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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1918-11-08, Page 6_All NOVF BER 'Alloy vary. from 45 to 90 feet in wing; Fovea(' and carry 'frisra -two to tvselee =sons in addition to their bombs and fuel, Their Speed is from 75 to 100 mileo per hour; their radius of operations ZIT 500 , to 1,000 m miles and their cif tieing speed 7,000 feet in 30 minutes. (4) 13attleplane; A two or three-. 'paeeeng-e.r pla,ne driven by one or two engines and equipped with machine gum and sometimes-cannon.41t Makes! from 75 to 86 Miles per hour. - (5) For naval work, laying 'boats1 and hydro-airPlanes of various sizes! are used, On account a the weight of their • hulls, or pontoons, these compere favorably with the f.recon-, naissance machine, travelling 90 to 100 miles per hour. They are used for a et• patrol work and naval ob-1 seryati purposes, and can., caeftr 2,000 pe teds. ! Straw for 1.. • ..4orses. Straw is A feed Vcry high in - fil;re and the horse's digestive iesystem is , not suited to, the ,liberttl use of this roughage. It is not a sultable feed ! Ler horses at: hard work, but during the , winter months .fattybe used to advantage where hay is scarce, and particularly if- a little grain is fed 4,1ong with 'M It J.S just a question whether it is more economical to -I feed good hoyt and no grain than it Lr to feed - 4 'Percentage of bright rLw and aftration or crnehed oats.- OnlY clean, tbright straw eihould be tmed for hor-,pcs and one or two feeds Per clay, rOplacing hay should be • tound advantageous: under certain rinnenstancOs. We have seen -horses- good condition on oat .::t.avv• and 4. light grain ration. 11. nie were ayailable tor. a light :feed „Jere a -day •the other two fet ts could eopipustil• of straw, and less grain v. Quid be litquIred Ulan whore tue antire rou4hage ration was .straw. Oat straw:.@alces the best feed, bar- ley straw t.pming second and wheat • and ryestraw lust.. A ‘few roots maj,: be used to good Advantage with the straw, id. under • no cl2cumstanccs Lt a go policy to winter horses wi itraIN WHlQut sunplementing it with or two light feeds of .oats - at least per !lay.—+Prof. Wade Toole, Ontario Agricultural College, Guelph. e4, 4 "Unto the least of these RIVET your eyes on this picture of a Belgian mother and child, until you feel the full horror of the situation! Thousands of these orphans, dying of starvation, might now be living in comfort and plenty, had their soldier fathers not flung themselves into the breach when the Hun invaded • Belgium. The fathers died to save us. Are we going to let the orphans starve? Conditions are simply ghistly. The United States loans to the Belgian Government finance the general -relief work, but this only provides a bowl of soup and two piecs of bread to each person per day. The Canadian Bureau in Brussels will adminiiter funds, and provide means for getting the ailing children .into Holland and into, orphanages where they can be saved from a hideous death. Before you sit clown to another meal, do SOMETHING for the Belgian children. What is that for a growing child? • The Slaughter of the Innocents is 'less terrible than what is now occurring in Belgium—practically a *hole - generation of the Belgian nation inthe grip qf Consumption, Rickets and other ills all direly due to insufficient nourishment. Make cheques payable mull send contributions to I • *In Rdidrun (Registered under the War Charities Act) tri 116 , •Huron County Belgian Relief Fund—Mrs. 3. B. Thompson, Treasurer, Seaforth, Ontario, or to ONTARIO BRANCH— • Belgian Relief Fund, 95 King Stet, West, Toronto." 1 'Yr all r6h.i" 776"16kC WORT HOUSEHOLD EAU For over twenty-five years thousands and thousands of housekeepers have found' their greatest aid to clean- liness and comfort in Comfort' Soap. Comfort enjoys a larger sale in Canada if than any other soap and, to -day, more people are using it than ever before "The people know best". Quality always wins. Most things you buy have decreased in size in war time but the Comfort bar is bigger, much bigger than a year or so ago. Get it at your 'Grocer's to-diy. PUGSLEY, DINGMAN & CO, LIMITED, TORONTO - 6 ' THE 1t to N EXPOSIT/A? •.•••: NOVEMBER St 1918 TAKES OFF DANDRUFF, HAIR STOPS FALLIN46 Save your Halrl Get a small bottle of Danderine right now—Also atop* itching scalp. Thin, brittle, colorless and eeraggy hair is mute ervidence of a neglected I of dandruff—that awful scurf. ere is nothing so destructive to hair se dandrietit It robs the heir its luatre its strength and its very eventually producing a feverish- ness and itohing of the scalp, which if not remedied causes the hair roots to shrink., loosen and die—then the hair falls out fast. A little Dan4rine to- night—now—any time—will surety save your hair. Get a small bottle of 'Knowlton' Daudet:1'1e from any drug store. You surely Can have beautiful hair and lots tif it if e-ou will jest try a little Dan- derine. Save your hair! Try it! LEGAL, R. S. HAYS. tarrister, Solieitor,Conveyancer and Notary Public. Solicitor for the Do- minion Bank. Office in rear of the Do- aneion Bank, Seaforth. Money to loon. 3. M. BEST. Barrister, Solicitor, Conveyancer and Notary Public. Office Upstairs over Walker's Furniture Store, Attain Seaforth. tt'ROUDFOOT, KILLORAN AND MORA Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries Pubs , etc. Money to lend. In Seaforth on Monday of each week. Office in Kidd Block W. Proudfoot, K. C., 3. L -Killorain, H. J. D. Cooke. VETERINARY. F. HARBURN, V.S. Honor graduate of Ontario Veterhe- ery College,. and. honorary rneraher of the Medical Aseociation of the Ontario Veterinary College. Treats diseases of ell domestic animals by the most mod - tom Principles. Dentistry and Milk Fev- a. specialty. Office opposite Dick's Hotel, Male Street, Seaforth. Ali or- ders left at the hotel will receive prompt attention. Night calls receiv- e et the office. * JOHN GRIEVE, V.S. Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin- ert College. All diseases ol domestic *rands treated. Calls promptly at- tended to and charges moderate. Vet- erinary Dentistry a specialty. Office and residence on Goderich street, one door east of Dr. Scott's office, Sea - forth. MEDICAL DR. GEORGE HEILEMANN. Osteophatic Physician of Goderich. Specialist in women's and childretrs diseases, rheumatism, acute, chronic and nervous disorders; eye ear, nose and throat. Consultation free. Office in the Royal Hot:7, Seaforth, Tues- days and Fridays, d a.m. till 1 p.m. C. 3. W. HA.RN, M.D.C.M. 425 Richmond Street, London, Ont., Specialist, Surgery and Genito-Urin- ary diseases of men and women. Dr. ALEXANDER MOIR Physician and Surgeon Office and residence, Main Street, Phone la Henn DR. 3. W. PECK Graduate of Faculty of Medicine McGill University, Montreal; Member of College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario ;Licentiate of Medical Conn- ell of Canada; Post-Grachiate Member of Resident Medical Staff of General Hospital, Montreal, 191445; Office, 2 doors east of Post Office. Phone 56, Hansa% Ontario. $ DR. F. J. BURROWS Office and residence, Goderich street east of the Methodist church, Seaforth. Phone 46. Coroner for the County of • Huron. DRS. SCOTT & MACKAY 3. G. Scott, graduate of Victoria and College of Physicians and Surgeons Ann Arbor, and member of the Col- lege of Physicians and Surgeons, of Ontario. C. Mackay, honor graduate of Trin- ity University, and gold medallist of Trinity ftleolical College; member of tho College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario. DR. H. HUGH ROSS. Graduate of Univereity of Toronto Faculty of Medicine, member of Col- kge of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario; pass graduate courses in Chicago Clinical School of Chicago; Royal Ophthalmic Hospital, London, England, University Hospital, London, .EngIand. Office—Back of Derainion, Zank, Seaforth. Phone No. 5, Night Calls answered from resideice, Vie- toria street, Seaforth .......—•••••••••=••••••••• AUCTIONEERS. THOMAS BROWN Licensed auctioneer for the counties of Huron and Perth. Correspondece arrangements for sale dates can he made by ceiling up Phone 97, Seaforth, or The Expositor Office. Charges mod- • erate and satisfaction guaranteed. R. T. LUKER Licensed Auctioneer for the County of Huron. Sales attended to in all parts of the county. Seven years' ex- perience in Manitoba and Saskatche- wan. Terms reasonable. Phone No. 175r11, Exeter, Centralia P.O., R. R. No. 1, Orders left at The Huron Ex- positor Office, Seaforth, promptly at - fended to. iminiriZommeamM10"11111"tommimmome The Opal Pin - Continued from page seven' "Yes: I'm going to try something honest before I get so deep in I won't care to get out; before crime gets me the way it does every one, and while I've got looks enough, yes, and char- acter enough, left to be worth some- thing. You don't think I'm starting too late, do you?" British smiled in- gratiatingly. Mink did not answer, merely regard- ed him sullenly. t "You don't think I've lost too much of my manners and polish to win one of your American heiresses and keep straight and make her happy, do you"' "How do 1 know?" Mink turned a- way from' him with a -vicious impati- • ence. "No; 1 don't think you can do it. not in a thousand years," he added with a snarl," "Now you -make me feel quite sure that I can." British laughed and pees - ed into the adjoining room. 11 The young man was tall and. slen- der; he had heavy black hair and pe- culiarly dark and lustrous brown eyes. The young man was well groomed, his clothes seemed to lend, and, at the seine time, to take, a certain air of distinction. The young man had the aquiline nose of the man that ventures but neither one nor all these details quite explained the strange interest he excited in two other passengers on that Boston -bound Knickerbocker Lim- ited. He was 'brooding, brooding over something so deeply that to him there was no other persn in that parlor -car. • But some queer cast of chance had de- • posited him inthe next chair to Ben- jamin Bunce. And Bunce was—vary- ing the old phrase to suit events— Dunce certainly was the dub in the machine. Bun* one gathered from a, self- importance that fairly bugled, Was a prominent Boston business Man; Bunce was one of those short, cor- pulent, self-made -men who overlap, • who are so pleased with themselves that they are pleased to talk to the man in the next seat. The pleasure is mostly theirs. Now, in that slow, tedious ride with which the railroad separates Boston from New York, it is common enough for men of Bunce's order to endeavor to make friends; but, when all their early advances are checked by a cer- tain positive, if polite, distance, they seldom try to force an acquaintance. Not a bit of it! That is not Boston - bound behavior. • Also'it is common • n enough for a traveller, to Bos- ton, to be distant, to indicate plainly that he would like to be left to him- • self. But usually one thus fried turns his chair towards the window, plants his feet upon the heating con- duit and uses the high back of said • chair as a bulwark against intrusion. The young man in the snug Wagner. had neglected to do this. He sat sprawled look in a chair still pointed up the aisle; and he seemedtoo en- grossed. in his thoughts even to be scratched by Bunce's ludicrous deter- mination to make his acquaintance. Bunce retired from leis vain -attempt to drag the young man into conversa- tion with a knowing nod of his fat, • round head, and 'a smile where one would have expected a frown. He turned, and behind the high back of his own chair consulted again the pic- ture, the headlines and the few para- graphs he had torn from an inner page of one of New York's yellow newspapers. This time he folded ov- er the picture,- which was as like the stranger as newspaper cuts are like any -body, skipped the headlines which told the meat of the Story and read eagerly the fervent language in which they were rehashed by a thoroughly impassioned rewrite man. They de- clared: "Late last fall the wreck off the Balearic Islands of their yacht caused the loss to the Earl of Ashburton of his two eldest sons, and obliged him to summon from America a younger scion of his noble narne upon whom developed the title of Lord Bellmere. The present Lord Bellmere returned, endured the endless round of gaities of English social life for one brief winter, and acted as became the on and heir of one of the wealthiest peers of the realm. One brief winter? And now he has fled the parental roof -tree and vanished into thin air. "Rumor saith that the rebellious lord has had words with his hat -tem- pered father over the same opinions that separated them of yore, and has hied him back to America to prove that his birthright is but a mess of 'pottage, and that he is .capable of making a name and place in life for himself. "Whether this be true or no, this much is known: The young and hand- some Lord Bellmere thinks for him- self, and is no longer to be found in his old haunts, while the Earl, his fathengruffly denies having any know- ledge whatever of his present where- • abouts, though he will say no more. "More than likely, Lord Bellmere has returned to America, where he was educated and insisted upon living until summarily called home. During the brief London season, which he had just graced, he was known as The Am- erican, Lord,' because of his unconven- tional ideas and speech. He disdains society, and has even been known to use slang. "Perhaps he is already among 1.16, • incognito, and making good as man was intended to make good. It is said that he could easily be taken for one of us. "Welcome, Lord Bellrnere!" &mac hid the newspaper clipping • away in an initer pocket and ponder- ed, until a look of sly cunning appear- ed in his small eyes. Hee turned quick- ly toward the stranger. • "My lord," he whispered. The young man -start* but revert - to his abstractions without turning his head. • Bunce grinned, resumed his louder tone and baited with a fresh subject. • "Awful rumpus those suffragettes are k;eking up on the other side." The stranger nodded without looking up. • "Getting so it isn't safe for a man to go out walking alone. Seen the afternoon papers?" Bunce thrust a bunch of them toward him. The young man thanked him and • ye .RAGES IN CANADA Thotisands of Cases Reported •• With Many Deaths. menormarai THOSE WHO ARE MOST SUSCEPTIBLE TO IT "FRUIT-A-TIVEV—The Wonderful Fruit Medicine—Gives the Power • To Resist This Disease. The epidemic of Spanish Influenza whieh played such havoc in Europe, his. reached. this continent. Thou- sands of cases of the'stra --ge malady have appeared and manyl deaths are already reported; Surg on -General Blae of- the United States Public Health Service having stated that "Spanish Influenza will probably spread all over the country in six weeks". Practically every ship which touches our shores from abroad, brings those infected with • the disease. • Surgeon -General Blue urges that "the individual take all the precau- tions he can against contracting . the disease by care and personal hygiene". Plenty of exercise should be taken ;the diet should be regulated, etc. Spanish Influenza affects most severely elderly persons and others whose powers of resistance are •weakened by illness,work or worry, especially those who are "run-down" or "not feeliag up to the mark." •The really great danger from the disease is not so much in the disease itself, as that it often develops into pneumonia. • What everyone needs now is a general tonic like "Fruit.a-tives". This wonderful fruit medicine is not a germ -killer. It is a body-builder; a strength -maker; a blood -purifier; a power in protecting againt the' ravages of disease. . " Fruit -a -tives" regulates thew kidneys and bowels, causing these •organs to eliminate Waste regularly and naturally, as nature intended. "Fruit -a- tives " keeps the skin active, and -purifies and enriches the blood. " Fruit- a - tives " tones up and strengthens the organs of digestion, insuring food being properly digested and assimilated. - Everyone can take ordinary pre- cautions, avoid crowded places, and use "Fruit -a -tives " regularly to insure sound digestion, to keep the bowels and kidneys regular and the whole system in the best possible condition. Then we are safe from disease. • "Fruit-a-tives" is sold by dealers everyithere at 50c a box, •6 for $2.50, trial size 25c or sent postpaid on receipt of price by Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa, Ont. took the papers, but, after a perfunc- tory glance at the toprnoste'allowed them to drop into his lap. Bunce shook his head and turned to- ward his neglected companion on the •other side. Here he could command attention, for this young man was in his employ. "Ice, David; ice!" he muttered, tak- ing for granted that his aetion had been watched and his defeat n ticed. "I tell you what, our Cabots ah En- dicotts and Coolidges may- have walk- ed with God, but they hatrenit got a thing on this young man. You just know lie s semebody by the way he treats you. • David Shaw, business manager of Bernamm Bunce and Company, 'recall- ed his eyes reluctantly from the young woman sitting a few seats away oti the other side of the car. is had happened to be looking in her direction'''. when she turned to ob- serve • Bunce's amusing pursuit of the stranget. He had seen a pair of dark eyes full of lurking mischief liglat casually on the victim, widen, and then remain fastened incredulously up- on him. He had seen her look change from doubt to started certainty, her face grow suddenly white, her lips fall apart ab from dismay. Then Bunce — confound him!—had chosen on suffering with that obstinate sore, if you will only use Zam-Buk—the • great herbal skin cure. This balm, owing to its unique composition, is the very thing for 'sores and skin troubiss that have resisted ordinary treatments. Mrs. Herbert Cox, of Port McNicoll. Ontario, writes: 'For nine years 1 %suffered with an abscess on -my face, Ivhich was both painful and disfigur- ing. I had. the abscess lanced re- peatedly, but it still remained. also tried ordinary ointments, but without any permanent benefit. Fin- ally the doctor told me .1 ha.d a tumor on the bone, and would have to undergo an operation, which did; but instead of improving, the wound only became worse., I was In dPspair when a friend got me to try Zam-Buk. I soon noticed a marked improvement. Zam - auk • sc......rned to get to the .very root of t11,3 trouble, and in the ed the ab- sc vs was entirely cured—not even leaving a sear. This was a year as), and there has been no return g the trouble." Zom-Duk is not a mere ointment, but a Pich,herbal balm. Unequalled forc:ler•::eina, scalp sores, ringworm, boils, Id legs, bloodpoisoning, piles, culs, burns, sprains, scalds, and all skin injuries. 50c. box, 3 for $1.25, all druggists or 'Zam-Buk Toronto. Send lc. stamp for post- ! age on free trial box. this moment to speak to him; As soon as Dance grew less atten- • tive David's curidity scht his eyes back to her. She had wheeled her ) chair around and Was staring at the stranger with an intentness that en- abled David to serutinize her unob- served.- And there wasthat in her ap- i pearance which intensified his inter- est. It was a face, dimpled and be- guiling, without being Weak; a face all curves, without the monotony of a single straight line, extraordinarily soft, intelligent and expressive. And the -hair—heavy, 'abundant, raven- black—parted ° at one side, pressing over the .brow in two great waves be- fore allowing itself to be turned back over the ears, gave her a picturesque appearance of strength that her soft young face belied. The panic had all but left her atti- tude by, now; , her dark eager eyes dwelt upon the stranger with the steady stare of recognition. David waited for the young man ot, lift his eyes from the floor and bow. He want- ed to hear her 'voice and to see that interesting face light up again. The young man glanced up. For an instant his eyes rested incuriously upon .the. girl who so obviously stud- ied hint Then, :Without a 'sign of re- cognition, they retifrned to the floor. But not before the girl, blushing to her ears, had picked up her book, has- tily, and in a very flutter of confusion. Didn't she know him. Then why, David wondered, had the mere sight of him give her such a shock? He watched her, his astonis him ashamed, but ,thou remained pointed in th she ddid not allow he glance. toward the youn ment making h her chair ir direction, self another man m the seat between them. Atid,, lalthough she kept her eyes ecrupulously fixed upon her book, five—ten—minutes passed and she had not yet turned a page. 111 Manner'n' tone, Davi , menner'n' tone! That's what the four hundred have on vs, and that's all too. One 'generation ices up for th next, and the next gets in all righ without . so much as a struggle. 'T in't a cage of money, breeding or lea ing a vertical life—nothing of the sot!—jut cold storage. Take Gideon Tueker! What's he got? Nothin' but a name that once was, shiny clothes, and the patented freezing process, Gus A.mes, social tramp; not money enough to buy. a drink, too ktzy to do anything but dance for a living—leads the swell Boston codtlionse doesn't he? Hired, of cotfrse. We all know that. • Sim Hodge, farmer's boy, self-made man like me; how'd he wriggle into that Cold Roast Boston set?,, Married one of their cold storage wernen. I could buy and sell Sim; we're good friends still, but his hand now would give you a 'chill. Manner'n' tone, frost an' dis- tance—that's the recipe! ' Look at Al- gy Coolidge. . . ." Buncer kept on down the list of Boston people of birth and rank, hand- ling their names with the familiarity of a megaphone -man on a sight-seeing auto, talking to. David but .really ad- elressing the neighborhoed. David re- joiced because it left him free to ob- serve others in whom he Was more interested. Bunce talked oet tirelessly. The. young man in the chair ahead appar- ently paidentYtettentiner.• And the girl —was she still atittchin him? Was she, each time that she llfted her eyes from her book, using the highly polished mahogany pane ng as a mir- ror? (Continued Next Week) • NEWEST NOTES OF SCIENCE A Patent has been issued for an attachment to fasten a carrier° to a rifle or gun to photograph anobject at which, the weapon is fired as • the trigger is pulled. •• , According to a Dutch scientist who has experimented extensively, bread can be kept fresh for several days at temperature below freezing or exe4ed- ing 104 degrees. - An Ohio inventor •Ilan patented a lenseless direct niew finder to be at- tached to any earner° to' enable a pho- tographer to evOtek his object up to the instant of exposure. The Argentitieigenernnient has con- tracted for a radio station with three towers, each the helklit of the Eiffel tower in Paris, making it the largest station in the world. 'Equipped with cots and °thee con- venieoees for. six- persons a tent has been invehted.that cir he completely enclosed' to form a shelter. Sweden, with nearly 48 per cent. of its area under fewest, is the most densely wooded country in Europe and Portugal has the least timber, only about 31/2 acres he each hundred. A new electricwitch for use in places empolying many persons un- familiar with electricity is so enclosed in a box that the latter cannot be opened while the owitell -is conveying current. - The anteeae of the wireless stations ie the cathedral at Florencte, Italy, are entirely within the building, yet work satisfactorily, though the waves pass through several thick walls. A new German process for drying eggs and fruit juices without using any chemical means lashes the liquids to foam in a steel cylinder through Which a current et hot air passes and converts them into powder. eta' planes at the Front. The airplanes which are doing so much to help win the war are of • many types. A'Each variety of avia- tion' exploits -at the front requires its own machine, and as many different • tasks are performed by the Allied aces, the types of plane in use are • numerous. Here is a description of the five airplanes most comMonly used by the Allied air forces; (1) Combat machines: Small, fast, single -seater fighters, used for scaUt- ing purposes. They usual* have a wing spread of from 20 to 25 feet, a speed :of from 125 to 135 miles per hour;. carrying capacity 450 Pounds, and a climbing speeli,of 10,00-0 feet in from 8 to 12 minutes. (2) .Recorinaissaice and photo- • graph: Slower machines, used for artillery spotting, map making and 1 general reconnoitering. The. wing l spread is usually from 40 to 60 feet; speefrom 80 I carrTing capacity from 80 100 miles per hour, ity fro800 to 900 pounds. They are two or three seat- ers and have a climbing speed. of 10,000.feetiin 12 to 25 minutes. (3) Bombers: Similar to the re- connaissance machine, but lareer. - 1 111111111/11110R, : Motormen And., Conductors Wanted. 'Steady Positions. Ten Days' Training. New men earn an average of $90 per month. Others make from $70 to $1.10 per month, The war will soon be over. Make pre- paration' for the future. The Toronth Railway Company 165 Front treet East Toronto * I. ' The tall, reserved -looking elan in evening -dress, hive arm, stick in hand, consulted then sauntered quietly out of 1 of the Waldorf. Interested o ly only in the shop -windows ing women, he walked slond] Thirty-fourth street. On B he stopped to mail a letter, steps further he drew anoth feom his pocket, tore it and the pieces carelessly into th Without -change of gait or Ioo • be then entered the bar of / tinique. Once inside, be earn guardedly through the de short, athletic but slightly q man whom he ,but seen appri of the Waldorf house-deteett picking up The pieces. , • Smiling, the tall, reserved Englishman moved to the ban a high -ball, drank it. After, wandered out into the foyer served two seats for the f night at the Little Theater. : the name of Howe. Then he i ed to the grill room, ordered I drink, and set there placidly the music of the negro-rainst til one o'clock came and ti1 • c lo s eod w. • Nhe took the elevator flee floor and started with e swinging gait toward the thir Street exit of the hotel. II 4 through the long vestiheile he • suddenly, as if recalling retraced hissteps and left tl by its Thirty-second Street ei Jong this street to FiftliNAvene the avenue to Thirty-first, aloi ty-first street he sauntered. tit he neared the corner of ] avenue did he venture his fo behind. Then he dropped his s turned in picking it up. Thl athletic but slightly corpulel was far behind, on the other Thirty-first Street. The Englishman turned up Avente. Around the corner i a master -key from his poell quickened his gait. The outei two doors of the house he proaching someone had left aja a hurried look back he ente vestibule and noiselessly clo outer door, With the maste opened ths inner door. It was a boarding house. furniture, the absence of anyth sonel lying about, said so. S by the heavy hangings at the of the fropt parlor,he watched He say the man who had ed him stop at the eorter of second Street, look ideeisivel north, east, and -then hut.= toward Fourth Avenue. The tall reserved -looking Mal) waited in the dark sha the parlor for nearly an ho one eneered the boarding house left it. At the end of this drew over his shoes a pair GIRLS! WHITEN YOUR .WITH LEMON Makea beauty'lotion for a few remove tan, freckles, sail* Your grocer has the lemons drug store or toilet counter will you with three ounces of mbar for a few cents. Squeeze the, two fresh lemons into a, bottle, t in the orchard white and sha3 This makes a quarter pint of t best lemon skiu whitener and beautifier known, Massage grant, creamy lotion daiiy into neck, arms and hands and just freckles, tan, sallownejs' redn roughness disappear Midhow soft and. clear the skin become It is harmless, and the beautiful will surprise you. end on Farms, First, Se orteages. Call or itemwe nee and get your loan a by return rata No ady dumps. B. R. slyNorms, • 77 Victoria St., Toronto. rrF !HIM t t telt-Met- Graha One satisfi "I never k could be Tellers. licious". She's- rigt. Y Packed in ajr tight pa Por sale, at 611 grocer elfe "The Buy Word fin !II Hi