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The Huron Expositor, 1932-05-20, Page 79 ff� RUPI l'U'RE RurPture, YY Sicocele, Varicose Veins` Atidondanl ."i?Y�ealsr eee, Spinal Deform,, its. Consuitatign free. - Call or write. J. ,G, gM1111l1, British Appli- eince. Specialists, 15 Downie,•St., Strat- fordDint, 3202-25 LEGAL Phone No. 9.1 JOHN J. HUGGARD Barrister, Solicitor, e Notary Public, Etc. Beattie Block - - 'Seaforth, Ont. R, S. HAYS - Barrister, Solicitor, Conveyancer and Notary 'Public. 'Solicitor for the Dominion Bank. Office in rear of the Dominion Bank, Seaforth, Money to loan. BEST <& BEST Barristers, Solicitors, Conveyan- cers and !Notarien Public, Etc. Office, in the Edge Building, opposite The Expositor Office. 'VETERINARY JOHN' GRIEVE, V.S. • Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin• ary College. All diseases of domestic animals treated. Calls 'promptly an - tended to and'charges moderate. Vet- erinary Dentistry a specialty. Office and, residence" on Goderich Street, one door -.east of Dr. Mackay's office, Sea - forth. • "' e J , 1 • • A. R. CAMPBELL, V.S. Graduate of Ontario Veterinary College, University of Teronto. All diseases of domestic animals treated by the most modern principles. Charges reasonable, Day or night calls promptly attended to. Office on Main Street, Hensall, opposite Town Hall. .Phone 116. • MEDICAL DR. E. .1. R. FORSTER Eye, Ear, Nose and. Throat Graduate in Medicine, University of. Toronto. Late assistant New YorkOpthai- mei and Aural Institute, Moorefield's Eye and Golden Square Throat Hos- pitals, London, , Eng. At Commercial :lliotel, -'Seaforth, third Monday in ' each month, from 11 .a.m. to- 3 ,pan, SS Waterloo Street, South, Stratford, .I I)r. W. C. SPROAT Graduate of Faculty of Medicine, University of Western Ontario, Lon- don. ?Member of College of Physic- ians_ and. Surgeons of Ontario. Ofiiee in Aberhart's Drug Store, !Main St , Seaforth. Phone 90. DR:' A. NEWTON-BRADY Graduate 'Du'blin University, Ire- land. Late Extern Assistant Master Rotunda 'Hospital for Women and children, Dublin. Office at residence lately occupied by Mrs. Parsons. Hours: e to 14 a.m., 6 to 7 p.m,, Sundays, 1 to 2 p.m, 2866-26 DR. F. J. BURROWS Office and residence Goderich Street, east of the United Church.., §ea - forth. •Phone 46. Coroner for the County of Huron. • DR C. MACKAY C. Mackay, honor graduate of Trip; ity University, and gold medalist 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 O'phthalmie Hospital, London, England; University Hospital, Lon- don, ls.,ngland. Office -Back of Do- minion Bank, Seaforth. Phone No. 5. Night calls answered•from residence, Victoria •Street, Seaforth. DR. S.•R. COLLYER Graduate Faculty of Medicine, Uni- versity of Western Ontario. Member College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario. Post graduate work at New York City Hospital and Victoria Hos- pital, London.- Phone: Hensall, 56. Office, King Street, Hensel]. DR. J. A. MUNN Graduate' of Northwestern Univers- --- ity, Chicago, III. Licentiate Royal College of Dental Surgeons, Toronto,. Office over Sills' Hardware; Main St., Seaforth. Phone 151. DR. F. J. BECHELY, Graduate',Royal 'Oollege of Dental Surgeons, Toronto. Office over W. R. Smith's Grocery, MainStreet, Sea - forth. Phone: 'Office, 185' W; resi- dence, 185,1. CONSULTING ENGINEER , S. Wl. Archibald, B.A.Sc,, (Toronto)", O.L.S., Registered Professional En- gineer and Land Surveyor. Victor Buildings -288% Dundas 'Street, 'Lon- don, Ontario. Telephone : Metcalf 2801W'. AUCTIONEERS OSCAR KL,9P.P Honor Graduate Carey Jones' Na- tional School for Auctioneering, Chi= cago. Special course taken in Pure • Bred Live Stook, Real Estate, Mer-' chandise and Farm Sales. Rates in keeping with prevailing markets. &at- isfaetion assured. • Write or wire, Oscar 'Klopp, Zurich, Ont. Phone : 18-98. • 2866-52 w1LDS BY OTTWELL $INNS (Continued from last week) "Well," she replied quickly, "you say the Indian told you that it was an order. V aejt znyfselfL-whoso • or- der? There were very few people at Fort IM!alsun to give orders, T think of thein in turn;, The factor? You were a strange>:• to hien!' My uncle? He never heard of you ex- cept in gossip over the dinner -table the night you were deported.. Ger- ald Ainley? He knew you! He had made appointments with you that he twice failed to keep -which, .quite ev- idently, he had no intentionof keep- ing. He had --may I guess? -some strong reason for avoiding you; and he is a mean of some authority in the Company and moving to still greater. He would not know the Indians who actually carried you away; but••Fac- for Rad'well would, and factors are only human, and sooner or later Ger- ald Ainley will be able to considerab- ly influence Mr. Rodwell's future. Therefore -well, Q-,E.D! Do you not - agree with me?" "I find your argument convincing." lapsed: into though fu IThen sileriee lwhilst la the girl, watched him, wondering what was in his mind. Presently she knew, for most unexpectedly the young man gave vent toa short laugh. "What a foal the man is!" he de- clared. "He must know that we shall ,meet again some time! , nut, Miss Yardely, I am keeping you from your rest! We must start be - time in the morning if I am to take you back to your uncle." "If you take me bask-- .?" "There is no question of that,' he answered promptly. "3 could not dream of leaving you here." "I was about to say you would very likely imeet Gerald Ainley. He has joined my uncle's party." "So much the better," cried Stane. "I shall certainly go." There was a flash in his blue eyes, a grim Iook in his face, and instinct- ively Helen Yardely knew that the matter ..which lay between this mari and ;Gerald Ainley was something much more serious that forced depor- tation. What it was she could not guess, and though after she had re- tired to the -tent she lay awake think- ing of the - matter, when she fell asleep she was as far off as ever from anything that offered a solu- tion of the •question which troubled her, - And outside, staring into the fire, his' strong face the index of dark thoughts, Hubert Stane sat through the short night of the Nortlilana summer, never once feeling the need of sleep, reviewing from a di:ierent angle the same question as that which had perplexed the mind of the girl in the tent. At the first hint of dawn Stane rose, from his seat, gathered up the girl's now dry raiment, and put it in a heap at the tent door, then proner- ing a canvas bucket of water he set that beside• the clothes and busied himself with preparing breakfast. Af- ter ,a little time Helen emerged from the tent. Her eyes were bright, her beautiful face , was radiant with health, and it was clear that she was no 'worse for her experience of the day before. "Good morning, Mr. Stane," she said in gay salutation "you are the early bird. I hope you slept weIl." "May I reciprocate the hope, Miss Yardely ?" "Never better, thank you. I think hunger and adventure must be health- ful. I slept like the Seven Sleepers rolled into one; I feel as fresh as the morning, and as hungry as -well, yo -u will see," she ended with ' a laugh. "Then fall to," he said, joining in the laughter. '"The sooner the break- fast is over the sooner we shall start." "I warn you I am in no hurry," she 'retorted gaily. "I quite like, this. It is the real thing; whilst my uncle's camps are just civilization imposing; itself on the wilderness." - "But your uncle! You must thine of him, Miss Yardely. You have now been away an afternoon and a night. He will be very anxious." "Yes!" she said, "that's the pity of it. If it were not for thaten-" She broke off suddenly, gave a little laugh and for no apparent reason her faca flushed rosily. "But you must re- store me t� the bosom of my family soon!" "fore's the pity!" said Stane to (himself under his breath, his heart- beats quickening as he looked at her radiant face and laughing eyes; whilst openly he said: "I ,Will do. my .best. You will be able to help me to paddle 'against the current, and no doubt in a little time we shall meet a. search, party, coming to look for you." "Then my little jaunt will be over! But you must not surrender me untii you have seen my uncle; Mr. Stave.' Stane laughed. "I will hold you against the world until then, Miss Yardely." "And perhaps you will see Gerald Ainley,•as you wish," she said, glanc- ing at him to watch the effect of her words. The laughter died swiftly from his face, and a stern light came into his eyes. "Yes," he said grimly, "per- haps .I shall: Indeed, that is my hope." Helen Yardely did not pursue the matter further. Again she glimpsed depths that .she. did not understand" and as she ate her breakfast she glanced from time to time at her -companion, wondering -what, was be- tween him and Ainley, and wonder- ing in vain. Breakfast finished they struck amp, launched the canoe and began to paddle, upstream'. The current was strong, an.d their progress slow, but after Some three hours they ar- rived at the junction of the two rivers -then Stone asked a question. 'L. amemmalemeammenesessemess "Which way did 'you come, Miss Yardely?" 'Down the main stream or the other one?" The girl looked tower* the meet- ing of the waters doubtfully. "I do not know," she said. "I certainly do not reunem'ber coming through. that rough water." "Your uncle's party had, of course, travelled some way since 'i: left Fort •Maisun?" ("Oh yee; we had made .long jour- neys each day, and we were well on our way to -wait a moment. I shall remember the name -to -oto old Fort Winagog." "Winagog?" said 'Stave. '"Yes! That is the name: I re- me'm'ber my uncle mentioning it yes- terday." "Then you came down the main stream for a certainty,, for the old fort stands on a lake that finds an outlet into this river, though it is rather a long way from 'here. We will keep straight on. No doubt we shall strike either your uncle's camp or some search party presently." As it happened the conclusion he reached was based on a miscalcula- tion. The only waterway to old Fort Winagog that he 'knew was from the main river and up the stream that formed the outlet for the lake. But there was another that was reached by a short, portage through the woods from the subsid- iary •stream from which he turned'• a- side,' a 'Waterway which fed the lake, and whieh cut off at least a hundred and twenty miles. Knowing nothing of this shorter route he naturally con- cluded that Helen Yarde1y's canoe had come down 'the main stream, and took the wrong course in the perfect assurance that it was the right one. 'So hugging the left bank they Pass- ed the junction of the rivers, and a little further on crossed to the other side to seek shelter from a rising wind, under the high 'bank. And less than an hour later the canoe, carry- ing Gerald Ainley and his Indian, swept out of the tributary stream in- to .the broader ;current; and they drove downstream, unconscious that every stroke of the paddle was taking them further from the girl whom they sought. . CHAPTER WI STRAN DED It was high noon when Hubert IStane directed the nose of the canoe towards a landing -place in the lee of a sand -bar on the upper side of which was a pile. of dry driftwood suitable for firing. "We will take an hour's rest, Miss Yardely; and possibly whilst we are waiting• your friends my show up." He lit a fire, prepared a wilderness meal of bacon and beans (the latter already half -cooked) . anel :biscuit and coffee, and as they consumed it ho watched the river, a Tong stretch of -which was visible. "I thoug'httewe should•,have encoun- tered your friends before now, Miss Yardely,''' he remarked thoughtfully. The girl smiled. ."Are you anxious to. get rid of me?" she ...asked, "Be- lieve me, I any enjoying myself anti- azingly and if it were not for the anxiety my uncle and the others will be feeling, I should not trouble at all, This-" she waved a hand towards the canoe and the river -"is se dif) ferent from my uncle's s•peeially con- ducted tour." 'Oh; I am not at all anxious to be rid of you," laughed • Stane, "bet I cannot help wondering whether we have not taken the wrong turn. Yoe eee, if we halve, every yard takes us further from your• uncle's camp." "But this is the way to Fort Win - agog?" asked the girl. "It is the only way I know." • "Then we must be going ri,g•4t, for I distinctly heard my uncle say we were within a days journey of the. place." - "The thing that worries me is that we have met no one looking for you." "No doubt they will thoroughly search the neighbourhood of the camp and the beaver -dam before going fur- ther afield. 'Also, you must remem- ber that it might be dinner -time last night 'before I was missed." "Yes," he agreed, "that is very likely. On which bank of the river was •the camp?" "This bank -the left coming down," "Then we will hug the *here this (afternoon, and no doubt we shall find it before supper -time." But in that anticipation he was mistaken., The long day drew to its close and the camp they sought had not appeared; nee had any search - party .mnaterialieed. As they pitdhed camp for the night, the doubt which all .day had been in Stane's mind be- came a certainty. "I am afraid we have made a mis- take, Miss Yardely. You 'must have come down the other rivers -It is im- possible that we can have, missed the camp; and we must have seen any boat coming down 'this empty wa- ter." "But we are going towards Fort Winagog?" "Yes. On the other hand, you roust remember that a .paddle -driven canoe trarvels much faster than a merely drifting one; end that we ourselves, assuming that we are on the right way, all 'day have been shortening the distance that a search party,. would have . to travel. We ought to have met soon time ago. I think we shall have to turn back in the morn- jeg-" • "Moist we?" asked the girl. "Can't we go on to Fort Winagog? I can wait there till my uncle appears, and I shall not be taking you further out of your way. I an! afraid I am put- ting you to a good deal of trouble, and wasting your tine." "Tune is not of much account to me," laughed .Stane shortly, "And What you suggest is impossible." "*Why?" demanded Helen. "Because. old Fort Winagog is a • • fort no longer.. Ftsie a mere ruin like old 'Fort Selkirk.ere may be an Indian or. two in tU neighbourhood. (There is certainly rio One else." "Then we shall have to go back?" (said the girl. •'SIt seems to be the only way," was the reply. "If we are wrong, as I am convinced we are, every yard we go takes us further from your peo- ple." "{t am sorry to give you all this trouble," said the girl contritely. "Please -please!" he answered in quick protest. "Believe me it is a pleasure to serve you; and with me.' a few days do not Matter. I shall have enough of nsy own company be- fore _long." • "You live alone?" asked Helene "I have an old Indian for compan- ion." ••' "And what do you do, if you will permit me to be so curious?" "Oh," he laughed. al hunt, I pur- sue the elusive nugget, and I experi- ment with vegetables. And this win- ter I am going to start a trapping line-" "But you are rich!" she cried. "Yon have no need to live in exile." "Yes," he answered with sudden bitterness."I am rich. I suppose Ainley told 'you that.• But exile is the only ••thing for me. You see a so- jojurn ` in ,Dartmoor .spoils , one for country 'society." "Oh," she cried protestingly, "I cannot believe that yoiil--that you--" "Thank you,' he •said as the girl broke offin confusion. "I cannot be- lieve' it myself. But twelve good men and true believed . it; an expert in handwriting was most convincing, and if you had heard- the judge---" "But you did not do it; Mr• Stone, I am sure of that." "No," - "No," hp answered, "I did not do the thingfor which I„ suffered. But to prove my innocence is another matter." - "You have not given up the endeav- our. I hope. "No! I have a roan at work in England, and T myself make small endeavours. Only the other day I thought that `Apparently he remembered something, for he •broke off sharply. "But why discuss the af- fair? It is only one of the world's ,small injustices which Shows that the 'law, usually right, may go wrong oc- casionally." ,But Helen Yardely was not so eas- ily to be turned aside. Whilst he had been speaking a thought had occur- red tg-.her, and now took the form of a question. "I suppose that the other night when you were waiting for Mr, Ain- ley, it was on this particular matter that you wished to see • him ?" "What makes you think that?" Stane asked quickly. Helen Yardely smiled. "It is not difficult to guess. You told me last night that you wished to question him on a matter that wasimportant to yoia. And this matter -well! it needs no argument." "It might be something' else, Miss Yardely," was the evasice reply. "Yes, it might be," answered the girl, "but I do not think it is." Stone made no reply, but sat look- ing in the. fire and the girl. watching ;him, drew her own conclusion from his silence, a conclusion that was far from favou'r'able to Gerald Ainley. She wondered what were the ques- tions 'Stave had wished to ask he; uncle's secretary; and which, as she was convinced, he had been at such pains to avoid. Was it possible that her rescuer believed that his one-time friend had it in his power to prove his innocence of the crime for which he had suffered? All 'the indications. reem,ed to point that way; and as she looked at the grave, thoughtful faee, and the greying hair of the man who had saved her from death, she• resolv- ed that on the morrow, when she reached her uncle's camp, she would herself question Gerald Ainley upon the matter. But, as events befell, the oppor- tunity that the morrow was to briny was not given. For that night, whilst she slept in the little tent, and Stave, wrapped in a hlanket,-slu•mber- •ed on a bed of spruce -boughs, perhaps +half a dozen yards away, a man crept cautiously between the trees in the rear of the encampment, and stood looking at it with, covetous eyes. He was a half-breed of evil countenance and he carried an old trade gun, which he held ready for action whilst he surveyed the silent camp. His dark eyes fell on Stane sleeping in the open, and then looked towards the tent with a question in them. Evi- dently he was wondering how many travellers 'there were; and found the thought''a deterrent one; for though once he lifted his gun and pointed it. to the sleeping man, he Iowered it again, his eyes turning tenth; t nt anew. After a period of indecision the in• truder left the shadow of the trees, and crept quietly down to the camp, his gun still at the ready, and with his eyes fixed on the unconscious Stane. Moving very cautiously he reached the place Where the canoe was 'beached, and looked down into it. A gleam of satisfaction came in- to his dark eyes as he saw a- small sack of beans reposing in the stern, then again a covetous look came into ,them as their gaze shifted to the ,stores about the camp. But these were very near the sleeping man, and as the latter stirred in his sleep' the half-breed relinquished any thought of acquiring' them. Stealthily he con- veyed the canoe down to the water's edge, launched it, and then with a grin on his evil face as he gave a last look at the man in the blanket, he paddled away. • A full three-quarters of • an hour later Stane awoke and kicking aside the blanket replenished the fire, and then went a little • way upstream to bathe. At the enol of half an hour he n . the I "then' 1Jis tl) ilyr� all 0losed, 'ied tea*l►4rh0 he ce'. 'W w i eg.4 4 11a tl+s unfa,nibnr,'.sroothing acct pow ent, 441P;aatrO.Ott! -''1'bbe cis eefa, As ,the words shat fra2n lucre he her tied forward• f este AlAstin4ly xe rnembared carrying `,t tw., the lentilk the, 'night before, arid .,,,,..- " In side half a minute he found. hiemelf looking at the plaee where it had lain; The 'ininivesion of it -wasBits akar' on the decry grass, and there were other ]impreseior s ale.--irmpres- sines of w'occasined feet goring down, to the edge .of ,the ° water. • For a moment he starred unbelievingly; then as a thought occurred to Cion he, glanced at the tent again. Had .the girl in his absence taken the canoe and --•- The thought died as soon as it was born, and he began to Bellow the tracks on the damp grans, backward. They skirted the camp in a small Semi -circle, and led to the forest be- hind, whe{e an the dry pine needles they were not quite ee easy to fol- low. But follow chem he did, and in a couple of minufhs. ' reached a place where it was evident., some one had stood for a considerable time. This spot was in the shadow of a great spruce, and standing behind the trunk he looked towards the camp. The fire and the white tent were plain to be seen. Then he understood what had happened. Same one had seen the encampment and had waited in the place where he now stood, probably to reconnoitre, and then had made off with the canoe. A thought leap- ed into his _mind at that moment, and brought with it •a surge of fear. "The stores. If-" At k -run he covered the space be- tween him and the camp, and as, he looked round and saw that most of the stores reposed where he had plac- ed them the previous night, relief surged in his heart. • "Thank heaven!" • "Mr. ,Stan, what is the matter? You look•as if something had start- led you." • He swung round instantly. Helen Yarely was standing at the tent door with a smile on her face. "The matter is serious enough," he explained quickly. "'Some one 'has stolen the canoe in the night." "Stolen the canoe!" echoed the 'girl. "Yes! You can see .his tracks in the grass, going up to the place where .he stood and watched us. He must have come down whilst •we slept." "But who cafe have done such a thing?" Stan shook his head. "I cannot think. A wandering Indian. most.like- ly . . Hard put to it, I expect. He has taken a sack of beans with him." "Then we are stranded?" asked the girl quickly. "In a way -yes," he agreed. "`But we are not in a desperate case. We have food, I have my rifle; •and it will be possible to make a raft and float down the river until we •meet your uncle's people." The• girl looked at the river doubt-. fully." "What sort of control shall we beep. the l u of o eFa t,oned. e�tane len ii!h'oo' 'h` I)uo)nrent 'he' l► Girteh,g the alitd as is ?�erciemee bile oz ,ng `ef eurre7it" ;a, thf; u,+se'8 0, tins rivers hp KeneOlge4..t4er4 .yfa'; ". reason in the g,xl',w +Ileatiprr, «" Thtaxe axe S's4, course' . h(s said. `The altey'nat,ve lei the .riser 1's n p htn the .wd•«" ,"ThtoIraen .1 vete trforgh hg. alteoornat xr,� replied ¶Telen with a Tittle lau,ggh� `SIT e haat ni, r full of drifting. lr'lee a''•t1y caught in .are eddy." •• , 'Stane looked down the river 'and! fame .the river to the -Weed's Which lined its banks.• • "1t wilt be difficult," he said. "Thi ' is virgin forest." "Pooh," retorted • the girl lightly - "You ;can't make me' afraid,• , Mr. 'Stave. Ewer since 1 left •Edmonton with my uncle's. party I've wanted to rough. it --to know' what the wilder- ness really is. Now's my chance -if you don't deprive me of it." In spite of the seriousuess of the ,,situation, Stane laughed. "Oh, I won't deprive you of it, Miss Yardely. 'W'e'll start after breakfast; but I warn you, you don't know what you are be for." • '"Job's comforter!" ,she mocked him laughingly. "I'm going to .fill , the kettle. A cup of tea will cheer you up and make you take a rosier view of things." She said no more, but taking the kettle, walked down to the river, humming to herself a gay little chanson. "Qui va la! There's some one in the orchard, There's a robber in the apple trees, Qui va la! "'He is creeping through the doorway. Ah, ailez vous-en! ea -t' -en!" He watched her go, with a soft light gleaming in his hard blue eyes, then he turned a'nd 'began to busy himself with preparations for break- fast. When themeal was finished', he went through the stores, and his personal possessions. "We can't take them all," he ex- plained; "I know my limit, and sixty pounds is as much as I can carry .along if I am to travel steadily, without toe many rests. We shall have to cache a goodish bit." "You are forgetting me, arent you?" asked the girl quietly. "I'm fairly strong, you know." `ABut---" "I think I must insist," she inter- eupted with a smile. "You are doing all this' for me; and quite apart from that, I shall be glad to know what the trail is like wider real conditions." Stane argued further, but in vain, and in the end the girl had her way, and took the trail with a pack of perhaps five and twenty pounds, part- ly made up of the clothes she had changed into after her rescue. Stane knew the woods; he guessed what havoc the train would make of skirts and for that reason he included the '0•a�} r ee1T!}h,ry,epn • .• R p., T'M, t 1 0,404 .....,.R40'4?1r.ei :1400,4000r9 • I3Iyth••• ' y• Beigrave�" ... ...•...• . ;.. ,A? Winghant • .. ,...,,+ , /AP ,t;, C. "IST .R ., East Goderich 0.35 Ho1mesville .... .. 6,50 $til Clinton' • 6.08 .. 3:0 Seaforth .:, 7.12 3,31 - St. Coluenban . , .. , 7.1$ 8.2T Dublin 7.24 ;. 3.32 P ski Dublin St. Celumban Seaforth Clinton Hloliriesvilie Goderich West. 11.24 9.1.2 11.29 , 11.40 9.24' 11.55 9.39 12.05 ' "9.53 12.20 10.05 C. P. R. TIME TABLE East. Goderieh Menset McGaw Auburn Blytth Walton McNaught Toronto Toronto 'McNaught .... 1.45 Walton 12.01 Blyth 12.12 A`u'1?urn 12.2:4 IM'Gaw 12.34 Menset 12.41 Goderich 12.4G West. a.m. 5.50 5.55 6.04 6.11 6.25 6.40 6.52' 10.2'5 ' a,m. 7.40 clothing in her pack, foreseeing that there would be further need of them. As they started the girl began to hum: "Some talk of Alexander And some of Hercules." • Stane laughed over his shoulder. "I'm afraid, a quick step will be out of keeping soon, Miss Yandre"hy." "Why?" she asked, interrupting her song. "WeII-packing on trail is . neces- sarily a slow 'business; and there's -rough country between these two rivers." (Continued next week) ere's A Game For all the Family' (or your guests) SOME night, when party, ask everybody Question 1 What product would 'you use for gargling, to kill throat and mouth germs? 2. What brand of cheese is best known to you? 3" "French women rarely allow water to touch their skin, but .prefer cold cream for cleans- ing." What cold cream • is said to be the purest and best for s k i n - cleansing? 4. It is said that Canadian women are using more white soap for a l 1 cleaning and dishwash- ing. What white soap was named? 5. If you wished to color your finger nails to match the color of your gown, what preparation is available for such a purpose? 6. There a certain floor wax giving a surface wh'i'ch neither pounding feet nior scaping chairs can mar. What is its name? the family is complete, or when you to give answer s to these questions: Fill in Answer • are giving a Question 7. What toothpaste bases its appeal for use on its' declared ability to re- , move the film which foirns on teeth? 5. "No matter ..how ,much housework you have to do, you 'c a n easily avoid the embarrass- ment of Domestic Hands" - so say the half -century -old makers of a skin 'cream. What Cream is it? Fill in Answer <'. A c ertain advertiser says that when you are constantly ti red and over-worked, Fatigue Poisons accumulate in your system. He makes a drinking cereal which fights fatigue poisons. What is the name of this beverage? 10, After 30 years of ex- perience in ham -curing, a neat packer says that "Four great improve • - ments came dramatical- ly, from a new method of smoking the hams" -improvements in (1) flavor, (2) tender qual- ity, (3) pinkness of col- or, and (4) firmness." The new way is called " Ovenized. " What hams are "ovenized"? You can make your own questions -by stu dying the advertisements in this and other news- papers. Write out the questions, and pin the sheet of paper on the wall. Offer a small prize to the one who gives the most correct answers inside 30 minutes. Or ask each member of the fancily, or each guest, to provide a question, for inclusion "' on the "examination paper." YOU'LL HAVE AN EVENING WITH LOTS OF MERRIMENT -ANI) SOME USEFUL INSTRUCTION -IN IT. This Advt, is sponsored by the Canadian Weekly Newspapers Association, of which The Huron Expositor is a Member. . .,.r. r �;tn �t q 14' 7...0 1�61vsf.1.w>.M...i_f.c8.li,rV1:4„r�::�tk-,.e.., ,..+'.,�4v�.3u., ee L • <.