train Amerâ€" icans into the farâ€"seeing thriftiness of the Scotch. An illustration on this thrift is contained in the story of a scotchwoman who had been promised a present of a new bonâ€" net by a lady. Before she made the purchase, the called and asked the good woman: "Would you rather have a felt or a straw bonnet. Mrs. Wilson?" "Weel," said Mrs. Wilson. "I think I‘ll tak‘ a stae ane; it‘ll mayâ€" be be a mouthful to the coo when I‘m done wi‘ it!" Real Spring Lamb Dinerâ€""Waiter, what kind of meat is this?" Waite.râ€"â€"“Spring lamb, six." "I thought so! I‘ve been chew on one of the springs for an hour!" Asked A Small Favor A pretty girl had an elderly, corâ€" pulent suitor. The stout lover went on his knees to propose in the oldâ€" fashioned way. But even this roâ€" mantic attitude did not soften the girl‘s heart and she promptly reâ€" fused him. "In that case, matters ought "No; system." "Well, Miss ‘Smith," said the fat one, still on his knees, "if you will not accept my offer, you might at least help me up." A Harrowing Experience Sam had passed through a harâ€" rowing experience. He had seen a ghost. "Ah jes‘ come out of de cowâ€" shed," he said, an‘ ah had a pail of milk in mah hand. Den ah hears a noise by de side of de road an‘ de ghost rushes out." _ "Did you shake with fright, Sam?" asked one of his dusky audâ€" ience. "Ah don‘t know what ah shook wid. Ah hain‘t sayin for suttin‘ ah shook at all. But when ah got home ah found all de milk gone, an‘ two pounds o‘ butter in de pail." It has just laid the keels of eight|ness. | cargo boats and four passenger| Jad Salts is inexpensive; makes a steamers. The total cost of the 12| delightful effervescent lithiaâ€"water vessels, which wil have an aggreâ€"|drink which everyone should take gate tonnage, will be $5,000,000.|now and then to help keep the kid« They will be completed early in|meya clean and active and the blood 1926. ‘The _ Government . hopes| pure, thereby often avolding sorâ€" through these steamers to. lower| lous kidney complications. By all freight rates and to compete with| means have your physician examine foreign shipowners. your kidneys at least twice a yoar, RUSSIA BUILDING A MERCANTILE MARINE. 18 SPENDING $5,000,000. Soviet Russia has begun the forma tion of its own merchant marine said the second quesâ€" on THE WATERLOO DYING,. CLEAN | cramBNT, HATTIN and SNYDER, ING AND PRESSING rnygll law offices, Waterioo County Loan MAHN BRO8., Proprictors. Bullding, corner King and Founâ€" 18 King 8t. N. Waterioo| dry Streets. Phone 77, Kitcheger, furnace work. Reparing promptly| D. S. BOWLBY, BA, LLB., Bar done. Estimates on work cheerfully| rister, Solicitor, Notary Public TINSMITHING Quart Of Water Cleans Kidneys Take a Little Salts if Your Back Hurts, or Bladder Is Troubling You. No man or woman can make a mistake by flushing the kidneys oc-‘ caslonally, says a wellâ€"known authâ€" ority. Eating too much rich food creates acids, which excite the kilâ€" neys. They become â€" overworked from the‘ strain, get sluggish and fail to filter the waste and poisons ‘from the blood. Then we get sick. Rheumatism, headaches, liver troubâ€" le, nervousness, dizziness, sleeplessâ€" ness and urinary disorders often come from sluggish kidneys, ‘The moment you feel a dull ache in the kidneys, or your back hurts, orif the urine is cloudy, offensive, full of sediment, irregular or passâ€" age or attended by a sensation of scalding, begin drinking a quart of water each day, also get about Your ounces of Jad Salts from any pharmacy; take a tablespoonful in Harry Marks, Prop. 91 King St. N. Bring your vulcanizing and welding work to us. . Lawn mowers and knives sharpened, rubbers, repaired, and general repairing. THE MERCANTILE FIRE INSURANCE a glaes of water before breakfast, and in a few days your kidneys may act fine. Upholstered Chesterfields and‘ Chairs, while they last. Your opportunity to save money. ! Glady Upholstering Co. Cor.. UNION & HERBERT STS. PHONE 400 WATERLOO WATERLOO _ VULCANIZING WORKS ‘This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juloe.‘ combined with lithia, and has been used for years to flush and stimuâ€" late the kidneys; also to help neutralize the acids in the eystem, so they no longer cause irritation, ’thul often relieving bladder weakâ€" ness. Agent Rear of Pequegnat Block, Fredâ€" erick St., Kitchener. Phone 173J Jad Saits is inexpensive; makes a delightful effervescent . lithiaâ€"water drink which everyone should take curity of $50,250,000. Alfred Wright, Secretary. C. A. BOEHM, DiST. AGT. Waterioo, Ont. Phone 249 Farm Implements Bubecribed Capital . .$250,000 Assets ....... . $700,000 All policies guarnnteeq by Gordon Peterson Masseyâ€"Harris Implements. s. T. Btable Equipment Ontario Mind Mills Wire Fencing and Twine Schnarr & Cline | an 14 TO 1}3 OFF INCORPORATED aokedat A. L BITZER, B.A, SUCCRSSOR and . to Conrad Bitzer, Barrister, Solieâ€" FURNACE WORK | itor, Notary Public, ete. Money to COMPANY CHESTERFIELD Suites and odd MOVING, TRUCKING and ICE Carting and Moving, local and long distance trucking, and baggage transfer. Dealers in ice, Phones: Office 232. GUARANTEED repairs of broken metal parts and auto radiators. Broken frames of cars, broken castings, etc., welded, straightenâ€" ed and made good as new. Wreckâ€" ed radiators a specialty. Twin City Welding and Auto Radiator Repair Co., 246 King St. E., Kitâ€" and Conveyancer Office Merehâ€" aut‘s Bank Building. T elophone All makes of cars at lowest prices. Price of Fords $20 up. Also wash and polish cars. Jul. Rietz, Phone 1967J, 36 Cameron St., Kitchener. TOTAL ASSETS OVER $1,000,000 pieces reâ€"upholstered arfd repaired New Chesterfleld 3â€"plece Suite for sale. Call or write J. L. Chase, 90 John Bast, Waterioo, Officers and Directors Harness and Shoes Promptly and neatly done.Satisâ€" faction guaranteed. REPAIRING â€" BOOTS, SHOES and RUBBERS REPAIRED KNIVES SHARPENED Allan Bowman, Pnllden&. Preston | Levi Shuh, Vice Pres, Waterioo P. E. Shantz, Preston J. Howard Simpson, Gueiph. Richard Roschman, Kitchener 1 W. G. Weichel, Waterioo f Aloyes Bauer, Waterloo ‘ Joseph Stauffer, Gait ‘ J. H. Reos, Waterico LEVI SHUH, Manager B. E. BECHTEL, Inspector ARTHUR FOSTER, Asst. Manager C. A. BOEHM, District Agent. H. M. WILHELM 13 King St. N, Wate chener. Phone 1556. E. NIERGARTH 27 Erb St. â€" Waterloo Waterloo Mutual Fire Insurance Company Highest Prices . Paid For Churning Cream AUTO PAINTING UPHOLSTERING in touch with us. Write, phone or call. Shoemaker‘s Dairy will pay producers to get AUTO RADIATORS Incorporated in 1863 FOELL BRO8. Repairing next to Market, 96 Church St Waterloo. 46. Chiropractic Speciailst Chromic, nervous and funchional 1504W; House, Palmer Graduate Chiropractor 194 King St. West, Kitchener Phones: Office 1123J, House 606w. National Graduate, The Golden Rule Chiropractor. Consultation and examination free. Office 29 Ahrens St. W, Kitchener Phone 580M. DR. F. G. HUGHES, Dentist, Hachâ€" mel‘s Block, King St. S., Waterloo. Phonesâ€"Office 394J, Residence, 359J. DR. J. W. HAGEY, Dentist, Room 110 Weber Chambers, King St. W. Kitchener, Telephone connections, Kitchener. DR H. M. KATZENMEIER, Denâ€" tist, office 93 King St. W., Kitch® ener. Phone 305W. . DR. L. DOERING, Dentist, succesâ€" sor to Pr. J. Schmidt, 69 King St. East, over Dominion Bank, twe doors from Postoffice, Kitchener, phones: Office 454; residence, 2092 W. D.D.S., D.M.D., LD.S, MDS, Special attention paid to Orthodonâ€" tia (straightening teeth) and painâ€" less extraction with early imâ€" Office Room 11, over Bank of Toâ€" "King St, S., ‘Waterioo, Phoneâ€"849. Office 406; Accountants and Auditors Author ized Trustees, Assignees, eto. .... INCOME TAX COUNSEL 206 Weber Chambers, . Phone 1908. Kitchener. In Molsons Bank, Waterloo, Phone 114 _ pressions for plates. Phones: Office 444, Res. 2029M. 35 King St. West, Kitchener. AUDITORS & ASSIGNEES Brantford selfâ€"oiling Windmills * Buggies and Cutters C. R. GIES 40 King 8t. L., Kitshener WALTER D. INRIG & CO. 27 Erb 8t W. Office 44 DR. F. DK. H. E. ILLING Don‘t throw away your old Inâ€" grain, Tapestry or Brussel Carâ€" nots. Bring them to us. We make them into beautiful new reveraible Fluff Rugs for you. DR. A. HOLM, D.C.____| . FLUFF RUG WEAVING A full line of Masseyâ€"Harris Implements DR. E. G. FRY DENTAL Waterloo. Phone 481J.

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