HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1920-03-05, Page 7•
•
5, 1920.
Adnan -
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a
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ult isM▪ OW
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de wa.
Lhe whole
st mon
-
in all de -
and Eo-
Saturday
r -
lues ii
48c
m in.
lsome
el col-. e 5
$€i.00_ s
mostly
in link
true in
collar,
.h and
is and
straw -
Nile,
lei and
Values a
95
•
Black,
95
1
e, full
Men's
'rice.. a
a fen
r and
c65°. 42
4248
.. ..
al priced
Coats is the
lnd when this
end other pile
Velours, also
styles which
big demand
effects. Sizes
$35.00 up to
down to
he biggest Stocks of
his district to choose
yle at every price;
7' reduced. Regular
i -W` $14.85. Regular
IW :11.98.. Regular
;OW $7.99. BOYS'
NTS, Reg. $3.50,
1(1rk S' CORDUROY
r $5.50, NOW $2.95.
hRCO ATS A N D
Lr .'.12.tei el les,
e
MARCH 5, 1920.
DR. F. .1. R. F'ORSTER
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat
Graduate in Medicine, University o '
Toronto. •
Late Assistant New York Ophthal
enei and Aural InstituteMoorefield's
Eye and Golden Square 'Throat' Hos
pitals, London Eng. At the Queen"
Hotel, Seaforth, thd Wednesday hi
each month from 11a.m. to 3 p.m.
18 Waterloo Street South. Stratford
Phone 267 Stratford.
LEGAL/
R. S. HAYS.
Barrister Solicitor, Conveyancer ane
Notary Public. Solicitor for the Do
Wilton Bank. Office in rear of the Do-
minion Bank, Seaforth. Money to
lean.
J. M. BEST
Barrister, Solicitor, Conveyer
and Notary Public. Office upstairs
over Walker's Furniture Store; Main
Street, Seaforth.
PROUDFOOT, KILLORAN AND
COO:TE
Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries Pub
lie, etc. Money to lend. In Seaforth
on Monday of each week. Office its
Kidd Block. W. Proudfoot,
L. Killoran, H. J. 11 Cooke.
VETERINARY
P. HARBURN, V. S.
Honor graduate of ;Ontario V eterin-
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 of Ontario Veterin-
ary College. Alldiseases 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, reheumatisnn, acute, chronic
and nervous disorders; eye, ear, nose
and throat Consulation free. Office
above tlmback's Drug store, Seaforth,
Tuesdays and Fridayai, 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.
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
r
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. -
i1111111011111N111 IIIIIi1111111111IH1UUIIII1,
David
Harum
EDWA
,
NOES WESTCOTT
\,, TORONTO
WILLIAM BRIGGS -1899
at11111UWf!lltlflillifiWWIH11111111ll11111t1II1P'
(Continued from last week,)
"Very pretty, sir, very pretty," she
said, looking very graciously at him,
"Will you sing Annie. Laurie for
me?"
"With all my heart," he said,
big. He Iooked at Herr Schlitz,
shook his head.
"Let me play it for you," said Mrs.
Benson, coming over to the piano.
"Where do you want it?" she ask-
ed,.modulating softly from one key to
another.
"I think D flat will be about right,"
he replied. "Kindly play a little bit
of it."
The tounrr of the symphony brought
most of even the young people into
the drawing room. At the end of the
first verse there was a subdued rustle
of applau.e, a little more after the
second, and at the end of the song so
much of a burst of approval as could
be produced by the audience. Mrs.
Benson looked up into John's face
and smiled.
"We appear to have scored the
success of the evening," she said
with a touch of . sarcasm. Miss Clara
joined them.
"What a dear old song that is!"
she said. "Did you see Aunt Charlie
(Mrs. Tenaker) wiping her eyes?—
and that lovely thing of Tosti's I We
are ever so much obliged to you, Mr.
.,Lenox."
John bowed his acknowledgments.
"Will you take Mrs. Benson out
to supper? There is a special table
for you musical people at the east
end of the veranda."
"Is this merely a segregation or a.
distinction?" said. John as they sat mg i e to is is Her,
down. made.
"We shall have to wait develop- "I hain't never cared to say muc
ments to decide that point, I should about it to Polly," he remark
say," replied Mrs. Benson. "I SUP "though fer that matter Jim Bixb
pose. that •fifth place was put on the
off chance that Mr. Benson might be
of our party, but," she said, with} a'
short laugh, "he is probably nine
fathoms deep in flirtation with Sue
Tenaker.. He shares Artemas Ward's
tastes, who said, you may remember,
that he liked little girls—big ones
'too."
A maid appeared with a tray of
eatables, and presently another with
a tray on which were glasses and a
bottle of Pommery sec. "Miss Clara's
compliments," she said.
"What do you think now?" asked
Mrs. Benton, laughing.
"Distinctly a distinction, I should
say," he replied.
"Das ist nicht so schleoht," grunted
Herr Schlitz as he put half a pate
into his mouth, - "bot I vould brefer
beer."
"The music has been a great treat
to me," remarked John. "I have
heard nothing of the sort for two
years."
"You have quite contributed your
k share of the entertainment," said
Mrs. Benson.
"You and I together," he respond-
ed, smiling. .
"You have got a be-oodifool woice,"
said Herr Schlitz, speaking with a
mouthful of salad, "und you zing Iigh
. a 'moosician, and you bronounce your
vorts verr goot."
"Thank' you," said John.
After supper there was more sing-
ing in the drawing roof», but it was.
not of a very classical order. Some-
thing short and taking for violin and
piano was followed by an announce-
ment from Herr Schlitz. j
"I zing you a Zong," he said. The
worthy man "breferred beer," but had,
perhaps, found the wine quicker in
effect, and in a tremendous bass voice
he roared out, Irn tiefen Keller sitz'
ich hien, auf einem Fess voll Reben,
which, if not wholly understood by
the audience, had some of its purport
conveyed by the threefold repetition
of "trinke" at the end of each verse.
Then a deputation waited upon John,
to ask in behalf of the" girls and boys
if he knew and could sing Solomon
Levi.
"Yes," he said, sitting down at the
piano, "if you'll all sing with ,me,"-
and it came to pass that that classic,
` followed by�YBring Back my Bonnie to
Me, Paddy Duffy's Cart, There's
Music in the Air, and sundry other
ditties dear to all hearts, was given
by "the full strength of the company"
with such enthusiasm that . even Mr.
Fairman was moved to join in with
his violin; and when the Soldier's
Farewell was given, Herr Schlitz
would have sung the windows out of
their frames had they not been open.
Altogether, the evening's programme
was "brought to an end with a grand
climax.
"Thank you very much," said John
as he said good night to Mrs. Ver-
joos. "I don't know when I have
enjoyed an evening so much."
"-Thank you very much," she re -
I turned graciously. "You have' given
us all a great deal of pleasure,"
The Huron and Erie Mortgage Corpor- "Yes," said Miss Verjoos, giving
anon and the Canada Trust Company. + her hand with a mischievous gleam
Commissioner H. C. J. Conveyancer, . in • her half -shut eyes, "I was en -
Fire and Tornado insurance, Notary chanted with Solomon Levi."
Public, Government and Municipal
Bonds bought and sold. Several good
fauns for sale. Wednesday of each ;
THE HURON EXPOSITOR,
1ER CASE -SEEN 0
get to thinkin' more oft her all'' the that dum'd dogl" exclaimed
time, an' she ane, seemin'ly. We took David with fervor, looking back to
a few days oft' tag"ehgr two three where the object of his execrations
times that summer, to Niag'ry, are was still discharging convulsive yelps
Saratogy, all' 'round, an' had real at the retreating vehicle, "I'd give a
good times. I got to ' thinkin' that; five -dollar note to git one good lick
- HOPELESS' the state of matrimony. was a putty at him.. I'd make him holler `pen. an'-
ink' once! Why anbody's willin' to
have such a dum'd, wuthless, pestifer-
ous varmint as that 'round 's more
'n I c'n understand. - I'll bet that the
days they churn, that critter, unless
But "Folk -fives" brought
Near and Strength
29, Sr. Roan Sr., Murirr r..
"I am writing you to tell you that
femme; life to."Fruit."-fives". This
medicine relieeed me when I had
given up hope of eeer`being well.
I was a terrible sufferer from
Dysf�siu—had suffered for years;
and nothing I took did me any good.
' I read about "Fruit -a -tines" and
tried them. After taking a few boxes,
ofthis wonderful medicine made from
fruit juices, I am now entirely well"
Madame ROSINA. FOISIZ.
50c. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size 25c.
At all dealers or send postpaid' by
Fruit -a -tires Limited, Ottawa.
•
"Never- heard • me sing before, did
ye?" he said, looking with a grin
at his companion, who laughed and
said that he had, never had the plea-
sure. "Wa'al, that's all 't I remember
on't," said David, "an' I dunno 's I've
thought about it in thirty year. The'
was a number o' verges which carried
dem 'through the rest o' the week, an'
ended up in a case of 'sault an' bat-
tery, I' reelect, but I don't remember
jest how. Somethin' we ben sayin'
put the thing into my head, I guess."
"I should, like to hear the rest of
it," said John, smiling.
David made no reply to - this, and
seemed to be turning, something over
in his mind. • At last he said:
"Mebbe }telly's told ye that I'm a :spells fer a fortni't together when
w John admitted that Mrs. Bixbee : I couldn't any time of day git a word.
had said as much as that. out of -her hardly, unless it was to,
"Yes, sir,"said David, "I'm a wid- go fer me 'bout somethin` that mebbe
wer of lonstandin'." ; I'd done an' mebbe I hadn't—it didri t
No appropriate comment suggest- ; make no diff rence. An when them
• 'ts if ' h' 1' to nn�+ was spells was on, what she didn't take
out o' me the did' out o' the house—
h diggin' an' s eriibbin', takin' up carp-
ed, : its, Wind d
iown carpits, shiftin' the
ee, furniture, rain' one day in the kitchin
t
good institution. When it come along
fall, I was dour.' well enough so 't
she '-could give up bus'nis, an' I hired
a house an' we set up housekeepin'.
It was really " More on my account
than her'n, fer I got to kind o'` feel- i they ketch him an' tie him up the
night- before, 'll be under the barn all
day, -an' he's jest Mowed off steam.
enough- to run a dog churn a hull
forenoon."
Whether or not the episode of the
dog had diverted Mr. Harum's mind .
from his previous topic, he did not
resume it until John ventured to re-
mind him of it, with "You were say-
ing something about the surprise for
your wife." J
"That's so," said David. • "Yes,
wa'aI, when I went home that night
I stopped into a mil'nery store, an'
after I'd stood 'round- a minute, a
girl ,come up an' ast me if she c'd
show me anythin'.
" `I want to'buy a bunnit,' I says,
an' she kind o' -laughed, `No,' I says,
'it ain't fer me, it's fer a lady,' I
in' that when the meat was tough
or the pie wa'n't done on the bottom
that I was- 'sociated with it, an' gen.'-
ally I wanted a place- of my own.
lint," he added, "I guess it was a
mistake, fur 's she was concerned." ,
"Why?" said John, feeling that
so e show of Interest was incumbent.
" a reckon," said David, "'t she kind
ad missed the comp'ny an' the talk
at table, an' the goin.'s on genially,
an' mebbe .the work of runnin' the
place --she was a great worker ---an'
it 'got to be some dift'rent, I s'pose,'
after a spell, settin' down -to three
meals a, day with jest only me 'still
of-' a tableful, to say nothin' of the
evenin's. I was glad enough to have
a place of my own, but at the same
time I hadn't ben used, to settin'
'round with • nothin' pertc'ler to do says; an' then we both laughed.
or say, with somebody else that hadn't i • «'What sort of • a bunnit do you
neither, 5 an' I wa'n't then nor ain't want?' she says.
now, fer that matter, any: great hand "Wa'al, I dunno,' I says, 'this is
fer readin'. Then, too, we'd moved the fust time I ever done anythin' in
into a diff'rent part: o' the town where the bunniit line.' So she went over
my wife wa'n't acquainted,. Wa'al, to a glass case an' took one out an'-
anyway, fust things begun to drag held it up, turnin' it 'round on her
some—she begun to .have spells of hand.
not speakin', an' then she begin to "'Wa'al,' I says, `I 'guess it's putty
git notions about me. Once in a enough fur 'a it goes, but the' don't
while I'd have to 'go down town on seem to be much of anythin' to 'it.
some bus'nis in the even'. She didn't Hain't you got somethin' a little bit
seem to mind it- at fust, but born -by bigger ani—i
she got it into her head that the' " `Showier?' she says. 'How is
wa'n't so much bus'nis goin' .on as I this ?' she says, doin' the same, trick
made' out, an' though along that time with another.
she'd 'set sometimes mebbe the hull ft'Wa'al,' I says, 'that looks more
evenin'' without sayin' anythin' more like it, but I had an idee that the
'n yes or no, an' putty often not that,' Al trible-extry fine article had more
yet. if I went out there'd be a flare- traps on't, ai' most any one might
ups an' as things went on the'd be have on either one o' them' you've
showed me an' not attrac' no attention
at all. You needn't mind expense,'
I says,
" `Oh, very well,' she says, 'I guess
I know what you want,' an' goes over
to another casean.' fetches out an-
other bunnit twice .as bigas either
the others, an' with more notions ,on't
d
than you c'shake a stick at—glowers
an' 'gard'n stuff; an' fruit, an' glass
beads, an' feathers, an' all that, till
you couldn't see what they was fixed
on to. She took holt on't with. both
hands, the girl did, an' put it fuell-
ed
her healed, an' kind o' smiled an' turn-
ed 'round slow so 't I c'd git a gen'-
ral view on't. ,
"Style all right?' I says.
`The very best of its kind,' she
says.
"How 'bout the kind ?' I says.
" `The very best of its style, she
says."
John laughed outright. • David look-
ed at him for a moment with a
doubtful grin.
"She was a slick one, want she?"
he said. "What a hoss trader she
would 'a' made. I didn't ketch on at
the time, but I reelected afterward.
Wa'al," he resumed,. after this brief
digression, " `how much is it?' I
says.
`Fifteen dollars,' she says.
" `What?' I says. 'Scat ley I
I ed. buy head rigging enough to
last me ten years fer that.'
" `We couldn't sell it for less,' she
says.
" `S'posin' the lady 't I'ni buyin' it
aces an' the best o' things, an' git - fer don't jest like it,' I says, 'can you
along is well 's I could; but things alter it or swap somethin' else for
kind o' got wuss an' wuss. I toldit ?,
ye, that she begun to have notions a `Cert'nly, within a reasonable
about me, an' 't ain't hardly nec'sary time,: she says.
to say what shape they took, an'af- " `W,a'al, all right,' I says, . `do her
up.' An' so she wrapped the thing
'round with soft, paper an' put it in
a box, an' I paid for't an' moseyed
along up home, feelin' that ev'ry man,
woman an' child had their eyes on
my parcel, but thinkin' how tickled
my wife would be."
(Continue& next week).
DR. H. HUGH ROSS.
Graduate of University of Toronto
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
Calls answered from- residence, • Vic-
toria Street, Seaforth,
B. R. HIGGINS
Box 127, Clinton — Phone 100
Agent for
CHAPTER- YXBVIII
hex
in the actor' room an'
fin all 'accounts, was about as poor - an ano She -wa'n't
a shack as ever was turned out, I ! sleepin most r anywhere.
gss "+ real well after a. while, an.' the wuss
John took advantage of the slight - she :moiled to feel, the fiercer she'
hesitation to interpose against what was fer scrubbin', an' diggin'an' up -
he apprehended might be a lengthy aetti things in gen'ral, - an born -by
digression on the subject of the de- , she got so she couldn't keep a hired
ceased Bixbee by saying: ; girl in the house more in a day or
"You were quite' a young fellow ' two at a time. She either wouldn't
when you were married, I infer." j have 'em, or they wouldn't stay, an'
"Two or three years younger 'n you more in. half the time we- was with -
be, I guess," said David, looking at out one. This can't int'rist you
him, "an' .a putty green colt too in much, can it?" said Mr. Harum, turn -
some ways," he added, handing over ding to his companion.
the reins. and whip while he got out' « "On the contrary,"replied John,
i
his silver tobacco box and helped him- t interests me very imuch. I was
self to a liberal portion of its con- thinking,"he added, ,that probably
tents. It was plain that he was in the state of your wife's health had
the mood for personal reminiscences. a 'good deal to do -with her actions
"As I look back on't now," he be.. and views of things, but it must have
gan, "it kind o' seems as if it must been pretty hard on, you all the
'a' ben some other feller, an' yet I same."
remember it all putty dum'd well too `•`Wa'al, yes," said David, "I guess
—all but one thing, ari' that the big- that's - so. Her •health ""wa'n't jest
ist part oh't an' that is how I ever right, ant she showed it in her looks.
come togit married at all. She was I noticed that she'd pined an' pindled
a widdo'at the time an.' kep' the some, but I thought the' was some
boardin' house where I was livin'. It natural criss-crossedniss mixed up in -
was up to, Syrchester. I was better to it too. But I tried to make allow'-
lookin' them days 'n I be now had
more hair at any rate—though," he
remarked with a grin, "I was alwus a
better goer than I was a looker. I
was doin' fairly well," he continued,
"but mebbe not so well as was thought
by some.
"Wa'al, she was a good-lookin' wo-
man, -some older 'n I was. She seem-
ed to take some shine to me. I'd
roughed it putty much alwus, an' she
was putty clever to me. She was a
good talker, liked a joke an' a laugh
an' had some education, an' it come
about. that I got to beauin' her 'round
quite a consid'able, and used to go
an' set in her room - 'or the parlor
with her sometimes evenin's - an' all
that, an' I wouldn't deny that I liked
it putty- well." -
It was some minutes before Mr.
Harum resumed his narrative. The
reins were sagging over the dashboard
held loosely between the first two
fingers and thumb of his left hand,
while with his right he had- been
•retaking abstracted cuts at the thistles
and other eligible marks along the
roadside.
"Wa'al," he said at last, "we was
married; an' our wheels tracked putty
well fer quite a 'consid'able spell. I
week at Brucefield. i David and John had been driving
for some time in silence.' The elder
man was avparently musing ,upon
THOMAS BROWN man was apparently musing upon
to his mind. The horses slackened
Licensed auctioneer for the counties their gait to a walk as.they began
of Huron and Perth. Correspondence the ascent of a long hill. Presently
arrangements. for stale dates can be the silence was broken by a sound I
made by calling up phone 97, Seaforth which caused John to turn his head
MOTHERS
TO BE
Should Read Mrs
I "Singular," said John thoughtfully.
"Yes, sir," said David. - "Wa'al, it
Letter Published by
Her Permission. come along to the second spring, 'bout
Mitchell, Ind.—" Lydia E. Pinkham's the first of May. She'd ben more like
Vegetable Compound helped me so much folks fer about a week mebbe n she
g p phad fey a long spell, an'I begun to
during the time I chirk up some. I don't -remember
was look ming ward jest how I got the ides, but f'm some -
Heartburn,
Indigestion, Sour Acid Stomach,
l
to the coming of my thin' she let drop I gathered that she Heartburn, Gas On Stomach, Etc.
recommending
one that I am was thinkin' of havin'. a new bunnit.
recommending it to will thisf her," remarked `
ter a while, mebbe a year 'n a half,
she got so 't she wa'n't satisfied to
know -where I was nights—she wanted
to know where I was daytimes. Kind
o' makes me laugh now," he ,observed,
"it seems so redic'lous; but it wa'n't
no laughin' matter then. If I looked
out o' winter she'd hint it up to me
that I was watehin' some woman.
She grudged me even to look at a
picture paper; an' one day when we
happened to be welkin' together she
showed feelin' about one o' them
wooden Injure women outside a cigar
- store." -
"Oh, come now, Mr. Harum," said
John, laughing.
"Wa'al," said David with a short
laugh, "mebbe I did stretch that a
little; but 's I told ye, she wanted to
know where I was daytimes well 's
nights, an' ev'ry once 'n a while she'd
turn up at my bus'nis place, an' if
I wa'n't there she'd set an' wait fer
me, an' I'd either have to go home
with her or have it, out in . the office.
I don't mean to say that all the sort
of thing I'm tellin' ye kep' up all the
-time. It kind o' run in streaks; but
the streaks" kep' comin' oftener an'
oftener, an' you couldn't never tell
when the' was goin' to appear. Mat-
ters 'd go along putty well fer a
while, an' then, all of a sudden, an'
fer nothin' 't I could see, the'. 'd come
on a thunder shower 'fore you c'd
.Monyhan'a git in out o' the .wet."
—A railway accident in which
several Goderich men figured took
place last Monday on the Buffalo and
Goderich line at Ridgeway. The pas-
senger train leaving Goderich in the
which
morning ran into a coal train
wad standing on the track, and the
engine, the baggage car and the mail
coach were badly wrecked. John,. D.
Stewart, of Goderich, brakeman, had
his leg crushed and foot sprained.
Engineer Dolan, of Stratford, was un-
hurt, 'but the fireman, Adam Steven-
son, of Stratford, was - badly scalded
and died next day. T: T. Leckie and
J. A. Dalton were in the mail car.
Mr. Dalton got off with 'a shaking up,
but Mr. Leckie was not so fortunate,
receiving injuries on both sides of
the head which required stitches. He
has not yet been able to resume his
work. Conductor Callaghan was not
injured. Baggageman Cox and Ex-
pressman Cavilman also escaped any
serious injury.
Tells Dyspeptics
What to Eat
other expectant I say or all
mothers Before David, "that she w h trouble, say medical Autho
as an economical
Indigestion and practica forms of
eS
taking it, some days woman, an' never spent no money ,1, saretomdueach nine tes out of ten to an xuc i
I suffered with nem, jest fer the sake o spendin it, Wa'al, ' of bydrochlorlc acid in the stomach. Chronic
ralgia so badly that we'd got along eo nice fer a while ' add= i " iseoi i olre teroua a e
I - thought I could that I felt more Ix usual like ieleasm' `
not live but after her, an' I allowed to myself that if ! di. agreeab a footh: that disoften
agree
taking three bottles she wanted a new bunnit, money ; with them, that irritate the stomach and lead
of Lydia E. P ink- shouldn't stand in the way, an' I set ; stress acid secretion or they can tat as
ham's Vegetable out to give her a supprise. o they please in reason and make it a
practice
Compound I was en- to counteract the- effect of the harmful acid
Pp They had reached the level at the And prevent the formation of gas, sourness
tirely r e 1 i ev e d of top of the long hill and the horses or premature fermentation by the use of a
neuralgia, I had had broken into a trot, when Mr . , little Beisurated Ikiagnmta at their meals.
gained in strength , Therds probably nese better, safer or snore
and was able to go Harumis narrative was interrupted :village stomach antiacid than Bisurated
and his equanimity upset by the on- lkiagnesia and it is widely used for ibis par•
slaught of an, excessively shrill, ac- pose. It has nQ direct action on the stomach
-five, and conscientious dog of
or The Expositor Office. Charges mod- with a look of surprised amusement l '' I " around and do all
crate and satisfaction guaranteed. —Mr. Harum was singing. The tune, my' housework. My •baby when seven
if it could be so called, was scaleless; ' months old weighed 19 pounds and I feel
,,; and these were the words: better than I have for a long time. I
R T LUKER never had any_ mdicine do me so
"Monday Mornin' I married me a wife much good."—Mrs. PEARL MON,
Licensed Auctioneer for the County Thinkin' to lead a more contented life./. Mitchell, Ind, •
of Huron. Sales attended to . in all Fiddlin' an' dancin' the' was played, ! Good health during maternity is a
parts of the county. Seven Years' ex- ', To see how unhappy poor I was made. ' most important factor to both mother
perienee in Manitoba and Saskatehe- • and child, and many lettere have been
wan. Terms reasonable. ' Phone No. "Tuesday mornin', 'bout break o' day, received by the Lydia E. Pinkham
175 r 11, Exeter, Centralia P. 0. R.. While my head on the puller did lay, Medicine Co., Lynn, Masa., telling of
R. No. 1. Orders left at The Huron She tuned up her clack, an' scolded health � Lydia E. i'is tryingr period
app 'Beat#oath' promp$ly at- 4 more tabtleh eCuonn f"till.
beaded. , Than I ever heard before."legs-
the and is not ,a digestant. But teaspoonful
of the powder or a couple of five grain tablets
"yellow" variety,, which barked and taken in a little water with' the food will
sprang about in front` of the mares neutralize the excess acidity which may with such frantic asiduity as at last present and prevent rte farther formation.
This remover the whole cause " of the trouble
to communicate enough of its excite- and . the meal digests naturally and health -
and
to them to cause them to bolt fully need of l in pills or arta-
forward on a run,. passing the yellow [set fr ounce of ll "rated Micanests
nuisance, which, with the facility of from any reliable druggist. Ask for either
long practice, dodged the cut which powder or tablets. It never eo les
David made at it ie. passing. It was fiquiia„ milk or cute and in .e- 14:11.2.4
with some little trouble that the i°m` nota laxative, Tryisthulaa and
eat what YOU want at your neat mast and
horses were brought back to a sober see if this isn't the best advice You ever
pace, bad onr"whatYto eat"•
Keep our eye
: .
.rte
on this Brand
The one Tea that never disappoints the
most critical tastes•
on a Sealed Packet is Your fel:Th
t,
A
�b
rwa▪ rr
.-
moi.'__ ..
a-
Whv are
•
•
•
flavors like the
pyramids of E't
Because they are
tong -lasting.
And WRIGLEY'S is s.beneiicdaf
as well as long-lasting treat.
It helps appetite and digestion,
keeps teeth clean and breath
sweet. allays thirst.
CHEW IT AFTEREVERY M
Sealed Tight
Ket
Right
tia
Two -Party Line
Telephone Service
- --
Necessary curtailment of new con-
struction during the war, followed by
the -unprecedented development since
the armistice, have resulted in a -uni-
versal shortage of telephone ma-
terial.
In order to utilize our supply of
equipment to the best advantage, to
reduce delay in installations to a min-
imum, a
in-
1ninja d to avoid refusing service
to anyone, we ask those intending to
order telephones to consider the ad-
vantages of two-party line service.
The cost to the user is substantially
lower than for individual line, and
the service of a high - standard.
The rate for two-party line is,"for
Business telephones $19.80 and for
Residence $19.80 per annum.
We will be glad to furnish full ins
formation - to anyone interested.
I
`Every Beg Telephone is a Long
Mance mon.. _
GRIFFIN, IN, - er.
The. Bell Teleone co
of
411.