i# 82 .( ~ t might pe well IC miss Yau m you have said may constitute all that we have agrinst you, but it is not all we have against her." i ï¬hmmumr» myself to understand, but. at :,mumwmnuum < by Mr. Durand. â€"~ _ _â€" _ *What do you mean?‘ he demanded, Wmh odd ‘breaks in his voice, can you have against her?" _ "A triviality," returned the inspector, with a look in my direction that was, I felt, not to be mistaken. ~*I do not call it a triviality," I burst out. ~"It seems that Mrs. Fairbrother, for ail her elaborate tollet, was found without gloves on ber arms. â€" As she wertainly wore them on~entering the ulcove, the police bave naturally been Jooking for them. And where do you think they have found them? Not.in the alcove with her, not in the possesâ€" gion of the man who undoubtedly carâ€" ried them away with him, but"â€" Wor a moment he seemed to lose heart, then he lifted his head again and looked as handsome as when he pleadâ€" ed for my band in the little conservaâ€" "Â¥ou have that right," sald he. "Beâ€" sides, weskness at such a time and under such an exigency is little short Of wrong.> It was uninanly in me to« endeavor to secrete these gloves, more than unmanly for me to choose for their hiding place the recesses of an article belonging exclusively to yourâ€" . self. â€" I acknowledge it, Rita, and shall meet only my just punishmhent if you deny me in the future both your symâ€" pathy and regard. But you must let me assure you and these gentlemen also, one of whom can make it very unpleasâ€" ant for me, that consideration for you, much more than any miserable anxiety mabout myself, lay at the bottom of what must strike you all as an act of unpardonable cowardice. "#"rom the moment I learned of this woman‘s murder in the alcove, where I had visited her, I realized that every one who bad been seen to approach her within a haif hour of her ‘death would be subjected to a more or less rigid investigation, and 1 feared if her gloves were found in my possession Bome special attention might be directâ€" ed my way which would cause you unâ€" merited distress,. So, yielding to an Impulse which I now recognize as a most unwise as well as unworthy one, * I took advantage of the bustle about us and of the insensibility into which you had fallen to tuck these miserable gloves into the bag I saw lying on the floor at your side. I do not ask your pardon. My whole future life shall be devoted to winning that I simply wish to state a fact." * x "Véry good!"‘ It was the inspector who spoke; I could not have uttered a word to save my life. "Perhaps you will now feel that you owe it to this mu&ym:ddhowyonqmow bave these gloves in your possession." â€"*"Mrs. Fairbrother handed them to "Handed thetn to you?" "«¥es, | hardly know why myself. Bhe asked me to take care of them for her. I know that this must strike you &# a very peculiar statement. It was my realization of the unfavorable efâ€" fect it could not fail to produce upon those who heard it whichâ€"made me dread any interrogation on the subâ€" ject. But I assure you it was as l gay. She put the gloves into my hand while I was talking to her, saying they Incommoded her." "And you?" "Well, I held them for a few minâ€" utes, then I put them in my pocket, but quite autoniatically and ~without thinking very much about it. She was a woman accustomed to have her own way. People seldom questioned it, I judge." Here the tension about my throat reâ€" lxed, and I opened my lips to speak. But the inspector, with a glance of wome authority, forestalled me, "Were the gloves open or rolled up wmmwâ€ï¬‚'. 9 were rolled up," "#And roll them ug?" mhw-fl- "‘dlot 1 f immediatety. She let them. lie in her lap for awhile." > "While you talked?" , Mr. Durand bowed. _ "And looked at the diamond?" Mr. Durand bowed for the. second W ILLS O NS FLY »»= tR\ a The Alcover uot so much at this seeming "_ _ ANNA KATHERINE GREEN OVA *& o M OAAA has actwally killed a bushe! of files. "I have that reputation." : _ "Mr. Durand, would you know this | *~ diamond if you saw it?" L "I certainly shoold." ~ : ,] ow "The setting was an untoniimen ode,| an "Quite an unususa} one." | ‘The inspector opened his hand. f "Is this the article." "Good Cod!‘ ‘Where"â€" :"Don‘t.you. know ?" e ts arwg'.vs’w N2 008 R ‘The inspector eyed him gravely. â€" . "Then I have a bit of news for you. ltvuuu.hlhm?'hh, from Mrs. Fairbrother, Miss Yan Ars dale was present at their unroiling." Do we live, move, breathe at certain moments? It hardly seems so. I know that I was conscious of but one sense, that of seeing, and of but one m that of judgment.< Would he break â€"down, â€"betray â€"gullt, orâ€"simplyâ€" show astonishment? 1 chose to be lieve it was the latter feeling only which informed bis slowly whitening and disturbed features.. Certainly it are, as I bave stated." The inspector regarded bim with an .earnestness which made my heart sink. "I cannot believe it. I cannot be Hieve it." And his hand flew wildly to his forehead. "Yet it is the truth, Mr. Durand, and one you have now to face. How will you do this? By any further explanaâ€" tlons, or by what you may consider a discreet silence?" * "I have nothing to explainâ€"the facts : "You can fix the time of this visit, I hope; tell us, I mean, just when you left the alcove. You must have seen some~one who can speak for you." "I fear not." uncertain? "There were but few persons in the hall just then," he went on to explain. "No one was sitting on the yellow divan." "Had you ever seen so fAine a diamond "Â¥You know where you went, though? Whom you saw and what you did beâ€" fore the alarm spread?" > "Inspector, I am quite confused. I did go somewhere; I did not remain in that part of the hall>~ But I can tell you nothing definite, save that I walked about, mostly among strangers, till the cry ruse which sent us all in one direction and me to the side of my fainting sweetbeart." x "Yet you deal in precious stoneg!" "That is my busineds." â€"| _ _ â€""Can you pick out any stranger you talked to, or any one who might have noted you during t}ug_tn_tg-_ul? You see, for the sake of this little woman, I wish to give you every chance." "Inspector, I am obliged to throw myself on your merey. I have no such witness to my innocence as you call for. Innocent people seldom have. It is only the gullty who take the trouble to provide for such contingenâ€" cles." This was all very well, If it had been uttered with a straightforward air and in a clear tone. But it was not. 1 who loved him folt that it was not,andconnqnenuywumorhp prepared for the change which now took place in the inspector‘s manner. Â¥et it plereed me to the heart to obâ€" serve this thange, and 4 instinetively dropped my face into my hands when luwumnmï¬owmmm with some @nal order or of canâ€" tion. ; Instantly (and who can account for | such phenomena? there floated into view before my rétina a reproduction of the picture I had seen, or imagined myseif to have seen,. in the supper room; and as at that time it opened before me an unknown vista quite reâ€" moved from the surrounding scene, | so it did now, and I beheld again in faint outlines, and yet with the effect of complete distinctness, a square of light through which appesred an opegn pamgepufl’lhltolmflmw a half lifted curtain and the tall figure of a man holding back this curâ€" tiin and gnzing, or sceming to gaze, at his own breast, on which he bad already laid one quivering finger. _ What did it mean? In the ment of the ‘hortrible occurrence. had engrossed us all, I had forgotten this curious expérience; but on feeling anow the vague sensation of shock and expectation which seemed its natâ€" ural sccompaniment, 1 became conâ€" sclous of a sudden conviction thit the picture which had opened before me in the supper room was the result of a reflection in a glass or imirror of something then going on in a place not otherwiseâ€" within the reach of my viston; a reflection, the importance of which 1 suddenly realized when 1 reâ€" anHâ€" at. whatâ€"aâ€"artHiaat mariah®t" 4 trad occurred. . A man in a state of dread looking at his breast, within five minâ€" utes of the stir and rush of the dread« t"m‘ t which had marked this evenâ€" A hope, great as the despair in which I had just been sunk, gave me courage to drop my hands and advance imâ€" petuously toward the inspector. . _ _ "Don‘t I pray; don‘t judge mu-mflmhwm what J haye to #my.® 0000 0 0 anpec? of »everity, he ashed me what me xnonmmxumu the opportunity of saying before. 1 did be look so disturbed. and Ais part, T backed up this statement by > an entreaty for a few words with bim apart, as the matter 1 had to tell was private and possibly too fanciful for: He looked as if he apprehended some untary gesture ‘of appeal with. which I supplemented my request, be led me jnto a corner, where, with Just an encouraging glance toward . Mr. Durand, who seemed struck â€"dumb by my. action,â€" I told the inspector of that mothentary picture which 1 had seen reflected in what I was now sure was some window pane or mirror, "It was at a time colncident, or very nearly : coincident, with the ~perpetraâ€" tion of the crime you are now investiâ€" pressed an emotion incomprehensible to me at the moment, but which in my remembrance impresses meâ€"as that: of fear and dread." It was not the en: trance to the alcove I behbeidâ€"that would have ‘struck me at onceâ€"bat some other opening which I might ree: ognize if I saw it.~ Cannot that openâ€" Ing be found, and may it not give m clow to the man 1 saw skulking throtigh it with terror and remorse im his heart?" t "Was this figure when you saw it turned toward you or away?" the inâ€" spector inquired, with unexpected inâ€" ‘‘Turned partly away. He was going from me." s "And you sat where?" "Shall I show you?" C f "I am going to take this young lnady â€" the man.: ~He â€"whose figrre L see there . into the hall for a moment at her OWH is another person entirely; I see no request. mln&youndur.nu- remorse or even fear in his looks." rand to & me here?" "Of courseâ€"not. ‘¥ou are looking at: Without pausing for reply, he throw the reflection of one of my men:. : Miss open the door, and presently we were Yan Arsdale, ‘do you ‘ recoguize the â€" pacing the deserted supper room seckâ€" place now under your eye*‘ ing the place where I had sat. . I found _ "I do not. You spoke of an arch in it almost by ‘a miracle, everything beâ€" the hall, at the left of the carriage enâ€" ing in great disorder, Gulded by my trance, and I see an arch in the wimâ€" bouquet, which I had left behind me ‘dow pane before me, but"â€" in my escape from the table, I laid~ "You are looking straight through hold of the chair before which it lay the alcoveâ€"perbaps you did not know and declared quite confidently to the that another door opened at its backâ€"â€" inspector: hhmmwhumb“a. "This is where I sat." Farther on is the arch, and Naturally his glance and mine both that arch the side hail andâ€"staircase fiew to the opposite wall A window leading to the dressing room». ‘This, was before us of an unustial size and doer, the one in the rear of the alcove, make. Uum:nyw)bhmmlmummmw before come under my observation, it from the main ball by draperies f swung on a pivot and, though shutâ€"at have beem hung over it for this occaâ€" the present momenty might very easily sion, but it is quite visfble‘frem the . when opéned present its huge pane at back pessageway, and there can . be an angle capable of catching reflections ne doubt that it was by its means . from some of the many mirrors decâ€" the man whese refected image you . orating the reception room situated saw bethâ€"entered and left the alcove. diagonally across the ball. As all the It is an important fact to establish, doorways on this lewer floor were of Mnudmnnflwmum unusual width, an open path was offerâ€" â€" for the ald you have given us in | ed, as it were, for these reflections toâ€"matter." pass, making it possible for scenes to â€" Then, as I continued to stare at him be imaged here which to the persons in my slation and surprise, he. added, ;mwn:‘wmmn:â€mm& in. auick explangtion: .â€". . â€" . one‘s as â€"were y "Alag "Tilé Nght in tho"dRove abd in the ‘w«mm-mm séveral pariors are ail hung with | """"""“:.:::"n:"" shades, as you must perceive, but the between us of more “‘..-u."'wmm. fiflcanee. Pointing to the window, the very‘ bright, which accounts for the inspector turned to a group of WAItETS gistipetsess of this donuble reflection. watching us from the other side of the Another thingâ€"and it is a very interâ€" room and asked if it had been opened esting fointâ€"it would have been imâ€" that evening. > possible for this reflection to be noticeâ€" on e cics the_ is able from where you sit if the levéel «Yes, sirâ€"just before â€"__. ~of the Alcove flooring had not been "I understand," broke in the inspectâ€" higher than that of the or, and, leaning over me, he Toain Boot." ‘But for this froak of the «mwell ",'“‘::.“‘"' 7°" erchitect the continual passing to and But 1 could add little to my rormer . f% o Peobi® 70. pratkgs rom Yurdhes descriytion, . .._ io #urface. Miss Van Arsdale, it would "Perhaps you can toll me this," b# seem that by onme of those chances kindly persisted. “'uthom'nm-nâ€.mpy when you saw it, on a level with your mm“mmw eye or did you have to lift your bhead at the moment to make this reflection in order to see it ?* 4 pessible accurrenceâ€"even the loca mnuâ€".hï¬.-n L‘“‘“.‘ were. That iIte oddest feature:" ° and the exact point at which porâ€" ‘The inspector‘s mouth took @satisfied tiere was drawn aside from: tte low word of caution turned to my "Cortainly, certainly," was tis cheerâ€" tul rejoinder; and, summoning one of his men, he was about to give some orâ€" der when his impulse changed, and he asked it I could draw. 1 assured him, in some surprise, that i was iar from veing an auepe in uns direction, but that possibly 1 might manage a rough sketch, whereupon he "Poszibly 1 might Mentity the door and passage if I saw them," I sugâ€" ;yuo #or the Kidnoys. If there is trouble in mnmqmamg-mflm o is hot and scaldingâ€"Gin PHMis will quickly 1 GIN â€"PILLS _ "YÂ¥es, i what 1 mean." 'xd(.:‘:?:tkhm. 'hl'Mv back of such questions as flwmhu.‘ï¬ï¬‚mï¬l zide entrance," he now â€"procesded. "Did you notice, as you turned to go upstairs, an arch opening into a #mall passageway ‘at your left?" "I did ‘not," I began, Aushing, for 1 room ‘to look about me." . «¥Yary well," be replied; "I may want to whow you that arch." ‘The outlineâ€" of nmb.'l:ycï¬' figure we were endearoring to identiâ€" ty, was a marked feature in the sketch I had shown ‘him. "Will you take a seat nearby while I make a study of this matter?‘ T turned with alacrity to obey. ~There was something in his gir and manper which made me almost buoyant. Had my fanciful interpretation. of what I viction it had me? If so, there was hopeâ€"hope for the man I loved, who had gone in and out between curtains, and mot through any arch such as he had ‘mentioned or I had ‘ described. Providence : was working for me. . I saw it in the way the men now moved mï¬n&tu‘uwmbm fro, under ‘the ‘instruction of the inâ€" #pector,. manipulating the lights, openâ€" ing doors and drawing back curtains. Providence was â€"workingâ€"for â€"me, â€"and when, a few ininutes later, <I was asked to reseat myself in my old place at the suppor table and take another look in that slightly deflectedâ€"glass I Unew that my effort had met with its reward ‘and that for the second time Iâ€" ‘was to receive the impregsion of a place now indelibly imprinted on my “umthtlt?'nt.dflum, pointing at the glass with a last look at the imperfect sketch I had made him and which be still held in his "Yes," I eagerly responded. "All but the man. ~He whose figure 1 see there remorse or even fear in his looks." "Of courseâ€"not. ‘¥ou are looking at: the reflection of one of my men:. : Miss Yan ‘ Arsdale, (do ©you © recoguize : the place now under your eye?‘ "I do not. You spoke of an arch in the hall, at the left of the carriage enâ€" trance, and â€"I see an arch in the wimâ€" dow pane before me, but"â€" "Â¥ou are looking straight through the alcoveâ€"perbaps you did not know that another door opened at its backâ€" hhhmmeb“wJ: Farther on is the arch, and that arch the sideâ€" hail andâ€"staircase leading to the dressing room». ‘This doer, the one in the rear of the alcove, lmummm-m from theâ€" main ball by draperied $ have been hung over it for this occaâ€" sion, but it is quite visfble ‘frem the saw bethâ€"entered and left the alcove. It is an important fact to establish, mnummflmhm for the ald you have given us in Then, as I continued to stare at him in my slation and surprise, he. added, in. guick explangtion: .»« â€" â€" â€" "Tilée Nehts in tho"dRove abd in the séveral pariors are all hung with shades, as you must perceive, but the oue in the hail, beyond the arch, is distinctmess of this donble reflection. Another thingâ€"and it is a very interâ€" esting fointâ€"it would have been im« possible for this reflection to be noticeâ€" able from where you sit if the level wm The â€" 1008" and width of the several doorways mbmnflluvï¬zï¬ tiere was drawn aside from: Cte trance to the alcove." "It is wonderful," I cried, "wonderâ€" tu!" Then, to his astonishment perâ€" haps, T asked If there was not a email large central ball. ~"Kes," he replied. "It opens just boâ€" yond the frepiace. Three small stepa lead to it." 3 passageway back of the alcove and the 10 mysoly then to him, in my mind 1 are just as good for the Biladder 1 understood chim now. "I T had noticed it I had noticed it Trom the moment I recovered from my fainting At, but I had not thought it a matter of suficient interest to ask, even of myself, his reason for thus mlux:nmnma Now I could not faculties were too coufused, my: hentt too deeply shaken by the suggestion which the iInspector‘s words conveyed, for me to be consclous of any thing but the devouring \question as to what I should do if, by my own mistaken â€" zeal, I had succeeded in njunging the man 1 loved yet desper ‘The inspector loft me no time for the uettiemient of this .question. â€" Ushering me back into the room where Mr. Duâ€" rand and my uncle awaited our retu. . closed the ‘door upon the curious eyes of the various persons still lingering in the hall and abruptiy said to Mr. Duâ€" ~*The â€"etpinnations you ‘have been pleatied to give of the manner in which this diamond came tnto your possession are not too fanciful for credence, if you tan satisty us on another point which has awaketed some doubt in the mind of one of my men. Mr. Durand, you appear to have prepared yourself for departure somewhat prematurely. Do you mind removing that handkerchief for a moment? My reason for so peculâ€" lar a request will presently appear." Alas, forâ€"my last fond hope! Mr, Duâ€" tand, with a face as white as the backâ€" ground of snow framed by the uncurâ€" tained window against which he leanâ€" ed,.lifted his, hand as if.to comply with the inspector‘s request, then let it fall again with a greting laugh. "I soe that I am not likely to escape any of the results of my improdence," be cried, and with a quick jerk bared his shirt front. into the tolls in which he had become A splash of red defiled its otherwise uniform whiteness! That it was the red of ‘heart‘s blood was proved by the sbrinking look ‘he unconsciously cast at it fe ar} Y love for Auson Durand died at ‘ sight of that crimson splashâ€" ! or I thought it did. In this spot $Gilpad.pn the_breast of. Bm to whom T hid given my bbart‘I could read but one wordâ€"guiltâ€"heinâ€" ous gullt, guilt denied and now brought to light in latiguage that could be scen and read by all men. Why should I stay in wuch a presence? Had not the inspector himself advised me to go? Yes, but another volce bade me reâ€" main. Just as I reached the door An, son Durand found his voice, and L heard, in the full, sweet tonds I loved so well: . "Wait! I am not to be judged like this. 1 will explaint® But here the inzpector interposed. "Do you think it wise to make any such attempt without the advice of counsel, Mr. Durand?" ‘The indignation with which Mr. Doâ€" rand wheeled toward him raiged in me C a faint bane Toronto, Sept. 2.â€"Mayor Moss and n.& of â€" the ° Dundas mentsinal Cl:‘\. waited :- Hon. Mr. Hahniw, asked for an ¢xâ€" y( -::?-0 ~lnl' payment of an t municietit®. bas !‘. C ‘t!~' ~‘ â€"dopulan RETIRES FROM qQUEEN‘S \To be continued.) CHAPTER IV. + N luA M hore in town : are and â€"mt' home by wel}l in a This l:gï¬wwzw is ‘ney um:?:uuâ€".-uom- 'mï¬bwup:.:od Rheuâ€" } matism in just a while.: Th _ mixture is said to remove all blood «disorders and cure the Rheumatism !by forcing the Kidneys to Piter â€" and strain from.the blood and system all uric acid and foul, â€"ascomposed â€"waste {matter, which causes these afflictions. Try it i you aren‘t well, Save . the !yrucflnhn. Fluid Extract . Dandelion, oneâ€"hal! qunces..© Take a teaspoonful . siter each meal and‘at bedtime. gisd try 1t a prominent young <cattle ~dealer ol forrie ermmdiiceedcoghy d this town comynitted suic‘ds heve W oray t some â€" time _ this evening hy ‘ yc :A Tok :loï¬umhh ‘hl'llll out'-). in cl:l 90# | otg, m“ Bolicitor,:â€" t aID: ast seen ow An, 5 $ Chesloy was last" Fridey, _ He was "‘â€mm1‘-f,;‘: seen at difforent ~neighboring â€"towns E_'â€"â€";___â€"â€"_-;ï¬Ã©ï¬‚ :eiz'wth;n. and 4b is umï¬ 3.’ he T2 ~home ~last t. "Dr . Downâ€"| *‘ *MED =aâ€"~yors ing, :: the coroner, t:? the . remal?s | pg j 1OAL to his own farm and will hold _ in . R, HBTT, IC inquest. &w teaves a â€"wile ani] ianp two childron. No reason can be given | * o8 ‘or ho rash deed. k. 9P en «f ;flm “shoflnc quality‘‘ in the tone of . every o is distinâ€" guished m::omo“ u’not due to any one cause alome, but is rather the result ofâ€"unwearying study, perâ€" lect craftsmanship, rarest of materâ€" ials and a determination to . excel no matter what the cost may be. Toronto, Sept. 2.â€"Charles Arnst,c! 119 York Stteet, a _ yo ng German. feeling ill when he awoke this moin ing, took a mercury bichloride tab let, ‘with almost fatal effect. Alth ough suffering severely he hbad pre sence ol mind sufficient to rur to a nearâ€"by drug store, where & antidote was administered. He wa: ‘then rushed to St. Michael‘s hos»} tal, where the stomach pump â€" wa‘ used. Arnstâ€"is now thought to Y ou§ of danger, RUSHED FOR DRUG STORE St. Thomas, Sopt. 2.â€"Mr. T. W Crothers was waited upca this 6 ening by prominent members of â€"th party from all cnds of the _ridin and ‘urged to accept.the call recent ly made upon him to Jead themâ€" 1 victory, but pusiness ond private mait ters _ intervening he was compelled :o forego the honor ol renresentins hem, .â€"â€";â€"â€"-â€"â€"-â€"â€"- 4 M. m e 3y > > SUICIDE AT CHESLEY. g‘_Ԡu.a'..“ o w2 ««=a " m P Cuétity. 860. 7 Withem 3. Co+, [ Nocom manin, is .e g THE COME AND SEE SItN ‘This sign is pormanently attached to the front ofwt.he main building of the Lydia K. Pinkham Medicine Company, Lynn, Mass. What Doés This Sign Mean ? _ It meauns that public h:flechon of the Laboratory and methods of doing business is honestly desired. It means thatâ€" there is nothing about the busâ€" iness which is not * open and aboveâ€" board." It means that a permanent invitaâ€" tion is to axom to come and any and statements advertisements of Lydia ‘s Vegetable Compound. &-;"m"'m" herbs â€"â€" with Seo. + Do the women of America continuâ€" . Do the women of America continuâ€" d%hu .....ol'itun mtpld! now* to whom dqrvipe l woman are asked to write ?. ï¬_ and s w';mh correspondence women only, and are the letters kept thousand ba imen correspondents ? mm%mmtr sn neenmmnintt on cguitider women CANNOT ACCEPT women conducted by is got letters fron Â¥, P. CLEMEST:E 0, & w, Fâ€"G. HUGBES, + Fox ;‘ll’nnmnl convenience . rom a distance are m.a quested to make sppog:.t:pu. Ofice; Over Bunk'o'f'ï¬â€"m__nmâ€".fl Â¥ tis W. R. WILKINGON, 1 o. s. 0; o. 8. Ww , veurs,up.s, ol Dentist Watertoo,_ w Fiy §1A8,P.D Pouts fhn second Thureday and 1i hW €" maur‘ +J 2s ?u.nn ‘s Boug â€u.:‘:."' ‘.@ trance between Bg-m store and ‘s u.. ; 1 Ath« Jollege of Dental Surger; ‘ sollege of Dooual &vfl""m‘.}" A%::nulr 3. Ufcimana‘s * Bt. Jacobe every 1 i ~ v:: Outh, D‘nm:r,y practioed ~ip 4 i .008, uce OHN WID J * lnwuï¬â€˜mmu-. Offlceâ€"Post Office, St. Jacobs, Ont. EXPERIENCED VETERI # _ ARY; SUEGECN â€"â€" ho. --â€"'-c. DITERY OE I}:'E;""’wi'mm"a‘ .-.ï¬ .c;\:o(flm will be closed every *& Hamilton, Sept. 2.â€"The t of Mrs. Dellia Claytom is slowiy proving and the . chances ate U she will recover Aow. When: y was taken to the hospital first who objected to taking medicine, and e 6 wiik." tm Cets aoter f F . was a that was started in The dootors said . to , Architeot â€" _ Patents soliciting for Canada an! the Uzited States, x Biue printing at short aotioe.. Phone 494. CC Office: 31 Courtland Avenue,â€" near Victoria Park Gate, . Berlin, Ont. * Specialty, Nose, Thrcat and Kar, _ STRATFORD, ONT. in the sainern Most Suounaaore practical training school in 'z ern Ontario. Three d Commercial. Sho Qur graduates secure m posâ€" ‘W:lt:.;’or c .t..;n:'w- our You will find it interesting. You may enter any time. Eutd M 3. B R Chicaas Jellege ot Chas. â€"Knechtel IW†* i- DELLA 18 IMPROVING Elliott & McLachlan, DENTIST, Office Open Daily sho was slowly gttting Attend the Best & FLINTOFT, Uddfellow‘s ‘Blook,