â€" _ ZIEBRA SHINGLES for the Roof SHEET STEEL CEILINGS e i se i hannces. For Schools, Halls, Stores, . Dmenetiber Geiprices. _\ Hotels, Kitchens, etc. GALVANIZED ALWAYS HISTORIC Manitoulin, political storm centre, has "gone Conservative," after 13 yearsa‘ adherence to U. F. O. docâ€" trines. Pretty nearly thirty years ago it was a member for Manitoulin. Roâ€" bert Roswell Gamey, whose senstionâ€" al accusations in the Legislature had much to do with sending the Liberals on their long Opposition journey. In 1917 it was the election by Manitonâ€" lin of a U. F. O. supporter, Hon. Beniah Bowman, which was the first portent of the storm that smashed a Conservative Administration. Now, will the election of a Conservative once again, in some manner or othel: put Manitoulin "on the map"? LIQUID STOVE POLISH c ney 1 100 4e A Retin | CHILDREN HAVE TO CHEW ITâ€" AND THEY LIKE THE CRISP SHREDS With all the bran wl of‘he w wheat | With all the bran w of the whole wheat You don‘t have to coax children to chew Shredded Wheatâ€" themorethqchewki‘tl{mbamduvlikehâ€"-ndthnm sound teeth and healthy gums. Just the food for growing youngsters. So delicious and so easy to serve. NOT AnNOTHER WORD A8ouUT mY BROMERâ€"HES yUuST A WONnIoeRrulL BOYâ€" HE PRESENTED ME wiTH A WONDERFUL SET OF GILVER:â€" 1M USING IT TONIGHT AT DINNER: RECKITTS (Oversea) LIMITED i‘ ARRESTED IN NAPERVILLE ; _ Wanted in Kitchener on a charge ‘of converting money to his own use, ‘Norman Kellerman was arrested on | Saturday night at Naperyille, III. He ‘\will be brought back to Kitchener ; to face the charge. The members of the Board of the Y. W. C. A. arranged a successful "Sauer Kraut Supper®" at the instituâ€" tion Thursday night. Mrs. C. F. Ott was the dining room convener and Mrs. C. H. Germann was decorations‘ convener. Mrs. Mary Kaufman, Mrs. C. B. Augustine and Mrs. C. H. Janâ€" zen were the general conveners. SAUER KRAUT SUPPER ["Yoq. yes. We was very seltâ€"willed, and one dared not oppose Bim: for ‘hbmmu'hmnd. "Precisely," Percival agreed. _ That conversation took place in the hall, and Doctor Stopford did not ask a single embBarrassing question until they were in the bedâ€"room. upâ€" them, and Nurse Ripley, still in her uniform, was in attendance. Ard it was to her that Stopford turned when, after one glance at the body, "Were you actually watching him when he died, Nurse*" She shook hervhead, and had to clear her throat before she could reâ€" ply, "I had gone out for my walk." ‘"Nurse Ripley is in disgrace, I may remark," Percival put in. "Inâ€" stead of attending to her duties, she was carrying on a flirtation with Jor dan, the chaffeur, to whom I now hear that she is engaed to be marâ€" ried. Qou will, I hope, notify the General Hospital to that effect, Stopâ€" The doctor turned at once upon the culprit with the evident intenâ€" tion of administering a severe reâ€" buke. He must not be blamed for his too obvious desire to propriate the Fyttons. They were by far the richâ€" est family in this district, and he was a hardâ€"working and comparatively illâ€"paid man with a growing family to educate. Also, he was naturally inclined to be deferential in the preâ€" sence of the Harley ‘Street specialist, whom he regarded as his superior in the medical profession. His purpose was defeated in this instance, howâ€" ever, by the sudden collapse of Nurse Ripley into a fit of hysterical Iweeplng. 5 And from that moment any suggesâ€" tion of a judical inquiry into the manner of Gregory Fytton‘s death completely disappeared. When a young and uncommonly pretty woâ€" man ‘breaks down in the presence of three men, she becomes inevitably the center of interest; and although Percival held aloof, Doctor Stopford, forgetful for the time being of Fytâ€" ton prestige, devoted himeelf to wooing back Nurse Ripley‘s selfâ€"conâ€" trol with a characteristic‘ kindâ€" heartedness. Even when she been persuaded to go to her own room, the conversation of the three men was rather of her than of the giving of the death certiâ€" ficate. ‘‘Best thing she could do would be to marry Jordan," was Doctor Stopâ€" ford‘s opinion. "Too goodâ€"looking and too flighty to make a dependâ€" able nurse. 1 should not have had her in the first instance, only there was no one else to be got just then. She is, I may say, the daughter of a local ‘tarmer. educated rather above her ‘stauon. However, as a matter of fact, she could have done nothing if she had been here at the time. I should imagine that your father died in his sleep, eh, Fytton?" _ ‘"Yes, yes. No difficulty about the certificate," Doctor Stopford hurried on, feeling perhaps that he had been somewhat too softâ€"hearted about Nurse Ripley and anxious to recover the Fytton‘s approval. And Percival agreed with a proâ€" fessional nod of the head. "And what day would you propose for the funeral?" Bernard, one side of whose thoughts had been entirely occupied for the last twenty minutes with a distracting effort to pursuade himâ€" self of the utter inconceivability of the idea that Manette could have had anything to do with this miserable affair, braced himself to attend to this question. The h.mer’l’.’ Would it not perhaps be wiser to have it as soon as possible, bury the old man decently and try to forget that he bad not died a natural death? On the other hand, if, as surely must be the case, that absurd suspicion of his with regard to Manette was groundâ€" less, he was faced not only with a fillal duty but also with a legal reâ€" sponsibility to do all that might be done to bring the criminal to jusâ€" tice. "Ought it to ibe soon?" he asked with a glance at the bed. ‘"Weather‘s turning colder again this evening," Doctor Stopford reâ€" The two doctors followed the direcâ€" tion of his eyes. By J. D. Beresford marked, ‘but it‘s very warm in hore, continued when he returned to the bedroom to find Bernard once more deep in a fit of abstraction. "Well, éuppose we say Thursday?" he sugâ€" "Very good of you, Stopford. Yes, we should be grateful to you if you would do that," Percival replied. ‘"And ‘Masson will give the necessary orders about opening the vault, I supâ€" pose? ‘By the way, we‘d bettor see Rossiter as you go out. He may have some special instructions about my father‘s wishes in connection with the funeral. And about Nurse Rip ley, you can do whatever you thlnkl right about reporting her negligence to the superintendent. She can‘t get back to the hospital toâ€"night, but she will, of course, return there early tomorrow morning." l imagite," Doctor Stopford said, "and if, of course, there should be any necessity" for it, the body could be screwed down on Wednesday eveâ€" ning. Shail I call on Masson as I pass and give him instructions about the coffin ?" Bernard heard everything that was being aaid; he éven considered its bearing on his own intentions, but never for an instant did that side of his attention interrupt the feverish‘ hurry of his inner thought, the ceaseless enervating round of futile speculation as to what he must say and do if Manette‘s confession should involve . .. At that point, the cirele of his thought was always broken. He shrank away from any approach to statement in that connection. For he could do that, although he could rot prevent himself from beginning again the horrible round which led once more to the necessity for leapâ€" ing that appalling gap. " Â¥es, I‘ll turn off the radiators, here and in the dressingâ€"room," Perâ€" cival agreed, and proveeded at once He broke away at last from any pretense of taking part in the arâ€" ratgzements that had still to be made in connection with the funeral. If ho: once got downâ€"stairs and began to| taik to Rossiter, it might be another ; hour before he could get away. He| could safely leave everything to his‘ younger brother. * ‘~4 "Do you mind looking after all that business for me, Percival?" he said, breaking abruptly into the conâ€" versation. "I know it‘s my job rather than yours, but the fact is . . ." He could think of no reasonable excuse, ard had not the patience to seek for one. He wanted suddenly and pasâ€" sionately to get away from the room, out of sight of that still figure on the bed. He could not think reasonalby !and dispassionately in that company. He had a horrible vision of a woâ€" man‘s form ‘bending over the sleep ing figure and dropping that potent destructive crystal into its open mouth, much as he himself had |:lmpped a morsel of meat containâ€" ‘ing just such another crystal into 'lhe mouth of poor Pepper, the faithâ€" ;ful old spaniel. With the ‘briefest of nods to the local doctor, he turned quickly and left the room. _ Doctor Stopford was quite ready, in the circumetances, to make any alâ€" lowance for the new head of the Fyttons, but Percival was puzzled and disturbed. Bernard was behayâ€" ing. very uncharacteristically, he thought, ever since that moment downâ€"stairs when they heard the docâ€" tor‘s car at the door‘! When he came into the corridor, however, Bernard‘s impulse unex pectedly failed him. He had but a few steps to go to reach the suite of Three rooms, «o near to his father‘s that Caroline always set apart for him when he visited Mallow. But now that knowledge was within his reach, he dreaded as much as he had recently longed for it. He had to make a determined effort of selfâ€" control before he could open the door of his and Manette‘s bedrocm and go in. Manette was sitting crouched over| disease. Geta boxfrom your drugsist the fire, and she did not raise her | back H aot peecseafaie °*‘ head as she said, "Lock the door, Mm‘ Bernard, I don‘t want to be disâ€" turbed," adding, as soon as he had Huw‘m;’n' obeyed her and come across to the fireplace, "And Bernard. let me tein| HAEHNEL‘S DRUG ST you everything without any interrup Waterloo, Ont. *Thursday would be very well, I Age tion, if you can. It‘s so horribly dlt-‘ ficult, and if you interupt me before I‘ve finished, I shan‘t be able to go on. Afterward you can say whatever you like. If you decide that you can‘t bear the sight of me any more I‘ll go away quietly. We can arrange someâ€" thing, anything you like. But you‘ll hear me out first, won‘t you?â€"all my temptation, all my deception of you, though perhaps you‘ll never be able ‘to un!lerstand how I loathed that deâ€" ception." Bernard sat back in the chair he had drawn up opposite to her across the hearthâ€"rug. He dared not look at her. At that moment, he had little realization of her as an individual. All his thought was concentrated on one imposeible problem: what was he going to do? What was he going to do? He had hardly a dowbt, then, that his ghastly suspicion had, after all, been justified. "Go on," he said, as quietly as he could. ON BRINK OF GRAVE X CcOw "FINDS HER LEGS".‘ John Deyell of Mount Horeb, near Lindsay, has a cow that surely had a premonition of imminent peril. Three weekse ago a valuable cow in Mr. Deyell‘s stable took ill. The veâ€" terinary was summoned, but his skill could not get the animal to its feet. For two weeks Mr. Deyell and his neighbors held consultations. An efâ€" fort was made by placing her in a sling to get her standing on her feet, but all to no avail. Finally, Mr. Deyell decided to put an end to her sufferingâ€"if she was suffering. A large hole was dug in a nearâ€"by field and a stoneâ€" boat secured. The cow was eased on to the stoneâ€"boat and drawn to the place of prospective burial. Then Mr. Deyell discovered that he had forgotten the materials with which he intended to give the animal a painless death. He went for them, and when he returned to the scene, lo and behold, the cow had stumbled to its feet, and ever since it has been going around with the rest of the herd apparently all 0. k. HAEHNEL‘S DRUG STORE \’_“““lbd“ .*:-hfl;ï¬c“ were cine that 1 needed for it was not long before I was as well as ever. Now I take them every Spring as Dr.Willtams‘ PINK PILLS No matter remedics have tried over 20 years, by remoping the cause of the Don‘t Suffer from Cruel PILES! of South March, Ont., "I u““tâ€" tism in the left shoulder. Pink Pills now at your drugâ€" gist‘s or any dealer in mediâ€" This is one of hundreds of cases in which these bloodâ€" 1 had beard so much conâ€" *A mousexoto name IN 54 countrics PILE REMEDY , (To be continued) from The Dr. Wilâ€" AssETs OvERn $1,400,000 &A L, BITERR, BA, GUCCBASOR Coverumant purosit $100000| °to Conrad Bitzer, Barrister, Solist Officers and Directors tor, Notary Public, otoe. Money to L. W. GMHUN + â€" â€" Presigent| ‘JO8n. German spoken. Ofice, 15 W. R. BRICKER and veyancer sand. Crown Atte JOHN FIGGHER â€" â€" inspectore| Officeâ€"County Buildings, G C. A. BOENN insurance St. N. Phone 720, Kitchener, AGENCIE® LIMITED esn | There are inumerable books on \interesting English period of Queen Aune, but there was always a lamentâ€" ’able vacancy regarding the Queen herself. "Alas, Queen Anne" by !Bentrlce Curtis Brown (Bobbs Merâ€" rill Co., Indianapolis) fills this :longâ€"desired want to perfection. Many famous characters appear: ‘James II, Charles II, George of Denâ€" mark, Mary, William, the Mark |homug.l'n'i and others, but are always subordinate to the main figure. The personal history of this famous Queen is exceedingly interesting. The book is well written and is one of the most important and interestâ€" ing biographies produced in some years. 4. Meward Simpson Oscar Rumpol ‘Pioneer Heroes" by J. Walker Mcâ€" Spadden (T. Y. Crowell Co., New York) makes another fine addition to the list of splendid of Ameâ€" rican history by this clever writer. Last year he produc "Indian Heroes" which gave the Red man‘s impression of the white man‘s invaâ€" sion; "Pioneer Heroes" gives the white man‘s point of view. Here are met many famous pionéers: Iberville and (Lasalle, Father Serra, Daniel Boone, Lewis and Clark, etc., etc. Many trails are biazed, many plains settled. The author adheres closely ito historical fact, but the human eleâ€" ment is stressed, thus presenting history in a romantic fashion that will have a wide appeal. A splendid gift book for young people. ~‘The Mystery of 37 Hardy Street". by Robert J. Casey (Bobbs Merrill Co., Indianapolis) is a most amazing, breathâ€"taking mystery tale, Mr. Casey has a number of fine books to his credit, but this is his finst mysâ€" tery novel, and he has made a huge success of it. A ‘breakfeast table set for four, with the host bound to his chair, dead and an overpowering smell of nicotine in.the room. Murâ€" der or suicide? This was the problem that confronted the detectives, and its unravelling makes one of the keenest mystery tales of the year. "Shiner Watson" by MacGregor Jenkins (Bobbs Merrill Co., Indianâ€" apolis) is the autobiography of a boy, |the kind of a book that only comes once in many years. "Peck‘s Bad Boy" has its good points,. but in "Shiner Watson" there is fun of a different kind. Shiner is a normal lad, a ministers son, who objected to washing and other trials of boyâ€" hood. These are passed over lightly until he is ten, when the story proâ€" perly ‘begins. Clean, snappy boyish sports, treasure hunts, mischievous pranks and all the other incidents that go to make up a boy‘s growing years are described in graphic style. Then there comes his first love ‘aflair. and every man reader will reâ€" member this, most important and peaceâ€"disturbing event. "Shiner Watâ€" ison" is a book that will win its way and one that will always live. i is one of the liveliest books of the early West, written by a man who really know the West. Many of the most picturesque men of the old fronâ€" tler are met with; some are real heroes, others are on the side of lawâ€" leesress and disorder. He does not ‘t.lorlty the rogue? he telm~ thoeir stories graphically and describes their usually tragic ending realistiâ€" cally. "Wild Men of the Wild West" is a stirring story full of life and action, unusually well written, and can be recommended to readers of all ages, particularly older boys. | "Wild Men of the Wild West" by Edwin L Sabin (T. Y. Crowell Co., New York) speaks for itself. Here LITERARY NOTES Phones 700 and 701 | P n U D \ | MASTMAN, liw ofices, Beak D. 8. BOWLBY, BA., LLB., Burls DR. 8. H. BCKEL, Dentist, Office in Bank of Montreal Bldg, Waterioo. Phone 174. DR. W. J. SCHMIDT, Dentist, 69 King St. K., next to Post Office. FIRST MORTGAGES on city end Queen St. South. Phone 538, KW eases of the Har, Throat and Nose. King St. Rast., Kitchener. 110 Weber Chambers, King St. W., Kitchener. Phone 175. farm property. Reasonable inter eat. Fire Insurance, Economical and North Waterico Farmers‘ Mutual, at the lowest premiums in the city. G. F. Lacknor, 170 Queen St. N., Phore 1 Bring in your harness and have It repaired and olled ready for spring use. CHIROPRACTOR Office 44 William St., Waterics. Money Loaned on Your Car Pay back in 12 mounthly payâ€" ments 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 Miss Anna R. Bean Mlss Emma i. Bean, F.T.C.M. Teachers of Piano, Singing, and Theory. Private and class imâ€" struction. Studios 48 Roy B., Phone 1171M, Kitchener. 12 King 8t. N. â€" Bibles, Hymn and Prayerbooks a specialty. Add mere books to your home library by having your favorite magasine bound into books. Goods called tor and delivored. at 27 Erb St. W., Waterice Next door. to Masseyâ€"Harrie Bechtel&Dreisinge r FUNERAL SERVICE Phone 2808 â€" Kitchener â€" _ Day or Night. Home â€" 178 Queen St. 8. We specialize in SHOE REPAIRING MONEY TO LOAN Expe;* Shoe Repairer CHIROPRACTIIC SHOEMAKING Rebindmg books E. HOUSE Music Branch Mgr. 1107W,