_ When Exposed to Air glmmm|mun|mmnnmnmmumummnmnmmmlmnumumnnmmg ï¬lllllllllllllllllIlIlllIllllllIllllllllllllllllmllll||l|lllllllllllllllllllIlllllllllllllllllllï¬‚ï¬ "Have one?" he said, exfending, Cal, perhaps you will do it on his pouch and papers. Reed‘s?" R "No thanks. I usually take a pipe Iron jaws suddenly went clutchâ€" before turning in, but that‘s about| ing _ about â€" Cal‘s â€" heart. . "How all." Reed‘s?" he demanded. "What have Jackson returned his pouch to a pocket of good worsted stuff, now frayed and broken about the edge. "Well, let‘s get down to business," he said, as one who had an unpleasâ€" ant task and wants to get it over with. "How about lending me a hunâ€" dred dollars? That ‘u‘d put me back under the cluster’/ughts amd out of everybody‘s way." Cal did a moment‘s quick thinkâ€" Ing. What lay behind this complaâ€" cent suggestion that he should lend a stranger a hundred dollars? There was a deliberateness about the manâ€" ner of young Jackson which sugâ€" gested that this approach was part of a definite plan. Why had he not gone to his father for money? But be must speakâ€" "A hundred dollars? 1 haven‘t that much in the world." "You could get it from the old man if you went after it. He paid you something toâ€"night, didn‘t he?" man if you went after it. He paid you something toâ€"night, didn‘t he?" Cal restrained an impulse to tell this meddler to mind his own busiâ€" ness. There was something deeper here than appeared on the sifrface and he must move warily. "Yes. He paid me up to date, and something over. 1 couldn‘t ask him for more at present." "You‘re too modest, Cal. Always do your getting while the getting is good. But perhaps what he gave you would see me |hrm‘u:h‘ I could be in Minneapolis in . twentyâ€"four hours. and comfortably out of your "But you‘re not i\my way. Not at all. This country‘s big enoughâ€"" "It won‘t beâ€"if I stay here. Beâ€" sides, I‘ll send the money back as soon as I hit a bit of luck. I got nothing against you, Cal; nothing at all, and I‘ve made you a straight proposition. Come through with the green and I‘ll get eut and stay out, and nobody‘ll know any more than when I came." Cal was screwing a dust cap on a valve. His head was low, turned to the wheel, and he held it there for a moment while he considered these strange words. They were spoken softly enough, in a manner a‘most friendly, but there was a hard hint of threat underneath. What was the fellow coming at? They might as well have it out at way once Cal straightened up and faced him,. a latent fire of belligerency faning up hotly in his breast. "I have no money to lend you he sald,. "and there is ng, reasc why I should do so, if I had. As f what you call ‘a straight propos tion,‘ I don‘t understand you at all TE A. nees for that reason is never sold in bulk. Your %rocer sells this delicious blend. Try SALADA. Jackson did not move from his seat on the runningâ€"board. His face was â€"calm, his voice deliberate, but there was a deep glow in his eyes that was hard to fathom. "If you won‘t do it on my account, "SALADA" TO WOMEN OF MIDDLE AGE Mrs. Wilson‘s Experience a Guide to Women Passing through the Change of Life Hamilton, Ontario. â€"‘‘I have taken several bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Comâ€" pound and I canâ€" not speak too highly of it as I wfnslntfthe Change of Life and was Q ’ all runâ€"down and y had no appetite: %}m I was very weak se d and sick, and the | 4 pains in m{ back were so bad I t couldhardlymove. eeeeeeeeeieeemi Ight very sad at times and thought I had not a friend on earth. I did not care if I lived or died. I was very nervous, too, and did not go out very much. A friend advised me to try a bottle of Lydia E. l‘ir{hnm‘s Vegetable Compound, so I di I am a farmer‘s wife, and alâ€" ways worked hard until lately, and was in bed for two months. I began to‘feel like a new woman after the first bottle and I recommend it with grent success, also Lydia E. Pinkâ€" am‘s Liyer Pills. 1 am willing. to anawer letters from women asking about your medicines, as I cannot ipe.k too highly of them.‘"â€"Mrs. MMA W1LSON, 471 Wilson Street, Hamilton, Ontario. ‘«z Q’ ahe ts ‘ee* "ecpt". \ times and thought Sold by druggists everywhere. C The Smoking Flax tea loses its strength and flavor. By ROBERT STEAD is ng, reason I had. As for aight proposiâ€" id you at all." Iron jaws suddenly went clutchâ€" ing about â€" Cal‘s â€" heart. . "How Reed‘s?" he demanded. "What have you to do with Reed?" Jackson flicked the ash from his cigarette and inhaled deeply. "It‘s not a pleasant story, Cal; not pleasâ€" ant for any of us, and I‘d just as soon not go into it. Suppose you iend me fifty dollars and I‘ll be off on the next train to Minneapolis." Cal measured him for a moment. "I don‘t know what you‘re driving at," he said. "But I‘m not going to lend you fifty dollars. If you think you can get it from me any other way here and now is a good chance to try." "I didn‘t want to tell you the story, Cal, but if I must I must. The boy is not what you pretend he is." "Not what‘/l pretendâ€"2 You lie! What do yow@ know about Reed?" If Cal expected the passing of the lieâ€"would bring Jackson Stake to his feet he was disappointed. The man remained seated. _2 "I don‘t generally take that, Cal, but the circumastances are unusual. You may want to take it back in a imoment. You ask me what 1 know about Reed. Suppose I tell you. You had a sister named Celesta?" A tremor of something akin to fear ran along Cal‘s spine. It was plain that Jackson was not 'merely stabbing in the dark. He knewâ€" how much? Cal decided it would be worth while to find that put and changed his tactics accordingly. "That‘s soâ€"yes," he agreed. "And Reed is her son?" * "I have made no secret of the fact that Reed is my sister‘s son." "Quite _ so. Butâ€"who _ is _ his dather?" Cal‘s feeling was that of a miser whose hoard has been robbed:; of a now virtuous woman whose youthâ€" ful error is about to be blazoned abroad. He had a terrific impulse to fall upon this black scoundrel, to take his neck in his strong hands and twist it into eternal silence. The man knew about Reed! The seâ€" cret he had guarded so well, which he had hoped to lose forever, was in this man‘s power. Why not seal it nowâ€"now, for the sake of the boyâ€" Something jerked his whirling mind back to a solid ground of cunâ€" ning. He had to meet this problem brain with brain, not muscle with muscle. Curiously, even at this moâ€" ment Cal recalled his own philosoâ€" phy about Gander being no match for this stranger, and about those who are lacking in the head trying to make up for it with a heavy fist. The thought sobered him, steadied him, brought him back to earth. He could be as dangerous as young Mr. Stake. The secret must be kept! That was the one thing above all others. Nothing else mattered. Reed must grow up free of the horrible handiâ€" cap that society would place upon him if it knew. For that he was willing to pay any price. It was plain that this man knew, and his mouth must be closed. With money? The loan idea was blackmailâ€" blackmail, pure and simple. If he gave him fifty dollars toâ€"day. he would demand a hundred dollars toâ€" morrow. In the promise to go away and keep silence Cal had no faith whatever. The creature would keep silence only so long as he found it profitable to do so. ‘ On the other hand, if Cal attacked this man, if he thrashed him as he should, explanations would be deâ€" manded, and the secret would be out. With a blow that seemed to stop his heart it came to Cal that there would be no safety while this man lived . . . Still. he must feel man lived . . . Still, he must feel his way; he must temporize. "I can‘t guess what you may know about Reed," he said, "or why. you should ask me a question like that. It is, of course, none of your, business. That is the obvious anâ€" swer. But apparently you think you have information which you can sell to me and that I will pay you for keeping quiet. Before I can deâ€" cide on that I must know what the information is. What do you know lnbout Reed, and why should I pay you for silance?" Jacks laughed uneasily. ‘"You carry At well, Cal," he said. "If I had four poker face I wouldn‘t be holding you up for a measly fifty at you may said, "or why question like none of your dollars. I‘d go after However, when the big bitting one has to play for the small # ones. 1 thought T‘d told you enough, smtlcs and you wouldnt be curious about ® the details." c mm m ui oi d snn n lA oi i0 ast Ap i "I want to know the whole thing. Of Course â€" If I‘m to pay you money I want 10| =wne; kind of boys go to Heayâ€" know what I am paying it for." en?" asked the Sunday School Sup "Bit down, Cal," said JACKBOD:| suingongent, after a moment, making room for him on the runningâ€"board. "I ain‘t proud of my part in this story, as perhaps you can guess, but I ain‘t as sorry, either, as you‘ll think I ought to be. I met your sister when she was eighteen or nineteenâ€"" "You miet her?" "Yep. Mighty catchy looking girl and I fell for her right away. I wasn‘t much more than a kid myâ€" self, you understand. She spoke of you oftenâ€"that‘s how I knew it was you when I heard your name here; Cal Beach isn‘t so common but that it ‘u‘d make one pick up the, conâ€" nectionâ€"but she never let me come ‘round to her place and never let me see you, you understand. Guess she knew I was a sort of black sheep from the first and wanted to keep the family name as clean as the circumstances would permit." Cal listened to this amazing reâ€" cital too stunned to feel its force. Afterwards he wondered at that moâ€" ment he had not twisted Jackson Stake‘s head from his shoulders. But at the time the suddenness, the brazenness, of the revelation held him dumfounded. It was not until the sneer in Jackson‘s confessionâ€" If he could call it a confessionâ€"it was not until the sneer upon Celâ€" esta began to emerge from the tangled debris of his life‘s wreckâ€" age that Cal felt the sting of the blow. The blood rushed to his head and brought him, reeling, to his feet. "You dog!" he cried. "You cur! I‘ve a mind to choke your insults down your throat, here and now. Youâ€"you murderer! Yes, murderâ€" er; that‘s the word. Murderer, and worse than murderer, of my sister! 1 could take your life, but it wouldâ€" n‘t settle the score; it isn‘t worth a hair on her head. Youâ€"youâ€"" "Hot words, Cal. Calm yourself. i told you I wasn‘t proud of my part but you insisted on the facts. You got ‘em. But there‘s one fact which doesn‘t seem to be quite clear to YO%; the fact that it is I who hold the whip hand in this little controâ€" versy. Just lay so much as a finger on me and no price you can offer will keep me from telling Minnie, at any rate. I haven‘t been a model brother, but I owe her that much and I‘ll pay it. So sit down and keep quiet." Cal obeyed. There was nothing else to do. The hypocrisy of Jackâ€" son‘s pretence of protecting Minnje nauseated him, but there was noâ€" thing to do but keep silence. And keep his head. He was playing with too shrewd a gamester to lose his head. "And I wasn‘t insinuating against Celestaâ€"not at all. Celesta was a good girl. But she seemed to recogâ€" nize the black sheep in me and there‘s a kiglg in human nature that makes the good girl and the black sheep an awful bad combination. She‘d.have given her soul for me, I reckon, and I admit I thought more of her than of most of them. I was mighty sorry over it all, but it couldn‘t be helped then, and there was no use standing around weepâ€" ing about it." Cal‘s sarcasm burst his restraint. "That is the one thing you allowed Celesta‘s other friends to_ do for her," he commented. "And now you expect for this little service to the 'â€"fflnily I‘ll make a good fellow of you and present you with my sumâ€" mer‘s wages?" "Wellâ€"I wouldn‘t put it just that way. I thought this country would be a little small for us, and the simplest thing would be for you to stake me a railroad ticket and I‘d put a lot of land between us. Of course, there are other waysâ€"" ‘ "You‘re right@@ihere are other ways. Listen to me, Stake. When 1 sat by my sister in those last hoursâ€"when I followed her alone to the cemetery, I swore before God that if I ever met the man responsâ€" ible for it I‘d have his life for hers. And I haven‘t entirely changed my mind. You might chew on that a little, too." â€" "I know. You could lay for me and knock me out sometime when I‘m off my guard; I don‘t admit you can do it in a fair fight. But that would call for explanations, Cal, and it seems to me explanations are the thing that would be particularly hardâ€"for you. So you can chew on that." EARACHE Heat an jron spoon. Put four drops of liniment and four drops of sweet ofl in it, mix and put one ear. (To be Continued.) * KING OF two drops in the Copyright young Ferguson home toâ€"night Mrs. Jonesâ€"Why, we haven‘t a thing to eat in the house, the cook is in a bad temper, baby has whoopâ€" ing cough, and mother is coming. "Yes, that‘s why I‘m going to bring him home. The young fool is thinking of getting married." "Well, it has one advantage. A fellow can select his own wrong numbers." _ It‘s One Advantage "So you‘ve got one of those dial system telephones. How do you like it ?" Lack Harry‘s Thrift Sir, William Carruthers recently told a story about Harry Lauder‘s last visit to New Zealand. A class at school was asked who was the richest man in the world, and one boy shouted shouted, "Sir Harry Lauder." _ "But," said the teacher, "Vanderâ€" bilt and other Americans are much richer." "Ay", said the youngster, "but they spend some of their." one? Sheâ€"Yes, Would you mind hunt ing up a partner for me? No Wonder Sweet Young Thingâ€"Claude says he worships the very ground I stand A Rejected Suitorâ€"I don‘t blame him, A farm of that size is not to be sneezed at. . She Wants To Be Boss "I can‘t get along with my wife." Nonsense! Where there‘s a will there‘s a way." "Not in this case; it is where there‘s a will there‘s a won‘t." ‘‘Benâ€"Was there a wedding at Smithson‘s last night? I heard strains of "O Promise Me:" Ebenâ€"Nope, Burtkins was just borrowing five fromâ€"Smithson. From the Land of Cakes Englishwoman (who had written engaging housemaid) â€"Why, when you answered my questions so fully, did you not say you were Scotch? Ingrowing Humor "A happy thought struck me,‘" said Boreleigh, continuing his re marks. "Funny thing about your happy thoughts," interrupted Blunt; "you never give expression to oneâ€"they always strike in." Hostâ€"I should say so. Why, it even indicates when my wife is goâ€" ing to have a crying spell. A Sensitive Instrument _ _ Visitorâ€"Got a barometer, I see Does it work .well? Stretchable "Jack‘s been engaged to so many girl‘s he‘s seen the necessity of inâ€" venting a new ring." "What‘s it like?" "Gold halfâ€"way round and rubber the rest of it." "Dead boys!" shouted an enthusâ€" Mr. Jonesâ€"I‘m going to bring Tempted "I met our minister on the way to Sunday Schoo,l mamma," said ‘Wilâ€" lie, "and he asked me if I played marbles on Sunday." "What did you answer?" asked mother. "I just said ‘Get thee behind me, Satan,‘ and walked off and left him," was the triumphant response. Persona Non Grata Heâ€"Would you like to dance this Absolutely No Hurry About It One chilly evening in the early part of March the sheriff entered the county jail, and addressing the coloured person who occupled the strongest cell, said: "Gabe, you know that under the law my duty requires me to take you out of here toâ€"morrow, and hang you. 80 I‘ve come to tell you that I want to make your final hours on earth a@# pleasant as possible. For your last breakfast you can have anything to eat that you want, and as much of it as you want. What do you think you‘d like to have?" Beyond Him "Can you manage a typewritér?" "Not the one I married." Maidâ€"Well, I dinna like to boast The condemned man studied for a minute. "Mr. Lukins," he said, "I b‘lieves I‘d lak to have a nice wortermelon." "But watermelons won‘t be ripe for four or five months yet," said the sheriff. "Well, suh," said Gabe, "I kin walt." * (From "A Laugh a Day Keeps the Doctor Away"). Doran. the Key of Dough The most a rheumatic -m‘ can hope for in rubbing something on the swollen, aching joints is a little relief and all the while the trouble is becoming more firmly rooted. It is now known that rheuâ€" maism is rooted in the blood, and that as the trouble goes on the blood becomes still further thin and watery. To get rid of rheumatism, therefore, you must go to the root of the trouble in the blood. That is why Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills have proved so beneficial when taken for this trouble. They make new, rich blood which expels the poisonous acid and the rheumatism disapâ€" pears. There are thousands of formâ€" er rheumatic sufferers in Canada, now well and strong, who thank Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills that they are now free from the aches and pains of this dreaded trouble. One of these is Mr. Robt. A. Smith, Mersey Point, N.S., who says: â€" "Some Liniments of No Avail â€"The MONEY TO LOAN | Trouble Must be Treated tepmissstimnaigimmmetintentmpigemiinmma Through the Blood. PIRST MORTOGAGES on city and wz 9z farm property. Reasonable interâ€" The most a rheumatic sufferer| est. Fire Insurance, Economical can hope for in rubbing something| and North Waterlco Farmers‘ on the swollen, aching joints is a Mutual, at the lowest premiums little relief and all the while the in the city.~G. F. Lackner, Agt., years ago I was attacked with rheuâ€" matism, which grew so bad that I could not walk and had to go to bed under the doctor‘s care. It is needâ€" less to say that I underwent a great deal of suffering. The doctor‘s medâ€" icine did not seem»to reach the trouble, so when I was advised to try Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills I did so, and after taking them for some weeks I was able to get out of bed. 1 continued using the pills and was soon able.to work, and I have not been _ troubled _ with â€" rheumatism since. In other respects also I deâ€" rived a great deal of benefit from these pills and I think them a wonâ€" derful remedy." Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills are sold by all medicine dealers or mail at 50 cents a box from The Dr. Wilâ€" liams Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. DIES AT MONTREAL * Messages of sympathy from over the world poured info the home of Colonel George Henry Ham, Canaâ€" @ian journalist and publicist and for thirtyâ€"five years with the C.P.R., whose death occurred early on April 16th at his home in Montreal. COL. HENRY HAM Death came unexpectedly despite a long illness, terminating a career which had given Colonel Ham farâ€" flung fame as a writer of wit. He was in his 79th year. The opening guns in the Provinâ€" cial election campaign expected this summer were fired last Wednesday night by Hon. E. C. Drury and Arthur W. Roebuck at the public meeting which closed the first anâ€" nual Progressive convention at Toâ€" ronto. Both speakers were bitter in their criticism *of the Ferguson Government, its tactics on the liquor question and on redistribuâ€" tion being the points particularly attacked. Hardly a hundred people were in the hall. . . DRURY CRITICIZES VIMY RIDGE ANNIVERSARY DINNER GIVEN BY LORD BYNG Many of the officers of the Canaâ€" dian Corps from all parts of Canada who took part in the Battle of Vimy Ridge nine years ago on April 9th were guests at the anniversary dinâ€" ner at Government House given by His Excellency General Lord Byng of Vimy, who was the Canadian Corps commander at the battle, in plan and in tactics one of the most notable of the war. The capture of Vimy Ridge was one of the outstanding triumphs the supporting units of the C.E.F. during the war. Vimy Ridge was scored by the Canadian Corps and‘ the most dominant position held by the Germans on the western front and was so strongly fortified that the German high command regardâ€" ed it as prackically impregnable. From the earlier days of the war in 1914 it had been the scene of bitter fighting. Attempts by the French army in 1915 and 1916 to capture We ridge from the Germans ’had,_ failed, at a cost of 100,000 casualties. You feel fine in a few moments. Your cold in head or catarrh will be gome. Your clogged nostrils will open. The air passages of your head will clear and you can breathe freely. _ No more dullness, head: ache; no hawking, snuffling, musâ€" cous discharges, or dryness; . no. struggling for breathâ€"at night. Tell your druggist you want a «mall bottle of Ely‘s Cream Baim. Apply a little of this fragrant, antiâ€" septic cream in your nostrils, lef it penetrate through jevery air passâ€" age of the head; soothe and heal the awollen, inflamed muscous .. mem:â€" brane, and reliet comes instantly. It is just what every cold and catarrh sufferer needs. Don‘t stay stuffedâ€"up and miserable. PREMIER FERGUSON L. W. Shuh ....â€"â€"........Presl W. G. Weichel ......Viceâ€"Presic J. Howard Simpson A. B Richard Roschman J. H. P Jos. Stauffer P. E. Sh ARTHUR FOSTER ...... Man B. E. BECHTEL and W. R. BRICKER ....... Inspec C. A. BOEHM INSURANCE AGENCIES, LIMITED District Agents Established 1863 ‘ DR. | ASSETS OVER $1,400,000 +o In ] GOvERNMENT DEPOSIT $100,000 | i74 170 Queen St. N., Phone 1167W, Kitchener. it THE MERCANTILE FIRE INSURANCE CUT FLOWERS AND PLANTs Artistic Floral Designs a = Bpecialty. A. BOND Florist Kitchenerâ€"17 Mary St. Phone 1597F. Waterlooâ€"122 King St. Phone Promptly and neatly done.Satisâ€" faction guaranteed. H. M. WILHELM 13 King St. N., Wat Waste of Braing Visitorâ€"Can you spell horse? .. Hostess‘s Little Girlâ€"I could if 1 wanted to, but what‘s the use of spelling anything so out of style?, It Depended Do you think my voice will be suitable for opera? Heâ€"Stage or boxes? REP A IRIN G BOOT8, SHOES and RUBBERS REPAIRED KNIVES SHARPENED E. NIERGARTH 27 Erb St. â€" Waterloo Waterloo, Ont. |_ INCOME TAX COUNSEL Smilin‘ C!‘.;l'h? Sa}’S' | 206 Weber Chambers. _ Phone 1908 N . Y | Kitchener. â€" Subscribed Capital . .$250,000 Assets ........ $700,000 All policies guaranteed by the London and Lancashire Insurance Co. Ltd. with se curity of $50,250,000. Alfred Wright, Secretary. C. A. BOEHM INSURANCE AGENCIES, LIMITED District Agents ma erect hu%e/ ums t hold th Charleston contzsts in ?.*â€"â€" _Waterloo Mutual Fire Insurance _ Company Agent Rear of Pequegnat Block, Fredâ€" erick St., Kitchener. Phone 173J *"Wonder when they‘re Farm Implements a> 4P Gordon Peterson Masseyâ€"Harris Implements . T. Stable Equipment Ontario Mind Mills Wire Fencing and Twine Harness and Shoes SHOEMAKING. COMPANY INCORPORATED 1874 Officers and Directors Repairing Phone 760 .. .. .President Viceâ€"President A. Bauer J. H. Roos P. E. Shantz .... Manager Waterloo. Inspectors BCELLEN and WHIX, J. 4A SOML lon, BA., LLB.; J. J. A Wolr, JAMES C. HAIGHT, BARRISTER, Bolicitor, Notary Public, Conveyâ€" CLEMENT, HATTIN and SNYDER, law offices, Waterloo County Loas A. L. BITZEKR, B.A., SUCCESSOR D. 8. BOWLBY, B.A. LLB., Bar rister, Solicitor, Notary Public and Conveyancer Office Merchâ€" ant‘s Bank Building. Telephone 247, Kitchener, Ont. DR. J. E. HETT, SPECIALTY, DI#â€" eases of the Kar, Throat and Nose. King St. East, Kitchener. Palmer Graduate Chiropractor 194 King St. West, Kitchener Phones: Office 1123J, House 606w. DR. F. G. HUGHES, Dentist, Haehâ€" nel‘s Block, King St. S., Waterloo. Phonggfl)mce" 394J, Residence, 259J. DR. S. H. ECKEL, Dentist. Office In Molsons Bank, Waterloo, Phone DR. G. E. HARPER, DENTIST Office in Oddfellows Block, 32 King St, S., Waterloo, Phoneâ€" 349. Block, King West, Kitchener. Molsons‘ Building, corner King and Foumâ€" dry Streets. Phone 77, Kitchoner, Ont. Bolicitors, Eitc Money to loas. DR. J. W. HAGEY, Dentist, Room 110 Weber Chambers, King St. W. Kitchener, Telephone connections, Kitchener. itor, Notary Public, etc. Money to loan German spoken. Office, Pequegnat Block, nest to Market, Frederick St., Kitchener. to Conrad Bitzer, Barrister, Solfe DR. H. M. KATZENMEIER, Den tist, office 93 King St. W., Kitchâ€" ener. Phone 305W. DR. L. DOERING, Dentist, succesâ€" sor to Dr. J. Schmidt, 69 King St. East, over Dominion Bank, two doors from Postoffice, Kitchener, phones: Office 454; residence, 2092 W. Graduate of Bellevue Hospital, New York. Special attention paid to extraction and children‘s diseases. Office 35 King St. W., Kitchener Phone 444. For SPRAY, PAINTING Accountants and Auditors, Author ized Trustees, Assignees, eto. .... A. HOLM, â€" CHIROPRACTOR and ELECTROTHERAPEUTIST 5 Holm Apartments, Young St. Phones, Office 1323J. Hâ€"1323W AND WHITEWASHING call at THE WATERLOO VULCANIZING WORK 8 Office 44 William St., Water loo. Phone §4m. AUDITORS & ASSIGNEES WALTER D. 91 King St., North Successor to Dr. U. B. Shants DR. A. C. BROWN, DENTIST Don‘t throw away your x Inâ€" grain, Tapestry or Oarâ€" pets. Bring them to us. We make them into beautiful new reveraible Fluf#f Rugs for you. Art Oraft Rig Works. 134 Mary St. Waterloo. Phone 481J. FLUFF RUG WEAVING CHIROPRACTIC F. WAECHTER MEDICINAL Chiropractor DENTAL INRIG & CO. Waterloo