HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1922-10-20, Page 6Tack tri4aF ,. 'tui -
stell, Oog4 AQ HAng
1ipi
fain. hen Intake and
orchard' anti plenty of gooa water.
d. ruraliSs.il and telephone, and
nines Isom .A orthhaanda 8s miles
Vliaton. Will be sold cheap aad on
4aih.tetMa. Apply to J. 13. HENDERSON,
285648
) FOR. BALENORTki HALF OF
t .5, Coaeessfon 2. Mallett, contataiag 60
There are on the premises sgood
e babas and bank barn 84552 with a 15
jPt lean to. All fenced and ole drained
Ind seeded to grams. Five miles from Sea-
Iavth; 40 rode from school. For further Dar-
',tiDulars esaly on Lot 6, or phone 16-147, Sea -
forth, THOMAS E. LIVINGSTONE. R. R.
No. 2, Seaforth. 2856-4t
'PARM FOR SALE. -200 /ACRES, BEING
Lots 8 and 4. Concession 4, Hallett
Township, to good stateof cultivation. Large
stone house and two bank bares with ambllug
underneath; windmill and water piped
through the stable. Will seil with or with-
out crop and would separate either /sects.
For particulars apply to EDWARD PRYOR
R. R. No. 2, Seaforth. , - 2841-41
FARM FOR SALE.—FARM OF TWO HUN
dyed acre. adjoining the 'town of Sm.
forth, conveniently situated to all churches.
school. and Collegiate. There is a comfort -
"'able brick cottage with a cement kitchen:
barn 100x68 with .tone stabling underneath
for 6 homes, 76 head of cattle and 40 hogs
with steel stanchions and water before all
stack; litter currier and feed carrier and
two cementaltos; driving shed and plat-
form scales. Watered by a ruck well and
windmill. The form is well drained and In
high .tato of cultivation. The crop G all
in the ground --choice clay loam. Immedi-
ate possession. Apply to M. BEATON, R.
R ;2, Seaforth. Ont 2707-tf
THE EXECUTORS OF THE LATE ARCHI-
baid McGregor offer for sale Lot 16,
6th Conceariun, Mel:Slop, 100 noes of ant
class form lands. The land 6 in a Snit
class state of cultivation and there are
ereoted on the premise,, a gond frame dwel-
ling house. with kitchen attached; frame
barn 761/54 with stone foundation, stabling
Underneath and cement floors and water
throughout, driving house, pig pen and hen
house. Also about ten acres of good hard
wodd tech. The property is well fenced and
well drained and convenient to good markets,
churches and schools. For further particulars
apply to MISS LILLY J. MCGREGOR, on tks
premises, or to R. S. HAYS, Solicitor, Sea -
torah. Ont
FARM FOR SALE.—FOR SALE. LOT 6,
Concession 11, an,t1 vest half of Lot 5,
m
Ccncssion 10, H.R.S., ` Tu.kenith, n-
talning 150 acres. There are on the premises
good two -,tory brick house with alpte roof,
•large bank barn 100069 feet with first class
otobling, water ;n the harm, drive',hed 2606,
pig house and hen house. Two good spring
elks, also an .ver -flow lug npri ng. The
farm is all cleared but ,bout 20 acre, The
good hardwood bush, principally maple. All
well fenced and tile drained. Eight acre,
of fall wheat sown, 40 acres ready for spring
crop. The farm is situated 7 miles from
Senforth and 4 miles from Henaall. one-half
mile from school; rural mail and phone. Will
be sold on easy terms. Unles. sold by Spring
it will be for rent For further particulars
apply on the premise,, or address R. R. No.
2. Kippen. ANGUS McKINNON. 28584f
•
eRgAm WANTED CREAM
Ship by Express; send by our
cream drawers, or deliver your cream
to the Seaforth Creamery.
We are determined to give our
Patrons better service than ever.
Watch our prices, consistent with
our accurate weights and tests, and
consider the many advantages of hav-
ing a thriving dairy industry in your
district.
Do not ship your Cream away to
other Creameries ; we will guarantee
you as good prices here and our very
best services.
Write, or call inour cream drawers
and we will send you cream cans.
When in town, visit our Creamery,
which we want also to be your
Creamery. We are proud of oar
plant.
THE SEAFORTH CREAMERY CO,
C. A. Barber, Manager.
2884-tf
PRESTON PORTABLE
GARAGES AND COTTAGES
in several designs, also Steel
Truss Barns and Implement
Sheds, all sizes. For further
particulars write
The Metal Shingle & Siding Co.
Preston.
or
WILLIAM T. GRIEVE,
Walton- Phone 14-284.
Also agent for Chicago Auto
Oil Windmills.
THE McKTTd4OP MUTUAL
FIRE INSURANCE CO'Y.
HEAD OFFICE--SEAFORTH, ONT.
OFFICERS:
J. Connolly, Goderich - - President
Jas. Evans, Beechwood vice-president
T. E. Hays, Seaforth - Secy-Treas.
AGENTS:
Alex. Leitch R. R, No. 1, Clinton; Ed.
Hinchley, Seaforth; John Murray,
Brucefield phone 6 on 187, Seaforti;
J. W. Yeo Goderich; R. G. Jar-
mutb, Brodhagen.
DIRECTORS:_
William Rinn, No. 2, Seaforth; John
Besnewies, Brod'hagen• James Evans,
lock; Geo. McCartney, No. 8, Seafortk.
Beechwood; M. McEwen, Clinton; Jas
Connolly, Gederich• D. F. McGregor,
R. R. No, 8, Seaforth; J. G.1 Grieve,
No, 4;- Welton; Robert Ferris, K.
sajeit
are i creased
by Long Distance
Some quotations from recent
reports:
"We use Long Distance
extensively to call up
prospects and sell.”
"We use Long Distance to
all our sub -agents, to keep
in touch with sales."
"We depend on Long Dia- •
tance to sell our vulcan-
izing service,"
"We order parts in the
morning by Long Distance
and get them in the after-
noon."
"We pdt 'Use the Bell to
Sell' stickers oto all price
lists and sales literature
lie send out."
"Ask us about our FREE
LONG; DISTANCE SER-
VICE un BOW parts," a
Motor Sales Co. writes
uut-uf-town garages.
We can tell you haw go
nppi' Long Distance to
al ioet any bused ess
Miss L. M. McCormack
Manager
Every Ball Telephone is a
Long Deaton, Siofiott
DONT
THiS!
Use
LEONARD
EAR OIL..
IT DOES RELIEVE DEAFNESS
and HEAD NOISES. Simply rub
it in back of the ears and insert
in nostrils,
MADE IN CANADA
L. H. Bedlington & Co.
Saes Agents Tetreate
For sale in Seaforth by E.
Umbach, and all good druggistrt'
FOR BABY
"Safety First"
Four generations of babies
have been kept clean, fresh,
fragrant, and free from skin
troubles by the use of
BABY'S OWN
SOAP
Bast
J-Zaby
est
j'Jou
ALBERT SOAPS LIMITED MONTREAL
Men! - - ' Girls!
DON'T BE "LONESOME"
We put yon in correspondence
with FRENCH GIRLS, HAWA-
IAN, GERMAN, AMERICAN,
CANADIAN, etc., of both sex-
es, etc, who are,refln charm-
ing and wish to eorretPond for
amusement or marriage, if snit.
ed. JOIN OUR CORRESPOND%
ENCE CLUB, $1 per year; 4
months' trial, 50c, including full
privileges. PHOTOS FREE.
Join at once or write for full
information.
MRS. FLORENCE BELLAfl ,
200 Montague St., Brooklyn, N.Y
44 ;4 fix..: mea n.m a ,til x re„«•y`, .,.:«t`..,,
,•
the gretlt l fit io 44.0.
as related by TillBe';lpa�'p eatP+ea.
in, B.A., who wag a '1IA61111t@r pf tin)
staff of ,the Ilaileybuz:y High chool,
on her arrival with ether refugees
in Toronto recently,' Miss 'Cronin
gave a most graphic account of the
•sweep of names and the men who
played the part of heroes. Miss
Cronin said that for eeverel days the
country around had beep burning,but it had been thought there drag
no reason for the people of Hailey -
bury to feel alarmed. They paid
little attention to these fires, and
had no fear or premonition of the
catastrophe that was approaching.
Miss Cronin states that while return-
ing to school after -lunch on Wed-
nesday the wind showed Big -its 9f
freshening, the sky turned red frdhr
the fire in the bush. It was then
that many of the parents of chil-
dren attending school became alarm-
ed and they telephoned to have
their children sent home, which was
dyne, more to ease their minds
rather than for any fear of danger.
Still, the staff had no premonition
that the fire was fast creeping upon
thein. They remained in the sehool
and had afternoon tea. About four
o'clock the scriudsness of the fire
macre itself manifest whim one of
the teachers noticed the station `in
dames. The principal, Mr. Tukc,
warned the teachers that it might be
well for then] to avoid going near the
busiue:.s section of the towel, but they
had yet no sense of dungen•.
The fire swept from the station
direct to the dock along Main Street.
1 crossed through the smoke and
went to my boarding house near the
Cathedral. The family there was
leas ing town to get away from the
smoke anti 1 joined them, lea ring
everything behind. Our motor start-
ed a little east of the hospital. We
then turned towards Liskeard, but
again had to turn back, the centro
of the town being blocked with
smoke. We got out of the car and
followed the people thronging to the
heath east of the town. It was then
five o'clock. About three hundred
had collected un the beach along
with the cattle and animals.
amilies with small children,
nuns from the convent with their
group of little girl, hoarders, and
young and old of the population
crowded together by the water. No
one had brought anything except
blankets, coats and buckets to fight
the tire. By 5.30 we could sec the
town a mass of red smoke. Then
the buildings at the end of the pier
caught and burned like a torch."
"The wired up to this time had
been blowing from the north west,
but turning to the east and working
round to south we could see the
hotels, the armouries, the mill and
the cathedral catch and burn rapid-
ly. Then the wooden houses on the
shore, a hundred feet or more be-
hind where we were collected burned.
This would be about 6 o'clock, when
the showers of sparks began falling
upon the people on the beach. The
women and children were put under
blankets and the men drenched them
with water to keep their clothing
from burning."
"This rain of sparks and cinders
continued for an hour, when the
wind began to blow to the south-
west, with the result that we could
leave the' water, and gradually the
people ventured to make their way
to the still burning fires on the
shore,. where they dried their clothes
and shivered. We saw the fire mov-
ing off to North Cobalt, but towards
seven o'clock' the wind died down.
We stayed on upon the beach for
a couple of hours. The people were
wonderfully cheered, and I cannot
speak with too much praise of the
men, who let up riot for one minute
in their ministrationsto the relief
and comfort of the women and chil-
dren. Of course, many harrowing
things happened and some of the
women were hysterical when the re-
action came.
"One baby was, I heard, born on
that crowded beach. '
"By seven the town was all gone,
the smaller houses having gone
down like grass and the larger
buildings burning with almost ex-
plosive rapidity. ,
"Relief came to the people on the
beach at nine' o'clock, when men
got through the fire from Liskeard
to tell us we could get motors at
the north end of the town to carry
us to Liskeard."
Many pathetic incidents attending
the fire when it was at its height
were told by Mr. Peter White, R.C.,
the well-known counsel of Toronto,
who was in the office of Mr, W. A.
Gordon when the disastrous fire
broke over the town of Haileybury.
Realizing that the fire was quite be-
yond human control, Mr. White,
who arrived in the city, said that he
and Mr. Gordon sought safety on a
road leading to the Riordon Mills. The
fire followed in their trail for some
considerable distance. Many citizens
abandoned their homes and fled in the
direction of the Mill Creek, where
many of them spent the night. Mr.
White said he remained there until 2
o'clock in the morning, when he jour-
neyed to the home of .Mr. Frank Smil-
lie, Crown Attorney for Timiskaming
district, in New Liskeard.
Mr, White said the Beene around
him was pathetic. While many per-
sons had journeyed to the spot
where he sought tefuge, it was not
really necessary for them to take
to the water. The velocity of the
wind was terrific. He told of one
little lad dad only in cotton jumpers,
Mho had Lost his parents. Though
wet and shivering, the lad appeared
to be quite happy. "Thenthere was
a woman," said Mr. White, "whom
was the life of the party. She had five
send for free t,00lt
giving 111 panto.
ars of aprworld-famo,epep-
ItiOa Fits—simple
Oror 8o arm m home treatment.
cows, Tdsamonlale from all parts
of the wort over 10001n one year. Write at0000 a
TRENCH'S REMEDIES LIMITED
2667 Et.Jamej' Chambers, 79 Adel/dage
Toronto. Ontario '
re at
hta abl,
peal di. ai*a
condi �µtlo._
e tit b4wee Furidor, an a„fly outl�
e .blood W6on the nule90c Ld,'crsaktl o>f
e be y, tarn reducing a lhl nig1. ou
and rer ern -,'Berme& co tpn�,
children and after, seeing they were
all cared for, she undertook`k to take
care of the little one in jumpers; and
got Mm to sleep, too."
There were many other sad inci-
dents which occurred in the group
of refugees, which Mr. White said it
was almost4nipossible to describe.
One of -the oldest fireasufferers
was Mrs, A, C. Semple, of Owen
Sound; who is over 70 years old.
She was on a visit to her two sons,
sawmill owners and ranchers. When
she arrived in 'Toronto she told how
she had carried her grandson through
spark and storm to a place cif safety.
She was at S; i &tun when ' the 'fire
broke upon them.
"At Eariton," said Mrs. Semple,
"it came on us so quickly. The
other children were at school, but
my daughter -in haw and myself were
alone in the house, with the four
lath. ones. With a roar, and a heat
so awful, we ran from the house to
the stable, where the sparks poured
down like a su itv stunt', and I was
almost blinded. In a moment this
was on fire, and we had to make
for the open fields, ' The children
could not get :tiwig fast enough, so
we had to carry them. It was awful,
and I don't 1 n„w how eve came
through. We were certainly in an
awful condition when we got to a
spot where we could breathe. 1
shall never forget it, and 1 never want
such a thing again.
Prominent among the survivers
who arrived in Toronto was Mr. R. S.
Robertson, K.t'., a well-Iceown Tor-
onto lawyer. lir•. Robertson was en-
gaged in a rase before Supreme
Court ut Haileybury. Having com-
pleted his work in court, Mr. Robert-
son returned to the hotel, and whin,
waiting train time, began work on
revising an agreement. Before long,
however, he became uneasy .at the
smelt of smoke. "I decided to take
tit look at ,things,” said Mr. Robertson,
"and then I noticed the Presbyterian
church was on hie. 1 decided it was
elite time for me to get out. 'then
all the pepole : torted to make their
way up north towards New Lis-
keard, but we were cut off. We
then went down south to the lake
:bole and stayed there until the
flanks died down."
Mrs. Lyons, a Haileybury refugee,
was alone in her home with her three
young daughters, one only two years
old. She had been given a lift by a
man with a wagon as far when
the fire danger became apparent.
When they reached Mile 104, a
town just south of Haileybury, they
were left on the roadside as it was
not thought at the time that section
was in immediate danger. In re-
lating her experience when interview-
ed at the station at Toronto, she
said:
"But I knew the danger of it all
and started to walk with my girls.
Hot ashes arid cinders showered
down on our heads. We had wet
towels to protect our heads. As I
was passing a store in Mile 104, a
grocer shouted to me to come into
his store for safety. There was an-
other lady there with five children.
We started off for Cobalt and on
the road were again picked up in an
automobile. I feel ten years older
to -day. It will be a thing one will
never forget."
FAMOUS CARD SHARP DIES IN
I'OVERTY
One of the most picturesque figures
in the world of criihe has come to
an untimely end in Paris through
suicide, reports a correspondent of
the Buffalo Express,, Andre Ardis -
son was his name, and in the heyday
ofhis career he could lay claim to
being the cleverest card sharper ever
known. Ardisson was a Frenchman
who started on his life of crime with
the advantage of a first-class edtica-
tion and an influential family, which
went a long way towards assisting
him to mix in a class of people where
cheating at cards would never be
dreamed of.' The courtly {manners
and gentlemanly appearance, which'
were his by right of birth, clung to
him through all the years when he
had become a prince of swindlers,
and relied solely on his wits for a
living.
Some 30 odd years ago, when gam-
bling at the French and Belgium
holiday resorts was a good deal more
sensational than it is to -day, Ardis -
son was at the height of his pros-
perity. Accompanied by a couple of
attractive young women, whom he
called his sisters, he would arrive
at places like Monte Carlo, Nice,
Cannes, or Biarritz, and take up his
quarters at the most expensive hotel
in the place.
While he was serving his appren-
ticeship, if it may ao be called, he
contented himself with using his
beautiful sisters to entice wealthy
young men to his hotel suite, where
perhaps a party or seven or eight,
which included the Ardisson family,
would sit down at night to -a game
of baccarat. What between an un-
ending supply of champagne and the
Mme. Ardisson urging them on, it
was net long before the guests were
betting thousands of francs at a
time against the bank. Even in those
days
Ardisson was skilful
dealhimself the cardhewanted and
it was very rarely indeed \when a
big hank_ was in the balance that
Ardisson was not'the winner. Some-
where about the year 1892 he be-
came involved in- a tremendous
scandal in Biarritz over the rooking
of a wealthy young French Comte,
who had .not long succeeded to an
inheritance worth $2,000,000, • The
Comte had known Ardisson when
they were both cadets at the military
academy of Saint Cyr, and never for
...r:.. ,.,..`r » air . r<.J.hIK k m:r.emvawi,•>"tn l>ml,'tx'i.'iitYd •snrr Yvhry
se a
Cedolne 'ftell0t a @ be the
till shoes 0 ilafl,,,�n,exeft .nloneYi
weld+ for te. ucpaslop'the two heauti.
M. sisters became.- ie wife; end Aja
ter -laden respectively,
eoellnd ether he1%cameswknewn,tptin/ pollee of
England, France, Germany,. Belgium
and Spain that when he was found
staying at hotels patronized by
wealthy visitors the management
were warned and Ardisson would be
ordered to take his departure- forth-
with. This limited his opportunities
for working big coupes, and ulti-
mately brought about the aeries of
daring frauds which he contrived to
work at some of the well known
casinos, How this was done is a
romance in itself. There woulsl ar-
rive at a place like Carlsbad er,Nice
a foreign nobleman bearing a famous
title, who would be accompanied by
a retinue of servants and was,, ap-
parently in a very bad' state of
health. For a few weeks the pseudo
count or baron would be seen taking
the air, or the Mineral waters, which-
ever hppened to be the particular
medicine in that part of the world,
under the care of his attendants. His
eyes, which always seemed to be bad,
were provided with blue glasses. As
time went on the distinguished visi-
tor grabually improved in health, and
was eventually able to walk slowly
into the local casino and take a mild,
benevolbnt interest in the play. Then
one day, his health having got still
better, he would be induced by some-
one to sit down and take a hand at
baccarat.
The luck the count or baron, what-
ever he happened to be at the time,
enjoyed, was truly marvelous. Inside
of half an hour he would win two
or three thousand francs '-and then
pass on the bank to someone else,
stay for a few minutes to lose a little
money, and then hobble off. This
used to go on for some,weeks, until
the casino authorities took to watch-
ing him, and made the little' game
impossible. When he discovered that
the experts were on his track, the
count, otherwise Mons, Andre Ardis -
son, would quietly disappear, and
that particular place would know him
no more for two or three years. A-
mong other things, Ardisson invented
a chemin-de-fer slipper, by which he
was enabled to pass almost any card
out of bhe shoe to a player. One way
and another this faked slipper brought
Ardisson a fortune, and, incidentally,
it was found among his effects in
1904, when he was arrested by the
Paris police on a charge of defrauding
the »on of an American millionaire
of 450,000 francs, The fraudulent
slipper was produced in court and a
demonstration given of how it was
worked.
Ardisson took\his sentence of six
years penal servitude on Devil's Ia-
Iand, with his customary sangfroid,
although he must have known that
his romantic career as an adventu er
was at an end:, When the police
came to investigate Ardisson's pos-
sessions, they found that in some-
thing like twenty years of crime mil-
lions of francs had passed through
his bank accounts, that he was the
owner of a luxurious marble villa on
the Riviera, and had evidently lived
as a millionaire for fifteen or twenty
years past. All his money and prop-
erty was realized for the benefit of
the people he had defrauded. When
Ardisson, then dose on 60 years of
age, came back from the famous
penal settlement, itr'1909, he was a
broken and penniless man. For a
year or two the once -famous crimin-
al tried to earn a living at his old
game, of cardsharping, but without •
success. Two or three times he fell
into the hands of the police on minor
charges, and eventually finished up
his days as a tout for some of the
dubious night houses of Montmartre,
He has just died at sixty-eight years .
of age, having possibly handled as
much money as any criminal the
world has ever known.
A STRANGE; BEQUEST.
"I wish to be luried in the simp-
lest manner, being laid in the ground
wrapped in my old Eastern travelling
rug, without coffin or casket, at a
spot in Newbuildings Wood, known
to my executors,"
In complete harmony with his ro-
mantic career was the late Wilfred
Scawen Blunt, traveller, author,
diplomatist and agitator, laid torest
at the age 'of eighty-two. Semen
4 ter• pIawo e
S1lvorw00% :etc,
- Avoid risk Of foss..
poste . ROnAg1i, 3,4o.Orjr$l
'Deposit oiijt<'
Itille Scau 'i1f+
.1.44 sue $day, �tstipai
SEAFORTH)BRAlVC1'ir.�p R +.F M .TQ�s..
1 ' • SAFETY »EPOsrr BOXES FOR RENT
meinnmennimie
Ike
mimager-
"My Boy was Starving to Death'
"As He Was Getting1No Nourishment He Was
Gradually Wasting Away."
here's a story which will interest
every mouser. Before my buy nets
bora, I was in such -delicate health
that the doctor didn't thunk I would
survive the ordeal. For weeks after
he was born na life was desist i red of,
so I couteln't feed hint and the poor
little- fellow was left to the care of
friends. IIe wasn'tnnutrally strong.
No care was taken in choosing his
food and Isis poor little stomach
became so weakened that he couldn't
keep anything on it. As he was
getting no nourishment from his
food, he was gradually wasting away.
i finally, in desperation, we sent for a
child specialist and he amid that my
boy was starving to death. Ile gave
him some medicine and advised a
certain diet l'he child did improve
but somehow cunldn 't seem to get
strong. This wee t on for four or 11, e
years and the boy still continued
weak and puny loukiug, fie cook&
not play like other children without
having to lie down ; nd rest. Sly
sister who lives on n farm near the
seri, said that she could fix him up if
I would send him to her. While 1
hated being sep,rntcd front hint, I
was ready to make any sacrifice to
get hint strong. lie was away from
me for three months suet it was with
feelings of great excitcuu nt that I
awaited his return -as my sister had
written ale that ,& would be surprised
when I saw uiy boy. When my
sister got off the train, I could not
believe that it was my own boy that
she was leading by the band. I never
saw such a change in any child. He
was fat and rosy and full of life with
a happy smile I 'What on earth hav4
you dune to hint,' I said. 'Why,' she
replied, '1 simply made him live out
of door gave hits good fake—and
here's a real secret, I gave hint
Hires bottles of Carmel Before he
had taken half a bottle his whole
appearance had changer. He got
heavier, his face took on a colour and
he would run round for hours at a \
Vine.' The change in my buy.is the
most wonderful event in my life. I
ant a regular 'tau' for Carnot and
never lose a chance to boost it As I
write I am loukiug out of the window
and when I see tlea$ rosy, active,
Iienithychild nein leg retied, I cannot
believe 111:0 he was once a puny,
delicate boy."
Carnol is sold by yowr druggist,
and if you cut conscientiously stay,
alter you have tri,t1 it, that it hasn't
done you any gr./A, return Clue empty
b•;1 le t6 hint and he will refund your
stoney. b-02.3
•
Blunt was wilful almost to •the poin
of bigotry and a scorner of easy
ways. Three lines of his own poetry
are used as his epitaph:
had gone a hunter through the
world, and set my tents in every
land and hurled my 'spears at life."
Blunt was born at Petworth, and
.in 1858 he entered the Diplomatic
Service and was sent to The Hague,
Athens Frankfurt, Madrid, Paris,
Lisbon and Frangfurt again. In 1867
he was promoted secretary at Buenos
Aires, In the year of 1869 he mar-
ried Lady Ann Hoel, grand -daughter
of Byron, who on her father's death,
succeeded to the barony of Went-
worth, and died in 1917. He travel-
led all over Arabia, Syria and Persia
and with his wife explored Spain on
horseback. He was known in Cairo
as the "Mad Englishman," and
would readily believe any bloodthirsty
and ghastly tales the natives would
tell him. For a time it was a fav-
orite amusement with them to get a
donkey -boy and dress him as a native.
He would then tell Blunt some of his
"dreadful adventures," all of which
was eagerly listened to and believed.
His secret life came to light when
his book, "My Diaries," was publish-
ed in 1919. As a poet he was chief-
ly known for his "Love" Sonnets of
Protems," He leaves one daughter,
Judilh, now Lady Wentworth, who
has a son and two daughters. The
instructions for his burial were faith-
fully carried out and he was quietly
buried in a Sussex Woodland with
only his daughter and grand -children
present,
t ated, "you' is de good-fer-nothin'ness
nigger dat I knows, Yo' shoes ars
behind de do', yo' stockin's am undah
de bed, and yo feets am on you. Now
see can you mingle em."—. -Judge.
MINGLE THEM
Erastus was dressing to go to Sun-
day School. He couldn't find his
clothes and pestered his mother in
his efforts to discover them. On this
particular Sunday he . seemed worse
than ever. Finally, he was dressed
except for his feet.
"Ma," he said plaintively, "does
you knbew whereabouts my shoes and
stockin's is?"
"Rastus," said his mother, exasper-
SPOKEN IN JEST
Love at first sight is minus second
sight.
Where ignorance is bliss, it's folly
to confess.
Often a man alters his face after
he faces the altar.
If you want to make light of
trouble, keep it dark.
No one iso empty as the magi
who is full of himself,
Many a man has found marriage
what he expected—only worse.
1 Time may be, the greatest healer,
but marriage is the big revealer.
Never try to kill time; time is
bound to kill you in the long run.
Many a woman's mind is merely
something she uses to guess with.
What is wisdom, but having
great deal'to say and keeping silent. ,
You cannot dodge your responsi-
bility by running away from duty.
Marriages may be made in heaven,
but they are not all safety matches.
i M
And too manyexecutives think ef-
ficiency consists in fluttering about
in the way of those who are doing
the work.—Birmingham News.
We knew a mffn once whose ear
stalled and who didn't say it was the
first time it acted that way.—Kin-
cardine Review.
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