The Huron Expositor, 1920-01-30, Page 6sat
6
DR. F. 3. R. FORSTER'
- Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat
Graduate in Medicine, University of
Toronto.
Late Assistant New York Ophthal-
.
met 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 3 p.m.
83 Waterloo Street, South, Stratford.
Phone 267 Stratford.
LEGAL
R. S. HAYS.
Barrister, Solicitor, 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.
PROUD -FOOT, KILLORAN 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, IL J. D. Cooke.
VETERINARY
F. HARBURN, 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 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 ef Ontario Veterin-
ary College. All diseases of domestic
animals treated. Calls promptly at-
tended to and charges moderate. Vet-
erinary Dentistry a specialty. Offic
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, reheumatism, 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-
' ary diseases of men and women.
•A'
DR. J. 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.
Hensall, Ontario.
• Dr. F. J. BURROWS
Office and residence, Goderich street
east of the Methodist church, Seaforth.
Phone 46. Coroner for the County of
Huron.
DRS. SCOTT & MACKAY
J. G. Scott, graduate of Victoria and
College of Physicians and Surgeons
Ann Arbor, and member of the Col-
lege of Physicians and Surgeons, of
Ontario.
C. Mackay honor graduate of Trin-
ity University, and gold medallist of
Trinity Medical College; member of
the College of Physicians and Sur-
geons of Ontario.
ai•eatar DR. H. HUGH ROSS.
Graduate of University of Toronto
Facility of Medicine, member . of Col-
lege of Physicians and Surgeons of
Ontario; pass graduate courses in
Chicago Clinical School- of Chicago;
i
Royal Ophthalmic Hospital Lonch n,
England, University Hospital, Lon on
England. Office—Back of Dominion
Bank, Seaforth. Phone No. 5, Night
Calls answered from residence, Vic-
toria Street, Seaforth.
B. R. HIGGINS
Box 127, Clinton Phone 100
Agent for
The Huron 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
of the county. Charges moderate and
satisfaction guaranteed. Address Sea -
forth, R. R. No. 2, or phone 18 on 236,
Seaforth. 2653-tf
VI.1111•••••••=.
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. $ales attended to in all
parts of the county. Seven years' ex-
perience in Manitoba and Saskatche-
wan. Terms reasonable. Phone No.
175 r11, Exeter, Centralia P. 0. R.
R. No. 1. Orders left at The Huron
1111xpositor &Bee, &Worth, promptly at•
boded.
THE RICHEST WOMEN IN THE
WORLD
• There is a remarkable woman 1.
Japan who has probably more wealt
than any other woman in the 'world
Mrs. Zone Suzuki is the Rockefelle
of Japan with business 'interests a
widely diversified as the American o
king: Something of how she mad
her wealth is told in the Green Boo
as follows:
Mrs. Suzuki is the head of Suzu
and Company, _one of the greates
enterprises, if not the 'greatest, i
Japan,. Suzuki and Company havi
offices in. all . the f- principal ities o
the world, London, New York, Seattle
Madras, Petrograd, Glasgow, Manila
Hongkong, H an k o w, Melbourne
Shanghai and other places. Suzul
and Company oWn, the great sten
mills of Kobe, Japan, as well as othe
steel -mills throughout the country
They are the sole manufacturers o
crude camphor and export it in en
ormous quantities to other countries
They control the sugar -market; the
own an immense amount of real
estate; they have established fish-oi
work, bean -oil refineries and smelters
And all of this great business be
longs t Mrs. Yone Suzuki, has grow
up and i developed under her. gentl
hand. During the War she made
hundred million dollars in goo
American money, and is now th
richest woman in Japan.
But just let me tell you , a littl
about- the status of women in Japa
in order to show you how it was tha
Mrs. Suzuki became the power sh
- is. - In ancient Japan women wer
held , in. very high esteem by every
one. They had a freedom and pres
tige that would be envied by -wome
in America to -day. Women were re
sponsible for some of the famous art
of Japan—flower-ayrangements for ex
ample, And the first Japanese t
write a novel was a woman, on
Murasaki Shibiku, now called th
Fielding of Japan. • Painting and
literature have ever been ferninin
accomplishments.
But with the coming*, of Buddhism
to Japan in 552 women were reduce
to the worst kind of slavery. Fro
the height • of freedom and independ
ence and intellectual development, the
sank under the new religion to a
degraded a state as women have woe
cupied anywhere. . From that time .0
women rarely went out, and whe
they did, it was in the company of
servant. Every girl was brought .0
to know how to please her husband
her marriage was arranged wholly
by her parents and was her inevitabl
fate.
Now, however, the economic up
heaval of the last few years has
caused a change that is. spreading
rapidly. Japan has always been an
agricultural country..Even to -day
ninety per cent. of the popplation is
agricultural. But the hope of the
country lies in becoming industrialized
—a situation that is taking place
with astonishing rapidity. In this
new industrial situation women play
an important part. It is estimated
that seventy-three per .cent. of all
the industrial workers of Japan are
women.
Factory conditions for women are
almost intolerable, but it is to be
hoped that they will improve even as
American factory conditions have im-
proved. At present all girls who
work -in factories are herded together
in dormistories, „where they are vir-
tually pisoners. The factories work
night and day, and the girls. go on in
two shifts. It is a case of working
twelve- or fourteen hours and tumbl-
ing into bed, dead -tired and worn out.
One set of girls crawls into the still
warm blankets vacated by the other
set. There is no day of rest, no. re-
creation, no care taken of these girls.
The result on their health and minds
• and morals is consequently deplor-
able.
' Profiteering is the order of the day
in Japan; great fgrtunes have been
suddenly amassed during theswar; but
in spite of these horrible conditions,
the very fact that these wofnen are
actually there carrying:on the work,
of the world is a sign of advancement.
We had bad conditions in this country
—we still have horrible conditions in
some factories. But we are learning,
and Japan is learning. Only last year
a twelve-hour working -day for women
went into effect. This was a great
victory for the reformists.
It was from this background that
Mrs. Suzuki came forth. Mrs. Suzuki
was an average Japanese g
gentle,, sweet, taught to loo
the ways of her householc
please her husband, above all things.
But it so happened that her husband,
Iwajiro Suzuki, who was the head of -
Suzuki and Company, was in the habit
,f following the age -Old custom of
onfiding his troubles to the wife of
iis boson -it So it was that Mrs.-
Suzuki had always known .a good deal
bout his busineis. enterprises. .
iwajiro Suzuki died, and the. burden
f responsibility fell 'upon his Wife's
houlders. Providing for a family is
sually the' spur that drives a man .
n to work. Somebody had to provide
or the ;Suzuki family, and there was
othing for Mrs, Suzuki to do but be-
oine that somebody.
In charge of the firm at. the time
f Mr.' Suzuki's death was Kaneko
n.
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and to
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ANOTHER VICTIM
OF RHEUMATISM
LL.01.1.1111111•101.1..,
Entirely Wen After Six Weeks'
Treatment With "FRUIT-A-TIVES"
MR. AMEDEE GARCEAU
32 Hickory St., Ottawa, Ont.
"I was for many years a victim of
that terrible disease, Rheu.matisra. In
1913,1 was laid up for four months
with Rheunia.tisfri in the joints of the
knees, hips ancl shoulders and was
prevented from following my work,
that of Electrician.
I tried many remedies and was
under the care of a physician; but
nothing did ane any good. Then 1
began to take "Fruit-a-tives' and in a
week I was easier, and in six weeksl
was so"well I went to work again.
1 look upon this fruit medicine,
'Fruit-a-tiveZ as simply marvellous in. the
cure of Rheumatism., • and strongly
advise everyone suffering with Rheu-
MatiSM to give 'Fruit-i-tives' a trial."
AMEDEE GARCEAU.
50c. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size, 25c.
At all dealers or sent postpaid by
Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa, Ont.-
Naokishi, known'a11 over Japan now-
adays as Mrs. Suzuki's prime min-
ister. Mrs. • Suzuki allowed him free
rein in the handling of the business
and the company's funds, with the
• result that he made some unfortunate
investments And lost not only of the
firm's money but a great deal besides.
• Mrs. Suzuki was a keen judge of
character. She knew that Kaneko
was .a man of great ability and trust-
worthiness, and when he asked for
time in which to retrieve her for-
tunes, she acquiesced quietly. She
Was not afraid. to take a risk, and
she had patience and confidence in
her own judgment. This loss of all
Suzuki's death, however, meant that
whatever great fortune has come to
Mrs. Suzuki since has been of her
own making.
The first great performance of the
Suzuki firm was in exporting jaP-
anese camphor to Europe. In 1900
• the Government of Formosa gave
Mrs. Suzuki the exclusive right to
make crude camphor out of camphor -
oil. Not long afterward tl3e famous
financial' transaction known as the
Formosa Sugar Deal took place, and
• Mrs. Suzuki cleaned up fifty million
dollars. •
The Formosa Sugar Deal alone
ought to have satisfied Mrs. Suzuki.
Fifty million dollars is not to be de-
spised. But like all financial genius-
es, it was the love of the game and
not the money itself that spurred her
on. She established a peppermint fac-
tory in Kobe, a sugar -refinery in
'Moji, and bought the Kobe Steel
Works.
Mrs. Suzuki is sixty-five years old
now. But still she comes down three
days a week to consult with heads of
departments and keep an efficient eye
on her many great enterprises.
•
WHERE WOMAN RULES
• At Zuni, New Mexico, the domestic
posititn of woman is exactly reversed
to that which 'exists - among more
highly civilized people. The woman
• owns the house and at marriage she
takes her husband to her own house-
holdi where he stays so long as he is
welcome. In the , Scientific Monthly,
Elsie Clewes Parsons writes an in-
teresting artilcle on the differentia-
tion of the sexes at Zuni. She says
in pEirt:
Zuni women own their houses and
their gardens or, perhaps. ib is better
to say, gardens and houses; belong to
the family through the women. At
marriage a girl does not leave home;
her husband joins her household. He
stays in it, too, only as long as he is
welcome. If he is lazy, if he fails to
bring in wood, if he fails to contribute
the produce of his fields, or if someone
else for some other reason is preferr-
ed, his wife expects him to leave her
household. He does not wait to be
told twice. "The Zuni separate when-
ever they quarrel or get tired of each
other," a critical Acoma moralist
once said to- me. The monogamy of
Zuni'is, to be sure, rather brittle. In
separation, children staw with mother.
SAY, TRY IT.
YOU VICTIMS OF BRONCHITIS, COUGHS, COLDS, BRONCHIAL
. ASTHMA AND HOARSENESS
Why do you Struggle along beneath your terrible affliction?
When medical science at last off you 'a sure and lasting remedy.
J .4
A real cure that will lift the blig mg shadow from your life fully
and finally, once and for all. 11,1a‘ e you have tried many so-called
Cough Cures and been disappointed in the things that you expect of
them. So perhaps it is only imbue' you should feel discouraged.
But I bring you renewed hope that will surely materialize into price-
less benefit of good health. Friend, get a bottle of -
Buckley's White Bronchitis Mixture
from your dealer to -clay. Use it for five days, and if it doesn't prove
to be the wonder medicine of the world take it back and get your
money. Can one do more than this to prove to you what a -marvellous
remedy it is ? 1 back ply claims, too, by the evidence of the people
I have restored to- health. And I will only be too pleased to furnish
you with hundreds of voluntary testimonials of praise that I receive
each day. 60 cents is the price that stands between you and the
road to health. Take no substitute; fear the man that dares say he
has a remedy just as good. Sold in Seaforth -by •
• E. UMBACH
Manufactured by W. K. Buckley, 97 Dundas St. East, Toronto
awwwwwww.wwww,
THE MRONtXPOSITOR
• Children belong to their mother's
• clan. They he affiliations, however,
as we shall see, with the clan of their
father. If the mother of a Zuni
maiden is a Badger, let us say, and her
father a turkey, the maiden will be a
Badger and "the -child of the Turkey,"
She cannot murk a Turkey clansman
nor, of course, a Badger. Did she
show any partiality for a clansman,
an almost increditable thing, she would
be told she was just like a clog or A
burro.
Wowen make their own dresses, al-
though, formerly, before 'weaving
went out of fashion at Zuni, it is
likely that men were the weavers,
just as they are to -day among the
Hopi, from whom the men of Zuni,
get cloth for their ceremmilal kilts
and blankets and for the dresses of
the yaomen. Even to -day at Zuni men
mak make up their own garments
from store bought goods and it is
not unusual to see a man sitting at
a sewing -machine, •
,
A man may use cloth or thread for
other -than economic reasons. In .case
a girl gilts him he will catch her out
some pight and take a bit from her:
belt to fasten to a tree on a windy
mesa top. As the wind wears away
the thread, thetwoman will sicken and
perhaps in two or three! years die.- A:
woman who is deserted inay take_ soil
from the man's footprints and put it
• where she sleeps. At night he will
think, of her and come back—"even
if the otheriwoman is better looking."
Apprehensive of desertion a woman
may put a lock of hair from the man
iin her house wall or ;the better to
• attach him to her, she may wear it
over her heart.
To the point of view that the differ-
entiation of the sexes at Zuni. pro-
ceeds on the whole from the division
of labor the native custom of allowing
a boyor man to become, as far as
ways of living go, a girl or woman
gives color. Towards adolesence, and
sometimes in later life, it is permis-
sible for a boy culturally to change
sex. He puts on woman's dress,
speaks like a woman and behaves
like a woman. This alteration is due
to the fact that one takes readily to
women's work, one prefers it to men's
work. Of one or another of the
three men -women now at Zuni or of
'the men-weinen. in other pueblos I have
always been told that the person in
question made the change because he
wanted to work like a woman or be-
cause his household was short of wo-
men and needed a -woman worker.
This native theory of the institution
'of the man -women is a curious corn-
mentary, is it not, on. that thorough-
going belief in the intrinsic differ-
ence between the sexes which is so
tightly held to in our own culture.
A TRIBE 'OF WILD. MEN.
• Most of the well -advertised brands
of wild men are fairly familiar to the
show -going American public, ' writee
Frederick Simpich in the National
Geographic Magazine. He goeS on to
say that a variety of "wild man,"
which the world at large has never
heard of, exists within 700 miles of
the thoroughly modern city of Los
Angeles, California. He writes:,
' But right here at home, there dwells
a lost tribe of savages whose very
name is known to but few of us;for
,
this tribe has never been tamed, `up-
llfted," .or even exhibited. Yet it is
older, perhaps, than the Aztecs; it
may even be tie last living fragment
cif the Arne an aborigines.
The Seris, tljese strange people are
called, and thy inhabit a lone4y, evil
rock called Tiburon (Shark) Island,
that lifts its hostile head from the hot,.
empty waters of the Gulf of Cortez.
(Gulf of California its printed on the
,Arnerican. maps). And all down this
coast the name of Tiburon is spoken
with a shrug of the shoulders, for
these Seris are thieves and killers.
It is even whispered that /long ago
they were canibals. However, they
did not try to eat us or -even hint at it
while I was visiting them.
From where we anchored', off the
north. end of the island, it had seemed
quite deserted; but no sooner had we
waded from our whaleboat to the
beach than two Indians appeared,
carrying- a flag of truce. Then came
others, in swarms, venturing timidly
from the mesquite and palo verde
brush. They were tall men, mostly
very slender, with straight black
hair ;their teeth were remarkably
white and sound. Except for a few
bows and arrows, all were unarmed.
(Later I learned that they had hidden
• their few old rifles in a neighboring
arroyo before showing themselves.
One picturelsque old man, clad in
tattered rags, an antediluvian* "Stet-
son," and rope sandals, advanced
and asked in broken Spanish for the
"Chief" of aur party. We shook
hands, and -then, waiving further
formalities, he demanded a drink,
Our failure to produce alcohol had
an immediate and depressing effeEt
on old Juan Tomas, as he called him-
self. It also seemed to upset the rest
of the tribe, who yapped and chattered
excitedly for several minutes.
I was told afterwards that previous
exploring parties hadiinvariably start-
ed negotiations with\ the Seris by of-
fering whiskey or mescal. Luckily- I
had brought some cigars, ,and when the
tumult among the "wets" had sub,
sided I produced these and gave them
to Chief Juan Tomas. He made no
move to pass them around;whereupon
the other bucks again broke into
noisy, jabbering protest. Then crafty
old- Juan lit a panetela, took a few
puffs, and passed it to the Indian
nearest him. He, too, took a puff and
assed the cigar on to the next; it
nally disappeared in the crowd. But
uan held tight to the box. —1 1
After some parley, the Chief agreed 1
o lead us to the Seris village. It lay
own the beach half a mile, toward
he Sonora side. But when we got
hete it was not a pueblo at all, as 1,
ther Indian pueplos usually are.
It was little more than a place in the i
and where the Seris ate and slept—
ust rude, flimsy shelters of mesquite •
nd tules, or palo verde brush piled
n.' circles about holes in the sand.. t
ere and there a few big turtle shells
ere worked in or laid on the brush. t
o typical Indian huts, no tepees— h
ot even the primitive but substantial f
ramadah" of the Pimas; in fact, the e
biding place of the Seris is no more
fa shelter than the pigs and calves 0
f Iowa find on the lee side of straw -
tacks.
I d
1
The Seris women, carrying bundles
n ther heads and chattering excited- h
,.fled up a canyon as we approached
eir village. But after a few min-
tes they began venturing back, tim-
ly, curiously. I
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J
0
a
a
,ly
th
id
issommaa.
^114M.4,
•
HE Demand Will Exceed the
Output Place Your Order
Now!
• The Ford Company advise that,
on account of the shortage of raw
material, they entertain no hope of
supplying theLdemand for Ford
Cars during the corning season.
Our allotment of cars will be
small compared with the demand
that will exist in this territory. in
order to obtain this allotment it
will be necessary to show the Ford
Company the actual orders. •
As Ford Dealers in this district
we are anxious to serve thet com-
munity to the best of our ability.
By placing your order now you will
assure yourself of getting your car
at a later date.
J. F. Daly . Dealer Seaforth
\Cook Bros. . Dealers Hensall
152
David Harum
Continued from Page 7
manner o' things fer supper, an
champagne, an' so on, an' after we
got done, Price says, 'I've got to ask
you to excuse me, Harum,' he says.
`I've •got to go an! dress an' show
up -in the drawin'-room,' he says 'You
smoke your cigar in here, an' when
you want to go to your room jest
ring the bell.'
"All right,' 1 says. 'I'm 'bout
ready to turn in anyway."
's I could, an' thought I'd step out an'
take the air before the feller ,'d come
back to git that tray, an' melsbe rub
my nose in't."
"Oh, Lord!" cried 'John.
"Yes: sir," said David, unheeding,
"I allowed 't I'd walk 'round with
my mouth open a spell an' git a little
air on my stomach to last me till
that second breakfust; an' as I was
pokirt"round the grounds I come to
a sort of arbor, an' there was Price
-azpokin' a cigar.
" `Mornin', Harum; how 'you feel-
- inc.?' he says, gettin' up shaldn'
The narrator paused for a moment_ hand's; an' as we passed the time o'
John was rather wondering what it day, I noticed him noticin' my coat.
• all had to do with the Erie Canal, You see as they dried out, the egg
but he said nothing. spots got to showin' agin.
"'Got somethin' on your coat there,'
he says.
"Yes,' I saysa tryin' to scratch it
out withiny finger nail.
"Have a cigar?' he says, handin'
one out.
"Wa'al, next mornin',," David re-
sumed, "I got up an' shaved an' dress-
ed, an' set 'round waitin' fer break -
fust bell to ring -till nigh on half -
past nine o'clock. Bom-by the' • came
a knock at the door, an' I says, `Come
in,' an' in come one o' them fellers. "'Never smoke on an empty stom-
'Beg pah'din, sir,' he says. 'Did, you ach,' I says.
ring, sir ?' " 'What?' he says.
" `No,' I says, ' didn't -ring. I was "'Bad fer the ap'tite,' I says, 'an'
waitin' to hear the bell.' • I'm savin' mine fer that second break -
"'Thank you sir," he says. 'An' fust o' your'n.'
will you have
sir?'• your breakfast now, " 'What!' he says, 'haven't you had
anythin' to eat?' 'An' then. I told him
" 'Where ?' 1 says. what I- ben tellin' you. Wa'al, sir,
" `Oh,' he says, kind o' grinnin', 'I'll fust -he looked kind o' mad an' dis-
bring it up here, sir, d'reely ' he says dusted, an' then he laughed till I
an' went off. Putty soon come an- thought he'd bust, an' when he quits
other knock, - an' in come the feller he says, 'Excuse me, Harum, its too
with a silver tray covered with a big damned bad; but I couldn't help
napkin, an' on it was a couple of rolls laughin' to save my soul. An' it's
wrapped up in a napkin, a b'led egg all my fault, too,' he says. 'I intend=
done up in another napkin, a cup an' ed to have you take your breakfast
saucer, a little pancake', of butter, a 1,with me, but, somethin' happened last
silver knife, two little spoons like t night to upset me, an' I woke with it
what the children' play with, a sliver on my mind, an' I forgot. • Now you
pepper duster an' •salt dish, an' an ; jest come right into the house an'
orange. Oh, yes, the' was another I'll have somethin' got fer you that'll
contraption—a sort of a chiney wine- I stay your stomach better 'n air,' he
gless. The feller set down the tray , says.
an' says, 'Anythin' -else you'd like to " 'No, I says, 'I've made trouble
have, sir?' • enough fer one day, I guess,' an' I
No, I says lookin• ' it over, 'I guess I wouldn't go, though he urged me agin
there's _enough to last me a day or I an' agin. 'You don't fall in with the
two,' an' with that he kind- o' turned customs of this religion?' I says -to
his face away fer a second or two.- him.
‘Theank you, sir,' he says. 'The sec- ; " 'Not in that pertic'ler, at anbs
ond breakfast is at half -past twelve, rate,' I says. 'It's one o' the fo41
sir,' and' out he put. Wa'al," David notions that my wife- an' the girls
continued, "the bread an' butter was brought home f'm Eurup. I have a
all right enough, exceptin' they fer- good solid meal in the mornin' same
got the salt in the butter, an' the ! as I alwus did,' he says."
coffee was all right; but when it come Mr. Harum stopped talking to re -
to the egg, dumkt if I wa'n't .putty light his cigar, and after a puff or
nigh out of the yace; but I -made up two, "When I Started out," he said,
my
tmaycklmedindit iotnntillhastt highways an' byways, but when I git
bideeeh.arsde-be'nillesdi, an'a-"I hadn't no notion. of goin' into all the
begun one thing's apt,to lead to an-
other, an' you never e n tell jest where
I 'will fetch up. Now I started off to
tell somethin' in about two yvords,
an' I'm putty near as fur off as when
I begun."
"Well," said John, "it's Saturday
night, and the longer your story is
the better I shall like it. 1 hope the
second breakfast was more of a suc-
cess than the first one," he added with
a laugh."
"I managed to average up on the
two meals,I guess," David remarked.
"Wa'al," hresumed, "Price an' I set
'round taikin' bus'nes an' things - till
abottt twelve or a little after, mebbe,
an' then he turned to me an' kind o'
looked me over, an' says, 'You an' me
is about, of a build, an' if you say so
I'll send one o' my coats an' vests
up to your room an' have the man take
yours an' clean 'em.' -." guess- the' is ruther more egg
showin' than the law allows,' I says,
tan' mebbe that 'd be a good idee- but
muse ye," he said with a grin, getting
up and helping himself. Attar swal-
owing the refreshment, and the pal-
iating mouthfull of water, he resum-
ed his seat and his narrative. '
"Wa'al, sir," he said, "that dum'd
egg was about 's near raw as it was
vhen i' was laid, an' the'iwas a crack
n the shell, an' fust thing I knowed
t kind o' c'lapsed, an' I give it a
grab, an' it squirtid all over my pants,
an' the floor, an' on my coat an' vest,
an' up my sleeve, an' over the
ray. Scat my--! I looked gen'.
ally like an ab'lition orator before
he war. You never she such a mess,"
e added, with an expression of rue-
ul recollection. "I believe that dum'd
gg held more 'n a pint."
John fairly succumbed to a par-
xysni of laughter.
"Funny, wa'n't it?" said David
ryly.
"Forgive me," pleaded John, when
e got his breath.
"Qh, that's all right," saiiIDavid,
ldbeuktedit uwpa inn't mthlre breascit o fatetimMollmi ra le!
1-t-h.v4iwine'll fit ye,' he says.
pants caught it the wust,' I says.
cleaned myseli up with a **el well (Continued next' week)
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Signets:sat
-1 '
• a saaa-a-asaaawa '
4
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hung
never
perfo
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toget
Her
Aunt
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did,"
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