HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1917-02-23, Page 7{
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writing Out Lydia
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Han Alias £i
Rt .a 23 1917
ACID itTO
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dli s1
-ins it atom
r..._, Minutes,
THS
ON EXPOSITOR
TO
dee
S .
. !elites et
No indigestio
or belch -Intl i
elle of undigester
bloat/11a .fou:'
Smith
fezee
noted for. 4ts
eat stonmeha
02:1 and besides it
ea end to catomaoh:
Pares thapepsin
auy dye.; &ere. You realize -in
minutes how needless it As to sulk-
om ledigestion, dyspepsia: or any
disorier. Ws the quickest,
sureet end most harmless -stomach
M the world.
by
Spearman
illereister, Solicitor. Coarseetacee said
Wan Patine. 1501.1dtor for •the Deo
Nosh. Office le rear ot the Dons
tfiffft "Wok, Sea -forth. Mosey to lose
Me. Office ineetaira ewer
Neesetttere store, Meta attest,.
Collator, Cloavo.raseeo and
Sekliticer for the Ogoa.
Osologros. lifter It lear
for sale, Office, la Soobra Wale
Stafottk
Siaiiriti Moe.;
4000 Week. Off100 Ilidd Mach.
04004.
vittrinpitt
stimausa. Y. lb
iteeMo of Ontario.' Yetelln,
00110010). *este diseeles of•
.1)oliestle Asimalt by the 11100 mode
eidoeiniese Dentistry and Milk 'rev.;
Sr OVICURY. Office opposite Moles ,
SOK Maisi- stela, Seaforlh, All or- '
SOO& at Ithe hotel57111 soothe prompt 1.
:Irk Sight eglia received' at thf
(Continued from
sight. At Marion's she had carefully 1
avoided hint, Her precipitancy at
their • last meeting had seemed, on°re
'l tion, unfortunate, She felt hat
she nand- :have appeared to him,
shockingly rude, and there was in her
recalling of the, scene an uncotessed
impression that she ewes to blame.
Often when Marion spoke of him,
which she 'did without the slightest
wserve, and with no reference as to
ether Dieksie liked it or not.It
hid beer in Dicksie's mind to'4bring
up the 'subject of.``:the disagreeable
week) ferret' to other than as the college
priioner to the Stone, ranch
The Quarrel. Busied with 'her thoughts, Di.cksie
gleadee nearing the lands of the Dane ,dousth d in at the back of
well advanced, and the men a long detoun brought her ae
valley line
ning , ranch Righttoftway men. had .;44 0 Throwing her lirtee to the
been 'working for months With Lance eacaktiapda.'rcahhadala.'sigrhniteaddtt_ilarthreerigy unit tot!
Dunning, over the line,* and McCloud _re, _
had been called frequently into tonsil/. erervu to Hee wore. Prole the ofneet
tions raised kr Dielesie'e cousin to- the 2,
when the priteedings had been etOiled.
a steeng current of discontent set from "
dissatisfaction a
road people. Vs
tensive irrigation se
Sinclair for the erawlin e
crept into the new and it was ,
genatilY and ti,nn„,,, nein' der ray oraera.
ning 'had exp laYOU have. no right to give elle or -
afid she slipped into ;,
'here She *add heal
ilioncr,gradvato of Ontario TeEstin.
IOW sod charges moderate. Toterinaty
a specialty. Office and rest.
douse as Ooderich street, one door east
• Dri Swat's office,. &earth.
MEDICAL
prsity of Toronto, six yaws'
Peporience. Brumfield, Ontario.
Rlahmond street, London, Ont.:.
Specialist: Surgery and Genito-Urin.
an diseases of men and women. •
DR. 'GEORGE HEILEMANN.
Osteopathic Physician of Goderich.
ibeciellit in women's /old children's
alseesee, rheumatism acute, chronic
sad *emus dizoidere, eye, ear nose
and throat. Consultation free. Office in
Cady Block, over W. G. Willis' Shoe
Store, Seaforth, Tuesdays and Fridays
Mee Resddenees *fain Street,
MIAs 76, Hensgal.
tbe-
an
mod bY
Valley
ed with- -CoWlitiel-
dinir'vvise eignr : net that she heard- Words, litit she
To 0 104G YEAR
SUFFERED
"Frult-alves" ade Him Feet
As If Walking Oil Air
"For over tivollaart, I was troubled
Appetite and Headaches. one day saw
make you feel like. walking on air."
Thie appealed to me, so I deeld.ed to
ley a box. In $ -vary short time, I
began to feel beitert un$3.1fartafeel
I, eat, alid the flesdaeltes are
Oa box, II fOi OM, trial size, 25e.
Outer `of the table, was facing W-
hit hand and one leg thrown over looytediorgveryet sytaaditourmaffy ,at.wahers aclious,Inhe,
de who steed before him with his ssids
•
tones: '914 men were acting un- sio, evenly,
"You don't understand this matter
at alit" deciated Lance Dunning ve-
"Nothing could justify your - tan-
-"Do You think / am going to:allow
this railroad company to ruin thies
ranch while I am responsible here?
'You havelio busbies interfering. I -say.
"These mutters are not of your af-
"Not 'of my Wait ?" The listenere
stood riveted. McCloud felt liirnself
swaltoWing, and took a step backward,
with an effort as Dieksie advanced-.
Her hair, losened by her Ade, 'spread
Iow upon her head, She stood, in her
saddle habit, with ter quirt etiil in
her hand "Any effete that May lead
my eousin into shooting is my effaie.
I make it mine. This is my father's
roof. I neither know nor care about
what lead to this quarrel, but the
quarreleis mine now. I will not Allow
my cousin to plunge into anything that
may cost him his life or ruin it." She
turned suddenly and her eyee fel on
McCloud. "I am not willing to leave
either myself .or my cousin in a false
M• cCloud should be brought /into
so unpleasight a seezte, because he has
"1 ani using a -supported grade there already suffered rudeness at my' own
for eight miles to get over the hill
drop back there. We might as well
not build at all if we egn't hold our
_DwiuLtithhainhienegabouenhreeteriths limit. can't
my engineers will do it for you with -
grade, whereas it would be very simple
to run a 'Sew line for your ditch, and
out aedollata of expense to you, Mr.
, as he spoke again to her cousin, "there
ning waved his hand as an need be no serious controversy over
ultimatum. "Cross where I tell you the right 'ef -waY Metteri Dunne
to crags, or keep off Stone Reach. Is tatertess anil..cellasuiplIppoXielell. you, notgiveprineeee pe;e
that English?"
to ride (fiver the' ground with
"It eertairde is. • But in matter of chance
fact we must cross on the survey you again and let us See whether we
_ cant arrive at some tonclusnon?"
agreed on in the contract for a right
But Lance was angry, and nursed
of -way deed."
"I don't recognize any contract ob.. his wrath a long time.
tattled under. false representations." (Continued Next Week.)
"Do you accuse me of false repre-
Lance Dunning flipped the ash from 0<aeeateaeee 40e.e.e
I am pet a plain every -day civil Brother Played 4.
engineerebut you must not talk false X
representations. in any contract drawn X
to the enterprise, z4er8/ C °II sal
Diekiie gave slight heed to Matter's detain rd
e, nor to obstrucet our free
es weighty assthese. She 'spent eau& Pneenge along the right of way you
of Mr time on horsebsteke.witb neve agred to convey to us under our
where she rode with frequencY, I ` Damn your survey! I never had a
ogee cksirordered hats nutii mare !coati* any such survey. And if yoar
midge tire saddle; and in Medicine Bend keriveYs
ion'S ehg became her favorite abiding Piet of IMY such surveY.
ion'S conscience arose and' She praet- tighteorswaY' men 'tied ever eald
welly refused to supply any more. word about crossing the ereek above
But the spirited controversy ..on this the thine I never would have given
Point, as on many others—Dieksie's *el* a right ef waY at all"
Eaughtiness and Marion's restraint, '4There -were never hut. tvie lines
quite .unnioved by °any show of dig_ rim below the creek; after You taieed
pleasure_ended. always in drawing your objection ran them both; and
the two closer to each other. hi?timrh eWitryeoauboveaent4htepAnna etr.'a' de
At home Dicksie's fancies at'that there.
time ran to chickens and crate. after I and "me a My aelghhers are geing
crate, of thorouglibreds.and clutch af- to aam UP that basin, and the irrigee
tien laws will protect our rights.
ter dutch of eggs wete brought over
the Pass from far -away Countries. But cortaiiilY eitn't put a grade in
the coyotes stole the chiekene and below the fiwne, and you refuse to
kept the hens in such a state of en- lalh about ereesing above it." -
'Why not let us cross where we are
and rue a new level for your ditch„
that -will put the flume higher up?"
"You will have to cross the flume
where it stahde or you- won't cross
the ranch at 'all."
McCloud was silent for a moment'
sit effectively. Nest afer nest Dieksie
had the mortification of seeing desert-
ed e at the moet critical Mo-
ments and left to furred prowl-
ers of the foothills and canyons. Onee
she had managed to shoot s particular-
ly bold coyote, only to be overcome
with remorse at seeing its death -strug-
gle. She gained reputation. with her
cousin and the men, but was ever af-
terward assailed with the reflection
that the poor fellow might have been
providing for a hungry family. House-
keeping cares rested lightly on Melt-
sie. ,Puss had charge of. the house,
and her misess concerned herself
more with the setting of Jim's aloes
thin with the dust on 'he elk heads,
oyer the fireplace in the dining -room:
Her Medicine Bend horitesi-dier staed
in much greater awe of h flien Plias
did, because if he ever left a mistake
on Jim's heels Dicksie could. and
would, Paint it coldly out.
One Marph afternoon, coming home
from Medicine Bend, she saw at some
distance before her a party of men
ctt horseback. She was riding a trail
leading from the pass road that fol.
lowed the hills, and the party was
corning up the bridge road from the
lower 'ranch. Dieksie had good eyes,
and something unusual in the riding
of the men was soon apparent to her
Losing and epgaining sight of them. at
different turns in the trail, she made
out, as she rode aniong the trees, that
they were cowboys of her own ranch,
and -riding,' under evident exeiteitent
about a strange horseman. She re-
cognized in the escort Stormy Gorman
McCloud flushed. He raised his hand
"And I am sorry 'for it," added
Dieksie, before he could speak. Then
turning she withdrew from the room.
' I am sure," said McCloud slowly.,
under my hand.'
"Lam talking facte. Whispering € ,s
don't know. Who ever rigged it, it WHERE in the history of
has been rigged all right. the world can there be
"Any charge against Whispering
Smith is a charge against me. found a friendshiP more
deeply rooted, fuller of
quiet fondness and substantial devo-
tion than that of Charles Lamb and
his sister Mary. ,
Charles, with the heroic fortitude
of a martyr, resisted all temptations
to marry and . evoted his lovable life
to his sister Mary) who had Inherit-
ed the family curse of insanity.
Mary was ten years Older than
Charles and loved him-with.azt affece
tion combining a mother's care, a
;sister's tenderness, and a friend's
fervent sympathy.
Charles Lamb was born in Lon -
is not here to defend himself, but
- the ferocious foreman of the ranch, he bleeds no defence. You have charg-
1 and Denison and Jhn Baugh, two of ed me already -with misleading sur-
f the most reckless of the men. These veys. 1 was telephoned far this morn -
t ee caret es ung ee °se ing to see why you had .hekl up our
SO University, Iligstreal; Umber of 1
Wage of Fity4einat 'end 'fluegeone of
Itentreal, 1,14-15; afire- two i
east of Poet °flees+, Phone 11,
Ontarea
Moe sad reeldence—Gederleh street
seat of the Methodist church, Seaforth,
note Ne. 4,5, Coroner for the Camay
DRS, 60072 M.CICAI,
a, seat, imitate Of Vittoria
Dollop of Physicians and Surgeons,
gee Arbor, anei member of the Ontatio
gsreete _for the County a Hutton.
Patrecelty, and gold medallist of Teta.
Mc Medical College; member of the Cal-
k. of Phietelane and Cummins, Wald%
Sraduate of Tfolveneity of Toronto
Mika Physicians sad Surgeons of On.
Itsido; pises graduate courses. in Chicago
Mica .of Chicago; Royal Oph-
thalmic Hospital, London, England,
Ifoliversity College Hoapital, London,
Illegland, Office—Back of Dominion
*sok, liaeforth. Phone No. 5, Night
mike answered from residence,.Victorla
WW1 aegoith.4
AUCTZiONEERS
THOMAS BROM?
pommels, and in front 'of them -rode
the stranger.
Fragments of the breakfast -table
talk of the morning came Inch -to Dicke.
sie's mind. Railroad grader*,
weise in the. valley below th Mt*
and she had beard -her t
good deal on a point Ate ear
about, as to where the railroaa
crose the Stone Ranch. Approaelli
the fork of the two roads teetardst
which she and the cowboys were_
ing, she checked her horse in the
of a cotton wood tree, and as the
rode of the draw she saw the h
man under surveillance. It was
McCloud'
Unluckily, as she caught a
of him she was conscious that e whit
looking at her: She,beat ,forevard tee
hide a momentary -confusion, ipo
briskly to her horse, and rode out of
work and your men cover me with
rifles while 1 am riding on a public_
i "Yon have been warned, or your men
:have to keep off this ranch. Your
inam'Stevens cut our -wires- this morn -
."As he had a nerfect right to do on
"If you think so stranger, go ahead
440sense vee wergt have civil war --
not tight away at least. And if you
devour men have threatened and
beaten me enough for today, 1
"Don't set footem the Stone Ranch
hi and don't send any men here to
pass, mark youl"
- mark you perfectly. 1 did not
itetfeotwillingly on your ranch todity;
Was -dragged on it. Where the men
are grading now, they Will finish their
work."
"No, they wont."
"What, would you drive us off land
.you have already deeded?"
"The firstoman -that cuts our wires
or -orders them cute -where they were
strting yesterday will get into trouble.
"Then don't string any wires on
land tha belongs to us, for they will
certainlY come down if you do.
Lance Dunning turned m a passion.
"111 put a bullet Through you if you
touch ,a barb -a Stone Ranch wire!"
Stormy -Gorman jtimped forward
with his hand covering the grip of
his six-shooter. "Yes damn, you, aid
put another!"
"Cousin Lancet" Dieksie Dunning
advahced swiftly into the rOOM . "You
1 are under our own roof, and you are •
wrong to talk in that way."
Her cousin stared at her. "Dicksie
this is no niece for yous"
"It is when my. Cousin is in danger
of forgetting he is a gentlenzan."
"You are interfering with what you
know nothing aboutl" exclaimed Lance
• "I know what is due to every one
under this reed."
"Will you be good enough to leave
this room?"
"Net if there is to be any shooting
or any. threats of shooting that in-
Volve ray cousin."
"Dicksie, leave the room!"
There was a hush. The cowboys
dropped back. Dicksie stood motion-
less'. She gave no sign in her man -
Ideessed auctioneer for the count.tac
Of Rego* and Perth. Correspondence
eireageenents ler saki dates CIA .
Md. ki caning up Phone 97, Seaforttel
Sr The Expositor utftne., Charges mod.;
Mt, And isatiefaction guaranteed,
tioeseed -,Ictiottear tor the Cow
Web oil th,3 coaxj. Nem Moe Si
allihe reaozeiaale Those -No. 2,
gager, "Cestralla P. 0.
Ordsiu ?eft at
OWN to,
gonimos-
said a well educated man the other day'
when he waa asked this questiert;—"Why,
when 3rou balm a cold, a cough or ,bron-
chitis (troubles, you will note, of throat
and chest) do _you persist in pouring
cough syrups, l'ung tonics and the like
into your stomach, which is perfectly
sound ?
Ever think of it ? The stomach and
the lungs are not connected, Otherwise,
foe'd swallowed would choke you. Lung
and throat troubles were never yet cured
by dosing the stomach, To cure coughs,
colds and bronchitis, you must breathe
the cure. Peps provide the rational treat-
meot for thesa ailments. Peps are tablets
made up of pine estracts and medicinal
turn into healing vapors. These are
breathed doWn dinwt to the lungs throat
and bronc.hial tubes --not swallowe'd down
to the stomach, which is not ailing.- Try
a SOc. box of Peps for your cold, your
cough, bronchitis or asthma. All drug -
,gists and stores or Peps Co., Toronto,
will supply -
Children Ory
ro Wows
don, h'ebreary 10, 1776. At anetarly
age he and his shate,ravere foreed to
support an insane,' lather atia a
scanty living with his pen and Mary
took what- sewing statietitild got. •
At 21 Charles showed:symptoms of
insanity. and was forced to spend
some Mile in an institution, A few
down to a state of extreme nervous
misery by attention to needlework
all day and by watching with her mo-
ther at night, broke into upcontrolt-
from the table spriad for dinner,
stabbed her mother through the
heart. The Coroner's jury brought
in a verdict of "lunacy." •
Mary was immediately put intoea
madhouse; but as she grew better
Charles. exerted himself to have her
released. He was forced to make a
solemn. .agreement to make her his
charge for life and to watch over her
that she should do no harm.
Mary's insanity returned from
time to time, during which periods
she was again confined in an asylum,
but her brother always eagerly re-
clainied her as eoon as she was bet-
ter. When she was returnedeto him
he was almost bappy.again, in spite
of the shadow called up by the
raeatory of what had happened, Els
well as by the uncertainty of the
future, His clerkship in the South
Sea House brought him a hundred
Pounds a year and there was a maid-
en aunt as well as, the father to be
cared for. While Le had .to watch
his sister he had to emuse bis father',
bY cribbage. As he had time he 'dee
veted himself to literature,- which
brought him about thirty pounds a
year.
14 all the annals of Mitts there le
no story so touching and tender as
the Weeny of those -40 years of
steady toll Charles went through. He
always wrote of her as his better
tactresis. of whom he was hardly
1
warmly, hearty were toe nights spent
in anxious watchings. Sleepless and
harassed with her dangerous vagar-
ies, he rose early in the morning and
went to his desk. and when released
from his labors he ran in hot haste
to see that she was still safe. Many
were the hand-to-hand encounters
he had with her in her dangerous
hour ----but no murmur ever escaped
his lips. When she became very bad
he took her back to the asylum,
Charles Lamb was one of those
silent heroes who have no. nsonu
Bleats to cor .memorate their brave
deeds; only the single stern that
marks the final resting place of these
two, in one pave, conveys the beau-
tiful character of this man who gave
up all. for his sister, _who in turn
gave up all for hint.
Lamb's one hope was to outlive
Mary, but this was denied him. He
left her well provided for. Lamb's
greatest work is his "Essays of Elia."
"Lamb's 'Tales from Shakespeare"
have probably been read by as many
children as the popular "Orimms'
Fairy Tales." This book was writ
ten by the brother and sister jointly.
Charles Lamb died. from a fall, which
injured his facer, in 1835. His sister
died 13 yeare later.
In her sunset walks she would in-
vaziably lead her friende toward the
church -yard where Charles was laid.
Their loving friend, Mozom, paints
the touching scene;
Here sleeps beneath this hank, where
daisies grow,
The' kindliest sprite earth holds within
her breast
Zier only mate ie now the minstrel
Save ;she who comes each evening, ere
the bark
Of watch -dog gathers drowni Wolk to
sired .
A sister's tears.
Honored the Czar.
During the Kaiser's visit to Mita.u,
two Russian airmen flew over the
CONDITION
SOUND legs pull s. No liorse with a pavin, Splint, Curb, Rinp,-bone,
Bony Growth or ..tn, can do itself justice. Thousands of horsemen have
been- keeping their horses sound by using Xendall's Spavin Cure—the old
reliable, ssfe remedy: Mr, Maurice Wayville, Maherstburg, Ont., wrote on April
soth last—"1 cured a x.ek spavin with two bottles of your Spsvin Cure. X um Just
Wang off- a bog spiavora. it is the b,..t liahnent far sprains you edli,getfor rum
or beast.. I Would' ve to haven copy cte3tour "Treatise on the Horse' .
our ralutble Isook—"Treatise on the horsc"--free at your
Et's, or write us 11
Waterproof linapsacke.
Waterproof knapsacks glade of
horsehair have been invented by a
Japanese army oilleer.
The Fur Sears Herein,
Fur seals are extremely polygam•
ous and the eld males, which. welsh
trent 400 to 500 pounde, "haul -up"
first on the breeding beaches. 'Each
bull holds a certain, area, and as the
females, only one-fifth his size, come
ashore., they are appropelated by the
nearest bulls until each "beach mas-
ter" gathers a harem, sometimes con-
taining more than 100 members,
Here the Wiling are born, and after
the mating seation, the, wells which
have remained ashore without food
from four to six weeka, return to the
water. The mothers go and come,
and each iii able to find her young
with certainty among thousands of
apparently identical woolly black
Prom the ages at one to four years
fur seals are extremely playful. They
are marvelous swilniners and trona
about in.. pursuit of one a.nother, now
divint deep and then, one after the
other, suddenly leaping high above
the surface in graceful curves, like
porpoises.-- -Sniltde-and Thar Of' var-
ious species are their main food.
Their chief natural enemy is the
killer whale, which follows their mi-
grations and haunts the sed about
their breeding ground, taking heaVY
toll among them.
- Not Ifer Work,
He 'was a young subaltern, says
the London Opinion. One evening
the nursing sister huh Just IDA/shed
makiag him comfortable for. the
ntght, and before going off duty
?staked: "Is there anything 1 can do
for you before 1 leave?" Dear little
Two Stars replied:- "Well, yes!
eheukl like very much to be kissed
good -night." Sister rustled to the
door. "Just wait till 1 call the or-
derly," she said. "He does all the
rough. work here."
Here s
relief from
tts
thirst; here's tr.
fresh vigour
for the boys
at the Front and
workers at home!
Soothes, refreshes,
and sustaing through
weary hours .of sus-
perfse and stru le.
It helps appetite and di-
g.-..stion too. Delicious and
antiseptk—wholesoine and
After every meal and in the
wiltth, it cheers thousands eve
soildiTar lad.
ITYS ON SALE EVERYWHE'P:79.
C57
Flavogol Lasts.
W121.Wrigley jr Co, Ltd.
Wrigley Bldg., 'Toronto
•
MADE
CANARIA
Sealed
the acket
41140.
ti
81.
WEROMMIIMMEINNIIWOMMaanawasAIMANWINAMOUPRONIVAgieelaallaal .10'7110k
of
permanent
Stetsgte_n it"
10# 20, 50 and 100 lb. Saga, mime in one grauw onzy---me nignest
REQUESTS
THE PEOPLE OF CANADA TO
BEGIN NOW
TO SAVE MONEY FOR THE
NEXT WAR L