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Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 8 Aug 1929, p. 9

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h en o t -az eeg! "‘T " ECY -h:. ts With all the bran $s 32 of the whole wheat â€"â€"â€"~ COhildren don‘t have to WHEATEEE 6 t l "," With all the bran . & Efggens and healing the irritated tlasues. ITCHING BTOPS TNSTANTLY. D.D.D. is clear and Stainless. A 35c bottle proves Its merit ot your druggist gives your money back. D.D.D, gtoce akin health, (Useoniy D.D.D. Soap). "Gralb the tiller . . . . that way . . . with your feet .0. ." McCarthy obeyed. Norman took a full breath and with the line still under his arm, set one foot on the wet coaming alongside the cabin. Cautiously, gripping the hand* rail, doused deep under mountainous waves, he crawled to the bow of his H made the line fast to the post. "Come on!" he howled, and the wind ate up his voice. Fresh ‘blasts ripped morth. ‘The fish boat Resema, chafed skin, rashes, and other skin troubles quickly yield to D.D.D. This pure €vollng liquid penetrates the skin, soothing A. B. LEARN DRUG STORRB Waterioo % & s COnta "Get the line when he throws it «0. 0 . . I can‘t go too close. The sailor flung down the rope. It snaped directly over Norman‘s head, uncoiled in the wind, whipped down. Without waiting for Mcâ€" Carthy he caught it loosely under his arm. ‘The engine pushed his boat ahead five feet, ten; the wind, swooping around the end of the wreck, drove it back twenty. They were paying out the line up there He worked his bow closer under the lee of the wreck. Breakers tresâ€" passed like incautious, swaggering boys over the decks of the steamer. Spray, whipping across her highâ€" flung rail, slapped back into Norâ€" man‘s facge and welted his hard skin. Twenty ygrds away the deck tipâ€" ped now. A sailor with a coil of rope on his arm crawled down to the rail A tall wave buried him just as he lifted on one knee to fling the rope. The wave wrenched over him, and he stood up to try it again. They saw him, undoubtedly. They were staying ashore while he tried No powerâ€"boat could make it out through that surf against the wind. It was up to him. Lives . . . the lives of: thole men there on the freighter, those sandpipers, with little hands, hanging to little ropes .. . . . they all depended on him. Parish had failed. Would he fail He Pbointed Gustaf‘s boat toward the csteamer. Already he felt the urge of the running undertow. Breakers, white headed, white beard ed, like giants incredibly old and unbelievingly powerful, pommeled the side. But the motor chugged unâ€" excitedly. Norman‘s feet worked. nimbly along the tiller. He gknced shoreward once. The surfmen stood close together in a tight group. Norman screamed into MeCarthy‘s A Real Antiseptic Gets Results kin Troubles Lucky Children Indeed, If Their Mothers Know and Serve Itching it i 49k t have to be coaxed to eat like the shrode of Siked whole wheit The, nc e out of the drew away "C POSC| Six more to make the trip.â€" That and the|jast one. . . . that was the capâ€" tain, it flashed over Norman, a capâ€" of the|tain loath to leave his command. Y @WaY| What difference to the captain if â€"â€"â€"â€"=|she were only a tramp vessel, what difference if her very heart were torn out already? His own, his own â€" command! Norman remembered his 'Ie‘ father, who swam afone from the wreck of his schooner on Mustache ults Shoal. It would be hard to bring her skto |the captain down. A sixth man slid, his pure -nom-a a seventh. ear ‘ang | The eighth, the ninth . . . . nerit or ‘"‘Where are the rest?" Norman D.D.D. ap). screamed. ORE "Four washed overboard in the Ontario dark trying to launch the lifeâ€"boats," uarles Stewa . Minister of the Interior. nant pools in dry weather. The good sportsâ€" lnnn.inhi'ovn interest, is careâ€" ful with fire in flow of clear runâ€"~ ning ~â€"water ; burned timber means muddy torrents in flood Issued by authority of _ Honourable A bulky body followed. Norman dragged the fellow to his â€" knees, opened the forward hatch and flung in the seaman. He threw the dog in, too, before he slapped shut the cover. A second pair of boots kickâ€" ed out of the fog. Again the hatch opened and shut with a bang. This time water poured into the cabin. Norman thought of the wiring, of the stoutâ€"hearted engine doing its best. Without the engine, if the wiring became wet, that thin little line would part in a second. Withâ€" out the engine there was no hope. A third man glided the rope, hand over hand; a fourth, a fifth. The mist slit open and Norman peered up through wet lashe«s,with aching tormented, eyes. Five more heads bobbed into sight. Farther aft, anâ€" other, paying him â€" no attention, stood immovably by the rail, watchâ€" ing this hazardous rescuer, taking no part in it. 3 * He glanced overside. A dark shape was rolling toward him on the crest of a gray wave. A man? No, a dog. The ship‘s â€"dog! He reached out his arm.One moment he Tdruw back his hand. Again he leanâ€" ed out, strained toward the animal. It was a big dog, a good swimmer. Hi finger gripped the hair, then a strong metal colir. "Jump," he cried. jump!" 2 A wave leaped high over the coamâ€" at his feet. He looked up quickly ing and flung the wet dog groveling: at the deck above. ~ ! A pair of boots pratruded over the higher rail. They slid, jerking along the life line from the ateamer deck. "Come on, men, hurry!" he ‘howled igaill. 0 "trom the freighter until the thin line enapped tight. Norman felt that the whole world was being shaken under his tortured boat, the whole universe pommeled, beaten, shattered for the fancy of evil tempered winds.' A moment the fog piled thicker, a dull, unlighted wrap of chill damp ness, opague as mud, that cut off sight of steamer and shore, that drew a dark cowl about the boat, that admitted only the noise, the interminable and intolerable noise like a drunken regiment of drumâ€" mers, the nolse of wind and sky and sea. k forests AAW ME ce amireliennteiidisnc iz tans tow dPreictaith ernment and railway representatives, the short crop, the heavy l-;hn- tlon movement this year and the use of the combine harvesterâ€"throsher, it was decided at a meeting held at Winnipeg recently by the Canadian Passenger Association, attended by immigration, Labor, Provinciai Govâ€" CaAN REAP ownNn cROP No lahor will be required from Rastern Canada to harvest this year‘s crop in the West in view of _ The fishing boat flung atop the last of the breakers. It lifted its bow high into the scudding air in a final tipsy plunge. It ecraped against bottom with an impact that threatened to tear Norman‘s head So Julie had come , Come to pay 1 Sunday visit in apite of what Capâ€" tain Stocking had said? He would convince her this time. Maybe her ,sti;. from ‘his shou from his chest er itself, staring straight at him in an ectasy of terror. He watched Sue Stocking thrash into the waves with fists to her cheeks, immovable as the light towâ€" He watched Andersan and Shay and other surfmen whom he knew; behind them, Baker, edging nervousâ€" ly into the undertow, drawing back, pulling feebly at the rope dropping it. headed. in white pants, hauling with the surfmen. He watched Captain Stocking, secâ€" ond on the line,â€" his fat red face twisted â€" into astounding _ contours, his mouth like a cavern. The fog was breaking rapidly. A pale angd â€" melancholy illumination spread across the flouncing lake. Directly overhead a dim wet disk strove Inel’lectuglly to pierce the clouds. The sun. Straight above. It couldn‘t be noon? It must be, if that was the sun. ‘Hours and hours he had struggled. He screwed together his eyes that were ‘blte as his father‘s Had been. He watched Captain Parish strainâ€" ing in the lead with the end of the rope about his shoulders, pushing out toward the endangered fish boat, ap to hig knees, up to his hips up to his armpits in water, saw his bony cheeks chopping the mist like She was a great little boat, wasn‘t she? Well built Brave. Dependâ€" able. Handle her properly, what wouldn‘t she do? What hadn‘t she done for Gusta{? For Gustaf? Ah, but she was his son‘s boat now. She would do as much for him. Ten sailors . . . ten sailors and Doctor McCarthy depended on him. He drove the boat cruelly. A boat could be mended. The wind moaned in a tremendâ€" ous _ and â€" overwhelming _ sorrow. Cheated combers trooped shoreward. threw up wet arms, collapsed with explosive bellows, perished undis~ mayed against the beach, and in subtler reincarnation rushed back to the lake again with a tricky underâ€" tow. Gustaf‘s boat eluded them. Forty yards from the ‘beach Norâ€" man made out the forms of men chasing like spiders. They were cumning with a line into the surf. l:‘»ome. staying ashore as anchors, were holding its end. A halfâ€"dozen thers were beating against the the wind â€" down _the shelving beach, bringing the rope into the water to imeet him. He wiped spray from his eyes. So they thought he couldn‘t makeâ€" it. eh? Thought his boat would emash to pieces in the shallow water? Thought McCarthy and those len men, wading in, would be swept back by the undertow? Well, they probably would. _ Whose boat was she now, Gustaf‘s or his? Often Gustaf had risked his boat. When had he spared her if men were in peril? Gustaf was al ways reckless. Foolhardy, Jim Nel son called him; called him foolhardy and loved him for it. It was foolâ€" hardiness that took him out alone to save the mail catrier two sumâ€" mers ago, the time he nearly smashâ€" ed his back. Risky? Gustef loved risk! ' sin and no teeth. Two hundred jbo‘lds he must have weighed; he was heavy to have slid the line. He said not a word. only held on grimâ€" ly, his head twisted about, watching the deserted steamer wistfully as it laded behind the fog. Ashore men were running. Norâ€" man drove the bow deliberately and desparately againat the high spitting wash of the beach. He was risking his father‘s boat. But why not? trap. Only one of the "Burkett" sailors remained on deck. He was & heavy man, brown as an old saddle, hard, with a face ugly as He watched Jones Delong, his own fireside ho braced his| Mr: Anthony ~Newton and "son body while he fumbled in his pocket,| William were busifiess visitors in a clasp knife and slashed the Mzuum rope. He watched the tish boat ride| © Mr. and .Chris. Tabbert visitâ€" safely away. He waved once and|ed with Mr. and Mrs. D. W. Musser dissppeared behind the rail on Sunday. tm He wal not seen again. Such was| Miss Winnic Marks is spending the his code. holidays with her father Mro Sandv dor a troubled second. Old, he arod, ‘with rod mwickers. â€" A sea (To be continued) the officer had drawn back his his SUFFER FROM HEAT WAVE Thousands of people in this disâ€" trict aweltered under the severe heat during â€" the â€"past week. The therâ€" momeéter registéred as high as $9. SENTENCE DEFERRED A foreign couple, Mr. and Mrs. Steve Szilak, appeared in Kitchener court, the wife charging the husband with theft of $312, which accused admitted he had taken durihg the absence of his wife. Magistrate Blake ruled.that as husband was not living with his wife he had no right to money and found him guilty of the theft. Sentence !s deferred. Mr. and Mrs. Hy. Ernst and Miss Matilda Erust, accompanied by Mr. and | Mrs. Ely Brubacher'of 8t. Jacobs, spent Sunday at Waterloo and Kitchener, Master Stanley Ernest of Waterâ€" loo epent two wgeks‘ vacation at Mr. H. Ernst‘s. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Borkman and Mr. and Mrs. Thos. Hayden of Gorâ€" rie were recentâ€" visitors at Mr. Ed. Cressman‘s. C Mr. and Mrs. James Richardson ; and son William and Miss Kathieen ‘ Richardson visited on Sunday with| Mr. and Mis. Geo. Richardson 0t| Crosshill. m Sunday at Mr. Ed. Cressman‘s. _ Mrs. John Letson of Linwood is spending a couple of weeks with Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Beggs. Mr. John MacPherson and family and sister, Miss Susie MacPherson, visited on Sunday with their sister, Mrs. Fred Voll of Carthage. Mrs. Thos. Hacket of | spent a day of last week y slster, Mrs. Wm. Allingham U Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Brubacher . visited‘ recently (with the latter‘s‘ parents, Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Hahn.‘ Mr. Victor McClennan of Guelph spent the weekâ€"end at Mr. Hy M}r~ tin‘s. Miss Evelyn Martin is on the sick list. We wish her a speedy reâ€" covery. Mr. and Mre. Bert Cressman visitâ€" ed on Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Jake Marks, Lebanon. < ~ Mr. Alex. Stewart of Dundalk, who is at present taking a six weeks‘ course at the O. A. C., Gueiph, visit ed over the weekâ€"end 'lth_ Mr. and Mrs. C. Tabbert. Mr. and Mrs. Mike Ryan and famâ€" ily and Mr. Donald Thorpe visited Miss Winnie Marks is spending the holidays with her father, Mr. Sandy Marks of Listowek Mr. and Mrs. Lneliwyn Neurt and daughter Bernice of Windsor were recent visitors with her parents, Mr. and Mre. Hy. Newton. | : . â€"> maston W1 ._Mr. ~Anthony â€"Newton and "son|w William were busifiess visitors in | Kitchener one day last week. im Linwood with her Rev. E. G. Dale, pastor of the local Baptist Church, conducted the tunâ€" aral services 6f Mr. Oscar Hairland, prominent resident of Norfolk Counâ€" _ _ ~_"_"/V mIIQE Hostiger of Monktom spent Sunday at the home of Otto Boottger. ed Mr. George Wettlaufer and aiso spent the afternoon at Burlington Beach. & * Mr. ane Mrn Miltiam Wasiaccl _2 The Ladies‘ Aid of Trinity Luth eran Church held their annual gardâ€" en party on Wednesday evening which was a good success, the weather being idea) and a large crowd present. m Cl OO 0 0 20026 207. HNC NMTS. J. B. Wettlauter, Mr. Alvin Wettâ€" lapfer, Mr. and Mrs. L. Doering and son# Ralph and Donald , motored to Palermo on Bunday where they visitâ€" Mr. and Mra. John Wottlaufer, Mr. Reuben Wettlaufer, Mr. and Mrs. E. Doering and son Roy, Mr. and Mrs lt on The Baptist Mission Circle held its meeting in the park on Tuesday afternoon. Interesting papere were read ‘by Mrs. Harold Appel, Mrs. 1. Christner, Mrs. Kropp and Mrs. Dale. Mrs. Kalbfleisct" gave a reading "Wantedâ€"A Minister‘s Wife." A picnic supper followed. An invitaâ€" t At the recent Toronto Conservaâ€" tory of Music Examinations, which were held at Kitchener, Miss Helen Porster was successful in passing her primary examination with honâ€" ours. She is a pupil of Miss Roxie Bowman. . Successfu) Students > Mayor Hilborn and Mrs. Hilborn and Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Niebel of Galt were visitors at the home of the latter‘s brother, Mr. George Morâ€" ley, on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. John Miller and Mise Katie Klinck were visitors at the home of Mr. anfl Mrs. George Appel on Sunday. Mrs. J. K. Brown and Mr. Jerome Cassidy and son Arthur of Cargill spent a week with Mrs. Geo. Appel. Mrs. William Goebel and son Ward returned home after spending a week with the former‘s brother in Toronto and friends in Kitchener. Mr. W. E. Metz and Miss Agnes Meiz have returned after epending a week with friends at Walton and Brussels. Mr. and Mrs. Emerson Luckkart and Mrs. David Luckhardt are spendâ€" ing the week at North Bay. Mrs. Mary Damm of Toronto is spending a few weeks with her sisâ€" ter, Mrs. Aaron Eidt. Mr. E. Bechtel returned to Hamâ€" ilton after spending two weeks with his famfly here. Mr. and Mrs. Clare Berlette were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. E. Bechâ€" tel on Sunday. : Mr. C. L. Moser returned home from a fishing trip to Hastings in Eastern Ontario. A successfull twilight bowling tournament was staged on the local greens lact. Friday evening. Four |teeu rinks competed. The evening was cool but the bowlers enjoyed the games and close ends were played throughout. Two St. Mary‘s rinks took first and second‘ prizes, namely, Northgrave first and Markle second, while a New Hamburg rink skipped by George cousins won third. Handsome prizes were awarded the winners. * Miss Marshall of Forest is visiting her sister, Mrs. W. Walker, Bouller street. Mre. A..Eldt took in the excursion to Detroit on Saturddy. when a man on third scored the winâ€" ning run on a bunt by the batter. Miss Agnes Mets is visiting with friends in Brampton. A Nice Catch of Fish Dr. T. B. Feick and Messra. Waliter Bowman, Grundenberger, Herbert Hamel, Walter Geiger, Thomas Lauâ€" tenschlager and Lioyd Appel were on a fishing trip to Silyer Lake in the Bruce Peninsula, and brought home a fine catch of pike. Lcni Truschinski, a former member o!\the‘ New Hamburg championship hockey: team but now of Walkerton, accomâ€" panied them Bowling Tourney loosely played with many costly orrâ€" ore on both sides. "Tavistock led by a large margin ty the carly stages of the game, but the locals crept up and won out by 15 to 14 in the last iwnmwm The local softballâ€" team equeered in an unexpécted victory over Tavi stock team on Wednesiay evening, thus tying the Tevistockers for first place in the Oxfordâ€"Waterioo o# was extended to hold the ©*‘ended to hold the August at the cottage of the pastor of Miss The Evangelical Sunday School held their annual Children‘s Day programme on Sunday afternoon. Rev. Mr. Barthel of Kitchener was the speaker of the afternoon. Messrs. Philip Soehner, E. Soehâ€" nerand Melvin Martin, Miss Clara Soehner, Mrs. Henry Schmidt and )rina and Norman motored to Scotâ€" land on Sunday and spent the day with Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Kaufman. Mr. and Mrs. Will Coulter and famâ€". ily of Atwood, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wyandotte, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Williamson of Palmerston, and the Misses Eileen and Evelyn Gordon of Mount Forest were the Sunday guests of Mr,. and Mrs. Wm. Coulter. _ Mr. and Mrs. John Soehner, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Soehner, daughâ€" ter Gladys, Misses Edythe and Laura Soehner, Florence Zeigler and Gertâ€" rude Hemmrich, Messrs. Harold and Percy Soehner, Elmore Schuts and Sylvester Zeigler motored to Belfonâ€" taine on Sunday. Mmâ€"n;ww-u.- : traces of eating m At the end of a d work, relieve nervous tflul:q‘.b,:.hn cating. Wrigiey‘s will refresh and tone you rigley‘s will refresh and tone you ;"_‘Lé" you‘re â€"ready to enjoy Miss Lorraine Gole of Bridgeport spent the weekâ€"end with Mr. and Mrs. Lioyd Snyder. . Miss Margaret Mattusch of Elmira visited her cousin, Miss Gladys Matâ€" tusch, last week. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Williams, who have spent their vacation with their parents, have returned to their home in Windsor. Mr. and Mrs. Gavin Semple are spending their vaccation at the home of the laiter‘s father, Mr. Sampel Peacock. _ Miss Matilda Gatzmeyer, who visitâ€" ed her â€"mother for the past two weeks, has returned to Detroit. Rev. and Mrs. E. C. Dale leave for a month‘s vacation at their cottage at Normandale on August 1st. Mrs. Meyers, who was on a visit to friends in New Hamburg and Kitchener, has returned home to Chicago. + Mr. L. G. Pequegnat left on Sunâ€" day to visit his sonâ€"inâ€"law and daughâ€" ter, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Eby, and see his littke grandson at Detrodt. Mrs. Harold Appel and family have gone on a month‘s visit to her parâ€" ents, Dr. and Mrs. J. C. Bell at Merâ€" lin, Ont. ty, on Sunday afternoon. ed to preach in the Church in the evening. Jos. Stauffer P. L. Shants n.l.lo'ur.u..llql.-l“ Mrmun!ocrl:‘â€"-.-la' ter, Solicitor, Notary Public, Com W. R. BRICKER veyuncer and Crown ‘ Attornay. JOMN FIBCHER â€" + inspectors Officeâ€"County Bulldings, Queen C. A. BOEHM INSURANCE Bt. N. Phone 130, Kitchener, Ont. AGENCIES LIMWTED Serintindintrteama ue e n o e T Phone 2308 â€" Kitchener Day or Night. Home â€" 178 Queen St. S. Bechtcl& Dreisinger FUNERAL SERVICE C. A. BOEKNHM INSURANCE â€"_ AGENCIES, LIMITED , District Apjents. Phones 700 and 701 ___ _ Waterioo, Ontarie. _ AsgETs oven $1,400000 FLOBADALE He returnâ€" Evangelical ~| AUDITORS & ASSIGNEES °> 306 Wober Chambers, Accountants and Auditors Authorized Trustees, Assigness, ote. _ Income Tax Counsel FIRST MORTGAGRS farm property. Re: Goods called for and delivered. DB. 8. H. ECKEL, Dentist, Office in Bank of Montreal Bidg, Waterice. Phone 174. Money Loaned on Your Car Pay back in 12 monthly payâ€" monts while driving, present payments reduced, private sales financed. All dealings confiden tial. Open evenings. Motor Loans & Discounts Ltd. 129 King St. W., Kitchener. *Phone 4126 D. T. Brown _ â€" _ Branch Mgr. Mbrary by having your favorite Rebinamg books Bibles, Hymn and Prayerbooks Bring in your harness and have It repaired and olled ready for spring use. ‘Teachers of Piano, Singing, and WATERLOO MUSIC CO. 182 King &4 a. Bookbinder . 17 @ueen 8t. N. Phone 2086 Music and Music instruments CHIROPRAcTOR Office 44 Wililam 8t., Waterios. ~ Phone 64M. f WALTER D. INRIG & CO. R. W. J. SCHMIDT, King St. E., mext o 110 Weber Chambers, King St. W. Kitchener. Phone 1756. 13 King Bt. N. â€"â€" Waterieo Mlos Anna R. Bean . Miso Emma L. Bean, F.T.C.M. R. G. R. HARPER, Dentist, Office in Oddfellows Block, 32 King 8t. Expe;* Bhoo Repairer at 27 ‘Erb St. W., Waterioe Next door to Masseyâ€"Harris Shop. & J. L HETT, SPECILALTY, Di# eases of the Kar, Throat and Nose. King St. Rast., Kitchener. Add more books to your home J. C, Lehmann Phone 1171M, Kitchener. We specialize in SHOE REPAIRING MONEY TO LOAN SHOEMAKING E. HOUSE E. G. FRY Music , Dentist, Room

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