Waterloo Public Library Digital Collections

Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 26 Apr 1934, p. 7

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

PR e is ty naita Elizabethâ€"Harold is an awful Kathcrineâ€"That‘s strange ; 1 was pest. He never seems to know when out riding with him last night and to stop. he found a dandy place. a." 3° Doaven Cjevesnd, edar Toint and Putinâ€" to and from . Low all Island s Iéstonriptemont toep ts | Cc 4/3 ' MAIL THE coupon low as . . . . THE CLEVELAND AND BUFFALO TRAN sIT. comPANY Foot of Erie Street BUFFALO, N. Y. Gentlemen: Send me free, beautifull strated folder dvinr complete information, schedules and covering your Allâ€"Expense Showboat Cruises on the 8, 8. BEE, Saturdays, Sundays and Holidays, steamers operate between Cloveland and Pog s:.%m Daily Bay. Low rate allâ€"expense tours to Thousand lslands â€"THE WORLD‘S QREATEST sHoW BOAT 500 feot long â€"â€" 100 feot wide â€"500 Staterooms and Pariors Ir_l:hfldvm-::vmflh- c " 1 cAco on net mam »imiferdencenys Aeattes oRkD‘s‘ rair floor show revue and "nufldnmntâ€"-ll‘o- a quality w pelth Tentenqintenstendats in derniion.beatn the second . [f MACMINAG week in July and continue through tre first woek in _1sLanD n ukstmemonitenarupodgisttforeploree . [ savir ate.manie day at Butlalo permitting trip to Niagara Falle: _ aec€OoRGIAN Bay One low fare includes all expensesâ€" â€"â€" mm-flumflnlmm?nm CLEV_E_LAND mfi.’“m’”m:.‘v’i::‘.!&t‘““‘“‘m ‘roee | BUFFA L O C & B Line steamers operate regular nightly servic e e en in io n s are _ low. on Saturdays, Sundays -myz mequiers cogrite FEEL, LOOK and ACT Years do not make us ‘oldâ€"we show signs of age when we lose the buoyant spirit of youth through worry, iliness and failure to care for our bodies. Natural methods ot health restoration and preservation insure. the vitality and strength which make for success and prosperity . Most diseases respond readily to natural treatments You can be young in body and mifd. You can coriect physical ailâ€" ments. You can remain well and strong. You can enjoy life. You can be an asset to yourself, your family and your community. These results attained through Physical Culture Health training as taught at An upâ€"toâ€"date, modern and well equipped Health Institution, founded by Bernarr Macfadden, where natural methods are exclusively used Here you learn the magic secrets of gooud health Pleasant surroundings, comfortable exercise . classes, likes. and sport recreation. Rates are very moderate. Write to the above rcdress catalogue and rate schedule Be Well + Be Strong + Be Young Mention this paper and receive valuable Health Bockle PHYSICAL CULTURE Dansville, New York DIXIE DUG Accommedations for 300 The World Famous on the S. S. SEEANDBEE OTHER C & 8 TRIPS (6rs Hotcr ‘L' FAN rtable rooms, fine sports . Ideal for hi fe Te esd s fell ara Falls. ahiphoardrend fe the con'& YouNnG Gar meals NIAGARA FALLS 7 bays, ;finm all Expenses, iss as low ms . . e Dbays, _ vacali for illustraced entertaingient AWFUL SMELLNG STtuFrF vou"o.c L_ PuPrina On ThE @rounmo me nextvor? wh wWhAtTsS Taat Mrc. Thompson started at this, It was the first intimation she had had that Marah knew of the means she had taken to prevent ‘her marriage with Waring. She tried to speak, but i Marah went on and would permit no [ interruption. | _ "Since then you‘ve had a sort of [mmumpl for me, because I‘m a wornâ€" out thing of no further use to you. id‘ve heen ill and weak and wretched |and you‘ve left me for days, alone ’und uncared for, with not even a word of the sympathy people give ito you three years ago my heart was {full of love and gratitude. I felt I could devote my life to doing whatâ€" ever I could for you in return for | your kindness to me. You told me that dreadful story about your past life and I never let it make any difâ€" ference in my affection for you. 1 pitled youâ€"and wanted to make up to you for what you had had to go through ‘withâ€"and I put everything ‘else out of my mind; and when you began to be jealous of me, and hate me because some other people liked me and I had a friend or two, 1 was so puzzled and hurt I did not know what to do. I tried in every way I could to make myself useful to you so that you might care for me again, but it was of no useâ€"the more I did the more you exacted. iot the convention of the thing. But J can forgive yon all thatâ€"ag T can forgive you everything else. You‘ve taken my youth and my health and my happincs; and my beltef in peoâ€" ple ond you‘ve taken my loveâ€"the one thing that made life worth anyâ€" thing to meâ€"they‘re all gone in your service and through your contri vances. "Then there came a man who ioved me, and you hated me more than ever, because of that, and watched us, lusultingly, and lied wbout ma and finally separated us forever without any pfty, or any remorse." "You‘ve said a great many cruel things, and many of them were true", she sald, "and now I‘m going to tell you some true things. When I came Mrs. Thompson sprang to the door, opened it nofselessly, and took a quick survey without. Theén she went back to her place. ‘There was another silence. It seemed as if Mre. Thompson was fortifying herself for a fresh effort. But Marah forestalled her. A strange kind of courage and selfâ€"asâ€" sertion had come to her, Still in her crouching position by the bedside, she raised her head, and looked at her cousin boldly, and straight in the eyes. en Semdlea c 0 oo Sn ces q c Oe on S o on S oemeg rn e e t ute!‘â€"if there could be an instant‘s desperdte, I turned to my sister tor a relief from this deadly, Incerating litHe.sympathy. 1 told her how you rain of words! But Mre. Thompson ;had treated me, and then, because only changed hor tone & little; she she urged me anit before J realined began to pity hereelf, uflv that it |â€" what i was dolitg, 1 told her who you was all up with her, that Von Stoll 1& uts P ult ¢ had . not. been persueded by her‘|â€"© ,hrm your eruelty and deceit pleading that it was all a dieâ€"that |1 was ren to treacheryâ€"and. it‘s she was ruined. ‘"You‘ve done your {thet:I can‘t forgive you forâ€"I can‘t work well, haven‘t you?" she cried, | forgive you fos the loss of my soul! finally, "you contemptible little trat | Beforeâ€"even with vouth and Kealth ‘Marah could not hear any more. Her kness gave way under her. She eank in a heap beside the bed and buried her face in her hands. There was & short eilenceâ€"she could hear her cousin breathing heayily, the clock ticked with preternatural loudâ€" ness, some one moved in the corrlâ€" dor outside. i "I thought that.French devil might be liatening!" she said, with perfect calmness. tort" 8B â€"RIR: l-‘.:l.fll.flfl-”"-fll'-'lf'.m! GREATEST VALUE ® WiTH RUNNING WATER $1.50 $1.175 $2.00 Breaklast from Luncheon â€" Dinner â€" And then at last, when I was ill ATTRACTIVE ROOMS WITH BATH $2:.00 S2.s0 $3.00 WAVERLEY HOTEL E £O00, 09e d w Oh! if she would stop for a minâ€" and beaten down by everything and IN TORONTO EXCELLENT FOOD TORONTO Write for Folder * MAE S "?T'CI'”?“'"‘“”*"'â€"""4:?‘;‘7"‘ "y€,9" v! > u- * omm n "pj‘l \;",':v}. i C ~White Lies â€"â€" LEMETEO â€" â€" â€" 35c â€" 50c and 60c â€" 60c, 85c, $1.00 HARD TO UNDERSTAND Ella, full of remorse, once she had had the wickednecs of what sahe had done pointed out to her, nevertheâ€" les cherished, in her secret soul, a Taint ind unworthy satisfaction. It was, she felt, quite according to justice that Mrs: Thompson should bave been punished for the way she had treated Marwh. She would never have dared hint at such a sentiment, however fleeting it was, to het alster, for the girl was obvionsly welghed down by a sense of her own disâ€" honour and shame. She brooded over Jt through idle days and sleepless nights, though ehe never epoke of Mr=. Thompson or anything connectâ€" ed with ‘her, and Ella felt more and more alarmed for her slater‘a health. bodily and mental, On one of the last days of her stay in New York, Marah had to go out in the afternoon to do some necesâ€" sary errands, OQn her way through Forty second Street she met Karl Heilsburg. They had not seen each other «ince before the publication of the article in the ‘Two Seas‘. She would ~have avoided him, it she could have done ao, and was looking «bout for a way of escape when he stopped her. ‘Marah expressed her eurprise that he was stlll in New York, and he explained that he had slayed on to look after aome mattera for Von Stoll. "I am sailing next Thursday," he eaid. "I ought to have left sooner, but 1 could .not go without sesing you again. There was always the hopeâ€"â€"alwaya the thought of you". Marah looked at him coldly, but it came over fher, in a great wave, how much ehe trusted and cared for him. And he had loved her when she was ill and ugly and indifferent â€"with nothing to offerâ€"nothing to give. What could he have loved her for? cher loyalty, perhape? He had cald once she was the most loyal woman he had ever known. What would he think of her If he knew the truth! Despise bherâ€"no doubt. It would be a kind of expiation to tell him the trath! Her mind was made np in an Instant, ‘I want to talk to you for a few miuutes," she said Abruptly. "Is there any place whore we can talk quletly ?" MW”’HW | , |>:_.‘ [%\\Kz_": //: ‘- 3 / Marah went to stay with her sister at the Ninth Street flat, for a few days. before veturning to Southfield. By a fortunate chance Mary Menenâ€" dez had hbeen called to the bedside of an ailing relative in Pittsburg. Now there was Hugh to be seen. That would be supremely unpleas: ant. She decided that she would spend che winter in the City of Mexico. Clarkse Briggs would perâ€" haps go with her. She had been a good friond to Clarisse in the past. â€" Me looked up at a towering above them. mate, she hardly suggested a human figure. Mrs. Thompson found herâ€" melf unexpectedly deprived of a re tort . Margh‘s attack had confounded her. How â€"dared.the gitl try to de fexd herself! . She vaciliated for a mement between opposing impulses, and finally decided that it would be better to goâ€"away in wrathful silence. The look she gave Marah, as she went out of the room, was like a thrust from her footâ€"it was so inso. lent and contemptuous, Later, she promised herself, to excuse what hinted dimly at her own intimidaâ€" tion, she would "get even." For the present there was a great deal to be done. There was, alas! no more hope of the baron. He was sailing On the following day, leaving his secretary to close up his affains and follow him later. It had been a great mistake for her to try and prove to him that the newepaper story was a blackmailing lie. If she had conâ€" fessed and thrown herself on his mercy she might have had a chance with himâ€"though even that was doubttul. 4 -“l‘hrxhuvh ‘your eruelty and deceit 1 was ren to treacheryâ€"and. it‘s thetâ€"I can‘t tforgive you forâ€"I can‘t forgive you for the loss of my soul! Beforeâ€"even with youth and Health and love goneâ€"I had something left 140‘ ate. Now L am degradedâ€"it is all up with me, as you say it is with you. 1 have nothing." © Marab‘s head sank on her heands again. Huddled on the floor, heside the bed, motionless, almost inaniâ€" PrEew! On FOR _ | it LANDS >Artl. Mhommpinaineninmeins | _ "‘That 3MAE $h9e" ] us $ 00. es tnl o < > * "| Taak uie mooy glont hotel, p * 1 77 7. Pormrmecoereccent Dartrr? o All the friends of Mr. Owen Hefâ€" fernen Sr., are pleased to learn that he has been able to return to his home after being confined to St. Joâ€" sph‘s Hospital. Congratulations to Mr. and Murs. James (Mines of Vineland formerly of this place, on the arrival of a duughter, Mr. and Mrs. Mike K. Zinger aud won Clarence called on Charles Bruâ€" der and family recently \ Mr. and Mrs. O‘Brein epent Friday in Guelph. Mr. and ‘Mrs. George Kuttz spent n day in Guelpbh. ; Mr. and Mrs. K. Hullburton epent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Bruâ€" der. â€" Private Raetueâ€"Cap‘n, hit‘s de yospel trufe. Ah wus jea‘ backing up foh to good start to charge. Miss Marle Reinhart has left (or‘ Guelph where she has secured a poâ€" sitton. ‘ Mr. Anthony Merrgott epent Sunâ€" day with his friend, Mike Zinger, Sr. Mr. and Mre. Spencer Hall epent Friday in Guelph.. . Mr. Wilfred Brader apent Sunday under the parental roof. Mr. Chas. Selfried and Miss Marie und Emm Seifried epent Sunday at the home with John Drexler. On The Rebound Captainâ€"Answer me. . Why did you desort under fire? Mra. Harper of Guelph is spending some time with her sister and broâ€" therâ€"inâ€"law, Mr. and Mrs. O‘Brein. Miss Helen Rawon has returned to our district after spending some time with her aunt, Mrs. Mines in Vineland. i~ Yen # o2 & y t $ UR «Yen, that will 402 ‘. > ( PE r ) A P cormer in â€"one of :FOORAâ€" A baitfem ty ies td "us email tablea stood about, out with cups and eaucers and redâ€"chadâ€" ed candies for future comers, Now and then a waiter went in and out and in the corridor outside they saw Master Alex Kraemer, son of Mr. and Mrs. S. Kraemer was suddenly stricken with appendicitis last Monâ€" day and operated on on Wednesday. For some days he was in a critical condition, but at present is doing as well as can be expected Mr. and Mrs. Mike Zinger visited with Mr. and Mrs. O‘Brein and famâ€" ily recently. Mr. Clarence Logel was & business visitor in Conestogo last Wednesâ€" day. ‘Mesers. Hunter Coote and W. N Allingham spent last Saturday in EJ mira. is Mr. and Mré. Fred Dietrich epent last Friday in Listowel. ‘Mr. and Mrs. W. N. Allingham spent last Friday with Mr. and Mre. Reid Allingham at Fernbank. Mr. and Mre. L. Wright and daughâ€" ters and iMiss Doreen Lambert epent Saturday in Kitchener. Mr. and Mrs. William Kraemer spent last Thursday in Linwood. , Mr. Hunter Coote and sister, Migs A. E. Coote spent last Friday in Lisâ€" towel. Mr. and Mrs. Clare Beggs of the 13th line Wollesley, epent Sunday with Mrs. Robt. Mewhinney. Mr. Russel Allingham was a busiâ€" ness visitor in Listowel last Saturâ€" day. . Mr. and Mrs. Norman Crooks of London epent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Roy Calder. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Calder of the 13th line, Wellesley, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Lambert. Mrs. Henry Martin of Wallenstein epent last Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. Edward Creseman. Mr. and Mrs. Ervine Mewhinney of Jordan Station spent the weekâ€" end with the former‘s mother, ‘Mre. Robt. Mewhinney here. people ; otherwige they had the wlm lighted, soeméeeâ€" cluded place to thomeelves. Helle burg ordéred some tea, in order to establish their right to be there, and looked at Marah as a lover does. A new and stronger hope stirred in bis heart, But her seriousness and lack of selfâ€"congciousness pussiqd him. Her face had grown graver and sterner since he saw her. It had now the ingcrutable and mysterious exâ€" pression of one who has looked deeply ipto the things of good and evil. When she began to talk her eyea seemed to be fixed on someâ€" thing distant and invisible, and she thing distant and invisible, and she had a kind of tragié*beauty, seen in this way, which moved ang im preased him. DORKING ARISS rfl" m to iln Paoty Nt S‘Su t V‘Tll'vmnflrv % V’_}, y man Sar ) ,}f‘ y )% A» ~C~f * a~ ppeh| ty 5:}/'; By J. P. McEVOY and J. H. STRIEBEL ‘"The Beauty of England", by Thomas Burke (R. McBride Co., New York). The beauties of England have never been presented in a betâ€" ‘ter light than in this beautiful book, Mr. Burke certainly loves the romanâ€" tic Isle, and knows how to present its charms in very fascinating word pictures. He takes you on carefree jJaunts in outlying villages and rural countrysides where the centuries seem to stand still, leaving the ancinet imprint so dear to both Engâ€" lishman and tourist; again he takes you to Cathedral towns and large historic Cities, where the ancient and modern vie with each other to command admiration. He takes you on lakes and rivers over hills and downs, and gives many quaint anec dotes and personal narratives that make his travelogue extremely life like.: ‘The book is beautifully proâ€" duced and has many etriking photoâ€" graphs of famous beauty apots of England. "In the Tiger‘s Cage" (J. B. Lippinâ€" cott Company, Philadelphia). Caroâ€" Iyn Wells‘ name on a book is enough for the reader of detective yarns, and in her new one, she is at her beet. Allen Moore has a collection of wild animals, and when his beauâ€" tiful young wife is found dead in a lion‘s cage, murdered, there is a «trange mystery to unravel, Thore is a house party and Fleming Btone, the versatile detective, has many suspicions which he traces. With his usual ability, he solves the mystery, and the reading of its is immensely thrilling * Hildebrandt Spinners was doing me good, so L evered with it and got my we@ ‘:lown to 129 lbs., a reduction of 8$ lbs. ?1' un,:antied ht.h. : xm;: “xiot oastâ€" ing when I say t ‘und.more active, have a mu{m figure, and am healthier than I have been for years.‘"â€"(Mrp.) J. 8. _ Kruschen isâ€"a blend of six mineral salts which assists the internal orâ€" gans to throw off each day those waste products thet wonhi otherâ€" wise accumulate in the form of fatty tissue. s i following her husband‘s .adâ€" vicnéfh% 'O:‘.: inwh:t a m-y“ â€"I v.m e ?::lu lnflm’“i:m.lly took off fl lbe. of her excess fat, Telling of her exâ€" porian. she vwrllm:-â€" © > n mu.f:::d""l t “&"E‘ co so I '?vu" ashamed o!nmy hm \l‘ was persuaded by my husband to take Kruschen Saits. Refore £ beâ€" x:‘;: I weighed 161 &%undl. After taking Kruschen a rt time the rheumatiom was less painful, my nerves got stronger, and my step nerves got stronger, and lighter. ‘Then I knew that ASHAMED OF HER /ok ~ * _ Hildebrandt‘s HINT® for 193. tells you about the new baite and the old ones . Send for your FREE COPY. HILDE B R A NDT High ftreet Logansport. Ind. M rab e 5 t t T aiie treeg the | big ones ~â€" um blzed ones â€"â€" and amallet fellown that taste so good1 Sizen color commbinationa for erery Dshing conditl â€" use ‘em with files â€" worms or with. plain hook Husband Persuaded Her to Hha Literary Notes n romnn rrarrm irrrrrrrn Here‘s a NEW NKR â€"â€" positively wicked on al kinds of trout â€" a brandâ€"new spinner with action galore ! lsmosac.) OF COURSE â€" there ate all the old lumlhr. Spix.n and !'lyw'onhllut ons t are fi‘p AYS good for trout and ot rnmfll‘. _The most satiefactory A LL CJrou 1ib a 0 aii‘k, 2MR alnful. my my step A red »@ own 0 8“ lbe. :iot. Roastâ€" ol younger TZER & SMYTH, BARRISTE] mm?m_» Notarics; J.‘ H. Smy DBR. W. J. SCHMIDT, Dentist, 69 Kifl.St. E., next to Post Ohce. Ki mer, Ont. D. 8. BOWLBY, B.A., LLD .rister, Solicitor, Notary | Conveyancer and Crown Att DR. J. W. HAGEY, Dentist, Room go Weber Chambers, King St. ., Kitchener. Phone 1756. Teacher of l’Lnno, Singing, and Theory. Private and Class Instruction. Studios: 48 Roy St., Kitchener. Phone 1171M. magazine bound into books. Initialing Club 3‘”’ Suitcases, ete. Prices reasonable. . Goods called for and delivered. Rebinding Books, Bibles, Hymn and Prayerbooks a specialty. Add more books to your home library by having your favorite J. C. Lehmann BOOKBINDER 17 Queen St. N. â€" Phone 2686 Kitchener M. O. BINGEMAN, B. V. Sc. Veterinarian Graduate of Ontario Veterinary College and Toronto University. Specializing in Cattle Diseases, Blood Testing, etc. Phone Kitchener 745 r 32 13 King Coroner for County of Waterioo. YH% Wdesh-l' 0& 0+ v-k.-PruHa-\ . ward ~ President F. H. !n-qrh-‘gd‘:.m.r, and Secretary F. H. Moser â€" â€" Office 44 William St., Waterloo Phone 768w Shoe Store and Repair Shop. King St. $. â€" Phone 941 WATERLOO, ONT. C. A. BOEHM INSURANCE AGENCIES LIMITED Waterloo Mutual Fire Insurance Comp_any C. a. BoOEHM Insufance AGENCIES LIMITEp District Agents WILHE L M S 228 KDiR' Js't.Eii: m@ » a ner pecialists Nose, Throat. Rex, ancerâ€"Internal and external. , N., Phone 720, Kitchener, Ont. BUSINESS CARDS Miss Anna R. Bean District Agents. Phones 700 and 701 itors, Notaries; J. i 2 Y Te n 8t. S., Kitchen SHOEMAKING Watcrloc, Ontario CHIROPRACTIC ED. HOUSE‘s CHIROPRACTOR VETERINARY MUSIC 3t MEDICINAL | _ DENFAL OFFICERS + + _ Inspectors N7 i PORDMbmhe C an) dntian Waterloo prices Waterloo Waterico

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy