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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1919-04-25, Page 7APRIL g5, 1919, ;AIMS OFF DANDRUFF, HAIR 'STOPS FALLING 1 THE' VURO EXPOSITOR : yotre HAW Bete _small bottle of Danderine right how --Also stops itching scalp. CN III CE A SKIN WHITENER e a creamy be atutll lotloli Er a few Mg& f two fettle lemons strained -containing three ounces of • makes at whole quarter lost remarkable lemon skin about the cost one must 01 jar of the ordinary cold ehonld be taken to strain ice through a, fine cloth so p gets iso-, _then this lotion resh for month& Every s that lemon juipe is used L remove such blemishes ae rawness and - tan said ie xn softeners ; whitener and t! Get three ounces of :e at any drug store and . Fora the grocer and make up St of this sweetly fragrant and maseage it daily into kt arms and hands. I. C. A. :i: develop - boys in the rd Efficiency conferences; ri the towns ywhere, who sical o:; social etiry, and the Mages lacking and equip - may organ- include the .ed Triangle motional and fog bays and a with the of Y.M.C.A. Cs army of plants, both ;s and in the rganizing the )ur Mies by isolated dic- ers hold the ty for 1919, .ailway men, age physical c the fund - Note. et asking for :arry on our mss, with the treat Britain, .igium. That ntinue at its Some months, ;ovided for by tip n of oar gas, and will e till the last :cl for home. F Canada pairx .Director: . Xrflop, TCS i Thin, brittle, oolorlese and norag8y hair is mute evidence . of a neglect 1 1�s , of dandruff---. that awful stair{ There is nothing so destructive to the hair es dandruff. It robs the {fair of its lustre, its strength and: its very life; eventually producing a feverish - nese and itching of the soalp, which if not remedied causes the hair - roots to Shrink. loosen and die --then the hair frrine to- night—now--any time—will surely save out fast. A little Danderine hair. Get a small bottle of KnawIton's Danderine from any drug store. You surely to have beautiful hair and lots of it if you will just. try a little Dan - Brine. Save v e your hair! 'Try it! - BY : WILLIAM-MacHARG _and : ,EDWIN BALM -ER : Thomas Allen, Publisher, "Toronto The disgrace, .unha, iness, the threat of so pP. the stern "� of the little boa,; it . disa - methi worse,whichp pared� ,r � inure, have made death a relief�n the".- eh�d4w . , apier:. -shoe iV Uncle to heard, presently,' the ' _____ , 1 L ncle Benny, she had seen passed on walk crunch -uder �hiquick of the s • now to Alan. What moose had come nd thena P , , Dat. F.to Alan since ' •she saver hi in the ;noon - J'. R. FORSTER ( she :had last .he off ham? _Mrd light ; ,among the tree � The im et- Eyee, Ear, Nose and -Some terriblep Throat substance to his uousness, ess '- al'm os Graduate in"fanciesthe ofezYce of his Medicine, University °of which would assail hun again;.hurry to reach her,.t to Its thrill Toron. as she had seen him assailed shortly through , her. She 8' wen db on Late Assistant the Asss Cant .. 'after � wn New. York Ophthal_ .r Luke had come ? Might an- path to meet hi mei and Aural Institute,, Moorefield's other attack have • been made - -m. upon "How quickly ;you c Eye and Golden Square Throat Hos- him similar to that which he had , met "You let pitals. London, Eng. At the Queen's in Chicago? - me ouself thi Hotel, Seaforth, third Wednesday. Connie!"d edn sday. in Word had reached« �, � . her fate each monthfatherI did-, .,. from Al. 1`1 a.m . to � th , -k r 3 p.ir3z. ,. ro aghipping circles in May ' and He had caught her hf 83 Waterloo Street, South, Stratford. again in July which told of inquiries he held .i Phone 267 Stratford: q t while•he br,ou regarding Uncle Benny . which made porch and exchanged her and her father was searching believe that 'Alan her mother, Then he Ie,� g for hisfather upon the and into the house. 1 lakes. Now these articles which had When she saw'his facein the light, arrived made plain to her that he there wet signs of strain s n iii it;he i would never find Uncle . Benny;s would learn through others or - he could feel •strain now i his fingers through which held hers strongly but tensely themselves, that Uncle Benny was too. dead-. Would he believe then that "You're tired, Henry!" there was no longer any chance of He shook his head.I " "'s been ?mel! „you needed LEGAL. R. S.RAYS. Barrister, Solicitor, Conveyancer and Notary Public, Solicitor for the Do- minion Bank. Ofliee- in rear of the Do- minion Bank, Seaforth. Money to loan. - J. M. BEST Barrister, Solicitor, Conveyancer learning what his father had done ? rotten hot in Chicago; t' en I guess and Notary Public. Office upstairs Would he remain awn because, of 'I was mentally stoking Al. the way over Walker's Furniture Store, =Mail} that, not letting her see or hear from up., here, Connie. When g t start - Street, Seaforth. him again ? ed, I wanted to see you to nig t ...but She went back and picked up the first, where are the thin o _ - g yanwt w•Q t !'n : ring. Thethought which had ed me to see ? cine to her thate.'this was Alan's, Shearon up -stairs .and b 1ught them <r la 'r's wedding ring, had fastened dawn to him. Her hands were shak- iteeit upon her with a sense of cer- ing now as she gave th in to him; tainly. It defended that unknown she could not exacta 'und n' y tad'why; e mother; it freed her, at least, from the but her tremor increased s she saw stigma � i Constance's which o C pita c his ii e s bighands fumbling a � ' moths unwrap - had a unwra had been so ready to .cast. Con- ped the muffler and sho p out the stance could not yet begin to place things it enclosed. He to k thein up Uncle Benny in relation to that ring; one by one and looked at t ein, as she had done. 1 -lis fingers were steady now but only by mastering, of control, the effort`` for which amazed her He had the watch in his hands. "The inscription is inside the front," ' d iii his and it her to the eetings with her din past pR©UDFOOT, KILLORAN AND.. COONE Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries -Pub- lic, etc. Money to lend. In Seaforth on Monday of each week. Office in Kidd Block. W . Proudfoot, R.C., J. L. Killoran, H. J. D. Cooke. VETERINARY F. HARBURN,V. S Honor graduate - of Ontario Veteein- ary College, and honorary member of the Medical Association of the iOntaro Veterinary College. Treats diseases of all domestic animals by the most mod- ern prineiples.t Dentistry and Milk Fever a specialty. Office opposite Dick'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, reheusiatim, acute, `chronic and nervous disorders; eye, ear, nose and throat. Consulation free. Office above Umback's Drug store, Seaforth, Tuesdays and Fridays, 8 a.m. till 1 p.m C. J. W. HARN-,. M,D.C.M. 425 Richmond Street, London, Ont., Specialist, Surgery and Genio-Urin- aiy diseases of men and women. DR. 3. W. PECK Graduate of ' Faculty of Medicine McGill University, Montreal; Member of College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario; Licentiate of Medical Coun- cil of Canada; Post -Graduate Member of Resident Medical staff of ,'General Hospital, Montreal, 1914-15; Office, 2 doors east of Post Office. Phone 56, Hensel', 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. SCO 171: & MACKAY J. G. Scott, graduate of Victoria and College of Physicians and Surgeons Ann Arbor, and member of the Col- Iege of Physicians and Surgeons, of Ontario. C. Maekay honor graduate of Trin- ity University, and gold medallist of Trinity Medical College; member of the College of Physicians and Sur- geons of Ontario. DR. H. HUGH ROSS. Graduate of University - ofToronto Faculty of Medicine, member of Col= lege of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario; pass graduate courses in Chicago Clinical School of Chicago; Royal Ophthalmic Hospital London, England, University Hospital, London England. Office :Back of Dominion Bank, Seaforth. Phone No. 5, Night (:'alis answered from residence, Vic- toria Street, Seaforth. . B. R. HIGGINS Box 127, Clinton —. phone 100 Agent for The Hpron and. Erie Mortgage Corpor- ation and the Canada Trust Company]. Commissioner H. C. J. Conveyancer) Fire and Tornado Insurance, Notary Public, Government and Municipal Bonds bought and sold: Several good farms for - sale. Wednesday of each. week at Brucefield. AUCTIONEERS. GARFIELD McMICHAEL Licensed: Auctioneer for the County of Huron, Sales conducted in any part --tif the county. Charges moderate and satisfaction guaranteed, Address Sea - forth, R. R. No. 2, or phone 18 on 236, Seaforth. 2653-tf 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 all parts of the county. Seven years' ex- perience in Manitoba and Saskatche- wan. Terms reasonable. Phone No.. 175 r 11, Exeter, Centralia P. d. R. R. No. 1. Orders Ieft at The Huron Expositor Office, Seaforth, promptly at- tended. but she was beginning to be able to think of Alan and his mother. - She held. to the .little band of gold very tenderly in her hand; she was glad that, as the accusation against his mother had come through her she said:, people, she could; -it -tell "him 'soon of She pried the cover open again and this. She I could not send the ring to • read, with him, the word, engraved him„ not knowing where he was that within.. - was too much risk. But she could " `.As master of...'.Whst ship was .ask him to conte to her; this gave he master of then, Henrys and how that right. did - he ` rescue the W nnebego's She sat thoughtful for several min- people?" Utes, the ring clasped warmly in her "He' never talked to me about hand; then she went to, her desk things like that, Connie. This is all?" "Yes." "And nothing since to shove' who /,sent them ?" "No." and wroth: , Mr. John Welton, Blue Rapids, Kansas. - Dear Mr. Wel on: as he had pu it It is pose le -that Alan Conrad • has mentioned - me—or at least told you of my father—in. connection with his stay in Chicago. After Alan left ��, -`My father wrote twice to his Blue Rapids address, but evidently ; Ice had tnstrnete On postmaster there to forward his mail and had not Made any change in those instructions for the letters were returned to Alan's address and in that way came back to us. We did not like to.press in- quiries further - than that; as of course he could have communicated With us if he had not. felt that there was some reason for not doing so. Now, some thing of such importance to hint has come tb us. that it is necessary for as to, get word to hien at once. If you can tell pie any address at which he can be reached by telegraph or Mail—or where a messenger can find hien, it will - oblige- _s very much, and will be.to`,,his interest. ! ' She hesitated,'about to sign it; then impulsively, she added: I trust you' know that we have Al- an's interest' a.t heart and that you cion safely tell us anything you may know as to where he is or what he may be doing now. We all liked him here veiy very much. She signed her narn.e. There were still two other letters to write. Only the handwriting- of the addrens upon the package, the Manitowoc postmark ' and the -shoe box furnished clue to the sender of the ring and the .watch and the other things. - Constance her- self could not trace those clues, but Henry or her father could She wrote "Cornet, Sherrill, and Spearman not i B. " NERVOUSr Told by Mrs.. L G From -- Own Experience, a Providence, R. I. --"I was a111 run clown in health, was nervous, had head- aches, my back ached all the time. 1 was tired and had no ambition ferany- thing• 'I had taken a iiuinber of medi- cines which did me no good. One day d i I read about Lydia E. Pinkham'e Vee- table Compoundand what it had done for women, so I tried it. . M.e � '� , „ ,.,.� ��<:.and y�i rvousne$s Ir backache and headaches disappeared.eared. I gained in r„ -eight and feel,finer f so h I n can honestly recommend Lydia i;. Pinkham'a 'Vege- table Compound to any woman who is suffering as I was. ''=-• Mrs. ADELINE B. LYNCH, 100 Plain St., Providence, R.I. Backache and nervousness are'symp- toms,,, or nature's:warninggs, which in- dicate a functional disturbance or an. unhealthy condition which often devel- ops into a more serious ailment. Women in this condition should not continue to drag atonwithout help, but profit by Mrs. Lynchs experience, and try this famous root and' herb remedy, Lydia E. Pinkhant's Vegetable Com- pound—and om- ppoundand for Special advice write to Lydia E. Pinkbam Med. io., Lynn, Mass. I am here -with your hand inmins, and as we will stand` before the altar - together, that he had no cause to speak against me. I've waited, Con- nie,,,togive him a chance to. say to you what he had to - sem; .I wanted you to hear it before making you wholly niine. Butt now , there's no need to wait any longer, you and L Ben's gone, never' to coiie back. I was sure of that by what you wrote me, so this time when I startedto you I brought with me ---this. He felt in his pocket and brought out a ring of plain gold; he held it before her -so that she could see within it her own initials and his and a blank left for the; date: Her gaze Went from it for an instant to the box where he had put baek the other ring—Alan's mother's. ,Peeling for her long ago gazing thus, as she must have, at that ring, held_ her for a moment. Was it because of that Con- stance. found herself cold- now? "You mean you want ane to marry you—at once, Henry?" a He drew her to him. powerfully; she felt " him waren„ almost rough with passions. Since that day when, in Alan Coniad.'s presence, he had grasped and kissed her, she had not let him "real ze" their engagement, tie both of them, therefore, describ- ing the articles which had come and relating what she had done. Then she. rang for a servant and sett the letters to the post. They were in tirim to catch the "dummy" train a- round the bay and, at Petoskey, would get inl4o the afternoon -mail. The two for Chicago would be delivered .early the next morning, so she could expect replies from. Henry and her father on the, second day; the letter to Kansas, of course woluld take much longer than that: • But the next noon she received a wire from. Henry that he was "com- ing up." It did not surprise her, as she had/expected him the end of the week. ': Late that evening, she sat with her another .on the wide, gtreened ver- anda. The breeze among the pines had died away; the lake was calm. A half moon hung midway in the sky, ,waking plain the hills about the bay and casting a broadening way of sil- ver • on the mirror surface of the water. The lights of some boat turn- ing in between the points.; and moving swiftly caught her attention. As it entered the path of the moonlight, its look was so like than of Henry's power yacht that she arose. She had not expected him = until morning but now the boat': was so near that she could no longer doubt .that it was his, He must have started withan an hour - of the receipt of her letter and had been forcing his engines to their fastest all the wa up. - He had done that partly, perhaps,' for the sheer sport of speed; but part- ly also -foethe sakeof, being sooner with her. It washis way, as soon as he had decided to - leave " business a- gain and go to her, to arrive as soon as. possible; - that hed been his way - recently, particularly. So the sight of the yacht stirred her warmly and she watched while it ran in close, stop - Ped and instantly dropped audey from: the davits. She ssw "He in will send some one to ,Maiiitowoo` to make inquiries." Henry put the things back in the box. - "But of course, this is the. end: of Ben3amin Comet." "Of course," Constance said. She f was shaking again and, without will- ing it, she withdrew a little from Hen -1 r3r. He caught her " hand againi and drew her back toward him. i His hand was quite steady. "You know - why I came to you as quick as I,. could? You knew why I —why my mind was behind every thrust of the engines?" iwohi Y� ' "You don't? Oh, you k low; you must know now!" "Yes, • Henry," she said. "I've been patient, Connie. Till I got your letter telling me this about Benjamin. -Cornet, I'd .wa ted for your sake for our sake though- it seemed at times it was i possible.-` You haven't known quite w at's been the matter between us hese last months, little gill; but I've known. We've been engaged; but that's about all there's been to it. Dont's think I make lit - of that; you know what I mean. You've been mine; but—but you haven't' let me yeah.; it, you see. And I've been patieit, for I knew the reason. It was Ben poison- ing your mind against men' "No! No, Henry!" "You've denied it; I've recognized that you've denied it, not only to me and to your people but tot yourself. I, of course, knew, as 1. know that "Why not?" he urned °.',ter face up to his now. "Your mother's here; :your father will follow Soon; or, it Yah€ will, we'll .rpu away Constance:, You've kept me `off so g! You don't believe there's anyting, .against me, dear? Do you? Do:you? "No; no! Of .course n!" "Then -we're going tobe harried.: . We're going to be married -aren't we? Aren't we, Constance?" "Yes; yes, of course." P "Right away, we'll have it then; up here; now!" "No; not now, Henry.; Not up here!" - "Not here? Why . note" She could give , no' arii3wer. He held her and commanded her again; only when he frightened be, ' he ceas- ed. "Why must it be at (M, Henry? I don't understand!" - f' "It's not must, dear,': he denied. "It''s just that I want yol so!" When would it be, he . demanded then; before spring, she promised at last. But that was all he could make her say. And so he let fir go. The next evening, in the moonlight, she drove him to Petoskey. He -had messages to send and .iireferred to trust the telegraph office. the larg- er town. Returning they; swung out along the country roads The, night was cool here on the lulls, under the stars; the fan -shaped ;"glare from their headlights, blurring the radiance of the moon, sent dancingthefore them swiftly changing; distorted- shadows of the, .dusty bushes beside the road. Topping ,a rise, .they came suddenly upon his birthplace. She had not designed coming to that place,. but 1 shehad taken a turn at his diyec i tion, and now he asked. her to stop the ear. He got out and . paced a- bout, calling to her and pointing out the desirableness of the spotas the • site- for their country home, ` She sat in the motor, watching hint and call- ing back to ham, The house was small, log built, the chinks between the logs stopped with clay. = Across the road from it the •silver bark of* the birch trees gleam - led twhilte among the black -barked timber. Smells of rank Vegetation came to her from these woods and from the weed -grown fields about and beyond the house. There had been ae small garden be'sicle thehouse once, now neglected strawberry vines ran' riot among the weed stems, and a clump of sunflowers stood with hang- ing, full-blown heads under the Aug- ust moon. She gazed proudly at Henry's strong_ well proportioned figure moving a- ut in the moonlight, and`'he was h, incoznplaarable Tea -Pot results always obtainable from an infusion has liven it a prestige possessed by no other tea on sale. - - out -draws and outm•elasses al "This is no idle claim" ether teas. which separates the blue - waters of Grand Traverse from Lake Michigan; and, thinking of her, he knew that she was •near. He not only had re- .membered e- mb re .an e bed that sh would be north. at Harbor Point thiaxnonth; he had seen to thinthatin one of the Petoskey papers that gladk a boy from this she and her mother were at the Sher -house had become the man that he rill simpler home. His business now was But when she tried to think of him as a child here her find some- was taking hem nearer them Mian he how showed.herAl, la : hal been at any time before; send, if A an playing about he wished to, weaken, he might cone the sunflowers; and the plats was not vine himself .that he • might learn here; it was the brown, Kansan --. prairie of which he had from her circumstances which :would p ar " told her. aid him in his task. But .he wins not .Sunflower Houses she murmured to herself. {`Sunflower ho, ses. They going to her for help; that. was follow used to cut the stalks and . uild shacks ins in his father's footsteps, When with them." he knew everything,, then—not till then "What's that'?" Henry said; he had —he could go to her; for - then he come back near her. would know wan, what wa• upon The warm blood rushed to her face. him newt what he :should do. "Nothing," she said, a little ashamed. His visits to the people named on those sheets written She opened. the door bride her: "Come . by his father had we'll go back home now,." been confusing at first;, hey had had Coming from that poor little place, and having • made of himself what he had, Henry was such a man as she would be ever proud to have for a hus- band; there was - no man whom she had known who had 'proved himself as much a roan as he. Yet now, -as she' returned to the point, she was think- ing Sof this lake coantry not only as Henry's - land but as Alan Conrad's too. -In some such plaice he .also had been born—born by the mother whose ring waited hint in the box in her room. Alan,, upon the morning of the sec- ond -of these days, was driving north- ward along the Yong, sandy peninsula. great difficulty ire tracing some of at all; and, afterwards he coif cover no certain 'connection eithc tween them and Benjamin Cory between themselves. Butt recentl had been succeeding better in this ter. _ Ile had! seen—he reckoned them over again fourteen of the twenty- one originally, on Benjamin, Coi+et's lists; that is, he had seen eitlieri the individual originally name -d: ori the surviving relative written in below the name crossed off. He had foi'und that the the enttme meant that dead, t ex-, thein un- be- t or Tat - crossing out of the person was (Continued on Page Six) LIFT CORNSIOR 1600 ') CALLUSES OFF Doesn't hurt1 Lift anycorn or callus off wtl fingers Don't suffer! 'A tiny -bottle • Treezone costs but a few cents lit any, eirug store. Apply a few drops on the corns, calluses and "hard skhi" oft bot- tom of feet, then lift them off. . " ,When Freezone removes corns from the toes or calluses from the bottom of feet, the skin beneath is left pink and healthy, and never sore, tender or irritaiteri. Sp�en�id -� for �ir��t� �nc� drains 4, t� *44,k. t:- - .f - 1 ti� y ;�,.� ti -s - tom O�•\\\�\ �� '•--Z:.. ACTUAL Sift—the "Bigger -Bar Su Be sure you receive - your -awn . favorite brand--" on f ort"..Do not permit hiferior , soaps to be substituted. "Comfort'! is the biggest and best for the ,money. - For nearly 25 years it has been at the top for iluality, popularity and big sales. So why guy ex• perience instead of soap '? Comfort Soap—"it's All Rpt" PUGSLEY, DI G AN & CO., LIMO J TORONTO, ONT,