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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1919-03-07, Page 6p 4 Ots r DR. F. Je R. FORSTER . • EY*, Ear, Nose and -Threat Graduate in Medicine, University of Toronto. Late Assietant New York Oplithale mei and Aural Institute, Moorefield's Eye, and Golden Square Throat Hos- pitals, London, Eng. , At the Queen's Hotel, Seaforth third Wednesday in each month from 11 a.m. to 8 pen. 88 Waterloo Street, South, Stratford. Phone 267 Stratford. LEGAL R. S. K&YS. Barriater, Solicitor,Conveyancer and Notary Public., Soliciter for the Do- minion Bank. Office in rear of the Do- minion Bank, Seaforth. Money to loan. S. M. BEST. Barrister, Solicitor, Conveyancer and Notary Public. Office upstairs over Walker's Furniture Store, Main Street, Seaforth. t. PROUDFOOT, KILLORAN AND COOKE. 'Barristers, Solicitors; Notaries Pub- ' lire etc. Money to lend. In Seaforth on Monday of each week Office in ilia Block W. Proudfoot, K. C., 3. Tee KMoran, fl. 3. De Cooke. VETERINARY. F. HARBURN, V .S. Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin- ary *Melee, and honorary member of the Medical Association of the Ontario ffotemblerY College. Treats diseases of all domestic animals by the most mod- Isen rinciplmi. Dentistry 'andlifilk Fev- er et specialty. Office opposite Dick's Hotel,. Main Street, Seaforth. AI1 or- ders, left at the hotel will receive prompt attention. Night calls receiv- ed at the office. SOHN GRIEVE, V. S. 'Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin- era liege. All diseasesol domestic au1il. treated. Calls promptly a• tented to and charges moderate. Vet- tarhiaty Dentistry a specialty. Office and residence on Goderichstreet, one door east of Dr. Scott's office, Sea - forth. - MEDICAL DR. GEORGE IIEILEMANN. opbatic Physician of Goderich. 114 in women's and children.' rheumatism, acute, chronic and Otla disorders; eye ear, nose and t. Consultation fra. Office In the Royal Hotel, Seaforth, Tues- days end Fridays, t am. till 1 p.m. C, J. W. HARN, M.D.c.m. Richmond Street, Loreline Ont., *st, Surgery and Genito-Urin- etisee of men and women. bloat. DR. J. W. PECK Graibtatee of Faculty of icine UmvermtytMtnitreali • anther ef 1 ege of Physicians and Surgeons ef Ontario;Licentiate of Medical Com- fit da; Post -Graduate Member ident Medical Staft of General Roo tal, Mbittreal, 1914-15; Office, 2 door* east of Post Office. Phone 56, Hinman, Ontario. " A ON OF MANOR. he, they only go to eih.ow that there . . Vic Typical "Soldier of the ar a g°°4:1111anY Mkt ways of 'flaking -kitchen towels. Th 'f h ' , ere is no necessity or emnung ., e. !Julie just seen a :legionnairekitchen stowels by hand. They do writes Algernon Sartorls in the Chi- s- their work just as Well if they are cage News*. He happened to be of ' hemmed.'' by a maclune. And there is my company, the Seventh. Do you , e no necessity for. mark* g them by hand. You can buy tape with, your know that Victor Is dad9" he askedname in for --11 very little money, Or It seemed to me almost impossibleelse you can mark the towels witletyour The legion without Victor!' I Asked how- he bad, died. "Be was killed, name written in indelible ink. It you use indelible ink it pays to get a ape - but he gave them hell," was the ane swer. Of course he did; that was las cial marking:tablet—a little sheet of haw. er am me of the five who. are tin three inches 'across, with. a litttie left"- continued my iliformant. llooP 'to slip over the mateiaal which tn April we were 120 strong. ! is stretched across the tin sheet If you neve no little tin sheet, stretch m est be recruits. Victor, a ehort time h. t ' 1 . einbroidery hoops and There ' mat!' be more- now, but they e 111a en.a in 1). d tk rt i slip some smooth o Jed un er e pa ag , 44tured 10 Germans- alld ret ce vedlthe military medal. Now he is: to be ,written on. . 1 dead, at his post _ The simplest sort of hand. embroid- . Bergt. Bouligny has a snapshot 'of ered littering can 'be done in. outlinc, Vietor. Underneath is written: "A ing. and cross stitch, but unless a typical legionnaire" ' Victor was ai woman bas a few outside interests Breton, born in lIttorlaix. He was tat- I Ws marking is a waste of time. toped all .oter. There was nothing en The argument -against the roller his notebook save records of his num- towel is that part d it is soiled before erous campaigns. Heewas a Seidler, the rest is and, therefore, a partly Pure and simpleApen lignY says, soiled to he was a typical legiormaire; that is, d must hang for several , ii . he was typical of all thit was best in days until' the cleaner parts have been used „ -- the legion. ---courage, honesty, . The argument in its favor is chiefly .one of laundering. A roller braveee. - towel takes less time to iron. than half His history was Written in his heart. He wore emedals of /40-. a dozen small towels—and at the rocco, Tonkin, the war clangs with steam laundries costs only as much as several palms and finally the military one small towel, medal—a glorious record. Victor act- Towels used in the kitchen should ed always as a stimulant, he WAS al- always be -rinsed in moderately eoole waye gay and always kind. ° He en- water and then washed in hot, soapy courage& us by his _endurance of liAter. - Then they should be rinsed every hardship without a murmurtuad then dried in the open air. If time He was absolutely loyal to his calm- is ' at a 'premium they need not be try and in the darkest moments he kept- -among . us the light of hope burning brightly. , On one of our long marches he saw ;that I was suffering. He came to me and offered to carry my haversack in addition to his own. I declined his offer, but his courage and kindness went to my heart, and, in spite of sore feet, I arrived in Mount Meton with my company, thanks to Victor. Among the soldiers Victor's name Was proverbial for gallantry.- On the banks of the fetid rivers of Annami ou the burning sands of Molecco, Victor‘was there. In the mud and nitre a the trenches of France he WifS also there, Always kind, alwa.ys thoughtful of others!' Simple and Un- affected, he related deeds of valor that would have moved to -stone; deeds that would enrich the already glorious railitary history of France. I asked his comrade how many bodies Victor got. He answered; "When 1 last saw him.he was whirl-, ing his Min weer his head. There were about a dozen dead boches i around him. I think an officer killed hire. with a revolver. I couldn't svrear - .1 I to it, but I think so." . When I had. last seen Victor in Paris a little while ago I had Biked him . how he had won. 'his military medal "In a fit of bravery," he had answered. Victor was alwa,ys having those nts of bravery; they are com- mon in the legion. , In the :death . of Victor not only the legicint but. France4 sustains a Wee. He. was only. a corporal, but he was a typical legionnaire, a true French poilu, and 1 ara proud that I Waanie friend: . In many of my dark-, est moments his smile has raised me' out,of my 'depression. ' New he. ea- deed on. some lonely battlefield, but his is the dell.* that he would 'hive aliked. In the words 0 ilon. de paiiteitdan, "It is the. best posifele death," the only passible death for such as he. !CASCO .10.011C ACTIVITIES OF WOMEN :MIX 'YOU MEP lien wore= workers who receiv- ed from $30 to $40 a week during the war are now getting from $16, to 425 Foie Skit Headache, Souri; Stomach! a weak. Sluggish Liver and flotvels— : The increase in thenumber of wont - Takeo Cineatrets tonight. , en wage earners in the Mated States during the' war amounted to about 10 ledeerin !Negate Ilia Task, Wire* M on Harland, the writer, despite tion, Sida via' _Miserable Heade- axis 9 years of age, still spends four aches wine from a totenit liver , and lioure each day at her desk writing - °loggia' bowelk- 'Oalloo Your Stow.- She was the 'Bret weepan America ach to • become With undigested to eater the field ofneivel writing, have food, ivhioh enure and ferments like ,gar- ink *.begun her career e3 years ago. hage in a swill barrel. .That'S the tint , While England's woman land army step to untied misetitatindigiation, foul tilled old and new fields to increase pees, bad bratte, yellow skin mental food: prodUction, other *Omen :were fears, everything that is horrible and stoking the. boilers- of the hop kilns 'nauseating. 'A Clisoaret to -night will used for wholesale vegetable drying. give your constipated bowels thorough I The defeat of the Socialise peaty in cleansing. and straighten you out , by I Poland Was atie to th.e bitter morning. . They work *idle yini sleep- ! fight made againat them by the women :a 10 -cent box from your. druggist I in that keep yeti, -feeliug good. for molten I. For the first time in the history lof the Trades and Label- council of Can- ada, two woinen delegates represent- ing t Waitresses' union attended one one their meetings recently. Of the 6560381. women of Chicago eligi le to vote 'only 190,228 have reg- ister el. , 1 • Experts from the Linited States have been authorized to `make studies for an underground telephone se - stem for Montevideo. Uruguay. For the selection of electric liget reflectors, 'charts have - been worked out that show the. shape and size Of the field they illeininate. To handle cargoes of grain at what- ever port a ship may land in England auction unloading apparatus has been mounted on two railway cars. For clearing ground of Wisconsin farmer has invented a lever operate tool that shears off- brush and even ir ned. Probably this laxity would small trees close to the roots. - sh do many careful housewives, but A shrub growing wild throughout is uite Et3, useful for drying dishes as contain a large athount of, atropine a lean towel, dried in the open air, the' Philippines has been found to one that is ironed smooth. - and at least one other 'valuable drug.: One clever woman always saves the With the ice in. a compartment a - coarse sacks that sugar and salt come bove the shelves a revolving refriger- in—the big ones. She rips the side ator that resembles a once popular seams lied hems the ends and uses style of bookcase lute been invented. them for teetels for pots and pans. An electrically driven machine hag with doll's clothesline, calotdhoezselnintic, lowthhesichpinsemaneds many beans into flour in 40 Minutes been invented in ,Japan to grind as two small pulleys, is convenience for as a man can grind by hand in a day. drying kitchen towels. It can be fate To help reduce the number of auto- tened from the kitchen porch to a mobile parts an inventor has designed brieeabrobuygrteefo'ranadsmextalrlap Vcoetisiespins.can wheel hub and a lieehse tag bracket. a tail lamp that also serves as a spare The government - of India. has asked each of the provincial governments to _HURON NOTES Make a survey' of its water powers Smith of the Goshen Line Stanley, —The little child .Of kr. Herbert trietiy. -- suitable for the production of elec- aged about six months, passed away A new cover for -cooking utensils is on Sunday and was laid to rest in so formed that as it is tilted it drains Bayfield cemetery on Monday last. its steam into the utensil and then is ee—On Tuesday of last week the two laid on a table with the moist side up. young sons of Mr. Issac Carter of Its inventor has patented a self - Clinton while attempting to cut wood, feeeding soldering iron, wire solder one of the young lads had the misfore being fed from a reel through the tune to have the toes on one foot coin - handle and point- of the device by a pletely severed by the axe. Medical- thumb operated lever. attendance Was at once summoned and Spain has been experimenting with the young lad is doing as well as can substitutes for petroleum as feul for be 'expected. miners' lamps ited promising results —W. H, Lobe's auction sale of cows have been obtained from a mixture of and sheep in Goderich township, on alcohol and benzol, Tuesday, was a fairly succeseful one. - Lightness and durability are claimed .The day was fine and there was a for a new.life belt for novice swim - 'very good crowd. The stock was mers that consists-. of a broad strip of said to be the hest lot of cows .sol -canvas . with sealed metal 'floats at by auction for many years and was. the front and baek. • nearly all purchased by Hullet town-) ship farmers. The highest price fele A process, hits been invented by an EnglishMan for treating weals hereto- fore thouiet„ eeteeengt and long' for anything bet t-sthas so they can. be used in finer.. *tilts, • - To help. persons ' learn Opp -writing. 'bei the touch skiterif` it meta1. shield has beet' invented to hide a keyboard, yet Whi ieniliiinted as to be easily aiming out of the way. - Coal mines of the province of Alber- ta yielded 4,59-4400 tons in the mine- motiths ending with Septemlber as competed with 3,182,826 tons in the same months in the previous year. Electrical and magnetic apparatus has been invented by a Chicago man to move iniinature warships about models of,waterways to participate in naval battles for amusement parks. A inixture of liquid air and powder- ed aluminum has been invented in Europe for Wasting in mines, hiving. more than twice the power of black powder without its dangerous fumes:. A gas room heater for which ex- ceptional *heating powers are asserted has a perforated cast iron core, in which the flames are confined, sure reunded by a perforated eadiatinet drum. English aeroplane engineers luavel, developed a four -cylinder rotary mo - to be built into a propeller with for. blades, which are metal, and utilized - as exhaust expansion chambers. Springs are iteplaced in a new mote truck by four telescoping cylindera which- open arid close independentlyt on a body of oil and air, the pressure being equalized by a central tank.. A device has been patented by e citizen of Columbia to enable' light. locomotives to be U8esi as stationary engines without alteration, except substituting, gear wheels on their front .axles. for one cew was $175, William Brewn of Millet', beingtee piarehasen The twenty' cows averaged* $133 each. The sheep brought $28 each. - - —Mr. M. Dunin of Luelalow has- purChased. front. the Wine'WheatleY -es- tate what is well known as the James Fair litrni on Saturday, the price be- ing $11;500. It is e fine farm and the purchaser is to be congratulated. Mrs. - Wheatley purchased the house she occupied and. Mr: D. Elliott bought WEN'BUYING KITCHEN TOWEIS- the double . house .on Huron street. 'Wien to ale as well as :time It was a successful sale eltogether. an1 tide wait r no mime nor woman —The Holmesville correspondent of DR. F. 3. BURROWS eit eel We 7 ttan-eoinehow postpone the Clinton News. jeecoxel of last week th buying „of tablecloths and shift a-, says :—It is not so unusual a thing long with the few we have on hand,: for a farni to change hands, in this making use of runners for lunch-- comparatively new country, but in.the eon and breakfast and inity-hap case weare about to instance there- for dinner when we Are quite en ts a peculiar interest Mr. J. R. famille. And, though they are not Holmes has disposed of his farm, especially nice, we can even use -bath jilt at the edge of the village, to towels for hand towels.. But if you Mi. S. R. M,acMath of the Western have ever seen• a cotton dish towel plirt of the township, who will take after it had beehensed a few weeks pessession in the spring. The farm, or if you have had to use one you which will then pass into the hands of know how impossible they are. Linen, Mr. MacMath, has been in possession of course, gives up its grime and of the Holmes family since 1832, the stains much more quicker than does late John Holmes, father of the pres- cottoe,, and hence its fair appearance ent occupant, having bought it , then while cotton, even when boiled, ap- from the Canada Company. Ma Holmes pears grimy - and clisclored. More an Irshman, was married in helm -id over linen is absorbent anct„, therefore in May of 1833 and immediately start- -a god material with Which to dry ed with his bride for Canada, arriving. china and glass, while cotton does not at his homestead in September. Tray - Dee a Hum OSS LJ absorb Water so readily, and, is, there- elling either by land or water was not fore, a poor material for this purposeas speedy and comfortable as it is So if you run short of kitchen tow- to -day. Four of the Holmes brothers els there is no such thing as waiting and a sister, Mrs. Proctor, settled till the ;price of linen goes down. As here in a block at that time and„ with a matter of fact, this heavy linen, such the exception of the Proctor farm, as is ueed for kitchen towels, is not so none of the homesteads now remain frightfully expensive at the present in the hands of descendents of the or - time, and sometimes you can pick up iginal settlers the Holmes farm now a. few yards of material that is part of being sold, being the last one to pass a pre-war stock at a very good price. into ethe hands of strangers. A large To be sure, there are almost as family was born it'o Mr. and Mrs. John many different opinions regarding Holmes, grew up on the old homestead kitchen towels as there are good and went out from it to scatter here B. R. HIGGINS housekeepers in the world. Some and there leaving one son, J. R., and Box 127, Qlinton — Phone 100 women use nothing but linen towel- one daughter, Miss D. A. on the old Agent for ing or glass and .chitta, and some'farm. Two members of the family, think cotton is just as good. Some Mr a: Leitch and Mrs. Howell, reside nse ne sortof toweling for glass, in Goderich; the late Dr. Holmes, for another for china and a third for pots many years treasurer of Huron county, and pans, and: some use the same sort was another, and Dr. Holmes of De - for all three, ,Sorne swear by roller trait,. is another. For over eighty towels for hand towels, and some years, therefore, the na,rrie. of Holmes think little towels are the only ain't has been inseparably bound 'tip with to have for that purpose. But what- the life of the donnnunity. It is hoped ever the differences of opinion may by the neighborhod that Mr: and Miss Holmes will continue to reside here but at present -it is not certain what they will do. Oe and residence, Goderich street - haat of the Methodist church, Seitfoith. Phime 46. Coroner for the County of Huron. DRS. SCOTT & MACKAY I, G. Scott, graduate of Victoria and College of Physicians and Surgeons Ania%rbor, and member of the Col- lege of Physiciand and Surgeons, of On o.. . 0. ackay, honor graduate of Trhet" Ity. University, and gold medallist of Tru4ty Medical College; member of the c�liege of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario. Graduate of University of Toronto Faculty of Medicine, member of Col- lege of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario; pail graduate courses in Chicago Clinical School of Chicago; Royal Ophthalmic Hospital, London, Ragland, University HospitaLondon, England. Office—Back of. bondinon Pank,'Sforth. Phone No. 5, Night Calls answered from residence, Vic- toria street, Seaforth The Huron and Erie Mortgage Corpor- ation and the Canada Trust Company. Comimseioner H. C. X.„, Conveyancer, Fire and Tornado Ineilkancei Notary Public, Government and Municipal Bonds bought and sold; Several good farms for sale. Wednesday of each week 0 Brumfield. AUL IONEERS. GARFIELD McMICHAEL 0•••••••••••••••.....* Licenzed Auctioneer for the Cotmty of harem Sates conducted in any. part of thel.teOnti., Charges moderate and satisfaction guikoteed. Addresa Seaforth R. it. No. 2, or phone 18 on 236, Seaforth. 2653 -ti THOMAS BROWN Licensed auctioneer fortiteeirtmties Of Huron and Perth. Correspondece arrangements for sale dates can be made by calling up Phone 97, Seaforth, or The Expositor Office. Charges mod-. erato and satisfaction guaranteed. R. T. LUKER Licensed Auctioneer for the County of Huron. Sales attended to in all -parts of the county. Seven years' axe -.rust t perience in Manitoba laakatebee ;orchard Wan- Tem% Matra eeThtne No. two lemo GIRLS! LEMON JUICE IS A SKIN WHITENER How to make a creamy beaitty lotion for a few cents. The juice of two *leek lemons strained into a bottle containing tbree (Aimee of orchard white makes a whole quarter pint of the most remarkable lemon. Skin beautifier at about the cost one ,must pay for a small jar of the ordinary cold creams. Care should be taken to strain the lemon juice through a fine cloth so no lemon pulp gets in, the this lotion will keep fresh for months. Every wornan knows that lemon juice is used to bleach and remove such blemishes as freeeles.e sallowness and tan and is the idea skin softener, whitener and beautifie ite Get 'exec ounces of bite at any drug stote and t; from the grocer and makeeep 1.7541,:Eteteri Cen rtfle ae quarter pint of Shit sweetly fragrant No. 1, Orden'ieft at Thb :Enron Ex- - lemon lot on and massage it deify into, pesitor Mee Seafortbi prenintly at- the face, eck arms and hands, ..ereee NEWEST NOTES OF SCIENCE Hotiduras has built a Ateam dry.. Zug plant to experiment with the pro- duction of copra from cocoanuts grown along its coast. For persons who move long dis- tances, fiber packing cases into which articles of. furniture fit securely, have been designed. Of English invention is a new lub- ricant /for cutting screw threads in aluminum more satisfactorily than heretofore possible. - Its inventor believes hehas so weighted the head and shaped the base of a new collar button that it cannot roll if dropped. Georgia inventoe's chair can be Used as a rocker, a stationary chair or one that reclines and has attgch,- ments that convert It into a desk, bookcase. Though Burmah. bps the irichest tungsten ore dePosits in the world arid until 1916 was the :greatest producing country,' the 'Mated States litti ex- ceeded W for production for the last two Years. A 'watering trough has been so coil- nected. with a hinged platform that whep a horse stem on the. latter it raises a pail of clean water within reach, the pail being emptied when the horse steps away. END STOMACH TFtOtAiity / GASES OR DYSPEISIA k, agur,. el fine "Papes Diapepsin" maids gassy stomachs surely In five minutes, . If what you just a is souring on your stomae or lies like a lump .of Iced, or you belch ab and exuttate Sour, undiges dfe e, or have a feeling of dizziness, h art i; fullness, nausea, bad taste in.Q e aid stomach -head- ache, you can relief in five minutes by neutralizin acidity. Put an end to edPromising ay from experimeresults have been Attain- such stomach distress new by getting a in Norwnts in the manufacture of a meal for feeding cattle front seaweed. .A recently patented conibined typee vr.iter table and chair, fold together to form a cover for a machine and to economize floor space. large fifty -cent case of Pape's Diapeesin from -;any drug stere. You realize in five redeptes how needless it is to suffer from incligestion,, dyspepsia or any °tom- ach disorder canal by feed fomentation due to excessive acid in stomach. ee The Indian Drum' Continued from Page 7 tie eiiinribeils on the bridge jangled more 'nervously and exeit.edly, and the policeman at the south -end hastily sgnalled the 'Motor carp from the city* stop, While he motioned' those. still On the bridge to scurry off; for a ship desired to pass. "Can we stop and- see 'It?" Alan appealed, as Constance ,raie the car from the bridge, just before it -began to turn. She swung the car to the side of the but I found certain things in Mt Cote woman knowsP that lemon %lice is „street tied stopped; as he gazed back, vet's house, last night which made. me to bleach and remove suck blemishes as he Was, --she knew—seeing not only want to kpow, if I could, everything his Mat . at ship close by, but hav- ing his teteniew of his people—the lake men , from whom now he knew from the feeling he had found within himself, and no only from what had been d him, that he had come. cause I had -not decided now to act in a, quarter pint of t.his sweetly fragrant Th sent ekasxeheathed in ice, from regard to these matters, but because lemon lotion and massage it daily bio. stem to stern; tone of the gleaming, e had not said anything to Mr. Spear- the face, neck, arms and bandit. It is erYstal metal weighed the forecastle; man about them previously, because marvelous to smoothen rough, Ted kande. the pee all around had become ea I expected to get some additional in - frozen bulwarle; the boats were mein- formation from you. After seeing hummocks of ice; the bridge was -en- you, I was obliged to wait for Spear - ceased, and from the top of the pilot man to get back to town. The dr- • cuinstances are such that I felt myself obliged to talk them over -first with For ' lottircotelioSnalyal..coTwhvir him; I have done that this morning; bidii:pa,le ing the envelope closed in his hand. tsr had not come dawn." so I was going to send for you, if You he:1152:1b3:grow.in seramood ef:oThot a. numberwritelorof partscubiti/ears, 'end ' Sherrill thought a minute, still hold- -rose ee 'Manitoba Hotel, Winnipeg. Jigs. a* to Price and ter to JAMB I. JOHNS - appeared," he went- on, but before I "On the day after your father dis- I LIDOolgnceslt 813,A124-11.11.P.,RTiteliSii*eramith,WreetS: . knew he was gone—or before anyone Itaineur lee eerie. There Are on the oris lagrth.frainMeOehardli°12:acer'nbarecIdnictibarntirbid"4".5thw1711feelvall'Sirt; except my daughter felt any alarm fraboomuthiliimm. show ivoedw itatoshyoortu j:to4ter, gram. Forrty pzettridoos , apply to ;jaw If you wish.; its exact wording, how- I CLEARY, Seciforth. R. No. 4, 02r5.6.phosett ever, is umniPertint. It had been I 14 on 145. apparently at the mail box tear his; rilitiVI'Ftht' SALE Our Claitns A Tea -Pot Test hi better than a pa of Advertisements f Is the Purest 8/ Finest riavored Tea your money can ptirehase. "71 awalthig Met Conrad, she opened an , Wassaquam; for an hour or ;o after inner door and led Alan. into a large ' when Corvet sent Wassaquam away Many -windowed room, where Sherrill from the house, Wassaquarn had was. sitting alone before a table desk. gone without feeling any anxiety at He arose, a moment after the door bout bine, opened, and spoke a word to his daugh- (Continued Next Week) ter, who had followed Alan and the girl to the door, but who had halted there. Constance withdrew, and 'the girl from the outer office also -went away, clorang the - door behind , her. Sherrill pulled the "visitor's chair" rather close to his desk and to his own Make th:- Is nea-uty • lotion cheaply for big leather chair before asking -Alan Alan said, "about those facts in regard oonfserindiateradb4Athiltee.conctaarilleishngouttirebeeetatennntee * something last night, my daughter has At the cost of a smelt jar of ordinary back" to Mr. Covert which. you mentioned to told me," Sherrill said cordially. "I'm Cold create one Can prepare a full quer. sorry I wasn't home when you came ter pint of the 111085 wonderful lemon "I wanted to ask you, Mr. Sherrill," tlY squeezing the juice of two fresh late "Yott Wanted to tell me, or ask me, - . • your face, neck arms and hands. 1 • P a skin softener and complexion beautifitr, this iest3lt - to seat himself. me yesterday but did not explain. You tet; nstoraltnemthenepjulpengtehtsroiut ti II k fr h f thaenils said it would not ant me to know them; LOONS WHITEN AND BEAUTIFY THE Ski you could tell me. the ideal skin softener whitener. Sherrill opened a drawer and took beautifier. - out a large, plain envelope. just try It! Get three ouncee of "I didepOt tell you about these yes- orchard. white at any drug store and _ terday, Alan," he said,'. not only be- two lemons from the grocer and make up ousel which Way. the b hung. down, giant stalactites an axeman . was chopping a - Alan could see the officers on 'Age, the wheeleman, the look- out; ea- could see the spurt of water from the ship's. side as it expelled with each thrust of the pumps; he could see the whirlpool about the ecre as slowly!, steadily, with sig- tals langing clearly somewhere be - OW, he steamer went ,through the draw. 1 From up the river ahead of it eame :the jangling of 'bells and the inova g of alarm. whistles as the other hridg 'were cleared to let the vessel Ihro . jt-thowed. its - stern now; Alan ad the name and registry a- loud: `Groton of Escanaba!" Is that <line O yours,- Miss Sherrill; is that one o l yours and my—Mr, torvera ?" I She 'shook her need, sorry that she. had say no.. "Shalt we go on nowt"- • bridge Was swinging shut a- gain; Ithe long line of motor cars, which ' fiaa accumulated from the the ulevard from the city, -began stowl to move.- Constance turned the 'Ca down the narrow street; front- ed by I wareliousee which Alan had. passed the morning before, to Micigan Avert", with the park and harbor to the le t. When she glanced fiOW at Alfm; saw that g reaction of de- ptesei had followed excitement at seeing e steamer bass close by. _ l M or if he could call it that, had give bit a feeling for ships and for the lake; a single weed--Miwalca— a childish rhyme and. story, which he might have heard repeated and asked for a hundred times in babyhood. But these eecollections were only what those of a three -years' child might. it SO plain Met something serious had fuivertjantreithpae:ticularathie spapringwyortoinitothneRfaT11.0Alr GAR - have been. Not only did they refuse happened to _ 'Corvet, that Fly first ROW, Seaforth, P 0 Isolation, they warned him that they— readily connect the thought of sui- 2672-2 to eomieet themselves with anything thought was menly for Iiim. Corvet P. . eilse, but by the very finality of their was not a man with whom one could :and perhaps a few more vague inem- cide; but -Mane that was the idea I •'ories ' o similar sort—were all that had.. rhurried' at once to his house, reesellec *on ever would give him. He but the bell was not answered, and -I aught himself together and turned could not get in. ifis servant, Was - 's thoughts to the approaching visit saquam, has very few freinds, and the to Sherrill—and his father's offices. few times' he lute been away from Obsetveng the towering buildings to home' of nicent, years have been When his right, he was able to identify he visited an old. 'acquaintance of some of the more prominent strut- his—the bead Perter in tr-Sotith Side ures, familar from photographs of the hotel. -I went to the telephone in the city. Constance drove swiftly a few house next door and celled the hotel blocks , down this boulevard; then, and found Wassaquam there. I asked with a l sudden, "Here we are!" she Wassaquain about the letter to 'Alan shoe the ear to the curb and stopped: Conrad,' and Wassaquam said Corvet She lect Alan into one of the tallest had given it to him to post early in and best -looking of the . buildings, cotherveetvebnaindg.sentSehviemralouhtoutorswaliatteart, where they took an elevator' placarded "Express" to the fifteenth floor. the mail box for the mail collector to On several of the doors -opening up- get the letter back., West -avian` on the wide marble hall where the went out to the mail ebono,:ahrveaeentedine elevator lefethem, Alan saw the names came out there too, almost at once. "Corvet, Sherrill and Spearman." tTurhen mail collector, r but Corvet hel:arvtsoeeisIdt As they paseed without entering, one. thhaedrn, of keeonurse,iettte.atishe couldnotniootakreed- of 'these doors which stood. propped them through. Calvet seemed very Open, and he looked in, he got his much excitect when he discovered the first realization of the comparatively ii leteer was not there; and when the stain aecommodations which a great m business conducted upon the water re- ad man remembered that he had quires.. What he seafr within was only1 one large roont, with hardly more than :. abtee9nneleeteafotInr hilts must have taken up the letter almost wPrasevirnellaalletd,4PCoariinde: a dozen, certainly not a score of desk.e., in it; nearly all the desks were closed, exeatement increased on leaning that and there were not more than three: on its way west. He controlled him - ie Was already probably on the train apparently stenographerst Doors of' or four people in the room, and these: self later enough at least to reassure several smaller offices, opening upon the larger room, bore names, among i which he saw "Mr. Corvet" and "Mr. Spearman," ' • `It won't look like that a month .from ,now,"; Constauce eitice catching his expression. 4Just now, You know, the straits and all the northern lakes are locked fast with ice. There's no- • think going bn now except the winter traffie on Lake tYliehigan and, to a much smaller extent, on Ontario and Erie; we have an interat 'tin some winter leoate, but, we don't operate them from here. Next month. we will *1 be busy fitting out, and the raouth - after that all the ships we have will I be upon the water." - i- Slie led the way -tne fast to a dooe i farther down the corridor, which bore emerely the name, "Lawrence Sherrill;" : evidently Sherrill, who had interests aside from the shipping. business.' had offices connected litigant not actually .. . a part of the offices of Corvet, Sherrill end; Spearman. A girl was on guard on the other Side a the deor* she ft -c- ognized' -0011 nee Sherrill' at once, . and saying that Mr. Sherrill had been FARMS FOR SALE mailed very late the night before and house, or at teed, by the postmark, 1eZereisttes,11)4LIcerettilg tillttetet, tit bill; Somewhere in the neighborhood; and --es by 30 feet, stoke foundation, inn lien, &iv - 'not reach the eoffice -until I had . been 1,1k.'"iryttirth windmilli4/4 irro_fitrfru. for that reason had not been taken up : ing 'awl and he:itt.?:rtides-ariitaAlab meilrallsouss.j4.:Otft: before the morning collection and did ..1 a grass WO. West ludf of ieteeitoncemeen 7, - here and gime away age* about !Wien: plione1-1112. Seat ,feoterezu4viliey,e,asat,..orehmdideu„no,t.rgheet nito,tethwereas- ...,, _ the Towilsaip of - Itilb;ett, on num; 9ttfi Ac.R.V WW1 FOR isAliff,-LOT 7, IN agitated, almost incoherent. It told 'load, three Mike west, of 'Iditoteg. Brick me he had sent for you—Alan Conrad, tiOUSe, hank barns, and all,modern tonvenien. the Of Bine PATIOS, iCansas---but spoke of I eceteeeeTtitlad e°,:raueredwanthewnitt ii.,falati„ „,‘....,. you a8 though yeti Were some one ,iiy- 1-- ---Ine—v, --:ti- - --rm- ----rice-friaellio-o•I I ought to have known about, and this amount aSt40705 pearofreenalit7. :or -111-fx...:eref-- p.-0,-.- con:1:rnended you to my care. The re- let." to be Paid 43: easb' hala:Cer) remain* =wider of it was merely an agitated ticulargaa_1!ply to FRANK ble0014111ELL. Dub. fhwaiiimaeonfainyidpeoeteuhiiee.hdkeThraetyh:elbeneuointteavreee.moiwomadveepliar,e ffnog.ktnreeieyt_.' - I } ixtL.: enroot.:7. . one :wA:rt:ock.:_tabviaelimijonie:inunir4.23:10dasztwnioAn7Rinfo276:14. in.rtee a . with one I had •in my pocket, I saw I 66x1" °2111arigatge cement tios-i-exii36-.1inTh-e hilit: that it appeared to be a key to safety deposit box in the vaults of a table brick cottage. Convient toschool and -rhunth- - a isanrlirinwodern wfltotenr;enfieg an. d Itter cavier company where we both had boxes. "The dote, 'taken in! connection with tai..nwadvsTahnedbeefirughtt wolitcoacrdatoeiniecdnian4rafitiltfanuchlasbas• - my daughter's alarm about him, made ..4 FOR BMA . That very desirable properLy -lest off -street.,.ginnondville. conaitlng of one-half Of land, on which is,situated.it IS. story house with seven roma and good, cellar. are Utto on the eternises et ;table, good and nistern. also *mak IMO and near and other small 'fruits. This is 1 It .property and the takes are low. For tiartioulars, apply to Mrs. M. A. Char= Ecrnondville P. O. _ roll FOR BATA BEING LOVII. the.,Pifth Oonceesion of the Town. .hip of Stanley. in . the County of Buren -100 acres. Ninety acres cles=nder cultwation, and 10 acres of ers soca frame house and wod.hea ad Amm- an." shed an the premie, and a c orchard. There Is, also a never &film spri 4* the Place and a good well. Will be sold. cheat. For farther particulars near Eigie, Concession 3, lot 16. Tuckers -We, or phone 10 on 150, or to M. BEST, Sea Her Solicitor. 2670_ WARM FOR c9N 1. Tuckersmith, 10.IttlsUng 106 Aortal forty acres sew". =swot -all noT plowed -rand ten acres a4aVo.' Thaw the Prtitnisea horn 5 teet with foundation, driving abed .4 -Also a Inca* him* kfteben 444 in 01.101100`; pair, wit* furnace and *lawn in eater. Tbit land is all well fanned andtiiijo mile_north nf Brucedekl. Por PartledlirS on the -premises. MR8. WILLIAM Brueetlem.P. 0. • Co Uncle to Cons unpleas and co But Al not unp quite liked hi fused a absence ing hien planatio had ope her, as I had like self, an thing o his fat the co force or had bro .fathe for not and she fu.sal, ic to accei should II She h for brea: coming believe when sh was nee -come; si to watch utes she ing often She ,w let him. "Fate told hire Mr. Spl this 1X101 tell him I told fa last nig) clown tol ove ‘You . "Very ern., t after She 1313 the beau] fill, cozy with a si an -more up half I tiles set' walls al were tia Weecien-e ges the and. the Zee. Alan nuiele ai ity of in iating a .s.t,ance and beet "I like myself She tie lot, and Mother bed; that Ire to There wi stance tAl little, sib 'This 1 use it tbree of selves 11( "I like "Coffel t#Trrt. yv Lten xplainec pleased -00:0410.1036:1061, port smai.-iho OMB;UIO WT i*nd 1$yrogalinldisitht50' hetisitti iratestatezibk:ettiatalilissa and stalled off. The land is ohmic et th bii Ivo:heirs itruilear of htichiait.inw- 'flood Int& •Pdblifamitig Ina% 'add Videldlione. win b� se the reptieter wb. .to ream DALE, N. IL No. 2, Blefortis. 4e-