And the date of this occurrence was the day following my Chinatown misâ€" ndventure. ‘"""~. 1 At 5:27 he entered the Mott street store of the Yup Sing Com:â€" pepy, remairing until 6:42, when he came out with a tall, thin, wellâ€"dressed Chinaman, said to be Yup Sing, himâ€" sclf. Together they went to Ching Wung‘s restaurant on Doyers street. From there & Chinaman known as Muk Chuen returned with Murphy to Cos Cob." A Slump in Crystal Consolidated. ‘ The week of my convalescence was wot eventful. Evelyn and Mrs. Lanâ€" waster called daily, and the reports from O‘Hara came each morning with unvarying regularity and equaly unâ€" warying lack of import. The artist, after his visit to Yup Sing, had re turned to his Cos Cob hermitage. acâ€" companied by a sutcessor to his tOr mer unfortunate Chinese servant, and now rarely left his own â€" grounds. Gravid with suggestion as his appearâ€" ance in Chinatown had seeined at first, 1 soon came toâ€"realize that it might possibly bear no more vital ‘signifiâ€" carce than that altogether commonâ€" place proceeding, the quest of a cook. And in the absence of any confirmaâ€" :tory evidence to the contrary, and ‘with the knowledge gleaned from Miss \Clement that Yiip Sing, on occasions, ‘added to his regular business of merâ€" ‘ichandizing that of an employment ‘agent, I saw no reason to attach an {undue importance to the incident. ‘Nevertheless I relinquished none of gmy suspicions regarding Murphy, but ‘continued the detective‘s surveillance with a fresh injunction to vigilance. Ard I did not apologize to Yup Sing i Miss Clement, to whom I believe I owe my life, visited me at my request. How I whelmed her with my gratitude is no more material than how she enâ€" deavored to make light of her service to me, declaring that such offices were & part of her day‘s work in her chosen field, and that her day‘s work was her passion. And yet it was this part of our interview which gave me my strongest insight into her exceptionalâ€" Jy worthy character. Absolutely unâ€" selfish, she joyed in a life that even a 4 % vq;m'l’led 7b'etore; ï¬mflng flowers in muck heaps and jJewels gmrld tlns&_al. In five minutes, too, I glimpsed her abounding magnetism, the movlng‘ agent in that rare efficiency which was part and parcel of her. Lgger, I learned , of the weight of her influence among ; the dwellers in the Chinese colony; | not from any direct narrative of whatl she bad accomplishedâ€"for she was | deduction, purely. Moreover, my‘ watch, a few trinkets and a little" money, taken from me that night in Doyers street, had all been returned | through Miss Clement‘s good offices; | and If, thus far, she had afforded us no real clew in our absorbing exiâ€" gency, I fcolt that ultimately her knowlâ€" edge, coupled with her resourcefulâ€" ness, would prove to us of unbounded value. And, as events shaped themâ€" selves, I was not wrong. 5 yes V s"% esÂ¥ e It was now ncarly four weeks since ‘Cameron‘s disappcarance, and a fear that he had met death in some fiendâ€" lish form at the hands of his abductors ‘thad come to be with me very nearly ,an obsession. The care I exercised in ‘hiding my real state of mind from !Evelyn could not well be exaggerated.‘ lWhen I appceared to her most hopeful :1 was actually most despairing. With Miss Clement, however, I had no reaâ€" ‘son to dissemble. With all frankness I told her of my despair; and when, instead of trying to comfort me with empty @words of encouragement she agreed with me that the chances of ‘our ever secing Cameron again were at a minimum, I liked her the better ‘for being straighfforward. "I sometimes feel," I said to her, 'muxlng full confession, "that we made i T Py se es a t:rrible mistuke in not at once notfâ€" fying the authorities. Even now I am inclined to lay the matter before them. Anything would be better than uncerâ€" Hora ces Hazcuirs Keeping the Body in Repair Nature didn‘t intend that we should wear corsets, . tight coliars or shoes, nor live in badly ventilated and draughty houses, nor eat and drink some of the things that we do, nor ride in street cars whena we should walk. Sm - h â€" Uve l qL UE Ab Auc ant. Dr. Pierce‘s Golden Medical Discovery 0 e en e e e esns U sfldn.no«nuumwup‘ymafmmunl.n-humydDr.r\-u‘oc mon Sense Medical Adviser, 1008 pages, clothbound. Address Dr. Pierce, Buffalo, N. nipimacboedstbinbiceemedinentndire ~ Seold in Liquid or Tablet form by Dealers in Medicines CHAPTER XVI. Nature intended that tl;c body should do its own repairingâ€"and it would do so were it not for the fact that most of us live other than a uturql life. Save Doctors‘ Bill: Indian Root Pi1 tainty." A few arrests and the third degree might work wonpeu." "Where would you staft?" she asked in a blg. logical way that reminded me of lyn‘s faculty of going to the root of things. "You see, you know so little. The story about the portrait and the mirror, the police would reâ€" gard as more amusing than mnvlne-‘ ing. And besides, you haven‘t any proof. Yup Sing, you tell me, has the | only original letter, and by this time: he may have lost it or have forgotten ‘ that he ever hud it. If you had seen as much of the Chinese as I have, you would appreciate how wily they are. My belief is that the police would conâ€" clude that Mr. Cameron fell overboard from his yacht and was drowned. Inâ€" deed it would be fortunate if they did not take the view, that he jumped overboard and committed suicide. Or, worse still, it would not be beyond them, Mr. Clyde, to charge that you pushed him over. ‘The yellow papers would almost certainly intimate such a posslbility." < Had some one else volced this suggestlon I should probâ€" ably have resented it, but I underâ€" stood Miss Clement. She was as kind as her eyes indicated; and that is speaking very strongly. | three days, Mr. Clyde, and if at the yend _of that time I have not learned for you what you want to know, go on ; with your publicity idea." ‘ "Nevertheless," I said, with growing. determination, "I shall make the case public. It is my duty, and I am willâ€" ing to run all the risks you point out. I shall start by making a complaint against Peter Johnson. We‘ll have him arrested, get his record, and fol low along that trail until we turn up the other conspirators. If poor Camâ€" eron‘s shares fall in the market, they‘ll have to fall. If the notoriety precipiâ€" tates a delayed fatality of which Camâ€" eron is the victim, it cannot be helped. I simply will not longer shoulder the responsibility of silence." ue way she had or ‘siient delfberaâ€" tion was almost masculine. I can see her, even now, as she sat there that afternoon, her hair the same shade of gray as her cloth gown, her fresh, clear complexion lined in thought, her kindly eyes half closed. For the better part of a minute she pondered. ‘Then, suddenly, ber face awoke, and she asked me: It was now my turn to be thoughtâ€" iful. Evelyn belicved in the woman‘s ability to aid. She had said as much to me. And I myself possessed a cerâ€" itain degree of faith in feminine intuiâ€" "tion. Aside from that, though, Miss ‘Clement bad demonstrated that she "Will you wait three days longer? That is all. I have channels of inforâ€" mation that are closed to the police, even. There are men in Chinatown, and women too, who would lay down their lives for me. I think some of them would even betray their friends, common ailments which us wey diticrcan, bur wheh ell it clogged with impurities The Pills cause the bowels to move % strengthen and stimulate the m:’n up the pores of the skin. organs immediately throw of the accumulated impurities, and Biliâ€" Kidney Troubles, Headaches, Rheumâ€" atism and similar ailments vanish. Dr. Morse‘s Indian Root Pills « Sunday was with me a day of imâ€" patience. I fretted now at confine ment, for my ankle was quite strong lagain, and I was perfectly well in ‘other respects, too. But my physician ‘had set Monday for my first day out, ‘and he refused to concede even 2 twentyâ€"fourâ€"hour change of plan. But \_ "Very well, Miss Clement," I agreed. i"I will wait three days. It is now Satâ€" ‘urday, November 14. If by this time Tuesday afternoon we are not, at least, on the track of something tanâ€" gible, I shall be on my way to Mulâ€" berry street." wickâ€"was not my watch, at that moâ€" ment, in my pocket?â€"and her whole ipersonamy prociaimed â€"inherentâ€"caâ€" ‘pacity for accomplishment. I chafed more even at the inactivity to which I .had agreed concerning Cameron than at the confinement. All at once, I had become imbued with a necessity for prompt and strenuous measures. Some awful thing, I knew not what, scemed ominously immiâ€" nent, and remorse tore at me tormentâ€" ingly. â€" , ENE Early Monday, I telephoned Miss Clement for tidings of her progress, but Sshe could only implore me to wait. She had nothing to report, but she was encouraged. With my hands thue tied diversion was my only refuge, and an accumulation of office work itc collars or :‘;‘ Ves3 omall end -@' us te take as cagam | rige rom WEABACRE . tten FOR DIZZINESS. een ron Bilousuet® j FOR COnsTIPATIOH ard FOR Ts FOR TUECOMPLELION did | | 2f 492,, | Puresy Vegetamie, ObarsZEesel u& Genuine ( . ‘ Carter‘s . â€" Little Liver Pills. LCUAN! CiNQ|rea oirrmucess. imes, _ of $3,450,000 the new Toronto ron BilJoUsHNESR General HosPital which has accommoâ€" FOR TORPID LIVER. dation for 670 patients, was formal FOR COnsTIPATION ly opened this afternoon, and _ this F FOR SALLOW SKIN. evening was for the first time thrown FoR TUECOMPLEZION opem for public inspection. _ In . the evermusr building the most modern ideas ; for P CB,,|Purety the battle against disease are UWliliz ed. GURE SICK HEADACHE, The Ontario Government on behali mm =====*~*********~ [ of the Umiversity of TOFORYO, . COH which i piungea servea, in ‘pai‘l a« | tTibuted $00,000 and the City bf To least, this purpose. . ronto paid the cost of the site, $610, _ Evelyn .and Mrs. Lancaster. bad|0"0. Private citize®s contributed $1, come in from Greenwich and opened | 400,000, and _ there is a net debt oi the Cameron town house, a great|about _ $500,000. A surgical ward, white granite Renaissance affair, OB |costing $300,000, was contributed i\ upper Fifth avenue, facing the park; |.JoAn (C. Eaton as a memorial to bis and because the girl had made m¢|father, the late Timothy Eaton. _ Evelyn .and Mrs. Lancaster. had come in from Greenwich and opened the Cameron town house, a great white granite Renaissance affair, on upper Fifth avenue, facing the park; and because the girl had made me prognl-e, I lunched there; but 1 went with less grace than ever before, unâ€" certain as I was of my selfâ€"control. Evelyn‘s faith in Miss Clement, howâ€" ever, was contagious. She spoke of little else, and when I came away it was with strengthened hope of speedy results. § It is my habit to glance over the earlier editions of all the evening pa pers before leaving my office, and latâ€" er, either on the train to Greenwich or, when in town, at my club, to read more carefully the later issues of the News and Star. On this particular day, however, a succession of matters of more importance prevented my looking at so much as a headline, unâ€" til, seated at dinner, in the club res taurant, I saw on a window ledge be side me one of the more sensational of the afternoon dailies, and approâ€" priated it in lieu of better companionâ€" ship. It was one of those journals which, in catering to the tastes of the prole tariat, conceive it wise to minimize their references to Wall street, save only when a marked slump or a pank points the moral of the unscrupulour capitalist and his heinous crimes When, therefore, long, boldâ€"face typ« attrasnted my eve with tbe announce ment, "Fall in Crystal Consolidated," I started to read the subjoined article, confident encugh that some director or directors had been spitted for bar becue. And before I bhad read five lines I came upon the name of Robert Cameron. . If I was to believe this introductory paragraph, my friend was to Crysta‘ Consolidated what John D. Rockefel ler was to Standard Oil, yet in the no reference to this connection; and though I was thoroughly familiar with the "great glass trust," as it was called, and with the name of its multiâ€" millionaire master, strangely enough 1 had never connected the Cameron J knew with this Cameron, the Captain of Industry. "I am," he had said, in all modesty, "largely interested in a certain line of industrial enterprises." That was all. I suppose I should have known; and yet, "no prophet is without Honor, save in his own country." The newspaper article I now read, however, left no room for doubt on the subject; and, incidentally in a single sentence, revealed the secret of how Cameron had succceded in escaping that general recognition which is usuâ€" ally the penalty of greatness. "He has never sat for a photograph." _ But, while this part of the article interested, that which followed startled apd perplexed me: | s "Crystal Consolidated fell to 1-03‘ today," it went on, "because of a perâ€" sistent rumor that Robert Cameron is seriously il1, in a New England saniâ€" tarium. The greatest secrecy has been maintained as to his malady and his whereabouts by those who are in a position to know. It has been ascer tained, however, that after spending a qulet summer at his country place, Cragholt, on Long Island sound, near Greenwich, he started on October 21, on his fast steam yacht Sibylla for a cruise along the New England coast. Ten days later the Sibylla returned, but Mr. Cameron was not on board. "It is known that he has been in 111 health for months, and there are those who now declare that he has sought the seclusion of an institution for the treatment of nervous diseases, near Boston, his condition being critiâ€" cal. "Inquiry, today, at his Fifth avenue home in this city, and at his Connectiâ€" cut country seat, was fruitiess. (Mr. Cameron was at nelther place, and the servants expressed ignorance concernâ€" ing his present address. "At the offices of the Crystal Conâ€" solidated Manufacturing company and at those of the missing financier‘s brokers, Hatch & Hastings, evasion was the keynote of the answers to all amnest! ue Must Sear Signature of Sce Pacâ€"Simile Wrappor Bolow, (Te be continued.) NEW TORONTO GENERAL HOSPITAL _ FORMALLY OPENED Toronto, June 19.â€"Completed at a total cost, including land and puildâ€" Sir .John Gibson, _ the lieutenantâ€" governor, opened the front door of th building with a golden key at _ fow o‘clock and proclaimed the institutior formally opemed. _ Addresses Aollowe{ from .Sir James Whitney, Mayor Hoe ken and Mr. J.W. Flavelle. MEATS AND Ottawa, June 19.â€"The Labor _ De partment‘s index nurwer of wholesale prices stood at 137.0 for May as com pared with 136.3 in April, and 136.3 in May, 1912. The numbers are ‘Perâ€" centages of the price level during the decade, 1890â€"1899. . The â€" chief advance of the _ PaSt |wign, s ; â€" menth occurred in attimals and meats ‘ fish, fruits and vegetables, with con n ie ons o m aage siderahle â€" decreases {mâ€"dairy nraoductsb~ _ 3 | and fuel. Western grain was upWafd, | ~Coon uy o SPEr®x but paints and oils were lower. FORD MOTORâ€"CAR STOLEX. In retail prices, dairy products, fish | ST. THOMAS.â€"The â€" garage â€" of sugar, potatoes and coal were lOWwel.| George Spackman was entered. _ beâ€" while meats and rentals tended _ UPâ€" | tween 1 and 2 o‘clock _ this morBing ward. and a Ford touring car belonging to T.H. Hutchinson stolen. No trace e oo oc of the auto thief has yet been secured. pends upon the noDrISMINCA! _ """ proper assimilation of food, and unless digestion is good, the whole body sufâ€" fers. Mrs. L. D. Cook, Vineland, N. J., says: "I was sick five years with in digestion. . My stomach seemed to have a heavy load in it, and at other times it seemed to be tied in knots. Nobody knows how I suffered. mothing did any good untll i """" Vinol. It has belped me wonderfully. I am improving fast, feel better and am getting my fiesh back again. Vinol has done me a world of good." VERY LARGE ‘ _ INCREASE IN USE _ OF CIGARETTES PYZ bodyâ€"power, and because is dovoid of drugs or stimulants. We know the great power of Vinol, our â€" delicious cod liver and iron tomic without oil, in curing chronic stomach trouble and building up all weakened, runâ€"down persons, and that is why we guarantee to return your money if it does not help you. RENTALS WENT_ ~UP N MAY Ottawa, June 19.â€"The neoble of Canada last year smoked 975,325,501. cigarettes, and increase of neatly two hundred millon over the firures of theprevions vear. . accordinr _ to fir vres_comniled py the Devartment _ 6* Taloind Revenve, In fact the consumn Yinn ef tahacea and wet ~nnils Ihas jncreased _ all round. The per capita averaces are: Spirits, _ 1.11% gallons, compared with 1. 030 last â€" year; beer 7. 005 against 6,598; wine, .131 acainst 114. tnbacco, 3.&%18% â€" pounds against 3,679 pounds. The figures for tobacco _ inâ€" clude cigarettes. MINVARNS â€" LINIMENT â€" CUR SS DANDRUFEF. "I tried a great INDIGESTION FIVE YEARS health to 8SC G. HAEHNEL», Watetloo ;m;- ;;)u;l;!ilme{lt and reat many doctors and kinds of medicine, but nvy good until I took nourish~ The business transacted at the regâ€" ular meeting of the Board of Educa tion on Thursday evening was largely M m routine character, a large numâ€" her of mimrot matters being disposed ‘The Management Committee of the Rerlig Collegiate and Technical . In stitute recommended that the stall oi the Collegiate Institute be reâ€"engaged jor the year beginning September 1st. 1913, at the following salaries:â€" D. Forsyth $1900, W. H. Williams $1750; D. W. Houston $1650; Clara: M. Bridgeman $1350; E. Pugsley i1600; C. S. Kerr $1600, H. W. Brown $14.50; Edna M. _ Ferguson, $1000; Auna A. Lee $950;, N. k. Hodgins $650; Mir%el Kerr $250, Barâ€" on Osborne $350; J. W. Conzor $500, Christian Fischer $800. The report was adopted with but ene change, the majority of the Board voting in favor of increasing Mr. Forâ€" syth‘s salary toâ€" $1950. The request of the Hospital Board ‘or the use of the Auditorium at the Collegiate Institute for the gradw ition exercises this evening in case of cain was granted. School Inspector F. W. _ Sheppard: ubmitted his first report on visits of inspection. He said, "Of the _ work A your;stafl as a whole I would say that it is excellent. You have a numâ€" set of teachers with experience much above the average, both as to length f service and in the opportunities Aven them of gaining strength _ and improving their methods, as many of kem have had more otr less experiâ€" mee as Model School teachers. I have been â€" so [favorably _ impressed witth the work, done that T would not advise you to make any changes unâ€" less compelled to do so through teâ€" signations of members of your stal. The work of the teacthks â€"more lately engaged by you is also of such merit is to;warrant further trial. He aiso reported the organization to be satisfactory, the overcrowding of rooms having becn done away with. â€" > minent _ druggist it takes GIN PILLS a for his own Backâ€" 2 ( ache, youn can feel A t‘nite sure there is nothing else quite so good. Winnipeg, May 19th, 1912. "Tn the autumn of 1911, I suffered with a continual pain in the back. . As a druggist, I trie} various remedies without any apparent results. Having sold GIN PILES for a number of years, I thon%h.: there must be good in them, otherwise the sales would not increase so fast. . I gave them a fair trial and the results I find to be good‘"‘. GLO. E. ROGERS. GIN PILLS have well â€"earned the confidence which druggists, as well as the public, have in them. For years they have been relieving the gin of Rheumatism, Lumbago and Kidney Troubles â€" generally, and changing tortured cripples into strong, supple men and women. We ul ENVERE ETTE PCTUCCC Wh{ should you go on suffering when there is a remedy so easl‘:'lsy obtained and so reliable? GIN PILLS tost but 50c. a box, 6 for $2.50. â€" Money back if they do not help you. Sam‘rlc free if you write National Drug an Chemical Co. of Canada, Limited, Toronto. 15¢ Says GIN PILLS Are Good For Pain in The Back MAN _ WHO KNO! NWP*N'::W wun.,&nmn.;;.}/... mlShppu_d etable Compound Did For ol_l_:‘:clucahon Their Healthâ€"Thei 1 erarr CA1 ADire Statements Follow. Inspector‘s Report Request Granted Salaries Fixed omiisnia on ho hiee 1 heg raine as | e e examine me and he sai alling o the womb, so I have peen taking Lydia SCELLEN & WEIR E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Compound and| J. A. Scelles, B.A., LL.B. J. J; it has done me a lot of good. All the| A. Weir, Master in Chancery. Barti# bearingâ€"down pains have vanished. 1|ters, Solicitors, Etc. Money to loas. have gained ten pounds in weight, the|Offices: Upstairs in the Amesica® Adischarge is all gone, and J feel better | lock, Berlin. Lhanlhla'v;for.longti;\e. l%n‘ny woman oolish to suffer as or the sake of a few dollars. CLEMENT & CLEMENT **You can use my letter as a testimoâ€"| â€" Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries, nial. It may encourage other poor women Conveyancers. who suffer as I did to use your Vegetable Private Funds to Loar Read What This Woman Says: New Moorefield, Ohio. â€"*"I take great pleasure in thanking you for what your es e â€" »emiiiies. .‘ | has done for me. 1 Haliburton, Lot 7, P.E.L _ Uiped 4 | not be upon my feet | ~~~~ |_ 3 72° _, _ | long enough to get a | * EpppeeeP<of meal. As long as 1| â€" ajey 4 laidâ€"on myâ€" back 1 D.CL t would feel better, m i but when I would|g, ‘ w get up those bearing | _ down pains would come back, and the|~~~~ doctor said I had female trouble. Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Compound was (s the only medicine that helped me and 1| gar, have been growing stronger ever since | \;, . 1 commenced to take it. I hope it will| ()fice. help other suffering women as it has me. | y, ,,., You can use this letter."â€"Mrs. Cassig LLOYD, New Moorefield, Clark Co., Obio. | â€"â€"â€" wOMEN WILL NOT VOTE IN VESTRY Majority in HuronSynod Favorâ€" able but Vote Was Not HISSING IN THE GALLERY London, Cnt., ‘June 19.â€"The Augliâ€" can women of th> diocese of Huron will not vote in the vestry. _ So it was decided at this evening‘s session of the Synod after a debate wiich lasted from this morning until 10.15 p.m.â€"a debate tilit was marked | by arguments that went heoek â€"tmâ€"the Creation, and. covered constderable ground between that time and the day of the suffrageite. There was a maâ€" jority in favor of the innovation, the clerical voto being 41 to 30 and the lay vote 20 to 17, but a twoâ€"thirds vote by each order was mecessary to carry tlk motion. The sensation of the whole Synod was the interruption that came toâ€" nighi from the gallery of the Synod hall, and _ which prompted â€" Bislfop Williams to threaten to clear the galâ€" leries. Quite a large number of woâ€"‘ men had followed the debates . frem the opening of the Synod and to-nightl among the many interested onloo‘sts were ome or two persons who underâ€" took to very distinctly hiss one of the speakers.. Mr. R. McElheran of this city was the speaker. By such comâ€" ments as ‘"The modern woman is a work of art," he incurred the indigâ€" nation oi those women who were anâ€" xious to see the proposal carried, and wikn he declared that the motion was the thin edge of the wedge for kvoves for women for everything, the hisses were heard all over the hall. Rev. Dr. Tucker, who is rector of the Cathedral, _ immediately _ arose and stated that he could not allow _ such proceedings. _ Mr. McElheran declarâ€" ed that such conduct was _ sHocking and shameful, and his Lordsbip interâ€" posed that this was the first time in his twentyâ€"six years in Canada that such proceedings had been _ indulged in, and if it happened again, he said, he would give orders to clear the galâ€" leries. Just what effect the hissing had upâ€" on the voting cannot be told, but at least one vote was turned from _ a yea toa nay, Rev. Dean Farney deâ€" claring that he had conte nrepared to vote for th> motion, but that hiss had, converted him. A teliable Fâ€"ench regnlator ; never fails. These pills ure exce@dingly powerful in 1 egulating the generative portion or the female system. Refuse all cheap imitations. _ Dr. de Vam‘s are sold af #5 a box, or three for $10. . Mailed to any address Dr. de Van‘s Female Pilis ii'a'b}'»if or three for fhe Scobell Drug Hisses From the Gallery Sufficient J J J__ 1 _ L . THERE Is n. C D. & A. or a "Z BWM 1 weak, had pains in lower back and could Co.. tesnn‘ La Diva corset for every figure. Our catalogueâ€" we send it freeâ€" will help you choose the best for yours. â€" Write for it today. Dominton u!m Co., Opefepefpegpedetpejpeopege® LEGAL k JAMES C. HAIGHT Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Pub, / Conveyancer, etc. Money to loan. O# fice, Letter‘s Block, Waterioo. Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries, j Conveyancers. Private Funds to Loar e Office: Metcalle Block. Cor. King and Foundryâ€" Sts., Berkia * E. P. CLEMENT, K.C. 60000000R Barrister, Solicitor, Notary, Publie Conveyancer, etc. _ Money to . loa® Office, Upstairs Cor. King and Erb Sts., Waterloo. . D.C:L. Barristers, notaries, ete. OF fice, Upstairs Economical Block, King St. West, Berlin. Honot Graduate of Toronto Univer« sity, Late of the Ril?au St. Genova Hospital, Ottawa, Member of . the College of Physicians and Surgeoms of Ontario. Note: Night calls answ (Successor to Conrad Bitzer.) Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Publie etc. Money to loan. German spoken. Officeâ€"Pequegnat‘s Block, next to Market, Frederick St., Berlin, Strasser‘s Block, Pbone 143 King St., Waterloo. ered from the office. CLAYYTON W. WELLS, L.D.S., D.D.S., Dentist, Waterloo. Hours 9 to 5. Fridays 9 to 12 Tel. 121 Alter April ist will visit Elmirs the second and fourth Friday in each month, 1 to 6 p.m. _ Graduate Chicago College of De# tal Surgery and Royal College of Dental Surgeons of Toronto. â€" Dental Oflice in Fischer‘s Block, Waterloo. Dentistry practices in all its brantclhâ€" J. H. Engel, graduats of theâ€" Ontâ€" ario Veterinary Cnlle%:. Office and residence, Queen St. Phone 293. All calls by day or night answered. Aler. Millar, K.C. Harvey J. Sime.., sity. All branches of dentistry pracâ€" tised. Entrance to office same . a8 Concordia Hall,â€" over Lang .Bros. store. Dentist, L.D.S., Royal College De# tal Surgeons, D.D.S. Toronto Univerâ€" Licentiate ol the itoyal College of Dental Surgeons, Honor Graduate University of Toronto. _ Office, first floor, Weber Chambers, King St. W. Berlin. ‘Telephone 202. Hours: 9 am. to 5 p.m. DR. W. J. SChafIDT . DENTIST * | Officeâ€"~43 King St. E. over Domisâ€" ion Bank Entrance. 2nd Door West of Post Office. Phone 454. = â€" = Berlin. DR. WELLINGTON K. JACOBS, Osteopathic Physician. Graduate under Dr. Still, the founder of the science, Editor Jourâ€" nal of Osteopathy 1909â€"12. Osteo pathy often cures where all else fails. Chromic comstipation, stomach . dizâ€" orders, nervous diseases, rhoumatism, infantile paralysis, goiter, etc., sug« cessfully treated. _ Electrical troat» ments. Offices, Room 203 Weber Chambers, Boriin, Ontario. King St. East. EXPERIENCED VETERINARY SURGEON. Office hours 9 to 12 ; 1.30 to 5. Closed all day Friday. _ F. G. HUGHES Dentist _ Oddfellow‘s Blook, Waterloo. DR. WILLIAM GEIGER, S. ECKEL, L.D.S., D.D.S. JOHN L. WIDEMAN j Issue* of Marriage Licenses. DR. LEDERMAN, D.D.S. :â€" Pust Office, St. Jacobs, Ont. A. L. BITZER, B. A. CLAYTON W. WELLS. r DR. J. E. HETT MILLAR & SIMS A. B. McBRIDE, Diseases of the Ear, % Nose and Throat. R Dentist, Waterloo. J. A. HILLIARD +3 : OSTEOPATHY. Telephone 121. German spoken.