HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1921-07-15, Page 6�. $. FORSTER `
NOS tell Throat
¥adicine, University of
t:'New York Ophthal.
Ural :Instttnto, Moorefield's
Golden Square Throat Hos-
don, Eng. At Mr. J. Ran-
a iiteaforth, third Wednes-
eaeh .month from 11, a.m. to
sofa, 68 Waterloo Street, South,
Hord:. Phone 267, Stratford.
•
a.
CONSULTING ENGINEERS
James, Proctor $ Redfern, Ltd.
E. M. Proctor, B.A..Sc., Manager
36 Toronto St., Toronto, Can.
Bridge., Pea. SysPyavveemenlnel eratomWaterworks,eewe
Schools,
Public Halle .iroualngs. Factories. Arbi-
trations. Litigation.
Our ly
t of
the rooms we we ear ar'clients
MERCHANTS CASUALTY CO.
Specialists in Health and Accident
Insurance.
Policies liberal and unrestricted.
Over $1,000,000 paid in losses.
Exceptional opportunities for local
Agents. •
904 ROYAL BANK BLDG..
2773-50 Toronto, Ont.
JAMES McFADZEAN
Agent for Ilowick Mutual Insur-
.ance Company. Successor to John
Harris, Walton.
address BOX 1, BRUSSELS
or !'HONE 42. 2769x12
•
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
lean. ,
J. M. BEST
Barrister, Solicitor, Conveyancer
and Notary Public. Office upstairs
over Walker's Furniture Store, Main
tsr.reet. Seaforth.
PROUDFOOT- KTLT.ORAN AND
HOLMES
Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries Pub-
lic. etc. Money to lend. In Seaforth
on Monday of each week. Office in
Kidd Block. W Prnudfoot, E.G., J.
L. Killoran, B. E. Holmes. 4.
VETERINARY
F. HARBURN, V. S.
Honor graduate of Ontario
V
eterin=
tryC01lege, and honorarymember 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 calla
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-
arinary 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, reheumatism, acute, chronic
and nervous disorders; eye, ear, nose
end throat. Consulation free. Office
above Umback's Drug store, Seaforth,
'Tuesdays and Fridays; S 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 Phyhicians 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 66.
Hensall, Ontario.
DR. F. J. BURROWS
Office and residence, Goderich street
east of the Methodist church, Seaforth
tNaueusi crop i,npra nuke's Service.)
"In the Pacific Northwest, wheat
sruut spores live over winter in the
soil aad the ordinary treatment with
formaldehyde is not effective unless
Intent has been a rotation 01 crops
ii hick causes the stout spores to die.
"An a consequence, dense clouds of
rani! spores, which may he seen for
tile:, arise from the lie eshers and
•.,d wheat contagion over the en-
u:o ouuutry," says Sir. V. Stdalcuss-
,.' .. l' -Tie Auili') t'hewlcal Cont-
Su:uctimes wh,'n this smut cloud
. • p1 :,perly (1020 d with alt', a picee of
IL ;rc or tail will (treks a spark in
Itc ,i;'.trator an,l the result is an
'team!, veers.. there a (hirneen'inch
a' I''..r. nee (lines to pi,,'i•a and
: n k:!lu,:• and injuring the crt•w.
i';1,' ti•he.ii smut lax :lit:Uuitlt! IO
,l„hul''. 11 i:i 1:1 (sheat in-
- rely pri v'•nta bee by ireal-
'•t •ol the reed. bol 'So ;((inns has
i! 1,e,'0:u, that th.• As''':'ic,ua Depart -
!nerd of AC' ,'milli r,• II:^: a st•pal•ate
'r fur amid;,' I
'It gill b„ v, oil far Ihr• Canadian
t: I" I,'1-., 1u 1,1' „-111 mem tree, ever
gr a ten.; (Ott'enched d'hil„ ll is ceul-
p, i..ulisly easy."
(.`::,n„e:,l ' 1,•p f,..vn,n .',, nt N. (vice,)
''in !.ser. reduced
s
lac Ile sten 1,1 1,r'1t•, le to oltl Ilis-
1'
:,'.k'•1! Ire 111 al' Car
et e,t':nin al the leronLal lumi'ktt and
is divided ,ntu r+. ., hulnog."taus
halves by Ite..tn.; of an Inceoious
::,'p:tr.uur inn, whirl) the semen., is
p'''ii -
-This din Iiis ;and mix's the grain
SO ei'ettly 1Ii.•I 1i": Iwo puri ions tray
be weighed w'I'hout the iarlance of
11101'e titan a P•w (:rains." says Chi,'f
Culver, of the '!'ol'''io Produce
Exchange.
"The object rii' this ie that when
th'e grain arrives at i:e destination
and the buyer should complain of lis
quality, a re -inspection can elways
be demanded from the identical saut-
ple from which the tir',t inspection
was made.
"These res^eve portions are kept
for rev' rtl month:-, and in case of ex-
pel I. they prove invaluable in settling
complaints as 10 quality,
"Itapectinm r.uw'ndays is all otll-
-'. tl and the rosy, -tor cannot be tam-
pe:ad with l'io'ns" fid• has no idea
grain he it inspecting. Grain
., - ..'semi, is as Tillable as the coin-
er silver.”
.kiirankautthzstumps
Phone 46. Coroner for the County of .1•. ii. i;:..;1':' ;..i:iii 1, . • and
Huron.
..,re: of '... 'vinic: t',., . utiGte
DR. C. MACKAY
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- I
lege of Physicians and Surgeons of
Ontario; pass graduate courses in
Chicago Clinical School of Chicago;
Royal Ophthalmic Hospital, London,
England; University Hospital, Lon-
don,. England. Office—Back of Do-
minion Bank, Seaforth. Phone No. 5,
Night calls. answered from residence,
Victoria street, Seaforth.•
AUCTIONEERS
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
:;for The -Expositor Office. Charges mod -
'(crate and satisfaction guaranteed.
R. T. LUKER
Licensed -auctioneer for the County
Huron. Sales attended to in ail
oft'> county. Seven years' ex-
ein>,itoba and Saskatehe-
onable. Phone NA.
Centralia P. O., $.
left at The Huron
Seaforth, promptly
•
' 1, I'i. i. I.. :•. .. :-Int ,-, r;'ttig is
a veal pint:,:: n no lit,- t.:.:n win is
1..rtuir.e in a t ,r: -over r,.;.. „', I" iho
m:.n, ho is p„y r I,,;:-.1 on idle
s.ulnlplaudt r II) the 11U111l s, ha in
kl":a. g .;'it f..:tn at a compare.-
!iv. -.1)"
low lI'nee.
"The m;l,s', gnickcnt :ca:l most.
economical v.a•r of cle:u'irg 0111
alum! to soil '-i' s. i -i ti nth a stump -
miller and Wile rep'.” :nits Sir. If. S.
e..;nadiao Steel &
bb'itr Co. •.
-.The mee or n pl:lley block so de-
�.ig;let] Ihi,.t oily nit'nbrr of them can
he used Ip dglble, (rills, al' quad-
ruple the pi -,Wer ui Ili : ::,rhino, will
ran gn,•i t)te tuo:a SI el amps
without fail,
Ilynamit,' is nerd, the root.;
ere left to be grubbed out or pulled
'tut by team, all Of which Is' slow,
Il.nr,l work. With the stunp-puller
rued a wire rope, the job is clean and
complete.
"A goorl slump -puller will pay for
itself in the saving; of nand labor on
a few acres of ground. 16 say noth-
ing of the increase of crop values.
You can use it In the wet season
when you can work at nothing else.
In fact, the mschine works easier
when the -ground Is wet.
"We need every acre."
Children Ory
VCR FLEtCNER'S
CASTOPtaA
Kill them all, and the
germs too. 10c a packet
at Druggists Grocers
and General Stores.
as, pro
it in a
large plant
to get the
machines 'wi£iv the least 'tabor poss-
ible, and the machines themselves
are the last word in up-to-date con-
struction. Tn recent years they have
formed' a corporation to control the
price do a considerable extent.
The first Minder twine used was
called "manila." It was made from
the abaca plant, which grows in the
Philippines, and lookf much like the
1)ahane. Much of our binder twine is
still called manila twine, hut as a
matter of fact nearly all of it is aisal,
for the reakon that the manila twine
is altogether too expensive on ac-
count of the 'large amount of hand
labor used in its production.
t ttion in Yucatan,. have kle
i9 li lg
bootlegs :way,. The
ns are laid out so as
delves to the cleaning
WHERE GOLD IS OF LITTLE
VALUE
Gold coins are difficult things to
dispose of in Europe at the present
time, as visitors to the old world can
testify.
One very disgusted visitor stamped
his way put of the office of a United
States official in Germany recently.
What had happened to him had driv-
ers hint to sarcasm.
"Well, when we can make motor
cars and sewing machines out of gold
I suppose the yellow stuff will be
worth something," he said crushing-
ly to the offending official.
The visitor had tried to get the
official to accept front him a $20 gold
piece. In fact, he had extended the
glittering piece proudly to the of-
ficial, as if to say, "You don't see
much of this unrest •to goodness
money out this way, do you?" But
the official hadn't even reached out
his hand; he had been surprisingly
disinterested.
"We don't take gold here," he told
the visitor. "You can't get rid of it
tiny ntore'n if it was a zinc nickel."
'fhe visitor tried to argue, at first;
then he got mad,
"Gimme German ;narks" said the
,'Ilisial. "We'd rather have them
than the gold. (le to sonic bank and
trade your gold for• marks. Yup
w''. n'l get cis much for it as you would
far United States bills or checks un
New York, but you'll get sulnething.
Then c„nI' bark here with your Ger-
man marks .end we'll fix you out.”
"But the German murk ain't worth
even two cents," protested the visitor.
it'.; alines,: the cheapest money in the
world."
"Bring ,'rough of 'ens here, and
we'll be happy. They're better'n
geld." explained the official.
So the astonished visitor went out
int , the strange, cold European world
to .seek out some bank where he could
get almost as marls money for gold
• s he could for bills of the United
Steres Federal l Reservr Bank. He
sad the geld at a loss,as everyone
one Y
must de who brings the yellow metal
to Europe in the farm of money.
The chief thing that sten in Europe
demand of money these days is that
it be mobile. Old gold must stay
where you find it. It is against all
the laws of Europe to move it from
one country to another. No matter
what you buy from one country, you
cannot ship gold from your own,
country iota the other for the pur-
pose of making payments. You may
go to the officials of your own coun-
try and beg as you please for per-
mission to ship out gold, but they
will tell you to change your .gold for
paper and ship the paper away.
Europe is "dry" so far as gold is
conN,rned.
Silver does not stand any higher
than geld in the ;monetary scale in
Europe these days.
BINDER -TWINE
To bind enough bundles to produce
a bushel of grain takes on the aver-
age fifty feet of binding twine. Just
think of it, the average farm pro-
ducing 1.000 bushels of small grain
uses each year about ten miles of
binding twine. Most of the binder
twine comes from Yucatan in south-
ern Mexico and about.ten per cent.
from the Philippine Islands; If a
war between Mexico anti the United
States were to break Out it mightbe
necessary to try to find something to
take the place of the sisal fiber which
we get from Mexico. Flax fiber
;sakes a good twine, but unfortunate-
ly crickets and grasshoppers eat it.
Sisal fiber comes from a plant
which looks mach like the yucca. It
rase looks something like the pine -
tipple plant. The leaves are sharp,
stiff and swordlike. In Mexico they
set esu: large acreages of this sisal
el int. After five or six years the
elates are Surge enough so that a
dozen Icivcs or so can be cut off of
h eat twist' a year. The leaves erre
tied un in bundles and carried to a
machine which shreds off the green
part and leaves the fiber. It takes
the fiber from about" one hundred sis-
al plants to supply enough twine for
the average farmer. Ordinarily, in
Mexico, they plant about 1,000 of the
sisal plants to an acre, so you can
see that an acre of sisal is about en-
ough to supply binder twine for ten
farmers.
The Mexicans wise have developed
ate t (1,I I" 'e ti leaYi. nit l�t1 !i,.,t nail li,L(I
= 6.
Elm sates] to yew,
pipe"
a
Don't pass our door if you
need anything in our line.
We take as much care in
serving our customers as
we do to selecting the goods
we sell
W. W. ROBINSON
SEAFORTH
yid,iIiIll,dgc siili.mmr 11121111.puo91)W:imd0ll I;i111.
NORTH ONTARIO'S FORTUNE TO
• BE FOUND IN TIMBER.
Northern Ontario has much fine
farm land but fully ninety per cent.
of the whole area is fixed by natural
laws as a timber growing estate.
One crop will grow thereon—timber.
Fifty years ago, about the' only piece
Of timber that spelled value was White
Pine. Since then, the huge develop-
ment of the pulp and paper industry
has put a premium on spruce Tem-
aro
(Continued from pale 7)
you talk." Be -took a bit of her
brown frock betweenilia fingers and
held' it, gazing at' her with all his
crude. young .soul in his eyes. "Now
tell me," he added.
"Thes`e's only one of two things
about, the people who'll come tp Tem-
ple Barholm. Grandmother's talked
it ever with me. She knew all
abalhl those who came in the late
Mr. Temple Barholm's time, He
used to hate moat of them."
"Then why in 'thunder did be ask
them to come?"
"He didn't. They've got clever,
polite ways of asking themselves
sometimes. He couldn't bear the
Countess of Mallowe. come.
Grandmother says you may be sure
of that."
"What'll she come for?"
Little Ann's pause and contem-
plation of him were fraught with
thoughfulness.
"She'll come for you" at last she
said.
"She's got a daught she thinks
ought to have been married eight
years ago," annouced Hutchinson,
Tenebarom pulled at the bit of
brown tweed as though it were a
drowning man's straw.
porary dullness in the pulpwood mar- ' "Don't you drive me to drink,
ket at the present moment does not
affect the fact that the selling price
of spruce logs is certain to reach an-
other high figure in the very near
future. The fact that the American
and Canadian publishers turn out 40
million papers daily and must have as
raw material annually a pile of spruce
wood nine thotls:uul miles long, four
feet high and four feet wide, is suffi-
cient assurance that Ontario spruce
forest represents :In asset of supreme Who's he?"
market.
Forest fires have made such inroads f "He's one of those smooth, clever
value i n the world
upon Ontario's...eruct. domain that ones that's always getting up some
no citizen having the province's in- company or other selling the stock.
ferests at heart sail refrain from a- i He'll want you to know his friends
dinning every sensi'hle precaution in and he'll try to lead you his way."
his personal conduct. Unextinguish- I As Tembarom held to his 'bit of her
ed camp fires, liehtcrl matches and dr'es's, his eyes were adoring ones,
tobacco have robbed the province of which, was really net to be wondered'
millions of dollars
Property. To le:r.,. :
ing while in or L •:v
iS a plain invit til
The lighted mat.':•
are in the same a
caring fires are, :it.,
reports, the chef
less. The land
be cleared and lin• I
irent in that li-os'
law prescribes a nil
such fires shall be
elect of such cen:r,
Ann,' he said. Ivan frightened.
Your grandmother will have 'to lend
me the dog."
This was a flightiness which little
Ann did not encourage
"Lady Joan—that's her daughter
—is very grand and haughty. She's
a great beauty. You'll/look at her,
but perhaps she won't look at you.
But it's not her I'm troubled about.
I'm thinking about Captain Palliser
and men like him."
of public -owned
carne fire burn -
standing timber
I to a disaster.
rel the cigarette
•eg',try. Settlers'
•ording to official
,erste of timber
the settler must
s a necessary a -
The Ontario
thud by which
controlled. Ne-
il endangers the
Site and property of every_neighbor.
FOREST BURNING IS HEAVILY
PEN), l.IZED.
Negligence :the: results in forest
fires is now be.ng �punished by the There was a touch of fire in the for -
courts with heavy linos and iiuprison_ get -me -not blue of her eyes.
went. A few days ago five fishermen "Just you let them see—just you
appeared before Ow magistrate at let them see that you're not one
Woodstock, New Brunswick, charged they can hold light and make use of."
with leaving a campfire burning and But there she stopped short, 'looking
causing thereby a heavy loss in tim- up at him. He was looking down at
bee. The magistrate fined them fifty her with a kind of matureness in his
dollars each, .4, settler at Sudbury, exprgssion. "I needn't be afraid,"
Ontario, was sent to jail for careless- she said. "You can take care of your-
self; I ought to have known that."
"You did," he said, smiling; "but
you wanted to sort of help me. And
you've done it, by gee! just by say-
ing that thing about T. Tembarom,
You set me right on my feet. That's
you."
B,yfore they went away they paid
a visit to Strangeways in his remote,
undisturbed and beautiful rooms.
They were in a wing of the house
to the people as a whole. Contrary untouched by any ordinary passing
to _an all too common belief, the to and fro, and the deep windows
celerity of timber growing in Ontario looked out upon gardens which spring
is not more than sufficient to main- and summer would crowd with lovli-
tain the present number of forest in- uess from which clouds of perfume
dustries. Ontario, in truth, has not would float up to him on days when
a single acre of timber to waste. the sun warmed and the soft airs
livery body of timber may be regard- stirred the flowers, shaking the frag-
ed as an 'incubator' of employment, ranee front their full -incense cups.
and as a filler of pay envelopes. To
cause a forest fire is to destroy the
raw materials out of which the bulk
of employment in the Northland must
be derived. In the pulp and paper in-
dustry of Ontario, alone, the spruce
forests create a wage list that rims
every year in excess of 11 million
dollars.
at. She was adorable as her soft,
kind, wonderfully maternal girl face
• tried to control itself an that it should
express only just enough to help and
nothing' to disturb.
"1 don't want hint to spoil you. I
ncit't want anything to make you—
i different, 1 couldn't bear it."
"Why, Little Ann'?" he implored
quite low,
"Because," she said, feeling that
perhaps she was rash—because if
I you were different, you wouldn't be
T. Teutlbarom; and it was T. Tem -
barons that—that was T. Tembarom,"
she finished hastily.
He bent his head down to the bit
of tweed and kissed it.
"You just keep looking after me
like that," " he said,1
"and there's not
w with me."
can a a l
one of them da gety
She got up and he rose with her.
mess in burning his brush piles. Que-
bec magistrates have made many
such 'sentences in the interests of for-
est fire prevention, but the Sudbury
case marks the commencement of
more vigorous treatment of Ontario
,:Wenders,
The greater part of the timbered
area of Ontario is the property of the
Ontario Government and losses
through forest fires are a direct loss
war -
ODDITIES
An alliance has Ibsen formed be-
t:i'een a blackbird and a robin at
Nnank, Conn. The stair was at first
eaticetl carrying sticks, dry grass,
etc., to a corner of the eaves trough
in a hotter near the freight yard.
Some fussy observer did not like this
evidence of bird miscegenation --or
whatever it might be called — and
routed the saucy pair fronts this perch.
Now, however, they have taken pos-
sra5inn of the decayed 'spot in an you here. Think a bit. Little.—Little
apple tree where the limb had been a
sawed off, the blackbird making the "Yes," he broke forth. Of course,
Place larger with his long, sharp bill. Little Ann! Thank God I've not for -
The pair are never seen with others gotten." '-He took her hand in bath
of their species, .and it is evident that his and held it tenderly. You have a
they have been ostracized by both sweet little face. It's such a wise
robins and blackbirds. People in the little face!" His voice sounded
neighborhood of the odd nest are dreamy. ,
watchfully waiting. Ann drew him to his chair with a
coaxing laugh and sat down by him.
Of wild oats which got stuck to the "You're flattering me. You make
drum of a man's ear was found to he me feel quite shy," she said. You
sprouting, says a Saskatchewan read- know him, too," nodding toward Tenn-
sprouting,
But the white fog shut out to -day,'
even their winter bareness. There
were light and warmth inside, and
every added charm of rich harmony
of deep color and comfort made beau-
tiful. There were books and papers
waiting to 'be looked over,'but they
lay untouched on the writing -table,
and Strangeways was sitting close to
the biggest window, staring into the
fog, His eyes looked hungry and
hollow and dark. Ann knew .he was
"trying to remember" something.
When the sound of footsteps reach-
ed his ear, he turned to look at them,
and rose mechanically at sight of
Ann. But his expression was that of
a man aroused from a dream of far-off
places.
"I remember you," he said, hut
hesitated as though making an effort
to recall something.
"Of seems you do," said Little Ann.
You know me quite well. I brought
While stretching and yawning a
man in Norfolk County, Ontario, dis-
located his arm's. He also opened
his mouth so wide as to rause )ock-
jaw.
Four families living ir`''St. Johns-
bury, Vt., whose farme adjoin, have
been unfortunate. One has lost his
left eye, the next has lost his left
arm, the next his right foot and the
other has lost his light leg.
/JOIN 'YonCanlnotBn7
New Eyes
V�``t�tiiflr� °Cleayou
on EYEY ie,pazleadtlbyCmoningit'ion
Keep year Eyes clean, clear ane Healthy.
W ritefor Free EyeCare Book.
Ifiriaserelemet CoaeEastObisBitaa.Cifcaaa
barom.
"Oh, yes," he replied, and he looked.
up with a smile. "He is the one who
remembers. You said you did." He
had turned to Tembarom.
"You flet your life I do," Tem-
barom answered. "And you will, too,
before long."
"If I did not try so hard," said
Strangeways, thoughtfully." It seems
as if I were shut up in a room, and
so many things were knocking at the
doors—hundreds of them—knocking
because they want to be let in. I am
damnably unhappy'—damnably." He
hung his head and stared at the floor.
Tembarom put a hand on his should-
er and gave him a friendly shake.
"Don't you worry a bit," he said.
"You take my word for it. It'll all
come back. I',m working at it' my-
self." Strangeways lifted his head.
"You are the one I know best. I
trust you."' But there was the be-
ILIPi
MORRIS
10 f r15yri_�'
I itYrle
25farD59 Brown
Package
ginning of a slight drag in his voice.
I don't always ,quite—recollect—
your name. Not quite. Good heav-
ens! I mustn't forget that."
Little Ann was quite ready.
"You won't," she said, "because it's
different from other names. It be-
gins with a letter—just a letter and
then there is the name. Think."
"Yes, yes," he said anxiously.
Little Ann 'bent forward and fixede
her eyes on his with concentrated
suggestion. They had never risked
confusing him by any mention of the
new name. She began to repeat let-
ters of the alphabet slowly and dis-
tinctly until she reached -the letter
T.
"T," she ended with much emphasis
—"R. S. T."
His expression cleared itself.
'T," he repeated. "T—Tembarom.
R, S, T. How clever you are!" .
Little Ann'sa aze concentrated itself
still more intently.
"Now you'll never forget it again,"
she said, "because of the T. You'll
say the other letters until you come
to it. R, S. T."
"T. Tembarom," he ended relieved-
ly. "How you help me!" He took
her hand and kissed it very gently.
"We are all going to help you," ,
Ann soothed hint, "T. Tembarom most
of all."
"Say," Tembarom broke out in an
aside to her, "I'm going to come here
and try things on him every day.
When it seems like he gets on to
something; however little a thing it
is, I'm going to follow it up and see
if it won't get somewhere."
Ann nodded.
"There'll be something some day,"
she said. "Are you quite comfortable
here?" she asked aloud to Strange -
ways.
"Very comfortable, thank you," he
answered courteously. -"They are
beautiful rooms. They are furnished
with such fine old things. This is en-
tirely Jacobean. It's quite perfect."
He glanced about him. "And so quiet.
No one comes in here but my man,
and he is a very nice chap. I never
had a man who knew his duties
better."
Little Ann and Tembarom looked
at each other.
"I shouldn't be a bit surprised,"
she said after they had left the room,
"if it wouldn't be a good thing to get
Pearson to try to talk to him now and
then. He's been used to a man -ser-
vant."
"Yes," answered Tembarom.
"Pearson didn't rattle him, you bet
your life:
(Continued next week.)
LEONARD
EAR L
RELIEVES DEAFNESS and
STOP. HEAD NOISES. Simply
Rob it Back of the Ears and
Insert in Nostrils. Proof of suc-
cess
ue-cees will be ghee by the druggist.
MADE IN CANADA
6.171ft10 SALES Cfl., Sales Agents, Turista
a. a tensa; hr:.., Mot.,is Slit Are„ M. Y. Clty
ForS ale by
rt
U BA Seaforth
E.M CH, S
i
MERE IS ONLY ONE
GENUINE ASPIRIN
Only Tablets with "Bayer Cross':
are Aspirin—No others!
If you don't see the "Bayer Cross"
on the tablets, refuse them—they are
not Aspirin at all.
Insist on genuine "Bayer Tablets of
Aspirin" plainly stamped with the safety
"Bayer f'i'nes"--:\spirin prescribed by'
pbyiieians far nineteen years and proved
safe by million.. for Tle-,dache, 'T'ooth-
ache, elareclue -fRlheumatism, Lumbago,
unites. Neuritis, and Pain generally_
li: tot'. Iia hoses of it tablets --also
"I+cysr" packages. tita:ile in
('ane d s.
A- .irin is the trade mark (registered
i•1 ! ..••1.,), of T'•,ver Mamtfaetnre cf
• of fiel it'i'hr'tr.td.
ea , i.; i,'rii ';n,.wn that Aspirin
le•'!•. It. ,, ;n•t ap ices Ire, to at.retr.t the
tare Tablets of
11 ,; Iny. ltd., will he sl.atuped
j'^ll . ., i;...,- mark., the
PLUG SMOKING
7
TRY a plug and learn
what real pipe
satisfaction is. And
remember the big plug
holds the flavor to the
last. Master Mason
"is good tobacco" at
the rock -bottom price.
4