HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1920-04-23, Page 61
THE ION EXPOSITOR
END STOMACH TROUBLES
GASES OR DYSPEPSIA°
"€ape's Diapepsin" makes sick; sour,
gassy stomachs surely feel fine
in five minutes.
If what you just ate is souring on
your stomach or lies like a lump of
lead, or you belch gas and eructate
sour, undigested food, or have a feeling
of dizziness, heartburn, fullness, nausea,
bad taste in mouth and stomach -head-
ache, you can get relief in five minutes
by neutralizing acidity. Put an end to
sneh stolons} distress now by
ettin�_
a
large$ .fifty -cent case fPa Pape'saDla e stZ
fromg any drug atom. You realize in
flue minutes how needless it is to suffer
from indigestion, dy pepsta or any atom-
ach disorder deed byfood fermentation
y'
due to exceeeive acid in stomach.
The Rider �f the
King Log
Continued from Page 7
"But surely you must have had a
true inclination, one way'or the other,"
!protested Miss Clare, her Celtic sense
of fidelity shoving signs of having
been rather severely shocked.
"Oh, one must ].not be too exacting
tit regard. to personality -these days
when qualifications`. are equal. Bob's
father is in steel and Kenneth's father
is in timber both solid . foundations.
1 really think that Kenneth did ---Well
'at least dreamt ,' He was such a love-
lypartner! pa f But O#, course, ere*1
understand why he has been .holding
b k!' It's that widow! I think wid-
` ows ought to be licensed or muzzled,
haven't heard about the widow?"
t
v
.,_ � ha a not." "
I "You're such a queer girl! 1 have
With scarce and higa-priced coal the cost of heating and
cooking : is very high.
"Toronto'
ASaw will save your coal by sawing up the wood
that would otherwise rot away.
The "Toronto" Saw is of all -steel construction—will give
many years of saving .service with little cost for power and
reasonable first cost.
Write us to -day for booklet
ONTARIO WIND ENGINE & PUMP Co., Limited
Atlantic ,Ave., Toronto
Montreal Winnipeg Regina Calgary
JAMES � MARTIN
Seafortb, Ont.
Extra Years of
easy Riding
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For example, C. C. M. case-hardened
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108
noticed you a lot, though I haven't'
said much to you! • It seems too bad
that we're getting to be such good
Mende, all of a sudden, and are just
going to part. Fust think! Didn't
pay enough attention to - Stephen Mar-
thon's sons to remember him! Well
never mind,- some Orls are that
way. I wish that widow had never
noticed him! She's front • the West
somewhere,"
"Is she a very old lady?" - asked
Clare, to whom the -word "widow" pr-
dicated mere or Tess venerable age.
"Old! Yeo dear child! Now I hon-
estly
onestly shouln't tell yoiu -this! But
you're such a sympathetic lis[tneri
Miss Harriet gave Bei quick glance
about them and then seized Claire's
arm and ahispered.
I'veseen
her
l
You' must never lisp that I have seen
her.. For it niust not 'be known that
1 ever was in places where she and
Kenneth would`naturally be together."
shee
And
Perceivinghad shocked d d
P sung that
Mystified ' the quiet recluse of Verona
Manor, Miss Tell appeared: distinctly
gratified.. For a few momenta she en-
joyecl the impression she had produced
and then added: "Of course Bob and
were properly chaperoned and so it
Was perfectly alright for us to be there,
provided nobody found us out. It was
the Hermitage!" Miss Tell whisper-
ed the name putting deep. import on
it. • Butt she failed that time to get
reaction. "Never beard of The Herm-
itage?"
erm-i, ge?"
"Never said Clare" wholly Intim-
pressed.-
"Well,
ntim-pressed-
"We 1, - you're a strange -But we
won't mind! And I won't try to ex-
plain. It -it would take too long,"
stated Harriet, surveying this paragon
of propriety with wondering gaze, and
adding he her owns thoughts, "Perhaps
it's just as well if nobody tries to
make you understand." -
"I don't quite get your meaning,
but it sounds like a good quiet place,"
said Clare, wistfully anxious to please
this new friend. - •
"Don't always belive in sounds,"
advised Miss Tell, warmly."Bob says
that when 'Rome howled it wasn't :be-
Cause Ropte was being hurt anywhere.
Well, I've seen her. She's a -tataran-
ta!"
"Perhaps he will bring her to Com-
mencement. Quite naturally he will
come himself."
,
Miss - Harriet walked aronud in front
of this ingenuous personage, surveying
her with mingled emotions. Say.
Kavvy,-are you trying to jolly me with
your innocent Ida stuff?" she demand-
ed. •
Clare's -kray eyes opened on this
abrupt interlocutor, Miss Tell seemed
to be effectually convinced by the girl's
expresion and disarmed of distrust.
Now listen!" She put up her fing-
er. "When a young -roan like Ken-
neth Marthorn .motors • out - with a
young widow to The Hermitage --or a
place like that—party of two—it
means• that he is cultivating
a friendship that h e does-
n't care to let the family in on. -No
you will not see the widow at Manor
Verona! Bob says he hopes Kenneth
isn't going to make a fool of himself"
"I am not entirely one myself, I
must assure you," deelared Misa Clare
a little frostily. z'If I seemed dense
it's because I like to believe good of
folks, first of all."
"But Kenneth is good all right,
He's only like the rest. Don't scowl
so at ine, Kavvy, and I did not mean
to do so. We must clear- it up."
"I am not offended not—at you!"
"But I - don't want any misunder-
standing, dear, between us, now that
we are about to pact! I insist! Tell
me why you are so touchy all - of a
sudden!" . .
"If you insist, I'll tell you! It is
a shame to speak of love that way!"
I do hope you love your young man
and that he loves you. But to speak
to mention him in the same breath in
which you speak of that, cad!"
"But Kenneth Mathorn is not a. cad"
"It'sthe only word I can thipk of
now!"
"But if you knew him—"
"I don't want to know him—I don't
want to hear about him—or any other
Marthorn. The name and the man
disgust me! I hate the whole family.
I'm sorry! But my temper makes
me ashamed sometimes. I'd better
walk away by myself."
She stepped past Miss Harriet and
hurried off •
"Well, of all the—" gasped the
maiden, rebuffed. "No wonder she
has never got anywhere in. our class
if that's the kind of a prickly peri-
winkle she is—and that's all the fit
name I can think of!" Miss Tell made
a face like en angry kitten.
When Cora Marthorn went the
rounds with her subscription paper,
she had- secured the names of nearly
all the others in the class before she
approached Clare.
"It has .been a most wonderful re-
sponse," stated Miss Marthon, urbane-
ly, but the air of patronage still ling-
ered in her manner. "Really, quite
enough is guaranteed"
It was a plain hint which afforded
Miss Kavanagh an opportunity to
make her contribution as modest as
her resources prompted.
Miss Marthorn's condescending ef-
fusivenes was chilled by the look Clare
returned. The girl took the paper and
glanced at the Marthorn subscription.
With much deliberation she produced
herfountain pen and wrote the amount
of her own donation; her chirography
was naturally bold and she affected -a
broad-nibbed pen. When she had fin-
ished, her "John Hancock" of a sig-
nature stood defiantly forth; the sum
which she against her name was just,
double the - amount pledged by the
daugher of Stephen Marthorn.
The interview was in Miss . Kav-
anagh's dormitory., room; she took a
check -hook from a desk pigeon -hole.
"But the payment need not—"
"It is somewhat of a Kavanagh pe-
culiarity," boke in Glare writing. 1
"When my father gave me my ekeck- 1
book, years ago, he gave me some good -
advice about obligations."
Miss Marthorft received in her hand !
the check and the signed - round-robin,
and lifted eyebrows and voice at the
same time. "But I cannot accept this"
"The check is perfectly good," stat-
ed Miss Kavanagh. No meek model
of perfect womanhood was "Old X.
K." colleen! Out of .long repression
and wounded pride and resentful sen-
sitiveness
ensitiveness had developed rancor= -and
rancor was begging for the privilege
. - L'
Acidse
in Stomach � Miss 'Tell, though claiming friendly
Actds � 41
Create Gas, Sourness and Pain
How. to Treat
Medical authorities State that nearly nine-
tentl,l of the eases of- stomach trouble, indi-
gestin.., sourness, burning. gas, bloating,
nausea, etc., are due to au excess of hydro-
chloric acid in the stomach and not as some
believe to 'a lack of digestive juices. The.
delicate 'stomach lining is irritated, diges-
tion is delayed and food coots, causing the
disagreeable symptoms: which every stomach
sufferer knows so well.
Artificial dtgeatenta are not needed in such
cases • and may do real harm. Tis laying
aside all digestive aids and instead get from,
isurate&
ounces of �
.
t e, ifew
any druggist
Magnesia end take a. teaspoonful in a quarter
. glass of water right after eating. This
sweetens the stomach preveab the formation
of access acid end' there it no seaman. gas.
or pairs. Bkarat.d Magn&sia fin powder or
tablet form—never liquid or mink) is herrn- •
letsto the :stomach, inexpensive to take and
orae of
or
~t imagnesia
m
ielnt
t es eiS�a
is
e
I
stomach i+utgasr• It is toed bg thousands
of people whd enjoy their meals with 'no More
fear of indigestion.
of "handing something" to the daught-
er of Stephen Marthorn.
"Oh .I am not questioning the
cheek" affirmed Miss Marthorn, her
words belying the expression wath
which the . looked at the figures. "But
the sum ° is tba large," -
"I did net know that any limit had
been set," said Clare coldly. "As a
•matter of fact; I believe it was your
own suggestion that this plan be
adopted in order tc obtain a very gen-
erous sum."
"Yes, but this may be embarrass-
ing," pleaded Miss Marthorn, rapidly
losing self-possession.
•
"The amount. I have given does not
embarrass me. If you had come to Me
earlier," was the cutting suggestion,
"the present situation might not have
been so `embarrassing. I shall insist"
"1 have already taken some measures
in regard to the gift and its cost, and
"It would have been better to take
the whole class into your confidence,
Miss .Marthorn, wouldn't it? We
should all have a say in what our
money - buys."
"But this will leave a surplus of
so much!"
"Possibly some of the young ladies
will be willing to reduce their sub-
scriptions. Perhaps .some of them
have given more than they can afford.
You are experienced - in such matters
and very tactful, Miss Marthorn!
You might go to them and show them
how they can be relieved." There
was no mistaking the tone!
Miss Marthorn, flushing, Momentar-
ily carried out of her usual composure
opened her mouth as if to give back
retort in kind. But she restrained
herself and bowed. "I'm sure the
whole class will be pleased by your
generosity, Miss Kavanagh. 'As one
of the class, simply for myself, I
thank you"
She went away.
She left behind her a being who had
been - more bitterly stricken by . a
glance and •e bow than by any words
which could have beep. uttered. In
fact, the withering thought came to
Clare that she would have welcomed
railing and scolding, hands. on hips.
She confessed to herself "the bitter
truth of that feeling—that hope, un -
confessed and formless till then, that
Cora Marthorn would thrust. and
parry with her, word for word, until
some of the force of four years of
unspoken rebelliousness might be ex-
hausted in speech.
She flung pen and check book into
a corner -of the room. She stood up
and faced her panting, crimson -faced
self in the cheval glass. "So that's
what you are! That's - what you are
inside! After four years here, eh?"
She leaned close to the glass and made
ugly faces of -unutterable loathing and
disgust. Deep in her throat and
sinking her voice to a low contralto,
affecting what her natural speech
never contained, she- spoke the
figure reflected in the mirror: "There
ye stand, Ould Jawn Kavanagh's
gur-ri! Thraitor to ye'self and yer
father, both! Away wid ye! But
where can ye go? Even the woods
are too honest for the likes of ye!
Yer father is too good for ye! A
lady, eh?" She slapped her hand a-
cross the glowering visage in the
glass. "Go on! I never want to
be else than what I was born to be!"
Then she turned away and lifted her
arms and wailed: "0 God --my God
of pity! God forgive me for that
lie!"
CHAPTER IV
To assist in the further and better
understanding of Kenneth Marthorn,
contrast may be made of his trial
in his winter sanity and his test
in his midsummer madness.
Clare Kavanagh from the breath
of scandal had formed an opinion of
Kenneth Marthorn which made his
personality, as, far as she was con-
cerned, as hopeless a wreck as was
Humpty Dumpty • after the tumble
from the wall.
•
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LONDON - - ONT.
•
acquaintanceship with the young man,
evidently had in her mind a picture
of the idle scion of a rich man.
But, as hydraulic engineering -chief
Kenneth had built the penstocks and
installed the turbines in the new
Board Falls paper -mill of the Great
Temnicouata Company; and he did not
owe his job to his father's influence,
either! He had gone in for engineer-
ing -because he liked that kind of
work. The Temiseouata took him - on
because he Proved that he could make
good. He was not a bit quixotic,
that young main, He aiccepted his
allowance from his father just the
same ---even ."jacked" the figures
adroitly and persistently whenever
the colonel's good .future, gave oppor-
tunity, ' and banked the sums intact
against the days of relaxation in the
city wthere was interim between
when
the. blue -overalls jobs. -
It
build wheel- '
is good business to b ld us
pits and penstocks and install turbines
in the winter -time when the droughty
cold holds back the waters. But to
be - down in those pits among frozen
earth -clods or .fumbling in bitter
weather with transit, level, or such
like, and nothing to- look forward to
except meals from the oilcloth -cover-
ed tables of a Intl]. boarding-house
and s dip into a novel before bunk -
tine at nine o'clock—that is paying
a heavy price to good business, when
a. man is young! -
Then glorious, warming, rosy, trill-
ing, thrilling spring! Spring, the
town, the klub—and all the money in
the bank!
Young Mr. Marthorn found that he
was keeping a sort of debit -and -credit
account with hiniself. During his
periodical terms of banishment to
the desert he devised plans and
pondered possibilities and piled up his
zest for enjoyment, just as
he stored
his money.
Therefore, after watching the great
turbines begin,' grumbling and growl-
ing, their unending toil, Kenneth
Marthorn' faced toward his holiday,
glad that he was alive in the budding
spring! Nominaelly he lived in the
home mansion; actually he lived at
the club. Colonel Marthorn did not
question or discountenance that ar-
rangement; the young man was ab-
sent so much on his tours of duty
that it would have seemed odd to have
him constantly at home. Nor did the
colonel question any of his son's ac-
tions, for, so far as all outward ap-e
pearanee went, they Were merely mild
escapades marked by high spirits and
Pure Clean
APRIL 23, 1920.
Preserved St sold only in
Sealed air-- tight packets
to preserve its native
Econom.ieat
goodness®
1174
Millions
..--Po.�s
Used in of Tea � Daily
were not questionable adventures as-
sociated with low morals. Further-
more, Colonel Marthorn secretly be.;
lieved in the laissez-faire doctrine in
the management of a son who had
shown so much ability in making a
way for himself in the business world;
the colonel was in no mood to see
too much!
Mrs. Irma Sturtevant met young -
Mr. Marthorn for the first • time at
the Waldheim Country Club.
There seemed to be nobody to do
much of any talking about Mrs.
Sturtevant. She did mighty little of
it, herself—regarding . herself. It
was a toss-up between her and Ken-
neth Marthorn, in their association,
which one was less illuminating in re-
gard to personal matters. Both €lf
them seemed to prefer to buiiid
theories about the other and to let
prosiac facts alone. Outwardly, Mrs.
Sturtevant *as quite .enough to oc-
cupy the mind of an ordinary man
without any bothersome delving into
matters which she might be hiding
behind her exquisite exterior: She
announced herself without words as
young and very pretty, jolly, tempera-
mentally fond of excitment and plea-
sure, - probably rich, else her jewels
lied. The question of the person who
announced her as a widow 'or affirm-
ed anything as lto her social standing
did not appear to be- a matter of
special interest on the part of any-
body.
On the first occasion they met she
had a wonderfully good time with
Kenneth Marthorn. Better time, ap-
parently next meeting!
(Continued next .week.)
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New Standards of Value
$1365
F.O.B. - CHATHAM
WAR TAX EXTRA
4.a
Gray -Dort has brought peace -time stan-
dards of value to the motor car business,
Greater value than the light ear has hereto-'
fore offered. $1365 brings you a car corn -
parable with those costing several' hundred
dollars more. - -
LOOK FOR THESE THINGS IN
THE CAR YOU BUY
The Gray -Dort motor is big enough for
its job—not stunted -33.4" bore and 5'a
stroke—with big water jackets and a big.
honeycomb radiator. The crankshaft is
husky—many pounds heavier than other
builders of light cars think nry. - The
pistons are metra -light . and three -ringed•.
Special design prevents valve -warping.
High -carbon steel gives toughness to moving
parts.
•
The carburetor is a Carter—improved
this year. Westinghouse starting and light-
ing. Connecticut ignition (newly improved).
The whole chassis parallels the motor in
quality. Heavy frame of channel steel.
Husky rear axle, ' Chatham -built. Long
springs, cantilever in the rear, and built
,here under -our inspection. The big brakes
now have Thermoid lining. A new steering
gear, 50% larger and stronger than the
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The Gray -Dort is as pleasing to the artist
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The smooth lines of the body are restful
after so Much of the extreme in present-day
cars. . TIT Gray -Dort finish, development
of 60 years coach -building, will win your
instant, and lasting approval. Add' the
smartness of. French -pleated upholstery,
and a new top, tailored in our own shops. .
The big gasoline tank is now in the rear
--for good -looks and convenience. As in
big cars, the emergency brake is an a lever,
the side -curtains open with the doors. A
shorter, smarter cowl gives more room in
the -driving comparrtnt. The new hood,
with its many long, narrow louvres has a
touch of 'European smartness.
AND YET THE PRICE IS $1365r
(tLU$ wait we
You know that such a car as the Gray -Dort wfli
f e in heavy demand at $1365. We have doubled
Dear production this year. But there is likely to be
a ehortage. See the Gray -.Dort dealer now.
PRICES
The Gray -Dort 5 -passenger ear, finished its Ger-
Dort green and black and with atandardequipment
is $1365 f.o.b. Chatham. War tax extra.
The roomy roadster Is the same price.
THE CRAY-DORT SPECIAL
For the alae wishes 110112Sthr alittle eactra
is his car, we have built the Gray -Dort Special.
Maroon body, with brown ray ntite top. Platt glass
rear windenr Gipsy curtains. Rookie to wheels.
Motometen Tilting steer wheel.' Real leather
upholstery. Mahogany Instrument board. just
the touches which lift this car above the ordinary.
$ 150 extra on the standard.
AND THE ACE 1
The Gray -Dort Ace --the most beautiful light
car of to -day. Sapper green body with handsome
California top to inatch.
Trouble Lain and bull's-eye flashlight. Electric
cigar lighter. Rear -vision mirror. Plates gksew.
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de luxe car for the a man who does not wish to pile
up' a tremendous operating cost.' $255 extra on
the standard. -
0
GRAY-DORT MOTORS - LIMITED
Chatham
aro)
G. D. C. Harn, Seaforth
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