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The Huron Expositor, 1919-10-31, Page 7>nthe - 9 z is optional er lat, 1934 General at a, Montreal, ided, at any in Canada and $1,000 est, penditurea gratuity tblishrnent rs forming any neces- II be spent ued interest id interest. any instal - interest are a: r ende.r or �l cr any Minister of ic,itix`'e, and t be accom- tions cr any instalment is provision,. 1O©). ,5100)- 1t1r00). e i10). :.-an instaI- '-id mai be 920. tile, will be multiple of luiired, and >re desirous incipal and tion can be its. These cription is ids without fupr its will tion to the Aim nittee, s 1919 Busy OCTOBER X1,1919 • THE HURON EXPOSITOR , I1111I tit1X1111'1ItH iulIE#llgltillititra David Haruni .�q WARD NOYES WESTf;OTT TORONTO WILLIAM BRIGGS—j8 ' 111111iilIIiltt1HLfluIUUh1111111M111uUi1' CHAPTER I David poured half of his second tup of tea into his saucer to lower temperatdre ze to the drinking point, and helped himself to a second cut of ham and a third egg. Whatever Was on his mind to have kept him usually silent during_ the evening -meal; and to cause certain wrinkles in his forehead suggestive of perplex-' icy or misgiving, had not impaired his appetite. David was - what he called ,good feeder."_ Mrs. Bixbee, known to most of Uwe who enjoyed the privilege. pf ber acquaintance as "Aunt Polly," though nieces and nephews of her blond there were none in Homeville, Freeland County, looked curiously at leer brother, as, in fact, she had done at intervals during the repast; and •veneluding at last that further for- bearance was uncalled for, relieved the pressure of her curiosity thus: "Guess ye got somethin' on your Mind, hain't ye ? You hain't hardly sd aye. yes, ner no senee you set art. Anythin' gone 'skew?" David lifted his saucer, gave 'the tont+ents a precautionary blow, and emptied it with sundry windy suspira- tsts. ' '"No." 1]e - said, "nothin' hain't gone exac'ly wrong, 's ye might say— szt t yet; but I done that thing I was te31in' ye, of to -day," "Done what thing?" she asked per- "iexedly - telegraphed to New York," he eeplied, "fer that young feller to come on—the' young man General Wolsey wrote me about...I got a letter from him to -day, an' I made up my mind 'the sooner the quicker,' are I tele- graphed him to come 's soon 's he iou1d." "I forgit what you said his name was." said Aunt Polly. "There's his _letter," said David, ceding it across the table. "Read it. out 'loud." "You read it," she said, passing it* ick after a search in her poc;et; "I must 'a' left my specs in the. settin'- Y'DOz .s' The Fetter was as follows: , 'Dear Sir: I take the liberty of •addressing you at the instance of General W'olse • y, who spoke to me of the matter of your communication to him, and was kind enough to say that he would write you in my behalf. iVly ER acquaintance with him has been in the 'nature of a social rather than a 16 YEAR business one, _and I fancyhat he can ori`ly recommend me on general grounds. I will say, therefore, that I have had some experience with ac- counts, but not much practice in. them for nearly three years. , Nevertheless, unless the work you wish 'done is of an intricate nature, I think I shall be able to accomplish it with such post= ing at the outset • as most strangers would require. General Wolsey told me that you, wanted some one as soon as possible. I ` have nothing to pre- vent t me from starting g at once if you desire to have rne. A telegra ad- dressed to me i at the office o the t Trust Company will reach me prompt- ly. Yours very truly, "John K. Lenox." "Wa'al," said David, looking over his glasses at his sister, "what do you think on't,?" "The' ain't much brag in't," she 'replied thoughtfully. No,��said David, putting his eye- glasses back in their case, "th' ain't i no ,prai; ner no- promises; .he don't even say he'll do his best, like most fellers would. He seems -to have took it fer granted that I'll take it fer granted, an' that's' what I like about it. Wa'al," he-, added, "the thing's done, an' I'll be lookin' fer him to morrow mornln or evenin' -at latest."- ) Mrs. Bixbee sat for a moment with her large, light blue, and rether prom- inent eyes fixed on her brother's face, and then she said, with a slight under- tone of anxiety, "Was -you cal'latin' to have, that young Klan from New York come here?`" "I hadn't no such idea." he replied, with a slight smile, aware of what, was passing in her mind. "What put that in your head?" "Wa'al," she answered, "you know the' ain't scarcely anybody in the vil- lage that takes .boarders in the winter an' I was wonderint what he would do." "I s'pose he'll 'go to the Eagle," said David. "I dunno where else, 'nless it's- to the Lake House.'? ' "The Eagil!" she' exclaimed con- temptuously. "Land sakes! Cotnin' here from New York! .He won't stare it there a week." "Wa'al," replied- David, "mebbe he will an' mebbe he won't, but- 1 don't see what else the' is for it, an' I guess 'twoz t kill him for a spell: The. fact is--" he was proceeding When Mrs. Bixbee interrupted him. "I guess we'd better adjourn t' the settin'-room an' leiq Sairy clear off the tea -things," she said, rising and going into the kitchen. No Return :01 The Trouble Since Taking Fra It a tires . 108 CHURCH ST:, MONTREAL."I was a great sufferer from Rhete- matismfor over 16 years. I consulted specialists; took :medicine; ; used Lotions; but nothing did me good. Then I began to use `Fruit -a -tines", and in 15 days the pain was easier and the Rheumatism much better. Gradually, "Fruit-a44ives" overcame my Rlieumai s-snj and now, for five years, I have had no return of the trouble. •I cordially recommend this fruit .medicine to all sufferers. P. H. Mc HUGH. 50e a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size 25e. At ail dealers or sent postpaid by Frit -a -tines Limited, Ottawa. "What was you sayin'?" she asked, as she .presently found her brother in the apartment designated, and seated herself -with her mending basket in 'her lap. "The feat is, I was sayin'," he re- sumed, sitting with hand and forearm resting on a round table, in the centre of which was a large kerosene ; lamp, "that my motion was, Rist off, to have him come here, but when I come to ' think on't I changed my mind; In the fust (place, except that he's well recommended, I don't know nothin' a- ; bout him; an' in the second, you're I -are pretty well set in our ways, an' git along all right just as we be: I .may want the young feller to stay, an' then agin I may not—we'll see. It's a' good sight easier to git a fish- hook in 'n "Us to git it out. I expect he'll find it; ,putty tough at first, but if he's a feller that c'n be drove out of bus'nisby a spell of the Eagle Tavern, he ain't the feller I'm looldn fer— though I will allow," he 'added with 'a. grimace, "that it'll be a putty hard test. But if I want to say to him, after tryin' him a spell, that I guess rhe an' him don't seem/ likely to hitch, we'll both take it 'easier if we ain't linin' in -the same house. I guess I'll take a, look at the Trybune," said David, 'unfolding the paper.' Mrs. Bix%ee went on with her needle work, with an occasional side glance at her brother, who was ih miersed in the ,gospel of his politics. Twice or thrice she opened • ...hetlps as if to address. him, but apparentl some re- straining thought interposed. Finally the impulse to utter her mind culmin- sted. {`Dave," she , said, "d' you know. what . Deakiti Perkins is sayin about ye?" , David opened his paper • so as to hide his- face, and the corners of his mouth twitched as he asked in return, "Wa'al, what's • the deakin sayin' now?" "He's sayin'," she replied, in a voice mixed of indignation and apprehen- sion, "thet you void him a balky horse an' he's goin' to hey the law on ye." David's shoulders shook behind the sheltering page, and his mouth ex- panded-in x-panded-in a grin. "Wa'al," he replied after; a moment, and 1'o0 grave- ly the paperking gr ve- over hisglasses, at his companion g asses, "next to' the deakin's religious ex- perience, them of lawin' an'A horse- tradin' air his strongest ,p'ints, an' he works the hull of 'em to once some- times." Ther -evasiveness of this generality was not lost on Mrs. Bixbee, and she pressed the point with, "Did ye? an" Will -he?" "Yes, an' no, an' mebbe, an' mebbe not," was the categorical reply. "Wa'al," she answered with a snap, "mebbe you call that.. an answer. I s'pose if you don't want to Iet on you .won't, but I do believe you've ben playin' some, trick on the deakin, an' won't own up. I do wish," she added, "that if you hed to git rid, of a balky horse 'onto somebody you'd -hen pick- ed out somebody else." "When you got a balker to dispose of," said David gravely, "you can't alwus pick an' choose. Fust come, fust served." Then he went on more seriously: "Now I'll tell ye. Quite 'a while ago in fact, not long after I come to enjoy the priselidge of the deakin's acquaintance—vi, hed a deal. I wasn't jest on my.sguard, knowin' him to be a deakin an' all that, an' he lied to me 5o -splendid that I was took in, clean over my head. Ile done me so brown I. was burnt in places, an' you o'd smell smoke 'round me fer some time." "Was it a horse?" asked Mrs. Bix- bee gratuitously. "Wa'al," David replied, "mebbe 'it had 'ben some time, but at that par- tic'lar time the only thing to determine that fact was that it wa'nt nothin' else." "Wa'al, I declare!" exclaimed Mrs. Bixbee, wondering not more at, the deacon's turpitede than at the lapse in David's acuteness, of which she had an immense opinion, but commenting only on the former. "I'm 'mazed at the deakin." "Yes'm," said Dave with a grin, "I'm quite a liar myself when it comes right down to the hoss bus'nis: but the deakin c'n give me both bowers ev'ry • • j�,1„ i Higy gHAIlligii i lolllll�llJ�lMIll111111111J1111111111,1111111,1111 11t19111111111,11..1I;i1t�f11 ij1l ff111111} {{1lj it Illi (n'11•tE)1(II it 111111{IQ11111. I.11� illtul I l(I 11111ii ,+�`y }�tid,• rl!@,�rJ....% �.t :s•S l".ti. z}tr i•,� �/,•'7r��:•;is i �••'.\ .S � �, ): 1\.��.-.,r[:: i• 'N. i . .�,• .� kv��.:__ ... '..t-•�'r��i:''t:1 ,�:.:.e •.."ti. . c^;5,,...."�r..�:.i�':?:n�!e.�::�i:rn,,:•�»ar�:.��:d=:4'�.�..•f,�1,r4�.;;�� •�+. i.....,... e x• - ln: �[ ,.- >t■!1+ 4 ,- . Vis` Si.�,. t „ P _ Ni11�Itiil�p�f�lliii�(iill(llltilrlillilAlilltiliuiii111�iilliulrinlliiimivamilliiilllllirliltill�l i1)1(liif�it�irtinii�i� i � � � � `� j `�' a 1 I I��lt II11All11111811111iIiiUIUI111IiIIllilullnt111 VIII Bim Murray Slyly Sings ' He'd. Saiz -La Lai s 1 We 1 Griiy "Go -La Lal Weel cer is, not: nrcrch of z French vocabulary. B:ta: Br1Iy Mur- ray- nakce k mean a lot in this scrappy . ,syncopated song. Coupled with Irving Kauf- i ini'e ,pstpular phist:..Ohl ehl Choi Those Those Landlorels." The Wald Orchestra Love and r orf- :korih. Dance Plays "My Cairo "Merci Beaucoup" "My Cairo Love,", that novel fox-trot from the Orient,, has all the rhythmic reverbera- tions of an oriental gong. "'Merci Beau - coup" is a' one-step that will make you step all, the way 2764 -9Orr • ' "ze (Blow My. Bab, I"' To Me) --- a Harmonious 4.1 ' s. tit Merry 'Music Marvelous Melodies The Radiance in Year Eyes. Wheeler Wadsworth, Saxophone solo. Sing M. Love's Lullaby. Wheeler Wadsworth Saxophone solo. 41728,10 -inch 901 Diedley of Neapolitan Solna, Part T. Pap- zrello's Mandoline Orchettrs. Medley of Neapolitan Songs, Part II, Paperello'a Mandoline Orchestra. E4.144.10 -inch 900 Ts11 Mother I'll Be Ther.. Earl F. Wilde. Work, ter the Night is Corning. Earl F. Wilda. A2772,10-tinah 901 Yon Caa't tet Levin' Where There Aia'l Any Love, Nora Bayes. Maximi a Pisk- auiany. Don't Yea Cry; Nors Hayes 417711,10 -in cis 900 ' Car.lMr8eashine, Sterling Trio.Give Me a Smile sad • Hies, Charles Harrison. A2770,10 -mast 801 The Ileeltethig Hines, Adele Rowland. h'm Goin' to Break That Yawn -Dixon Lin.. Harry Fox. 42U 9.10-in.h 909 Wild Hoasy. Fox -Trot, Waldorf-Astoria Dance Orchestra. Bewails* Smiles. Waltz Yerkes' Jezerimbe Orchestra. A2790,101inch 909 Yesraieg, Pox -Trot, Prince's Dance Orch- estre. Dance Music. Eames, Fox -Trot The Happy Six. Dance Music. 42773. 10-inek 901 In ilio Hart of it Feel, „Henry Burr. I'ro Lirei. Fee Leni,' Vie Satisfied, henry • Burr. 42767, 10 -inch 90e sweet Ilawaiise Moonlight, Waltz: Kalalnki Hawaiian Orchestrs,Introducui Halon* Hawaii.. Ni/hh,Waltz,Kalalnki Hawaiian Orchestra. 42761, 10 -rook DOo T1. Akottelte Rhos, Fox -Trot, Louisiana Five Jazz Orchestras. Introducing; 1, Minnie, 2. Ohl Laddie, 8. Victory Bali Kansas City Blues, Wilbur C. Sweetman's Original jazz Band. A2768, 10 -inch 900 Easy Piti is's, Fox -Trot. Yerkes Novelty Five. Introducing"Squeelin' Pig Blues". 8eaendon, Jazz One -Step, Yerkes' Mar imbaphone Band. A0116, 12-imok $1.60 Cant Yen Seep M. Celltn',Car•line. Oscar Seater; And Columbia Stellar Quartette. &nil in' Through, Oscar Seagle. 42762.-10-inok $1.00. Onr Yesterdays, Barbara Mauro'. Think Lnve,ot Me Barbara Mansel. 42768.10 -mock $1.o0 Overture t. "La Forza Dal Destine". Col- umbia Symphony Orchestra. Selection from "La Forza Del Destino" Columbia Symphony Orchestre.46113,12-ineh•$1.50 Arthur Fields and Jack Kaufman, a cnew Columbia vocal combination, sing nthts harmonious sweetheart soli. ;Coupled with Billy Murray's ro.lick- rhe, Jovial, Jocular rendering of "Ta::e .LMB _Bach 1rc..;ne. Land ofJazz.' 1 • A72766—Pec • t Get the New eidel Plays Wild Gypsy.. Dances Gypsy' musicians' started the dancing, craze in Hungar�r'wit ' ;their famous. "Qat, das," or tavern chnces. Perhaps the most dazzling of thi. fascinating music is the "Hejre Kati (pro- ' flounced Higgh-ra-eat- sy), scenes fro;!n the Csarda." Toscha Ser- interprets it with 'irresistible fire. N Girattiger Glorifies Hungarian Fan Here is "the .first' really great and successful phon- ograph record' of a piano - orchestral classic. In these thrilling, heroic melodies, in the glorious, thunderous chords and the swiftly rip- pling runs from end to end of the keyboard, Percy Grainger is at his most brit= pant est. At6115' $1.50 • 49630 1.50 • French Army -Band.. Superb. in Anie rlesie Columbia Novelty Record Booklet Every Colombia Dealer Has It ; it contains the cream of the inttromental music of many nations, whether it's Gypsy, Jewisk,,, Spanish, Turkish, Xu» (in, .r Hawaiian. .11• Columbia Records are t,wie in an tcnpuaees Anew Columbia Records on Salo the 20th of Every Month at all Columbia Dialers. COLUMBIA GRAMOPHONE CO. • Toronto 11fi ttie Bizet's exquisite- "Arlen sienne Suite'- must have mightily appealed to these veteran bandsmen of die' Marne, for they play it ail" if they love it. A.1 in zet's opera Carines, these melodies are strongly fluenced by the composer's study of French and Spann ish folk -musk.". Qt► , the • back, "La an um-;, spiring, 31 `Spanish• ball -n ;tllZrcili7'`�1 4744't A!6114 4 Oflt. Phone 129 hand. He done it so slick that I had to laugh when I come to think it over —an' I had -witnesses to the hull confab,. too, that he didn't know of, an' I' o'd 've showed hien up in great , shape if I'd had a mind to." "Why didn't ye?" said Aunt Polly, whose feelings about the deacon were undergoing a revulsion. "Wa'al, to tell ye the truth, I was so completely skunked. that I hadn't a word to say. I got rid. o' the thing fer what it was, wuth fer hide an' taller, an' `stid of sgliealin' 'round the way you say he's doin,' like a stuck pig, I kep' my tongue between my teeth an' laid to git even some time." "You ort to 'veshed the law on hirci," declared Mrs. Bixbee, now fully con- verted. "The old scap!" "Wa'al," was the re ly, "I` gen'ail Pref r' st •e to e tle out ocourt, an' in this partic'lar case, while I might 'a' ben willin' t' admit that I hed ben did up, I ` didn't feel much like swearin' to• it. I reckoned the time 'd Colne when .mebbe I'd git the laugh on the deakin, an' it did, an' we're putty 'well settted now in full." "You mean this last pufformance?" asked Mrs. Bixbee. "I wish you'd quit beatin' about the bush,' an' tell me the hull story" "Wa'al,- it's like this, then, if you will hen it. I was over to Whiteboro a while ago on a little matter of worldly bus'ni's, an' I seen a couple of fellers halter-exercisin'- a hoes in the tavern yard. I stood 'round a spell watchin' 'em, an' when he come to a standstill I went an' looked him over, an' I liked his looks fust rate. "'Fer sale?' I says. • "Wa'al,' says the chap that was leadin' him, `I never see the hoss that wa'nt if the price .was right.' " `Your'n ?' I says. - " `Mine an' his'n,' he says, noddin' his head at the other feller. " `.What ye askin' fer him?' I says. " `One -fifty,' he says. "I looked him all -over again putty careful; an' . once or twice I kind o' shook my head '•s if I didn't quite like what4 seen, an' when I got through I sort o' half turned away without sayin' anythin', 's if I'd seen enough. ' " `The' ain't a scratch ner a pimple on him,' says the feller, kind o' re- sentin' my look,'s. `He's sound 'amt' kind, an' '11 stand without hitchin', an' a lady c'n drive him 's well 's a man.' " `I ain't got anythin' agin him,' I says, 'an' prob'ly that's all true, ev'ry 9 word on't; buton-fifty's a c nsI fi s o d abl Y price fer a hoss these days. I hain't no pressin' use fer ;another hoss, an', in fact„' I says, `I've got one. or two fer sale myself.' ” 'He's wuth two hundred jest as he stands,' the feller says. • 'He hain't had no trainin', an' he c'n draw two men in a road-wagin better'n fifty.' "Wa'al, the more I looked at him the better I liked him, but I only says, `Jes' so, jes' so, he may be wuth the money, but jest as I'm fixed now he ain't wuth it to me, an' I hain't got that much money with me if he was,' I says. The other feller hadn't said nothin' up to that time, an' he broke in now.' `I s'pose you'd take him fer e gift, wouldn't ye?' he says, kind o' sneerin.' " `Wa'al, yes,' I says, `I dunno but I would if you'd throw in a pound of tea an' a halter,' "He kind o' laughed an' says. `Wa'al this ain't lin gift enterprise; ' an; Ir guess we ain't goin' to trade, but I'd like to know,' he says, 'jest as a matter of curios'ty, what you'd say he was wuth to ye?' " `Wa'al,' I says,- `I come over this mornin' to see a feller that owned me a trfile o' money. Exceptin' of some loose change, what he paid me 's all I got with me,' I says, takin' out my wallet. 'That wad's got a hundrea an' twenty-five into it, an' if you'd sooner'. have your hoss an' haltep than 'the wad,' I says, 'why, I'll bid ye good - "'You're offerin' one -twenty-five fer the hoss an' halter?' he says;- " `That's what I'm doin',' I says. " `You've made a trade,' he says, puttin' out his "hand fer the money an' handin' the halter over to me." "An' didn't, ye suspicion nuthin' when he took ye up like that?" asked Mrs. Bixbee. "I did smell woolen some," said David, "but I had the hoes an' they had the money, an', as fur 's I c'd see, the critter was all right. . How- somever, I says to 'em: 'This here's all right, fur,. 's it's gone, but you've talked putty strong 'bout this hoss. I don't know who you fellers be, but I c'n find out,' I says. Then the fust feller that done the' talkin' 'bout the toss put in an' says,' 'The' hain't ben one word said to you about.this boss that wa'nt gospel truth. not one word.' An' when I come to think on't after- ward," said David with a half laugh, "it mebbe want gospel truth, but it was good enough jury truth. I guess this ain't over 'n' above interestin' to ye, is it?" he asked after a pause, looking doubtfully at his sister. "Yes, 'tis," she asserted. "I'm lookin' forrered to where the deakin comes in, but you jest tell it your own way." "I'll git there all in good time,' THE Never -Failing Remedy for ndicifis Indigestion, Stomach Disorders,. Appendicitis and Kidney Stones are often caused by Gall Stones, and mislead people until those bad attacks of Gall Stone Colic appear. Not one iu ten Gall Stone Sufferers knows what is the trouble. Mariatt's Specific . will qure without rain or oyer-, ,tion. - For sale at all druggists. Recommended by E. IU rnbach Druggist, Seaf.rth, Ont J.. MARLATI&CD ,s8! Ol9 TARO ST, Tononv -O _ - said David, "but some of the point of the story'll be lost if I don't tell ye What come fust." "I allow to sten' it 's long 's` you can," she said encouragingly, "seem' what work I ad geetin' ye started.. Did ye find out anythin' 'bout 'them fellers?" "I est the bern man if he-' knowed wI they was,, an' he said he neve seed em till the yestiddybefore an' , didn't know 'em fill Adam.' They come along with a couple sof hosses, one drivin' an' -t'other lea+cdin.'—the one I bought. ' I ast hila if they know- ed wlio I .:�uas, an' he said one on 'ern ast hint, an' he told him. The feller said to him; seein' me drive up: `That's .a putty likely-lookin': hoss. Who's drivin' him?' An' he says to the feller: 'That's Dave Haran, f'm over to Homeville. He's a great fel- ler fer hooses,' he says." "Dave," said Mrs. Bixbee, "them chaps jest laid fer ye, didn't they?" "I reckon they- did," he admitted; "an' they was a slick a .pair as was ever drawed to," which expression was lostupon his sister. David ands rubbed ub ed the fringe - of yellowish -gray hair which encircled his bald pate for a moment. ' (Continued next week'. 1 SINCE '18,7'0 �3a Q eco GH 7 LIFT OFF CORNS! 0 Apply few drops then lift sores touchy corns off with fingers Doesn't hturt a biti` Drop a littler Freezone on an aching eoxn, instantly that corn stops hurting, #hen you it eight out. Yes,_rnagiei A tiny bottle of Freezone costs bit few Beats at any drug ..toxo, but is st=�- eient to remove every hard corn, soft- corn, oft corn, or earn between the toes, and the calluses, without soreness or irritation.. • Freezone is the sensational diseevery of Viucinnati genius, It is'wonderful. ula 4100 e-_ WHEN YOUR HEALTH FAILS ALL IS LOST ! 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Hinchcliffe of Winghazn Writes as follows "Hacking's Heart and Nerve Remedy has dose wonders for me,I was on thepoint of a Complete Nervous Breakdown; could not sleep nor plan my household duties; for years 1 suffered wth my Heart aud,my Nerves and the doctors could do little for me. I took Hacking's Heart and Nerve Remedy on the recommendation of one of my friends. After taking - the first box I improved so much in health that I took the full treatment of six boxes and am now feeling so much better that I ani able to return to my work with renewed vigor. I am glad that I have at last found a medicine that has done me so much good." ' Hacking's Heart and Nerve Remedy sells for 011ie a box. 6 for 2.50. If your Druggist does not haven he will be glad to get it for you or we will be glad to send it to you by mail post paid. insist on Hacking's: HACKING'S LIMITED, Listowel, Ont. este j ;+1 t + ,Ili,, 1t{ ash;: Three flavours' to suit alt tastes. Be SURE to get IGLEYS 'Sealed Tight llePt Right EPT secret and • special and personal for You is WRIGLEYS in its air - tight. seated package. A goody that is worthy of your lasting regard because -of its lasting quality. a The F(avour Lasts MADE CANADA I;tilllll jNta:1' 1t k1A TIff fF.f-- . 575.arm