The Huron Expositor, 1920-07-30, Page 6e
6
THE HURON EXPOSITOR
l LY 30,192.
DR. F. J. R. FORSTER
Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat
Graduate in Medicine, University of
Toronto.
Late Assistant New York Ophthal-•
tnei and Aural institute, Mooreleld's
Eye and Golden Square Throat Hos-
pitals, London, Eng. At Mr. J. Ran -
kin's Osce, Seafortb, third Wednesday
in each month from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m.
: Waterloo Street, South, Stratford.
Phone 267 Stratford.
LEGAL
R. S. HAYS.
Barrister Solicitor, Conveyancer and
Notary Public. Solicitor for tiie. 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.
PRRUDFOOT, KILLORAN AND..
COOKE
Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries Pub-
lic, etc. Money to lend. In Seaforth
on Monday of each week. Office in
Kidd Block. W. Pioudfoot, K.C., J.
L. Killoran, H. J. D. Cooke.
VETERINARY
F. HARBURN, V. 5.
Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin-
ary College, and honorary member of
the Medical Association of the Ontario
Veterinary College. Treats diseases of
all dofn
estic 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. ' All diseases 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'+. office, Sea -
forth.
• MEDICAL
DR. GEORGE HEILEMANN.
Osteophatie 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 storeSeaforth,
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.
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.
ACTIVITIES OF WOMEN
Women are employed in the shoe
industry in Spain, for stitching.
Woman suffrage was defeated in.
the Belgium Chamber of Deputies -by
a vote of 89 to 74.
Canada now has a woman game
warden --Miss Laura Rant having
been sworn in for the Province of
Ontario.
Three groups of women in China
are agitating for the , 'sight to be elect-
ed members ` of Parli ment.
Dr. Elizabeth Bass, `of New Orleans;
La., has been chosen, head of the
Medical Women's National Associa-
tion.
The women in Egypt spend most
of their lives in miserable hovels, in
working in the fields or in getting'
water.
Miss B. Pullen Burry was the first
geographer• to visit some of the .un-
known parts of the Bismarck Archi-
pelago.
Indications' are that at the coming
elections in RhQde 'Island there will
be more women voters than men.
Women are the real rulers of the'
Tripoli Desert, for instead of the wo-
men, as in Turkey, the men go veil-
ed.
Wealthy French women use cham-
pagne as a shampoo for the purppse
of producing reddish brown hair with
rich golden lights on it.
Americans girls ;in great numbers
are going to England, where they,will
marry young men by whom they have
been wooed by mail: _
One of the novel features of the
State College of Industrial Arts at
Denton, Tex., is -the teaching of young
women how to be dairy maids.
In the new republics that have
pearled off the • western borders of
Russia, Lithuania, Esthonia, Ukrainia;
etc., women have full suffrage.
The Women's City Club in, Wash-
ington, D. C., is fitting up in a luxuri-
ous manner a smoking room for the
use of its members.
Miss Isabel Cumming, appointed
secretary of agriculture ` in Canada,
has the distinction of being the first
woman in the Dominion, to hold such
a. position. .
Through the education of girls of
the leading families of the outlying
provinces polygamy is rapidly being
eradicated in, the Philippine Islands.
In a protest against the high cost
of clothing Miss Elsie Southgate,
England's famous violinist, will ap-
pear in overalls at all her future en-
gagements.
Queen, Elizabeth, of Belgium is a
skilled playwright and during 1908
royalties from her drama yielded
more than $30,000 for the /Brussels
fresh air fund.
Persia has no old maids or bach-
elors: In that country also a wife
is prohibited from walking with her
husband and must at all times walk
behind him if they go out together.
During the war women were em-
ployed as life savers along the beach
and at the city swimming pools in
St. Louis and they prayed so efficient
that they are ;ow preferred' to men.
A fairy tale written by Queen Ma-
rie of Rumania to amuse her youngest
daughter has been made into a play
and scored a brilliant sucess at the
initial performance givep recently in
Paris.
When hotel cooks and waitresses in
Wichita Falls, Tex., went on a strike
club women of the city volunteered
to act as strike breakers and were
paid from $G0 to +$75 a week for their
services.
Besides her job as a high- cost of
Dr. F. J. BURROWS
Office and residence, Goderich street
east of the 1tilethodist 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
arrangements for sale dates can be
made by calling up phone 97, Seaforth
-or The Expositor Office. Charges mod-
erate and satisfaction guaranteed.
ea
R. T. LUKER
Licensed Auctioneer for the County
of Huron. Sales attended to in all -
parts of the county. Seven years' ex-
perience in Manitoba and Saskatche-
wan. Terms reasonable. Phone No.
175 r 11, Exeter, Centralia P. O. R.
R. No. 1. Orders left at The Huron
Illzpositor Office, Seaforth, promptly at-
tended.
Children Cry
FOR REINEWS
C AS MO.R I A
.
N
jWHEN USING
W I_LSON S
(FLYPADS
READ DIRECTIONS
CAREFULLY AND
FOLLOW THEM
EXACTLY
Best of all Fly Killers 10c
per Packet at all Druggists,
Grocers and General Stores
BEST TREATMENT FOR
HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE
—o—
Wheu" the Blood does not circulate
treely through the Veins you have
High Blood Pressure and this is +but
a Symptom of, some other disease or
trouble. There is ueuilly Kidney
Disease; Heart Disease, Nervous
Troubles, Hardening of. the Arteries
or Brain Trouble.
There is always the danger of a
rupture of a 'Blood Vessel and es the
Heart, the Blood Vessels and the
Kidneys are all aseoc ialted with High
Blood Pressure the best and most
s+a1tisfadbory treatment is
Hacking's Heart and Nerve Remedy
and
Hacking'. Kidney and Liver Pills.
Tufa tredhment will reduce the
Blood Pressure by removing the
cause and driving out the Poisons -
from the system. We are firmly con-
vinced that this treatment will re-
duce the blood pressure below the
danger mark and thus free your
Mind from the constant worry of
death. -
People wh'o have been ailing for
years should not expect a ooraptete
cure in a few days, one should take
at least six boxes of Haoking's Heart
and Nerve Remedy and three boxes
of 1,he Kidney and Liver Pills. Be
sure to get Hacking's. If your dealer
does not have them, he will be glad
to get them for you.
Mrs. Walker, formerly' of Port
Elgin, now living in Flint, Michiigan,
says: "The neighbors are perfectly
as'toni hed to see me getting along
so wen. I Contribute my good health
to the persistent use of Hacking's
Heart and Nerve Remedy andgladl
recoimmend it *b all my friends."
Hacking's Remedies are sold
Seaforth by E. UMBACH, Phm.,
living expert for the United States I
government, Miss, Edith Strauss pos-
sesses one of the handsomest collec-
tionslaf diamonds in Washington. MI6
is also •,an ardent automobilist.
Miss Alice S, Tyler, director of the
Western Reserve University Library
School at Cleveland, O., has been elect-
ed president of the American= Library
Association. She is the third woman
elected to the chief office of this -ore
ganization of more than 4,000 libra-
rians.
Miss Laura Clay, one of the woman
delegates to the Democratic national
convention,, who received one vote for
the Democratic. Presidential. nomina-
tion, was the first woman to receive
such an honor in, the convention of
either of the two great political par-
ties.
The Florence Nightingale medal,
the /highest honor to which any mem-
ber of the nursing profession may
aspire, has recently been 'awarded to
Miss Florence M. Johnston, of New
York City, for distinguished service
during the world war. Only six
'American • women have been so " dec-
orated.
The Rider of the
King Log
Continued from Page 7
"And now you are rude, to mel
What is the matter with you?"
"I am not wasting your timg; Mr.
Kezar," stated Paul. "Your are
wasting it."
"I am in no frame of mind to talk
business with anybody to -day. You'll
have to see me at some other time."
"I am going • far and may not rome
this way soon. I ask -you to step
aside—now!"
The men of the party had stopped
all activity and were surveying their
field boss with wonderment.
"Yes you are wasting the time of
all of us," declared' Miss Clare, with
impatience, in manner and voice.
"Donald, mind your, manners!" It
was said with the imperiousness of
John Kavanagh himself.
When Kezar finally walked toward
Sabatis . he went slowly and, with in-
stinctive movement of reassurance,
he set his palm for a moment against
his hip., •
The Indian smiled contemptuously.
"I said it was a matter for your ears,"
he reminded the, boss. "I did not
mean that I proposed to box them."
Explorer Pratt giggled.
Paul's smile and his bit of 'a jest
relieved the, tension considerably.
Clare smiled, though it was clear that
her curiosity was in no manner sat-
isfied.
"I didn't think there are any men
still afeard of Injuns and of bows
and arrows in the woods," commented
Mr. Dumphy. "I wish I knew how
to give a war -whoop. I'd like to make '`
him jump."
"Hush your jokes, Dumphy," com-
manded' the) mistress.
Paul spoke, in a low tone when
Kezar came near. "I'll not take you
out of the sight of your friends, you
coward. This is not the time or the
place for the matter which lies be-
tween us two. Come! Twenty paces
from their ears." He led the way.
"There's only one thing that's pro-
tecting you from me, Kezar. A girl
thinks you are , worth something to
her. You must prove to her that
you are worth something."
"What .do you mean?"
"She believes that you are her hus-
band. So far as I am concetned,
that is your only xcuse for living.
Do you understand?"
"No."
"That's because you don't want to
understand! I don't ask any word
of promise from you. Your word is
worth nothing. But as long as you
are Lola's husband, and she remains:�
satisfied with you,'Il keep my hands
off you. Your safety rests with you.
If you abandon her you will be worth
nothing to her. Then look out for
me!"
"You are meddling in ' an ;:aaffair
that's none of Your business." •
"Yes! I am honest! It's none, of
my business. But I mean what I
threaten. I'm trying to do by my
threats what honor and decency and
your promise can never make you
do."
"I haven't done anything that will
excuse you for killing me, if that's
what you threaten! Those two old
men—"
"I am not talking about those old
mem. I'll give you what's excuse
enough for me, if I kill you." His
voice was tense and grating. There
seemed to be red flames in his eyes.
"You have made a plaything of a
girl I have loved since we were chil-
dren. I. love her now in spite of
everything." He drew a long breath.
"There, Kezar! I have just done the
hardest thing I was ever -called on to
do. But it's out. It's the truth!
You, you sneaking hound, I don't be-
lieve you have man -decency enough in
• you to realize what it has meant to
me to stand in front of you here and
confess what I have just owned' up to.-
I have laid down all of my pride for
you to spit Ion! But I have done the
hard thing so that I can show you
how I'll be ready to do the easy thing
—kill you! I have told you how you
can stay alive." He hurried abrupt-
ly from Kezar; the latter stood where
he had been' left until Paul had push-
ed off his canoe and was paddling up-
river.
Donald was fully aware that the
in
contretemps"Leetle demanded somestrong—lactic sortstrong—
of
comment from him; he got his feel-
ings and his features ,under control
anal rejoined his party: "It's the af-
termath of the affair at Old Joel's.
You remember that I explained it all
to your father, Miss Kavanagh." He
was usually formal with her in the
hearing of others.
"I remember that he was not pleas-
ed because you were mixed up in any-
thing of the sort."
"But . I was not mixed up in it!
The crazy old halfbreed grabbed my
horse away from me and raced up the
road on it. That Indian thinks I
loaned the horse to his uncle and
wants fo quarrel. But he's a cheap
scalawag—always lying and trying to
Y start trouble. Nobody pays any at-
tention to what he says or does!"
Eublas Pratt sturdily offered pro-
test.
B. that language, Mr. Kezar! I have
known the boy a long time. Never
saw yeller in him."
"Well, when a man calls me aside
and threatens that he's going to kill
me some day, he has developed a
streak that's either \yellow or red or
some color that isn't right."
"What's that you say? Kill you?"
demanded Pratt, incredulously.
"That's what I said. That's what
he threatened to do, If anything
happens to him in these woods after
this, you can all swear that I was
acting in self-defense." They sur-
veyed him with considerable wonder-
ment, for his sudden anger was al-
most hysteria. "A man has the right
to protect himself against a crazy
Indian. If I should drop him like I'd
drop a loup-cervier the law would
have to stand behind me. You saw
how he called me over 'there to
threaten me."
Explorer Pratt shook his head.
"Calm down!" he advised. "We heard
no threats. You'd better keep away
from any mix-up with Sabatis. We'd
be poor witnesses if you should de-
pend on us to bring you off. College
Indians in these days don't go round
trying to scalp folks; and white men.
better not do any ambushing."
"That advice is excellent," declared
the head of the X. K., starting for her
canoe. "You must be having a case
of nerves, Don! I have always heard
Paul Sabatis spoken of as a rather
mild young man. And somebody has
told me—I can't remember who—that
he is soon to marry a very handsome-
girl."
"It's the girl Lola, of the Isle of
Hebert, maim;," reported Explorer
Niles. "The Mellicites call her The
I White Lily. I've seen her. She's a
hummer for looks --present company,
of course, excepted."
"Then we may safely hope that the
wild young Indian will be' thoroughly
domesticated in a very short time
and will note be roaming the woods,
Waving a tomahawk and crying for
the blood of nervous young field boss-
es." From her seat` in the canoe she
gave the flushed Donald a side -glance
that was demurely humorous; but the
look quieted him somewhat, for it
expressed tolerant sympathy and
friendly expression of an" intimacy Tom, and another cli m who had
close enough to allow jesting on a tested the attractions' of the border
rather delicate matter. "We may be
able to arrange it, Donald, so that
you may be his best man at the wed -
send a present to her. It may help
the general erect in the peace work,
Her name is—what chid you say, Mr.
Niles?"
"It's Lola Hebert. Her father is
Onesirne Hebert, the ' owner of the
big island half -way down to the Port --
age Beaulieu—and she'll match up
well with Paul because she has Melli-
cite blood—she's kin of old Noel the
Bear,"
The gossipy Mr. Niles had the
stern paddle and was pushing off.
Clare was able to flash one l t
radiant -smile . at Donald and then
made a little moue of disappointment,
suggestion for him alone. 'Oh, she's
only an Indian,," she returned, look-
ing at Mr. Niles, and adding, for the
ears of Donald, discomposed by her
jests, "Then I'm afraid, after all, that
it's not because of a threat of the
young Lochinvar to, ride out of the
west!"
Mr. Niles, having no personal ac-
quaintance with the young man men-
tioned, and cautious about comment-
ing on remarks which he did not un-'
derstand, kept silent and paddled a-
way. Donald, following after, felt
like a canoeman who ha& just negoti-
ated safely a stretch of white water
in which bristled dangerous ledges.
He was uneasy! Only the threat of
Paul had produced- any effect on
Kezar; nobody knew just what an
ugly Indian might do. Donald had no
sympathy for the poor boy's love and
distress, and the effort Paul had made
to straighten the affairs of Lola—an
effort which by its very crudity might
have touched the heart of a less selfish
man—roused only anger in ltezar.
He feltthat the Indian might have
sized him up as being a fool; he saw
no pathos in Paul's striving to make
use of the one method left to hint, a
method' which branded the repulsed
lover- as the real fool in matters of
the heart.
Abroad, against the suitor who
craved Clare Kavanagh, were tongue
and rifle, jealously and desperation;
he wohedered what aids he could en-
list. At Dolan's House—at the r
Squawpan—where they lodged that
night, he found one. It was Jesse
Wallin, game warden brother of
barrooms and brotheds b Kezar's
company.
_ Mr. Wallin, who arrived aOUSe in a canoe _ t Dolan's
-
ding instead of his worst foe on the
with a
war -path. At all events, be sufficientcase of gin in high -shouldered bot-
-
ly modern to send him a nice wedding
present. And ,the handsome 'girl! I
believe I'll disregard convenances and
ties, walked, after supper,. with Don-
ald and talked with him freely. At
the time of the walk and the talk Mr.
Pin Your Faith to
obi's' Goid MedaI Lkes,
°ATTENTION!"
EVERY article you buy at any of the fallowing
hardware stores will give you Distinguished
Service "Af you make sure` when buyin,g that it
bears the famous GOLD MEDAL Label.
" Quality " and " Hobbs Gold Medal " mean the
same. Look for the Gold Medal Label— a symbol
of service. You'll find it on harvest Tools, Garden
Tools, Safes, Lawn Mowers, Sewing Machines,
Roofing, Washers and Wringers. Cutlery, Sporting,
Goods, Refrigerators, Binder Twine, etc.
For Sale by
All First-class Hardware Dealers
3
Wailin's stock of gin had been de.
pleted by one bottle which had been
full when 'he had arrived at Dolan's
House, and he was very profuse and
volubly profane in his declarations of
what he proposed to do, eventually, in
the case of a certain double -starred,
much-beblanked, book -ballasted In-
dian he was following up—to wit,
Paul Sabatis.
(Continued next week.)
Buis, Beirasties,S
lissis—Keep your
Strong and Healthy. If
theyTire,Smart,Itch,or
Burn, if Sore, Irritated,
R Inflamed or Granulated,
use Murine often. Safe forInfant or Adult
At all Druggists in Canada. Write forFres
Eye Book. Hodge Company, Odom, ,
•
i
40.
MOTORrZING THE FARM
HE horse has been declared by Thomas Edison to be the most inefficient
machine m the world. In return for the amount of food and care needed,
the horse returns less in work. than any other machine. -
The average team of farm horses costs $400, a
good set of double harness $100, a wagon without
box $115, making a total of $615.
A Ford Truck costs $750 at Ford, Ont. A Fordson
Tractor costs $850 at Dearborn Mich. z
The initial cost of motorizing a farm is slightly
greater than the cost of a horse` outfit, but the lower
cost of operation and upkeep of the tractor and truyck
and the greater amount: of work done easily put
the horse'out of the running.
_Government experiments have proved that the cost
of feeding a horse is 8.7- cents per working hour.
A team of horses cannot plow more than two acres
in a ten-hour day. At 8.7 cents per hour or 17.4
cents per hour for alteam, the cost would be $1.74,
or 87 cents an acre. A Fordson Tractor plows on an
average of seven acres a day. The cost per acre
averages not !more than 75 cents per acre for gas and
oiL The Fordson does three and a half times as
much plowing in a day at a smaller cost per acre.
Suppose you are hauling produce to market or bring-
- ing out supplies. If the town is twenty miles away it
will take you a whole day to make the return trip
with horses. If you have a heavy load and the
weather is hot it will take you two days. If it took
you twelve hours, the cost at 17.4 cents an hour for
your team would be $2.09. The average cost of run-
ning a Ford, Truck, for gas and oil, is 43/ cents a mile
or $1.80 for the forty miles. But with the Ford
Truck you can make the return trip in four hours.
The truck enables you to make three times as many
trips and at a lower cost per trip.
But this is not all.. If you motorize your farm you
can get up an hour later in the morning. You have
no horses U. feed, groom or harness. You start work
after breakfast.
When dinner is ready you stop at the end of the field,'
drive your tractor direct to the house, eat your dinner,
_and rest till it is time to go to work again.
In the afternoon your motor works just as well though
the sun is hot and the flies are bad.
And at night when work is over you are through for
the day,—no horses to rub down, feed or water.
You are always free to leave your farm for picnic or
_ vacation --no worry about horses left behind to be
cared for.
Every way you look at it the motor has the advantage over the horse. I.
means shorter hour, on the farm, more -work done in less time and at less cost.
J. F. Daly
Cook Bros.
.- t Dealer
Dealers
Seaforth
Hensall
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