The woman was struck dumb by a bolt of lightning that hit in her yard, ran up a waterpipe and leapâ€" ed into the kitchen. . Mrs. Whited was knocked unconscious,. She was ~revived by a ,b,(siciun, but could not talk. The d’&;tor said he doubted she ever would speak again. "Ah!" said the relieved one as he stooped and picked up a 25â€"cent piece from beside the curb. "Help from an unexpected quarter!" ‘Mrs. Lester Whited, of Gastonia, N.C., who yesterday had a firm, clear voice, now faces the prospect of never speaking again. â€" WOMAN IS STRUCK DUMB BY BOLT OF LIGHTNING; MAY NEVER SPEAK AGAIN Phone 2777w. 50 Ontario St. S. KITCHENER A. Cohencious Suitable for( any kindvof ruptura,. Prevent yourself from torture and get a truss to fit you. We have the knowledge and experience to fit you right EXAMINATION FREE TRUSSES DO YOU PREFER A QUIET HOTEL? Hotee Wavercey TORONTO ) YOU WILL ENJOY THE TASTY, INEXPENSIVE FOOD SERVED IN OUR BEAUTIFUL DINING ROOM If you.bO, you WiILL ENJOY HOTEL WAVERLEY AND IT‘S HOMEâ€"LIKE ATMOSPHERE. A Complete Stock of * 4 sepe | fupiem Ruth â€"and Lolo, and son ALL TRUSSES l Te ies Horry and Ouent flelp, M 12 Mansion St KITCHENER, ONT. ORDON‘S Oop Satisfy waite for foudta Rates $159 up ’\ )1 t :::'9†cf ue o oo Botor Arep nds LOCAL LAWN BOWLERS WIN In, the Twin City Lawn bowling games Priday night Waterloo won | three games and Mutual Life and ‘Heuvem two each. For:â€" Waterloo | Jack Dahmer beat W. Eager 27â€"14; | Lloyd Moser beat Barlow 25â€"13; Otto Stuebing from H. A. Kraatz 31â€"14; while W. James, Jr., lost to Fedy of the Mutual Life. ST. THOMAS VICTORY ELIMINATES GALT Galt ‘Terriers were eliminated from the Interâ€"county playâ€"offs on Saturday when the Tom Cats took the second game of the series 9 to 7, before the largest crowd of the season. Williameburg _ defeated _ Winterâ€" bourne 129 in a «oftball game at Williameburg Thursday night. Mil ard of the lpsers drove a homer in the fifth inning, while L. Becker hit out a pair of triples. By. inâ€" nings : Winterbourne ... 000 025 11â€"..9 Williameburg ... 400 052 1x 12 Schuett and Burnett Becker and Grischow. _ Umpiresâ€"F. Sapsworth, and J. Daub. St. Clements took two out of three from the White Eagles in a "B" fixâ€" ture by score of 176â€"167, 160â€"146 and 184â€"188. Each club threw 212 ringâ€" ers. High scorers: St. Clementsâ€"F. Schumimer, 38; G. Schummer 36 and C. Lienbardt, 33; White Eaglesâ€"J. Madtke, 42; M. Dziura 33 and R. Sill WILLIAMSBURG ‘TRIMS WINTERBOURNE NINE White Eagles took three games from Melrose players in a echeduled North Waterloo Horseshoe League match Thursday night, by scores of 200â€"122, 200â€"140 and 185â€"140. The wipâ€" ners had a total of 245 ringers rgainst 182 for the losers. St.. Louis "B" team defeated Knights _ of _ Columbus in â€" three straight games on their home courts Thursday night by scores of 198â€"150, 177â€"172, 200â€"123. The winners pitched 197 ringers as against 158 for the Knights. Mr. Ross Israel of Kitchener spent a cuugle of weeks with Mr. and Mry. J. Seip. _ ST. CLEMENTS BEAT .__ WHITE EAGLES IN HORSE SHOE Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Buhrow and son Harvey, and Mr. and Mrs. Louis Fatum and son George spent a day at Wiarton. 7 Mrs. Wm. Gadke of Tavistock is spending two weeks with friends and relatives around Clifford. Mr., Walter Gadke of Kitchener gpebnt a week with friends in Clifâ€" Kidon and Mr. E. Koenin spent qsfd?yu:vl:llli‘lr. and Mra, N son Beip. + m . Mr. and Mrs. Alex Iurn& and fnmï¬‚ï¬ spent a few days with Mr. and Mrs. Peter Dickert, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Dickert spent 4 day with Mr. and Mrs. Henry eir, * Mr. and Mre. Hana Seip and fumil%lwore guests of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Wettlaufer. / Mr. and Mrs. J. Sc;i‘f and daughâ€" ter Ruth and Miss Madeline French spent several dai' with friends and relatives in Kitchener ord y ~~~*~~ mampes ht T Marah was more and more dieâ€" tressed and embarrassed. She had a «ensation of shocked modesty, as if her cousin had Ainsisted on having her aid at her most intimate toflet, yel she was filled with pity goo, for Mrs. Thompson, as she plumfed into a long and excited recital of halfâ€" forgotten things, was obviously sufâ€" fering. If there was some slight eatisfaction in the dramatic effect of this suffering it escaped Marah‘s notice. She did not see that what «eemed remoree and wes &0 poignant to her was a mere compound of selfâ€" jity and wrath at a too censorious world. S0ometimes, while her cousin {alked on and on, Marah forgot, in her horror of the story, who It was that «poke. With an ineffectual, inâ€" ward protest she seemed . watching eome part of her own innocence, as At moments, too, a flerce gust of anger flared within her at the woâ€" man who was destroying her illuâ€" «lons; then pity returned, overmasâ€" tering, as before, and irresistible, "I was thinking," went on Mre. Thompson, still etaring at Marah with cdd fixedness, "of what I was at Iwen‘y-l’()ln‘." At this her composure gave way to a few hysterical tears. "No, how ahould 1?" said Marah, trying to smile, yet somehow vagueâ€" ly uneasy and alarmed. It was eleven Celock, and the house was comâ€" pletely still. The sudden chill in the uir, after the storm, had obliged them to close the windows of the hedroom, so that even the faint nolses of the summer night were shut out. Mrs. Thompson‘s usually emooth pink and white face looked grey and creased. Her yellow hair, a little thin and stringy, now that it was not carefully dressed hung around her face. Marah noticed that it was dark at the roots. She had observed this before but it had never struck her as distastefully as now. The illusion of youth which had alâ€" ways hung about her Cousin Cora disappeared and she looked, all of a eudden, old and unpleasantly exâ€" perienced. "Oh, if you only knew what I have nuffered!" erled â€" Mrs. Thompson, ‘ what abysses of horror I have desâ€" cended into, how my life was deâ€" etroyed before it was ever begun!" . it was shrivelled and finally conâ€" sumed in the light of Mre. Thompâ€" son‘s revelations. _ "Not «o young, Cousin Cora. T wentyâ€"four." "Twentyâ€"four! I had forgotten you were as old as that! Let me seeâ€" at twentyâ€"four Iâ€"" She got up from her aofa and began to walk, nervousâ€" ly. up and down the room. She was in a state of irresponsibility and exâ€" citement which made her seem a new person to Marah. "You are worn out after the thunâ€" derâ€"storm, Cousin Cora," she said, sy mpathetically. "Do lie down again and rest!" Marah sat down beside her cousin ond taking her amall, plump hand, patted !t gently, in an Instinctive effort to restore her to calm. Mrs. â€" Thompson â€" seated â€" herself on the eofu and looked at Marah with a queer light In her eyes. "Do you know what I was thinking?" she asked, _ _When Marah rejoined her cousin after dinner she found her restless und a little peevish. They read for un hour or two in their novel, then Mrs. Thompson declared that she was tired of the book and had raâ€" ther talk. ‘Their talking meant as a rule that she gave a more or less uent and picturesque monologue, while Marah listened, offering a comment or an opinion now and then when she was appealed to. Mrs. Thompson seemed to set a high value on Maurali‘s ideas. Ther? was, it must be caid, seldom anything uncertain about them. They had the uncomâ€" promising nssurance of all youthful Judgments. ‘This night Mrs. Thompâ€" ~on talked about herself, of her nerves, her general health, her exâ€" treme sensibility, her loneliness, and finally the affection she felt for Marah. "Now, Marah," she said, ‘ knowâ€"I feelâ€"that you are good, pureâ€"mindâ€" ed, everything a young girl ought to be. Let me see, how old are you?" "I‘m not sure," said Marah, speakâ€" ing with the seriousnese with which the children of New England apâ€" Lflmqi;h all ethical problems. "I thin mvaal? that auvnsothins mar think myself that everything ba} l ances,â€"for so much good, so much geod received, and so on." "It is certainly complicated. I beâ€" lieve in it, but faith and underâ€" wtanding are different things, I‘ve always been told. At any rate I‘m too hungry now to abstract and philoeophical thought." â€" "But most of us are mixed," ob jected Mns. Thompson. "Yes, but think what their outlook on life is. They think all the people uround them have done dreadful things too, that the world is all deâ€" ceil, just because they have decelt in their own souls." "I don‘t know what you mean." "I mean that if one is good one I‘ves in a good world, if one is evil in an evil one." J l "I should like to, know whether they ever find out about that woâ€" ‘man!"‘ ghe said. . "What do you think, Marah? Don‘t you thiuk she was punished enough by having to gliwe up the man?" . ‘"For justice, I should think," said hfxrlh, laughing, "but not for the righteous satiefaction @!â€"the reader." "But that‘s nonsenge, Marah. We all know people who‘ve done dreadâ€" ul things and who are rich and re »pected and happy." © . "But people are never punished in real life for things as\they are in sioriesâ€"we all know that." * ‘White Ltes. _‘ I[ Marah â€" breakfasted along with Phebe. ‘Later Mre. Thompsoh joined them on the veranda. Marah bent her head low over her embroldery when she heard the rustle of her dress. How hard it would be for Couâ€" «in Cora, this meeting again after what had passed! Her cousin made it clear by her manner and words that whatever confidences she had made were to be ignored, if not forgotten. Posâ€" wlbly she already was sorry for the impulse, born of nervous excitement, which had driven her to talk of herâ€" self at all, But she. would learn in time that with Marah there was nothing to regret. ‘The girl felt proudly conscious that her %Oynlty was as Immense as her pity. If love had been mentioned she would have hesitated a little, Her devotion to Mre. Thompson was devotion to a human being, q representative of suffering humanity, rather than to a personality. She did not really love her Cousin Core. Indeed in the first days of their acquaintance she had been regretfully consclous of a vague and unreasoning antipathy to her, which had worn away in the familiarity of constant intercourse,. With Phebe it wae a different thing altogether. The child was all myetery and charm, and fascinated Marah. But her affection and conâ€" fidence had to be won as slowly and delicately as one wins the tolerances ol a little wild bird. Just ae Marah felt that ehe was succeeding, the «ummer came to an end, and the household broke up, Phebe going away to boardingâ€"school, and Hugh to college, leaving Mre. Thompson and Marah to take possession of the of the story had been her own. Could she ever meet her Cousin Cora? With this miserable consciousâ€" ness between them, could they look each other in the face? Poor torâ€" tured woman! How she had conâ€" cealed her hideous secrets under a brave pretence of cheerfuiness! How truly she had expiated what slight fault had been her in that monstrous wrong! Marah, in a passion of griet and pity, felt that her own mission was now plain to het, and her heart beat gallantly ap the thought that here was some one to whom she might ‘be of real usefulness. Still whe dreaded that first meeting, _ The picture of her cousin was etill in her mind, tearstained, dishevelâ€" led, impressive in her very abaseâ€" ment, an unreal figure, symbolic of despair, as theatrical art. teaches us to recognise it. How would she look that mornâ€" ing? Surely things could never again be the same between them. t But the eound of her volce, clear and confident, gave her courage to look up. Mrs. Thompson smiled brightly at her. All signs of yesâ€" terday‘s storm of emotion and selfâ€" abandonment had vanished even more completely than the traces of the thunderstorm. She had the freshness of a little child after a night‘s dreamless sleep. Of the two it was Marah who looked worn and pale, but it was an immense rellef to her that the ecene of the night before was to have no epilogue, of the cloget began to pack her clothes, feverishly, half unconscions of what she was doing, intent only on‘ following the blind impulse which prompted her to leave that house. Then, little by little, her deâ€" termination faltered and at last she eat down idly, in the midst of the confusion of her halfâ€"finished packâ€" ing, dominated once more by the Ithought that her cousin needed her, that flight would be cowardly and unkind. No, she must stay! More than ever now there was a place for ’her and what ministration she might give. The night was nearly gone, and she was worn out ‘with fatigue andemotion, but something | like peace came to her when she had made this decision. 1 CHAPTER VI Marah had a tew hour of restless, fittul _ sleep _ during . which _ she dreamed that she was sitting alone in a dark, alrlées cuphoard weeping for the death of her sister Ella. She, woke in the morning conscious that in real life something unpleasant had tappened, the nature of which she‘ had forgotten. |_ _ She etill sat on the‘ sofa by her \cousin‘s side and held her hand, but now an intenge desire for eoliâ€" tude came to her. If she could be alone for aâ€"few houre she could |understand it all better, could eee her way clearer toward being a comâ€" forter, and giving the sympathy I,whlch was exvected of her! Soon a clearer memory ‘came to her and, alone as she was, her cheeks flushed hotly as if the shame But when, later that night, she f.ed to her own ropm, through the dim hall and up the narrow staire, her repuision at the hideous vision of sin, which had risen, menacing and insistent, among the flowerâ€"like imaginations of her youth, overcame her completely. In a kind of panic she thought of escape, and pulling her trunk out in her selfâ€"abandonment, reached a point where she saw herself glowâ€" story, was not so much the evilâ€"doer the \victim of s a ;:ulo and appealing lm_ of lawâ€" ever be written! ‘If it sickens you to hear, imaginewhat it was for me to live through!" She had now, ing with a kind of lurid beguty, pale and wonderful in the mystery of evil. t ""Poor, poor Cousin Cora!‘" eaid Marah,‘ "poor Cousin Cora!" & for Mrs. Thompson, as she told her Marah!" .she "Could it ":'('l" The Women‘s Institute met on (?)re | Tuesday evening. | The treasurer : tor ’gnve her report on the tj:x'oceeda; of ight the garden party which the Institute one .and the Hockey Club held in July. lgue"Euch organization received $32.31. like M"8S. R. C. Luckhardt gave a well had“"ef‘“ed paper on canning vegeâ€" tables. The roll call was answered by how to eradicate household pests. The Ladies‘ Bowling Club held their first mixed tournament of the year on the the local greens on Tuesday evening. A full entry was present consisting of rinks from Stratford, Seaforth, Drumbo, Taviâ€" stock, St. Marys, Elmira and Presâ€" ton. Three ten end games were ! played. Mr. Fred Debus‘ rink was the winner with three wins and a plus of 17; J. Newcombe‘s rink of Stratford and H. R. Roth‘s rink were tied forsecond place with three wins and a plus of 15. Thege two rinks bowled three ends to deâ€" cide the tie and H. R. Roth‘s rink won all three ends for a total of eight points, thereby winning seeâ€" o}r):_ddwhile the Stratford rink took third. W.M.S. Hold Outdoor Meeting. ‘The monthly meeting of the Ladies‘ Aid and the W.M.S. of the Evangelical Church was held in the form of an outdoor meeting at \Fountain Park on Tuesday afterâ€" | noon. There was a splendid atâ€" tendance. Mrsa. H. Williams had charge of the devotional period. Stray Police Dog Shot. _ _ | emall house in West â€"â€" Street, a ehort distance from the Riverside Drive, which had been rented for the winter. This house belonged to A friend of Mrs. Thompson‘s who had gone abroad for six months. One entered it on the street level and mounted the stairs to a drawâ€" ingâ€"room on the first floor, which was furnished with a "suite" of gllded Louis XV. chairs ang sofas, %holflmred in a deep pink brocade. e walls were also covered with pink brocade, and on one of the panels hung a lifeâ€"size, pastel porâ€" trait of the aforesaid friend, dressed in white satin with a furâ€"trimmed opera cloak falling artistically from her bare shoulders. In the portrait she had a emooth, apparently bone less face; enormous black eyes, curly dark hair, and an ideally pink and white complexioon. Mre. Thompson told Marah it was eo flattered that no one would ever know it was Clarisae. _ * â€" A stray police dog, which was molesting sheep and chickens in the neighbor%ood for several weeks, was waylaid during his nightly prowlâ€" ings and was aï¬ot on Monday night. The dog was dispatched from a rifle shot in the hands of Art Kalbâ€" fieisch, and was cremated in the furnace of the cheese factory boiler. Some weeks ago this dog killed a ewe and two lambs belonging to D. W. Roth and later molested other sheep and killed several chickens. The owner of the dog could not be learned. Stratford Wins Last Baseball Game. The Â¥ew Hamburg baseball team played their last lenï¬ue ]gnme of the season on the local diamond last Friday night when the local team Civic Holiday was observed here on Monday, August 7th. . â€" Mr. and Mrs. W. J« Johnson and Mr. and Mrsa. H. L. Meldrews of Lacombe, Alta., visited their nunt, Mrs. L. A. Smith, The meeting then adjourned and the members went in a body to the home of Miss Frieda Kalbfleisch, who is to be married shortly, and presented her with a beautiful silâ€" ver water pitcher. Mrs. Jas. Patterâ€" son read the address and Mrs. A. R. G. Smith presented the gift. The rest of the evening was spent in music. Lunch was served by the committee in charge. Local Rink Wins Mixed Tourney. Mr. and Mrs. E. Merklinger and children of Owen Sound and Mr. and Mrs. Peter Merklinger of Kitchâ€" ener spent Thursday with Mrs. Schedewitz. s f W. I. Honors Miss F. Kalbfeisch. _ ary S'ociet{;‘and’ Mr. G. Forler preâ€" sented a nd-}l;minped Yicture on behalf of the choir. Following the presentations, a social hour was spent in which games and contests were held, followed by lunch. 4 wC NROCY MEVETT 20. MUUS, WIHL WIRC ug her home on the mission ‘field in Alberta. She was presented wié.h a purse of gold on behalf of the Sugâ€" day School, the presentation behig made by Mr. Ed. Sein. Mrs. , E. Chapin presented her with a silver cake plate on behalf of the Missionâ€" Over fifty mempbers of the choir, Sunday School and W,lï¬ï¬‚. of the Trinity Lutheran Church gathered on Frg,dsy evening to honor one of theirâ€"members in the person of Miss Ffledad K.a'ibfleiisch,Awho ii:tiw b; married shortly, reclation | 0 the . service M)i'u lé)n?bfleiach had rendered during the time she had been a member of the choir, Mission Circle, and a teacher in the Aunday School was voiced by Rev. _ Mr. Mosig and Miss Wilker. Miss Kalbâ€" ï¬einci, who after her marriafe will be Mrs. (Rev.) A. Goos, will take turned from Rockwood Camp. Churgh Honors Bride. Fege. _ coftage at Grand Bend for some Kropf and Marguerite® .u":‘ visit the Century ¢ & m%}lmuw::n. se Mre. d d.vï¬ta- of Chicago mp\‘rl“:l:i; friends in town. Mr. and ‘Mrs. O. H. Becker and family have gone to their summer _ _ _NEW HAMBURG â€" Puat (To ‘be Continued) ld Plum and duttu ; are visiting friends in 6 lost H & of 6: "| e Homagh sey i::g;.i" Mr. and Mrs. Joseph MacTavish spent Sunday with the former‘s ;I)‘arents, Mr. and Mrs. Alex Macâ€" avish, of 13th Wellesley, Miss Florabele Grosz and Mr. Alvin Kittle of Kitchener spent ;?ent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs, W. . Allingham, Mr. and Mrs, Robert Lytle of Louisiana, U.S8.A., spent a (rny last week with Mrg. Alex. Coote. Irish‘s Colleens won their fifth victory on Friday evening when they went to Plattsville and deâ€" defeated the lassies there by a score of 19 to 5. The Colleens played their best game of the season. To J. Haunn‘s pitching goes the big share of the victory. _ _ _ â€" Mr. and Mrs. N. C. Allingham and family of New Yofk City are holiâ€" daying with the former‘s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Alllinghnm. Mr. Allingham is business agent for the Royal Bank of Canada there. Mr. John Byron of Toronto spent the weekâ€"end at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Byron. Mr. cand Mrs. Eckhardt Kalbâ€" fleisch announce the engagement of ('._!leil‘ eldest daughter, Frieda, to Rey. Adelbert Goos of Edmonton, Alta., son of Professor and Mrs. Goos of Saskatoon, Sask., the marriâ€" age to take place in August. Colleens Win Another Game. Messrs. J. Scherer, V. Scherer and R. Hahn left on Saturday morning to spend a week at Wasaga Beach. Abu s Ars n o o nac Messrs. Clarence Ingold and Ediâ€" son Schmidt left on Saturday to spend a week at the Keswick conâ€" ference being held at Ferndale in the Muskoka district, Cl _ Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Bell and family are spending a few days with relatives in Windsor, Mrs. Vanderbrooke and‘ children of Napoleon, Ohte, who have spent the past two months here with Mrs. Vanderbrooke‘s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Ritz, Sr., left on Friday for their home. They were accomâ€" {»mied by Mr. and Mrs. Charles titz, Jr. Nurse Edith (‘.opu]i of Alma n&ent the weekâ€"end with Mr. and rs. J. E. Byron. Mr. and Mrs. Gavin Semple and two children, Bobby and Betty, of Cargill, are visiting Mrs. Semple‘s {ather, Mr. S. D. Peacock. Mr. Ed. Lantz, local horseman was very successful at the Stratfor(i races on Wednesday, He won first money in the 2.18 pace with his Bingen Brino, and also the 2.26 trot with Imperial Axworthy. Quite a few local race fans attended the meet which was a good one. _ Â¥ Mrs. Leon Hutchings of Detroit is visiting her mother and other reâ€" latives in town. Mr. James Sherman of near Bright suffered a fractured right elâ€" bow when he fell down a stairway in the barn of his employer on Tuesâ€" day. He was brought here to Dr. Kirkpatrick who attended to his inâ€" jury. We are sorry to report that our veteran townsman, . Mr. Dominick Fischer, is confined to bed Lhrou{gh illness.. His condition was quite serious a few days ago but he is nowâ€" reported â€"to be slightly imâ€" proved. Mr. Fischer is our oldest male resident and will celebrate his 91st birthday, on the 30th of this month. Hig many friends hoge that he may have fully recovered by that time. _ The long hoped for rain after the ‘long drought and heat wave came during Wednesday night and did a world of good to root crops which ‘/had not yet been ruined by the dryâ€" ness and heat. Mr. Russell Laschinger left again on Monday for his home in Gilmer, Texas, after spending his vacation with his relatives here. Mr. Elmer Laschinger, who came with him, will also leave on Saturday to resume his position in the Gilmer newspaper with which is brother is connected. Dr. and Mrs. N. H. Winn and dgughter Margery have left to spend two weeks‘ vacation in Toâ€" ronto, Oshawa and other eastern points, and will return August 14th. Mrs. Ralph Yeoman and son of Toronto spent a week at the l;tme of her aunts, the Misses Deiche Mr. Orval Hostetler of Grimsby spent the weekâ€"end with his parents, Mr. mnd Mrs. L. Hostetler. team continued to hold undispu 'rolaguion of first rhce in the &‘! ord â€" Waterloo softball race. They won their third consecutive tiuae at Hickson last Friday when e; deâ€" feated last year‘s chmï¬ionl 6 to 13 in easy fashion. On Monday eveâ€" ning they took the Plattsville ‘I’lih into camp on the local diamond. The visitors arrived late and only five ‘fnnin‘gs could be played. However the Colleens hammered home 16 counters while the Plattsville girls got only five tallies. The batteries were: New Hamburgâ€" Haunn «and Hostetler; Plattsville â€" Lachman and McFarlane. g» Hamburg, Notes. ‘ ville had not played hardball ""ix'nlmm & ntm,n.uu.ï¬â€˜ , Botlâ€" season but put real game | ~citors, Notaries ete. in spite of l:ga‘;:e: of yr‘::geo. to loan. Qu-am Offices In anexhibition game d J yB 8, A, on nuastey eveite, a Plote locals . when \they _ defeat burgers by a score of 6 to 2. The New Hamb rls‘ softball am eonef}'nuadmfnm;:'oflhnhndimnï¬d DORKING TD f00} HOVESE SpOnes, â€" VHICOS .ui~ gt__g_fl_ 'm“d'&ï¬f..' 3. 4 Insurance Company Established 1863 ASSETS OVER $1,800,000 Government Deposit â€" $100,000. ~__ Officers and Directors W. G. WEICHEL â€" â€" President J. H. SIMPSON â€" Viceâ€"President Joseph Stauffer E. J. Bauer Oscar Rumpel, Ford S. Kumpf W. R. Bricker Wm. Henderson, Sr. ARTHUR FOSTER, Managing Director F,. H. MOSER â€" . â€" Secretary J A. FISHER,, E. E. ROTHARMEL â€" Inspectors C. A. BOEHM INSURANCE AGENCIES LIMITED ADVERTI8ING in The CHRONICLR BRINGS RDSULTA DR. J. W. HAGEY, b?iu.ï¬â€˜xoom 110 Weber Chambers, King St. W., Kitchener. Phone 1756. uAumr?n DALY, tor, Notary. 5i A Specialty. Expert Workmanship. Prompt service and prices reasonable. 13 King St. N. Teacher of Piano, Singing, and Theory. Private and Class Instruction. Studiost 48 Roy St., Kitchener. Phone 1171M. _ magazine bound‘into books. . Initialing Club Bags, Suitcases, ete. Pricea reasonnble Goods called for and delivered Rebinding Books, Bibles, Hymn and Prayerbooks _ a specialty. Add more books to your home library lzy h:vlng‘qo:ar Pv‘?flu Office 44 William St., Waterloo Phone 768w J. C. Lehmann BOOKBINDER 17 Queen St. N. â€" Phone 2686 Kitchener . B. ‘WLBY, B.A., LLD., Barâ€" rhien. Schisiton Notairy Public, <Conm-néer u%c! grown'Attonâ€. â€".Co: uildings,â€"Queen x Office â€"_County Buildings, Quéen ,, R. W. J. SCHMIDT, Dentist, 69 Kini‘ St. E., next to Post Office, Kitchener, Ont. C. A. BOEHM INSURANCE AGENCIES LIMITED District Agents. Phones 700 and 701 Waterloo, Ontario Nose. King St. East, Kitchener. R. J. E. HETT, SPECIALTY Diseases of the Ear, Throat and Kitchener, Room 1 3010. Shoe Repairing tor, Notary. 58 King St. West, gt;poner. Room No. 8. Phone Shoe Store and Repair Shop. King St. S. â€" Phone 941 WATERLOO MUTUAL FIRE WILHELM‘S BUSINESS CARDS WATERLOO, ONT. Miss Anna R. Bean ., Phone 720, Kitchener, Ont, / CHIROPRACTIC SHOEMAKING CHIROPRACTOR ED. HOUSE‘S MUSIC District Agents MEDICINAL DENTAL Waterloo Tsc wÂ¥ Nek N