VE ZF ) d@ecision. (Bo for years thes i had fought a silent but bitter duel which principle on the one side and ‘ AHempted corruption on the: other s.“'..fh'.'.\_r: e of battle. Judge Rossâ€" , He who controlled legtslatures and tetat to sapreme court judges had. found I himselt poweriess when _ each turn, â€" of the legal machinery hed broug him faee to face with Judge Rossm Buit after suit had beeb against him and the interests Fe re ted, and each time it was Judge R ore who bad Handed down ‘decision. ~Bo fof years these two Ts PHooVuail s a :nc y, and this, together with life inâ€" ~ surar and other incidentails of keepâ€" hos iouse in New York, had about takâ€" \/ @n all he had. ‘Yet he had managedâ€"to ‘ wave a little, and those years when he e i-“,mw.mo:mmm ;| _ yudge considered himself ‘lucky.â€" Seâ€" eretly he was proud of his comparaâ€" _ tive poverty. At least the world could \ . mever «sk him "where he got it." ._fgï¬;‘:_‘ was well. acquainted . with â€" dudge Rosemore‘s private means. ‘The ~_ 4wo men had met at a dinner, and, &lâ€" more fought with the wespons which bis oath and the Jaw directed him to Nise, Ryder with the ouly weapous he inderstoodâ€"bribery. and trickery." And i time it bad been Rossmore. who had emerged triumphant. Despite evâ€" ery maneuver n!k‘..w could iggest, . notwithstanding every â€"card iat could be~played to underminc bis ;"; and reputation, Judge Rossmore & higherâ€". in <the country‘s confiâ€" jence when be was frst appointâ€" ;7 Ryder found ‘heâ€"could not .w cided to destroy him with calumâ€" iy.. No seruples embarrassed Ryder in arriving at this determination. From his point of view he was fully justified. (‘Business is business. < He burts interests; therefore I remove i@?%'hmmhw~ ore it â€"no â€"more wrong to wreck the P of this honorable man than j wnnï¬otlmh ~ o having ‘thus tranâ€" _ quil his conscience he had gome to ‘Ap "his usually: thorough manner, ud his success had surpassed the sanguine expectations. is what he had done. .. many of our public servants labors are compensated only in p_ fashion by an inconsiderate ww,wwmtw < of . moderate imeans.. His income »g:mamnvmeom was o m-mr,mttorlmu»hll position, having a certain appearance _to keep up, it little more than kept the . welf trom the door. . He lived quietly, ggmg-mw.nuwxofl;wlmu- .1, and his darghtes.Shisley, anatâ€" i fe young teman whod Bid gradâ€" 'uqmv.-rmam--hown- taste for literature. ‘The daughâ€" ter‘s education bad cost a good deal of w had tried to cultivate I A tance, he never received inuch â€" encourigement. . Ryder‘® . son Fefterso too, had met Miss Shirley Ross: prevand been mtch attracted to her, but the father baving more amâ€" ‘Bitious pians for fiis heir quickly disâ€" 4 wod ‘all attentions in that direcâ€" tion. â€" He himself, however, continued to m the judge casually, and one evening. he contrived to btosch the |eubject of profitable investments. ‘The jude mmthLMW Y_'s; had managed ;1 .uywm\vm he was antious to Invest in something , each one merely a reâ€" j‘mu 'ub:l,; iL "ubsuld bet. Was he not with every possible phase of ? ~Better than these men who talked, he was planning how i andâ€"al} his other interests get rid of the troublesome judge. ~oule ,‘g:'-th:-m“. W""‘m wily Rossmore fAnancier ‘selzed the opportunity thus mmm' .,..1.‘:"#' “~m-*m to usk ming the judge‘s Inexperiâ€" #" bie in answering s favorable emeed questions and generally made help Mimsclf so agreeable that the Judge MOL® "°! #ound bimself regretting that be and .. "___, .. * Â¥ ue ol s 4n . L Ewoops down on its prey the wily ‘selzed the opportunity ‘thus e And he took so much trou 7 in answering the judge‘s Inexper!â€" . questions and generally made so agreeable that the judge d hbimself regretting that be and j ,mww«m ‘epposed to each other in public ite so long. RyGer strongly recomâ€" Mhmdmm ;â€.‘uwn‘m-lnc“ R »mu‘muymnv , zum Ryder said ho ‘ to believe that the stock * A Story of American was an opportunity to get it cheap. whmwhhduht: investment the judge was sourprised ?«" livé certiicates of stock for double same time he réceived a lettet from the secretary of the company explainâ€" ‘utook and not to be marketed at the Shines at Night "Black Knight" Stove Polish makes stoves shine by night as‘ well as by day. Can‘t burn it off, githerâ€"no matter how hot you make the stove. # ARBAAAUVAAAAAA MMiPDt â€" CÂ¥ ‘‘Black Knight‘‘ Stove Polis x Tw BY CRAIRLES : KLEIM, erican Life Novelized From the Play by ARTHUR HORNBLOW. ~ i the stove with ha details of which the . 3 s# nothing, but be thought it very iibora! *{u::'-va‘:,» e ‘fl e uk Cr x« 63 15X ho hoin o Ti i ain ns p L4 r:' .ï¬-i, 7 {?k ?.:‘ ‘;:~ wo e oo ie on in Bs E"""‘“"*""“ g...‘ ,’?j l ,â€"‘g ed Ԥu. s l o d eC C 1 ,r,.;\,{gn £ Wim J..;»;i;‘ whi s bad not. pald :;.,,_L; t for e e ewiines onl3 l0 Sn lc 2+ W l Nee WM n "Yor Ry ~ RP Mi?‘x hs o tR rmar 2 one % T N is pnnther 1e * whiu he asced bios it be wan sure the %m. imantiaily: sound, as the . in the ï¬a st he had : hbis Investment and being a perâ€" .. tect child in business bé : m':&iï¬.n ex.> tra $50,000 worth the secretary of him : that . everything : was in changes. : New capitalists gained con gol :u:ï¬.:mm“bh. reat Northwestern Mining company. Then it became involved in litigation, and one ‘suit,; the outcome of: which meant nilllions to the company, was earried to: the supreme court, where *Judge Rossmore was sitting. The judge had by this time forgotten all about the company in which he owneld stock; Hedid not even recall its name. He only ktew vagnely that it was a â€"mite and that it was mituated in Alasâ€" ka. Could he dream that the Great Northwestern Mining company and the ‘company to which be had intrustâ€" edhh(evtmmmdthe same? > In ‘deciding on the merits of ,ueanmunmmmd !‘to him to be piainly with the Northâ€" 1,methâ€-00 that effect. it was an important deâ€" cision, tovolving aâ€"large sum, and: for a day or two it was talked about. But as it was the opinion of the most learn« ed and bonest judge on the bench no one dreamed of questioning it But very soon ugly paragraphs be« gan to appear in the newspapers, Oune pnperukedl!!tvmtnnflntlnd(o present time. It was in the aature of Rossmore owned stock in the Gréat Northwestern Mining company which had recently benefited so signally by his decision. Interviewed by & reportâ€" er, Judge Rossmore indignantly denied being interested in any>way in the returned to the attack, stating that the judge must surely be mistaken, as the records showed a sale of stock to him at the time theâ€"company. was known @@ the Alsgkan Mining . company. When he read this the judge was overâ€" whelmed. It was true then! They had not sfandered him. â€"It was he who had Hed, but how innocentlyâ€"bow inâ€" nocently! His daughter Shirley, who was his greatest friend and comfort, was then in Europe. She had gone to the conâ€" tinent to rest after working for months onâ€"s novel which she: had just pubâ€" lished. His wife, entirely without exâ€" mnbâ€"mumiflm what of an invalid, was belpless to adâ€" vise him. But to his old and tried friend, â€" exâ€"Judge ~Stott, Judge. Rossâ€" more e%plained the facts as they wore. Stott shook bis head. > "It‘s a conspirâ€" ney!"* he cried.. "And John B. Ryder is behind it." Rossmore refused to beâ€" ieve that anx man could so deliberateâ€" 1y try to encompase another‘s destrucâ€" tion, but when more newspaper stories came out be began to realize that Stott was fight and that bis enemles had inâ€" dted dealt bim a deadly blow. One newspaper boidly stated that Judge eompany‘s books for $50,000 more stock than he had paid for, and it went »h to ask if this were payment for the favorable decision just rendered. Rossâ€" more, helpless, childlike as he was in business matters, now fully realized the seriousness of his: position. . "My God! My God!" he cried as he bowed his bead down on his desk. And for & whole day he remained closeted in his library, no one venturing near him. As John Ryder sat there sphinxlike at the head of the directors‘ table he reviewed all this in bis mind. His own ‘part in the work was now done, and well done, and he had come to this meeting today to tell them of his tr} umph. COries of "‘The chairl ‘The chairt" on every side. Senator m%mumm whigpered something in bis ear. . Ryder tapped the table with his gavel and rose to address his fellow direct MOUSE s ~~~.. St. Rapbaels, Out. \ For over Awenty years 1 auffered from Chronic Constipation of the bowels, and I could get n6 medicine to cure me, /1 trizd doctors and every. known‘ purgaâ€" tive, or laxative, medicine known but I was no bettec. mi‘vlfll‘ take medicine, I would go ‘m days, without any action of the bo During all this tinke L wes weak and suffered from Indigestion constantly, About a year ago a friend advised me to try ‘Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives‘ as they had helped her.â€" I. began taking *‘Pruitâ€"aâ€"tives" and from the oulset I began to feel better, and inside of a month the pains were almost gone and the Constipstion relieved, In two months I was perfectly well agaix, no peins, no coustipation, and my complexion bad lost all that sallow appearance. enoares â€"are d that e"-‘% ‘hey do this by making : the liver hexithy and activeâ€"thus cansing more bile to ow into the bowels. 182 * Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives * â€"or * Fruit lc ‘Tablets" are sold by dealers at 50c a box ablets" 7 dealers at 50c a box ® w""'m-'&m-nuw n Ottews, ‘They had: ail listened carefully, he said, to what had beenâ€"stated by preâ€" vious speakers. The situstion no doubt was very critical, but they hnd weathâ€" tred worse‘storms, and he bhad every reason to hope they would outlive this . «torm. nmwmnmm m;runyw, )IOM ; 3 ized capital and was seeking to© them through the courts. For a time this agitation would hurt business and lessen the dividends, for it meant not only smailer annual earnings, but that a lot of motey must be spent in Washâ€" hanging on every word, involustarily turned in the direction of Senator Robâ€" erts, But the latter, at that moment busily engaged in mimmaging among a lot of papers, seemedâ€"to have mitsed this significant allusion to the. road‘s expenses in the District of Columbia. Ryder continued; ‘ . In his experience such waves of reâ€" form were periodical and scon wear themseives out, wheo things go on just as they did before. \Much of the agitation donbtless was a strike for graft.. They would have to go.down in thetr noékets. he supposed, and then these yellow newspapers and . these .. yellow ‘magazines that wereâ€"barking at their heels would let them go. F:: in regard to the particular case now At issweâ€"this Auburndate decisionâ€"there nad been no way of preventing it. Inâ€" fluence bhad been used, but to no efâ€" tect. ‘The thing to do now was to preâ€" vent any such disasters in future by removing the author of them. ‘The directors bent eagerly forward. Hiad Ryder really got some plas up his aleeve, after all?â€" The faces around. the table looked brighter, and the diâ€"‘ ,Mewmm-um-g tled themeeives down in their chairs us ‘audiences do in the theater when | the drama is reaching its climax. The board, continued Ryder with ley mmmmvwm,u‘#fl‘:,: ;s f leged connection with the Great Northâ€" western company. Perbaps they bed . d#ot believed these stories. 1t was Ofly . ‘The eyes of the lsteners,. who wers «sion; but, what was worse, be had acâ€" eepted fromi that company a valuable giftâ€"that is, $50,000 worth of stockâ€" for which be had <given absoiotely fothing â€" in .retarn unless, as some ciaimed, the weight of bis influence on the bench. These facts were vety ugly and so unan#werable that Judge Rossâ€" more did not attempt to anawer them, and the important news which ha, the chairman, had to announce to his felâ€" low directors that afternoon was that Judge Rossmore‘s conduct would be made the subject of an inquiry by comâ€" . Ryder sat down, and pandemoniam eagerness to shake hands with the man who had saved them. Ryder bad givâ€" «n no hint that be had been a factor in their common enemy, but the directors knew well that he and he slone had brought aboot the happy result. (Sed) Mary A. McDoniix. OHAPTER 111 World, appe strongly to Jefferson w-:’ sat in frout of the Cate de is Paix in Paris, sipping a sugared vermouth. It was 5 o‘ciock, the magie hour of the aperitif, when the glutton taxes his wits to deceive his stomach and work up an appetite for renewed He edt in front of the Cafe de toa Puts ummu.â€"mm thingâ€"else: in the world beyond mere woney getting. His father was a #lave to it, but he would never be.. He was resolved on that. Yet, with all bis Meas ot emancipation and progress, Jefferson was & thoroughly practical 'ymâ€"m;mn.“ He fully understood the value of money, and the possession of it wasâ€"as sweet to him as to other soul in acquiring it dishonorably, No, Jefferson was no fool.. He lored money !otm{m_lnfl‘ ‘hflr‘ ia l umnmuvgmmh would never allow money to dominat® his life as his father had done. His faâ€" ther, he knew well, was not a happy Wirn, neither happy himselfâ€" nor te spected by the world. He had tolled all hbis. life to make hisâ€" vast fortune, and now be tolled to tuke eare of it. The galley slave led a life of luxurions ease compared with John Burkett Ryâ€" det; Baited by the yeliow newspapers and magatines, investigated by state committees, ~dogged y process servâ€" érs, baunted by begg*rs, barassed by blackmaliets, threatened by kidnapors, trustrated in ‘his attemptsâ€"to bestow certainly the l6t of the werld‘s richest man was far from being an emviable ~That is why Jefferson had resoived To e empsone ie mmï¬uibm | _ ®I feal it my duty to testify.to the bendfit L have received from the use of Peychine. While travelling in New Onw tracted a eold, which grad |iy â€" devatoped into Bronchitis of the worst form. I was advised to try Prychine, which I did, and after osing lm.mmlwm» ,m h‘ health. 1. recommend this ‘wFï¬a“m" Sn They Iouler io mrage d mm.«%jï¬au had ‘betore 1 < had ; and the â€" #aeal chords do not tite with speaking,‘‘ wiade for bim in the Empire Trading company, and he had gone so far as to refuse also the private income his f4â€" ther ‘offered to settle on him. ~He would earn M# own living. "A mas wuunmw?‘u‘ nï¬.mmiï¬uï¬mmw duu-genahmm to his will, he was secretiy.pleased at his son‘s grit. ~Jofferson was thorough: ty in earnest If needs_be he. would forego the great fortune that await auï¬nmmm†aquestionable business against which his whole maphood revoitad. “muwfl&m tes, In fact, he was unusually sorfous tor his ago. He was not yet thirty, but he had done a great dea!l of read ing, and be took a keen interest in all Salvation Army Praise han i. Taamis Jererson Hyder feit strotgly about ¥‘o. Army . 1007. the ary or art career. At one time he bad even thought of going on the stage, but It was to art that he turned. Anally, Â¥From an early age be had shown canâ€" sidetable skill as a draftsman, and later a two yeary‘ course at the Acadé 3wmuwm- ww_h'gm and for the magazines, moeeting at first with the usual rebuffs and disspppointâ€" ments: but, refusing to be discouraged. he had kept on and scon the tide‘turnâ€" ed. His drawings began to be acceptâ€" ed.© ‘They uppeared first in one magaâ€" «ine, then in another, until one day, to his great Joy, he received an order from an important frm of publishers for stx wash drawings to be used in Mustratâ€" Ing a fatmous novel. ‘This was the beâ€" giuning of bisureal success, ~His illusâ€" trations were talked about aimost as much as the book, and from that time great detmand by the publisher begun hiis career of inMependence on nothing a year, so to speak, found himâ€" self in a handsomely appointed studio in Bryant park, with more orders comâ€" in? in than he could possibly fl} and er oying an income of little Jess than $5,300 a year. ‘The money was all the sweeter to Jefferson in that he felt he had ‘RiibseI® earned®every cent of it. This summer he was giving himseif a well deserved vacation, and he â€"had come to Europe partly to see Parts and the other art centers about which his mmummnvdJ States supreme court, who had come abroad to recuperate after the labors on ber‘ new novel, "The American: Oc topus," a book which was then the taik of two hemispheres. Jefferson had read half a dozen reâ€" views of it in as many American paâ€" pers:that afternoon at the New York Herald‘s reading room in the Avenue 4e 1‘Opers, and he chuckled with glee young woman had described his faâ€" ther. ‘The book had been published unâ€" mï¬mmmmgm‘ the secret of authorship. ‘The eritics all conceded that it was the book of: MMMMRWM a: pittless pen the ‘personaity of. the biggest fgure in the commercial life of America. :: "Although," wrote one reviewer, "the in the mhwmmbm the world a vivid pen portrait «mmm She has sucâ€" casded in presenting a remarkable enaricter study of the most remarkaâ€" "ble man of his time.". He was particulatiy pleased with the Yeviews, not only for Miss Rossmore‘s sake, but also because his own vanity was gratified. Had he not collabor ated on the book to the extent of acâ€" quainting the author with details of his father‘s: life and his characterâ€" istics which no outsider could possiâ€" biy have learned? ‘There bad been no disloyalty to his father in dotng this. Jefferson admired Bis father‘s smartâ€" ness, if "he could not his methods. u.mmm‘gv:m ap attack on his father, but rather a powerfully written pen picture of an The notfuiiMtinceé of his son with the daughter of Judge Rossmare had not escaped the eagle eye of Ryder, 8r., and much to the fAnancier‘s annoyance dbd even consternation he bad ascorâ€" tained that Jefferson was a frequent caller ‘at the Rosamore home,. He im mediately: Jumped to the conciusion that this conld mean only one thing. ufl@_@.mt.mn«l"&oeuâ€" sequences of the insanity of immature minds®," be had surmmoned ‘Jefferson peremptorily to his presence. He told his son that .all idea ‘of marriage in that quarter was out of the question tor two reasons: One was that Judge Rossmore was his most bitter enemy, the other was that he had hoped to see his son, his destined successor, marty .â€.:g-u:.‘w.&.mu approve. "knew of such a woman, uvï¬ï¬‚t ke a far more deâ€" sirable mate tha s He alluded, ‘of course, e the pretty daughter of his old fric the senator. â€" ‘The 7 would beneft by this all which wan destrable‘ from every polnt of Jetfferson had: listened respectfully antil bi# father had finished and then gritmly remarked that only one point of view had beenâ€"overlookedâ€"his own. He did not care for Miss Roberts; he did not think sho really cared for bim. ‘The marriage was out of the question. Whersupon Ryder, Sr., had fumed and raged, declaring that Jefferson was opâ€" posing his will as he always did, and qï¬.muwunum matrried Shirley Rossmore without his consent be would disitmberit him. :‘Jnmhb cidents of the last fow mouths when suddenly a feminine yolce which he quickly recognized called out in Engâ€" The crope . JGo! Waterioo County lish ROPS LOOKING WELI that he alraady greoh To be continued.) the slightest in He had the ar rongly developed tes had litte is mA NY of with & 10 200 its When be of a liter: 11 the sp1 + Dr. Shoop‘s| © « Night Cure| * of Â¥U field _ Bome om onte asked@a woman how it. was -;‘t:i' her youth §o..woud. erfully, Her hai . was snowy white, she was, 80. years: old : and â€" her onerâ€" #Y . 'fl-% but she‘ never imâ€" m ‘@.. ,m[t!n Me:‘ of age/fyi , was young in sympathy and interesis. And this was her answers> **I knew : how. to forget disâ€" agreeable~ things: I .tried io a#Aster ~ Tired nerves,â€" with that "noâ€" ambiâ€" tion‘‘ feeling:that. is commonly felt in spriag. of early.summer, can be casily iand .quickly gitered by taking what is wn to druggists everywhere â€"as Dr:~Shoop‘s Restorattve. â€"One~ wili ibsolutely note a changed feeling withâ€" in 48 hours aft; beginniig _ to take ‘the Restorative. The bowles â€"‘get sluggish in the winterâ€"time, the cirâ€" culation often slows up, the Kidneys are inactive, and even the heart in many: cases .grows decidedly weaker Dr. Shoop‘s Restorative is recognized everywhere as a genuine tonic to these wital organs. It builds up and strengâ€" thens . theâ€" wornâ€"out weakened â€" nerves; it sharpens the failing appotite, : and universally ards #digestion. â€"It always quicklyâ€" bringsâ€"renewed strength, life, rigot andâ€"ambition.. Try it and be convinced.â€" Sold:by All Dealers. y : For the benefit: of/ our ‘readetsâ€" we publish <a list of Canadian and Amerâ€" ican patentsâ€" recently granted through the agenoy of Messrs. Marion & Marâ€" lon, ~ Patent | Attorneys, . Montreal, Canada, and Washington, D. C. ° â€"â€" « Any ‘information ~ on the subject will be supplied free of charge by apâ€" plying to the aborve named firm. Nos, £77 Jollege OL. nml -M 111,082â€"Theophite ©. Ayotte, Montâ€" m‘%hu in real, _ Que. ~Brick : Moulding â€"the menth. practic 111,689â€"Alfred â€"© Limoges, . Limoges, ‘~ * Ont. Exercises for gymnastics 111,758â€"Joseph : Ford, Dunedin, New ~ Zealand.: Convertible peramâ€" ,m,m;.ca. Herbert H. wumqn“%: ' ast ton: Station, k R A.m?."ï¬.; j United _ States. & 4â€"â€"George E. Morris, â€" Regina, [ â€"â€"% Sask.. Beading Implements. (886,645â€"Jean _ E. Saucier, Montréal, Â¥e Que. Trolleyâ€"guard. _ 886,699â€"Joseph Heaton, â€" Hampton .~\Station," N. B. / Acetyle gas generator. > m,thgam ‘O. O‘ Shaughnessy , Hal , N~S. Life Presetver. <â€"**The Inventor‘s Adviser‘‘ will . be sent to any address upon request. HOW SHE KEPT YÂ¥( "I want to t&ll you that without Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Comâ€" pound, I wouldâ€" not be alive. For months I suffered with painful and mflumhhudhï¬a-mflond the feminine organs. Doctors could S Nme Boms Chatel, Vaileyeld, do nothing for tme, and said 1 must subâ€" E.t'b an Mï¬â€œu a tumor. tave Epdin N. Pinkhrn‘s Vegetable w "&":«"T' nve no pain #4 80 and am éntirely cured. !? remedy is deserving of great praise. FACTS FOR $1CK WOMEN, â€" For thirty Lydia K. Pinkâ€" ham‘s Vanbl: und, made From reote and hetbe, has‘ocen the and has positively cured thonsands dvnmnwbahnhontmbledwlï¬ periodic pains, backache, that bear [he dpon meting Antuietcy indians Why don‘t you try #? _ â€"_â€" .=(_ Soild by all Doealors INVENTOR‘S WORK (From: ‘Womar d 4 snelablc Compound Invites all -mnnm a. 1. cidaintic‘s. " wR As : Barrister, Holicitor, ‘ conveyant @ +woffice opposite Court . & tly Petersou‘s.office Berlin; ~~ * /J %. fewy, patiaome _ o e o o cang aonupas F G. HUGHES. â€",~ e "7’ LpENXTIET. _ _¢ _ For mutual convenience ‘paiient . quested to niake appointments. <â€" _ _‘ _ Office; Over Bank of Hanilton, Berlin . w Whii vatk a2 N “‘ Vâ€-.v!. and ® y . m C.W. W ‘ s i 2ucded {ipussday 1 pmo to Friday i pm. ONOTURN EXPERIENCED VATERIN ~~~ ARYi SURGEON _ 3. of the ‘Ontarie â€"._. w%’% "‘:’L‘}fi Pn on‘ Al tallr i on on un arioo anles wit br o mos ‘avery Prides aliee D1 ‘l'A O oBRIVE & FLINTOFT branghes ofGontist Â¥ ioe fm ;. ~ : Berk [ nox * red ' ie 6+ e e t ce Bpeciaity, Nose, Throat and Eari Thiceâ€"Fin: Ondotin, deqemarons un t Offiseâ€"â€"Post Office,{,@b. Jacobs,; Ont, * . ceed, for our courses are the beat, Get our free catalogne and learn more about us, â€"You may enter now. MA Y GOo ‘TO LONDON Londan Free Pré «s of the New Ham eotric Maoter . & S were in the city yot er the ground 108 a suitable site stal. their. plant, . plating. moving * l old om Arohiteot â€" â€"â€" _ Patents soliciting ior Canada and the United States. tA Mechanical . drawings . made fo. all olasses of mathinery : & ote. _ > Bive printing at short m Photie 494, â€" Office 28 King W. > Room 3, Berlin, Ont. o Clement &{Clement â€" OHN L WIDEMAN Chas. Knechtel WELLS, LD.8 a*bD & Heroots Oitveadth, PAL srtlk Th y this city. * They natuar arey ie CEotblerge EA