Ontario Community Newspapers

Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 1 Apr 1926, p. 7

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«ooo n n en en nnnenn i Eummmnummumnumnm.m{lmmnlumflmmuumufi ‘Then there had been the auction sale at Fryber‘s last Saturdayâ€"just a week ago today. Something apâ€" proaching a~ domestic scene had occurred at the dinner table when Jackson Stake announced his purâ€" pose of attending the sale. 5 "More good you‘d dig the rest o‘ the garden," Mrs. Stake suggested. Her husband dsimissed the idea as impracticable. "Too late," he said. "Couldn‘t raise a disturbance in that garden unless you plart it before the first of June:" Mrs. Stake slapped another fried egg into Reed‘s plate. "Well, you can plant a disturbance over ° at Fryber‘s sale, an‘ it‘ll be ripe in Ocâ€" toberâ€"with interest,"â€" she remarkâ€" ed. "You‘ll buy some old fool conâ€" traption, or some dyin‘ or spavined critturâ€"trust you! An{ sign some one else‘s note, as though you hadn‘t enough o‘ your own. But will you dig the garden? Not for the soul or sake o‘ you! They‘ve perâ€" hibited liquor. Now if they‘d perâ€" hibit auction salesâ€"" After dinner Cal had engaged the farmer in conversation as they leanâ€" ed against the stays of the windâ€" mill. _ Overhead _ the _ galvanized tlades shone idly in the dead calm of noonday and at their feet the empty water trough gaped Rproachâ€" fully. _ "The wife‘s got ‘er knife into aucâ€" tion sales," the farmer commented. "She‘s always after meâ€"" Jackson Stake spread his great palms with a gesture of helplessness. * * "You could make yourself solid ‘by buying that gasoline engine," Cal insisted. "Just drag it home from Fryber‘s and hitch it to the household. implements, and ~you‘ve heard the last from Mrs. Stake about auction sales." The choice teas used exclusiveâ€" ly in Salada yield richly of their delicious goodness. Say Salada. "Fryber is offering a gasotine .enâ€" gine for sale," he suggested diploâ€" matically. "It could be rigged to run the cream separator and the washing machine, and to pump water when the wind is on strike." The farmer raised a brimless hat and scuffled his thin hair. "How old are you, Cal?" he. deâ€" manded. "Twentyâ€"six." . "You‘re old enough to be married. Any fellow that figgers as far ahead as you do is old enough to be married." Cal experienced a sudden bounce'l of lightâ€"heartedness â€"the first for days. Toward the goodâ€"natured, lr-l responsible, slightly henâ€"pecked old‘ farmer he felt a glow of real trlend-‘ ship; a sense of manâ€"toâ€"manness sent him to his fields whistling. f Mrs. Stake received the engine with conflicting emotions. Haven‘t 1 told you not to go buyin‘ those fool‘ contraptions?" she wanted to know. "I bet it won‘t go anyway." \_"Oh, yes it will, Mother," said Jackson Stake with amiable disreâ€" gard of her querulousness. "Start it up for her, Cal." _ Cal started® the engine and in a moment it was pitâ€"aâ€"patâ€"ing its stacâ€" cato thythm with the regularity of RESTORED 10 GOOD HEALTH Mother of Eleven Children Praises Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Compound Her Interesting Experience Buckingham, Qu mother of _ eleven The Smoking Flax 23 }';j‘" ‘lof it from mdy ts /+ sister, Dame Edâ€" # > Ne |ouard Bellefeuille P £ RamsayyMle. For five years 1 was in m was always ready to ery. Now I am so happy to have ggod health. My\daughter, who is :myhnold. has also taken it and be to recommend it to all i. Remmmem ong ENT Why suffer for years with backâ€" ache, nervousness and other ailments w ago when Lydia E Pigknam s & 'v""""mfli’ Compound will, give you â€" In a recent rhi“' tanyass ® g- frnbe on arrpre n 100 reported they were benéâ€" y &6« ~a C .By ROBERT STEAD â€"living children, and my baby is months old. I am only 38 years id and 1 have en L,di: E. kham‘s Vegeâ€" able Compound or weakness and my nerves.1 knew â€""I am the ¢lockâ€"work. Mrs. Stake watched stolidly for some minutes, but slowâ€" ly her face began to twist and puckâ€" er in unwonted lines and ridges, The stern old lips softened, the firm chin went quivering, there was a glisten of moisture about her deep, black eyes: "Jackson Stake, you‘re an old fool," she said, but her voice had gone soft and gaspy. . . . a Cal ruminatéd on all these things, and more, as he furrowed up and down the fallow field that morning in June. Mingie had not been home for two Sundays. . . . * At a little before twelve Reed came romping over the ploughed field, his bare feet sinking pleasantâ€" ly in the soft, warm earth. The boy was tanned and healthy; his little frame stood up sturdily under his loose blouse and knickers. Cal took him up on the plough, and at the end of the furrow, when he had unâ€" ‘hltched for dinner, tossed â€" him aboard Big Jim‘s ample back. This procedure always instigated great rpoddings and champings on the part |cf ‘Big Jim, and he marched homeâ€" Ivmrd with pride of vast responsibilâ€" ity and an ostentatious jingling of ‘hls traceâ€"chains. { It was not until, a little than the others, he was sea‘ : the dinner table that Cal b aware of an additional presen Jackson Stake‘s right sat u tall dark man; a man of thirty, or there abouts; stouter than Gander, an« without the peripatetic Adam‘ apple, but otherwise bearing a semblance that .could hardly / accidental.. He wore a suit «: bad once shown good materi ‘. :â€" faded and sagging; a celluloic > and a gorgeous tieâ€"pin cont=iis.~ an effect of comparative din.s> Cal sensed that no welcor : t being wasted as the busin: C eating proceeded without cor ; tional accompaniment. . T=» strange light gleamed . i; M ‘Stake‘s eye as she moved ‘» .« fro between the kitchen ra «i: _ the table, but she served th> m« without comntent. Jackson Stake was in.)© with an introduction. He hi« ed his platé of salt pork ai| potatoes and was deep in ‘| ing of riceâ€"andâ€"raisin pudd.~ he halted ‘a spoonful in mijâ€"a a sudden realization of ‘s duties. . k ‘"This is our boy Jacl he explained. "He has the parental roof after : absence, as the Plainvil would say." "Glad to meet you," s: dially. The stranger no quick glance from his < tercepted Cal‘s as for » a second they measure: "We‘ll be killin‘ th this afternoon," said ( an‘ me‘ll get the hide have the hoofs, (‘fl-â€"â€"v o‘ hoofs." There was no mista‘‘ hostility of Gander to â€" rival, and, absurd as was, Cal felt a sudd>» the heart at being inci> two fellow laborers. : time he had felt him cl community. Q "You don‘t seeth u: ! + that ypur brother‘s com > o him away ten years on‘ more Mrs. Stake, with a ory voo~ 1 unhappy old woman w« .on the | horne of & divided famils "Oh," yes I am," said Ganaer. I'm‘ tickled to death. Can‘t hardly ‘ from kissin‘ him, right here b« the comp‘ny. An‘ so wise + grown, too! Didn‘t come ‘till th: work o‘ the seedin‘s over, an‘ he‘ll be ,leavin‘ before the harvest beâ€" gins." | ‘The stranger turned his eyes on Gander. They were quiet, ‘ strong eyes, hintful of power and, perhaps, of hardness. When he spoke his voice was poised, easy, whruffied. "Honk for us, Gander," he sug gested. ‘The taunt drew theâ€" color up through Gander‘s sunâ€"tanned cheeks and his muscles bulged, quivering; he half rose from his chair. For a moment Cal expected Instant hostil ities. t 5n "Come, cut it out!" said Jackson Stake, who could; assert a blunt authority on occasion. ‘"Bygones is bygones, an‘ if Jackie wants«to atay with us How he can stay, an‘ wel 1e ving hig ‘chair batk and rising trom the table. "It wasn‘t me that suggested veal, if you remember." Cal made a ~quickâ€" appraisal of "He has too much head for ,"" he notéed, and Gander may try to make up the difference with ~ heavy fist. Nothing makes a man so quick\ with his hands as being a little slow with his head."> ut; best, were hardly to be described | * as. . w ‘functions. _ They were & business events, unavoidable â€" inâ€" terruptions to the serious occupaâ€" tions of the day, like oiling a tracâ€" tor, but an underâ€"current of goodâ€"|* avill and hospitality usuallyâ€"relieved their . stark ammnuz. They | * would end with a word 6f banter or of farâ€"fetched humor; q thrust at €al‘s upiversity education, at ‘Reed‘s prodigiotis ap,me. at Jackâ€" sonâ€" Stake‘s expanding waistâ€"line, at Hamilton‘s weakness for Elsie Fyfe € ‘. . . . Today the men rose from * their places and shuffled out in silâ€" * " The broke ‘up ~in : chilly W&h at Jackson Stake‘s, ence Cal added this development to majters under contemplation during the afternoon. It was plain that the coming of Jackson. Stake, junior, marked a new‘epoch in ylifé._ on the | family homestead; hgrg.was an imâ€" portant contribution to his growing list of exhibits. Evidently the pres ence of the firstâ€"born was not exâ€" pected to bring much glory* to the paternal name. â€" Cal remembered how Jackson Stake, senfor, in ap pearing to reprove Gander, had selzed the qpportunity to endorse, tor the benefit of "Jackie," the scriptural maxim that in the sweat of his brow he‘ should earn his bread.‘}l‘he old man was not so slow in a pinch. Hamilton and Grit had discreetly kept out of the discussion. He wopdered what Minnie woulfl say. lâ€";g wondered if she would come home for Sunday, and if that Hale would bring her. He wondered if she had deliberately kept away from tbe firm on his account. He ; + .f she were jealous <of + ~dic! That last was a : «ake note of; it was not 4 idea; it was a possible means of attack and deâ€" 1 o . meet either Minni 1 ‘.te, but a few minutes and Reed sitting beside the «ry with Trixie in hiw arms. ‘The boy had turned from ome source of affection to another." "Come on, old Indian," said Cal, taking him gently by the shoulder. It‘s é@arly yet. What do you say to a gwim in the lake?". Boes that go, Jackie!" . .. . A moment later they had Ante lope wputtering. and , were. off on their way fown the old trail to the Take. Throfgh the kitchgh window where she had furtively hc":ap ing m‘_}- waw them ‘go. . . be Continued.) â€" u_ seem quite excited about it," idded, shortly. eed looked at him for a moment, zled and crestfallen, then slipped atly out to the stable. He had ~1~ disappeared when (a stab. n â€"‘ wering through Cal‘s heart. (a «* time in his life he had + 1osi of Reed‘s estimate of 0 1.jh~! to answer enthusiâ€" . "Ob, Daddy X," he cried, ing in from the outer sunshine, nie‘s here, and that man that with her when we were down he lake, when you were wad: with Miss Frolicâ€"Miss Frawdic, ean. Don‘t you. remember?" il remembered, and said so. fell to Reed to break the big 10n. câ€" carbuncular tires struck 1. gination as being also the : between Archie‘s spick 4nd «e suit and his own flapping = and scuffed boots. And a range.speck of color burned ~ cheeks as he realized that ‘iberalism of his sociological « had not raised him above a ‘ jealously. Minnie had no ty on that weakness. ve‘s Ford had arrived and : had gone into the house ‘‘al was busy with his horses. ‘de a practice of giving them extra rub down on Saturday by way of acknowledgment .eek‘s work well done. In the lusk of the stables he curried im‘s fetlocks while up and the length of the mangers the sound of oats being wed with equine gusto and satâ€" ©â€":amé home that evening. {!«le brought her in ~his ‘ich he drew up, perhaps by : oy the side of Antelope. utrast _ between _ Archie‘s y machine, shining in the _ sunlight, and Antelope‘s 1 ‘body with her drooping handing in dogâ€"eared apolâ€" Minard‘s Mniment for Colds scrutinized it for a full he summerâ€"fallow; then e as something to fall in a moment of emergenâ€" id Cal to himâ€" . «ver Minnie in ‘t up to Copyright g.â€"%;' 6i Ml.dll" tul fib. Why, I meet‘‘em wherever 1 go, really! "1 see in the paper that a widowâ€" er with nine children ‘bas married a widow with seven children." ~ mmuâ€"mml"“ #. merger." > °_ . Old Stuff e "Aren‘t you nearly ready, dear?" "I wish you wouldn‘t %Keep asking that question, Clarehce. I‘ve been telling you for the last hour that I‘ll be ready in & minute." f A Truthful Angler "What is ty defendant‘s reputaâ€" tion for veracity?" fi the Judge. â€" "Wxcellent, your ," said the witness. "I‘ve known hb to admit that he had beer ing all day and hadn‘t got a single bite." M-nélmus beyond concéption inâ€" aptly describes the glories of Can: ada‘s Rockies. To be fully appre ciated they must be seen. To sta out on a trip by one‘s self into this unfamiliar but farâ€"{famed paradiseâ€" onâ€"earth, to many appears quite a tesk. Realizing this, Decn Sinclair Laird of Macdonald College, an exâ€" perienced Rocky Mountain Travel ler, for the third year in succession, has undertaken to conduct a party through thl-‘g)ofloun wonderhnd.‘\ A special train of dining, standard gleeping, and observation compartâ€" ment cars has been chartered, to leave Toronto on July 19th via the Canadian Pacific Railways. Stops will be made at Port Arthur and Fort William, which together form Canada‘s greatest grain port; Winâ€" ripeg Beach, the popular summer resort for Winnipegers; Winnipeg, Canada‘s third largest city; Indian Sheâ€"But gyou Deadlier Than~The Male "Now, can anyone tell me what myth is?"* asked the teacher. ‘Anm.rym'unhd.l-l voice exclaimed: k X Head, the chief ‘tree distributing centre of the Federal Forestry Branch; Regina, the capital of Sasâ€" katechewan; Calgary, _ Alberta‘s largest city; Banff, the worldâ€" famous mountain resort; by autoâ€" mobile for 104 miles over the Banffâ€" Windermere â€" Highway, the most spectacular _ drive in _ Canada; through Kootenay Lake to Nelson, the commercial centre of Southern British Columbia; then through the Dou‘xhobor country to ‘Penticton; along lovely Okanagan Lake, and to ‘\'ancouver. thence by steamer to Victoria. Returning, the trip will be by the imain line of the Canadian Pacific, through the great canyons of the Fraser and Thompson Rivers, qnd1 through the Selkirks, and Rockies, affording scenery such as can be found _nowhere else on earth; Lake Louise, the Pearl of the Rockies, the most perfect gem of scenery. of the world; another day at Banff, Edmonton, the Capital of Alberta; ‘Spskatoon, the city of optimism; Devil‘s Gap Camp, on the Lake of ACROSS CANADA AND BACK the Woods, near Kenora, thence to Fort William, where one of the fine Canadian Pacific Steamers will be used across Lakes Superior and Huron to Port McNicoll, then rail to Toronto, where the trip will terâ€" minate. % ; Everything is included in the price of $330.00, from Toronto; transporâ€" tation, sleeping cars, accommodaâ€" tion in Hotels, and bungalow camps, meals in diners, hotels and on steamers, and sightâ€"seeing tours at points visited. * ‘The trip is open to all, and appliâ€" cations for accommodation are beâ€" ing received. Fares from other points than Toâ€" ronto will be named, and descripâ€" tive illustrated booklet sent on apâ€" plication to Dean Sinclair Laird, Macdonald College Post Office, Que. 13â€"5t quTPUT OF TOBACCO FACTORIES VALUED AT 60 MILLIONS IN 1924 Quite a number of people in Canâ€" ada still take their pinch of snuff, itobacco factories in Canada in 1924, \he last year of record, produced gu-t.m worth of snuff, or 774,525 pounds. 3 A statement issued by the Doâ€" minion Bureau of Statistics Whows that in the same year 2450,143,000 cigarets were rolled in Canadian factories. 1\07 were valued at $26,â€" 455,986. ‘The‘outpat of cigars was 159,875,000, or $9,739,590 worth. ‘The output of smoking tobacco in that year is valued at $17,204,408, and of chewing tobacco at $5,568, 984. The total value of the output pf Canada‘s tobacco factories in 1924 is estimated at $59,953,502, of which $58,460,598 came from Quebet faw tories andâ€" $6,074,138 from Ontarlo tactories, The balance is distributed over the reat of the Provinces in very amail sums.. =~ _ l miss, it‘s a female motg." cannot Every . man, Woman needs new, rich, red B time of the year. Tha! tifle fact. AH doctors 1 ~O¢h:'.~fl:'. the ellect. . Un M “fi w‘7i"’ l s n e en are pale and sallow at this Hmogt! â€"___" _ _FLORIST â€" _ soy ied MOetoio ie OE Our neowene ano neakys & a anid || " lowâ€"epirited. That is Mother Natute|] ”“"“"""‘:m- urging them to impf@ve their 4 'w°:,9' E. supply; but often their digestion loriet . _ weakened so that they cannot t Kitchenerâ€"17 Mary St. Phone food into blood without help. â€"F 1597¢. . is" where modern medical . s¢/ ":*‘1” King 8t. Phone comes to the rescue. Dr. Will Pink Pills have a direct action e en nraenrandotraner, the blood and enable you to get f SHOEMAKING. winter; there is not enough lmo!mobmthi effectâ€"your appetite improves, ‘yo nerves are steadier, color rétur to the chaeks and lps, you‘ ha more vim and energy and. can wo with less fatigue. The value of Dr. Williams‘ Pills to all who. are in what known as a‘ runâ€"down condition health is proved by the i of Mrs. Aléx. McKenzie, Schumachâ€" er,‘ Ont.,. who gays:â€""I was in a eom_alauly runâ€"down condition. Nervousness, _ sleeplessness,. . and losg of vitality were all taaking their toll. I~felt miserable all the time and began to feel that my case ‘was hopeless, as I had taken a numâ€" ber of remedies with little or no relief. I had often read of Dr. Wil liams‘ Pink Pills, and finally decidâ€" ed to try them. I got a half dozen boxes, and by the time I had taken about half of them, there was no doubt I had at last found the mediâ€" cine I needed to restore my health. I continued the use Df the pills, gaining strength day by day, until I was soon enjoying good health and happiness. .1 strongly recommend Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills to every man, woman or child who is in a runâ€"down condition, feeling sure that the pills will soon restore them to health and strength." > Whether you are seriously ill or merely feel easily tired and outâ€"ofâ€" sorts, you should try Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills this spring. They are sold byâ€"medicine dealers everywhere, or will be sent by mail at 50 cents a box, by writing The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Red Pepper Rub takes the "ouch" from sore, stiff, aching joints. It cannot hurt you, and it certaiuly aopy that old rheumatism torture at once. When you are suffering so you can hardly get around‘ just u’yl Red Pepper Rub and you_ will have the qu‘ckest relief known. Nothing has such concentrated, penetrating heat as red peppers. Just as soon as you apply Red Pepâ€" per Rub you will feel the tingling heat. In three minutes it warms the sore spot through and through. Pa.n and soreness are gone. o a w nds B We PC Bc d B ce ce e tm e e itc nB td :000 +0 Ask any good druggist for a jar of Rowles Red Pepper Rub. Be sure to get the genuine, with the name Rowlés on each package. For Free Sample mail this adver %o,, Inc., 598â€" Madison Ave., New ‘isement to Whitehall Pharmacal wWwEE LITTLE WATCH Is WORN AS TIEPIN Walter Lett, Vancouver watchâ€" maker, claims to have produced the smallest watch in the world after two years of labor. Made for and mounted on a tieâ€" pin, the watch can be covered easily by a silver fiveâ€"cent pilece. Alongâ€" side of a regular railroad watch the tiepin timepiece shows as about oneâ€"fiftieth the size of the regular watch. The delicacy of Mr. Lett‘s task \ may be appreciated when it is statâ€" ed that the â€" screws used would carry 250 threads to â€"the inch, and that it would take 30,000 of them to make a pound. Similar screws, placed on a white sheet of paper, show without a powerful glass as mere specks, much smaller in tength than the width of a pinhead. ‘- The â€"watch in iIts entirety weighs three and oneâ€"half pennyweight, or &4 ~grains. Yet it ticks right along, and keeps perfect time. Mr. Lett made the special magnifying glass required in the manufacture of the watch, and made‘ also what is beâ€" Heved to be the only dial indicator of measurement, which gives the exact dithensions of the thinnest sheet of pap@t. ' Red Pepper For Rheumatic Pain ork, N.Y. CANADIAN NATIONAL The gross éarnings of the "Canaâ€" dian National Railways for the woek ending March 21, 1926, were $4,881, 526 &« compared with $4,187,874 m‘m the same period of 1995, an increasa| . It‘s of $691,862 or seventeon per cent, . up Y of Dr. Williams® Pink]| â€" 27 Erb St. â€" Waterloo RAILWAYS EARNINGS That is & rs know it SPRAY, PAINTING AND WHITEWASHING call at THE WATERLQO YVULCANIZING WORKS v Mutual, at the lowest 170 Queenâ€"Bt. N.,. Phone 1167W, Kitchener. ©; it 91 King St., North THE MERCANTILE : FIRE INSURANCE \ P COMPANY | REP AIRINGâ€" BOOTE, SHOES and RYUBBERS _ REPAIRED KNIVESs SHARPENED, Harness and Shoes. Promptly and neatly done.Satisâ€" taction guaranteed. L. W.. Shuh ........... W. G. Weichel ... ... Vi J. Howard Simpson Richard Roschman Jos. Stauffer P ARTHUR FOSTER ... 8. E. BECHTEL and , wW. R. BRICKER ...... H. M. WILHELM 13 King 8t. N. Wate Established 1853 ASSETS OVER $1,400,000 GOvERrNMENT DEPOSIT $100,000 Officers and Directors â€" All policies guaraniews 0y & the London and Lancashire imsurance Co. Ltd with se curity of $50,250,000 aifred wWrignt, Secretar» C. A. BOEHM INSURANCE AGENCIES, LIMITED District Agents Waterioo, Ont. Phone 760 INCORPORATED 197 wbecribed Capits! ~ sr50uv Assets ....... . $700,00u en n en n o mt t qenpnemnienim mt t n t t instant reliefâ€"no waiting~ Your clogged nostrils open right up; the air passages of your head clear and you can bré& freely. No more hawking, -n:}. blowing, headâ€" ache. dryness. No struggling for breath at night; your cold or caâ€" tarrh | disappears. f Get a small bottle of Ely‘s Cream Bahm from your druggist now. Apply a little of this fragrant, antl ..”n,memnh”‘?!'“ trile. 1t through every ‘..,.-..Emw,mun inflagsod or s@ollen muscous mem ‘mnflulllln‘.tmm. ~ It‘s just fine. Don‘t stay ewaftgd ub with & cold or nast, catarrh ‘Waterloo Mutual Fire Insurance Company Rear of Pequagnat Block, Fredâ€" erick St.,. Kitchener. Phone 173J HEAD STUFFED FROM CATARRH OR A COLD Says Cream Applied in Nostrile OE:C Air Passâ€" ages ht Up. Farm dImplements Masseyâ€"Harris Implements %. T. Stable Equipment Gordon Peterson _ Ountario Mind Milla Wire Fencing and Twine A. BOEHM INSURANCE AGENCIES, LIMITED District Agents Repairing Waterioo. .... . President Viceâ€"President A. Bauer J. H. Roos P. E. Shantz M-nage? Waterloo Inspectors uit t en t t JAMES C. HAIGHT, BA â€"â€" Solicitor, Notary â€" Public, _ ancer, ote. Money to loa â€"â€" Molsons® Bank Bullding, iaw affices,â€"Waterloo Bullding, corner King and dry Streets. ~Phone 77, Kitel A L. BITZER, BA. 3 w Conrad Bitzer, Barrister,_ itor. Notary Public, ete. M loan â€" German . spoken. t Pequegnat Block, nest to Markst Frederick St., . Kitchener â€" . _ D. 8. BOWLBY, BA. LLB. rister, . Solicitor, Notary Publ and Conveyancer Office 8 ant‘s Bank Building Telephune 247. Kitchener, Ofi on t s# J E& HETT. SPECIALTY Dib Blocu, King West Palmer Graduate Chiropracter 194 King St. West, Kitchener Phones: Office 1123J, House 606w DR. F. G. HUGHES, Dentist, Hash mel‘s Block, King St. _8., Waterloo Phonesâ€"Office 394J, Residence 259J. F eases of the Ear, Throsi and No«« King sSt. Bast Kitchener . â€" * DR. S. H. ECKEL, Dentist. Office In Molsons Bank, Waterloo, Phofe 174. . DR G. E. HARPER. ORENTIST Office in Oddfellows Biock â€" \Â¥ * King St. 8., Waterion," Poone $4= DR. J. W. HAGEY, Dentist. Rost» 110 Weber Chambers, King St W Kitchener, Telephon« counections Kitchener. . e :A DR. H. M. KATZENMEIBR. Den tist, office 93 King St. W., Kitch ener. Phone 305 W. 2 CHIROPRACTOR and ELECTROTHERAPEUVTIST 5 Hoim Apartments, Young §t Phones, Office 1323J. Mâ€"1328W DR. L. DOERING, Dentist, suctes sor to Dr. J. Schmidt, 69 King 8t loo. Phone 64m Graduate of Bellevue Hospital, New York. Special attention paid to extraction and children‘s diseases. Office 35 King St. W., Kitchene@r Accountants and Auditors, Author zed Trustees, Assignees, eto. .... 206 Weber Chambers. . Phone 1906. Kitchener, 5 East, over Dominion Bank, two doors from Postoffice, Kitchener, phones: Office 464; residence, 2092W. $ Office 44 William SL, Watet Phone 1963w AUDITORS & ASSIGNEES . WALTER D. INRIG & CO. Successor to Dr. U. B. Shants DR. A. C. BROWN, DENTIST INCOME TAX COUNSEL w. ROBERTSON AUDITOR and ACCOUNTANT Bookkeeping Systems Installed Income Tax - Don‘t pm-mmtdl grain, Tapestry or Brussel nrake them Into beautifual reveraible Finff Rugs Aor Art Oraft Rug Works CHIROPRACTIC FLUFEF RUG WEAVING , F. WAECHTER MEDICINAL A. HOLM, Chiropractor DENTAL Phone 444 « anmmfl.fi Kitchener _ > °l

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