Waterloo Public Library Digital Collections

Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 6 Apr 1933, p. 7

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Mrs. Annie Albrecht, Mr. and Mrs. Elie Albrecht of Milverton spent several days with Mr. and Mrs. Emâ€" manuel Wagner. Our rural roads are in their typlâ€" cal annual condition. Rain and mild weather combined well, which made them all but impossible. Sap Season Backward. The wedding took place last Thursday at the home of the groom‘s parents, 5th line, Wellesley Tp., when Fannie, daughter of Mrs. and the late Jacob Jantzi near here was happily married to Noah Gerber, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Gerber in the presence of invited guests. All joined in wishing the bride and groom a long and happy wedded life. Notes Of Interest. . The chief gossip among tillers of the soil, locally centres over the rising hog market prices. Some be lieve the sudd&n rise has been too rapid to last, while others agree that a wellearned raise had to come econer or later. Although their present price is appreciated, the present | generation should never have experienced such a drop in face of high interest rates and taxes. Farâ€" mers would welcome a similar rise in prices of other farm produce The maple eyrup season opened last week. The first runs of sap was poor owing to continned cool weaâ€" ther. Hog Prices Please Farmer. Mrs. Michael Brohman, son Richâ€" ard and daughter Lucy attended the funeral of ‘the late Mrs. Alfred Brohman at Ayr last Tuesday afterâ€" noon. Mr. Alex. Brohman of Kitchener spent Tueuda{' evenix{f with his mother, Mrs. Michael Brohman. â€" There was no church service here on Sunday morning owing to the bad condition of the roads. Mrs. Henry Burnett is visiting her brother, Dr. and Mrs. Herbert MacKay, at Ingersoll. MacKay, at Ingersoll. "It was my theory of life," he reâ€" Miss King of Conestogo spent|peated almost flercely, "and that is Thursday evenin&; with friends here.| the beginning of why I am up here. A large crowd attended the sale| My theory was that there existed of farm stock and implements of| no such thing a« ‘the divine epark of Mr. Fefix Lehman last I'Pridaf afterâ€"|love‘ between men and women not noon. Good prices were realized. related by blood, no reaching out of Miss Zillah Forbes of the Freeâ€"\one soul for anotherâ€"no faith, no port Sanatorium is vhitin?her parâ€"| purity, no union between man and ents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Forbes, woman â€"but that could be broken by Mr. and Mrs. Benj. Millard and low passions. My theory was that Mr. and Mrs. John Hamiiton and|man and woman were but machines, daughter Marie visited last Sunday|and that passion, and not the Jove with the former‘s daughter, Mr. and| which we dream and read of, united Mrs. Thos. Clemens near Stratford.|these machines; and that every meâ€" Mr. Llioyd MacKay of Willowdale}|chine, whether it was a man or a spent the weekâ€"end with his sister,| woman, could be broken and deâ€" lf:. and Mrs. Henry Burnett. !ntroyed in a moral eense by some Mr. MacDonald and Misa Klein,’cmer machine of the opposite sexâ€" teachers at the Winterbourne school, | if conditiona were right. Do you unâ€" spent the weekâ€"end at their homes|derstand me? My theory was deâ€" at Molesworth and Stratford. structive of homes, â€"of happiness, of n mm mm mamem moral purity. It was bad. 1 argued ADVERTI@ING In The CHRONICLE my point in medica) journals, and BRINGS RBSULT®. I wrote a book based on it. But 1 Mr. Lloyd MacKay of Willowdale ;rn'. the weekâ€"end with his sister, r. and Mrs. Henry Burnett. Mr. MacDonald and Miss Klein, teachers at the Winterbourne school, spent the weekâ€"end at their homes at Molesworth and Stratford. Happily Wedded. Mr. and Mrs. Benj. Millard and Mr. and Mrs. John Hamiiton and daughter Marie visited last Sunday with the former‘s daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Thos. Clemens near Stratford. Phone 2777w. 50 Ontario St. S. â€" KITCHENER A. Cohencious 12 Mansion St. KITCHENER, ONT. Suitable for any kind of rupture. _ Prevent â€"yourself from torture and get a truss to fit you. We have the knowledge and experience to fit you right. EXAMINATION FREE TRUSSES 20"* Off ALL TRUSSES A Complete Stock of BERLET‘S CORNER ORDON‘S WINTERBOURNE S a tisfy THAT THE Two ERSTWHILE FOES HAVE JUST SMonEOâ€" SLIGHTESY ocsine«. rog_monyty LEFT iN THEm AS THEY JUST To PrRAG THEMSELVES SUCCESSFUL HAVE 1% "I will not break your confidence â€"unless you have murdered some one," laughed Philip, stooping to light a fresh pipe. ‘"In that event you‘d better keep quiet, as I‘d have to haul you back to headquarters." "Good,"said the doctor. "Sit down, Steele. I take it for granted that you will help meâ€"if you can. First I suppose [ ought to confess that my name is not Boffin, but McGillâ€" Dudley McGill, proféséor of neuroâ€" logy and diseases of the brainâ€"" Phillp almost dropped his pipe. "Great Scott, and it was you who wroteâ€"" He stopped, etaring in amazement. "Yes, it was I who wrote "Freda", if that‘s what you refer to," fAnished the doctor. "It caused a little senâ€" salion, aa you may know, and nearly got me ousted from the college. But it sold up to two hundred thousand copies, so it wasn‘t a bad turn," he added. "It was published while I was away." said Philip. "I got a copy in Rio Janeiro, and it haunted me for weeks after I read it. Great Heaven, you can‘t believeâ€"" "I did," interrupted the doctor sharply. "I belfeved everything that I wroteâ€"and more. It was my the ory of life." He sprang from his chair and began walking back and forth in his quick, excited way. The flush hed gone from his face now and was replaced by a strange paleâ€" rees. His lips were tense, the fingers of his hands tightly clenched, his voice was quick, sharp, incleive when he spoke. "If 1 didn‘t," he went on, rubbing his hands again over the stove, "I‘d follow your suggestion, and go to bed. As it is, I‘m going to tell you why I‘m up here, on your word of honor to maintain eecrecy. I‘ve got a selfish end in view, for you may be able to assist me. But nothing must go beyond yourself. What ‘do you say to the condition?" He did not see the deepening of the flush in the other‘s face. "Boffin â€" Boffin â€" Boffin," he mused. "Strange I‘ve never heard Of you down south, Doctor. Now what the deuce can you be doing up here ?" There was a pointâ€"blank challenge In his eyes. The doctor leaned a little toward him, as if about to speak, but caught himself. For seyâ€" eral moments his keen eyes gazed equarely into Philip‘s, and when he broke the silence the same nervous flush that Philip had noticed before rose into his cheeks. "I know your father," he said at last, in a fow, restrained voice. "I know him well, and of course I read what the papers said when you broke away from society to go roughing it down in South America. I believe you‘re honestâ€"on the square." Philip stared at him in amazeâ€" ment. It was.late when Philip rose from his chair, auggesting that they go to bed. He laughed frankly across into the other‘s face. abrasionâ€"trifle feverish. Weo‘ll set cne of the mm drew forth & leather case. . "Queer place, queer pace." he chuckled, re turning with a vial in his hand. “';on you running when it happenâ€" ed ?" Philip laughed with him, and by the time the doctor had finished he had given him an account of his affair with DeBar. Not until hours later, when the Cree had left on his return trip and they sat smoking before a roaring fire after supper, did it occur to him bow confidential he had become. Seldom had Philip met a man who impressed him as did the little -rneon. He liked him immensely. e felt that he had known him for years instead of hours, and chatted freely of his adâ€" ventures aD@ asked a thousand quesâ€" tions about home. He found that the doctor was even better acquainted with his home city than bimeelf, and that he knew many people whom he knew, and lived in a fashionable quarter. He was puzzled even as they talked and laughed and smoked their clgarettes and pipes. The doc tor said nothing about himself or his personal _ affairs, _ and _ cleverly changed the conversation whenever it threatened to drift in that direcâ€" tion. flfl‘â€"hn “firiâ€"m”“vâ€" mâ€"â€"â€"-‘ up to Fort Smith. ‘The doctor interâ€" rupted his thoughts. _ "Queer place for a blow," he said the bandage he found himself Philip knew that he had checked kimself with an effort, sand as his The Pursuit "This place to which they went was made up of a dozen or so hoâ€" vels", continued the doctor, resumâ€" ing his nervous walk. "There was no one there who could talk or underâ€" stand their language but these two. The consequenceâ€"conditions were right. They would be constantly toâ€" gether. They would either prove or disprove my theory that men and women were but machines of pasâ€" eion. I knew that they would stay at this place during the three | months I had allotted for my experiâ€" ment, for I paid them a high price. The girl, when she fourd no Ameriâ€" can family, was told to wait until they artived. The man, of course, | had plenty of supposed work to keep him there." "I understand," repeated Philip. ‘"‘The second couple," continued the doctor, forcing himeelf into a chair opposite Philip, "were in a {similar way sent up hereâ€"to an Obâ€" scure northern post which 1 have reason for not naming. And the third couple went to a feverish disâ€" | trict down in Central America." "I suppose you think it all very atrangeâ€"and idiotic," he said, after a few moments. "But we frequently do etrange things, and apparently genseless ones, in scientific work. Madmen hbave made the world‘s greatness. Our most wonderful inâ€" ventors, our greatest men of all ages, have in a way been insaneâ€" for they have been abnormal, and He rose from his chair again, and Philip was sllent while the doctor went to his greatâ€"coat and from somewhere _ within its _ depths brought out fresh cigarettes. His hand trembled elightly as he lighted cne and the flare of the match, playâ€" ing for an instant on his face, emâ€" phasized the nervous tension which he was under. h consequences, I set out to prove myâ€" seif right. When I think of it now my action appals me. It was heinous, for the mere proving of my theory meant misery and unhappiness for those who were to prove it to me. I was not cramped for money. So 1 determined to experiment with six machinesâ€"three young men and three young women. I planned that each person should be unconscious of the part he or she was playing, and that eachwpair should %e thrown constantly togetherâ€"not in society, mind you, for my theory was that conditions must be right. Through ‘a trusted and highly paid agent I ‘hlrod my peopleâ€"the men. Through another, who was a woman, I hired ‘those of the opposite sex. One of the young women was sent to an Obscure little place a hundred miles back from the Brazilian coast, ostenâ€" a‘bly to act as governess for the chilâ€" dren Oof an American family which did not exist. To this same place, through the other agent, was sent a man, whose duty was to get inforâ€" mation about the country for a party of capitalists. Do you begin to unâ€" derstand now ?" -l‘;l:lrdo-ooâ€"câ€"d“. ork he continued. "I had no g00d thoughts for humanity, beyond my ‘l i2 v -"Al f "Yese, I begin to Understand," said Philip. â€"I SAFE! womenâ€"thus proving, if 1 hed stopped to consider myseif, the unâ€" reasonableness of my own theory. Cooly and without a thought of the licked proot, the actual proof of 'pll?n. lolntutcht. ment." % He seemed to have forgotten no e ieoiese t adeded mself for something which he not yet disciosed. for headaches, neuralgia, neuritis, periodic pain, and other suffering. If you‘ve tried it, you know. But no one need hesitate to take these tablets because of their speed. They are perfectly safe. They do not deâ€" press the heart. They have no ill effect of any kind. The rapid relief they bring is due to the rapidity with which they dissolve. Everyone accepts the fact that Aspirin is the swiftest form of relief So, keep these tablets handy, and keep your engagementsâ€"free from pain or discomfort. Carry the pocket tin for emergencies; buy the bottle of 100 for economy. The new reâ€" ducéed price has removed the last reason for trying any substitute for Aspirin. Tradeâ€"mark Reg. "I got «ix months‘ leave of abâ€" sence," he resumed, "and set out to see the results of my experiments. First I went to Rio, and from there to the place where the first couple had gone. As a consequence, five weeks passed between the date of the letters of my experimenters and the day I joined them. Heavens, man‘! When I made it known that I wanted them, where do you think they took me?" He dropped his halfâ€" burned cffarette and his voice was husky es he turned on Philip. "Whereâ€"where do you think they took me?" he demanded. ‘"To two freshly made graves just outside the village," groaned the docâ€" tor. "I learned their story after a little. The girl, finding bersolf use less there, had begun to teach the little children. I‘mâ€"I‘m going to skip quickly over this." His voice broke to a whisper. "She waes an angel. The poor halfâ€"naked women told me that through my interpreter. The children cried for her when she died. The men had brought flowerâ€" ing trees from mies away to shade her graveâ€"and the other. They had met, as I had plannedâ€"the man and the girl, but it didn‘t turn outâ€"my way. It was a beautiful love, I beâ€" lieve, as pure and sweet as any in the whole world. They say that they made the whole village happy, and that each Sunday the girl and the man would sing to them beautiâ€" ful eongs which they could not unâ€" derstand, but which made even the sick smile with happiness. It was a low, villainous place for a village, half encireled by a swampy river, and the terrible heat of the summer «un brought with it a strange sickâ€" nees. It was a deadly, fatal sicknoss, and many died, and always there were the man and the girl, working and singing and striving to do good through all the hours of day and night. What need is there of saying more?" the doctor cried, his voice choking him. "What need to say moreâ€"except that the man went first, and that the girl died a week later, and that they were buried side by side under the mangum trees? What needâ€"unleas it is to say that L am their murderer?" "God knows!" exclaimed Philip, tremulously. "Where?" He looked at Philip through his cigarette amoke as if expecting a reâ€" ply, but Philip only wet his lips, and remained silent. ‘"Yes, it was wrong," said the docâ€" tor, more gently. "I saved myself by killing them. My theory died with them, and as fast as 1 could travel 1 burried to that other place in Cenâ€" Miss Vera Fewings spent the weekâ€"end at her home in Millbank. Mrs. Donald Nevill was a Kitchâ€" ener visitor on Monday. _ _ Mr. Merino Shoemaker of Middleâ€" brook was a visitor at the home of Mr. and Mrs. George Shoemaker on Monday. £ what is that but a certain form of insanity ?" "There have been many mistakes made in the name of sclence," said Philip, clearing his throat, ‘"This was One. Your theory was wrong." Mr. ,and Mrs. Albert Steffier were visitors in Kitchener on Friâ€" aay. s _ Mr. and Mrs. Bob McTaggart moved into the house recenili vacated by Mr. and Mrs. A. â€" Letson. Mr. Edward Sully, Mrs. Herman Letson and Mrs. Olive Heibein were Elmira visitors on Tuesday. _ _ tral America." Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Letson moved on Monday to the home of Mrs. John Allgeier where they will make their home. Mr. Moses Steinman has purâ€" chased the fine residence of l‘l,z Alteman for the sum of $1000.00. He will take possession in the near future. Mr. Joseph L. Leis of Kitchener :ns a business visitor last Wednesâ€" ay. A Mr. George Allgeier of Kitchener spent a few days with his mother, Mrs. John Allgeier. â€" Mr. F. Ferguson snent the weekâ€" end with friends in Middlebrook. firmation services in North Easthope last Sunday afternoon. _ _ â€" _Examination and â€" confirmation services will be held next Sunda forenoon in the Lutheran Chnre‘ when â€" Rev officiate. Mr. Solomon Leis of Baden viaiged friends here for a few days. and an active member ET.?TI“E' :, the local s g: leaves one t J Alex war, one sister m lnnd :'hooot.ot friends to mourn their i;i‘;:h Ruth lm’:. u.i "l'h:o 'u| fomplise . rergined. io "ber "hams here much improved. O Mr. Barney Faber vacated the house of his mother last week and E‘o?d z"& thfc ho;: of Mr. and Mrs. . &. r for time being, Mr. and Mrs. Theo. Lichty and C. D. Koehler attended the conâ€" Ja-u).hul-a third line, fdlnu..“n W% of pneuâ€" 680 years '!\-n#m&au rest Sunday ; a Breeder of Heavy Draught wEST MONTROSE (To be Continued) C. A.â€" Kramer will AWAY Rev. 8. J. Wittig solemnized the marriage of Mr. Oscar Bartman of Palmerston to Miss Emma Mahoke of Gowanstown at the parsonage at hihg noon on Wednesday of last week. The bridal couple was attendâ€" ed by Mr. and Mre. Etwin Dahmer at whose home a wedding dinuer was served. The newly married couâ€" ple left later in the day to spend a short honeymoon in Toronto and on their return will reside in Palmerâ€" «ton. i| Esteemed Resident Passes. * It becomes our sad duty to chronâ€" icle the death of one of our most highly esteemed residents in the person of Mrs. Elena Snider, relict Of the late Walter J. Snider, who passed away at her home at 9 o‘clock last Wednesday morning folâ€" owing a stroke, suffered nearly a week before. The late Mrs. Snider was born in this village and spont her entire life here. Her husband the late Walter James Snider, pre deceased her on April 27th, 1927 and she is survived by two daughters and two sons, Mre. Lenora Beckman, Toronto, Mre. Milton Scheifele, Deâ€" troit and Russel and .Clifford at home. There also mourn her passing 4 grandchildren and three brothers, 'Charles Kuntz, Shoal Lake, Man., Jacob in Conestogo and Henry in‘ | Baden. _ Mr. Amos Martin is reported to be improving nicely from his recent severe attack of pneumonia. _ Among those from a distance who attended the funeral of Mrs. Snider were: Mrs. Lenora Beckman and daughters Lenora and Jean of Toâ€" ronto, Mr. and Mrs. Milton Scheifele and family of Detrolt, Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Snider and daughter Rleanor of Burford, Mr. and Mre. Ralph Sniâ€" der of Flint, Mich., Mr. and Mre. Henry Kuntz, Baden, Mr. Clayton Heimbecker, Toronto, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Struck, Burford, Mrs. Chas. Struck of Brantford besides these were a host of othere from the nearer citles and towns. Mr. and Mre. Henry Scheerer and son Peter. Mr. Valentine Gies and Mr. and Mrs. Solomon Kirch and family were among those who from here attended the funeral of the late John Danberger in Kitchener, on Sunday afternoon. Mre. Noah Kunts of Bridgeport spent over Sunday with relatives in the village. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Knarr and son of Kitchener were Sunday guests of the former‘s brother, Walter and Mre. Knarr. A group of 15 young friends of Miss Kathleen Bauman tendered her « surprise party at her home on Satâ€" urday evening in honor of her 15th birthday. The celebrant was made the recipient of many useful gifts. The evening was spent in music and games and concluded by a deinty lunch. Conestogo Notes. Mr. and Mrs. Raiph Snider of Flint, Mich., spent Sunday | at the Snider home. Mr. Arthur Mank and Miss Alice Doerbecker of the Twin City, apent Sunday at Â¥he home of Mr. and Mre. Clayton Rech. Birthday Party. A â€" series of at St. Mr last night. Next Sunday morning abd English service wil} be held at the Lutheran Church during which this year‘s clase of catechumens, 3 girls and 3 boys, who have receved religious inâ€" etructions during the past 6 months will be publicly examined and conâ€" firmed. An English communion service will be held on Good Friday mornâ€" ing when the newly confirmed and all others who «0 wish, will partake of communion. The confessional service commences at 10 o‘clock and the regular servce at 10.30. A Gerâ€" man communion service will be held on Sunday following Easter. Many of our country roads have been aimost in an {mpameable condiâ€" tion for a week or so. The concluding service in the series of Lenten services was held at St. Matthew‘s Lutheran Church The funeral which was largely atâ€" tended was held on Saturday after noon. A short service was held at the house 2 o‘clock and thence the cortege proceeded to the Mennonite Church at Bloomingdale for service. Interment was made on the adjoinâ€" ing cemetery. Those in sorrow have the eympathy of the community in their bereavement. The Lutferan Sunday School is preparing a program for a apecial Raster eervice to be held on the evening of Easter Day. Mr. Wm. R. Stroh of the Fourth Line of Peel was visiting relatives here on Wednesday of last week. Rev. and Mre. Peter Cober of Kitâ€" chener were midweek visitors at the home of Mr. and Mre. Allan R. Good. Mappily Wedded. _ home after spending several weeks in the parental home at Greenock. Rev. Isaac Brubacher of Scott has been a recent vigitor at the home of Mr. and Mré. Ephraim Betsner. dn oo its mchm bv.:t. ov( ‘ "The Family Meal Ticket" by McCready Huston (R. McBride Co., New York). The problems of a modern father of a large family are here described with keen insight and unfailing and original humor. Inâ€" stead of chapters there are letters from the father to married sons and daughters and to others at school, usually in answer to letters from the children giving their hopes, plans and mostly wants. There are many smart passages, and many new words coined, that are hilariously funny. The book is written in 1988, and is based largely on present conâ€" ditions, when salaries are "adjusted" and banks vanish overnight. All phases of the depression are touchâ€" ed, and poor old dad is continually "touched". So long as they underâ€" stand he is not fooled, dad is willinsg to help out. The illustrations by S. Soglow are extremely clever and fit in admirably with the sYirit of the letters. A particularly valuable book for these times when the world needs cheering up and we predict it will be the outstanding book of humor in 1933.. "The Eyes of Love" by Warwick Deeging. (R. McBride Co., New York). A new Deeping novel is alâ€" ways an event, and his new one is Farticularly charming. His great ove of the English countryside is evident in every page, and lovers of the great outdoors will find it especially attractive, even ag‘art from the beautiful love story. Falâ€" coner is more of a dreamer than a farmer, with the result that he and his wife are practically estranged. When he becomes blind, matters beâ€" come worse, and he leaves the farm for a wanderer‘s life. Ann Wethâ€" erellâ€"is in a totally different class, but loves the man, and despite conâ€" vention follows him and protects him from an unsympathetic world. Their great unbreakable love story is one of remarkable beauty, told in a simple but forceful way that has tremendous aEpeal. A truly great Kiece of work, possibly Deeping‘s est. "The Animals Came to Drink", by Cherry Kearton, (R. McBride, Co., New York). The highly exciting m& vies that are shown of animal life in the jungle are inclined to give one a distorted vision; here is the real drama, told by a man who has l‘ved there many years, and who has made a close «tudy of them. Most of these animals are peaceable and friendly: the zebras, monkeys, impalla and others graze peacefully all day, but at nightfall they all meet at the water pool for the refreshing drink after the day‘s terrible heat. Instinct teils them of their danger, but in spite of every precaution, the vicious crocodile and the wily leoâ€" pard take conetant toll. Tragedy is ever present, and it is only hy excerâ€" caing constant vigilance that their species do not become extinct. A marâ€" vellous picture of the jungle, accuâ€" rate in detail, and highly entertainâ€" ing. 4 s ; »n ons DR. W. J. SCHMIDT Donti-tTG Red Sea Nights" by William J. s » a Makin, (R.McBride Co., New York).| King St. E.. next to Post Office, The delighted reader will finish this Sier, _ Unt book with a sigh, wishing there| ~â€"_â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" were more and more of it. This CHIROPRACT]C audacious Enilish journalist went| _ into places where few white men ‘wouldBventure, nndhw‘i:h ‘oi:ld rehl- E. G. FR son. Beginning wit arseilles, he . G. Â¥ describes the almost unbelievable ;iclss of Vieux Porti‘ whfre :h:ife ih CHIROPRACTOR eld even more cheaply n _ in cage densest Aflri:l:. Tge.: foflow thrillin, Office 44 William St., Waterloo stories o e t; seaports o Arabia, cities of Aby"uinnh. Cairo, Fhone 768w Constantinople, Port Said, and better still, of unknown inland| ~â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" p}ll.ces where tl'llle barbarous l:fa of | $ â€"Em_._ % the natives still exists as always. CA He describes Oriental life, with its .] 25 2> ,. tomb robbers, dope smugglers, slave traffic and innumerable other vices. W ATERIm Th]srefiilahextrgme heat and elx:rem; cold, th and vermin, wealth an squalor. Altogether _ a _ colorful MUTUAL FIRE drama that has irresistible charm. Without a doubt one of the best lnnnmnnp travel books ever written The Modern mw just made an important in an unabridged Carlysle â€" Wickstead translation of Dante‘s "Divine Coâ€" medy". This book has stood the test of over twelye centuries, and is toâ€" day considered one of the few really great books in existence. The Moâ€" dern Library edition is complete in 600 pages, giving the three sections Inferno, Purgatorio and Paradiso with descriptive notes, printed in clear type on fine paper, bound in substantial cloth, and sells in Cana da for $1.00. The publishers will gladly send a complete list of their books, upon request. The Modern Lib Literary Notes J. H. SIMPSON â€" Viceâ€"President Joseph Stauffer E. J. Bauer Oscar Rumpel Ford S. Kumpf W. R. Bricker Wim. Henderson, Sr. ARTHUR FOSTER, Managing Director F. H. MOSER =â€" â€" â€" Secretary J A. FISHER, E. E. ROTHARMEL . Inspectors C. A. BOEHM INSURANCE AGENCIES LIMITED Established 1863 ASSETS OVER $1,800,000 Government Deposit â€" $100,000. Officers and Directors W. G. WEICHEL =â€" â€" _ President DR. J. E. HETT, SPECIALTY Diseases of the Ear, Throat and _ Nose. K’:I St. East, Kitchener. DR. J. W. HAGEY, Dentisty Room 110 Weber Chambers, ng St. W..WK.ltcluner. Phone 1756, MAURICE DALY, Barrister, Soliciâ€" tor, Notary. 5§ King St. W Egc.h;:." Room No. 8. n:.‘ Shoe Repairing A Specialty. Expert Workmanship. Prompt service and prices reasonable. 13 King St. N. â€" _ Waterioo ‘_J. C. Lehmann Rebinding Books, Bibles, Hymn and Prayerbooks a specialty. ditareey hotkts ole Tacome our fa nnd:o bonn:d {nb books. Initialing Clnb‘:qn. Suitcasen, e Prices reasonable, Goods called for and delivered. Teacher of Piano, Singing, and Theory, Private and Class Instruction. Studioe: 48 Roy SL., Kitchener. Phone 1171M. BOOKBINDER 17 Queen St. N. â€" Phone 2686 _B. BOWLBY, B.A., LLD. rister, Solicitor, N i\m Conveyancer and Crown Attornay 8010. R. 8. H. ECKEL, Dentist, Office in Bank of Montreal Bldg., Waterâ€" loo. Phone 174. .V Piitdnerâ€"verieruret o 4 /24 ‘“ Soee poounty Pulldings, Quees C. A. BOEHM INSURANCE AGENCIES LIMITED WATERLOO MUTUAL FIRE Insurance Company Expert Shoe Repairer at 27 Erb St. W., Waterloo, Next door to Masseyâ€"Harris WILHELM‘S District Agents. Phones 700 and 701 Waterloo, Ontario Miss Auna R. Bean SHOEMAKING MUSIC District Agents MEDICINAL E. HOUSE DENTAL

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy