;* ; ANNA KATHERINE GREEN s '*g. § v CAAA S A NUAAA OMA L 14 A4 A ‘5‘ *Take that back," said he. "I have some business to transact with this igentleman before I eat. I‘ll ring when 1 want you." Tken they entered where I was. As the door closed I caught sight of the inspector‘s face turned earnestly toâ€" ward me. In his eyes I read my duty and girded up my heart, as it were, to meetâ€"what? In that moment it was impossible to tell. *Hut how bere7 . Asd why such rury in Mr.. Grey‘s face and such amazeâ€" ment in that of the inspector? This question was not to be â€"angwerâ€" e4 offhand. 2r. Grey, advancing, lald n finger on the man‘s ghoulder. "Come," id he, "we will hayg.our conversaâ€" Hon in another room." man, who in dress and appearâ€" whce looked oddly out of place in those rooms, shook off theâ€" stupor which be had fallen and started to tollow the Englishman. â€" A <waiter erossed their track with the soup for gur table. Mr. Grey motioned him ‘The next enlightened me. With a total iznorance of my presence, due probably to his great excitement, Mr. Grey turned on his companion the moâ€" ment he had closcd the door and, seisâ€" Ing him by the collar, cried: ~*Wairbrother, you villain, why have you ealled on your wife like this? Are you murderer as well as thief?" â€" Fairbrother! This man? Then who was he who was being nursed back to life on the mountains beyond Santa Fe? Sears? Anything seemed possible in that moment. Meanwhile, dropping his hand frow the other‘s throat as suddenly as he thrad seized it, Mr. Grey caught up the stiletto from the table where he had fung it, erying. "Do you recognize this?" Ab, then I saw gullt! In a silence worse than any cry this so called husband of the murdered woman, the man on whom no suspicion had fallen, the man whow all had thought a thousand miles away at the time of the deed, stared at the weapon thrust under his eyes, while over his face passed all those expressions of fear, abhorrence and detected guilt which, fool that I was, 1 had expected to see reflected in response to the same test in Mr. Grey‘s equable countenance. é’â€"hn of the latter burst forth. *â€" "It was not for that I killed herl" jeried he. "It was because she defied _me and fiaunted her disobedience in my very face. I would do it again, The surprise and wonder of it held me chained to the spot. 1 was in a state of stupefaction, so that Iscarcely noted the broken fragments at my feet, But the intruder noticed them. Wrenchâ€" Ing his gaze from the stiletto which Mr. Grey continued to hold out, he pointed to the broken cup auu saucer, muttering: § â€"‘That is what startled me into this betrayalâ€"the noise of breaking china, 1 caninot bear it since"â€" _ He stopped, bit his lip and looked sround hbim with an air of sudden bravado. "Since you dropped the cups at your wife‘s feet in Mr. Ramsdell‘s alcove," finished Mr. Grey with admirable self possession. "I see that explanations from myâ€" self are not ip. order.‘" was.thieurip retort, launched" with the bittérest Â¥arâ€" wasm. Then as theâ€"full weight of his position crushed in on him his face assumed an aspect startling to my unâ€" ‘mccustomed eyes, and thrusting his hand into his pocket he drew forth a small box which he placed in Mr. Grey‘s hands. ‘"It was the first time I had heard this diamond so named. + ;;;l"he Great Mogul," he declared simâ€" ~Without a word ~that gentleman wpened the box, took one look at the @gontents, assumed a satisfied alr and earefully deposited the recovered gem Jn his own pocket. As his eyes reâ€" tuffied to the man before himâ€"all the â€"eyes; certainly under the eyes of many who knew me." Nes *~"f do not." It is enough fhat you enâ€" tered it; that you confess your guilt." Here AMr. Grey stretched his hand toâ€" ward the electric button. .â€"‘‘No, It is notenough."â€"â€"The tone was fierce, authoritative. "Do not ring the bellâ€"not yet. I have a fancy to tell you bow I managed that little afâ€" Here his yoice broke and it was in a «ifferent tone and with a total change of manner he added: "You stand apâ€" wd at my depravity. You have not 4 my life." Then quickly and with # touch of sullenness: "You suspected ma because of the stiletto. It was a #mistake, using that stiletto. Otherâ€" Wige the ptan was good. I doubt if you know how I found my way into the alcove, possibly under your very \ Glanctng about be caught up from © nearby table a small brass tray. Eimptying it of its contents, he turned on us with drawn down features and wh nbsequious mir so opposed to his #0,"% #P 5‘ _ Pamily cares and worries weigh heavily upon the: ) _ mother and the alone knows how much she‘needs someâ€" § _ thisg to supply the elements of health and vigor she islecking. OXOMULSION is the best food to Build and restore her lost vitality, 1t }s pleasant to take and beâ€" gins its work of toning up the system at once. No mother thould Be without it. Good for Mothor, it it equally good for Father and Children, and no home should be : Alcove natural manper that it wasâ€"as if ab other man stood before us, . fem.s "Pardon my black tie," be holding out the tray toward m Wellgood! + 1 ‘The rooin. turned with me.. it was he. then, the great fnan.cier, the multt« miltionaire, the husband. of the magâ€" nificent ‘Grize!, who bad entered Mr. Ramsdell‘s house as a waiter! \ir. Grey did not show surprise, but he made a gesture, when instantly the tray was thrownâ€"aside, and ‘the man resumed his ordinary aspéct. : "I see you understand me," he cried "I see you nnderstand me," he cried. "I, who Lave played host at many A ball, passed myseif off that night as one of the waiters. +1.came and went, aud no one noticed me. It is such a patural sight to see m waiter passing lees that my going ln’\nd out of the alcove did not attract the least attenâ€" tion. 1 never look at waiters when I attend balls, I never look higher than their trays. No one looked at me highâ€" er than my tray. I beld the stiletto under the tray, and when I struck ber she threw up her hands, and they hit the tray, and the cups tey. 1 have never been able to bear the sound of breaking china since. I loved her"â€" A gasp, and he recovered bimself. ‘‘That is neither here nor there," he muttered. "You summoned me under threat to present myself at your door today. I have doue so. I meant to reâ€" store you yourâ€"diamond simply. It has become worthless to me. â€" But fate eyâ€" acted more. Surprise forced my secret from me. That young lady with ber damnable awkwardness has put my head in a noose, but do not think to hold it there. 1 did not risk this Interâ€" view without precautions, I assure you, and when I leave this hotel if will be as a free man." > did -v'i'ï¬e pistol swerved my way. The face above it smiled. T watched that Mr. Grey stood dérectly in the line of smile. â€" Before it broadened to its fall extent,â€"I pressed the button. Fairbrother stared, dropped bis pistol and burst forth with these two words: "Brave girl!" The tone I can never convey. Then he made for the door. As be laid bis hand on the knob, he called back: "I have been in worse straits than this!" wn nE ... â€" But be never had. When he opened the door, he found himself face to face with the inspector. RUN DOWN. MOTHERS TER, it was all explained. Mr. Grey, looking !iké another man, came into the room where I was endeavoring to soothe his starâ€" CHAPTER XXIHL 38. Similarly, other fruits stimulate the action of the n-&n.fl sf the skin. .Combined. the blood pureâ€"the body :cl healthy. . _ =â€" se is \ 3 To get this og:::. however, © one mersens hi trorane toke Srrit ter, eat a fruitâ€"and take "Fruit«» "Fruitâ€"aâ€"tive$" are tablets in which the Julces if'ï¬ln fruits, with their medicinal . value Antensified, are com» :,mod with vg:ucbl!:' lï¬ula. They act and put them in â€"perfect Mfll w« thus ensuring the thorough elimina»â€" tion of all waste matter and polisons from the body. Trial box 25¢. Reg«â€" wlar. size. 50¢.â€"6 bog‘u for â€" $2,50. Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives Limited, Ottaws.‘ **:*Iis~ is tho happiest mwoment of my existence, Helen. I feel as if I had reâ€" covered you from the brink of the grave".:. .L. _ & age ued aaugover ang Gevour 1n"Se€ew «y own joy. . Taking the sweet girl in his arms he said, with a calm ignoring of wmy presence, at which 1 secretly were doomed ever since 1 heardor thought I beard in this city, and unâ€" der no ordinary cireumstances, the peâ€" cullar cry which baunts our house on the eve of any great misfortune. 1 shall not apologize for my fears. You know that I have good env.\?ntot them, but today, only today, I ve heard from the lips of the most arrant knave 1 bave ever known that this cry sprang from him@elf with intent to deceive ‘me. He knew my weakness, knew the _"Me? Why, I hare never been so il as that." ¢ry. He was in Darlington Manor when Cecilia died and, wishing to starâ€" tle me into dropping something which I held, made use of his ventriloquial powers (he had been a mountebank once, poor wretch!) and with such efâ€" fect that I have not beena happy man since in spHe of your daily imâ€" provement and continuedâ€" promiise of recovery. But I am happy fow, reâ€" lieved and joyful, and this miserable beingâ€"would you like to bear his story? Are you strong enough for anything so tragic? He is a thief and a murderer, but he bas feelings, and his life has been a curious one &md strangefy interâ€" woven with ours. Po you care to hear about it? He i# the man who stole our diamond." My patient uttered a little ery. "Ob, tell me," she entreated, excited, but not unhealthfully, while 1 was in an anguish of curiosity I could with Aifficulty conceal. Mr. Grey turned with courtesy to me and asked it a few family details would bore me. I smiled and assured him to the contrary, at which he setâ€" tled himself in the chair be liked best and began a tale which I well permit myself to present to you complete and from other points of view than his own. Some five years before one of the great diamonds of the world was offerâ€" ed for sale in an eastern market . Mr. Grey, who stopped at no expense in the gratification of his taste in this direction, immediately sent his agent to Egypt to examine the stone. If the agent discovered it to be all that was elaimed for it and within the reach of a wealthy commoner‘s purse, he was ; to buy it Upon inspection it was found to be all that was claimed, with one exception. In the center of one of the facets was a flaw, but as this was considered to mark the diamond and rather add to than detract from its value as a traditional stone with many historical associations it was finally burchased by Mr. Grey and, placed fAfmong is treasures in his manor nouse in Kent, Never a suspicious man, he | took delight in exhibiting this acquisiâ€" tion to such of hbis friends and acâ€" quaintances as were likely to feel any interest in it, abd it was not an unâ€" common thing for him to allow it to pass from band to hand while he potâ€" tered over his other treasures and disâ€" played this and that to such as had no .eyes for the diamond. It was after ome such occasion that he found on taking the stone in Mis hand to replace it in the safe he had had built for it in one of his cabinets that it did not strike hig eye with its asual force and brilliancy, and on exâ€" araining it closely hbe discovered the absence of the telltale faw. «Btrock with dismay, he submitted it to a still more rigid inspection, when he found that what he held was not even a dinâ€" mond, but a worthless bit of glass, which had been substituted by some eunning knave for his invaluable gem, For the moment his bumiliation al most equaled his sense of loss. He had been so often warned of the danâ€" get he ran in letting so priccliess an object pass around under all eyes but his own. His wife and friends had prophesied some such loss as this not wnce, but many times, and be had at ways langhed at their fears, saying that he. know. his friends and there was not a scamp among them. But now he saw it proved that even the intuition of a man well versed io hy man pature is not always infallible, !ld.llllnedof%ll‘hn-na more ashamed yet of the donbts which this erperience called up in regard to all his friends, he shut up the faise stone with his usual care and buried his loss in his own bosom till be could sift his impressions and recall with somée degree of probability the cireum» stances under which this exchango aulfl-m‘amm i romgpniys Oe + Brog <+ 0 a medicine as well as felt as if you He could gité hith carte vikuche to umurwmumm mhrket, but little.eise. Aud while this seemed to satisfy the agent, it did not lead ‘to any smn result to bimâ€" welt, and he thoroughly madeâ€"up his mind to swallow. his loss and say nothing about it, when one day a young mu UMying in great style in an county Informed biin that in some mysterions way he had lost from hits coflection ‘of arms a unique and highly prized stiletto of Italian work mimsbip, mwwmmea‘ ventured upon n question or two whi led to his cousin‘s confiding to bim the fact that this article bad disappeared after a large supper given by him to a uumber of friends and gentliemen from London. ‘!‘bl_inkccofknowlcdr.mfl turther colnciding with his own expe rience, caused Mr, Grey to ask for s list of his guests in the hope of Anding among them one who, bad been in his °Hi$ cousin, quite unconscious or fhe motives undertying this request, hastenâ€" ed to write out this list, and together they pored over the names, em-(u‘ out such ss were absolutely above m‘ picion. . When they had reached the end of the list, but two names remain< ed uncrossed. One was that of‘a rattle pated youth who had come in t? wake of a highly reputed connection of theirs and the other that of an* Ainerican tourist who gave all the evidences of great wealth and had p: vented letters to leading men in London which had insured him attentions not usually ac corded to foreigners. This man‘s name was Fuirbrother, and the moment Mr. Grey heard it he recalled the fact that an American with a peculiar name, but with a reputation for wealth, had been among his guests ou the suspected even:vg. ou this name and begged bis cousin to look up its owner‘s antecedents und present reputation in America; but, not content ‘with this, he sent bis own agent over to New York, whither, as be soon learned, this gentleman had re turued. . The result was an apparent vindication of the lmpectegiAAmerScan He was found to be a well known cit izen of the great Wma. moving in the highest circles and with a repâ€" utation for wealth won by an extraor dinary business instinet. To be sure, be had not always enâ€" joyed these distinctions. Like many another self made man, he bad risen from a menial position in a western: mining camp to be the owner of &A fuine himself and so up through the various gradations of a successfql life to a position among the foremost busiâ€" ness men of New York.â€" In all these changes be had maintained a name for bonest if not generous dealing. He lived in great style, had married and was known to have but one extravaâ€" gant fancy. This was for the unique ahd curious in art, a taste which, if reâ€" port spoke true, cost him many thouâ€" sands cach year. ; ‘IWaling the effect produced upon Lim 1y this discovery, be placed his fl_ngen ‘This fast was the on‘y clause in the report which pointed in any way toâ€" ward this man being the possible abâ€" stractor of the Great Mogul, as Mr. Grey‘s famous diamond was called,.and the latter was too just a man and too much of a fapcier in this line himscif to let a fact of this kind weigh against the favorable nature of the rest. So ho recalled his agent, dowble locked ht cabinéts and continued to confine bi display of valuables to articles whic‘ did not suggest jewels. . Thus . thre years passed, when one day he hearn mention made of a wonderful diameus which bad been seen in New York From its description be gathered that it must be the one surreptitiously abâ€" stracted from his cabinet, and when, after some enreful inquiries, he learned that the mame of its possessor was Fairbrother, he ami:dlo his old susâ€" piclons and determffied to probe this matter to the bottoimiâ€"but secretly. He still bad too much consideration to attack a man in high position without full proof. Knowin#; of no one he could trust Wwith so delicate an inquiry &s this had now become, he decided to undertake it himself," and for this purpose emâ€" bruced the first opportunity to cross the water. He took his daughter with him because he had resoived never to let his one remaining child out of his sight.. But she knew nothing of his plans or reason for travel. }Joamdfl. Indeed, only his lawyer and the polics were aware of the loss of his diamond. His first surprise on landing was i¢ learn that Mr. Iairbrother, of whose marriage be had beard, bad quarreled wtth bis wife and that in the sese= Rheumatism Bc is frran cbsnit ns ghten ts %@E&&E%&'& this deplorable disonse. .. _ __ _ . .. .20 _, dey ble teript nev thet lnst infrofient. 1 muecesstanly_tren tod many pinegna) onl inorint narioies Til -u{,;'-'-‘d u%m’:i‘i"m?-i lnst, it unt. tormly cures all of this herctofare much dreaded disense. sandâ€"like smm wastns, found in Rhewreatic o pase away «mder the action of this remvody s frooly as does sogar when added to pure witor. ioi i + en Pures tion â€"which had occurred, the diamond had fallen to her share andâ€" was con seqdently in her possession at the pres ent moment. Grey‘s only; thought now was to surâ€" ptise her â€"with the diamond on her perâ€" son and by one glance Agsure bimselt that it was indeed the Great Mogul. Eince: Mts,â€" Fairbrotber was_reported to be a beantiful woman and a great society belle, he saw no reawon why he should not meet her pub!liiy, and that very soon. 1e therefore accepted invitations aud attended Theaters and balis,: though his daugbter â€"bad sufe fered fromâ€" ber voyage and wasâ€" not able to accompany ‘him.~ But alast ‘He soon . learned that Mrs.. Fairbrother , â€" was never seou with her diawond and, | one‘ everiing â€"after an . iutreduction â€"at | / the opera, that sbe never talkeâ€"about | ~ it ‘So there be was, baiked on the |â€" very threshold of his enterprise, and. | recognizing the fact, was preparing to take his now seriously allingâ€"daughter | â€" south, ~wheu be received an Invitation | t) a ball of such a select character that he decided to remain for it, in the | hope that Mrs. Fairbrother would be tempted to put on all her splendor for so maguificent a function and thus gratify him with a sightâ€"of his own diamond. During the days that interâ€" vened he saw her several times and. very soon decided that, 4u spite of her reticence in regard to this gem, she was not sufficiently in her husband‘s confidence to know the secret of its real ownership. This encouraged him to attempt piquing ber luto wearing the dinmond on this occasion. . He taiked of precions stones and fimally of. his own, declari e had a conpoisseur‘s eye foR a fine Mamond. but had seen none as‘wet in America to compete with a specimen or two he had in his own cabinets. flor eyes fashed at this and. though she said nothing, he felt sure that her proesence _at Mr. Ramsdell‘s house wouk| !». enâ€" Uivéened by her great.Jewel. â€" .. _ _ Bo much for MYF" Grey‘s ato,zde in this matter up to the night of the ball. It is interesting enough, but that of Abner Fairbrother is more interesting still and much more serious. His was, indeed, the hand which had abstracted the diamond from Mr. Grey‘s colléction. Under ordinary conâ€" ditions he was an bonest man. Te prized his good name and would not willingly risk it, but he had little teal éonsclence, and once his passions were aroused nothing short of the object desired would content him. ‘At once forceful and subtle, be bad at his comâ€" mand infnite resources which his wan dering.and eventful life had beightâ€" ened almost to the point ‘of genius. He saw this stone and at once felt an Inordinate desire to possess it. He had covéted other men‘s treasures beâ€" fore, but not as he coveted this. What bhad been longing in other cases was mania in this.~ There was a woman in America whom he loved. She was beautiful, and she was splendor loving. To scee herâ€"with this glory on ber breast would be worth almost any risk which his mngl;:’uon could picture at the moment. ore the diamond had teft his band he bad made up his mind | to have it for his own. He knew that it could mot be bought, so he set about obtaining it by an act he did not hesiâ€" tate to acknowledgo to himself as crimâ€" Inal. But he did not act without precau tion. ~Having a keen eye amd a proper senmse of size and color, be carried | away from his first view of it a true image of the stone, and when he was | next admitted to Mr. Grey‘s cabinet | room be bad provided the means for | deceiving the owner, whose character he had sounded. He might have failed in his daring attempt if he bad not been favored by a circumstance no one could have foreâ€" seen. â€"A daughter of the house, Cecilia by name, lay critically il! at the time, and \r. Grey‘s attention was more or less distracted. Still the probabilities are that be would havre noticed someâ€" thing amiss with the stone when he eame to restore it to its place if just as be took it in his hand there had not rigen im the air outside a wein‘t and walling ¢ry which at once seized upon the immagiuation of the dozen gentle men present, and so nearly prostrated their host that he thrust the box be held unopened into the safe and fell upon his krees, a totally unnerved him, erying: ‘The banshee! ‘The bansheo! My dangbter will diet" {rankls â€" fâ€" Another hand than his lacked the safe and «dropped the key into the dis tracted father‘s pocket. But be was soon the worse from jealousy of the wife which his new possession had possibly won for him. She had answered all his expectations ns mistress of his home and the expoâ€" nent of his wealth, and for a yearâ€"â€" nay, for twoâ€"he had been perfoctly happy.. Indeed, he had Leew more than that. Ife bad been trinmpbant, espoeciaily on that memorable erening when, after a cautious delay of monaths, he had dared to pin that unapproachâ€" able sparkler to hor breast and prosent her thus bodecked to the amart set her whom hbis talents, and especially his far reaching business talents, had made his owin. â€" . Recalling th« ola days of harter and sole actoss the pine counter in Coloâ€" rado, ho felt that his star rode high and for a t!me. w with his wito‘s ol prost! ze is not all, « c din dozens at her feet, any of whom whg more agreeable to her than charâ€" owu busband, and, though he could not prt his finger on any definite {ault, he £oob wearlied of a beauty that only glowed for others and madeâ€"up his mind . to ‘u.mmwummi'o-mnt% for what his own good sense told bim would never be his; . ~‘¥et,: being naturally â€" generous, ‘he was satisfied with a nmthu. and, m:c it Impossible to of hber as than extravagantly fed. waited on and clothed, he allowed her a good share of his fortune with the one proâ€" viso, that she should mot disgr@ce him. But the diamond she stole, or rather carried off in her naturally big> handed manner with the rest of her Jewels: He had never given it to her. She know the value be set on it, but not how he came by it, and would hare wor it quite freely if he bad not very soon given her to understand that the pleasure of doing so ceased when she left bis house, .As. che could sot be seen "WICH 1¢"Wwithout occasion‘ng pubâ€" lie renfark, she was forced, though much against. her will, to ‘heed bis wishes and enjoy its brilliancy in pri. vate; But once, when he was out of town, she dared to appear with this fortune on ber breast and agaia while on a visit west, and her busbavd heard of it. Stove Polish. Mr. Fairbrother bad bad the jewel! set to suit him, not in Florence, as Searsâ€"bad said, but by a skillful workâ€" man he had picked np in great poverty in a remote corner of New York city. Always in dread of some complication, he had provided himseif with a second facsimile in paste, this time of an as tonishing brightness, and this facsimile he had had set precisely like the true "The banshee! The banshee! My dough tor will die1" stone. Then he gave the workman $1,000 and sent him back to Switzerâ€" land. This fmitation in paste he showed nobody, but he kept it always in his pocket. Why, be bardly knew. Meanâ€" time, he had one confidant, not of his crime, but of his sentiments toward his wife, and the determination be had seâ€" cretly made to proceed to extremities If she continued to disobey him. Proof gl Inexhaustible that Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Verubb 00:&:!-4 cures female iis and cm women safely through the Oli?n.o of Life, c A rs. Letitin BN':] annifton, Ont., writes to Mrs. Pinkham ; "I was sick for five years, One docâ€" tor told me it was ulccration, and anâ€" other told me it was a fibroid tumor, and advised an operation, No one knows what 1 sdffered, and the bearâ€" ing down pains were terrible, 2o2 "It has cured meâ€"of aH my troubles, and I did not have to have the operaâ€" tion after all. The Compound also helped me to pass a«\fe“; through Change of Life." 'QCTQ' FOR SICK WOMEN. ‘ot thirty yoars Lydia E. Pink: _ "* I wrote to my sister about it and she l‘;lvinflum to take I.lydiu E. Pinkham‘s table Mrmm( k '“"0. Las Atza ) ma Af all me iwanhlar: For thirty years Lydia E. Pink:â€" ham‘s Vegetable (hmrwnu.l, made from roots and hertb«, has been the standard remody for female ills and has positively onred thousands of women who hava heen troubled with displacements, in f! \-.mnmou,“uloem- tion, Abroid taumors, Irmg: rities, Te on en focling, Thicionay, indiges. down feeling, fAatulency, indigeaâ€" â€"aown feeling, Hatuiency, if diszsipessor nervvus prost bow hot.the fire.‘ It shines _ g::ï¬gds_knhemy + 8} you cas | uy .. SN*3 for (44 sized can. xA neaiby ## s don‘t you try (To be contioucd.) w syr ©. â€"P. CLEMXNT, £ C,. ® 4\ ‘‘Harthion, . Soiicies, . Note:y, *4 deregernhs s 9t ¢ doiks, ____ Bartister, â€" Solicitor, â€" â€" Nota Oor veyaccer, etc. Office 141 Ques St. Nortb, Dertin. ‘Telephone 4%. . ";'Baflun, Siuhe-hrw etc.Office Oppositt Cour t uu-r,.w erly Peterson‘s office, Berlin, ~ _ /â€"â€"_ {Suecerser to Conrid Bitzcr.]). »" Burister, Sulicitor: Nctory Public etle. â€" Money to l an,â€" Germnan spo! Officeâ€"Pequegust‘s Block, next to uew Market, Fieccrick 8t., Berlin. {MECIOAL s DR. J. E. HETT, PHYSICIAR ___ AND sURGEON, W. R. WILKINSON, uo. s. o o 8. DENTIST, Bsce Office Open Daily. s For mutual convenience u::n.h trom a distauce are particularly ‘reâ€" quested to muke app« intments, 4 Oflice: Over Back of Hawilton, Berlig. JA ho 24 t es Deutists, Waterloo, Will visiy min ira," 2 : House, the secord Ihursday aid"Fr fourth Thureday and Fridey of ( d (ibuedéay 1 p.m Bricay I pan. CCT % U#KB forpei. less cxractivn of iccth.+ The | Waterice Uflice will ‘be clored every ‘3‘1 afte. neon. PRA WÂ¥ wW. Moc ECKEL, L. D. 8. D.D.8, Graduato: Chicago Ccllege of Dental W;ï¬ Ruyal Coli: go of Dental Surgeons of Torod Dei talUfMce above Mr, J. Uifelmann‘s â€" store Visite St, Jacobs overy Ist and. 3rd Foaay: the mouth, Destiâ€"try practwed in < ï¬ branches, ‘ ui EXPERRIENCED Vl’l‘lfllï¬â€˜?ï¬ ARY SURGFON A. HILLIARD ° en s s Shote sur ces bount 1. 0. Rent Calopp Sheenttie s dette u7 Prie e oileight @nzon‘s oc M er nox s store, _ance, between Knox'::m and Beu‘n‘lh= JOHN L, WIDEMAN beuer of Marriago J icore® Office~â€"Post Office, St. Jacobs, Ont. Specialty, Nose, Thrcay a; d Ear, SHOT. A WILD Architect Patents iclheiting to Cirtcz 61 the United States, / Biue printing at ahort notige,. Phone 494. s Office: 31 Courtland, Avenve, rear â€" Victoria Park Gaté, Borlip, Ont. PAERIETEE®, u:‘w i t WT OA L ‘ Cor. Kingerd Fcurdry ie Clement & Clement Mr. David Codtia . BCGRBES, Dentist. Uddfeliow‘s Block. . Ratai® x. c Our past record and our pres» ont ;rma uf work stampe us as the Flut practical training school of Western Ontario, We have three departments, YB, Commercial, Bhorthand, Telegraphic. f Our Fnduale- are in demand as Busipess Collego tcachers as as well as office assistance, In dividual _ instruction, _ Enter NOW, Large catalogue free, A. L. BITZER,.B A. NOW, L Write for it Chas. Knechtel .. ORAM WELLS,L.D.8 A tarXr ar ®r ar x NCye mC ME MC® _ The Great School yCeNIiar ) 4? _ . ‘(%{z’r’%@ CEEKKXXA kAXXXXA%35 Ellictt & McLachlan ETRATFORD, ONT. C.W,. WKXLLâ€"D D 8. W aterloo. »â€" Prumbo nne m0¢ K+