West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 14 Jan 1904, p. 6

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

Elfin OFFIOE. TORONTO. P. REID -- -â€" MANAGLK Dual Banking business trans Dnlta issued and COllOClthr all points. Deposits: re iv“ :nfijntereat allowed at nur rent rates. ’OHN CLARK We have a fine nuariigfi of tho but GROCERIES It. not cheap goods which I'D don at my ptico, but 33. V.) has thu money q My. Thoy include (IcKinnon’s old Stand) For the Millons We have a fine anon-Imam That is sure to plane can odwayl be purchased hero. see the Pelgnson LEIGH, Manufactured Owen (bund, before buying. Also a Pin} Clams “Wily. in connection Mining 3 speciaity. whine Oi], Harness Oil, :le Grease and H002 ntment, go to 84 UNDERS ’URHAM AGENCY“ It allowed on Savings Bank da- 01 31 and upwards. Promo? 03 and ovary facility alordow in living at a distance. B «BESS. 1n SAVIIOS BAR I. 3.13!le PRICES c 1': ital Authorized . . . 810100.000 | Up ............. 1.ooo.ooc In Pond ........ 850,000 i 11 t1! principu point. in "‘1: Quebec. lunch, United om. tnd mum ALWAYS ON HAND FOR SALE. S, Mowers, Rzikm, Ion Plowa. Ltnd Roilers, d Smooching H‘PI'OWS. Grinder-a. 3nd Dowseu’a when and Wringm'q, ODOI'ators. 30H! 3 ‘ II a!) For!” ries ent Agency? The Katmai" all kinds Bank of Canada. LLY. Agent of APPLES, gm! A1 fruit. ONTARIO. Class Hams; ONTARIO. ‘ “So good?" DURHA \l, ONT nloro you to put your thud, Eur c9;- “And yet she brought you my mes- uge?” pursued his companion. “That seems her naturebvioleut passions, yet thorough lonlty. But time is pre- cious. Imusturgoonyouwhatl hude‘you eome to hear. It In to un- “Singular, indeed! I never saw her until today.” He answered nothing. The convic- tion stole on him that Cigarette hated her because he loved her. 'm loves you very ioyaliy.” “Ciurette?” he asked wesriiy. “Oh, no! I trust not! I have done nothing to win her love. and she is a fierce lit- tle creature who disdains all such weakness. She forced her way in here? That was nnpardonabie, but she seems to beer a singular dislike to “But why? You still speak to me in enigmas. Tomorrow. moreover, before we leave, he intends to seek you out as what he thinks youâ€"s soldier of France. He is interested by all he terested by what I told him of you when he saw the ivory carvings at my villa. I asked the little vivandiere to tell you this. but. on second thoughts. it seemed best to see you myself once more. as I had promised. That French child forced her entrance here in a strange fashion. "She wished to see me, I suppose. and to try my courage too. She is a little brigand. but has a "I sent for you." she continued hur- riedly. “There are many things I de- sire to say to you. I must entreat you to allow me to tell Philip what I know. You cannot conceive how intensely op- pressive it becomes to me to have any secret from him. I never concealed so much as a thought from my brother in all my life. and to evade even a mute question from his brave, frank eyes makes me feel a traitress to him.” “Anything else," be muttered. “Ask me anything else. For God’s sake. do not let him dream that I live!” 1 She saw the blood forsake the bronz ed fairness of his face and leave a dusky pallor there. It wounded her as If she suffered herself. For the first time she believed “h at the little one had saidâ€"that this man loved her. She motioned to him to take ;. seat near to her. while the Levantine. who knew nothing of the English tongue. retired to the farther end of the tent. "I only kept my word.” she answer- ed. “for we leave the camp tomorrow: Africa next week." “Madame. this is wry mcrviful know not how to thank you." I O o lwal‘P the princess. . . , :2..- x distant ceremonial due from the rank no ostensibly held to hers. The whement. imperious phrases course-«i in disorder one after another, rapid and harsh and vibrating with a immirmi reprrssed emotions. He paus- ml mw moment. doubting whether she did not play some trivk upon him: tin-n. without a word. left her and went i:z;-'-i"-.- through the evening shadows. “.‘.:.i i have sent him to her when i sin :xzpi have tirmi my pistol into her in ~- -i <iw timugzt as she sat by the 7'. --: .mimrs And she remembered -~ v.- Hm story of the Marseilles i1~' - ;".”°i Sim understood that i- ' ' ' . i ‘ .Hit't' under ”)0 hot south- “By your silver pheasant yonder. Go!” “Who? I do not"â€" “Can you not understand? Mlladl wants to see you. I told her I would lend you to her. You know the great tent where she ll throued in honor. were not of more use and more de- served such lodgmeut than Mme. la Princesse. who has never done aught in her life, not even brushed out her own hair of gold! She waits for you. Where are your palace manners? Go to her. I tell you. She Is of your own people. We are not!" 1D the mirth, the noise, the festivity. which reigned throughout the camp as the men surrendered themselves to the enjoyment of the largvsses of food and of wine allotted to them by their marahal's command in commemo- ration of Zaraila one alone remained apart. silent and powerless to rouse himself even to the forced semblance, the forced endurance. of their mischief and their pleasure. He sat motionless. sunk In thought. with his head .ii'wqed upon his breast. The voice or i‘iga- rette broke on his musing. “Good sir. you are wanted yonder." He rose on the old instinct or obedi- “For what?” O O. .0 . mm... ”....‘HCOOHHO’CO ....“MCO "H.” ."HMO’"... ...”...C". CON... \0 "WNW..." .00...- O Wuuw...n...«...u...........c. ......Wmfi... .....3............ .. ab. cog-ouoolocooooOQPo: 000.00 0.0 00.0 a . u....3......3.. 3........ ......s. . . . .. no u. o co. 3 3w. who so little knew or In- occupivd her heart. :va'd through the move- miiimry crowds. crossed that parth the encamp- mnrquevs of the gener- avmwtv. gave the counter- ~-:¢-!::‘d. nnarrested and so 9:," the sc-mincls. the [oomxm.; the» ruthless southern '00 ~o " u . ... "a! 2:24»: ‘ ..: ’13...” . ..° ' o 0‘ .32... '0‘ o 0'. ‘ '0 She rose with what was almost a gesture of despair and thrust the gold hair at! r temples. “Hes, _ heln me, .I cannot. I dare “Choose for me, Venetia!” he mut- tered at hut once more. The tears that had gathered in her eyes tell slowly down over her color- less cheeks. She looked at him with a pity that made her heart ache with a sorrow only less than his own. The grief was for him chiefly, yet some- thing of it for herself. that, more in his presence and under diflerent circumstances, she might feel her heart to go to him with a warm” and a softer impulse than that of friendship. The heroism of his life had moved her greatly. His head dropped upon his arms. “0 God! It is possible at least! I am blind-mad. Make my choice for me! I know not what I do.” She looked at him full in the eyes with the old. fearless. haughty instinct of refusal to all such entreaty which had made her so indiflerentâ€"and many said so pitilessâ€"to all. At his gaze, however. her own changed and soften- ed. zrew shadowed and then wandered from him. “I do, not say that. I cannot tell”â€" The words were very low. She was too truthful to conceal from him what half dawned on herself. the possibility j AI.-A - ness '2” “You give me great pain, great sur- prise." she murmured. “All I can trust is that your love is of such sudden birth that it will die as rapidly”â€" He interrupted her. “You mean that under no circum- stancesâ€"not even were I to possess my inheritanceâ€"could you give me any hope that I might wake your tender- ‘6‘ mougb to love you while my life shall last and love no other woman. Ah, I was but an African trooper in your sight. but in my own I was your equal. No famine, no humiliation. no 0' .‘uquy; no loss I haw known. mm: dmvo me so urn fly to buy MM; happiness with the prime of «13-1: M .. as this one desire to stand in my right- ful place before men and be free to strive with you for what they have not “This is madness! What have seen of me?” won! “1 cannot! You leave so much in darkness and untold”â€" “Nothing that you need know to de- cide your choice for me save one thing onlyâ€"that I love you.” ‘ She shuddored. me! me!” he said vehemently. “Be my law and be my God 3” She gave a gesture almost of fear. “Hush. hush! The woman does not live who should be that to any man.” "You shall be It to me. Choose for “It is! It was a madness, a quixot- ism, the wild, unconsidered act of a fool! ' What you will! But it is done. It was done foreverâ€"so long ago- when your young eyes looked on me in the pity of your innocent childhood. I cannot redeem its folly now by adding to its haseness; I cannot change the choice of a madman by repenting of it with a coward’s caprice. Ah. God! You do not know what you doâ€"how you tempt! Answer me! Choose for He turned on her almost fiercely in the sufl’erlng she dealt him. He started from her side as he heard and paced to and fro the narrow limits of the tent like a caged animal. For the iirst time it grew a belief to him in his thoughts that were be free. were he owner of his heritage. he could rouse her heart from its long repose and make her love him. “Hear me." she said softly. “I do not bid you decide. 1 only bid you con- iitit‘ in Philip. You are guiitless of this charge under which you left England. You endure it rather than do what you deem dishonorable to clear yourself. That is noble; that is great. But it is possible. as I say. that you may exag- gerate the ahnegation required of you. Whoever was the criminal should suf- fer. Yours is magnificent magnanimi- ty. but it may surely be also false justice alike to yourself and the World.” an intense earnestness, almost en- treaty, to her argument. .-â€"â€" u‘“-u 5|A|Cl you live: let him decide Whether or not ‘this sacrifice of yourself be needed. ' llis iionor is as ptttietilimts as that of any man on earth. llis friendship you can never doubt. Why conceal anything from him?" His eyes turned on her with the: dumb agony which once before hm! chilled her to the soul. "Do you think. if I could speak in honor. I should not tell you all?" A flush passed over her face. the first that the gaze of any nun had ever brought there. She understood him. "But.” she said gently and hurried- ly. ”truty it not he that yoh OVl'i‘l'illt' the obligations of honor? I know that many a noble hearted man has inex~ orabiy condemned himself to a severi- ty of rule that a dispassiouate judge of his life might deem very exaggerat- ed, very unnecessary." Her voice tailed slightly over the last words. She could not think with calmness of the destiny that be ac- ‘ cepted. Involuntarily some prescience of pain that would forever pursue her own life unless his were rescued lent l v” licence. in Pmun m .vt mm learn that Choose for - v-‘.. 30:90.]. . you no._ ”can” the «arse of her radiant, mac}; and imperious lite. “God reward you! God keep you! It I stay, I shall tell you all. Let me go and forget that we ever met! I am dead. Let me be dead to you !" With another instant he had left the tent and passed out into the red glow of the torchlit evening. And Venetia Corona dropped her proud head down upon the silken cushions where his own had rested and wept as women weep over their dead. in such a pas- sion as had never come to her in all . . â€"â€" vâ€" U v" ‘V .“ ICU I hear of you, through which. at least. I can know that you are living.” She stretched her hands toward him with that same gesture with which she had first declared her faith in his guiltlessness. The tears trembled 'in her voice and swam in her eyes. He seized her hands in his and held them close against his breast one instant. against the loud, hard panting of his aching heart. psng to be added by me. All I wish is that you had never met me. so that this last, worst thing had not come unto you! You wrong me if you think that I could be so callous, so indifi’erent. as to leave you here without heed as to your fate. Believe in your innocence! You know that I do as firmly as though you substantiated it with a thousand ! proofs. Reverence your devotion to your honor! You are certain that I must or all better things were dead in me. You reject my friendship. You term it cruel, but at least it will be faithful to youâ€"too faithful for me to pass out of Africa and never give you one thought again. I believe in you. Do you not know that that is the high- I est trust, to my thinking, that one huo I man life can show in another’s? You ' decide that it is your duty not to free i yourself from this bondage, not to ex» 1 pose the actual criminal. not to take up your rights of birth. I dare not seek to alter that decision, but -I cannot leave you to such a future without infinite pain, and there mustâ€"there shall beâ€" mesns through which you will let me L--â€" “I do forgive,” she said gently. while her voice grew very sweet. “You en- dure tno much nixesdv for uzw uL-nvllnfl- “Forgive me, for [m tonight I shall never face again." He stood mute and motionless before her. his head sunk on his chest. He knew that she rebuked him justly. “Lord Royallieu.” she said slowly. as if the familiar name were some tie be- tween them, some cause of excuse for these the only love words she had ever heard without disdain and rejectionâ€"- “Lord Royallieu, it is unworthy of you to take this advantage of an inter- view which I sought and sought for your own sake. You pain me; you v.- and me. I cannot tell how to an- swer you. You speak strangely and without warrant.” hate.” “Cruel ?” “Yes. the worst cruelty when we seek loveâ€"a stone proffered us when we ask for bread in famine!” “Those are wild questions." she mur- mured. “What can they serve? I be- lieve that I shouldâ€"I am sure that I should. As it is-as your friend”- “Why speak so? You are unreason- ing. A moment ago you implored me not to tempt you to the violation of what you hold your honor. Doonuse I bid you be faithful to it you doom me cruel.” “Heaven help me! I scarce know what I say. I ask you if you won- a woman who loved me could you decide thus?” “Choose for me, Vcnctiu!” this life forever, nameless. friendloss, hopeless. having all the bitterness but none of the torpor of death, wearing out the doom of a galley slave. though guiltlvss of all crime?” “The? are noble vsnrds. and yet it In so easy to utter. so hard to follow. them. If you had one thought of tenderness for me. you could not spool; them." A flush passed over her face. “Do not think me without feeling, Without sympathy. pity"- "lf you loved me." he pursued pas- slonmvlyâ€" “Ab..God! 'I‘luJ very Word from me to you sounds: lmult! And yet the-r0 ls not one thuuym in me that sounds imult-lf you lovud mo. could you stand there and bld me drag on Ah. hush! Friendship is crueler than “Follow the counsels of your own conscience.” she continued. “You have been true to them hitherto. It Is not for me or through me that you shall ever be turned aside from them.” A bitter sigh broke from him as be heard. There was an accent almost at pas- sion in her voice. She felt that so greatly did she desire his deliverance, his justificax ion. his return to all which was his own. desired even his presence among them in her own world. that she could no longer give him calm and un- biased judgment. He heard, and the burning tide, of z'. new joy rushed on him. not! AndLJ am no longer capable at being just!" ', for pity’s sake! 'After look upon your ‘0 .- )a u 2-0410 “C For all weak and pale and thin children Scott’s Emulsion is the most satisfactory treat- A..- cause it is so perfectly adapted to their wants. Children take to it naturally because they like the taste and the remedy takes just as naturally to the children be- Scott’s Emulsion is simply a milk of pure cod liver oil With some hypophosphites especially preparedfor delicaie stomachs. milk because it works and because there is something astonishing about it. “When the butter .won’t “You can kill me; I know It. We“. use your prerogative; it will be the sole good you ha ve ever done to me." (,fhateauroy wrenched his wrist out of ghe hold that crushed it and drew his pistol. Cecil knew that the laws or active service would hold him but just- ly dealt with if the shot laid him dvad in that instant for his act and his words. And as he spoke with his leftwbaud he smote the lips that had blaspheme-d against her. (fut-H’s face changed terribly as the vile words were spoken. With the light and rapid spring of a leopard he reached the side of his commander. one hand on the horse’s mane. the oth- er on the wrist of his chief. that it gripped like an iron vise. “You lie. and you know that you lie! Breathe her name once more. and. by heaven, as we are both living men. I will lna ve your life for your outrage!" “Why are you here, and vghere have you been ?” he demanded once more. “I will not say.” The dark and evil countenance above him grew llvld with fury. “I can have you thrashed like a dog for that answer. and I will. But first listen! I know as well as though you had confessed to me. Your silence cannot shelter your great rnistress’ sham. Ah. ha. la Faustine! So unl- duine your princess is so cold to her equals only to choose her lovers out of my hiackguards and take her midnight intrigues like a camp courtesan!" “Why dld you refuse the word. slr?" “I did not hear." “Why are you absent from your squadron?” There was no reply. “Ha ve you no tongue. sir? Why are you here?" There was agaln no answer. Chateauroy’s teeth ground out a (no rlous oath. Yet a flash of brutal de- light glittered in his eyes. At last he had hounded down this man. so long out of his reach, into disobedience and contumacy. “It is one of my v u." said the chief carelessly to the sentinel. “Leave me to deal with him." Another figure than that of the sol- dit-r on guard came out of the shadow and stood between him and the senti- nel. It was that of Chateauroy. He was mounted on his gray horse and wrapped in his military cloak. about to go the round of the cavalry camp. "Halt. or I ilre!” The sentinel brought the weapon to his shoulder and took a calm. Mose. sure aim. He did not speak. The password be had forgotten as though be had new er heard or never given it. Still he never heard. but went on blindly. From Where the tents stood tluu'o was :1 stronger breadth of llght. thx'uugh which hc- had passed and was passing stillâ€"a light strong enough for it to be seen wheme he came. but not strung enough to show hls features. “Who goes there?" the challenge rang again. . Outside her tent the challenge ran: on the alt: “Who goes. there '3" Cecil never heard it. Even the old. IOU}; accustouwd habits of a soldier’s obedience were killed in him. It seemed to her as if she had seen him slain in cold Mood and had never lifted her hand or her voice against his murder. The guard saluted and resumed his SCOTT 6: BOWNE the Penny. l. e., a sample tree. Miss Short-Ah. yes. I noticed she began doing it when she came to me, but she’s given it up now. Mrs. Long-I'm glad to bear in I e3: Buses-ou- Ext-plea. Mrs. Long (who recommended a serv- ant)â€"Yes. she was an excellent girl in every way. except she would lmltata me in dress and things like that. il not a type at all. An animal type cannot be said to be established unti! 1* reDI‘OdIlces itself with reasonable cer- tainty.â€"John Gilmer Speed to Gen- Checks and Drafts. A bank check is really a sight draft on the depositor’s bank. It differs from a draft in wording and is used in pay- ing a creditor, whereas a draft is com- monly used as a means of collecting money from a debtor. The bank is obliged to pay a check if it has funds enough of the drawer .to meet it. but the person on whom a draft is drawn may or may not honor it at pleasure. Another use to which merchants put drafts is in sending remittances from one part of the country to another. for as banks keep money on deposit in all of the large commercial centers a bank I draft is simply the bank's check draw- ‘ ing on its deposit with some other bank ’ which it calls its correspondent. Banks sell these drafts or “cashier checks" to customers. Io Anon-Ica- Houo Type. Notwttbntandlng the importance of horse breeding as an indultry in this country. there is at this time no dis- tinctly American horse type. The rae In: thoroughbred is English. the heavy draft horse is French, the hackney II Enxllah. and the trotting horse. as bred at present for track and road service “0h. he is a very iiiâ€"caviit-tlg'goy." he repliEd. with a shrug. “i like him very much. but he has missed his vocation. I think helwal born to be a police- man.” Kari was tail and of fine proportions and was singing at the time with Titienn in “La Favoritn." “What do you thlgkâ€"Sfâ€";o;)vwé'arl7' Tagllapietxfa asked him one night. Professional Jealousy. ' Brignoll. the famous singer. was in- tensely jealous of all other tenors. nev- er admitting for an instant that any one of them could sing even passably well. When the handsome. talented Tom Karl burst upon the New York stage Brignoll turned up his nose. “Oh. no. I didn’t. mother.” said Bob- by. “He liked me. He said he was real interested in me. He kept looking at his watch so he could tell me when 12 o'clock came. so I needn’t be late for dinner. He even made me show him What thick shoes I had on. for he said ’twns so damp he was most afraid I might catch cold." “I'm afraid perhaps you both-(Irved him. dear.” said Bobby’s doting moth- er. “I stood close to him all the time.” announced Bobby triumphantly. “and I watched him. and I talked to hlm a good deal so he wouldn’t be lonesome.” Sollei'tous About "In. An artist who was spending a month in the neighborhood had asked Mrs. Lawton's permission to make a sketch of the little bridge in her meadow. The permission was given. and Bobby had been spending the morning with the. artist. In a brief while she had saddled and bridled Etoiie-Filante and ridden out of the camp without warning or fare- well to any. Thus she Went. knowing nothing of his fate. And with the sun- rise went also the woman whom he lovedâ€"in ignorance. Blane-Bee was the soldier of the ur- my of Italy. “I shall be best away for a time. I grow mad. treacherous, wicked here." she thought. “I will go and see Blanc- â€"vâ€" ~â€"â€"â€" '7 heart, the idol of her long desire, the star to which her longing eyes had looked up ever since her childhood through the reek of carnage and the smoke of battle, and she would have flung it away like dross to have had his lips touch hers once with love. She rose lmpetuously. The night was far spent. the camp was very still. the torches had long died out, and a streak of dawn was visible in the east. She stood awhile looking very earnestly across the wide black city of tents. of brute force. He dreaded lest there should be one sound that should reach her in that tent where the triad of standards drooped in the dusky dis- tance. .He was content with what he had doneâ€"content to have met once. not as a soldier to chief. but as man to man. the tyrant who held his fate. None knew, not even Cigarette. She sat alone, so far away that none sought her out. beside the picket fire that had long died out, with the little white do; of Zaraila curled on the scarlet folds of her skirt. She had the cross on her cruelty had been ever seen In him. signed to the soldiers of the I with one hand. whilewith the (:13! n A I ‘ cgw she-wan making her-elf [To BE (‘ONTINUEDJ the 8‘ A .3“ u PU BLISIIED My Yunnan uonmuc I...” ma noun, autumn STREE‘ THE JOB : : ”PART” E .\ ’l‘ k I!!\".‘ "IL I I sh)‘ 11.31 {L «I; A. Dnlamieson Macdonaxc er. meeynu-er. etc. l’rivaw unmey to-loan. Old nocounha and debt: nt‘ all kinds collected on commission]. Farms bought and sold- Insurance Agent. etc. Ofioe-MuKenzie's Old Stand. Lovwr frown. Durban. Ont. D \lclntyro’s Block. Loner Town. Du ham. Collection and Agency pmmpti nttmndud tn. Sean'hes made an the Regi trv Uflive. U short distance can of Knapp‘n lump btcm Street Lower Town. lhzrlmn hours from 12 to 2 u'clmk. w _- - _ Me‘\|\hl I - per ammm. '\ m” I): 3 . . |y IT'V. 'tr' 1 h 3e,”ch;.~ 50 ‘ ,. k subsemw.! i .- ‘d'crtiSCllfiiilh u; ‘1 hAh d'flam D Uflice over Gordon’s new Jew-Herfi' Store. Lower Town. Durham. Auyam«-:n.~ of monav to loan at 6 per cent. on farm property. A. G. MACKAY. K. (2 (ice owr Manchlan’s More. 0 rs. 8 (010 I. 0).. “.3 m 4 p.01. and 7 p. In. Speck! attention. given tn disc! d women and children. Residence posits Presbyterian Church. V1.0. Pickering. 0.0.8., L.D.S. D ‘1“ SUN-Pm 1“" Oflivewâ€"mld (3 I rmnicl dumb Home Blmk. UGH M ACKAY. DURHA M. Land Valuator and Licensed Audion- .l' for the Cuuury 0! Grey. tides prompt“ Med to and notes cubed. D aucer.Et¢°.. Etc. Money 10]..» reasonable rates. and 0:; terms to borrower. ()flice. Mclnure Block {be Bank the Durham Phnrmau F: Black. Rasidenceâ€"Lunbmn Mrmt the Stn'n. HE BWMBBRBNIBU {Got [l to Universitv: Graduate of Inna: Colleu e of Dental Surgeons of ”maria Boomsâ€"Odd" Block over Post ()fiive. n Auctioneer‘for the County of Grey. 8d“ promptly .amended to. Call at m\ residence or write to Allan Pnrk l’. H Orders may be left ut the Chronicle ufllw. tionoovrior the County of Grey. Sales promptly “waded w. Orders mgv be left at hi. Inpknom Wsmooms. llckinnon‘s “ “Ind. 01' ‘3 “I. Chronicle Oflioe. igeyfllnd mum. who of u... 23m DlvuiOn. Court Stlcs and all other ma mm. my!!! gfwudgdfi‘o. Hurhest refereenm NOTARY PUBLIC, COMMISSION Nov. 9. '03- m facilities l. G. Hutton. I. 0., C. 'onN CLARK. LIcnzqgsn App PFICE AN l) RESI DENCF AXES CARSON, DURHAM. LIP. eased Auptjonoer (9!le 90:31”ng HYSICIAN AND SURGHLV. (H Hfiboa if requirod. FFICE AND RESIDI'TNPEâ€" H Garafnu and George Sirwh t of hill. Oflioe hoursâ€"9 II a "L. I. .. 7 9 p. m Telephone Kn. 10 ARRISW‘ERS. SOLICITORS. “ON Fl’ICEâ€"FIRST DOOR BAN!“ ‘ ‘ G. Lefroy IcCaul. .mmsmu. somcmm. m A BRISTER. NOTARY, c015 v 1- ARRISTEB, SOLICITOB. “J“ OBEBT BRIGHAB]. LICENSE: ONOR GRADUATE 0F TORON Dr. T. G. Holt, L. D. 3 lam»: AND waumruu Medical Dz'rerfarr. Arthur Gun, M. D. MacKay . Dunn. Dental _ Director: W. 8. Davidson. A. H. Jackson. Legal Dz’ra‘torr Miscellaneous. W. 1!“le l. P. Telford. T. Cunnulcu will be tent to. “Us. free of postage, for ‘ino payable in udvanoe-‘I.5o ; no paid. The date to which on aid is dmmed by the numlw on it completely stocked: I“ "PW TYPE. thus for cumin: out lam g: Money to Lou and. in the Mi W. F. ”were (NU ()fl U (H H921 Ql OOPS mo (”IfI 0"" it at It \\ 0T Oll old In th t w I!» IN 0 out but further. p 1nd sort-o when all who have ‘ It forty-Iii to 0011mm! t \\‘ of fiwlr over th Stubâ€"A n lieâ€"0h. ‘ Val It causoa a in such at four or 0! mil ll “bu. Iomoty. l wife once NI fr their (100 orthvleas dumb nu She (at no impact 11.1 spri ug Cost: hair re ueeks and it Druza‘ist this enlighI fines of cl (hm N )l In \\ H 0:: or I : must I 8 rate 01 {Wu 6!“ ll rang! hildr \\' l 18‘ ll The roam 8 8‘0 Prom 'l‘|l s- £003 UH! lwr nd 0" ll four nl' It ind I “'Q I‘ In

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy