The Huron Expositor, 1920-05-28, Page 7Nature's ea e
inulating beverage.
- ,.0••0:00_,_._.
Tender
or e
oosening?
a, or Trench Mouth, and
gds Disease
elf in the comfort and
a and_ painless method,
'rite
ANY; Limited
ltou Street, Toronto, Ont. iff
PlIONOL HAS CON -
RED
O .
RED PRACTICALLY
EVERY DISEASE
is disease, heart troubles,
ag of the liver, diabetes,
anemia, ' nervous debility
ores of other dreaded mald-
e yielded to our Phosphonoi
;nt. Broken down men and
who are prematurely aged
=gained lost vigor and vital-
id just as efficacious in acute
sphonol
TREATMENT
gonia, typhoid fever, rheu-
virulent blood disease, .peri -
etc., are treated with a re-
y high average of success,,
ves are nude etrong and you
:.hat lost pep. Phosphonol is
all good drug stores. Price,
box or 2 for $5:00.
ft off Corns!
t hurt a bit and Freezone
ft _ only a few cents.
your Angers t You can lift oft
corn, soft corn, or corn between
and the -lard skin calluses fro
f feet.
bottle of "y'rsezone" eesta lid
nig store; apply s few drops
corn or callus. Instantly ie
ting, then ;shortly yos lift that
ae eoni or callus right off, Mat
ri:thout one bit of paia or. se-
aly No humbug!
Stomach
Disorders
are no remedies or nied-
ao effective for the treatment
If riot BtornatiZ Disorders
,ders
:king's. Heart and Nerve
r and Hacking's Kidney and
This we know, from the
ace we have had from tha#e
:ions and from the know -
we bare of the action and
al effect of the different
nd herbs that go into the
tion of the two rwonderful
s.
appetite may be either exag-
,
_Perverted, diminishes or en-
ast, these preparations wilt
at.. The condition may be
supp:yino the stornactt may
;aye or tile.„ may be Gas on
nach due to Fermentation or
o» t;rip. of Footle; -.; Iir, matter
e trouble may he this treat -
11 tate, un the of t,at:., of the
V qent and bring 'back the
good health `that you so
ire.
iter Eating, Vomiting, Grad-
., of. Flesh and etren; ne,
{ and Anaemia are `iomTZi.' :tI
cn;; of Ston.a' It Dieorriere
?.'y duet rear When you nee
tri c;r ii' r. to effect a eru.l,'e,
r•F•mn ly and anyone who
iF_:iinl; +sr any I r ' h of
e net expect to be cured
s :
Bay G 1)X, oe
:t zinc! Nerve Rerneciy and
i kes Kidney grid Liver
thcnu a enee tr:' . I're
MAY 28, 1920;
THE HURON EXPOSITOR
DR. F. J. R. FORSTER
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat
Graduate in Medicine, University of
Toronto.
Late Assistant New York Ophthal-
mei and Aural Institute, Mooretieid's
Eye and Golden Square Throat Hop-
pitals, London, Eng. At Mr. J. Ran-
Iin's Osce, Seaforth, third Wednesday
in each month from 11 a.m. to $ p.m.
88 Waterloo Street, South, 'Stratford.
Phone 297 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
ever Walker's Furniture Store, Main
Street, Seaforth.
The Rider of
the King
Log
HOLMAN DAY
CHAPTER VIii
Clare Kavanagh's repentance -suggests
service for the sake of John Kava-
nagh's peace of mind; and at story
of her .Kavanagh spirit goes abroad.
For John Kavanagh that home -go-
ing was a holy pilgrimage. -
The sudden determination to ad-
venture with Clare to see the world
had thrilled him, had filled him with
boyish exhilaration, had tickled antic-
ipation. However, underneath had
been second -thought's complexity of
dragging inertia:. old age's fear • of
changes -and experiments, the timidity
—_: of a man' long confined to one circle,
the anxious fear of the business head
as tb what would . happen while he
was away, the knowledge that the
comfortable habitsof a lifetime must
be supplanted by. all sorts of annoy- i
ing deference to the manners of the
outside world.
But now he was going ` home be--
All
eiAli the other faces seemed hostile. cause she had -begged hini to go, and
"You are" good," said Clare, grate. every glance from her shining eyes
fully. "But I'm going to have him and every word from her lips assured
lie down and be quiet!" She was mak- him of her sincerity.
ing a brave effort to be matter -of- For Clare, the journey had preeious
fact. sanctity; she felt like a lost child
Miss Tell patted the girl'shand. who had been frightened • by the even-
"Kavvy, you buck up! I don't know ing , shadows, but, at last, had found -
what kind of a duke your father is her father's hand reached forth to
. up where you and he live, but he her and was trudging ;homeward by
certainly acts the part when anybody his side. The queer little ache in her
makes faces at him. So don't . you throat only accentuated the thankful
COOKE' mind." - comfort she felt - within her heart.
Kavanagh shook off the hands of Kavanagh felt another emotion be=
Father Laflamme and Doctor March. sides calm joy. In spite of all his
t`Leave me be, my boys! If they think daughter had said to him by way of
I'm drunk or a dead man, I'll show pardon, that affair with Colonel
'em different!" But when he was out 'Marthorn was constantly before him.
of the throng and on his way to the Shame kept blazing up, stamp upon
dormitory he put his hand to his the embers of memory of that horrible
breast and kept it there, moaning: scene as he might! He had not par -
"It has all come back, and worse Boned. Marthorn for the insult to
with it! Their old water -soaked log Clare nor had . he pardoned himself
—their old devil of a president. The for the manner in which • he had al-
Temiscouata has got me!" ' lowed his rage to run away with him.
Doctor March found his voice at Those two, emotions furnished barbs
last. "Mr. Kavanagh, the wallop you for a shame that rankled.. He felt
handed to that old. hyena did my soul that he had disgraced the whole Toban
good. He's going to think twice. country. In his weakened physical
Hold your ttongue on it, man! Oh, condition he was not able to throw
why didn't I think once!" off the oppression of his thoughts
Fever • a specialty. Office opposite They went on in silence. - as he might have done in the old
Dick's Hotel, Main Street, Seaforth. In her room he obeyed her and lay, hale days. He was weak. There
All orders left at the hotel will re- down. on the couch while she minister- was something almost childish in his
eeive prompt attention. Night calls ed to him. All the time his eyes surrender to the obsession of dis-
received at the office pleaded with her like the eyes of a grace which could not be forgiven.
• hound seeking forgiveness after- mis- Therefore, considering the state of
chief. John Kavanagh's mind in general, Dr.
"And now I'm not fit to go out in Archaleus March's officiousness was
the world with ye, darlin'. Not fit! something not far from -heinous. The
Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin- I'd always be shaming ye." doctor's perception was not keen nor
ary College. All diseases of domestic She stood before him'
• her eyes was his' tact of a high order. But
animals treated. Calls promptly at- flashing. "1 am proud of what you his loyalty was spiritedly' wide a -
tended to and charges moderate. Vet- did. I have told you it was what I wake! Memories flamed in the doc-
erinary Dentistry a specialty. Office have wanted to say! It has been in tor: John Kavanagh had made his
and residence on Goderich street, one me—here!" She 'drove her hands a- bigness among the best of 'em; he
door east of Dr. Scott's office, Sea- gainst her breast with all the passion Tend asserted himself; he had. smashed.
forth. John Kavanagh could display and a blow across the face of the great
quite in hie manner. "I'm your own man •of the Temiscouata Company;
true daughter!" he was coming home with his educat-
•He blinked. "But -the education— ed daughter, According to Doctor
the making you a fine lady!" March's best private judgment, all
"I belong in the woods—up in the this demanded a celebration worthy
woods -with you!" It was the out- of the bigness of such a triumph.
burst of her reawakened loyalty, her Doctor Mardi decided that it ought to
contrition and love striving to make be made a surprise for John Kava-
ame ds.Inherpi o�� fervor shenagh
Therefore, without oot
making a
did not realize how cruelly she had confidant of anybody, even of Father
torn open his fresh wound. Laflamme, he wired ahead to Abner
"And it's because I belong in the Kezar to secure a brass band and to
woods and am . not fit for the world give out the news of the homecoming..
outside—that's iyhy I have spoiled Doctor March remembered something
everything for ye, colleen. It's , not about mention of a brass band for
the place for yettup there. - Ye'li be that home -coming. "But it's up to
'sad and sorry up there. I'll loop at me to cinch it—to see that the right
ye, and it will break my heart up thing is done at the right time," the
425 Richmond Street, London, Ont., there. ' For ye're the fine lady!" doctor told himself.
Specialist, Surgery and- Genio-Urin- Tears welled in his eyes and he • He cocked his stovepipe hat at a
ary diseases of men and women. scrubbed knuckles across his cheeks jaunty angle when at last they were
just as a sick and weary child would bumping up the branch line toward
do it.
HARPER & BROTHERS
(Continued from last week.)t
PROUDFOOT, KILLORAN AND..
Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries Pub-
IPc, etc. Money to lend. In Seaforth
on Monday of each week. Office in
Kidd Block, W. Proudfoot, K.C., J.
L. Killoran, H. 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
JOHN GRIEVE, V. S.
MEDICAL
DR. GEORGE HEILEMANN.
Osteophatic Physician of
Goderich.
Specialist in Women's and Children's
diseases, reheumatisin, acute, chronic
and nervous disorders; eye, ear, nose
and throat. Consul'ation 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.
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 world and all in4t. I didn't even know
Hospital, Montreal, 1914-15; Office, 2 whether I cared for you. But now I
know—now that you ;have come to
me. You are mine. And if there's
shame because you protected me, we'll
be ashamed together—and glad --glad!
Dr. F. J. BURROWS Oh, I'm your own 'girl, I say!" Her
voice had been shrill, her cheeks were
painted 'with vivid red. But all at
once she put her forehead :against
his arm. "I know glow,! I'm home
sick. I love you. I need you. I
1 want to go home, daddy; I want to
go home," she sobbed.
Ste. Agathe. He went up and down
` The girl kneeled beside the couch the aisles of the two ears, exuding hie
and took his hands in 'hers. "You importance, suppressing his excite -
don't understand! But you must un- meet, whispering in the ears of pas-
derstand! I have never told you ung- sengers.
truths. I haven't wanted to go back "What sort of a basket of eggs is
to Sainte Agathe. I didn't know what that clucking old rooster trying to
I wanted to do. I Was hating the hatch?"' asked "Old X. K." irritably.
"D4 yep know, Father Pierre ?"
"I -Te has not SAM anything to me."
"Glory be, I've got him 'most home
where his mouth won't stir :up any
more trouble for me. The lies he
told about me behind my back down
there!' And me only a poorold,
ashamed fool-ashamed--ashined!"
He stole a glance at Clare's tender and
reproachful face, "Ye have forgiven
me—I know ye have, darlin', for the
lie isn't in ye! Ne'ertheless, I did it
—and after I had tried so hard! But
we'll go -tiptoeing up the hill together
-.-you and I. And we'll be home
again!"
The remembrance that he had plan-
ned for a general jollification made
his cheeks burn. In the new light
which had come to him out of that
'dearer intimacy of theirs he realized
more and more that he had received
into his keeping• something precious
and sacred. The mellow twilight was
shrouding 'the . blue mountains -of the
Toban.
"We'll sit for a bit in the evening
in front of the house and hear the
old falls and feel the quiet of all the
rest of it," he told her. "We'll step
out of the car quietly and we'll tip-
toe up the hill—and I hope they'll
take the hint and stay away till the
morrow."
But John Kavanagh's dream of tip-
toeing into Ste. Agathe was shattered
before the, train came squalling to a
standstill. With blatant brasses and
booming drum a band brayed out "The
Campbells Are Coming!" The roar
of many voices, cheering in ragged
chorus, made din that echoed from
hill to hill.
Kavanagh rose, gasping for breath,
muttering oaths, and rushed to the
platform of the car. He stood there
and brandished his fists at the crowd
and roared commands. But they 'ac-
cepted his gestures as welcoming hail
and were yelling so enthusiastically
that they heard not a word that he
said. At the foot of the car -steps
Doctor March was serving as cheer
leader.
"Dod butter ye, ye meddling old
dose of bot and spavin physic, so this
is what your bobbing and your bowing
and your buzzing meant, eh? Take
that!"
Instantly occurred the wreck of the
only two plug -hats in Ste. Agathe.
Kavanagh swung off his own head-
gear and smashed it over the tile of
the unsuspecting Doctor March. Then
the old man leaped down and belabor-
ed the doctor with the smashed hat
as long as that gentleman was with -
doors east of Post Office. Phone 56.
Hene i , Ontario,
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. •
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.
THOMAS BROWN
Licensed auctioneer for the counties
of Huron and Perth. Correspondence 1
arrangements for sale dates can be '
made by calling up phone 97, Seaforth
or The Expositor Office. Charges mod-
erate and satisfaction guaranteed.
R. T. LUKER
Licensed Auctioneer for the County
of Huron. Sales attended to in all
parts of the county. Sevenears' ex-
perience in Manitoba and Saskatche-
wan. Terms reasonable. Phone No.
175 r 11, Exeter, Centralia P. O. R.
R. No. il. Orders left at The Huron
Etpositor Office, Seaforth, promptly at -
loaded.
Children Ort
Hilt MGM
CASTORIA
EVIDENCE
Of Success of Hacking's
Heart and Nerve Remedy
and Hacking's Kidney
and Liver Phis
Wm. Fullerton, R. R. 1, Listowel:
"I doctored for eight years for
stomach Trouble and Pains all
through my body. got no relief until
I used Hacking's Heart and Nerve
Remedy which fixer ane up all right.
I used Hacking's Kidney and Liver
Pills along with the Remedy."
Mrs. H. Hinchcliffe, Wingham:
';I
VMS on the point of a complete
Nervous Breakdown, could not sleep
or plan my household duties, suffer-
ed with my Heart and my Nerves
and doctors could do little for me.
After taking the first box of Hack-
in1'g's Heart and Nerve Remedy i
improved so much in health that I
conttn.ued with a 6 ibox treatment
and am able to return to my work
with renewed vigor."
Mr. Richard Jones, Doon, Ont.:
"I have had Pains under my Heart
for some time and tried all sorts of
remedies and have been, to four dif-
ferent doctors and sound get no re-
lief. I took one box of Hacking's
Heart and Nerve Remedy and felt
very much better, I took another box
and have been. able to work again.
Before I took ,your remedy I could
not work tor weeks at a time, the
pain was. so great."
These are only a few of the many
teatim+on,ials that come to us volun-
tarily and.. I am sure thatyou too
will get beneficda] results if you will
but give them a fair trial. Buy them
from your dealer. Insist on Hack-
ing's.
Magnesia fine
for Dyspeptics
.0.°0.41__.
Neutralize Dangerous Stomach Acids
Which Cause Indigestion.
The almost universal use of Mag-
nesia by physicians and stomach spec-
ialists is due to the fact that it in-
stantly neutralizes the dangerous
stomach acids which ,cause nearly all
digestive stomach trouble. With
acid gone and stomach sweet, easy
and painless digestion invariably fol-
lows.
Old dyspeptics, whom indigestion
and sour, weak and sickly stomach,
have made miserable for years, find
quick and lasting relief in this simple
remedy, and are, again able to eat
what they please: A glass of hot
Magnesia water after meals prevent
all trouble.
Prepare Magnesia water at home
by dropping one teaspoonful or four
tablets of pure Bisurated Magnesia in
a glass of hot water. Any reliable
druggist can sell you the genuine Bis-
urated Magnesia and stomach suf
ferers and dyspeptics who follow this
plan and avoid the use of pepsin, char-
coal, soda, mints, drugs and stomach'.
medicines will soon find that :jthe
stomach,. relieved of irritating acid
and gas, soon resumes its normal tone
and will do its work alone without
the aid of artificial digestents.
in reach, and flung the wreck after
him when he escaped into the crowd.
That amazing performance stilled
the uproar more effectively ,than the
speech John Kavanagh launched/at
them. "Horne with ye, ye loafing
blackguards! Get to your • homes!
Have ye no more respect or decency
in ye than to make a circus shindy of
this ."
"It's to show due honor where hon-
or is due," cried Romeo Shank, wav-
ing a paper under the nose of "Old
X. K." The paper contained a poem
of welcome, but nobody ever heard
that poem. Kavanagh scooped. it
with rushing hand, as he would have
captured an offending insect, and tore
it up.
"I want no honors like this!' A
riot and raving and roaring! Have
ye no manners ? Away with yel If
I hear another yawp from that band
I'll stuff the tooters down the throats
of them that toot."
They did not understand - his pas-
sion or the cause of thisresentment. i
But they were accustomed to obey
the word of Johns Kavanagh. And
the little priest went here and there
among them, hurrying, with a word
about their master's illness and an-
other word about the respect which
should be shown to private matters
of the family.
"It's like enough he has b ens get-
ting some e new ideas down -
cos try
about the right way to be genteel,"
admitted the man named Mike. "But
by the snub -line that peeled the leg
of old McCarty if he dract any -
ways sick, much y as I hate to doubt
the word of the priest! Go ask old
Doe Marek, after the way he has
been famed."
Kavanagh and his daughter passed
through the silent ranks which were
opened to let them walk on their
way to the mansion on the hill. The
old man's face was gloomy, but Clare's
honest and winning smiles for all in
the range of her .vision helped to
take some of the sting out of the
father's displeasure.
Duinphy trudged behind them, lug-
ging his master's big valise, "Old
X. K.'s" anger passed quickly and
with it went his fictitious strength.
His shoulders sagged forward and he
stumbled as he walked. The after-
glow served the subdued throng on
the station platform; their eyes were
on him as- lie struggled up the hill.
"But he is sick," insisted Mulkeron.
"Do you say he isn't? Is that the
way John Kavanagh would walk
home with his own colleen if all the
grit and glory hadn't been knocked
out of him by their damn Temiscouata
popple ?"
Doctor March had recovered his
self-possession
along with what was
left of his hat. "But he has taken
his toll for that!" He raised his
- voice so that all might hear, for Kav-
anagh was at a safe distance. "Listen
all, till I. tell how he polished the
sly xzxug of old Marthorn himself,
'Twos a /stirring sight and it will
make you proud of him;!"
Therefore, as a minstrel might
sing of the exploits of a champion
afield, the doctor stood there in the
midst of them and made the twilight
eloquent with his chant of derring-
do.
"After that it's 'most a wonder that
he didn't feel an appetite for music
by the band," averred Mike.
"But why don't. - ye show some
sense" in the case of a man that's
sick?" demanded Mulkern.
All of them indorsed that senti-
ment and forgave; even Romeo Shank
was repentant while he hunted in the
gloom for the scraps of his poem.
"The women's part" of the .house
on the hill was open and Iighted and
Elisiane Sirois was installed there as
housekeeper, according to orders left
by Kavanagh.
(Continued on Page Six)
ASTHMA
If you have Asthma. don't
imagine that you must al-
ways puffer untold misery.
Relief quick, sure and sale
isanteed in oven the
*susses by using
TEMPLETON'S
RAZ- MAH
CAPSLPLES •
a eartain you
re-
sample of sample of thesbtos -
co ndent that y�u
t
flit.
Tem
fl Q
all we have
md..
•
tQ► . � �9
onto. a ' W.,
e1d bi p � 88a
bemta !oz ai Kuabos.
Sold by E. Umbach, Seaforth.
"That's the Bike I
Want, Dad"
"It's one like Bob Harding's.
"He isn't a bit stronger than I am, Dad.
But he can always trim me, no matter how
hard I strain. My cheap old bike doesn't run
as easy as -his C.C.M.
f`This is the third season for his C.C.M., tog,
and it runs just like new,"
"Is that so, jimmy?"
'es, there's good stuff in the C.C.M,, Dad."
"It's a beauty to look at, jimmy,"
"Sure. And the swell nickelling and bright
enamelling won't wear off."
"When Bob's C.C.M. gets dusty he wipes her
off and she looks just like new."
"Oh, well, Jimmy, I see your heart's set on a
C.C.M. If you'll promise to study -hard and pass
into the next room, I'll give you a C.C.M, Bicycle."
C.C.M. Bicycles are the pride of the boys. They
have earned their good reputation by standing up
under the extra strain and wear that sturdy, active
lads are bound to give a bicy`le.
The- C.C.M. has the new Hercules Positive Drive
Brake—the Coaster Brake without a side arae.
Ask the C.C.M- dealer to show you the 18 -inch
curved bar model—the bicycle the boy won't
outgrow.
C • C • M
Bicycles
COLUMBIA--MASSEY--RED BIRD'
PERFECT—CLEVELAND
90% Made in Canada—
100% Value.
This -trade' spark is
on the frame of every
C.C.M. Bicycle.
Canada Cycle &
Motor Co., Limited
WESTON, ONTARIO
Montre&l'
Toronto
Winnipeg Vancouver
Over 411)00 c.
vice Stations In Can;
ado.: Look for this aim
raj
wilt in Canada by '.Skilled Canadian Workers and Canadian Capital
thntyoU see theYalnc?
IF you want to judge motor car values, examine the
.cars—compare them. You can see the value in
the Gray -Dort. You can see where we have used
more costly construction—made big improvements.
And you know the price is only $1465 (plus war tax).
r dealers tell us that Gray -Dort value is creat..
g a shortage of cars. We would advise you to
see the Gray -Dort dealer now.
The Gray -Dort 5 -passenger touring car is $1465 f.o.b.. Chatham, (war tax
extra.) The 2 -passenger roadster is the same. The Gray -Dort Special,
with extra uipment and beautifully finished, is $150 extra on the stand-
ard. The ray -Dort Ace. the most beautiful light car of to -day, is
$255 -extra the standard.
GRA -PORT MOTORS, LIMITED
G. D. C. Harn,
- Chatham, Ontario.
Seaforth
4 piss a ,1.s• fr