Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1922-09-22, Page 7a. 8. AT$IN801ti, 14)44 tOit Graduate of the royal ConiSt Dotal Surgeons of Ontario *• of Ib. University of Toronto. Lata Dis- trict Dotal Mee, Military DlstrIot, • No. I I,iondon, Ont. Office hours at Bayfield+ Ont. Monday, Wednesday, PFrrdiday'rind Seturday, from one to 120 p.m. 2814-12 L. DB. F. J. R. FORSTER Bie, Ear, Nose aad Throat Graduate in Medicine, University of 'Toronto. Late Assistant New York Ophthal- mei and Aural Institute, Moorefleld's Sys and Golden Square Throat Hos- pitals, London, Eng. At office in Scott Block, over Umbach's Drug Store, Seaforth, third Wednesday in each month from 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. 58 Waterloo Street South, Stratford. Prone 267, Stratford. CONSULTING ENGINEERS 1 James, Proctor & Redfern Limited. 36 Toronto St., Toronto, Can. Bridges, Pavements, Waterworks, Sewer- age Systems, Ineineratora, Factories, Arbitrations, Litigattoa. Phone Adel. 1044. Cable: "JPRCO"Toronto OUR FEES—Usually paid out or the owner we save our diente. MERCHANTS CASULTY CO. Specialists in Health and Accident Insurance. Polioies liberal and unrestricted. Over $1,000,000 paid in losses. E xceptional opportunities for local Agents. 904 ROYAL BANK BLDG., 4778-50 Toronto, Ont. LEGAL It S. HAYS. Barrister Solicitor, Conveyancer and Ylotary Public. Solicitor for the Do- minion Bank. Office in rear of the Do- minion Bank, Seaforth. Money to Nan. art BEST & BEST Barristers, Solicitors, Convey- ancers and Notaries Public, Etc. Office in the Edge Building, opposite The Expositor Office. PROUDFOOT, KILLORAN AND HOLMES Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries Pub - .1e, ete. Money to lend. In Seaforth -an Monday of each week. Office in Kidd Block. W. Proudfoot, K.C., .1. L. Killoran, B. E. Holmes. 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 !'ever 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's office, Sea - forth. MEDICAL C. J. W. HARN, M.D.C.M. 425 Richmond Street, London, Ont., Specialist, Surgery and Genio-Urin- ary diseases of'rnen 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- dl of Canada; Post -Graduate Member of Resident Medical staff of General Hospital, Montreal, 1914-15; Office, 2 doors east oiv Post Office. Phone 58. Hensall, Ontario. DR. F. J. BURROWS Office and residence, Goderich street east of the Methodist church, Seaforth Phone 48. Coroner for the County of Huron. DR. C. MACKAY C. Mackay honor graduate of Trin. sty 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, Lon- donEngland. Office—Back of Do- minion Bank, Seaforth. Phone No. 5, Night calls answered from residence, Victoria street, Seaford. 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 or The Expositor Office. Charges mod- ' erste and satisfaction guaranteed. R. T. LUKER Licensed auctioneer for the County of Httron. Salea attended to m all parts of the county. Seven years' ex- psriente in Manitoba and Saskatche- wan. Terms reasonable. Phone No. 175 r 11, Exeter '-entralia P. 0., R. E No 1. Orders left at The Huron No Office, peafortb, promptly A Novel Of Which He Is Not the Hero. By F. HOPKINSON SMITH. TORONTO McLEOD & ALLEN (Continued from last week.) And ao the boy struggled on, grow- ing in Bodily strength 'and mental exper'ence, still the- hero among the melt for his heroic rescue of the "Boss"—a reputation which he never lost• making friends every day both in the village and in New York and keeping them; absorbed in his slen- der library, and living within his means, which small as they were, now gave him two rooms at Mrs. Hick's,—one of which he had fitted up as a little .sitting -room and in which Ruth had poured the first cup of tea, her father and some of the village people being guests. His one secret—and it was his only one—he kept locked up in his heart, even from Peter. Why worry the dear old fellow, he had said to him- self a dozen times, since nothing would ever come of it. While all this had been going on in the house of MacFarlane, much more astonishing things had been develop- ing in the house of Breen. The second Mukton Lode scoop,— the one so deftly handled the night of Arthur Breen's dinner to the di- rectors,—ha ng somehow struck a snag in the scoowith the result that most of the ' "scoopings" had been spilled over the edge there to be gathered up by the gamins of the Street, instead of being hived in the strong boxes of the scoopers. Some of the habitues in the orchestra chairs in Breen's office had cursed loud and deep when they saw their margins melt away; and one or two of the directors had broken out into open revolt, charging Breen with the fiasco, but most of the others had held their peace. It was better to crawl sway into the tall grass there to nurse their wounds than to give the enemy a list of the killed and wounded. Now and then an outsider—one who had watched the battle from afar—saw more of the fight than the contest- ants themselves. Among these was Garry Minott. "You heard how Mason, the Chi- cago man, ouchred the Mukton gang, didn't you?" he had shouted to a friend one night at the Magnolia— "Oh, listen! boys. They set up a job on him,—he's a countryman, you know a poor little countryman—from a small village called Chicago—he's got three millions, remember, all in hard cash. Nice, quiet motherly old gentleman is Mr. Mason—butter wouldn't melt in his mouth. Went into Mukton with every dollar he had —so kind of Mr. Breen to let him in —yes, put him down for 2,000 shares more. Then Breen & Co. began to hoist her up—five points—ten points —twenty points. At the end of the week they had, without knowing it, bought every share of Mason's stock. Here Garry roared, as did the others within hearing. "And they've got it yet. Next day the bottom dropped out. Some of them heard Mason laugh all the way to the hank. He's cleaned up half a million anal gone back hone—`so afraid his moths would spank him for being nu'. i.l:e o' nights without his nurse,'" an_1- again Garry's laugh rang out with i such force and earnestness that the glasses on Biffy's table chinked in response. This financial set -back, while it had injured, for the time, Arthur Breen's' reputation for being "up and dress- ed," had not, to any appreciable ex-' tent, curtailed his expenditures or narrpwed the area of his social do- 1 main. Mrs. Breen's dinners and en- tertainments had been as frequent and as exclusive sive and Miss Corinne had continued to run the gamut of the gayest and best patronized func- tions without, the Scribe is pained to admit, bringing home with her for good and all both her cotillion favors and the gentleman who had bestowed them. Her little wren like Rof1 hair )'r eve ' f so out04q lsld0 Ai?S) she Dung het 8Weetetit and prettiest, rat sonmehow; when the' song, was over and the crumbs 'ail eaten (and there were often' two din- ners, a week and at least one dancer, orf went the male birds to other 'and more captivating roosts. Mrs. Breen, of course, raved when Corinne at last opened the door of her cage for Garry,—went to bed, in fact, for the day, to accentuate her despair and mark her near approach to death because of it—a piece of in- consistency she could well have spar- ed herself, knowing Corinne as she had, from the day of her birth, and remembering as she must. have done, her own escapade with the almost penniless young army officer who af- terward became Corinne's father. Breen did not rave; Breen rather liked it. Garry .fiad no money, it is true, except what he could earn,— neither had Corinne. Garry -seemed to do as he darned pleased,—so did Corinne;—Garry had no mother,— neither had' Corinne so far as yield- ing to any authority was concerned. "Yes,—let 'em marry,—good thing— begin at the bottom round and work up—" all of which meant that the honorable banker was delighted over the prospect of considerable more ' freedom for himself and considerable less expense in the household. And so the wedding had taken place with all the necessary trimmings; awning over the carpeted sidewalk; four policemen on the curb; detect- ives in the hall and up the staircase and in the front bedroom where the jewels were exposed (all the direc- tors of the Mukton Lode were repre- sented); crowds lining the sidewalk; mob outside the church door—mob in- side the church door and clear up to the altar; flowers, palms, special choir, with little bank -notes to the boys and a big bank -note to the lead- er; checks for the ranking clergy- man and the two assistant clergy- men, not forgetting crisp bills for the sexton and the panitor and the police- men and the detectives and every- body else who could hold out a hand and not be locked up in jail•for high- way robbery. Yes, a most fashion- able and a most distinguished and a most exclusive wedding—there was no mistake about that. No one had ever seen anything like it before; some hoped . they never would again, so great wasthe crush in the drawing -room. And not only in the drawing -room, but over every square inch of the Muse for that matter, from the front door where Parkins's assistant (an extra man from helmenico's) shouted out— "Third floor back for the gentlemen and second fluor front for the ladies" —to the innermost recesses of the library made over into a banquet hall where that great functionary himself was pouring champagne into batteries of tumblers as if it were so much water, and distributing cuts of cold salmon and portions of terrapin with the prodigality of a charity commit- tee serving a picnic. And then the heartaches over the cards that never came; and the pres- ents that were never sent, and the wrath of the relations who got be- low the ribbon in the church and the airs of the strangers who got above it; and the tears over the costly dresses that did not arrive in time and the chagrin over those they had to wear or stay at home—and the heat and the jam and tear and squeeze —and the aftermath of wet glasses on inlaid tables and fine -spun table- cloths burnt into holes with careless cigarettes; and the little puddles of ice cream on the Turkish rungs and silk divans and the broken glass and smashed china!—No—there never had been such a wedding! This over, Corinne and Garry had gone to housekeeping in a dear little Cut, to which we may he sure Jack w.o rarely ever invited (he had only rte aived "cards" to the church, an invitation which he had religiously accepted, standing at the door so he could how to them both as they pass- ed) --the two, I say, had gone to a dear little flat—so dear, in fact, that before the year was out Garry's fin- ances were in such a deplorable con- dition that the lease could not be re- newed, and another and a cheaper nest had to he sought for. It was at this time that the new church to be built at Corklesville needed an architect—a fact which ,Tack communicated Y to Garr . Then it happened that with the aid of Mac- Farlane and Holker Morris the com- mission was finally awarded to that "rising young genius who had so justly distinguished himself in the atelier of America's greatest archi- teet—tHolker Morris—all of which cAiai7ril(s a 'tree gi'6aBya. WO a µdonel�1 conditions. Auhifi wet mummy is a Tonle and ma Pttlltlor. DP 1eln tb 1Aail an nlld u the ye il CATARRH - BDIC NE elM is I.ti ork, [tons anal allow' Nature iil do rte wore Drugginnr. C�t esitars tree. 8: J. Cbeney & 1W„ Toledo, Ohio. Garry wrote himself and had insert- ed in the county' paper, he having called upon the editor for that very purpose. This service—and it came 1 at a most critical time in the young man's affairs—the Scribe is glad to say, Garry, with his old-time gener- ous spirit suddenly revived gracious- ly acknowledged, thanking Jack 1 heartily and- with meaning in his voice, as well as MacFarlane—.not forgetting Ruth, to whom he sent a mass of roses as big as a bandbox. The gaining Of this church build- ing—the largest and most important given the young architect since he had left Morris's protection and guid- ance—decided Garry to give up at once his expensive quarters in New York and move to Corklesville. So far as any help from the house of Breen was concerned, all hope had' ended with the expensive and much - advertised wedding (a shrewd finan- cial move, really, for a firm selling shady securities). Corinne had cooed, wept, and then succumbed into an illness, but Breen had only replied: "No, let 'em paddle their own canoe." This is why the sign "To Let," on one of the new houses built by the Elm Crest Land and Improvement Company—old Tom Corkle who own- ed the market garden farms that gave the village of Corklesville its name, would have laughed himself sore had he been alive—was ripped off and various teams loaded with all sorts of furniture, some very expensive and showy and some quite the contrary —especially the belonging to the ser- vants' room—were backed up to the newly finished porch .with its second coat of paint still wet, and their con- tents duly distributed upstairs and downstairs and in my lady Corinne's chamber. "Got to put on the brakes, old man," Garry had said one day to Jack. The boy had heard of the ex- pected change in the architect's fin- ances before the villa 'was rented, and so Garry's confidential communica- tion was not news to him. "Been up to look at one of those new houses. Regular bird cage, but we can get along. Besides, this town is going to grow and I'm going to help it along. They are all dead out here—embalmed, some of them—but he opened the dead." Here o d pamph- let p let of the company— "See this house—an hour from Now• York; high ground; view of the harbor—(all >r lie, Jack, but it goes all the same); sewers, running water, gas (lot of the last,—most of it in the prospec- tus) It's called Elm Crost—beauti- tul, isn't it,—and not a stump with- in a mile." Jack always remembered the in - interview. That Garry should help along anything that he took an in- tereskt,,in was quite in the line of his ambition and ability. Minott was as "smart as a steel trap," Holker Mor- ris had always said of him, "and a wonderful fellow among the men. He can get anything out of them; he would really make a good politician. His handling of the Corn Exchange showed that." And so it was not surprising,—not to Jack,—that when a new village councilman was to be elected,• Garry should have secured votes enough to be included among their number. Nor was it at all wonderful that after taking his seat he should have been placed in charge of the village funds so far as the expenditures for con- tract work went. The prestige of Morris's office settled all doubts as to his fitness in construction; and the splendor of the wedding—there could still be seen posted in the houses of the workmen the newspaper cuts showing the bride and groom leaving the church—silenced all opposition to "our fellow townsman's" financial responsibility, even when that oppos- ition was led by so prominent a ward heeler as Mr, Patrick McGowan, who had planned to get the position him- self—and who became Garry's arch enemy thereafter. In these financial and political ad- vancements Corinne helped but lit- tle. None of the village people in- terested her, nor did she put herself out in the least to be polite to them. Ruth had called and had brought her hands full of roses—and so had her father. Garry had continued to thank them both for their good word to the church wardens—and he himself now and then spent an evening at Mac- Farlane's house without Corinne, who generally pleaded illness; but the lit- tle flame of friendship which had flashed after their arrival in Corkles- ville had died down again. This had gene on until the ac- quaintance had practically ended, ex- cept when they met on the trains or in crossing the ferry. Then again, Ruth and her father lived at one end of the village known as Corklesville, and Garry and Corinne lived at the other end, known as Elm Crest, the connecting link being the railroad, n "I Was Run Down" "Body was completely covered with Boils" "If you have ever had boils, you know how painful and annoying even one or two eau be. But imagine having your whole hotly almost ep- tirely covered with them! I mu a watchmaker by trade, raking a spe- cialty of repairing the highest grade movements. This is probably the most trying of any mechauical work, particularly for a uercuus iudividnal like me. Working nailer great strain both day and night for three months, broughtmealunst toa stnteofeoilapse. I was so irritable and ncrvnna that the elightest'thing would 'send me up in the air.' If r managed to get a few hours of sleep at night 1 was lucky. I had no appetite for food. I certainly was miserable. During this tine boils began to appeer on different pens of my body and the pain from than made life a misery. Mystiffed ngwas so great at times that I felt there was nothing left for me to do brit to end it all. I consulted doctors but they all told me that if I didn't give up my work and live out of doors, I would itbinto adecline. As I had no money I couldn't do this. In fact paying doctors' bilis and buying medicines usedup all the money !made. Finally in desperation, I decided that I would either kill or cure nysr91, so I began to study my case. I realized th.it I was ascan nletely ren down as anyone could possibly be wttht a bad case of nerves. What 1 needed was building ❑p A tier reading de-er,p!iuns of different preparati0n5, the one which appeared to be the best for me was Carnol. It has. simply per.nrmed miracles for me. Poor bottles have done mote than nwuths of travel abroad. I feel like a Ivo -rear old. I steep eight hours every night and eat three good =ealsaclay. Afyskin is like a baby's, free from blenlclies of any kind and I have now almost forgotten that I have ever had such things as nerves. 1 want everyhrnl who Is ailing to know about Carnol, because I have such faith in it I be- lieve it will cure any human ill." Mr. J. 1I. Mc. C. Carnol is sold by your druggist, and if yon can conscieetionsly say, after you have tried it, that it hasn't done yon any good, return the empty bottle to him and he will re/mid your mur money I SOLD BY B. UMBACH, Phm. B. Hay - Fever ASTHMA, SUMMER COLDS. You don't need a month's treat. ment to prove the worth of RAZ -MAH! RELIEF IS IMMEDIATE. It restores normal breathing,— stops mucus gatherings in nasal and bronchial passages, assures long nights of quiet sleep. `1.00 at your_ druggist's, or write foe tree trial to Templetono, Toronto. Sold by E. Umbach. In Walton by W. G. Neal. ,8 to the3e,baelef• On 0 ,- they .parted to go- to VA*'i homes, to ,tybic Garry Weil, that . that it wa"s an Outrage annt"k was coming up ver''. ntfg t 4l of which he tailed to do when't)te;. -proposed visit was .talked over With Corinne. None of this affected Jack. He i would greet Corinne as affectionate, ly and cordially ea he had ever done, Ho had taken her measure years be- fore, but that made no difference to him, he never forgetting that shd was his uncle's norinal daughter; that they had been sheltered br the same roof and that she therefore in a way belonged to his people. More- ; o'ier, he realized, that like himself, she had been compelled to give u > many of the luxuries and surrouud- I ings to which she had been accustom - cd and which she loved,—worthless Inow to Jack in his freedom, but still ' precious to her. This in itself was enough to bespeak his sympathy. Not that she valued it; she rather snif- ' fed at it. 6 "I wish Jack wouldn't stand with his hat off until I get aboard the train," she had told Carry one day shortly I after their arrival—"he makes me so conspicuous. And he wears such queer clothes. He was in his slouch , hat and rough flannel shirt and high boots the other day and looked like a tramp." "Better not laugh at Jack, Cory," Garry had replied; "you'll be taking your own hat off to him one of these days; we all shall. Arthur Breen missed it when he let him go. Jack's queer about some things, but he's a thoroughbred and he's got brains!" "He insulted Mr. Breen in his own house, that's why he let him go," snapped Corinne. The idea of her ever taking off her hat, even figur- atively, to John Breen, was not to be brooked,—not for an instant. "Yes, that's one way of looking at it, Cory, but I tell you if Arthur Breen had had Jack with him these last few months—ever since he left him, in fact,—and had listened once in a while to what Jack thought was fair and square, the firm of A. B. & Co, would have a better hold on things than they've got now; and he wouldn't have dropped that million either. The cards don't always come up the right way, even when they're stacked." "It just served my stepfather right 5. ROnerve •'PV0V, Teach rehire iii Steward them for doing work prose upon them the tntpontonc ings. Why not apes !Tn account ltDd deposited and nt witThdrawMnnbilMn by ma auk? . 14lonpy BRANCHES • IN Tuts DISTRICT: Brucefield St Marys Kieletorl Exeter Clinton mall ' Znrd(«tr,, INDEPENDENCE THE DOMINION GOVERNMENT ANNUITIES SYSTEM affords an unequalled opportunity for the investment of small or large amounts for the purchase of an annuity of from $50 to $5,000 a year for life, to begin immediately or at any future age desired, and to be paid in monthly or quarterly instai- mentp. Annuities may be purchased on a single life, or on the lives of two persons jointly. After contract issues, no restriction as to residence. Employers may purchase for their employees—School Boards for their teachers—Congregations for their Ministers. Cannot be seized or levied upon. No medical examination required. Free from Dominion Income Tax. SECURITY—THE DOMINION OF CANADA Descriptive booklet may be obtained by applying to the Postmaster or by writing, postage free, to S. T. Bastedo, Superintendent Dominion Government Annuities, Ottawa. When writing, kindly state sex, and age or ages last birthday. for not giving us some of it, and I'm glad he lost it," Corinne rejoined, her anger rising 'again. "I have nev- er forgotten him for not making me an allowance after I married, and I never will. He could, at least, have continued the one he always gave me," Garry winked sententiously, and remarked in reply that he might be making the distinguished money -bags an allowance himself one of these fine .i days, and he could if some of the things he was counting on came out top side up; but Corinne's opinions did not change either toward Jack or her stepfather. t, CHAPTER XIX When the pain in Jack's heart over Ruth became unbearable, there was always one refuge left—one balm which never failed to soothe, and that was Peter. For though he held himself in readiness for her call, being seldom absent lest she might need his ser- vices, their constrained intercourse: brought with it more pain than plea- sure. It was then that he longed for the comfort which only his dear men- tor could give. On these occasions Mrs, McGuffoy would take the lace over off Miss Felicia's bureau, as a matter of pre- caution, provided that lady was away and the room available, and roll in a big tub for the young gentleman —"who do be washin' hisself all the time and he that sloppy that I'm afeared everything will he spi'lt for the mistress," and Jack would slip out of his working clothes (he would often come away in his flannel shirt and loose tie, especially when he was late in paying off) and shed his heavy boots with the red clay of Jersey still clinging to their soles, and get into his white linen and black clothes and dress shoes, and then the two chums would lock arms and saunter up Fifth dine either Avenue to d her at one of t Peter's clubs or at some house where he and that "handsome young ward of yours, Mr, Grayson—do bring him again," were so welcome. If Miss Felicia was in town and her room in use, there was never any change in the programme, Mrs. Mc- Culley rising to the emergency anti discovering another and somewhat larger apartment in the next house hut two—"for one of the finest gentle- men ye ever saw and that quiet," etc. —into which Tack would move and which the good woman would insist on taking full charge of herself. it. Was on one of these blessed and always welcome nights, after the two had been dining at "a little crack in the wall," as Peter called a near- by Italian restaurant, that he and Jack stopped to speak to Isaac Cohen whom they found closing his shop for the night. Cohen invited them in and ,Tack, after following the little tailor through the deserted shop—all the work people had left—found himself to his great surprise, in a small room at the rear, which Isaac opened with a key taken from his vest pocket, and which even in the dim light of a single gas jet, had more the appear- ance of the den of a scholar, or the workshop of a scientist., than the private office of a fashioner of clothes. Peter only stayed a moment—long enough to borrow the second volume of one of Isaac's books, but the quaint interior and what it contained made a great impression on .Tack, --so much so that when the twn had said good- night and mounted the stairs to Peter's rooms, it was with increased interest that the boy listened to the old fellow who stopped on every landing to tell him some incident con- nected with the little tailor and his Continued on Page 6 Your Men Folks like to Put Thing* Off; WhyThis That'sIs Addressed to You Women. If there is one in your family circle or among your friends who is having difficulty with their hearing, or if they are suffering from head noises, you can help them with Leonard Ear On. It does give relief: It has relieved thousands since it was first placed on sale in 1907. It is riot put in the ears but "In- serted in the nostrils" and "rubbed gently in back of the ears." It's a household necessity. Don't put off getting it. $1 At AB Druggists Descriptive Circular and Testimoni- als sent on request. Made In Canada I. H. BEDLINGTON Co., Bales Agents, Toronto A. O. LEONARD, Inc. 70 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y. 1 e fttii f of Opel TORONTO The Only Hotel of its Kind in Canada Centrally situated, close to shops and theatres. Fireproof. Home comfort and hotel conven- ience. Finest cuisine. Cosy tea room open till midnight. Single room, with bath, $2.50; double room, with bath, $9.00. Breakfast, 50c. to 75c. Luncheon, 65c. Dinner, $1.00. Free teal yt Take -Black ad service Tfromln. tradins booklet 240 JARVIS STREET - - TORONTO, ONT. The Question of Price Price seems tie main consideration --•but it is well to remember that some clothes are dear at any price, how- ever low. "Clothes of Quality" are a positive proof that Cermet Styles, Fine Fabrics and Ftrat-elass Tailoring can be ob- tained at reasonable price& Before you buy your new Suit, give us a wall and look over our Samplea and Styles. We can save you dogma and give you real value. Suits $20 Up sA "My Wardrobe" Main St., Seaforth I,aA !i'wkillvid'Lrk49A1u5iM1Ku'dLiS, .41.W.tra"li.'ititasi t' 0