HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1919-03-28, Page 61
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ITHICX, GLOSSY flAnt
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cliately dissolves'. y particle of
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and if not overcome it produces a fever-
ishnees and itching of the 'scalp; the
hair roots famish, loosen and °ie; then
the hair falls out fast. Surer get a
email bottle of Know1tcm' Xuderiiio
from any drug store and, just try it.
DR. F. J. R, FORSTER
•Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat
Graduate in Medicine, University of
Toronto.
Late Assistant New York Oplithal-
mei and Aural Institute, lVfoorefield's
Ye and, Golden Square Throat Hos-
pitals, London, Eng. At the Queen's
Hotel, Seaforthi third Wednesday in
each month from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Waterloo Street, South, Stratford.
Phone 267 Stratford.
LEGAL
• R. S. HAYS.
Barrister Selicitor, Conveyancer and -
Notary Public. Solicitor for the Do-
minion Bank. Office in rear of the Do-
minion Bank, Seaforth. Money to
loan.
J. M. BEST
Barrister, Solicitor, Conveyancer
and Notary Public. Office upstairs
over Walker's Furniture Store, Main
Street, Seaforth.
PROUDFOOT, KILLORA.N AND..
COOKE
Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries Pub-
lic, etc. Money to lend. In •Seaforth
on Monday of each week. Office in
Kidd Block. W. Proudfoot, K.C., J.
L. Killoran, II. 3. D. Cooke.
VETERINARY
F. HABURN, V. S.
Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin-
ary College, and honorary member of
the Medical Association of the Ontario
Veterinary College. Treats diseases of
all domestic animals by the most mod-
ern principles. Dentistry and Milk
Fever a speialty. Office opposite
Dck's Hotel, Main Street, Seaforth.
All orders left at the hotel will re-
ceive prompt attention. Night calls
received at the office
• JOHN GRIEVE, V. S.
Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin-
ary College. All diseases of domestic
animals 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 Children's
diseases, reheunratisin, acute, chronic
and nervous disorders; eye, ear, nose
and threat. Consulation free. Office
above Umback's Drug store, Seaforth,
Tuesdays and Fridays, 8 a.m. till 1 p.m
C. J. W. HARM, IVI.D.C.M.
425 Richmond Street, London, Ont.,
Specialist, Surgery and Genio-Urin-
arty diseases of men and women.
DR. J. W. PECK
Graduate of Faculty of Medicine
McGill University, Montreal; Member
a College of Physicians and Surgeons
of Ontario; Liceutiate of Medical Coun-
cil of Canada; Post -Graduate Member
of Resident Medical staff of General
Hospital, Mourreal, 1914-15; Office. 2
doors east of Post Office. Phone 56,
Henall, Ontario.
Dr, F. J. BURROWS
Office and reidence. Go-derich street
east of the Methodist church, Seaforth.
Phone 46. Coroner for the County of
Huron.
DRS. SCOTT & MACICAY
J. G. Scott. graduate of Victoria and
College of Physicians and Surgeons
Ann Arbor, and member of the Col-
lege of Phyeicians and Surgeons, of
Ontario.
• C. Mackay honer graduate of Trin-
; Univerity, and gold medallist of
Trinity Medical College; member of
the College of Physicians and Sur-
eon:s of Ontario.
DR. H. HUGH ROSS.
Grad cafe of ijniversity of Toronto
Faculty of Medicine, member of Col-
lege of Physicians and Surgeons of
Ontario; pa,s graduate coursesin
Chicag,-0 Clinical School of Chicago;
Royal Ophthalmic Hospital Lndn,
England, University Hopital, London
England. Oilee-Back of Dominion
Bank, Saforth. Phone NO. 5, Night
Calls answered frores idenc, Vic-
. Street, Seaforth.
B. IL HIGGINS
Bo x 127, Cl i at oi Phone la0
A gent for
The Hum and Erie Mortgage Corpor-
ation and the Canada Trust Comany.
Commiesioner H. C. 3. C‘veyancer,
Fire and Tornado Insuranc Notary
Public, Government and IVIunicipal
Bonds bought and sold. Several good
farms for Sale. Wednesday of each
week at Brucefield,
AUCTIONEERS.
GARFIELD MeMICHAEL
Licensed Auctioneer for the CountY
of Huron. Sales conducted in any part
of the county. Charges niuderttte and
satisfaction guaranteed. Addrese Sea-
-forh, R. R. No, 2, or phone 18 on 236,
Seaforth. 2653-t
THOMAS BROWN
Licensed auctioneer for the counties
of Huron and Perth. Correspondence
arrangements for sale dates can be
made by calling 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 eall
parts of the county. Seven years' ex-
perienee in Manitoba and Saskatche-
wan. Terms reasonable. Phone No.
175 r 11, Exeter. Centralia P. 0. R,
R. No. 1. Ordemgeft at The Huron
Expositor Office, Seaford; promptly at-
tnded.
• MOTHERS OF SIXTYTWO
The nation which could scheme out
the intensive cultivation. of . man
power would win all the wars of the
futureand dominate the glob, .but.
though this sort of thing can be done
with vegetables and to some extent,
with poultry, it seems a far cry for the
human race, and perhaps it is all for
the best for if sir at a birth became
COMM011 marriage might "become very -
uncommon.
The papers contained the informa-
tion lately that a woman of Palermo
had presented her husband with fivx,
boys, all well formed and, according
to the doctor, "eating well and crying
well," but this case is neither unique
nor a record. •
The largest grand/total of children
borne by one wife seems to be sixty-
two—as many as most wives would
want, certainly! Strangely enough,
number has been twice recorded. It
is set to the credit of the, wife of, a
poor waver in Scotland, who bore hr
"hubby" forty-six boys and four girls,
who grew to manhood and womanhood,
and a dozen others who died ere reach-
ing their pritne.
Sir John Bowers, of Newcastle; we
are told, adopted ten of the sons—
rathr a large order; • three other
landed gentry took ten each, and the
remainder were brought up by their
parents.
In obstetrical annals the "Gravetta
ease" is as well known as the Tieh-
borne case in law. The peasant girl,
Gravetta, of Tuscany, was the twin
daughter of a woman who was her-
self one of tiplets, and married a man
of her own class'.
She. set the seal on the family repu-
tation. and assured herself endless
fame although she led off unostenta-
tiously enough with' a baby girl, by
presenting her husband with -six little
boys, and followed that the next year
with five more.
Then came triplets twice. - which
were followed by a quartet. Then en-
sued a long procession of ones and
twos, an& as a wind up, lest her rep
utation should suffer eclipse, came
four more boys—all at once, bringing
the grand total of her living children,
to sixty-two:—Tit-Bits. •
ACTIVITIES OF WOMEN
More than 500,000 women acted as
farm managers while the war was in
progress.
East end women in New York have
opened a co-operative butcher shop.
Holland is preparing for a celebra-
tion next April in honor.of the tenth
birthday of little Princess Juliana, the
heir to the Dutch throne.
The tips of an aeroplane propeller
invented in Europe trend forward
when stationary and are straightened
by centrifugal force when revolving,
which the inventor claims lessens the
danger of them being broken by strain.
The Indian Drum
Continued from Page 7
been to Alan Conrad.
`Yes—Yes--ou are giving him
every possible care ?—At once."
She ran part way down the stairs
• and met her father as he came up.
He told her of the situation briefly.
"He was attacked on the streets late
last -night; he was unconscicai when
they found him and took him to the
• hospital, and has been, unconscious
ever since. They say it was an ord-
inary street attack for robbery. I
shall go at once, of course; but you
can do nothing. He would not know
you if you came; and of course he is
in competent hands. We; no one can
say yet how seriously he is injurd."
She Waited in the hall while her
ether dressed, after calling the garage
on the house telephone for him and
ordering the motor. When he had
gone, she returned anxiously to her
own rooms; he had promised to call
her after reaching the hospital and as
soon as he had learned the partitulars
of Alan's condition. It was ridiculous
of course, to attach any responsibility
to her father or herself for what had
happened- to Alan—a street attack
such as might have happened to any
one —yet she felt that they were in
part responsible. Alan Conrad had
cane. to Chicago, not by their direc-
tion, but by Benjamin Corvet's; But
Uncle Benny being gone, they had
been the ones who met him, they had
received him into their own house;
but they had not thought to warn him
of the dangers of the -city and, after-
ward, they had let him go to live
alone in tire house in Astor Street
with no better adviser than Wassa-
quana Now, and perhaps because they
had not warned -him, he had met in
jury and, it might be, more than mere
injury; he might be. dying. .
She walked anxiously up and down
her room, clutching her ki,mona about
her; it 'would be some time yet be-
fore she could hear from her father.
She went to the telephone on the stand
beside her bed and called Henry
Spearman at his apartments. His
servant answered; and, after an inter-
val. Henry's voice came to her, She
ton. him all that she knew of what had
of...curred.
"Do you want me to go over to the
opital?" he asked at once.
father has gone. There is
nothing any one can do. I'll call you
again as soon as I hear from father."
He seemed to appreciate from her
tone the anxiety she felt; for he set
himself to soothe and encourage her.
She listened, answered, and- then hung
up the receiver, anxious not to inter-
fre with -the expected call from her
father. She moved about the room a-
gain, oppressed by the long wait, un-
til the 'phone rang, and she sprang to
itf, it was her father calling from the
hospital. Alan had had a few mom-
ent' consciousness, but Sherrill had
licit been allowed to see him; now, by
rhe report of the nurse, Alan • was I.
leepinp', and both nurse and internes
assured') Sherrill that, this being the
case, there was no reason for anxiety
concerning him; .but. Sherrill would
wait at the hospital a little tenger
to make sure. Constance's breathe
caught as she answereehim, and her
eyes filled with tears 01 relief. She I
called Henry again, and. he evidently
had been waiting, for he answered at
once; he listened without comment to
her repetition of her father's report.
"All right, he said, when she had
finished. "I'm coming oTer, Conni"
"Now?"
"Yes; right away."
"You must give nee time to dress!"
•
•
•
•
. .
rimIftri: . ON
•
0 RAISES
800 CHICKE
After Being Relieved of Or -
wok Trouble by Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound.
Oregon, Iii.—sii took Lydia E. Pink.
ham's 'Vegetable Compound for an or-
ganic trouble which
pulled me down un-
til I could not put my
foot to the floor and
could scarcely do' my
work, and as I live
on a smell farm and
raise six hundred
chickens every year
it Wade it very hard
for me.
"I saw the Coni
pound advertised in
our paper, and _tried
it. It has restored
my health so I can do all my work and
I am so grateful that 1 am recommend-
ing it to na friends."—Mrs. D. M.
ALTERS, R. R. 4, Oregon, Ill..
. Onlywomen who have suffered the toe.
tures of such troubles and have dragged
alongfrom day to day c,an realize the
re1ief which this famous root and herb
remedy, Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound, brought to Mrs. Alters.
Women everywhere in Mrs. Atter?
condition' should profit by her recom-
mendation and if there are any corn--
Wications -write Lydia E. Ian hare s
Medicineo.' Lynn, Masa, for advice.
The result oftheir 40 years experience
is at your service.
His assumption of right to come to
her at this eaily hour recalled to her
forObly the Ooser relation which Hen-
ryn* asu.med ati existing between
them; indeed, as More than existing,
as progressing. And had not she ad-
mitted that relation by telephoning
to him during her anxiety? She had
not thought how that must appear to
him; she had not thought about it at
all; she had juet done it.
She had been one of those who think
of betrothal in terms of question and
answer, of a moment when decision is
formulated and stiOlen; she had sup-
posed that, by withholding reply to
Henry's question put even before Uncle
Benny went away, she was thereby
maintaining the same relation between
Henry and herself. But now she was
discovering that this was not so; she
was realizing that Henry had not re-
quired formal answer to him because
he considered that such answer had
become superfluous; her yes, if she
accepted him now, would not establish
a new bond, it-' would merely ;acknow-
edge what was already understood.
She had accepted that—had she not—
when, in the rush of her feeling, she
had thrust her hand into his the day
before; she had accepted it, even more
undeniably, when he had seized her
and kiSsed her.
Not that she had sought or even
consciously permitted, that; it had,
indeed, surprised hr. While they
were alone together, and he was tell-
ing her things about himself, some-
what as he had at the table at Field's,
Alan Conrad was announced, and she
had risen to go. Henry had tried to
detain her; then, as he looked down
at her, hot impulse had seemed to
conquer him; he caught her, irresis-
tibly; amazed, bewildered, she looked
up, at him, and he bent and kissed her.
The power of his arms about her—
she could feel them yet, sometimes—
half frightened, half enthralled her.
But his lips against her cheek! She
had been quite unable to know how
she had felt then, because at that in-
stant she had realized that she was
seen. So she had disengaged herself
as quieldy as possible and, after Alan
was gone, she had fled to her room
without going back to Henry at all.
Howcould she have expected Henry
to have interpreted that flight froin
him asodisapproval when she had not
meant it as that; wen, indeed; she did
not know herself what was stirring
in her that ine„tinct to go away alone?
She had not by that disow-ned the new
relation which he had accepted as
established between thm. And did
she wish to disown it now? What had
happened had Come sooner and with
ess of her will active in it than she had
expected; but she knew it was only
what she had expected to come. The
pride she had felt in being with him*
was; ehe 'ea)ized; only anticipatory of
the pride she Woad experience at his
Wife, When she considered the feeling
of her eafainilY and her friends, she
'mew that, though some would go
through the f,rroal deploring that
Henry had aot better birth, all would
he satisfied and more than. satisfiede
they would even boast about Henry
a little, and entertain him in her hondr
and . show him pfri There was no one
—now that poor Uncle Benny was
grie7-40 would serionsly Were
it at all
•
Constance ha recognized no relic
IA uneasiness, from 'Pride Bnny's last
appeal to her; -sheunderstood- that
horoughly, Or, at least, she had
understood thet; now was there a
Change in, the ciramstances of that
Miderstnding,, because of what had
happened to 'Alan, that she found her-
slf re -defining to herself her relation.
With Henry ? No; it had nothing to
de -with Henr, of course; it referred
oaly to Benjamin Corvet. Uncle Ben-
ny had "gone away". from his house on
A tor Street, leaving his place there
t61. 14 soli, Alan Conrad Something
W icli had disturbed and excited Alan
had happened to hiin on the firstnight
he had passed in that house; and now,
It 'appeared, he had been prevented
from passing a second night there.
What had prevented him had been an
atterapted slobbery upon the street,
her father had said. But suppose it
had been: sonithing else than, robbery:
Slie ' could not. formUlate more
definitely this thought, but it per-
sisted; she could not deny it entirely
and shake it off.
To Alan Conrad, in .the late after -
'noon of that day, this same thought
was coming far more definitely and .
far more persistently. He had been
al.vailte since Shortly . after noonday.
The pain of a head which ached throb-
bingly dnd of a body bruised and sore
was :beginning to give place to a feel-
ing, merely of lassitude—a languor
which revisited incoherence upon him ''''
when he tried to think He shifted •
nurse.,wo'
himself. upon his bed and called the
w long am I likely to have to
stay here?" he asked her.
"The doctors thmk not less than
two weeks, Mr. Conrad."
,
He realized, as he again lay silent,
that he must put out of his head now
all expectation of ever finding in Car-
. vet's 'house any such record as he
had been looking for. If there had
been a record, it unquestionably would
, be gone before he could get about a- , *
gain to seek it; and he could not
1 guard against its being taken from
the house; for, if he had been hope-
i less of receiving credence for any
accusation he might make against
Spearman while he was in health, how
much more hopeless was it now, when
everything he would say could be put
1 to the credit of his injury and to his
delirium! He could not even give or-
ders for the safeguarding of the house
and its contents—his own property—
with assurance that they would be
carried out.
The police and hospital attendants,
he had learned, had no suspicion of
anything but that he had been the'
victim of one of the footpads who,
during the month, had been attack-
ing and robbing • nightly. Sherrill,
who had visited him about two o'clock
had showed that he suspected no other
possibiliy. Alan could not prove 1 .
otherwisie; he had not seen his assail- 1 ,
ant's fade; it was most probable that 1 '
if he had seen it, he would not have
recognized it. But the man who had
assailed him had meant to kill; he had
not been any ordinary robber. That
purpose. blindly recognized and fought
against by Alan in their struggle, had
been unmistakable: Only the chance
presence'of passers-by, who had heard
Alan's shouts and responded to them,
had prevented the execution of his
purpose, and had driven the man to
swift flight for his own safety.
- Alan had believed. in his struggle
with Spearman in Corvet's library,
that Spearman -might have killed -
rather than have been discovered
there. Were there others to whom.
Alan's presence had become a threat
SO serious that they would proceed
even to the length of calculated mur-
der? He could not know that. The
only rade plan was to assume that
persona, in number unknown, had
definite, vital interest in his "emov- , •
al" by violence or otherwise, and that,
among them, he must- reckon Henry
Spearman; and be must fight them a-
lone. For Sherrill's liking for him,
evee. Constance Sherrill's interest ,and
sympathy we nullified in practical
_ ..
$.
LA'
4
•
it..., 4.
gp.1.919,
intent by their. admiration .for and
their complete confidence in. Spearman.
It did not matter that Alan anight be-
lieve that, in fighting 4-roadiMan, he
was fighting not .only for igtrieelt but
for her; he knew now certainly that he
must count her as Spearman's; her!
Things swain before him *tin dizzily
as he thought ef, her; and' he sank
back and closed hie eyes.
A little before six Constance Sher-
rill and Spearman celled to inquire
after him and were admit d for a few
•
moments, to his TOOM. She came
him, bent over him while she spot?
the fiee words of sympathy'1ie nurse
diked to her; she stood back then
While Spearman spoke to him. In the
succeeding days, he saw- 1-10iearIy
r
every day, aceomparaell always by her.
father or Spearman; it was the full
two weeps the nurse had allotted for
his remaining in the hospital before
he saw her alone.
d COUGHE
-
Ce;4614-3preads
.Diseos$ •
(Continued Next Week)
-MPS OXIGHP
KW 'INS. TOR atiLDRI(
Don't Let Your
Brown Sugar Crock
Get Empty
-addition to your Lantic
"fine" granulated Sugar
you 'should always keep on
hand a supply of
Cf./ I don e d Brown
It saves amoney and adds vatiety and zest to your cooking. The natural delicious moas—
ses taste of Lantic101d-fashioned Brown Sugar is g decided improvement to malty sweets.
It blends deliciously w; th the flavors of all dried fruits. Nearly all dishes containing
raisins,.date, figs or currants are better when made with brown sugar.
Spices and brown sugar are on the friendliest terms.
Spieed cookies and cup cakes and all sweet pickles
or :liked c.. -t3 are better -when made with brown
ar eau
I;e: fear thee; etafashioned recipes might, be for-
gotten, we have reprinted a number of the hest of
them in a booklet called "Grandmother's Recipes.'
We will send it to you upon receipt of a 2c. stamp.
Your grocer knows this sugar by the name of Lanai
Brilliant Yellow, and will sell you any quantity.
ATLANTIC SUGAR REFINERIES LIMITED
MONTREAL •
! 1111=ifialeka:-.1-./MWRA'sitt
Tee
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44** '4\ 14 •'t.'"N i'S'N 4.s
' •-*.i'41.7.; •
ACTUAL SIZE—the "Iligger Bar
I Substitute'
Be sure you receive your own
favorite brand --"Comfort". Do
not permit inferior soaps to be
substituted. "Comfort" is the
biggest and best for the money.
For nearly 25 years it has been
at the top for quality, popularity
and big sales. So why buy exa.
perience instead of soap? -
Comfort Soap—"It's All Right"
PUGSLEY0 DINGMAN & CO., LIMITED
TORONTO, ONT.
33
11
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I ME MO I I I I a SM WI n WW=Cii=gjtzzawim2== Gmt2.Zt 4w430Vermal.mwem.^..wr:rnIffx
}and. He 3oc'l:ori
IsYtorigi
fat
very little
33.y
would not
dians did e
were for,
h ilegsmpthu tg et ti
ound out
legs and
Totieadn thoen leBg
hadtowouldtt
inidegnes:ftov
ides,
"He we
w
then. Pret
coming ba
shea01.1 It ndhl esWhr aeand
dW1
her how sh
had , heard
I -fent out to
,D idyou
UYes; 1
tc
4hiovawet ye
"Yes;
it
would be s
aain. It
The Indian;
theirg.rram:Ts di 1. eg e.
night; tiler(
the sound
then nothin
gain onee--
:isauuPosiNmeuricriesteieed:
the heat ot
island the b
te, untied,rv3vkf
you floating ai In,
beaeh near
,y
an47Twehimt
ereyds:
when the
it was 'one
number!"
merely rate;
"Did I%-fr..
about the A
he:Nrdot;hheeDa
Waesaque
brought Alt
to stand in
that Alan
stood lookir
and thoughl
"Do lee
saw before,
:Tishathatis
JFT
Doen't hi
Don't
Teeezone
'drug store.,
awns, eallu
ern of feel
When Fn4
toes or eel!
the skin be
alai never
,
TASCA,1
For -SidPii?
r,.
lion, Salim
aelnee eom•
elogged
eel to be
food, whiell
ba.ge itt a
step to um
bad.
ever
nauseating.
give your
cleansina
morning.
it. 10 -cant
4-c'eR