: 42 g Ae5 5 z_j m cue * Fhen there came a later moment _ when, like Miss Portman, whom she so "yek P to scorn, the princess she could nefther go on nor go Bhe was horribly homesick. She wanted her mother and the garden at i Hampton Court and wou‘ld hardly have % thrown a glance of interest at Leoâ€" ... pold If be had appeared before her wl .@yes. There were tears in those eyos, ... @nd she was bating the mountain and «_ «MIl Rhaetia with her whole strength %_‘ when from the mysterious distance _ around the corner of the plateau there 5'1 "‘ eame the sound of a man‘s voice cheer <*/_. Virginia‘s burden grew beavy as she % ‘~ | gnounted, though at first its weight bad C ‘*:;m-u trifing. When sbe bad waved " g ABandkerchief at the turning and mi.* > passéd out of Miss Portman‘s sight it \\ "..Gecurred to her that it would be clever â€" ... . to lighten the rucksack and satisfy her >‘ ‘appetite at the same time. 3 _ _;~ Virginia took the alpeastock which she « . had laid down and began picking ber \‘â€" . way daintily, yet pluckily, toward the M . .â€"~ col which she had named as her goal. § There was another route to it, leading [ x 0M to the highest peak of the Schneeâ€" i6 only to be dared by experienced ; but the way by which the > girf and her companion had set out . from Allcheiligeon nearly four bours ‘y:’*&u merely fatiguing, uever danâ€" F4 and Virginia knew that Miss ~_.‘~. Portman was safe and not balf as k5 much frightened as she pretended. : They bad started at 8, just as the _ . ~<Beptember sun had begun to draw the $¢*>â€"might cbill ouf of the keen mountain â€" ‘. ate, mow it was close upon 12 *»:‘*> The &- was bungry. w*~.‘ In Nordeck, the frontier town of 4 Rbaetia as you come in from Gerâ€" many, she had bought rucksacks for ‘*//__ berself and Miss Portman, to be used "C._ upon: JG8t such mountain excursions °+_ es this, and today the brown canvas bags were being tested for the first a thne. Eachk rucksack stored in ndeâ€" *;;{ quate luncheon for its bearer, while on +)/ top, seeured by straps passed across . _a7 . the shouklers, Iny a folded wrap to be <.â€"_ / used in case of rain. k There was ar io x o to the hl“ \~ "horu, only to but «> agirf and her Â¥oO. ‘from Allehell _~ _ ~â€" mgo was merd .‘_ . geroum, and | ... Portman was ;:' if n a Msht * g hour ing w â€"_ Anoth " started. t . hm t _ T " o. *My dedr, as if 1 could have susâ€" â€"| . _ geeted you would search for him! You tarn a pebble if the roor little princess toppled over its cruel shoulder and fell in & small, crushed heap without ever baving looked upon the face of the ‘!_neunq emperor. Good Health «is within reach of nearly every and woman who earnestly it Start right with What a grim, remorseless gilant the mountain was, and what a mere creepâ€" ing fiy upon its vast shoulder she! Litâ€" tle eared the old mountain that she was a royal princess and that the emâ€" peror who ruled the land of which it was part had the intention of marryâ€" ing hber. It would thwart that imâ€" perial intention without a quaim nor w With the sentiments and inâ€" 1 w"mn had expressed and hea wished herself back by that good lady‘s side, but it was against her principles to be conquered, especialâ€" Iy when being conquered meant turnâ€" ing coward or something like it, and she scrambled on obstinately, her cheeks burning, her heart thumping and her Iips pressed together. #hought. "And, anyway, 1 said haif 2 hour or so. That means almost anyâ€" ing when it comes to an argument." Another moment and the girl had started. She was braye at first, but Wwhen she had gone haifwayâ€"a way which was longer and far more dif Beult than she bad fanciedâ€"she was ponscjous pf a certain sinking of the beart. Bhe even felt some qualms of . The place could be gained only by a Scramble over a ledge of formidable Focks and climbing in good earnest here and there, yet if the thing could done at all it could be done in ten utes, and to come back would. be paratively easy. _ Virginia was ;The one difficulty was that in her present position #he could not safcly mustrap the bag from her shouiders. @pen It, take out the parce! of iuncheon and strap it on again. The way was too narrow and the rocks too slippery a.attempz such liberties. At a sho:t d , bowever, and only a little out @fwibe pall to the col she con!d see n »mall green platenu, the yvery place for m rest But could she reach it? ‘The girl stood still and looked wistfully . "If be willâ€"if it can be so. But what do Helen Mowbray and Letitia Mancbester know about the love affairs ®f emperors and princesses? Au reâ€" yoir, dear friend; I‘m going. By and by, if you bave courage to lift your eyes, you‘ll see me waving a handker A_Ie_‘l‘ fiag at the rock corper up there." &,;. &fll not to pursue, but to ‘mn ewiperor‘ who wishes to have # <ertain princess for his consort a ehance to fall in love with berself." The dear Letitia will be eating her i lunch by this time and won‘t miss if my half hour is a long one," she COPYRIGHT, 1907. BY MceCLURE, PHILLIPS t CO. Princess Virginia Authors of "Stv Lightning Conductor," "Roseâ€" mary in Search of s Fsther," Ete Je Je By C. N. and A. M. WILLIAMSON, O she had gone "on her * knees to bim after allâ€" i- or nlmost. She was glad her _ mother did not know, and she hoped that be did not feel the pulsing of the blood in her fingers ak be took her hand and lifted her to her feet. There was shame in this â€mï¬ that swept through her yeins becw he did not share it, for to her, thoug! this meeting was an epoch, to him was no more than a trivial incident. Bho would have keyed his emotions to bers if sbe could, but m. ..‘:‘ had years of preparation, # moment, perbaps sho might have been All her life had but led up to this moâ€" ment. Under the soft bat of green felt adorned with the beard of a chamoig was the face she had seen in dreams. A dark, austere young face it was, with more of Mars than Apollo in its lines, yet to her more desirable than all the Ideals of all the sculptors since the world began. Ile was dressed as a chaimnois hunter, and there was nothing in the well wormn, aimost shabby, tlothes to distinguish the wearer from the type he chose to represent, but as easily might the eagle, to which in her heart she !!ikened him, try to pass for a barnyard fow! as this man for a peasâ€" ant. So thought the princess. bad passed. It geemed so inevitable now that he must have saved ber that | there was room in her €houghts for no dreadful might have been. Was it not the one man sent to her by destiny, when if this thing had not been meant since the hour of ber birth it might ensily have been some mere tourist sent by Cook? After all, it had been a narrow es cape, but the man‘s arms were so strong and his eyes so brave that Virâ€" ginia scarcely realized the danger she . o onnents cold doik : bave rolled over the narrow ledge on which he stood and gone bounding down, down the mountain side to her death, but he did catch her and broke the fall, so that she landed lightly beâ€" side him and within an ace of being on her knees. If the man had notâ€"sï¬rnn§7;r;r:l'â€"'d, and caught her she would probably $ e ts I P sIT i Slid down the stceply sloping rock, a song of triumph, and, losing her head n little, sbhe lost her scant foothold as well, slipped, tried to hold on, failed and slid down the steeply sloping rock, He had run across the plateau. Now the nailed boots were ringing on rock. Sbe could gaze down upon his head, be was so close to her. He was lookâ€" Ing up. What a noble frce it wasâ€" better than all the pictures! And the eyesâ€"â€" Virginia was suddenly and wildly happy. She could have sung for Joy, boots; thank heaven, no tourist, but evidently a mountain man, a guide or a chamois hunter perhapgâ€"at all events, one capable of coming to her rescue. ‘These things she saw and thought in a fash, and then the brown hand that had shaded his eyes dropped. She caught sight of his face. It was the emperor. A moment ago she had felt that she could look at him with indifference and would a thousand times over preâ€" fer a glimpse of the dear old house at Hampton Court, with an easy way to reach it, but now everything was changed. ‘There was no longer any danger, He was there. He was comâ€" Ing to help her. A power higher than his had arranged this as their first enâ€" counter and would not have taken the trouble to bring him to her here if the meeting were to end in ignominy or disaster. THE man appeared round a corner of rock beyond the green plateau. The sun shone in his eyes, and he shaded them with his band to look up at her. Virâ€" ginia stured hopefully, expectantly, A glance photographed a tall figure in a gray coat passemoiled with green, a soft green cap of felt, short trousers, bare knees, kunitted stockings, nalled Tuly yÂ¥u0hig. Never had a sound been so welcome or seemed so sweet. It was to Virâ€" ginia as the voice of an angel. "Help," she calledâ€""help!" first in English and then, on second thought, in Rhaetian. The yodeling abruptly stopped, aud a old wit verent "ha ar $tas ~angy ! "I am not sure if it lives here. 1 Zhould like to And out," repiled the giri. "Might one inquire the name o( this Prare thing?" asked the chamais hantor. *Porhaps If 1 knew it might torn out that 1 could help you in the search, ‘"I‘m nelther, yet I think I have seen something, a most rare thing, I‘vé wanted all my life to see." The young man‘s face confessed curt osity. ‘"Indeed! A rare thing that lMves here on the mountain?" . _ "I have brought down noble game today," he said to himself, and aloud: ‘"‘I know the Schneehorn well and love it well. Still I can‘t see what rewards it has for the explorerâ€"unless, gna‘ frauiein, you are a climber or a geolo« deed, this particular chamois hbunter | expected no more than good looks, a ‘ good heart and & nice manper from | women. Yet this beauty bade fair, it | seemed, to hold surprises in reserye. . | i Bhe had been glad before, now she was thankfu), that she ha@ #pent many | weeks and months in loving study of _ the tongue which was Leopold‘s. It ; was not the metiler of a chamois huntâ€" _ er to speak English, though the emâ€" ! peror‘ was said to know the language i well, and she rejoiced in her ability to answer the chamois hunter as he lwould be answered, keeping up the play. | _"I am hurt only in the pride that comes before a fail," she replied, forcâ€" Ing a laugh. "Thank you many times ,‘ for saving me." , "I feared that I frightened you and made you lose your footing," the chamâ€" ols hunter answered. ! _ "I think, on the contrary, if it badn‘t been for you I should have Jost my life," said Virginia. "There should be \a sign put up on that tempting plaâ€" \teau, ‘All Excent Sninides Rawars +# Bo beautiful l';n"lï¬t'l this need not rise beyond agreeable commonpiaces of mind and #speech to please a man. Inâ€" He lifted level, dark eyebrows, smilâ€" Ing faintly, and when be smfled half his austerity was gone. him to know. Therd, let come what would out of this adventure, at worst she should always have an Olymplan episode to remem ber. "Until I came?" she caught up his words, standing carefully on the spot where he had placed her. "But I am no tourist. I am an explorer." ul T c e e teau, ‘All Except Suicides Beware.‘" "The necessity never occurred to ul, my mates and me," returned the m#n in the gray coat passemoiled With green. ‘"Until you came, gna‘ fratlein, no tourist that I know of has foubd Jt tempting." Virginia‘s eyes lt with a udden spark. The spirit monitorâ€"that matchâ€" making monitorâ€"came back and dared her to m frollc, suck a frolic, she thought, as no girl on earth had ever had or would have after her. And she could show this grave soldierâ€"hero of hers something new in urHumethln( q::ltn newâ€"which it would not harm gt Oe m es is T P L | A spirit monitorâ€"a matchmaking ; monitorâ€"whispered these wise advices | in her ear, yet she was powerless to ; profit by thera. Like a schoolgirl about to be examined for a scholarship, knowâ€" | ing that all the future might depend , upon an hour of the present, the dire | need to be resourceful, to be brilliant, left her dumb, How many times had she not thought of her first conversation with Leopold PPE PS td 1 11 1 ‘"I hope you‘re not hurt?‘ asied the chamois hunter in the patols dear to the beart ot_ mxaet!ug mountiin folk, io dn t Oe of Rhactia, planning the first words, the first looks, which must make him know that she was different from any other girl he had ever met! Â¥Yet bere she stood, speechless, epigrams turning tail and racing away from her like a troop of playful eolts refusing to be caught, â€" And so it was the emperor who spoke before Virginia‘s savoir faire came Now, what were to be her first words to him? Dimiy she felt that if she were to profit by this wonderful chance to know the man and not the emperor â€"this chance which might be lost in a few moments unless her wit befriendâ€" ed herâ€"those words should be beyond the common. She should be able to marshal her sentences as a general marshals his battalions, with a plan of campaign for each. desses today?" _ * first, if you‘d let me lead you to other. A good treatment of "Fruitâ€"aâ€" tives" cured me of these pains and banished the Sciatica and Lumbago so that toâ€"day I amt as well as ever and can lift anything necessary." _ W. 8. BOND, Ese (Signed) W. S. BOND } "You must pardon my going first." : maid the man with the bare brows llne«t. "The way is too narrow for politeness." "Yet I wish that the peasants at bome had such courtoous manners a« yours," Virginia patronfzed him pret tily. "You ithaetinns need not go > court, 1 seo, for lessona in behavior." ‘ "The mountains teach us someiing may be." *Bomething of their greatness, whicl we should all do well to tearn . !}ut bure you never Hired in a town?" "Baedeker doesn‘t mention the exâ€" Istence of brigands in these dnys among the Rhaetian Aips," repifed Virginia, with quaint dryness. "Tve always found bim trustworthy. Be sides, I‘ve great faith in the chivairy of Rhaetian men, and if you knew how hungry I am you wouidn‘t keep me walting for talk of brigands. Brend and butter are far more to the point." "Even serrch for the rare edelmano may walt?" ‘‘Yes; the edelmann may waltâ€"on me." The last two words she dired but to whisper. The eyes of the hunterâ€"dark, bril Mant and keen ns the eagle‘s to which she compared himâ€"plerced hers. "Yor bave no fear?" be asked. "You are ® young:girl, alove, save for me, in a desolate place. For all you know, my mates and I may be a band of brig The princess stalled, fmprisoning each new thought of mischief which Bew Into her mind like a trapped bird. "I‘ve beard you‘re rich in bospitality," sbhe said. _ "I‘ll go with you to your hut, for it will be a chance to prove the saying." _ "I and some friends of mine have a â€"a sort of but round the corner from this plateau and a short distance on," announced the chamois hunter, with a gesture that gave the direction. "No woman has ever been our guest, but I invite you to visit it and lunch there, or, if you prefer, remain here and in a few minutes I will briog such food as we can offer, At best it‘s not much to boast of. We chamofs hunters are poor men, living roughly," "If you please, then I, too, shall be pleased," she said. Guiltily she reâ€" membered Miss Portman, but the dear Letitia could not be considered now. If she were alarmed, she should be well consoled Jater. â€" Ahere is more, much more bread and bacon, where this came from," he replied. ,"Will you be graciously pleased to accept something of our The chamois hunter looked surprised, though not displeased; but, then, this was his first experience of a feminine explorer, and he quickly rose to the ocâ€" casion. "Ob, many people have told me. Cats may Jook at kings, and the most insignificant persons may talk of emâ€" perors. I‘ve heard many things of yours." "Good things or bad?" *"No doubt such things as be truly deserves, Now, can you guess which? iBut perhaps I would tell you without your guessing if 1 were not so very, very hungry.‘" \She glanced at the pocket of his co@t from which proâ€" truded a generous hunch of black bread and ham, throst in probably at the instant when she had called for help. ‘"I ean‘t help seetng that you have your luncheon with you. Do you want it all"â€"she carefully ignored the contents of ber rucksack, which she could not well have forgottenâ€""or would you share it?" "Who told you that, gua‘ frauicin?" He gave ber a sharp glance, but ber gray eyes looked innocent of guile and were therefore at their most dangerâ€" ous. ""You, a chamois hbunter, say that?‘ "But I‘m a man. You are a woman, and women should keep to beaten paths and safety." The princess laughed. "I shouldn‘t wonder," said she, "if that‘s a Rhacâ€" tian theoty, a Rhaetfan man‘s theory. I‘ve heard your emperor holds it." mmltbouo!ntheuhkh;m. tudes, and the rare thing 1 speak of is & plant that grows in high places. â€" It ummhmmyum | mountains, though I have never heard Oof any one who has been able to track It down." l *Is it our pink Rhaetian edelwelss, ff which we are so proud? Because if it. bmrouwmtrunmlknowex- mctly where to take you to find it. With my belp you eould climb there from here in a few moments." "Perhaps, g:na' franlein, you don‘t realize to the full the danger you did run. No chance was worth it, believe "Bome chamois hunter, like yourself, had dropped it perbaps, not knowing what Its value was. It‘s a great deal to have bad one gllinpseâ€"worth runâ€" ning into danger for." "You have alrc-ady‘lie-e'l.; it on the mountain, but not growing‘?" 2°°° °CC T700 IRGOCG to say 8o, w&.dal'tbvwhow!una- served compliment." .. . "Did it sound like a compliment? "Thank you." 'Bltmhnnotuldl!lmmt belp you in your search This is a wild region for a young lady to be exploring in alone." "I feel sure," responded the princess M..::u if you really would you could me as well as one in Rhaetia," uny 4 fiink not,." Virginig answered. shaking her head. "It wouid thrive better pearer the mouantain top in a :‘Nfl.mwnthh. It does love tourists." "Nor do I, in truth," smiled the chamois bunter. "You took me for one." _ "Pardon, gna‘ frauleinâ€"not the kind about the green plateaun with a new toâ€" welf ‘g the act a kind of alleâ€" m.’fszu?uh:nuum “::-um--m.-. ?'*-buuflumm- the chamois hunter went on, looking workt now. ‘The rest is onny." , _ * B82 ghte hite ber RAKE phecetog hor. v â€"4na* frauiein, on e passed all the CEASED PUBLICATICN, The Ingersoll Weekly Sun _ cstabâ€" lished in _ T881, has ccased publicaâ€" tion. For the last year it has been printed at Woodstock. "My mates are away for the time, though they may come back by and by," the man explained, holding the heavy omken door that she might pass Into the room within, and, though she was not invited to further exploration, she was able to see by the several doorways ceut in the rock walls that this was not the sole accommodation tlre strange bouse could boast. a habitation such as this must bave cost more than most Rhaetlan chamois hunters would save in many a year. But ber wisdom also counseled her to express no further surprise after her first exclamation. Even bhad Virginia been ignoraut of her host‘s identity she would bave been wise enough to guess that here was no semmbutte, or ordinary abode of common peasants who hunt the chamâ€" ols for a precarious livelihood. The work of hewing out in the solld rock A doorway and large square openings for windows had been cut in the red veined, purplish brown porphyry, while a heavy slab of oak and wooden frames filled full of glittering bottle glass proâ€" tected such rooms as might have Lbyca boliowed out within from storm or cold. of an unexpected and striking descripâ€" tion. Instead of the humble erection of stomes and wood which she had counted on, the rocky side of the mountain itself had been coaxed to give her sons a shelter. @iplomatic response the tall figure swung round a corner formed by a bowider of rock, and Virginia gave a little cry of surprise. The hut of which the chamois hunter had spoken was revealed by the turn, and it was Why Green Flour When You Can Get Five Roses Tea grown at an e where soil and clim; When your friends are seated round the table, comes the discovery, the very embarrassing crestfallen rpologies, FIVE ROSES, Madam, is milled right from perfect materials in a sanitary plant cleaner than your own kitchen, / that be possible, 1t is packed right and atored awhlc'!n our own storeâ€" houses, until expert examiâ€" Royal Household Flour |: When a flour is improperty milled or mil‘ed from cheap, offâ€"grade wheat, it has lost its Aeeping qualities betore it ever had them. 1t can only get worse with age. Your dough cannot rise â€"shows pror graining in the Toaf with a crumbling crumb and sickly crust. Your est pastry efforts are rewarded wit> corresponding pastry evils. Allac end of a cenlu?l or more, & cigar box would hardly become a Stradivarius. Age is a wonderful improverâ€"in certain things, and flour is one of these. Practically alf cheap flours are green " flours. Up till five or six months after milling, good flour will go on imâ€" proving sfeadily in quality and dryness, developing many admirable traits which it would not otherwise possess.â€"For instance, clearer color, smociher «* feel,"" increased absorption, and so on. It is in obedience to this same principle that good wine gets better, and a mere "fiddle " develops Into a valuable violin. titmustb« goodin the beginning the end of a century or more. a (To be continued.) _b‘CVn at an elevation of 5,000 feet and rdz re soil and climate combine to ful fragrance and delicious favor ".’); .W more economical to use Its purity and ‘tuaï¬h make i g'â€"mâ€" Ogilvie Flaor Mills Coa., Limited, Montreal. Royal I not vary i disappoint. â€"It is made from selected hard wheat, milled by a most modern process which guaranters absolute purity. â€"a flour that you can depend upon to produce light, crisp and wholesome bread or pastry? Is it economy, then, to use & flour of uncertain quality when a few cents more will buy ID YOU EVER. FIGURE THE COST of a single day‘s baking â€" the material, fuel, time and Jaborâ€"and consider that it is all wasted if the baking is a failure? more of those light, toolhsome‘. flaky loaves and rolls which tickle the Anowing palate and fill a vacant place most pleasantly. Those extra loaves pay more than the difference in first cost. Since you want a flour fully matured and seasoned, that cannot spot! or sour on your hands or misbehave in any way, that does not acquire the ‘‘worm habit.‘ butimproves with age. I! you want Mis flour, Madam, you will imsist on FIVE RJSES from your grocer, drier absorbs more water FIVE ROSES ts never * green," never weak, nor * dead,"" nor acid. FIVRE ROSES is drier, and being e on i ® T ners declare it aged to proper dryâ€" ness, without a trace of acidity. Marvels of cleanliness and care are these storehouses of ours. To visit them would f‘ltdden the heart of the most /inicky housekesper. ‘Twould astonish you, Madam, really. OTTAWA.â€" The total immijgration ittto Canada for October w} 17,301, as compated with 9,089 in October of last year; _ 8,032 atrived at ocean ports, an increase of 78 per cent., «nd 9,269 from the United _ States; an increase of 102 per cent. as comâ€" pared with the same month of Jast year. _ The total immigration _ for seven months, April to October _ im clusive was 138,334, _ as compared with 109,566 fot the same months of last year; an increase of 26 per cent: ‘ Schr. "Stroker," St ouraska. I would not startâ€"on a voyage with out it, if it cost a dollar *a bot‘He Minard‘s Liniment (Co., Limited. Gontlemenâ€"1 _ lave vsed MINâ€" ARD‘S LINIMENT on my vessel and in my family for years, anc for _ the every day ills and accidents of liie 1 consider it his nmo equal. down a few hills on the â€" Guelph Road. _ Messrs. Grob, Ochs and Sutâ€" ton are operating wheeled scrapers and rivnoving the carth from the top of the hill and placing it in the bolâ€" lows. This expenditure is _ leing masje under the county good _ roads byâ€"law, by â€" which the Government rifunds oneâ€"third of the money exâ€" pended. The Waterloo Township Council is expenling the sum of $500 in cutting CUTTING DOWN THE HILLS Hcusehold Flour does in quality â€" does not OCTOBER IMMIGRATION CAPT. F. R. DE produclni RJARDIN, Andr: Kam 17 § Winter Torm from Jan.3 § ,/*~ y(ENiF#azzâ€">+, 72 A. HILLIARD ‘ J Dentish T. N @, PRoyal Dental Jurgeor s, 1).D.8, Toronte Uï¬% All branches of denmsiry practised. IVUiMce in Janzen‘a Block Berlin, over Knox s store, *. £/nee between Knox‘sstore and Bender‘s \ store : OHN 1. WIDEMAN :é J Issuor of Marriage Ticonses ® Offlcs â€"Post Office, St, Jacobs. Ont. ‘ 3'.“"'3"’“-“0!&-0... Neterinary . Oofefu.""8tt :i?.wn":.:"."‘ofl_"fls!« ce and residence, EXPERIENCED VETERIN. ARY SURGEON cce CKEL, . 8. D. D. 78=4 N. ichieate Uolleat o noak e ontvntd ~ Royal College of Dental Burgeons of Toronte '.",;;‘ Dental Office above Mr, J. Uffelmann‘s . store roy Yisits St, Jacobs every 1st and 3rd Friday uf “é tl;Im g':::lh. Dentistry practiced in alt the â€" ~. .. ran (Saccessor to Conrad Bitem.) Barrister, Solicitor N. emt,c. ‘3“" to Joak, ohq‘ Officeâ€" u ‘s o 00ote EnQuegnate : blotmue vv s 2 20000 b.l}.flé.w. wE b D.".g Dentiste, Waterloo, A ow WiIl visit Klmira. Zilliax F the p ds P ecaies cpprantes an ay each mou 4 e to Friday 1 p.mo.) ODONTUNDER g%t).mcdon of teoth. Houra 9 to 5; l%nn Pte ,_ Barrister, Solicitor, eonvw Patents soliciting for Canada and he United States, Biue printing at short notloe. Phone 494. j Office: 31 Courtland Aveune, near Victoria Park Gate, S Berlin, Ont. { Lo dexet P AEmmaee COonveyancer, etc. Office 14 St. North, Ber‘in ‘Telephone Specialtyâ€"â€" Diseases of the EKar, Nose and Throat. King St. East. dnb nses yon WX Réapaw‘e. _ _ _ * +orrrero t o ro + +0 +o. gund Chas. Knechtel . HUGBRES. Dentist. u. WELL3, LD.3 A. L. BITZER. B."A. _ DR. J. E. HEDT, Architect ORAM Berlin,