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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1917-03-09, Page 7eimide""d6itmehli 1:1 ON EXPOSIT , or ONSTIPATE xative can't her tentacle lives. waist tonsil , mother!It e one's stoinach, live s need cleat:Whig at on cross, listless, doesn't p, eat or act naturally, or is levee esta stomach sour, breath, bad; bail *see throat, diarracea, full a cold, give teaspoonful of "California Syrun ot Inger suid Issas. few hours all the foul, pated waste, undigested food our bile -gently moves out of its bowels without gelping, and, you a Well, Planta' childi again. Ask. rear dniggist for a. 50 -cent Inottle of %Worn% %mil) of Figs." which cora titan full directions for babies', chin - gam of an ages and for grown-ups. Le Lot forget her food thatwar. e than 25, - his gives a 4Inada and rale ;every ;nd boys to int appee possible to to increase pont:inky. =inn% of =who to an who help some vest. , ie o! the Help Carn- c-diture Trcnto mimirmignimpoothaseianilaat k000mania. Roumanian country eat pride in a cleaza ion, and just, aa tless n rural diricte ouId get up Worm Dal down 1.1nobsixved rsf May to wash thetr the dew of the • of Roumania aite threads,- twist F from 'which they round their neeka. they wear from this ntil they se -e the first feeling sure that „guarartee taeme rite corapl; xion, esy s. in Argen the ges of Commercial Agent otz, Buenos Aire-• pasturage and Ow s of fodder in attention of planter* s has been foeu_eest tuff question and the tioa discassed witk cad that many silos concrete are hethar contractors. VA* eparing eaeilage amele Hos will have to ba- eral American tae - ave raade arrange -- ale of this class sof erva public astroneo e in the nortkora less thaa twenty "trriigrantg, rom Ireland dilzikilSW 0,659-8,871 mato* lea—comisared. ren Cry LETCHER'S 0 R I A .1,01M101•41.11,110111. In Slag gsgeitet, Oseaveniumer and Soliciter for the Dew Mak. Office II rear ot the Dow Komi te leak ta. Mare. Cossayanceli sad POW. Office upstairs over hokum Mee, Sista *Meet, _ SOLIONTED. lirrieter, Solicikte: Offierserssem ad Polak* Solicitor for the Ceesse Yak et Commerce. Money to lean, gin* for sac Onkel la Scott's block *rest, limforth. AMINI.M.1.211•11.S. RSOUDIOOT, KILI-ORAN .AND COME leprefiters, Solicitors, Notaries Publici, to lend. In Seaforeh on gime ascb week. Office in litidd block. t, 1C.O., 3. L. Kihoran, E. rs EgatBURA Yt SCOW prilleste cif OutariO Tetifeelas VOW, and honors* mesabee of Aesociation Of the Ontario Treats diseases of ny the molt nod - and Milk len- Office onpoeite Dian liaaforth. AU or. hotelwill receive prompt I1itatihi revived at the Aim ering Smith by Frank H. Spearman eeeeeeeeneeeeeeeee (Continued from last week) CHAP'rER XVIL A Test, • Or Taking Intim* ne Box Of men were facing each other acrose Ion lines of possession; but the Sioux the table in Meitiloud'a office. "Person- will tell you in their own talk that ally, I am not sorry toesay it either." this man is but a tenant at will; that added Callahani ffiling the bowl in another tune and at another place Of his pipe. • the stranger will enhetit his fields;and McCloud said nothing to the point, that the Crawling Stone always comes as there seemed to be nothing to say back fer its own. until he had heard more. never (Continued Next Week.) Imlay before that you wire left-hand- ; ed," he returned evasively. • "It's a lucky thing, because it won't I COUNT TIZA'S MOTrili IS "ALL do for a freight traffic Irian, riowadays, to let his right lead know what his FOR THE STATE." lett hand does," obserised , Callahan, Emir SIIIP HAM* N. S. feeling for a -Plata. "I am the only silt is with greatpleasureihatI write left handed men in the traffic depart -1 to yon of the seatukifsstbenefits I ment, but. the. man that handles the rebates, ennamie 131ack, is cross-eyed. have received from taking °Trutt -a- • up Bucks offered to send him to Chicago Mies". or yoarsi, seeS4 dreadful ese Sieve Bryson straighten his eyes. Seiffererfrom. Cossiiiedlois 'and Head- but Jimmie thheks it's better to have arsissoindlivasmisembleheavery wey. -I• them as theY are for the present, so , _ - Nothingixithevrayefinethohleoseemed ihNvettears look at a thing in two different f the Interstate —ne or.Com- .- help Then I blab' trlednermconmissio and one for hiineelf. wolfe, and crossed the street with the nu - eto hoe 'relief fro= MeClondei jot". "Why Lance Dunning Du Sang had the siciwise gait Of fa splendid. - eleteeesearring-eme hex,' feel Callahan, returning to his riddle about "Fruktraues zw:ves?" :and eired 7. You haven't. heard, then?" continued choppy walk of a man out of a lour, -thostisiikent**f se.dd e. Being • both uncertain anal . mita. mitiovc DEMO quick, he was a man to slip easily. He travelled around thea block i - gosi A next ti for $2"t Pie sheerith.26°. and disappeared among the ma any open Asdeguersorsen plimbi eal4 doors that blazed along Hill Streeti ars.ranic,„1 Less alert trailers than the two hes- ti, i' "--' hunt.titn watdd have been at fault; has gone into the United States court and got an injunction against u� on the Crawling Stott() Lines—tied us up tighter than zero. No more construc- tion theta for a year at least. Dun - fling conies in for himself and for ,a cousin wish is his ward, and three or fin* little ranchers have filedibills.— w en he 'mitered the place he waS failed to light or !hit; deeign it %ma 80 it's up to 'the lawyers for eighty JULI it. Du Sang could have spoken to him had ' scratched the second time =the table Per cent. of the gate receipts and of looking for, Kennedy was SO CIOSO that Kelmedy passed idirecitly almitd. A maThkieng ma earan415tbentwegreeno' thineittwheo jdoiineet. PIteaegieve:' sPyeorummuta iganiceanito looglad k after would not have stood- that, yet Du he turned around. Trion:Oat later Whispering Smith put Sang hesitated. Whispering Smith, We are going te be swamped with i this operating for a year yotunelf . his ear to • the doorof the joint Du mildly surprised, looked up, "Hello freight traffic thee year, and I want Sung had entered,withdrew -itaand re- Pearline! You shooting here?" 114 it moved through the mountains like joming his 'companions spoke in an checkers for' the next six months. • You know what I mean George." To McCloud, the news came, in spite of himself, ita a blow. The results he had attained in building through the lower valley had given him a name among the engineers of the whole line. The splendid showing of the winter construction, on which he depended to enable him to finish the whole work within a year was by this news,brougat to naught. Those of the railroad men who said he could not deliver a completed line within the year could never be answered now. And there TIONV undertone: "A negro dive; he's lying low. Now we will keep Or regular order. It's a half basement with a bar on the left; crap games behind -the screen on the right. Kennedy will you take the rear end of the bar? It Smith moved closer to Du Sang. The covers the whole room and the back two men touched arms. Du Sang, and- step just to the left of the slot luirti, threatened in a way wholly new to waited iike a snaked hraved y a door. George, pass in ahead of me machine; you've got the front door mysterious enemy. His eyes b • iced there and everything behind the 1 !like a badger's. He caught up the screen and I can get close to Du Sang. Look for a thippjsh yellow -faced man dice and threw. "Is that the best with a brown hat and brown shirt— you can do?" asked Smith. "See here! and pink eyes—shooting craps under this window. shoot craps with him. Is your heart pumping, George? Never mind this is easy! Farrell, you're first!" e The dive, badly lighted and venti lated, was counted tough among tough places. White men and colored mixed before the bar and about the tables. When Smith stepped around the screen and into the glare of the hanging lamps,Du Sang stood in the small' cor- ner below the screened street window. to understand the reason for the al - McCloud, though vitally interested in front, he stood like a, 'eat waiting to looking at the man that had come to town to kill him, felt -his attention '13,"ng• "This is my game!" he snarl -- continually wandering back to Whig- eu• pushed the dice back towards the outlaw "Shoot again!" • Du Sang scowling, snapped the dice and threw badly. "Up jump the 'devil is it? Shoot again!" And, pushing back the dice, He took up the dice. "Shoot with me!" Smith threw the dice up the some slight bitterness in the reflection table towards Du Sang. Once he That the very stumbling -block to hold threw craps, but reaching directly in him back, to rob him of his .chance front of Du Sanp, he picked the dice for a reputation with men like Glov- up and threw eleven, "Shoot with er and Bucks, should be the lands of me, Du Sang," Dicksie Dunning. What's your game?" snapped Du Ile made no complaint. On the 41 - Sang an oath. at do you care, if I've got the and befit his faculties on the operat- vision he took hold with new energy coin? I'll throw you for twenty dol_ ing problems. At Marion's he saw lar gold Pieces." Dicksie intervals, and only to fall Du, Sang's eyes glittered. Unable more hopelessly under her spell. each thne. She could_ be serious and she could be volatile and she could be something between which he could never quite make out. She could be serious with him when he was ser- ious, and totally irresponsible the next minute with Markini _On the other hand, when °MeCioud attempted to be flippant, Dicksie could be confusingly grave„ Once when he was bantering with her at Marionis she tried to say, something about her regrets that coin - plications over the right of way should have arisen; but ..McCloud made light of it, and waved the matter aside as if he Were 'a esoitininaeiDicksio did-noti like it, but it'avd$ only that he was afraid she would realize that he was a mere railroad superintendent with hopes Of a record for promotion quite blasted. And as if this obstacle to a greater reputation were not enough, a wiler enemy threatened in the spring to have only threads and patches of. what ,had been alrea.dy earned. si's The Crawling Stone River ha said to embody, historically, all of the de- ceits known to mountain streams: Be- low the Box Canyon it ploughs through a great bed of yielding silt,. its own deposit between the two imposing lines of bluffs that resists its wander- ings from side to side of the wide valley. This fertile soil raakes up the 201f2T GRMITTA 7. a- pering Smith. The clatter of the "Then play it.' "Look here, what do you want?" he rolling dice, the guttural jargen of grate" Qntarl° Vert41143- the rolling gamblers` the drift of demanded angrily. Pgifige. dim/Aft of Domestic Ime-i d f th b d the Smith stepped closer. "Any game you-ve got. throw you left-hand- ed, Du Sang." With his right hand he snapped the dice under Du Satig's nose and looked squarely into his eyes. "Got any Sugar Buttes money?" Du Sang for an instant looked keen- ly back; his eyes contracted in that time to a mere narrow slit; theta sud- den as thought, he sprang rback into ward Du Sang. Thirty odd men were treated. Calla promptly attend. sad abuses tacdetato, vtiterig&T y timiktri & sseetatty. Office and ret- inas cot Goderfeh sosreet, one door east Ors Omani of, asiVorta. tiorntatip -W. L GLANYMIA M.11, Piersieian, Etc. Honor Graduate ff ;University of Toronto, six years' irrOttietlee. Brucedeld, Ontario. al Xt EARN, tii.D.Ceie • Eichimenid street,. Leaden", One becielitt; Surgery mud gegtto-Urin- lint dimwit Of mos sad women. • DR. ,OEORGE HEMP/MANN. Osteopathic Physician of Goderich. Sessialist he wommets and children's Wilma ThottimMISISt, *cute; chronic Nil 'Jerrold" dieorders, eity est', nose tad throat. Consultation free, Office in Clay Block, over W„ G. Willis' Shoe Mien, Seaforth, Tuesdays and Fridays a.m. till 1 pan. ALEXANDInt MOM Plegolan de Survey" MU Aid Seirildekaa* Aran Street.; Mk* 761 Hansa& Dr.. 1 VP, PECK Ifradaats Peoulty of Medicine, etc- a_e_114 lientresi; llezeber of weer of PhYsiciana Surgeoue of itearlo; Licentiate' of Medical alma * Ominthis; Post-Orsditate member of SiMideat Medical OW of General Ses- eVicistreal, 1./4-11is Oftkie two . mat cit"Post OffIci, Phone bbi War* T r Mit Ir. J. BURROWS. _ elttraa sad residence—Goderich Street II* 61 tile iktbedlet. church, Seeforee, ilkeis Nes Ms Coroner for the Coast, lama 41•11•••■••• ..amegapkt•••••111111, clouds of tobacco smoke made a hazy back ground to the stoop shOuidered man with his gray hat and shabby coat, dustecovered and travel -stained. Industrially licking the broken wrap- per of a cheap cigar and rolling it fondly under his forefinger, he was making his way unostentatiously to - tRi scow a mcicAT, AA ;kw, gradtwo of Victoria tad MuM of Physicialia - and tiorleenX, Asher, and member Of tke Waldo inn& .for the Ootuatt noun. MacKay, Loam gridtutte of Wean and gold medellist of Trio- * WW1 College; member of the Col- andalurnennis °Mario. in. the sal000n, but only twos knew what 'the storm centre moving slowly across the room might develop. Ken- nedy, seeing everything and talking pleasantly with one of the barkeetwentypers, se - teeth gleaming crap dealer looked impatiently up his closet . feet away stoo_d at the end a the'bar • It Was a showdown. No one watch- ing the two men under the window breathed for a moment. Whispering Smith, motionless, only watched the of the table where Du Sanwas shoot - g ing. He made no effort -to attract half closed eyes. "You can't `shoop craps,"' he said coldly. stop a man "What can you Du Sang's ..atteption, and when 'did latter looked up he could have pulled shoot, Pea.rline? You can't the gray hat from the head of sue on horgeback," 4 111111 (Ai I Du Sang linear that he ' must try man whose brown eyes we)!O fixed on Du Swigs dice;they were lying for a quick kill or make a retreat. just in front of Smith. 00 Ilg, nedy's teeth gleamed on lyneteettaoft rich lands that are the envy of less reached for the dice; just ahead of fortunate regions in the Great Basin; differently at the intruder, Du Sang nedy's teeth gleamed only ten feet his right hand, Whiepering Smith's away, and with his right hand under iinit the Cre.wling Stone is not a river to give quiet title to one acre of its right hand, the fingetetips exteeded his coat lapel toyed with his watch own making. The toil of itt ocentur- 1 on the table, rested in front f them; chain. McCloud had moved in from the slot machine and stood at the point i ies spreads beautifully green under h d of the table, looking at Du Sang see 1 the June skies, and the unsuspecting it 'night have been through accident settler lulled into security by many years of the fiver's repose, settles on ite level, bench lands and la,ys out, his the corner. He knewnow. This was the man who held the aces at the barbecue, the railroad man—Whig- pering Smith, Kennedy, directly ito cross the table, watched the lightning like move. For the first time the eliding an enipty glees between his hands- Whispering Smith pushed past the on -lookers to get to the end H, HUGH ROSgadruate of Univerelty of Toronto bleaculty a Medicine, member of Col- Phy,iicians and Burgeons of On - 'Mal peas graduate courses In Chicago cM School of Chicago; •Inoyal Oph- thalmia Hospital, London, England,Sidvetelty ccliege Hospital, London, Illigand, Office—Beek of Dominion a&W sk, orth. Phone No. 5, Night WM answered from reaidesiee,,i Victoria fleafortbi • 'He took in the field at a glance. Ken - 1 Sunlight Soap bat a high: stan. dard of purity which is baekea by a $.5,000 guarantee. If a soap has no standard there is noreason why it should always be ofunifOrin quakii.41, always contian the best' materials or be anything like as good eA the soap with a standard. ts 1101.1NT STEPHEN TISZA, Min- ! ister-'Prezident of Hangary, of has been alternately the I most hated and the most loved man in his nation. Out in the Balkans, they blame him for what the ret of the world brands the Kaiser. Steeped in Machiavellian lore, "all for the atate," he has for Years been one of the most fan -beat- ing and perhaps sinister Wills /II European etateeratt. Eleven- year"; age, January 5, 1905, siftei a, long political deadlock and sm extremely reactionary eatra-par- liamenta.ry regime of the Tisza Gov- ernment. in Hungary, all the opposi- tion parties united, mobbed the par- liament, passed the milftary guard, and demanded Tisza's resignation.. riis Ministers resigned hastily, None eatne to take their places, and until June 17, when King Franz Soeeph re- luctantly dismissed him, he ruled Hungary iron -handed and alone. Let- ters by the thousand threatened him, revolution muttered in the streets of Budapest, assassination was sev- eral times attempted, he was spit on by the crowds that Jeered at him. Ane yet when he retired, even the Opposition, granted he was the most courageous man in the country. He came back on June 10, -1913, stIll distruited and disliked by Lib- eral and by pro-nussian, Magyars, and for the greater part of the time up until August, 1914, his life was not safe on the stinets. In August, 1914, Fitudents 4 pepulace hailed or t might have been sign. In his left hand Smith held 1 laughing et him. Flisperirg Smith the broken cigar, and without looking threw off all pretence. "Take your at Du Sang he passed the wrapper a- gain over the tip of his tongue and slowly across his lips. , • . Du Sang now looked sharply t hie ana d Smith looked at his cigar. Others in the saddle at two hundred and were playing around the semicircular fifty yards what do you think you'd table—it might mean. nothing, Du look like after a break with me? Sang :waited. Smith lifted his right • back to the whelp that hired you -.and hand from the table and felt for a tell him when he wants ii- friend of match. Du Sang, however, made no rnine to send a man that can shoot. effort to take up the dice. He watch- If you are 'within twenty miles of ed Whispering Smith scratch -a match Medicine Bend at daylight I'll rope on the table, and, either because it you like a fat cow and drag you down I Front Street!" Du Sang,with burning eyes,shrank narrower and smaller into his corner, -ready to shoot if he had to, but not _ A liking the chances. No man in iaWill- 15 IrEACIS had Cache could pull or shoot with Du Sang, but no man in the rnotmtainsd ever drawn successfully against * - F I RE the man that faced him. Whispering Smith saw that he would Just think! That is the time not draw. He taunted him again in through which Mr, H. C. Buckley low tones, and backing away, spoke endured all Ina ery torture on laughingly to McCloud. While Ken - itching, burning eczema. His life nedy covered the corner, Smith back - was a perfect misery until Zam-ed to the door and waited for the two Buk—the great herbal skin cure-- tO join him. They halted a moment at brought complete relief. the door, then they backed slowly up , Mr. Buckley, who lives at 461 the steps and out into the street East Broadway, Portland, Oregon . Thotffialeke.un,,Ntiolwt,hzlresaocinhe- Wwi cak is unto° writes:—"For fifteen years I suf- ed theer eyell fered with eczema, and although 1 of tell me who Du Sang is?" ask - tried many so-called 'eczema cures,' ed McCloud, after Kennedy and Smith with banter and laughing had gone nothing seemed capable of dealing with a case like mihe. It was not over the scene. until ir. had Zam-Buk recommended Kennedy picked up the ruler. "The wickedest, cruelest man in the bunch— to me that. I began to have hope. This wonderful skin !healer soonand the best shot," "Where is your hat, George—the ter. As I perseveredwitb. Zam-Buk brought about a change for the bet - one he put the bullet through?" ask - the burning sensation got less. 1 ed Whisperingf Smith, limp in the big found Zael-13uk wonderfully �$h- chair. "Burn it up; he thinks he missed s I you. Burn it up now. Never let him ness and the Milani -minim were re- ing. Gradually the matches of sore - And . out what a dose call you ' had. ni- duced, and cemplete and -puniest- Du Sang! Yes, he is cold blooded as mat cure finally resulted. I would a wildcat and cruel as a soft bullet. strongly iedvise all afflicted with ! Du Sang would shoot a dying man, eczema to give Zam-Buk a trial. It George, just to keep him squirming will give them satisfaction, They in the dirt. Did you ever see such eyes in a human being set like that *ill not he disappointed." . I the an,d blinldng so in fight? It's bad _ No skin 410Pase can resist the po- enough to watch a man when you can tent healing forces etored up in Zam-Buk, which is uneeualledefor see his eyes. Here's hoping we're done old wound0,1 ulcers,. Abscesses, bad with him!" legs, scalp "sores blood -poisoning, piles, scalds, burns, cuts and an skin injuries. All druggists and stores, or Zam-Buk Co., Toronto. 50e. box. hand away from your gun, you albino! Ill blow ymir head off left handed if you pull! Will you get out of this town tonight? If you can't drop a man haliCTIONBBBEI THOMAS BROWit auctioneer for the counties. and Pestle °compose dance ate for "Nge date, can be s,by calking ofp nen* $t,Osaforth, 2e Expadter ettbe. Charges mod- , mid eatiotactiou tuerssiteedt lets al El LUX^ cdonaar for the Coes- resift Attended es in cd tire eenessee Seven years' ea Is &Igoe"' and ilaskeWbawse zseemeals Phew Mc am, a limmer, °Weide' P, OE. R., It Oniers 'eft at The Harem at Ssafortn, promptly 111116111........1•11.011EIMISedft iypipt*e. CHAPTER XVIII. New Plane. Callahan crushed the tobacco un- der his thumb in the palm of his right hand. "So I am sorry to add," he concluded, speaking to McCloud, "that you are now out 01 a job." The two - ict M>.= -= ^4-414 51s LAME -HORSES PUT BACK TO WORK QUICK 'TRY KeridaRsSpavin Cure. It has *clued a great many horries--has put them back to work even af ter they had be en given up. Over ss years of success has proued tee meet of KENDALL'S Spavin Cure Surf ravrtax, °rm.. March gth, s9r6. I have used a good many bottles of Kendall's Spavin Oire for sprains and lameness and 1 do not think it has an equal, especially in stubborn CAM& Kindly send me a copy of your Treatise on the Horse. 0. T. YOUNG. Soid by drurgists *sem/here, tr.00 a bottle, 6 bottles for ;pm. Get a copy of -PA Treatise on the Hone from your druggist or write De. B.J. Kendall Company, Enosburg Falls lit Venison* 10 CENT " i'SteoCist..P.1117.13" IF BILIddidii3 Can, COSTPIP, For SiOK Headache, Sour Stomach, F-oieeish Liver and Bowels—They . work while 3/co Weep. inirrod Tongue. Dai 7.f.tStO, Indiges lee Sallow Shin end lt,liserable Hee' eele Pomo frein a torpid liver and alegeere Lowele, Wil„teli cause yonr ,n lacome filled with yell- " allich f.;e7sr:li and ferrre-ei ee- 31-,3 vein barrel. T: ber:.th, '14) -- tr.-, a ere eree:alaiee the 1.e eatscar ve"1 frivf rier;.%; sti pa ty I t'107'.--i'.,tr eleansing ann by reenter. They Irty, .1.11 •!oi elaep—a 1O -cent box frnn't your to-1.17tfli‘t will keep you feel- eg good tor months, • , re Soap . JOHN BULL, A HISTORIC NAME. VERTONE Is farailiar with the I iL term John Bull. Nearly a w hundred years ago, Wash- ington Irving could write a him that "there is scarcely a being In actual existence more absolutely present to the public mind than that eccentric personage, John Bull"; aad yet, few people are aware of the origin of this nickname for the Brit- Mrs. L. Gonshary, 683 Manning Ave., bat nation. To and it we must ge Tomasurerontoe,inOnwritti, ngwriyt:su: sta"tingtakthee bgertut fit I have received by ung DOS3:1'S Kid- ney Pills. About three years -ago I was tenibly afflicted with lame back, and was so bad I could not even sweep the floor.- I was advised to use Doan's Kid- aey Pills, and before r had used one box Upset was a great improvement, and my back was completely cured. 1 bighly recommend 'Doan's' for Lame back.' ..' and not all the triumphs of Marl- BOZO'S Kidney Pills are put up in art borough, or Peterborough, or the oblong grey ioox, the trade -mark is a . Prince Eugene could inlay, In Eng. Maple Leaf, so accept no other. ' ,, land, the growing discontent over Price 50c. per box, n boxes for $1.25, the Matter, and the growing ant ag; t all dealers, or mailed direct on receipt , onisne to the Whigs, who were large- of price by Tnn T. Mumma Co., 1 11 rifeeonsible for it. Dr. Arbuthnot LIMITED, Toronto, Ont. ' , VMS a Tory of Tories. A friend of When ordering,directspucify"Doann," Jonathan Swift and of Alexander 1 Pope, he was a brilliant satiritst,, "full of abundant imnt agination," and fro his position as court physician he en- joyed many pray -lieges. So he looked out on the times, on the adventuatta at the Whigs in France and in Spain, and launched Oa, atter the.manner COULD NOT SWEEP SACK WAS $O S01E5 •witvais,:mnoah Women are coming to andengand that weak, lame and actiing backs from which they suffer so ranch eacraciating pain and agony are due to wrong Action 01 the kidneys. On the first sign of any ww.kness in the back Doan's Kidney Pills should be taken. hack just over 200 years, to a oar- • tain famous political satire written o by Dr. Arbuthnot, entitled "The His- , tory of John Bull," and first Pub- lished in 1712. At about that tim.e the question of the Spanish succes- sion was agitating all Europe. This agitation had gone on, in one war y o another, for more than fifteen years, COUNT STEPHEN TISZA. The kirk in a Wrelo a Fe. ... 18h vil- lage was in. urgent. need repair eori.eia and Sandy McNah, a 'vtry popular member, had been inviied to collect of his day, into a series of polities' pamphlets. subscriptions for the purpose. One day the minister met aaady 'walking It was in the year 1712 thatall irresolutely along alie road. He at Lendou, or that part of it which had onee guessed the cause. "Mark, 2TOWn tired of the Whigs, found it- Sandy" he said earnestly, "I'm sorry, self rejoicing over the first of a to so ye iti this state." "Ah, we. series of such pamphlets whick3ss- it's for the good othe cause," r- an to appear under the title of plied the delinquent happily. "le 'Law is a Bottomless Pit, Exemply- twe, meenister, it's a' through theft led in the case of Lord Strutt, Joh* Bull, Nicholas Frogg, and Lewin Baboon, who spent all they had in a Lew suit. Printed from the IllaUll- script found in the eablnet of the famous Sir Humphrey Polesworth." And Lord Strutt was Charles II. of Spain; John Bull was, of course, England; and Nicholas Frogg, "a, cunning sly- rogue quite the reverse of John in many particulars," was ' St, VittiS Dance Affects Holland; whilst Lewis Baboon was -1 Many Chil ire Le Grand Mona: ue. "And aome-1 times you would see Lewis Baboon I behind the rouri ,', selling broad- cloth, s o met i li:•.;• measuring linen; next day, he aee !.I. ' be dealing in mereery warce; • ish head's, ribbons, gloves, fans, anti lace, he understood him, bands played under his win- 1 to a nicety." Se Arbuthnot gees on, dows, adoring crowds followedhire i filling in the pira ire with wonderful in the town, old Kossuth songs were 1 deftiaess, show.n, Louis, as he was, 4revived in his honor. The steering- 1 forever seizing x ealth wherever he gear of Austria-Hungary was in his I could find it, a I then squandering I hand. Not since Count Andraasy's It all on wa.re t d again wars, in day, and not even then, had a Hun-- "baeksword, Tie,erstaff, and cudgel garlan statesman been so dominant play, in whieh L took great pleas - in the Dual Monarchy. It was known ure." But to retuin i John Bull. Bull, ithat his had been the band to pen the dictatorial note to Serbia, and his in the main, el:. a, honest, plain - popularity con.tinues because It is dealing fellow., .. Merle, bold, and of now known that his were not the a very inconstene emper. He dreaded 'changes, but Count Berchtold's and not old Lewis, • ,her at bacnswordi Count Forgaeh's, which made the single falchicne -,..e cudgel play; but note. too severe for Serbia's stomach-, then he waS1,":,-...-;ipt to quarrel with Ing. For Count Tisza is Bismarck- his best frienda especially if they Ian enough to have cautiously count- pretended to eeei rn him. He was ed the costs. quic-k, and lin lorstood business \ His father before him, Count Kai- well; but iio man alive was more -man Tisza, led Hungary for eighteen careless in look: g into his ac - uninterrupted years, and trained his counts, nor inc.:. cheated by part - son consistently for ' statesmanship. ners, apprennm s, and servants. No 'Mont Stephen Tisza arrived not by man kept a both- house, nor spent aecident. He comes near being theh.-eeev is money mo,. neusly. Thus only sta,tesman in the Dual Mon- Alide.-Arbuthnoe writing-- over 200 =thy with courage, experience, re- years ago, fashion the national sourcefulness, and indomitable bealtii. Garbed always in gloomy black, courteous but abrupt, dry and brief, he is not a come -hither figure. Ho looks- a bit lkke Martin Luther, and he has the most celebrated rac- ing stables in Hungary. Tall, almost gaunt, his gray ha:r is cropped crim- inally close. His eyes are pale gray and far-seeing. His face arrests you, the stern bones of tlae forehead and cheek, the straight, thin lips, the mil- itary carriage of h's neck. No one recalls having eeen him sines for years. And yet he is witty *PM 0C- 4"1431° member , , of the consular corps at Budapest remembers discussing aome 1tttle affair with him a few years, .ago. Both gentle men, kept their tempers and botb were very much Ir- ritated. When he got home from the !interview, the consular officer found a huge basket of fruit there before Wm "to make it up." Another re - ;members a Tisza sally during the lbarrassing salt scandal of 1912, 'when the then Minister -President Ladislaus de inkacs, figurehead for Tisse„. was beteg fatally found out foe his part in selling the salt monopoly. The Liberal papers called it spend- ing booty when Mr. de Lukacs gave an official dinner to two hundred persona, 'The Balkan war was in i progress, and the table at which Mr. 1 de Lukacs and Count Tisza and the 1 sonsular cone were seated gave It. I 'self over to ii neutral dismission of national foods, The French Cons& suggested that Hungarian foods were leccellent, but perhaps rather piquant, Count Tisza ipoke for the first time, glancing at Mr. de Lukacs: "Mon. Meer finds them perhape too salty." The hit reached himself, at that, fol. his own brilliant mind had suggested the Salt Paneena largely to provide campaign funds for hie party, the National Workbag party, On Count Stephen TiZ'Za depi any move that ti.ufetria may. meke Col operate peace. surescreeptions. Ii.ve been down Jet ; *sn collectIn' fun's, an' at every they made me hae a wee (Irises - "Every house! But—but- -. -'!y, Sandy, there are some at rab2rs wjio re teetotal-' ae tncre are; but I wrote character, and it is interesting to note how little i ie popular concept St. Vitus 'Dance. The following in has changed dur:ig the period, that proof of the power of Dr. Williams° has lutervened. - It was almost exactly a hundred years later that Washington Irving, coming to England from New York, picked up Arbuthuot's parable, as it were, and. developed it ill his fameus "Sketch Book." Washington Irving found John Bull '4. a time when he was, passing out cf the realm of tbe actual, "blunt, co, _le, and familiar," into the realm of tradition, "stated, fixed, and aettled." Irving's "sturdy old fellow with a three -cornered hat, red waistcoat, leather breeches, and stout oaken cudgel---," had yet to un- dergo further ebanges before he reached the popular concept of to- day. But all that the great Ameri- can author had to say showed him entirely unchanged by the passage of time. "He will 'nand by a friend. In a quarrel, -with life and purse, how- ever soundly he may be cudgeled.' With all his odd humors, Washing- ton Irving insists, he is a, "sterling - hearted old blade." He is, he adds, "like his own oak, rough without and sound and solid wiiM THIS TROUBLE CAN BE CU THROUGH THE USE OF DR WILLIAMS' PINK PILLS St, Vitus Dance is much moral common than is genetally iniagineda The trouble is often mistaken fon mere nervousness, or awkardnessa It usually attacks young children. most often between the ages of Sit and fourteen—thougb, older persona may be afrectd with it. The most onUflOfl sympton is twiething of tht museles 01 the face aid iinib. Ad the disease progresses this twitching takes the form of spasms in which the jerking -motion may be confined to the hued or all the limbs may be affected. The patient is frequent' unable to hold anything in the h or walk steadily, and in severe case the speech may be affected. Thn tiisease is due to impoverished nerves owing to the blood being out of cone dition and can be cured by Dr. Wile :Hams Pink Pills, which enrich the blood, strengthen the nerves, and in this way restore the sufferer to goo4 health. Any eymptom of nerve troubld in young children should be promptly, treated as it is almost sure to lead to. Et offineulimuclinicerinemmis - Children Or FOR FLETCHEWS C A SMO RIA Pink Pills to eure this trouble. Mesa Hattie Cummings, R.R. No. 8, 'Pet- caboro Ontario, says: "Vvnts attack.' ed with what the doctor said was Ste Vitus Dence. Both ray hands trembe led so as to be practically uselssse Then the trouble went to my left side, and from that to my right leg, and left me in such a condition that I was not able to go out of the house. I took the doctor'medicine without getting any benefit. Then I tried an. other remedy with the same poor re- ults. At this stage I was advised to try Dr.- Williams'. Pink Pillls and dia so, with the result that they fully restored rne to- health, and I have not the slightest , symptom of nervous trouble since. I can recome mend these pills to anyone who ig suffering from nervous trouble, awl hope they will profit by my experts ence. You can get Dr. Williams' Pia Pills from any drug dealer or .by maii at 50 edits a box or six boxes for 62.50, frein The Dr. Williams' Medicine Cala Brockville, Ontario. veins *A putt of J11 10I nine a clack a mere isessiee_ bee aeseepeeli of kebor Seeable. parebeeed ea box o & Ma Dagen la& Won ft wag taithei Z wu sal eble to relax* ie say Z reonelatuded Om to a wee ens also le a efieller maditLas and liatrlsa ana w4Ak U.s semi good. twits. I saw ton Mt X taloa MUT rerasaiasItt aaaraiea Tears f yea eider teen Iteteceo, Warm 204 other &mess 44e. er IOW a bex from your druggita-419a, YS LM for 15 fr JILZ, Saliseal brim & eheizikia C ef casksim, Toroator Crat