Stop Your Hair From Falling. Apply Salvia Once a _Dgy It is not often you can buy a preâ€" druff, will produce a beautiful paration with cuc,h a stroog guarante e hoad o?mvyu. Feed your bair, | attached to it as _Aim- with _ every if you don‘t it will die. %rhl. u bottle of Saivia e Hair Tonic. If foud for the hair, Price cte. your bair is umi. cut or has lost its $1.00 a boitle at all d. ug ttorer. It is not often you can buy a preâ€" paration with such a strod0k guarante e Attarhed ta it as Riven with every ife or if you sre "No right to hope. Others told me that 1 still possessed that right 1 knew they were wrong. 1 do not mean that they persuaded me. I persuaded myself that, after all, perbaps my right to hope remained to me. I perâ€" suaded myself that i might be, after all, the substance, not the shadow." He lonked up at her. "And so I dared to love you." She gazed at bim, scarcely breathing. "Then," be said, "came the awakenâ€" Ing. My dream had ended." She waited, the lace on ber breast pearce stirring, so still she stood, s pitifully still _ "Such responsibility cannot die while those live who undertook it I beâ€" lieved it until I desired to believe it no He took one step toward her, and bis woice fell so low that she could just bear him. "She has lost ber mind, and the case is hopeless. Those to whom the laws of the land have given care of her turned on her, threatened ber with disâ€" grace. And when one friend of hers balted this miserable conspiracy ber malady came swiftly upon her, and suddenly she found herself helpless, penniless, abandoned, her mind already clouded and clouding faster. Elleen, was there then the shadow of n doubt as to the responsibility? I Care not utter one word of love to you. I dam not touch you. What chance is thers for such a man as 1Y" _ 80 For a second he stood motioniess then, swaying slightly, turned on his And long after he bad left the house she still stood there, eyes closed, colâ€" oriless lips set, ber slender body quivâ€" ering, racked with the first fierce grief of a woman‘s love for a man. ':E__' ** Chapter 2()2I "’ ] 2 EERGARD had already g a begun to make mistakes. L alen BM The first was in thinking :}‘i that, amonsg those whose is only _ distinction _ was â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" their wealth, his own wealth permitted him the same insoâ€" lence and ruthléssness that so fre quently characterized them. He hbad sneeringly dispensed with Gerald; he had shouldered Fane and Harmon out of his way when they objected to the purchase of Neerâ€" gard‘s acreage adjoining the Siowitha preserve and its incorporation as an integral portion of the club tract; thus he was preparing to rid himself of Ruthven for another reason. But he was not yet quite ready to spurn Ruthâ€" wen, because be wantcd a little more out of him, just enough to place him on a secure footing among those of the younger set where Ruthven, as hack cotilion leader, was regarded by the young with wide eyed awe. Why Neergard, who had forced bimâ€" self into the Siowitha, ever came to commit so gross a blunder as to draâ€" goon or even permit the club to acâ€" auire the ncreage. the exploiting of "No chanceâ€"for us," she whispered with youâ€"asd heip you to keep your stomach and other organs in the proper condition on which your good health must depend BEECKHAM‘S PILLS Sold Everywh=re. AAAAAAAALALAAAAIRpOAOLA h AfQ a6, da By ROBERT W. CHAMBERS, No labor. â€" No dirt. Does not rub off or soil clothing. Preserves the leather, containing neither Turpentine, Acid or other injurious ingredients. Brilliant and Lasting. It is good for your shoes. 12 THE F. F. DALLEY CO., Limited, Wil Agree Author of "The Fighting Chance," Etc troub‘ed vith danâ€" HAMILTON, Ont, BUFFALO,N.Y. and LONDON, Eag. PPIPIIPIIPOPLDAILPLIOLLOCY Younger Set % _ .. 4, TB S“O"' 0[,3â€- 1907, ut TRma®e ‘“I o It appeared that she could not do so â€"that even the threatened tendency of B Block Copper could not sharpen her ’ wits to devise a way for him. Very innocently she told him that Jack In boses 28c. :iuthven was leading the Uhinese en Shines easily. by Oatmeal is Said to Ward. Off Ageâ€" Often 20 Years Two noted scientists, by experiments on animals, have proved that youthfuiness deâ€" pends on the thyroid gland. And that someâ€" thing in oats seems to feed that gland. It appears that old age can be deferred many years by caring for this gland, The :nain care is to feed it, and the proper food is oats. Oats contain more energy food, more food for the brain, more food for the nerves, than lxx other grain that grows. And now it seems that they also serve to keepone young. But common oatmeal isn‘t good enough for such an important diet. The rich, plump grains alone are used in the mul:iné of Quaker Oats. They are selected b{ siftings, and only ten pounds are obtained from a bushel. * Quaker Oats means just the cream of the oats made delicious. It costs but oneâ€" half cent per dish. which had (threatened their existence, is not very clear. Already the familiarity of his apâ€" pearance and his name seemed to sanction his presence. Two minor elubs, but good onesâ€"in need of duesâ€" bad strained at this social camel and swallowed him. Card rooms welcomed himâ€"not the rooms once flung open contemptuously for his plucking, but rooms ‘where play was fiercer and where those who faced him expected battle to the limit And they got it, for he no longer felt obliged to lose. And that again was a mistake. He could not yet afâ€" ford to win. George Fane, unpleasantly involved in Block Copper, angry, but not very much frightened, turned in casual good faith to Neergard to ease matters unâ€" Gladys Orchil. til be could cover. And‘ Neergard locked him in the tighter and shoulâ€" dered his way through Rosamund‘s drawing room to the sill of Sanxon Orchil‘s outer office, treading brutally on Harmon‘s heels. Harmon in disgust, wrath and fear went to Craig; Craig to Maxrwell Hunt; Hunt wired Mottly; Mottly, cold and sleek in his contempt, came from Palm Beach. _ The cohesive power of caste is an unknown element to the outsider. Made in Canada. That be had unwittingly and premaâ€" turely aroused some unsuspected force on which hbe bad not counted and of which he bhad no definite knowledge was revealed to Neergard when he deâ€" sired Rosamund to obtain for him an invitation to the Orchils‘ ball. > KEEPING YOUNG Robert W. Chambers K4 tillon with Mrs. 1 trom the otherâ€"s hint that a card eught to be easy enough to obtain in spite ‘of the strangely forgetful Orâ€" Tomg «ince be had fAzed upon Gladys Orcan as the most suitable silent partâ€" ner for the unbuilt house of Neergard, unconcerned that rumor was already sending her abroad for the double purâ€" pose of getting rid of Gerald and of giving deserving aristocracy a look is at the fresh youth of her and ber sellâ€" He hbad come on various occasions close to the unruffied skirts of this young giriâ€"not yet, bhowever, in hber own house. But Sanzon Orchil bad recently condescended to turn around in bis office chair and leave bis amusâ€" Ing rallroad combinations long enough to divide with Neergard a quarter of a million copper profits, and there was another ‘turn to be expected when Neergard gave the word. Therefore it puzzled and eenfused Neergard to be overiooked where the gay world had been summoned with an accompanying blast from the pubâ€" lic press; therefore he bhad gone to Rosamund with the curtest of hints that he would like to bave a card to the Orchil affair, *There is no use in speaking to George," she said, shaking her head. "Try it," returned Neergard, with a hint of a snarl. And he took his leave and his hat from the man in waiting, who looked after him with the slightâ€" est twitching of his shaven upper lip, for the lifting of an eyebrow in the drawing rooms becothes warrant for & tip that runs very swiftly below stairs. That afternoon, alone in his office, Neergard remembeéred Gerald, and for the first time he understood the misâ€" take of making an enemy out of what he had known only as a friendly fool. But it was a detail, after allâ€"merely a slight error in assuming too early an arrogance he could have afforded to walt for. He had waited a long, long while for some things. As for Fane, be had him locked up with bis short account. No doubt he‘d hear from the Orchils through the Fanes. However, to clinch the matter he thougbht he might as well stop in to see Ruthven. . So that afternoon he took a hansom at Broad and Wall streets and rolled smoothly uptown, not seriously conâ€" cerned, but willing to have a brief unâ€" derstanding with Ruthven on one of two subjects. stone a big touring limousine wheeled out from the curb, and he caught sight of Sanxon Orchil and Phoenix Mottly inside, evidently just leaving Ruthven. _ As his cab drove up to the intricateâ€" ty ornamental Allttlg_ bouge of_ gray His smiling and very cordial bow was returned coolly by Orchil and apâ€" parently not observed at all by Mottâ€" ly. He sat a second in his cab motionâ€" less, the obsequious smile still stenâ€" ciled on his flushed face. Then the flush darkened. He got out of his cab and, bidding the man wait, rang at the house of Ruthven. Ruthven in a lounging suit of lilae silk, sashed in with fiexible silver, stood with his back to the door as Neergard was announced, and even after he was announced Ruthven took his time to turn and stare and nod with a deliberate negligence that acâ€" cented the affront. Neergard sat down. Ruthven gazed out of the window, then, soft thumbs booked in his sash, turned leisurely in impudent interrogation. "Whoâ€"whyâ€"bow do you happen to know that they don‘t? Is this some petty soite of that young cuh, Gerald, or"â€"and hbe almost looked at Ruthven â€""is this some childish whim of yours?" "Ob, really now"â€" | _ "Yes, really nG7.," sneered Neergard, "you‘d better tell me. And you‘d betâ€" ter understand now, once for all, just exactly what I‘ve outlined for myself so you can steer clear of the territory I operate in. 1 need a little backing, but I can get along without it And what I‘m going to do is to marry Miss Orchil. Now you know; now you unâ€" derstand. 1 don‘t care a hang about the Erroll boy, and I think I‘ll disâ€" count right now any intentions of any married man to bother Miss Orchil after some Dakota decree frees him from the woman whom he‘s driven inte an asylum." _ Ruthven looked at him curiously, > . ."So that is discounted, is it?" | "I think so," nodded Neergard. "I don‘t think that man will try to ob tain a divorce until I say the word." "Oh, why not?‘ : ‘"Because of my knowledge concernâ€" ing that man‘s crooked methods in obâ€" taining for me certain options that meant ruin to his own country club," sald Neergard coolly. "What is the matter with you?" askâ€" ed Neergard. "I see there‘s some trouâ€" ble somewhere. What is it? What‘s the matter with Orchil and that hatchâ€" et faced beagle pup, Mottly? Is there anything the matter, Jack?" "Nothing important," said Ruthven, with an intonation which troubled Neergard. "Did you come here toâ€" ahâ€"ask anything of me? Very glad to do anything, I‘m sure." "Are you? Well, then, I want a card to the Orchils‘." "Awfully sorry." "You mean you won‘t?" "Well, if you really insist, theyâ€"ah â€"don‘t want you, Neergard." the club has bought in all that land, basn‘t it?"‘ "Yes, but the stench of your treachâ€" ery remains, my friend." "Not treachery, only temptation," obâ€" served Ruthven blandly, "I‘ve taiked "Nothing tmportant," satd Ruoen. It all over with Orchil and Mottly. 1 told Orchil what you persusded me to "DONT TAKE QLdâ€"TIME PINIEC "I am a seventyâ€"nineâ€"yearâ€"old man and a great believer in, and user of, "Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives". â€" â€" "‘Stricture of The Bowels was the complaint I suffered from and 1 found that "Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives‘‘ did me more good than any other remedy.. My docior advised me to stick to "Fruit aâ€"tives" and I have Cone so with best result. ‘"I have been in business here for a 5‘â€' many years and have been a resiâ€" nt of Otterville for over fifty years." WM. PARSONS. "Touâ€"you"â€" _ "Not at ail; not at all!" protested Ruthven, languidly settling himselft once more amoug the cushions. "And, by the way," he added, "there‘s a law â€"bylaw, something or otherâ€"that I understand â€" may â€" interest _ you"â€"he looked up at Neergard, who bad sunk back in bis chairâ€""about unpaid asâ€" sessments." Neergard now for the first time was looking directly at him. "Thought it just as well to mention It," said Ruthven blandly, "as they‘ve seen fit to take advantage of theâ€"ahâ€" epportunityâ€"under legal advice. You‘ll hear from the secretary, I fancyâ€" Mottly, you know. is there anything more, Neergard?" He looked at Ruthven, scarcely seeâ€" Ing him. Finally he gathered his thick legs under to support him as he rose, stupidly, looking about for his hat. Fruit is Nature‘s laxative. "Fruitâ€"s tives‘ is made of the juices of apples, oranges, figs and prunes, ‘"Fruitâ€"aâ€" tives" acts on the human system like fresh fruitâ€"easily and gentlyâ€"yet just as effectively as u:e‘old-time pil!.x oL Susn sn e ol Ruthven rang for a servant When he came, Neergard followed him withâ€" out a word, small eyes vacant, the moisture visible on the ridge of his mose, his red, blunt hands dangling as he walked. Bebind him a luckey "Unpaid assessments," repeated Ruthâ€" ven. "It‘s a detailâ€"a lawâ€"never enâ€" forced unless weâ€"ahâ€"find it convem« fent to rid ourselves of a membet. "Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives‘‘ does not . flipe or irritate the intestines. It regulates the bowels and cures Constipation because "Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives‘" acts directly on the liver, Just try ‘"Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives w{en you need a mild, gentle yet effective laxative and liver regulator. 5o0c. a boxâ€"6 for §2.50â€"trial size, 25¢. At all dealers, or from Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives laughed. In due time Neergard, who still spent his penny on a morning paper, read about the Orchil ball. There were three columns and several pictures. He read every item, every name, to the last imbecile period. Then he rose wearily and started downtown to see what his lawyers could do toward reinstating him in a club that bad expelied himâ€"to find out if there remained the slightest trace of m chance in the matter, But even as he went he knew there could be none, There was a new pressure which he was beginning to feel vaguely hostile to him in his business enterprisesâ€" hitches in the negotiations of loans, delays, perhaps accidental, but annoyâ€" Ing; changes of policy in certain firms who no longer cared to consider acreâ€" age as investment, and a curiously veiled antagonism to him in a certain railroad. the reorganization of which Limited, Ottawa. "Fruitâ€"aâ€"tives" Brings Matural Results In A RHatural Way, MADE WELL AND By Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Compound Toronto.â€"I gladly give you m7 testimonial in favor of {:ur wonderful medicines. _ Last October I wrote to you for advice as I was completely run down, had bearing down sensation in * the lower part of TmMm..gâ€"Tâ€"â€"_â€"_] bowels, backache, ..â€"~â€".‘s>al and pain in the 2 mm side. 1 also sufâ€" p _ _Â¥ f,« "\ fered terribly from \ | bowels, and am P stronger in every way. I also took Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable (‘omrmnd before my baby was botn, and 1 recommend it highllg to all proTnnt women. â€"Mrs. E. WanpBy, 92 Logan Ave., Toronto, Ont. Another Woman Cured Maple Creek, Sask. â€"I have used Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Comâ€" pound and Blood Purifier, and 1 am now in perfect health. I was troubled with painsa ove?' month. I know other women who suffer as I did and I will fladly recommend your medicine to em. You may publish this if you think it will help others. â€"Mars. F. K. CooK, Maple Creek, Sask. If you belong to that countleas army of women who suffer from some form of women who suffer from some form of female ills, don‘t hesitate to try Lydia E. Pinkham Vegetable Com pound, made from roots and herbs. OTTRRVILLE, ONT., July 8th. 1910. STRONG After nceivini your directions, followed them closely and am now entirely free from pain in back and he had dgred ounce to" to. And one day, sitting in his ofâ€" Sice, a clerk brought him a paâ€" per with one column marked Jn a big blue penciled oval, It was only about Gerald Krroil and Gladys Orchil, who had rup away and married because they "m"" in. love, although their es had arate disposal. The column was a full one, the heading in big typeâ€"a good deal of pother about a boy .m after all, particularly as it that their respective families had deâ€" termined to make the best of it. .It took Neergard all day to read that column. Then be went home with a mental lassitude that depressed him and leff him drowsy in his great arm coalr befo w tle grateâ€"too drowsy and ppathetic to examine the letters and documents laid out for him by his secâ€" retary, although one of them seemed to be importantâ€"something . about alienation of affections, something about a yacht and Mrs. Ruthven, and a heavy suit to be brought unless othâ€" er settlement was suggested as a baim to Mr. Ruthven. To dress for dinner was an effortâ€" a purely mechanical operation which was only partly successful, although his man aided him. But be was too tired to continue the effort, and at last it was his man alone who disemâ€" barrassed him of his heavy clothing and who laid him among the bedâ€" elothes, where he sank back, relazed, breathing loudly in the dreadful deâ€" pressed stupor of utter physical and neurotic prostration, VEN before Neergard‘s illâ€" ness Ruthven‘s domestic and financial affairs were in a villainous mess. Rid of Neergard, be had meant to deal him a crashing blow at the breakaway which would settle him forever and incidentally bring to a criâ€" sis bis own status in regard to his wife. Whether or not bis wife was menâ€" tolly competent he did not know. He did not know anything about ber. But he meant to. That she had been and probably now was under Selwyn‘s protection he beâ€" leved. What she and Selwyn intended to do be did not know. But be wanted to know. He dared not ask Selwynâ€" dared not because he was horrjbly afraid of Selwynâ€"dared not yet make a legal issue of their relations, of her sequestration_or of ber probable conâ€" tinued infirmity because of bis phys lcal fear of the man. ‘.g Chapter &7 But there was, or be thougbht that there had been, one way to begin the matter, because the matter must soonâ€" er or later be begun, and that was to pretend to assume Neergard responsiâ€" ble and on the strength of his wife‘s summer sojourn aboard the Niobrara turn on Neergard and demand a reckâ€" oning which he believed Setwyn would never hear of. Ruthven was too deadly afraid of Selwyn to begin suit at that stage of the proceedings. All he could_do was to start, through his attorneys, a search for his wife and meanwhile try to formulate some sort of definite plan in regard to Gladys Orchil. ‘This, in brief, was Ruthven‘s general scheme of campaign, and the entire affair had taken some sort of shape and was slowly beginning to move when Neergard‘s iliness came as an absolute check, just as the first paâ€" pers were about to be served on him. There was nothing to do but wait until Neergard got well, because his attorneys simply scoffed at any sugâ€" gestion of settlement out of court, and Ruthven didn‘t want a suit involving his wife‘s name while he and Seiwyn were in the same hemisphere. But he could sthl continue an unobâ€" trusive search for the whereabouts of his wife, which he did. And the chances were that his attorneys would find her without great difficulty, beâ€" cause Selwyn had not the slightest suspicion that be was being followed. In these days Seiwyn‘s life was methodical and coloriess in its rouâ€" tine to the verge of dreariness. â€" When he was not at the government proving grounds on Sandy Hook he remained in his room at Lansing‘s, doggedly forcing himself into the only alternate occupation sufficient to dull the sadness of his mindâ€"the preparaâ€" tion of a history of British military organization in India and its possible application to present conditions in the Philippines. He had given up going outâ€"made no further pretenseâ€"and Boots let him mlone. Once a week be called at the Geâ€" ; rards‘, spending most of his time while ' there with the children. Sometimes he ' saw Nina and Eileen, usually just reâ€" ; turned or about to depart for some fupction, and his visit, as a rule, ended o with a cup of tea alone with Austin and a quiet cigar in the library. ' The elopement of Gerald and Gladys made a splash in the socfal puddle: Elleen, loyal, but sorrowfully amazâ€" ed_at her brotber‘s exclusion of her in such a crisis, "became slowly overâ€" whelmed with the realization of hber loneliness and took to the seciusion of her own room, feeling tearful and abandoned and very much like a very little girl whose heart was becoming far too full of all sorts of sorrows. Nina misunderstood her, finding her lying on her bed, her pale face pilâ€" lowed in ber hair. "Only horridly ordinary people wikl believe that Gerald wanted her monâ€" ey," said Nina, "as though an Errol} considered such matters at all or needâ€" ed 10. Boots is a dear. Do you know ~what?" asked Kheen ::scressly, tais Ing the back of ber slender hand from her eyes to peer at Nina through the glimmer of teara, + whet ) "Well, be and Phil have moved out of Boots‘ house, and Boots has wired Gerald and Gladys that the bouse is ready for them until they can find a place of their own. Of course they‘ll both come here. In fact, their lnggage is upstairs now. Boots takes the bine room amd Phil his old quarters,. Bot don‘t you think it is perfectly sweet of Roots? And isn‘t it good to have Philip ba k neain?" {t0 be continucd} . The Municipal Council of the Townâ€" ship of Woolwich met at Conestogo on Tuesday, the 30th day of _ May, A.D. 1911, pursuant to‘ adjournment from last session. All the members present, the Reeve in the chair. â€" The minutes of whe previous session were read and adopted. â€" After having subscribed the oath of office and being duly sworn _ the Council went into a Court of Reviâ€" sion and Appeal on the assessment rolls for the current year, with Menno L. Weber in the chair, â€" and after examining the rolls the Council resumed, and the chairman presented the following report:â€" To the Reeve and Councilâ€"We, your Court of Revision and Appeal, beg leave to report that we have examinâ€" ed the assessment rolls for the _ year 1911, and with regard to the appeals of Peter Algeicr and George H. Schell Ache they would be almost priceirrs to those who suffer l‘w Mdï¬:::g:mm be* fortuâ€" nately their goodness nctund Nere,anu those who once try them will f =d these little pill« valuâ€" we recommend that they be left _ as made by the assessors. _ No _ othet appeals being entered we recommend the adoption of the rolls. Menno L. Weber, Chairman. Moved by Mr. Snider and Mr. Koch, that the report of the Court of Reâ€" vision and Appeal on the assessment rolls be adopted. Carried. yet Carter® Q'Wo-mâ€"' Pils are m.hhh Lonstipe tion, aud preâ€" -I!:nrt -l‘!.x:dctu ’ (hn-'a-‘- i: :.mh ivcr and repulate the bowils, . J ver if they ouly ; Jr. I.â€" Emery Strome, _ Arletta \ Hillgartner, _ Soleda â€" Shardt, Edna | Shantz, Susie Witmer, _ trwice Shantz, _ Lloyd Hallman. | B. Van Every, Teacher. ivcr and repulate the bowcls. . J ver if t able in so many va>s thot they will not be wils Ting 1e oo winigngt tagum Baraiies Alf sick hond Moved by Mr. Koch and Mr. Weber, that the assessors be paid as follows and that the Reeve grant his orders for the same:â€" Norman Snyder ... ... $28.00 Nelson Snyder ... ......._....... 35.00 H. Brodhaecketr ......... ............... 42.00 Byron Letson ... .................. 29.00 Carried. Moved by Mr. Mattusch and _ Mr. Koch, that the following accounts be paid and that the Reeve grant his orders for the several amounts:â€" Nelson Martin, burying carcas .50 Jas. Fenton, conveyancing ...... _ 3.50 Fred Bender, damage to plow... 4.50 is the bane of so many lives that here is where n:.nk.m{r‘t\u.t Our pills cureit while oth rs do not Carter‘s Little Liver Pills ars very emall and mtby I-“'“PJ.* CAZTEB MEDIOLIS 00., SW ToALK. M inl in i»! o TOtAL ......222 css $8.50 Cartied. Moved by Mr. Weber and Mr. Sniâ€" der, that this Council do now adjourn to meet again at the Council chamâ€" ber, Conestogo,â€" on Tuesday the _ 1st day of August next, at 9 o‘clock a. m. Carried. Nine Pires School report for May. Sr. IV.â€"Olive _ Strome, Geneva Wanklyn, crene Shocmaker. Jr. IV.â€"Arthur Lobhnen, Stella, Strom», Leslic Witmer. Sr. IMM.â€"Verley Hillgartner, _ Milâ€" (red Culligan. Jr. Iiâ€"Melvin _ Haase, Regingc Gushar.3. Sr. IT.â€"Mabel aase, Ooie Hall Sr. 11. â€"Malâ€"l Harsc, Joie Hallman Nora Haase, Hervine Shantz, Maryâ€" bellec Shoemaker, Eona Staltz. WOUuLWICH TP. COUNCIL Jr. II.â€" Etta Witmer, Vidla Shantz, â€" Hil{c Stoltz. Pt 11â€"Hilda Haase, Erma Shantz. Sr. Iâ€"Metaâ€" Haasc, _ Martha Le\ W«\ healthy kidneys, one has . a good chance to live long, but weak kidneys aMfict old age with great discomforts, The back becomes bent and lame, rheumatism is chronic, Aâ€" > 4* â€" eyesight fails, â€" 1 and too frequent or _ involuntary * BB passages of the QB’)(’ III W urine cause emâ€" 7 3 ** barrassment . by " ‘(â€'(‘( day and loss of es sleep at night ?BLLflI'S liidnei Te B “}Wl Booth‘s Kidne; | untering each v Pills bring NCW ° course at once. N strength to old , a « backs and quick / relief to _ weakâ€" ened kidneys. They banish backache | ______ and rheumatic pain, _ regulate the C bladder and urine _ w Booth‘s Kidney Pills are for _ sick kidneys in old or young and are guarâ€" anteed by the proprietors, The R T Booth Co , Ltd., Fort Erie, Ont Sold everywhere 50c box. Free trial sent on request How To Live Long ACHE . SICK SCHOOL REPORT { LEGAL URE__ ;sE aare W. J. SNIDER, Clerk l °mm ymA &e. § t eeelion: 6 2 1. in Ch inoery. is * e eakTaladoedine s * * PRIVATE FUND3 TO LOAN, OrFICE, METCALFE BLACK, Cor. King and Foundry Sis.. Beriin, Ont. E. P. CLEMENT, K C. E W. CLEMEt * * a iase, ditter . M . on t mm co Dfl'l'llwr;t‘ Dlélll'»lul’.lu bo cce d uveyancer, etc. Office Queen St. North, Berlin Telephone 464,: A. L. BITZER, B. A. = {Suogessor to Conrad{Bitzer.] _ _ g Barrister, Solicitor N ‘ B2 doney ian." Guraks en Officeâ€"Pequegnat‘s Block, ne new Muke:eg:l‘urkk Bt., B: F G. HUGHES. Dentist @Uddfellow‘s Blook. Will viait Zilliax Thursday m and is Priiar I pac) OBUN EY axtraction of teeth . Hours 9 to 5; 19. the month, j RPCKEL L D. 8. D, D,5, _ Gre y Ecnmoumunâ€"ua-â€" Royal Collâ€"ge of Dental Surgeons of TÂ¥ Jental:Office above Mr, Chas, Fischer Visits St. Ja0obs cvery 1st and 3id Frm Ali branches of dentastry nm‘ Janzen‘s Block Berlin, over # trance between Knox‘s storeand Bei EXPERIENCED VETERL ARY SURGEON â€"~ J L graduate of the vm-z.flo‘l&o. Offce and Atos‘g.tne almmsncer o | «Milceoâ€"Post:Office, St. Jacobs, Ont Licentiate of the Royal C Dental Surgeons, Honor â€"G Unlvenlcut Toronto. _Offit floor, Weber Chambers, King Berlin. Telephone 202. _ B. McBRIOKE _<â€"â€"J Hours: 9 a. m. to 5 p. Robt. Brickn Licensed â€" Auctionee For the Uounties of WATKE and OXFORD. Satisfaction g Freeport or business left in car CObronicleâ€"Telegraph at _ Wat: The Daily Telegraph at Berlin ceive prompt attention ‘ Pnone No. 734, ring 4 Freeport o es S nmpc OIDC LA ’l’hn school has a continental m on for hifb grade work ard for the success of its students. We have three departments,â€" -Oommerch‘l‘ Shorthana and Telegraphy. Ambitions young men and women should send at once for our large free catalogue. Write for it at once and see what our graduate: are doing. * â€" This is a good time of the year !cf ou to enter nur classes. Students are utering each week. Commence your OHN L. WIDEMAN a Issuer of Marriage â€" * STRATFORD,. ONT. *~* ‘A Large:School,fA Good] Learn Dress Making Cs Diseases of the Eat, Nose and Throat. King St. East. > A. HILLIARD Clement & Clement Contral 2 Business . Collogo . Reave k. c. WELLS, L. D.8. Cor King & Rilison Dressmaking School KEL L. D. 8. D. D.8, DR. J. E. HEDPT, Dentistiy practiood is 11 Chereb St.. Berlin D. A. McLach C.W. WELLS D D. D. 8.