Ontario Community Newspapers

Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 21 Jan 1926, p. 7

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"CSALADA" COULD NOT D0 â€" HOUSEWORK He liked, and a minute later the whine of the cream separator rose above the volcanic bubbling of the porridge on the range and the clatâ€" ter of Mrs. Stake‘s tableâ€"setting With something akin to fascination Cal watched the little rivulet of cream trickling out of its long slenâ€" der spout into the receptacie placed for it, while presently his arms cramped to the ache of a strange exercise amtâ€"the sweat began to gather on his face. "My land, you might let the man have his Sunday rest," Mrs. Stake protested. He had much to say, but before any of it had been said they were at the house. "What do you with it now?" h asked, helplessly. "Run it through the separator. You can turn it for me, if you like." Cal wondered who supplied the horsepower for this machine un; week days. Certainly not Gander, nor Hamilton. It boiled itself duwni to Jackson Stake or his wife. Per haps, in days gone by, Minnie; the‘ girl was strong of bicep, he could see thatâ€" | The men were filing in for hrn:nk-" fast. The slumbering chuckle in‘ Grit Wilson‘s eyes leaped to flame! at sight of Cal turning the separâ€" ator; then instantly died dnwn? again. A new note from the whirlâ€"<‘ ing bowl, a sort of throaty growl‘ as compared with its tight, highâ€"‘ pitched whine, proclaimed the task finished, and, at a signal from Minâ€" ie, Cal released the handle, whkh: dropped inert to the lowest point‘ of its circle while the machine itâ€"] self coasted joyously along, like An-! telope with the clutch out on 2 down grade. I Her remark opened up a new avenue of â€" speculation. By _ no stretch of the imagination had cows, common domestic cows, feâ€" male Bovina, appeared within the scope of the university curriculum touching sociology. And nowâ€" "Thank you," she said, simply, in a voice to reach him alone, and he went to his seat more than repaid. What cared he for the mocking eyes of Grit Wilson? What, indeed! No more than for the peripatetic functioning â€" of Gander‘s Adam‘s apple, more obvious than usual against the background of a recent shave and a clean collar! Woman Suffered until Relieved by Taking Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Compound "Why, I thought you city menâ€" It‘s been at the Plainville Electric Theatre. Some theatre, let me say. A sort of tunnel with a sheet at one end and a ticket box at_the other. Well, I could write a scenario for a film, "Why Country Girls Leave Home,‘ and I‘d use only one actor." _"A cow. A herd of cows. That‘s why." St. Charles, Quebec. â€""I was marâ€" ried three years and had no children. I was always trouâ€" bled with pains in the ahd{)vmen and was not able ffg to do my houseâ€" work. After tryâ€" ing all other remâ€" hi edies suggested to mt me 1 have at last e found that Lydia . * E. Pinkham‘s | hy Vegetable Comâ€" | f pound is the best &7 1 N us 4 $|bled in th % and 1 f s to d« ‘ s work a ing a y mfies t P me 1 $ foun l ®@ Vege | un amuai .. : me. _ It has done me mo Hamilton, Ont.â€" ‘‘I was nervous and runâ€"down, always had a tired feeling and no :x-etiu. I jumped at every sound and was always, low qirl‘ul My worst symptom was deâ€" Presaion and i was this way for sevâ€" pression and i was this way for seyâ€" eral months. Afflmdqdv;«ln\qp try Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Compound, and 1 have taken it for three months and am yery much betâ€" ter and can work around more. 1 feel like another woman."â€"Mrs.P.L.GUY, 98 Tuxedo Ave. No., Hamilton, Ont. 0 T J A. a7is The choice teas used exclusiveâ€" ly in Salada yield richly of their delicious goodness. Say Salada. TBR V N MoPTTPTCCCCCY ECC amilton, Ont.â€" "i was nem The Smoking Flax By ROBERT STEAD l eneeeemne mm en e m n mm e en e e e en en nnp E00 C000 e e e e e e t the world for tâ€" "That‘s what she saidâ€"or words :m that effect." . | _ "She did, ch? Well, she‘s wise. ) She knows. An‘ when a man drives j a team all day, an‘ feeds up at night i)'ll say he‘s done a day‘s work, an‘ , he‘s through." i "Same here," Mr. Wilson volunâ€" , tecred. qu The forenoon was spent in conâ€" genial laziness. Cal, drawing upon the warm water reservoir at the back of the kitchen range, and reâ€" cuisitioning an iron washâ€"tub t\at lay upturned in the yard before the house, sought the privacy of his granary for a bath and marvelled at the evidences of honest toil which the residue in the tub afforded. He shaved with more care than usual, selected clean shirt, underwear and socks from his somewhat limited wardrobe, parted his hair with mili tary exactitude, and superintended similar operations, sans the shavâ€" ing. on the part of Reed. Then he sallied forth, conquering and to conâ€" h« th I¢ Gander contributed a flicker of in terest. "What you goin‘ to do about it?" he inquired. "I‘m going 4o think about it." Gander relapsed. Cal, recalling his mental pfeture, saw the bear get ‘down from the top of his post and resume the plodding of his wellâ€" worn circle. The flicker of interest bad died in its birth. steadily gathered momentum, and when Grit‘s big grey thought to slip whead of Jim on a corner it broke into a gallop, and ended with a flourish of tails and stamping at the pasture gate. Then were many rol} ings on the warm grass, and heayâ€" ings of great hoofs and fetlocks in the air, and prodiguous scratchings of vertebral ridgeâ€"pole on the sandy carth. held his pipe; "we was just sayin‘ vyou ought to rig up the old Ford to run that milk buzzer. That shouldn‘t be hard for a man with a eddication." "For a D.D.," Gander expanded the descrpition. Cal sat down with them, hunched his back against the sunny wall, and got out his pipe.> Not until it was drawing well and the peace of tobacco was upon his soul did he "Minnie‘ll make up for that Gander. "She was givin‘ you start this morning. But take through th start this r from father this chore bus‘ness in college was "Wha‘s that clals, an‘ free snod subject." humor. "I don‘t know qi explain it to this aud paused, but his irony w cate; it was lost upon the purpose of an educ teach a man to observe, "Poof bus‘ness," Grit good subject." It was commenting. "You‘ll when the box social "The biggest trouble 1 ever got came from observin‘â€"an‘ think! He was for launching into a s clous story, but Cal would not deflected. "And my habit of observing and thinking," he continued, "has cansâ€" ed me to notice that the hardest worked beast of burden on the farm is the farmer‘s wife. Now that‘s a worked beast of burden on the farm is the farmer‘s wife. Now that‘s a tremendous fact. J suppose it has more to do with the the farm to the city else." round ontinued There was no sign of Minnie, so > rambled about the stables. On e sunnyside of one of the buildâ€" gs he came upor Grit and Gander unging in the warm sand. C We I‘m said it‘s not exactly that," d, husbanding â€" his _ g "I don‘t know quite how ju o this audience his irony was t« Jost upon then don‘t s sayin lenched eats got "we was just sayin‘ ig up the old Ford milk buzzer. . That EOD been here a few it is too soon to but my specialty fology â€"* to do with? Soâ€" (? Sounds like a vas Grit who was I1 beace ligh lal season comes get mixed up in _ There‘s nothin anppose it has movement from than everything was too deliâ€" them. "But ication is to , to thinkâ€"* interrupted. ever got into in‘ thinkin‘." â€"said. Grit, tecth _ that she‘s . wise. man drives up at night s work, an‘ ." said r goad a tip up in good sala Cal He en grinding, bore no does the soul. nuuu,w ‘as | W aware of the germ of an idea burâ€" i. *« NE +A oyn e s 5+ d ing from Gander‘s unreceptive brain &” it was igniting the combustile maâ€" . terial in his own. He knew it for a > great moment, and be â€"‘‘pped away, eager for a solitude in which he Diagnosis ' might compress the nebulas into a| Panel Doctorâ€"Well, what‘s the solid thought. ~ matter? C ' In the shade of the granary he| ‘Taxi Driverâ€"Feelin‘ a bit groggy evolved it. It was very simple when{about the chassis, doctor. reduced to terms; it simply meant w mz m Stake, he was to take his postâ€" An Armistice Ended that here, on the farm of JacksO®| yopson and his young wife were graduate course in sociology. He}naying their first quarrel had put his science away, @8 &| =; wish | was dead," she sobbed. thing to be kept under safe cover| =; wisn 1 was, too!" he exclaimed while his hbealth was mending, lifte!| ~ppon 1| gon‘t wish I was‘"â€"and dreaming that right here was the|in. war continued. environment in which he could best me develop it, and the raw material for Safety First * viead. prosperous, mo doubt, im 4| "WBY did you Jump out of the gross kind of way that is measured way of that fl'l‘ll()? You had the law by acres and bushels and droves of uu“ your slfle. stock, with its ‘rough buildings, its| : § recognite only one law in anch simple customs, its labors, its drud "“eii[be faw â€" of soltpreserys: geries, its flickers of humor, its Hon pathetic shadows, its unconscious Economy tragedyâ€"this was to be the school of his postâ€"graduation. What char Ole Olson had been working as an acters, what material to his hand!| ©U8ine wiper, and his boss, a thrifty Jackson Stake, himself a broadâ€"| A" had been coaching him for girthed boy of sixty; Susie Stake, a promotion to fireman with guch adâ€" domestic treadmill, but a treadmill|!%® 48‘ with a beart which in some unâ€" "Now, Ole, don‘t waste a drop of accounted way, had been set pouncâ€" oilâ€"that costs money. And don‘t ing again, by the presence of tha] #aSte the waste, eitherâ€"that‘s getâ€" boy Reed; Gander and Grit, allâ€"wise|tits expensive, too." and selfâ€"sufficient; Hamilton, deep When Ole went up to be questionâ€" It was too tremendous to be taken: standing, and Cal sought poise in the prairie fields. Fancy injecting idealism into this clay; suhstitming‘ art for materialism; living for beâ€" ing alive; implanting an intellectual‘ consciousness; attuning minds to the infinite reactions of Truth; broadening horizons until they inâ€" cluded the world, the universe itâ€" self! Cal walked the fields by himâ€" self, his soul afire with dreams; forgot his midday meal, and came cut of his trance only when he disâ€" covered that the family was preâ€" paring to attend church in the disâ€" trict schoolhouse, that the Dodpe was drawn up at the door, and that" Minnie was dressed apparently for walking rather than riding. "Dad will drive, of course," she explained, "and Mother will ride with him. Hamilton is over at Double F‘s, and you three men awill fill the back seat. I don‘t mind walkâ€" ing; indeed, I don‘t I rather like senily he and Minnie were tracking together the winding trail through the poplar groves to the highroad. Get a amail bottle of Ely‘s Cream Balm from your druggist and apply a little of this fragrant antiseptic cream in your nostrils. It peneâ€" trates through every air passage of the head, soothing and healing the aswollen or inflamed muscous memâ€" brane, giving you instant reliet Head colds and catarth yield like magic. Don‘t stay stuffed up and miserable. Relief is sure. it So (Cal said something about likâ€" ing to walk, too, and with Reed in the back seat it would be crowded, anyway, and it was only a mile and a half, wasn‘t it? And perhaps they had â€"better start at once. And preâ€" UNITED STATES VICEâ€" PRESIDENT â€"FORGETS HIS wWIFE‘S BIRTHDAY Count fifty! Your cold in head or catarrh disappears. Your clogged nostrils will open, the air passages of your head will clear and you can breath freely. No more snuffiing, hawking, muscous dstcharge, dryâ€" ness or headache; no struggling for breath at night. Viceâ€"President Dawes had a close call from what might have been a serious situation. Presented with a houquet of flowers for Mrs. Dawes is he completed an address on Jan. Tth mt Washington, he said: "Mrs. Dawes will doubly appreciate these flowers. Today is her birthday, and 1 forgot all about it." (To be Continued.) Copyright "suppose gine on a around a c ing toward would you To which "L grap | waste "Now, Ole, don‘t waste a drop of oilâ€"that costs money. And don‘t waste the waste, eitherâ€"that‘s get ting expensive, too." When Ole went up to be question ed on his eligibility for an engine men he was asked: My wayward thou To that land so A pleasing touch of red; The wild flowers smile a welcome From the lowlands‘ mossy bed. Pink and blue and purple colors Through the grassy carpet sput Nodding, Waving, sunlit blossoms Winking at the Midnight Sun. That raven flap) There runnins The rolling hills With the rowm An eagle circles The highest p A bill to authorize Presidert Coolâ€" IIge to take over and operate the anthracite â€" mines â€" was â€" introduced last week at Washington by Repre sontative Boylan (Democrat, New York). Numerous similar proposals have previously failed to receive serious consideration. Economy Ole Olson had been working as an engine wiper, and his boss, a thrifty man, had been coaching him for promotion to fireman with guch adâ€" vice as: ~ Meets And th® Greets .__ Safety First * "Why did you jimp out of the way of that auto? You had the law ou your side." That Wheve The scenes recall a picture Of the stirring days of oldâ€"â€" When the land of snow and glaciers Head become: the land of ggold. When the stormâ€"swept height . of Chilcoot, Was a blur of goldâ€"crazed men, And the wild goat qutickly seamper ed To someâ€"distant mountain glen. Then suddenly, above the trees, The sky is painted bright With the everâ€"chanzing colors Of the flickering Northern Light Again the silence scatters, â€" And I bear the mad moose crash Stumbling | wildly, through the wil Jlows As he sensed the rifle‘s flash. See the wild ducks res lake, Rippled by the breez With the ptarmigzan alon And spruceâ€"hens in 1 Reedâ€"grown â€" flats. . wher . "I recognize only one law in such casesâ€"the + law _ of â€" selfâ€"preservaâ€" I can see a lonely campâ€"ire On the Yukon river trail; And somewhere from out the dark ness . Comes the wolfl‘s dismal wail. My malamute steals. closer, With a low forbidding growl; And froni a nearby spruce tree .Tannts a melancholy owl. â€" Up (Written at Mother Lod Kennecott, Alaska, July 23, WABSHINGTON BILL INTRODUCED TO TAKE OvER COAL MINES Jobson and his young wife were having their first quarrel . "I wish I was dead," she sobbed. "I wish I was, too!" he exclaimed "Then I don‘t wish 1 was‘"â€"and the war continued. â€" Phe And As The "Boiling The sun And th Lp on t The fir Another And And yearning, (in back again when the @un swings around, j Go back with the anowbirds in wpringtime returning, Go back when the wild flowers pick from the ground, And my feet are getting restless, as J write this refrain, Are you going to Alaska, are the thoughts I think again. see the clouds of smoke roll up From fiery Old Katmai, Bolak nd â€" towering â€" Mount â€" McKinley As it blots the northern sky. he rainbow peaks and trails 1 knew As I followed fortune‘s whim rom the Copper liver Delta, To the head of the Kuskokwim. Ther bei And geese nC And â€" guils e waterfalls â€" where leap, Are the thdughts th me. hn THOUGHT OF ALASKA is in that gravling. is calling, ca the Malaspina the northern owindâ€"kissed se i the golden be on do?" rich Ole replied ip the oilâ€"can; ind 1 yump." Smiles : || S Rheupatisn [ it catch the rapid‘s roar, itch the maddened waters past my cabin deor. is up at midnight, _ e night is bright as day; ie rocky summits ire mountain sheep at play spell is In catch the veed unning a weasel s1 &# hills are dotted e roaming carihou; circles slowly near, hest point in view urve flapping you were on your enâ€" single track. You go rve, and you see rushâ€" you an M in that ghts still wapder wild and f&: and up yonder, calling me. s the lower hill along the ridge, in the trees. where the wild her express till Glacier )cean‘s foam 2 of Bering ich of Nome ily ting on th patch the grab the from . the come mes the 192 safm What Mine of "Pursuant to Statute" Wilmot Council met at the Township Hall, Baden, on Monday, January 11, 1926, at 11 o‘clock*A.M. The following members made and subscribed their respective Declaraâ€" tions and Qualifications and Office: Reeve, John Herber; Deputy Reeve, Valentine H. Zoeller; Councillors, E. B. Hallman, A. E. Bean and M. A. Schmidt. The Reeve Presiding. The min: utes of the December session were read and adopted. Communications were read from the Sick Children‘s Hospital, Toronâ€" to, asking for the usual grant, The Municipal World solifciting subscripâ€" tions, the Secretary of the Waterloo County Advisory Agricultural Counâ€" cil asking for the appointment of a representative. â€" Two â€" members of the Wilmot Telephone Commission appeared before the Council asking the passing of a byâ€"Jaw for the loan of three thousand dollars. Moved by V. H. Zoeller and M. A. Schmidt that . A. R. G. Smith be appointed representative from Wilmot Township to the Waterloa County Advisory Agricultural Counâ€" cil. fee _V. H. Zoeller, Chairman, when the following appointments were made: Auditors,. Wm. Russell and Henry Wuntz; Assessors, A. B. Christnor. Chas. Jacobs and J. K. Schmidt; Atâ€" tendance Officer, A. R. (G. Smith; .\';'unmry Inspector, Adam Hartung; Member Board ofâ€" Health, Wesley BErb. «nd finally passed. Moved by V. H. Zoeller Schmidt that the followin bepassed: New â€" Hamburg Independ ments and ad., $35.50; A. her, labor on road, 4.80; J & Co.. Diaries, 6.65; Sim ner, refund statute labor, 2.00; The Municipal World, six subscriptions h.; _ HMospltal â€" forâ€" Sick Children wrant, 30,00; C, Heipel, registering hirths, marriages and ‘deaths, for 8 months WILMOT TP. COUNCIL MEETS Attendance Officer, Members of the Local Board of Health and for borâ€" rowing a certain sum of money for the Municipal ‘Telephone System, and that said byâ€"laws be now read « first and scecond time, Moved by V. H. Zoeller and A. K. Nean that council go into commit An‘ why a horse can‘t learn to mnn,CMk'l Regulaling Compound An‘ why a cow can‘t neigh; 4 sajr, reliabl lati An‘ do the fairles live on dew? medicine." Rold in thive" dee )Yn' what makes hair ||H"I.Krfly? fi;,";f;,f"_'\','."'g{' ’\\flpo:b’l:. An‘ then my pa got upâ€"an‘ Gee! ZBl Bola h{ all drusrists, or sent The offul words he said. g,""‘;'"""'"“::"‘n'A;‘:“:“" + myp « t I ;mdnt done a thing, but he mtm“.‘mmm eat sent me off to bed. TONONTO ONT . (Formarty < Moved by A. E. Bean and E. B. Hallman that byâ€"Jaws he passed to appoint Auditors, Assessors, School Attendance Officer. Members of the & Co., Diaries, 6.65; Sims, Bray & Melintosh, _ legal _ retainer, _ 40.00; Henry Kuntz, conveyancing road way, 3.90; Herman Wagner, refund statute Jabor, 2.00; Emanuel Warâ€" road 67.50; Conrad H. Rueffer, labor un road, 79.05. Moved by E. B.Mallman and A. E. Bean that this Counci) do now ad: journ to meet again on Feb. 16 1926. Chas. Heipel, Rowles Red Pepper Rub, made from red peppers, costs little at any drug store. Get a jar at once. Use it for lumbago, neuritis, backache. stiff neck, sore muscles, colds in chest. Almost instant relief awaits you. Be sure to get the genuine, with the name Rowles on each package. My pa, he didn‘t go downtown Last evening after tea, But got a book an‘ settled down As comfy as could be. N tel you 1 was offul glad To have my pa about, ® To answer all the things I had Been tryin‘ to find out. rheumatism so you can hardly get around just try Red Pepper Rub and you will have the quickest relief known. â€" Nothing has such concentrated, penetrating heat as red peppers Instant relief. Just as soon as you apply Red Pepper Rub you feek the tingling heat. In three minutes it warms thÂ¥ sore spot through and through. Frees the blood circulaâ€" tion, Breaks up the congestionâ€"and the old rheumatism torture is gone. An‘ so I asked him why the world Is_round inatead of square; An‘ why the piggies tails are curled And why fish don‘t breathe air. An‘ why the moon don‘t hit a star, An‘ why the dark is black; An‘ jest how many birds there are An‘ will the wind come back? An‘ why does water stay in wells? An‘ why do June bugs hum An‘ what‘s the roar I hear in shells? An‘ when will Christmas come? An‘ why the grass ia always green, Instead of sometimes blue? An‘ why a bean will grow a bean An‘ not an apple too? nd 640 hbe now read Moved oved by E. B. Hallm: Schmidt that byâ€"Jaws THE UNREASONABLE PA ?1.00 . H. Zoeller and the following ace B. ffalfman and M Kerr, labor or third tim« nt Clerk Christ Jaimet ounts stat M. A â€"J. Howard Simpson Richard Roschman Jos. Stauffer l it is not directly 40 m medicine grves of No. 2, # TA Bold hy . repaid Free q THE Cc Towento L. W. Shuh .. W. G. Weichel ARTHUR FOSTER ...... Man B. E. BECHTEL and W. R. BRICKER ....... Inspec C. A. BOEHM INSURANCE AGENCIES, LIMITED District Agents conference on For SPRAY, PAINTING AND WHITEWASHING call at THE WATERLOO VULCANIZING WORKS Dominions‘ responsibility in the Lo:â€" carno pact, it is stated in quarters close to the British Government. General Hertzog, the South Afri can â€" Premier, it is understood to have informed the Colonial Office that his Government hbas decided pate in European h Dominion d« plans f« would UNION OF S. AFRICA ; WILL NOT TAKE PART IN CONFERENCE ASSETS OVER $1,400,00 GOvERNMENT DEPOSIT $100,000 91 King St., North _ â€" _ Waterioo THE MERCANTILE FIRE INSURANGE tke part in the project« ecarnod District Agents Waterloo, Ont. Phc nler Agent Rear of Pequegnat Block, Fredâ€" erick St., Kitchener. Phone 173J Promptly and neatly. done.Satisâ€" faction guaranteed. 13 King $t. N., Th A. BOND Florist Kitchenerâ€"17 Mary St. Phone e iog yare Waterlooâ€"122 King St. Phone | JAMES REP A IRING BOOTS, SHOES and RUBBERS REPAIRED KNIVES SHARPENED E. NIERGARTH 21 Erb St. â€" Waterioo INCORPORATED 1874 Bubscribed Capital . .$250,000 Assets ........ $700,000 All policies guaranteed by the London and Lancashire Insurance Co. Ltd. with seâ€" curity of $50,250,000. Alfred Wright, Secretary. C. A. BOEKHM INSURANCE AGENCIES, LIMITED CUT FLOWERS AND PLANTs Waterloo Mutual Fire Insurance Company Farm Implements join Gordon Peterson Masseyâ€"Harris Implements M T. Btable Equipment Ontario Mind Mills Wire Fencing and Twine Officers and Directors send nc have Harness and Shoes H. M. WILHELM Pn SHOEMAKING. the, Mother rothe sect mion Established 1863 TY COMPANY tces of atrengthâ€"No. 1, #1; fun 2, §3; No. 3, $5 per box. Bold l.{ all 4Iru:.‘u-0,'o|' sent repaid on receipt of price, g‘v«n pamphlet. _ Addresm; THE COOK MEDICINE TONONTO,ONT . (Formerly Repairing this _ autumn, _ whic under discussion th representative to the the ground that the not want to particl an affairs with which tly concerned. south Africa wih er Country in her cnrity and peace resented â€" by the . relinble . requlating Bold in three deâ€" atrengthâ€"No. 1, #1: ind .. ... President Viceâ€"President A. Baver J. H. Roos P. E. Shantz .... Manager Phone 760 Waterloo. Inspectors fuses . to Imperial which to CLEMENT, HATTIN and SNYDER, law offices, Waterioo County Loas Building, corner King and Founâ€" dry Streets. Phone T7, Kitchoner, D. 8. BOWLBY, B.A. LLB, Bar rister, Bolicitor, Notary Public and Conveyancer Office Merchâ€" ant‘s Bank Building. _ Telephone 247, Kitchener, Ont. DR. J. E. HETT, SPRECIALTY, Di# eases of the Kar, Throat and Nose, King St. East, Kitchener. DR. F. G. HUGHES, Dentist, Haekâ€" nel‘s Block, King St. 8., Waterloo. Phonesâ€"Office 394J, Residence, 259J. A. L. BITZER, B.A, SUCCERSSOR to Conrad Bitzer, Barrister, Solle itor, Notary Public, etc. Money to DR. 8 W. ROBERTSON AUDITOR and ACCOUNTANT Bookkeeping Systems Installed: Income Tax . Phone 1963w _ â€" _ Res. 532 Park 8t. Kitchener 206 Weber Chambers. _ Phone 1906. Kitchener. Palmer Graduate Chiropractor 194 King St. West, Kitchener Phones: Office 1123J, House 806 DR. L. DOERING, Dentist, succesâ€" sor to Dr. J. Schnidt, 69 King 8t. East, over Dominion Bank, two doors from Postoffice, Kitchener, phones: â€" Office 464; residence, 2092 W. Accountants and Auditors, Author ized Trustees, Aasignees, eto. .... AUDITORS & ASSIGNEES WALTER D. INRIG & Co. Successor to Dr. U. B. Shants Graduate of Bellevue Hospital, ew York. Special attention patd _extraction and children‘s diseases. Office 35 King St. W., Kitchener Phone 444. ancer, otc. Money to loan, Offite, Pequegnat Block, next to Market, Frederick© St., Kitchener. R. 8. H. ECKBEL, Dentist. Office In Molsons Bank, Waterioo, Phone 174. Block, King West, Kitchenser, t G. E. HARPER, DENTIST, Office in Oddfellows Block, 33 King St, S., Waterloo, Phone 349. 110 Weber Chambers, King St. W. Kitchener, Telephone connections, Kitchener, R. H. M. KATZENMBIER, Der: tist, office 93 King St. W., Kitch ener.. Phone 305W. PMLLEN and WHIR, J. A 1 len, BA, LLB; J J 4& INCOME TAX COUNSEL Don‘t throw away your old Inâ€" grain, Tapestry or Brussal Car pets. Bring them to us We make them into beautiful new reveraible Finf Rugs for you. Office 44 Willlam St., Waterâ€" loo. Phone 64m. Mary @t. Watesioo, Phone 415. 5 Hoim Apartments, Young 8t. Phones, Office 1323J. Hâ€"1323W. FLUFF RUG WEAVING DR. A. C. ELECTROTHERAPEUTIST CHIROPRACTIC F. WAECHTER CHIROPRAcTOR MEDICINAL A. HOLM, Chiropractor HAGEY, Dentist, Room DENTAL BROWN, DENTIST , House 806w.

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