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The Chronicle Telegraph (190101), 3 Feb 1910, p. 13

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e _ _ Apply Salvia Once a Da WeakWomen shou!« heed such warnings as headâ€" ache, nervousness, backache, deâ€" ssion and weariness and fortify K: system with the aid of *The empire of your heart‘" ghe echood. "If that Were mine I should be richer than with all the treasures of the earth. If you were Leo, the echamois buuter, I would love you as I love you now, because in yourself you are the oue man for me, and I‘d go with you to the end of the world as your wife. But you‘re not the chamols buater; yon are the man 1. love, yet you are the emperor. Being the emâ€" peror, bad you tai‘\il of a hopeless love and a promje not to forget, havâ€" ing nothliig else :> give me because of your high dosticy and my bhumbler ane, E eould still tave been bappy. Yet vair spesh cf more than that You eacch n‘ sonesliius i can‘t understand It seems to me that what a royal man offers the woman he loves should be all or nothing." The step which in a moment of pasâ€" | sion be had now resolved to take wou‘ld t create dissension among his people, alienste one who bad been his second father, rouse England, America and Germany to anger because of the prinâ€" cess whose name rumor had already coupled with his and raise in every diâ€"~ rection a storm of disapproval. When | this girl whom he loved realized the immeusity of the concession he was making because of his reverent love for her sbe would give her life to him now and forever. It is not you can buy a preparaâ€" tion 'hmh a “‘a‘n‘m mitached to it ux:u every boltle of Salvia, Hailr Tonic. : If your halr is falling out or has lost . its "I do offer you all," said Leopold, "all myself, my life, the beart and soul of meâ€"all that‘s my own to give. The restâ€"belougs to Rhaetia." ‘"‘Then whatâ€"do you mean by"â€" "Dou‘t you un‘yrstand, my sweet, that I‘ve asked you to be my wife? What can a man ask more of a womâ€" an ?" A He tried to take her once more in bis arms, but when he saw that she would not bhave it so he held his love fu check and waited. He was sure that he would not need to wait long, for not only had he laid his love at ber feet, but had pledged bimself to a treâ€" mendous sacrifice on love‘s altar. Tenderly he took her hand and lifted it to his lips. Then when she did not draw it away, because he was to have his chance of explanation, be beld it between both his own as be talked on. ‘"Dearest one," he said, "when J first knew I loved youâ€"loved you as I didn‘t dreom I could love a womanâ€" for your sake and my own, I would have‘avoided meeting you too often. This I tell you frankly. I didn‘t see how in honor such a love could end exâ€" cept in despair for me and sorrow even for you if you should come to care. Had you and Lady Mowbray stayed on at the hotel in Kronburg I think I could have held to my resolve. But when Baroness von Lyndal suggested your coming bere my heart leaped up. I said in my imind: ‘At least I shail bave the joy of secing her every day for a time without doing anything to darken her future. ~Afterward, when she hbas gone out of my life, I shall have that radiance to remember. And so no harm will be done in the end, except that 1 shall bave to pay by sufâ€" fering.‘ Still I bud no thought of the future without a parting. 1 felt that inâ€" evitable. And the suffering came hand in band with the joy, for not a night here at Lyndaliberg have I slept. If I had ) *fin wenk I should have groaned aloud in the agony of renunciation. "My rooms open on a lawn. More than once I‘ve come out into the darkâ€" ness when all the housebold was sleepâ€" Ing.© Sometimes I have walked to this "Your wife, but éot the empress. How can the two be apart?" very spot where yon and I stand now â€"heart to beart for the first time, my darlingâ€"asking myself whether there "Never 1" she exclaimed, In Boxes 25 cents gee your injfustice?" "In no way. ‘There‘s nothing more to be said between us two after this except goodby." "It shall not be goodby." "It must. I wish it." He had caught her dress as she turnâ€" ed to go, but now he released her. "You wish it? It‘s not true that you love me, then?" "It was true. . Everythingâ€"everyâ€" thing in my whole lifeâ€"is changed from this bour. It would be better If TA never seen you, Goodby." the moonlit path. One A step he took as if to follow and keep her, but checked himself f and let her go. Only his eyes went with hber, and in them there was more of pain than anger, though never before in all his life perâ€" haps had he been thwarted in any strong desire. Passion urged bim forâ€" ward, but pride held him back, for Leopold was a pronud man, and to have his love thrown in his face was to reâ€" cefve an icy douche with the blood at fever heat. ° For this girl‘s sake be had in a fcw UGays chafiged the habits of a lifetime. "So you may believe now. But the knowledge that you could change would be death to meâ€"a death to die daily, Yes, I tell you again, it was an insult to offer a lot so misérable, so coutemptible, to a woman you profess to love. How could you do it? IC only you had never spoken the hbateful wordsâ€"if ounly you had left me the Ideal I had of youâ€"noble, glorious, above the whole world of men! But, after all, you are selfish, cruel. If you had said, ‘I love you, yet we must part, for duty stands between us‘ I couldâ€" But, no; I can never tell you now what I could have answered if you had said that instead of breaking my heart." Under the fire of her reproach he stood still, his lips tight, his shoulders braced, as if he held his breast open for the knife. "By heaven, it is you who are cruel!" he said at last. "How can I make you "Xour wife, you call it!" The prinâ€" cess gave a harsh little laugh which burt as tears could not burt. "You seem to have strange ideas of that word, which has always been sacred to me. A morganatic marriage! That is a mere pretense, a bypocrisy. 1 would be ‘your wife,‘ you say. I would give you all my love, all my life. You in return would give meâ€"your left hand. And you know well that in a €eountry which tolerates such a one sided travesty of marriage the laws would hold you free to marry another womanâ€"a royal woman, whom you €ould make an empressâ€"as free as if I had no existence." "Great heaven, that you should speak so!" he broke out "What if the law did hold me free? Can you dreamâ€"do you put me so low as to dreamâ€"that my heart would hold me free? My soul would be bound to you forever." baun 0t y9u aon t ie will e * is a for the hair. Price and $1.00 a bottle at all Drug P s â€" _ a»t "I tell you that you cannot underâ€" stand or you wouldn‘t sayâ€"you wouldn‘t dare to say, my loveâ€"that I‘d tnsulted you. Don‘t you see, don‘t you know, that you would be my wife in the sight of all men as well as in the sight of God." ought to have seen its triumphant comâ€" pletion. f & f "I‘m coming to that now, It was best that you should know first all that‘s been troubling my hbeart and brain during these few bittersweet days which have taught me so much, You know men who have their place at the head of great nations can‘t think first of themselves or even of those they love better than themselves, If they hope to snatch at personal happiâ€" ness they must take the one way open to them and be thankful. ‘"Don‘t do me the horrible injustice to believe that I wouldn‘t be proud to show you to my subjects as their emâ€" With a cry of painâ€"the cruel pain of wounded, disappointed loveâ€"the prinâ€" cess tore her hand from his. "‘Never!‘ she exclaimed. "It‘s an in« sult." "An insult? No, a thousand times no. I see that even now you don‘t underâ€" stand." "I think that I understand very well, too well," said Virginia brokenly. The beautiful fairy palace of happiness that tered, destroyed, in the moment which were any way out 6f labyrinth 1f was not until I brought you here and saw you by my side, with the moon rays for a crown, that a fiash of blindâ€" ing light seemed to pierce the clouds. Buddenly I saw all things clearly, and, press, but instead I can offer only what men of royal blood for hundreds of years have offered to women whom they honored as well as loved. You must have beard even in England of what is called a morganatic marriage. It is that T offer you." she had watched as it grew lay shatâ€" count them as overcome." â€" “sunmmm'tmmwuuf tion," said Virginia in a lJow, strained voice. HE ran from him alonk Besides, he had loved the girl so pasâ€" sionately that it seemed she could not remain cold. And be boped still that when she had passed a long night in reflection, in thinking over the situaâ€" tion, perhaps taking counsel with that comparatively commonplace yet pracâ€" tical little lady, her mother, she might be ready to change her mind. For the first few moments after the stinging rebuff he had endured Leoâ€" pold felt that if she did it would be her turn to suffer, for be could never humâ€" bie himself to implore for the second time. But as he stood in the soft stillâ€" ness of the night, gazing toward the lights of the house, thoughts of Virâ€" giniaâ€"her youth, her #weetness, her beauty dimmed with griefâ€"overwhelmâ€" ed him. Could he have reached ber he would have fallen on his knees and kissed her gown. By and by a vast tenderness breathâ€" ed its calm over the thwarted passion in his breast, and plans to win her back came whispering in his ear. He would write a letter and send it to her room. But, no; perbhaps it would be But now the will which had borne him through life in a triumphal march had been powerless against that of this young girl. She would have none of him. A woman whose face was her fortuné, whose place in life was hardâ€" ly as high as the first step of a throne, had refusedâ€"an emperor! Hardly could Leopold believe the thing that had happened to him,. He had spoken of doubting that he had won her love, and he had doubted. But he had allowed himself to hope, because he had confidence in His star and because perbaps it had scarcely been known in the annals of history that an emperor‘s suit should be re puilsed. _ younger branches bad&contemplated . such folly as this he would have done his best to nip that folly while it was in bud. "He jests at scars who never felt a wound," and until Leopold had . learned by his own unlooked for exâ€" perience what love can mean, what men will do for love while the sweet madness is on them, be would have been utterly unable to understand the state of mind. ‘ A cousin inclined to act as he was now bent on acting would but a month . ago have found all the emperor‘s influâ€" ence, even force perbaps, brought to bear in restraining him. Leopold saw the change in himself, was startled and: shamed by it Nevertheless he would have persevered, trampling down every obstacle that rose in his way, if only the girl had seen things with his eyes. She had accused him of insulting her, not stopping to consider that even to make her morganatically his wife: be must give great cause for comâ€" plaint not only to his ministers, but to his people, for he was expected to marry a girl of royal blood that the country might have an heir. If Helen Mowbray had accepted the position he offered her, he could never have broâ€" ken her heart by making another marâ€" days to find a princess willing to tolerâ€" ate such a rival, but it would bave been impossible for him to desecrate the bond between bimself and the one adored woman. 4 This being the case, with Helen Mowbray as his morganatic wife, there could be no direct heir to the throne. At his death the son of his uncle, the Archduke Joseph, would succeed, and during his life the popuâ€" larity which was dear to him would be hopelessly forfeited. Rbaetia would never forgive him for selfishly preferâ€" ring his own private bappiness to the . good of the nation. He could fancy how old Iron Heart von Breitstein would present this point of view to him with fierce eloquence, temples throbbing like the ticking of a watch, eyes netted w&tb bloodshot veins. But, on the other Band, he could picture himself standing calmly to face the storm, steadfast in his own indomitable wfll. happy with love to uphold him. above tlie frailties of common men, the ambition to be placed and worthily placed on a pedestal by his subjectzsâ€" all these he had thrown away for Helen Mowbray. 6 He was too just a man not to admit that if one of his royalâ€"cousins of *"I have much pleagure in testifying to the almost marvellous benefit I bave defived froin taking *‘Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives." 1 was a lifelong &uier- from Chronic Constipation, and the only medicine I ever secured to do mg{. real m was â€" "‘Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives." med cured me when everything else failed: Iam now over cighty s of a and I can strongly rmendm “Frm‘t‘- aâ€"tives" for chronic constipation and ATTACK OF BLADDER TROUBLE WITH KIDNEY TROUBLE, and ;‘th-a-t‘ilm" &c:t;g these cmtnphi_nts or when ysician attending me m practically &m me up. Iam now over cighty years of age bladder and u’dn‘? trouble. _ This medicine is very mild like fruit, is easy to take, but most effective in action.** (Signed) JAMES DINGWALL. Williamstown, Ont,, July 27th, 1908. a box, 6 for §2. trial box, 2 â€"-s‘t,c dealers “32 ’m Ftuitâ€"btivfi Not only would it be difficult in these JAMES DINGWALL, Tse. thankegiving.. â€" How little ‘sbo pad then the homiiliation in store Tur Tar sht the wad of aif per magen PC PC PCid Do Sm V mBe Ahag ast at the piauo, and be had bent over her, love in his eyesâ€"honest love, "Lorenz shall belp me to pay ber for this!" he said furlously to himselt, too angry to mourn over lost hopes, lost opportunities. "Ie will know ‘how to punish ber. And between ns she shall Torher and the end of all ber hopes! How could she bear her pain, and how sould she go on Uving out her life? She paused in the window.â€"niche, looking into the room through a mist of tears, and a sob choked hor. "Cruel, "I see what you think of me," he said. "I see you think I was watching you. Iswear I wasn‘t, though I knew you were in the garden withâ€"the emâ€" peror. ‘Waitâ€"you must listen, You must bear my justification. 1 was sent to this room to fetch you. For your sake, how could 1 go back and say you had disappearedâ€"together? 1 looked out into the garden and saw youâ€"with him. 1 saw from your manâ€" ner thatâ€"be had made you suffer. 1 was half mad with rage, guessingâ€" guessing something which one word ‘you let drop as you came in told me had happened. He is my sovereign, butâ€"he bas insulted you. Let me be your knight, as in days of old. Let me defend you, for I love you. 1 waited here to tell you this as you came, so that if you would we might announce an engagement"â€" > what an insultt" â€" ; y > Then, dashing away her tears, she would have passed on into the room had not the quick.gesture brought hber arm into contact with» the buttons and gold braid on a man‘s breast. Instantly she realized that some one was hiding there, some one dressed in a military coat, and her first impulse. was for fiight, anything to escape unâ€" recognized. But on second thoughts she changed her mind: 7 Whoever it was had in all probabiliâ€" ty hidden himself for the purpose of spying and was already aware that Miss Mowbray hadâ€" rusbed into the house weeping after a teteâ€"aâ€"tete with the emperor in the garden, Perhaps he had even caught a word or two of her sobbing ejaculation. No; she must not run awasy and leave the outcome of this affair to chance. She must see with whom she had to deal that she might know what was best to do. She had taken a step into the room, but quick as light she turned, pulled away the screen of curtains and faced Captain von Breitstein, It was a trying moment for him, and the girl‘s look stripped him of all his light audacity. She bad come to the window by a different path from the one be had watched; therefore she had taken him unawares before he had time to escape, as he had planned. He was caught fairly and must save himâ€" self as best he could without preparaâ€" Never had she beeu more beautiful! but she was beautiful in his eyes no longer, He had hurt ber pride, but she had stabbed his vanity, and to wouud Egon von Breitstein‘s vanity was to strike at his life, He bhated the givi. hated her so sharply that his nerves ached with the intensity of bis hatred. and the only relief he could have would be through reprisal. He had not been able to deceive het She knew that te had been spying and it was fortunate for his future, he realized al\rcndy. that she had brokes with the emperor. He must do all he could, and do it quickly, to prevent a reconciliation lest she should work him injury. As for his hastily stammered pro posal, it was a good thing that the girl had not taken him at his word. for the cbancellor had not given him permission to spesk, and if she had accepted him he might bave bad to wriggle out of his engagement. Sti}l. he could not forgive ber scorn of him. If ‘herereproach forestalled his exâ€" cuse be â€"was lost. He must step into the breach at whatever risk. ‘There was no time to weigh words. He must let loose the first that sprang to his If Virginia‘s eyes had been daggers he would bave fallen at her feet piercâ€" ed to the heart. For one long second she looked at bim without speaking. ber face eloquest. Then she went by him with the proud bearing of a queen. Egon was stricken dumb. Dully he watched her move across the room to a door which led into a corridor. He beard the whisper of her satin dress and saw the changing lights and shadâ€" sws on Its creamy folds under the »rystal chandeliers; be saw the white reflection, like a spirit, mirrored dee; under the polished surface of the floor »ffer. thousands of housewives use Sunlight Soap in prefâ€" erence to any other, because it cleanses the clothes more thoroughty, and at half the cost withont iInjury to L. hands or fabric. Fotlow 4 ALL OVER THE WORLD Virginia‘s beart sank. ~She bad supâ€" posed the grand duchess to be in the white drawing room with the baroness and the other guests of the house. Now there was no Lhope that she might be left alone and unquestioned. And the girl had longed to be alod®. â€" "At last!" exclaimed a faint voice from the sofa. "I thought you would never come." The princess stared, half dazed, unâ€" able to tear her mind from her private griefs. "Are you ill, mother?" she stammered. "Had you sent for me?" "I came very near fainting in the drawing room," the grand duchess anâ€" swered. "Emestine, you may leave us now,." l A boudoir shared by the grand duchess adâ€" joined it, and, entering there, to her dismay the girl saw her mother lying on a sofa, attended by Ernestine, the French maid. Her mother pointed toward a writing table. ‘"The telegram is there," she murmured. "It is too distressingâ€"too humiliating." Virginia picked up a crumpled teleâ€" graph form and began to read the mesâ€" sage, which was dated London and written in English: Some one making inquiries here about the Mowbrays. Beg to advise you to exâ€" plain all at atâ€"once or leave Kronburg to avoid aimost certain complications. LAMBERT. Lady Lambert was the wife of the exâ€"ambassador to the court of Rhaetia from Great Britain. â€" The princess finished in silence. "Isn‘t it hideous?" asked the grand duchess. ‘To think that you and 1 should have deliberately placed ourâ€" selves in such a position! We are to run away, like detected adventuresses, unlessâ€"unless you are now ready to tell the emperor all." ‘"No," said Virginia hopelessly. "What! Not yet? Oh, my dear, then you must bring matters to a crisisâ€" instantlyâ€"tonight even. It‘s evident thit some enemy, perhaps some jealâ€" ous person, has been at work behind our backs. It is for you to turn the tables upon him, and there isn‘t an hour to waste. From the first you meant to inake some dramatic revelaâ€" tion. Now the time has come." The Frenchwoman went out noiseâ€" lessly. Still Virginia did not speak. Could it be that there had been another spy besides Egon yon Breitstein and that her mother already knew how the casâ€" tie of cards had fallen? Was it the news of defeat which had prostrated her? "Have youâ€"did any one tell you?" the girl faltered. *I‘ve had a telegramâ€"a borrible teleâ€" gram. Ohb, Virginia, I am not young, as you are! 1 am too old to endure all this. 1 think you should not have subâ€" jected me to it." The grand duchess‘ voice was plainâ€" tive and pried among the girl‘s sick nerves like hot wire. "What do you mean, dear? I do not understand," she said dully. "I‘m so sorty you are ill. If it‘s my fault in any way I"â€" "Ab, I meantâ€"1 méant!" echoed Virâ€" ginia, with a sob breaking the fce in her voice. "Nothing has turned out as I mennot. You were right, dear; I was wrong. We ought never to bave come to Rhaetia." The grand duchess grew paler than before. She had been vagnely disâ€" tressed. Now she was sharply alarmâ€" ed. If Virginia admitted that this great ndventure should never have been undertaken, then indeed the earth must be quaking under their feet. ARNOLD.~In Berlin, on Jan,. to Nr. and Nre. All. Arbold "Ought notâ€"to have come?" she reâ€" peated piteously. _ "What dreadful thing has happened?" The princess stood with bent bead. "It‘s bard to tell," she sald, "harder nlmo«t than anything 1 ever had to do. Dut it must be done. Everything‘s at an end, dear." "Whatâ€"yon‘re told him, and he bas rofuged to forgive?" "He knows nothing." : "For beaven‘s sake, don‘t keep me in suspense!" (1) ‘CHAPTER TWELNVE : ‘The label on every sack or barrel i& 0s a | statement, that the flour is RuGHL thaproking ripht the beking .. in Cofaee mhw’:wekosuumt. mfl we sa nmanlczdlflght. Not 4 D om_pound.ofl::rundsul d the top of the sack, but the C whole sack, the entire bartel rR from the first cupful to the c w ncmannile back!* . flour where, take â€" no We know, Madam, FIVE ROSES will save you time, trouble, disagpoint mentâ€"ay, and MONEY, tho, â€"~~ _ We know what it is doing for thouâ€" o ec '-, s o t â€" 6 " When you: hand over .e Mardâ€"Eamedâ€"â€"suppose you gusssed leaves you no recourse in the event A household help for 21 years. Which do buy, Mistress Housevite ? ~â€" M-‘f‘w‘ c iess * Flour on 2 GUARANTEE? I# you can purchase flour that (To be continued.) T was for refuge that the princess fled to her own BORKN LAKE Of TNE WoO9Ss ‘‘But the great treat of the evenâ€" ing was probably George Foxr, the violinst. This artistic young violinâ€" ist completely captured the audience and he was forced to respond to triple encores. Mr. Fox as a violinâ€" dst is in a class by himself, and without any doubt bhe is the greatest violin virtuoso in Canada. All critics are agreed on this point, and of this it. would not be hard to convince any person who heard him play last evening. There is a peculiar sweetâ€" ness and sympathy about his playâ€" ing which appeals to the very hearts of his audience, His first number, Gypsy Dances, was an artistic triâ€" umph, requiring very intricate _ exâ€" ecution. He seemed to make his inâ€" strument speak, there was so much meaning and expression in his playâ€" ing. Among his favorite numbers were Aunie Laurie and Old Kentucky Home, which he played in a _ very captivating manner." lately with General Sir Percy Lake, 4n which the conditions under which Ontario schools could comply with the requirements of the trust so â€" as to share in the grants, were discusâ€" sed. _ The original termsâ€" proposed were found to be too erroneous for adoption here. ‘The modifications ~ as now agrecd to were proposed by the executive council of the trust and entirely preclude the idea that the schools were to have a system + compulsory militaty training thrust upon thems ONTARIO TO SHARE f ‘ IN STRATHCONA FUND "NCy 50 "ESIES IV, O° any 2CA00L CaCU® J o w4 corps that may be formed. u‘éfi.afi.{“fi."_f‘u OntarSe speer‘s the Alerinder Monse, m The system is to be that now in S9ls All cnils byâ€" dag or force in the elementary â€" schools of Mfi. Great Britain and such modifications | y a. 2 as local conditions in Ontario warâ€" g g'.m.. ie > want are to be permitted. ?WD o & L222 s |ttnt doine reaiet oaegs . prome Store and Randas‘a ud evening. It says:â€" cxecutive council of the Strathcona Trust, by means of which the schoois of Ontario may share in the benefits of the Strathcona Trust for the enâ€" gagement of physical and | military training in the schools. The new arrangement does _ not make the formation of cadet _ corps compulsory. Physical training is to be the basis of the course in _ the schools, and teachers are not to be prevented from becoming officers, it they so desire it, of any school cadet corps that may be formed. Mr. Gen. Fox, who is now making his home here, took part in a conâ€" cert under the auspices of the Holy Trinity Church at Chatham _ last week. ‘Among other wellâ€"known arâ€" tists taking part were Mr. _ Frank Bemrose tenor, Mrs. Manley Pickard, soprano, arid Mr. Cameron, entertainâ€" er of Toronto. Judging by the folâ€" lowing extract from the Chatham Planet, Mr. Fox made the hit of the Toronto, Jan. ?£8.â€"The minister of education announced toâ€"day that hbe had concluded an agreement with the Hon. Dr. Pyne held a lately with General Sir P Even if it takes you si montks o seach the bottom.: the sil t waroofe dyemt we fovd prep ons Tt hiier wank, __ _ St. Aguathe, Que., April 6th, 1909. "I received sample box of Gin Pills cdxu 1 m(t}b;m“l;hkhly satisâ€" ndaihh.;:‘ly"t:'u-nd them." L. P,. DIETRICH. Write the National Drug & Chem. €o. Limited (Dept. A.), Toronto, and a free #. # o# .&# . Dor'hw.l‘dul.mfi COMPANY, a responsiblé and honâ€" :;lhlo u-n:n backed ly?l:.y-‘l.u ‘*square * dealing, dan it niiegs ns Because FIVE ROSES doesn‘t need a pkacfim.'\'oua'-':zthnnd ntlotyou-ell]‘r-hthovm good they will do you. is is the w:& Mr. Dietrich cured himself of serious Kidney ned C of Toh sihager j nothing for the mud. Surely, that‘s fair enough, ian‘t it ? We make it for whousteds ‘Oln Piis: to fnd cut how valuable they are. First of all, we will send absolutely hdâ€"fiau(:v- dmlhdd: every E or _ Then, after you have purchased the Tc ns t oesny io craenie o ip turm mot Allvt.ht r'h.k claim 34.: them. ou nothi â€"you have aty- 'MQ.F?:W.'."*“L for a free samâ€" ie t e .n Toke W it mheh you ait mokt Use it down to ha sack. ‘Then lmh‘!nfi*‘u“fi. CIN PILLS FREE, SO YOU CAN MADE A HIT AT CHATHAM. Before You Buy Them Decide NOW, Madam, whoâ€" ther to continue buying on a ROSE S which gusrenises YOUR success every time, o arviene * Te o O P enc i mm i §; Conveyancer, of6. Office 141 Queep i. 8t. North, Beriin Telephone 464. 44 enter is now. tie nesenpamey sah . SOLICITORS, £70 a g;q . .p. Chanen®« o. § °8 n ns NA oo p bodoandieies : Luhâ€"mvae of fas ._" "CC> ODRICIUOF, etc. Office OppositeCourt erly Peterson‘s office, . erlin, _ _ _ _ _ _ Cue ce i CA is the great practical training school of Western Ontario. Students are entering every woek. You take no risk in entering our classes, Oar courses are the best and mmm secure the MJIMML lm HAND, and TELEGRAPHY. Get our W_'_- Reipgx. 0. Barrister, Sol: Notary Public _ Office. Pod, "“'??' Jemsa »yoken new Marzer, fredse t oi hoh too . Jyoun © wioeman & Officeâ€"Post Offce, Bt. Jacobs, Ont, t flce above Me. I Tra.1.___â€" / COnt® . > Dental Office above Mr, J, Uffeimann‘s store ~â€" Vflhfl.lm‘mmm “tm of & ho sionth. Dentistry prachced in all the _â€" EXPERIENCED VeTEr ABRY SURGEON Patents -olmmho.nu.u‘ ho the United States. sn d Nose and Throat, King St. East. e . 0 AROOTY . T0 PC eemmmermenden arerne rzfllq-m. COlement ~>~ > Bilue printing at short notice. Chas. Knechtel â€" WELLS, LD.S. Mioo: 31 Courtland Avent near Victoria Park Gate, A. L. BITZER, B. A. . oo oioes T eaimes ac t iSucosesor to Conrad Bitem.]" .. . __ Diseases of the Ear, D. A. MCLACHLAN, C.W. WEA D D, 8,)

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