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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1923-03-30, Page 7MARCH 34, 1923.
DHITIBT
a. S. ATKINSON. $,.D a' D.D$
8 f
..e dlivate of the royal
Du tat Surgeons of t and of
Of University of Toro to arise
Wiot Dente,! Office, Mil nary' rdatirlet.
No, 1, London, Ont. OSIce. hours at
•.yfeld, Ont., Monday, Wednesday,
/ y and Saturday, from. to
1,30 p.m.
DB.J. R. FORlll
aye, Eitr, Nose and Threat
Graduate in Medicine, University of
t New York
Institute61gaai"e�
�x.At
'. in
Routh, Striat�
;1
,
cobtauvr lNfti RNGIND ,
James, Procter .& Redfern
LIMited-
>s Tome O. T.e!«th, Caa.
Brads«, Paveeeate. W. $
ass eriteme, Ineiaesston:
Arbitrations. Litigation.
Phone Adel. iota. Cable; "JPBCQ" Toronto
eine FEES-Vw)s aria an of tee
mower we iaiv• ear ennui.
LEGAL
n. S. BAYS.
Barrister Solicitor, Conveyancer and
notary Pudic. Solicitor fppr .the Do-
minion Banti Office in.reai'of the Do-
minion Bank, Seaforth. Money to
Ian.•
ONIIptottrtmit—
RI F & BEST
Barristers, Solicitors, Convey-
ancers, and Notaries Public, Etc.
pace In the Edge Building, opposite
- The Expositor Office.
PROUDFOOT, KILLORAN AND
HOLMES. -
/srristera oeiontors, rVotane. t'nb;
. ds, etc. Mond to lend. In Seafortb
o n Monday :%t each weak. ' Office. in
JtMd Block. W. Proudfoot, H.C., J
L. /lloran, B. E. Holmes.
V ETERINART
F HARBURN. V. 8
Honour graduate member of
Ilsecal Associationhew Ontario
Vetiy College. Treats diseases of
all domestic animals by the most mod-
e rn principles. Dentistry and Milk
Waver a specialty. Office opposite
Diets Hotel. Main Street, Seaforth
All orders left at tie hotel • will re-
solve prompt attention Night calls
sr*esived at the office
JOHN GRIEVE, V. S.
• Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin-
College. All diseases of domestic
treated. Calls • promptly at-
ia.nd to and charges moderate. Vet-
erinary Dentistry a specialty. Office
and., residence on Goderich street, one
deer east of .Dr. Scott's office. Sea -
MEDICAL
O. J. W. WARN. M.D. 3f"'
416 Richmond Street, London, Ont.,
Ipedalist, Surgery and Genio-Urin-
ary diseases of men and women.
timetioodit
DR. A. NEWTON-BRADY -
Dttb
Graduate.. lila` University, Ire -
The Light
Clearing
By
IRWING BACHELLER
land. Late Extern Assistant Master
Rotunda Hospital for Women ': and
Clilidren, Dublin, " Office at residence
lately occupied by Mrs. ' Parsons.
Hours, 9 to 10 a.m., -•6 to 7 p.m.
Sundays, 1 to 2 p.m. 2866-26
utzt bsAwaWyerayuu ib".r,• Y.ry
maim
p��eluws�a,•+W1r1.�
4ze WIWOOten 111.10110010
morning ,in early June when I was
to go back to the hills, my year's
work in school being,,ended. I elect-
ed to walk, and the schoolmaster
went with me five miles or mo a-
cross : the hats to the slope of the UOt
country. I Belt very whit with that
s learning in my hood. Doubt-
the. best of it bad mano not 'iia
- It had taken IS 1116110 to the
itairand in ...a Ivo lifted ilia
rtaa aattetlti+l M
cg� ' ntl�' tlhov�d,jC�key,* Y
" Pei' down into the t Valle of the St.
Go 'way from me. Take her vow, -.vve been thi 'q► y
sowiebody. I can't star' it. Bbd% wortort tb hut year t saidds l ; „T COY.o� ►�ei Stretching northward thirty
(Continued fawns last w. .) husk
THE=PM=F,
This New Discovery!
autifies your hair \
Removes dandruff
Stops falling hair
GROWS HAIR
------dor
7 Sather Sisters'
COMMETE
TREATMENT
Fertilizer -Grower -Shampoo
Ail 3 In one package $1:40
tfMBA(H, Druggist, Seaford'.
Be
FQR PLE WRO CARE
They drank the toast ---not one Of,
theta would have dared refuse,
'Now three cheers for the neer
heat*and every one that lives in it,"
be dontended.
They cheered lustily and went a-
way.
Uncle Peabody and I put in the
floors and stairway and partitions.
Mdre than once in the days we were
working, together I tried to tell him
what Sally had told me, but my cour-
age failed.
We moved .our furniture. 1 re'
member that Uncle Peabody called it;
"the houselta'ee." We hyo creased
paper on the windows for a tuna af-
ter we moved until the sash carne.
Aunt Deel had made rag carpets for
the parlor and the bedroom wbdah
opened off it Our windows looked
'o saw sbre nitoro from .our hilltop.
killin' me. Take her awn . Take mss a+F _ tea wanted. "Ye hare ♦ amara • tiosatmeat. Bae* 1 , leeetr
her away. Ta , • studied nooks and "One --God help as eiml. oar b A s eta mnnl*e stood
His face tutu swum, ye; Alai' I; think ye hak4.. ot, mere AsA » r.minaawa a out nwtsMw.. WI" a itoiaa's Burow 4f the back had be a hard blow►..ta, ]Irina. Birks byut Mm?"
white. He apd ll •headlong, out o' the cote than ye have out o' U Druggist, Seaforth, What a rustic charm in the .ion favor was h ossa only - "I hey away." . does,
doom• ' because this
like 1a tree server its roots, and , the six.' ] E. M$licli' r which s baba asked of is money cs+azy."
lay still on the hard, stone paveuaettt.. In a' moment of silence thatfollow-___ slant of them green hill below wUwely �em, She rnhistory of - , (Continued neat
its gray mossy botsldtlrs and lovely pbe Binkses � Ela�easaaer-r.�aia Ii`Lst �+
The Finest Green
la undoubtedly
11
It is rare free"! St It wholesome
akpd the flavor is that of the true
n leaf.
Hao
DR. J. W. PECK •
Graduate of Faculty of reeler*
gsQIll University, Montreal; member
of College of Physicians and Surgeons
of Ontario; Licentiate of Medical Conn-
ell of Canada; Post -Graduate Member'
of Resident Medical staff of General
Hospital, Montreal, 1914-1b • Office, 2
doors east of Post Office. rPhone 56.
$�easall, Ontario.
It seemed las if snow were falling eta ed I counted the books on•my fingers; aat�r ho
his dace—it. grew so white. The fill- �, Arithmetic, Algebra, Gram. which begins:
thorn trope t was, I think, ,a IMO- --down to that printout *date. Theirs -
ent .Woman stood as still as he, point- : mar, Geography, History..What was me :than -.that�► a 'had been three maim` subrn.Iasiolpna
had left. It was bn - cellar.,
ing at him with. her finger, her look 1 this one book he ';referred : to Y Come, Philander, let us •be a-marchin'. � in the family and that' .had met* .
unchanged. People came running to- 'It's God's book o' life;` boy, an' I .oof one burned s years before, the name of tknown wherever
ward us. I lifted the head of Mr. should' say ye'd done very,twell in it." How well I remember that hour The old barn still there and n people- knew Whelil! ' .
Grimshaw-and laid it on mar knee. It After a little he asked: "Have ye with the doors open and the sun shin- had made it do. .Wright left the room,Mrs. Binka df -
ever heard of a man whohad the ing brightly on the blossoming fields The day came, shortly, when�I:had reefed her 'conversation at me, and
and the joy' of.� man and bird and to speak out, and I took the Straight when Mie. Wright returned I only
beast in the return of summer and way of my duty as the needle of the gpt the spray,of it. By dinner time
the talk .about the late visit of Alma compass pointed. It was the end of vdc were'drenched in a way of speak -
Janes and Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln! a summer day and we had watched ing and Mrs. Binks left, assuring us
While, we were eating I told them the dusk fill the valley and - come that she would return later and 40
about the letter of .old Kate. creeping up the slant, sinking the anything in her power.
"Fullerton! Aunt Deel exclaimed. boulders and thorn tops in its Hood, "My stars!" Mrs. Wright exclaim,
"Are ye sure that was the name,
one by one. As we sat looking out ed "If you see her coming lock the
Bart?" of the open door that evening I told door and go and hide in a closet until
"Yes." them what. Sally had told me of the. she goes away. Mrs. Binks always
"Goodness gracious sakes alive!" evil report which had ' travelled brings her ancestors with`"her arid'
She and Uncle Peabody gave each through the two towns: Uncle. Pea- they fill the house so that th e'e no
other looks of surprised inquiry, body sat silent and perfectly- motion- room for anybody else."
"Do you kno anybody . by that 'less for, a moment looking out"into When the day's work was ended
name?" I asked the dusk. Mrs. Wright exclaimed:
"We used to," said Aunt Deel as "W'y, of all things! ' Ain't that an "Thank senores
'the Binkses have
she resumed her eating. "Can't he awful burnin' shame—ayes!" said„
she's one o' the Sam Fullertona, Aunt Deel as she covered her face not returned.
it?” with her Band.
We always referred to Mrs. Binks
"Oh, probly not," said Uncle .Pea- tracted—"
little
s Peabody, eddd homer con-
as the Binkses after that.
speaking
Mrs. Denison, a friend of the
Wrights, came in that afternoon and
told us of the visit of young Latour
to Canton find of the great relief of
the decent people at his speedy ae-
p rture.
"I wonder what brobght him here,"
said, Mrs. Wright. "It seems that
he had beard the beauty of Sally
Dunkelberg. But a bee had stung
her nose just before he came and she
was a sight to behold.''
The ladies laughed.
"It's lucky," said Mrs. -Wright.
"Doesn't Horace Durlkelberg know a -
felt like the head of the stranger in
Rattleroad. Old Kate bent over 'and
!coked at the eyelids of the man,
which fluttered faintly and were still.
"Dead!" she muttered.
Then, as if her work were finished,
she turned and made her way through
the crowd and walked slowly ,down
the street. Men ,•�4 aside to let
her pass; as if they ^!t the power of
her spirit and .fear -0 'he touch of her
garments.,
Two or three m n had run to the
house of the near''` doc4or. The
-cretvd thickened. As I sat looking
down at the dead 'ace in my lap, a
lawyer who had come out of the court
room pressed near me and beet over
and looked at the get eves of Benja-
fain Grimshaw and said:
"She floored him at last. I knew
she would.. He tried not to see her,
but I tell ye that bony old finger of
hers burnt a hole in him. He couldn't
stand it. I knew he'd 'blow up some
day under the strain. She got him at
last."
"Who got him?" another asked.
"Rovin' Kate. She killed him point-
ing her finger at him—so.
"She's got an evil eye. Every-
body's afraid o' the crazy of Trol-
lope!"
"Nonsense She isn't half as craey
as the most of us," said the lawyer.
"In my opinion she had a good reason,
for pointing her finger at that man.
She came from the same town he did
over in Vermont. Ye don't know what
happened there."
The doctor arrived. The crowds
made way for him. He knelt beside
the still figure and made the tests.
Be rose and shook his head , saying.
""It'$ all over. Let one of those
boys go down and bring the under-
taker."
Benjamin Grimshaw, the richest
man in the township, was dead, and
I have yet to hear of any mourners.
Three days later, I saw his body
lowered into its grave. The little,
broken-e,pirited wife stood there, with
the game sad smile on her face that
I had rioted when I first saw her in
the hills. Rovin' Kate was there in
th clothed she had worn Christmas
day. She was greatly changed. Her
hair was neatly combed. The wild
look had left her eyes. She was like
one whose back is relieved of a heavy
burden. Her lips moved as she
scattered little red squares of paper
into the grave. I suppose that they
thought it a crazy whim of hers—they
who saw her do it. I thought that I
understood the curious bit -of symbol `
ism and so did the schoolmaster, who
stood beside me. Doubtless the - pieces
of paper numbered her" curses.
"The scarlet -sins of his youth are
lying down with him in the dust,"
Hacket whispered as we walked away
together.
.END 0,F. -BOOK TWO.
DR. F. J. BURROWS
Office and. residence, Goderich street
oast of the Methodist church, Seaforth.
Phone 46. Coroner for the County of
Huron.
DR. C. MACKAY
0. Mackay honor graduate of Trin-
ity University, and gold 'medallist of
Trinity Medical College; member of
the College of Physicians and Sur -
teens f Ontario
Grimsteaws?"
I shook my head as I looked at him
not knowing just what he w,as\ driv-
ing at.
"Sure, It's a serious illness an' it
has two phases. First there's the
Grimshaw o' greed—swinish, heart-
less greed—the oth-gr is the Grimshaw
t4' vanity—the strutter, with sword at
belt, who would have men bow or flee
before him."
That is all he said of that seventh
book and it was enough.
"Soon the Senator will be coming,"
he remarked presently. "I have a
long letter from him and he asks
about you and your aunt and uncle.
I think that he is fond o' you, boy."
"I wish you would let me know
when he comes," 1 said.
"I 'am sure he will let you know,
and, by the way, I have heard from
another friend o' yours, my lad. Ye're
a lucky one to have so many friends
—sure ye are. Here, I'll show ye the
letter. There's no reason why I
shouldn't. Ye will know its writer.
I•robably. I do not."
So saying lie handed me this letter:
BOOK THREE
Which is the Story of the Chosen
Ways
CHAPTER XV
Uncle Peabody's Way and Mine.
I am old and love my ease and
sometimes dare to think that I have
earned it. Why do I impose upon
o myself the task of writing down these
memories, searching them and many
DR. H. HUGH ROSS notes and records with great care so
Graduate of University of Toronto that in every voice and deed the time
faculty of Medicine, Member of Col- shall speak? My first care has been
lege of Physicians and Surgeons of that neither vanity nor pride should
Ontario; pass graduate courses le rear a word of all these I have written
"Canterbury, Vt.,
June 1.
"Dear Sir—I am interested in the
boy Barton Baynes. Good words
about him have been flying around
like pigeons. When school is out I
would like to hear from you, what
is the record? What do you think
of the soul ih him? What kind of
work is best for it? If you will let
me maybe I can i)elp the plans of
God a little. That is my business and
yours. Thanking you for reading
this, I am, as ever,
God's humble servant,
KATE FULLERTON..
or shall write So I keep my name
body. "Back east they's more Fal- roc Uncle ng
renters than ye could shake a stick in a low, sad tone, but with deep feel-
at. Say, I see, the biggest bear this ;ing, cut of! this highly promising
mornin' that I ever see in all the born opinion before it was half expressed,
days o' my life.
"It was dark. I'd come out o' the
fifty -mile woods an' down along the
edge o' the 'ma'sh an' up into the
bushes on the lowerlside o' the pastur.
All to once I heerd somethin'1 I
stopped an', peeked through the bush-
es—couldn't see much --so dark. Then
the of bear riz up on her hind legs
clus to me. We didn't like the looks
o' one 'nother an' begun to edge off
very careful.
"Seems so I kind o' said to the of
bear: 'Excuse Me.'
"Seems so the of bear kind o' an-
swered: 'Sart'nly.' -
"I got down to a little run, near by,
steppin' as soft as a cat. I could
"Why, this is the writing of the
Silent Woman," I said before I had
read the letter half through.
"Rovin' Kate?"
"Roving Kate; I never knew her
other name, but I saw her handwrit-
ing long ago."
"But look—this is a neatly written,
well -worded letter an' the sheet is as
white and clean as the new snow.
Uncanny woman! They say she car-
ries the power o' God in , her right
hand. So do all the wronged. I tell
ye lad, there's only one thing in the
world that's sacred."
I turned to him with a look of in-
quiry and .asked.
"What is it
"The one and only miracle we
knew—the gate o' birth through
which comes human life and the lips
commanding our love and speaking
the wisdom of childhood. Show me
how a man treats women an' I'll tell
ye what he amounts to. There's the
test that shows whether he's a roan
or a spaniel dog."
There was a little momenta of sil-
ence then—how well I remember it!
The schoolmaster broke the silence by
adding:
"Well, ye know, lad, I think the
greatest thing Jesus Christ did was
showing to a wicked world the sancti-
ty o' motherhood."
That, I think, was the last lesson
in the school year. Just beyond us I
could see the slant of Bowman's Hill.
What an amount of pains they gave
those days to the building of char-
acter! It will seem curious and per -
must show here if I am to hold the
mirror up to the time.
"I wonder why Kate is asking about
me." I said.
"Never mind the reason. She is
your friend and let us thank God for
it. Think how she came to yer help
in the old barn an' say a thousand
and rose and went to the water pail
and drank.
"As long as we're honest we don't
cart what they say," he remarked as
he returned to his chair.
"If they won't believe us we ought
to show 'em the papers—ayes," said
Aunt peel.
"Thunder an' Jehu! I wouldn't go
'round the town tryin' to prove that
I ain't a thief," said Uncle Peabody.
"It wouldn't make no differ'nce
They've got to have somethin' to play
with. If they want to use my nanie
for a bean bag let 'em as long as
they do it when I ain't lookin'.
wouldn't wonder if they got s
hands by an' by."
e
just see a white stile on the side o' it. - I never heard him speak of it again:.
I lifted my foot to step on the stun Indeed, eh/lough I knew the topic was
an jump across. B.'r-r-r-r! The stun often in r thoughts it was never
jumped up an' scampered through the mentioned in our home but once after
bushes. Then I was scairt. Gosht- that, to my knowledge.
almighty! I lost confidence in every- We sat for a long time thinking
thing. Seemed so all the bushes turn- as the night came on. By and by
ed into bears. Jeerusalem, how I Uncle Peabody began the. hymn in
run! When I getter -the barn I was which we joined:
purty nigh used up."
"How did it happen that the stone "Oh, keep my heart
jumped?" I asked. God;
"Oh, I guess -'t was a rabbit," said Let not its sorrows stay,
Lncle Peabody. Not shadows of the night erase
Thus Uncle Peabody_ led us off into The glories of the day."
the trail of the bear and the problem
of Kate and the Sam Fullerton con- "Say—by thunder!—we don't have
cerneid us no mord at that -time. to set in the shadows. Le's fill the
A week later we had our raising. room with the glory of the day," said
Uncle Peabody did not want a public Uncle Peabody as he lighted the
raising, but Aunt Deel' had had her candles. "It ain't a good idee to go
way. We had hewed and mortised slidin' down hill in the summer time
and bored the timbers for our new an' in the dark, too. Le's have a
home. The neighbors came 'with game o' cards."
pikes and helped to raise and stay I remember that we had three
and cover them. A great amount of merry games and went to bed. All
human kindness went into the beams outward signs of our trouble had van -
and rafters of that home and of ished in the glow of the candles.
others like it. I knew that The Next day I rode to the post -office
Thing was still alive in the neighbor- and found there a book addressed to
hood, but even that could not para- me in the handwriting of old Kate.
lyze the helpful hands of those peo- It was David Hoffman's Course of
ple. Indeed, what was said of my Legal Study. She had written on its
Uncle Peabody was nothing more or fly -leaf:
less than a kind of conversational fire "To Barton Baynes, from a friend."
wood. I can not think that any one "That woman 'pears to like you
really believed it. purty thorough," said Uncle PeaBody.
We had a cheerful day. A barrel "Well, let her if she wants to—
of hard cider had been set up in the pcor thing!" Aunt Deet answered.
dcoryard, and I remember that some "A woman has got to have some -
drank it too freely. The he-o-hee of body to like—ayes!--or I dunno how
the men as they lifted on the pikes she'd live—I declare I don't --ayes!"
and the sound of the hammer and "I like her, too," I said. "She's
beetle rang in the air from morning been a good friend to me."
until night. Mrs. Rodney Barnes and "She has, sart'n," my uncle agreed,
Mrs. Dorothy came to help Aunt Deel We began reading , the book tha
with the cooking and a great dinner evening in the candle light and soon
was served on an improvised table in finished it. 1 was thrilled by the ideal
the dooryard, where the stove was of human service with which the
set up. The shingles and sheathes calling of the lawyer was therein
and clapboards were on before the lifted up and illuminated. After that
day ended. I had no doubt of my way. e
When they were about to go the That week a letter came to me
men filled their cups and drank to from the Senator, announcing the day
Aunt Deel. of Mrs. Wright's arrival in Canton
I knew, or thought I knew, why and asking me- to meet and assist
they had not mentioned any Uncle her in getting the house to rights. 1
Peabody, and was very thoughtful did so. She was d pleasant -faced,
about it. Suddenly the giant Rod- amiable woman and a most enter-
prising house cleaner. I remember
that my first task was mending the
wheelbarrow.
"I don't know what Silas would do
right before me, every oneo' you." if he were to get home and find his
He ranged them in a circle around wheelbarrow broken." said she. "It
the barrel. He stood at the spigot is almost an inseparable companion
and filled every cup. Then he raised of his."
his own and said: The schoolmaster and his, family
"I want ye to drink to Peabody were fishing and camping upon the
Baynes—one o' the squarest men that river, and so I lived at the Senator's
ever stood in cowhide." house with Mrs. Wright and her
mother until he arrived. What a
wonderful house it was, in my view!
from you,' dear reader, for there is prayers, my lad. I shall write to her
nothing you can give me thatwant. to -day, and what shall I say as to
I have learned my lesson in that dist- i the work?"
ant time and, having learned it, give 1 "Well, I've been consulting the com-
Night calls answered from residence, you the things I stand for and keep , pass," I answered thoughtfully, as I hey Barnes strode up to the boner.
Victoria street, Seaforth. ` myself tinder a mask. These things looked down at the yielding sand un- I remember the lien -like dignity of
r (urge me to my task. Ido it that I der my feet. "1 think that I want his face as he turned and said:
AUCTIONEERS may give to you—my countrymen— , to he a lawyer." a "Now boys, come up here an' stand
the best fruitage of the great garden ' "Good! I would have guessed it. I
THOMAS BROWN of my youth ftnd save it from the cold ' suppose your week in the court room
Licensed auctioneer for the counties storage of unknowing -history. ( with the fine old judge and the law -
of Huron and Perth. Correspondence' It is a bad thing to be under a yens settled that for ye."
araangeirients for sale dates can be I heavy obligation to one's self of "I think that it did."
or do by calling up phone liar gesmod. i which, thank God, I am now acquit- i "Well, the Senator is a lawyer,
or T 4 Expositor Office. Charges mod ` ted. I have knon men who were God prosper him, an' he has shown
erate',and satisfaction gaai!antded' 1 their own worst creditors. Every- us that the chief business. o' the
1 thing they earned went swiftly to lawyer is to keep men out o' the law.
Honor` Graduate Carey Jones'Na.' satisfy the demands of Vanity or Having come to the first flight of
cage al 0cou�e 0� � ' piire Pride' or Appetite. I have seen them the uplands,
he
left
me with ch they meany to
Bred' Liv. Stock, Real Estate, Mer.- literally put out of house and home, akinboy who is choosing his way with
chandiee and Farm Sales. Rates in -thrown neck and crop into the street, a growingy sense sh. of loneliness! / �c
beeping with prevailing market. Stat• as it were, by one or the other of I reached the warm welcome of our
h'e heartless creditors—each a
Chicago Clinical School of Chicago;
Royal Ophthalmic Hospital, London, I t
>cngland; University Hospital, Lon-
don, England. . Office—Back of Do-
minion Bank, Seaforth. Phone No. 6,
from sadness,
ideation assured.
write or wire, t se e$ ens ere
Oscar Klapp. Zurich, Ont. Phone glittle home just in time for dinner..rasping usurer with unjust claims. They were expecting' me and it was a
I remember that Rodney Barnes
fine
and strawberry shortcake.
18• 2868-68 called for my chest and me that fl regular company dinner -chicken pie
R. T. LUKER ,
Licensed auctioneer for the Couittyy
of Huron. Sales attended to In all
saints of the chanty. Seven years -
Misses in Manitoba and Saskatche-
wan.
askat1wan. Terms reasonable Phone No.
145 r 11, Exeter Seetralaia P. 0., 8.
Ne. . Orders Seaforth, promptlyoltoat Ta• Huron
s Mae,
"I weltered in the grass all the
forenoon tryin' $o git enoughberries
for this celebration ayes! •---, they
ain't many of 'em turned yit," said
Aunt Deel. "No, sir—othin' but pure
cream on this cake. I ain't a goin'
/ 1Ri stAran nY i to count Vie expense."
SUN WIND DU5T &CINDERSi Uncle Peabody danced around the
table and fang a Stanza of tills old
t,snoNn hire 6 sem w MMus= a. OPl'1COAN{have forgotten, but
URIN
cote eooa mowns ea .aiu.avu .ballad, Which
watt 110111,au. rye
but the man
week.)
Most people prefer it,
because: it is` esiiy' to
digest, and delicious,
with a full, juicy, twit
flavor.
It is easy to intake tasty
desserts with
EN'S INVINCIBLE
Jelly Powder.
Sixtess Difersat Flavor's
One package serves
;eight people.
At all Grocers
Insist os
McLAREN'S INVINCIBLE
JELLY POWDER
Made by McLA.RENS LIMITED,
Hamilton Bpd Winnipeg.
Thema
6
I was awed by its size and splendor,
neo mi pia N' its soft carpets and shiny brass and
mahogany. Yet it was very simple.
• ' o' I hoed the garden and cleaned its
rtpaths and mowed the dooryard and sm d
painting id some in the house. I
. . remember that Mrs. Ebenezer Binks
—wife of the deacon and the con -
1111 y . stable --came in while I was at the
latter task early one morning to see
• if there were anything she could do.
O wed,. Ertractof Codllierekr She immediately sat down and talk-
ed constantly until noon of her fam-
for QQUGHS a COLDS ■ fir and especially of the heartless-
▪ and $3RQNCHITIS acrg
▪ real and general misconduct of her
and daughter-in-law
because they
had refused to let her apply the name
asitaa eau ail of Divine Subpiission to the baby. It
Attend Summer School in London
Scfiool teachers, extramural, regular and special
students have the opportunity to spend six weeks at
the Western University Summer School beginning
July 2nd.
For information apply
Dr. S.P.R. Neville, Registrar, London, Ont. is
tr
A slow oven will not spoil'' ..your
baking when you we
EGG7-0
Bakint Powder
ORDER FROM YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD GROC'EIFm.
Wanted
Local representatives in all parts of Ontario to sell direct to the
farmer and user the ORIGINAL BELGIAN MELOT'FE, the most
reliable and satisfactory, easiest turning and hest skimming Cream
Separator in the world, the most popular machine ever sold in
Canaria, 1,000,000 in use the world over, sold in Canada by us for 30
years; Lister Milking Machines, Lister Farm Engines, Grinders and
Blower Boxes, Lister Electric Lighting Plants, all the best of their
kind—splendid opportunity for local machine man or farmer's son
with good mechanical knowledge and selling ability—must possess
the best of character, be well known in locality and be prepared to
drive the district continuously. A splendid opportunity for men who
understand their job and are not afraid of work. Salary and com-
mission, with good advertising assistance from Head Office given.
Apply, stating age, references and full particulars to
R. A. LISTER & COMPANY (CANADA) LTD.
58 Stewart Street TORONTO
dd.I torch
moan
Veil worth ea box
LE
The added length of MAPLE
LEAF MATCREs metas greater we
*hen Lighting range% stoves or lanterns.
They will not glow after use. They are
not poisonous. Rats won't gnaw thems.
They withstand more moisture.
They are Different and Better.
Ask for hen
bin amhw
THE CANADIAN MATCH C9
a LIMITED.MONTREAL