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The Huron Expositor, 1898-11-04, Page 7W.! 4111piaarNIIISSIPSOSIMMOMIRMI, VETERINARY I TORN GRIEVE, V, S., honor graduate of Ontario' Veterinary College. All diseases of Dotnestici male treated. Calle promptly attended to and ohsrges moderate. Veterinary Dentstry a spec1alty.1 Woe and residence on Goderioli street, one door teat of Dr. Soott's office, Seaforth. 1112-tf G. H. GIEIBi Telleeinary Sorg • Vetierintlry dentin gainsay College, eon and Dentists Toronto College of is, Honor Graduate of Ontario Vet - Honor member of Ontario Veterin- 7 a 0 fo e neatest bootesy. an niseases in aomesuo ammo dizzily treated. All calls promptly attended (or night. Dentistry and Surgery a specialt onli tind Dispeosary-Dr. Campbell's old offic i street Seaforth. Night emits answered ft on ti l' e. 1406-62 LEGAL JAMES L KILLORAN . 9 arrister, Solicitor, Conveyancer and Note blio. Money to loan; Office over Pickard's Stor nnerly MechanicsInstitute, Main Street, Seafort 1528 ir. a. CAMERON, formerly of Cameron, Holt L. Cameron, Barrister and Solicitor, Goderie dart°. Office-Hemilton street, oppositeColbor tel. 1162 8. HAYS, Barrister, Solloitor, Conveyancer at Netter/ Pnblio. Solicitor for tho Doraina itik. Ofdoe--Oardno's block, Main Street, Seated 'Rey to loan. 1226 E. BEST, Barrister, Solloitor, Notary, & . °Moe -Rooms, five doors north ofCcromerol disI, ground floor, next door to C. L. Papel Flan' store-, Main street, &Worth. °vied ati-eameron. Holt and Cameron. 1216 e, b. 16 1. 0. §COTT & McKENZIE, Barristers, Solicitors, eto., Clinton and Baytield. Clinton Office, Elliott look, Isaac street. Bayfield Oft*, open every Thursday, Main etreet, firet door west of post office. Money to loan. James Scott & E. H. McKenzie. 1598 j1 AB&OW& PROUDFOOT, Barrister., ilodoitows, tX o,Godatioh, Ontario. J. T. 0.1114011! Q. at P11017D118011. - 680 etitilIERON, HOLT & HOLES% Barrister* So- Ssj Breton in Chancery, &o.,Goderich, Oat M. C. Catenater, Q. o., Pamir How, Dumas Horan HOLIIESTED, successor to the late firm of „U a McCaughey & Holmeeted, Barrister, Solicitor Conveyancer, and Notaty Solicitor for the Can adieu Benk of Commerce. Money to lend. Farm for sale. Office in Scott's Block, Main Street Seaforth, DENTISTRY. 1G1 W. TWEDDLE, Dentlet. OtEce-4Iver Richard - e on & McInnis' shoe store, corner Main and John streets, deaforth. D i. BELDEN, dentist; crowning, bridge work and gold pieta work. Special attention given bo the preservation of the natural teeth. All work sareftilly performed. Odioe-over Johnson Bros.' aardware store, fleaforth. _ 1461 l'NE. H. S. ANDERSON, graduate of Royal College of Dental finrgeons, Ontario, D. D. S., of To - rent° University. Office, Market Block, Mitchell, Ontario. 1402 D R. A. R. KINSMAN, L. D. S., D. D. 8. • ITenor graduate of Toronto Uoiversity, Den - Met, Will praetoe dentistry at his father's rooms in •Exeter, and at his room at Mrs. Shafer's restaurant, Hensall, every Wednesday. H. Kinsman, L. D. S., at Zurich the Iasi Thurdeday of each month. 1645-18 D O, F. A. SELLERY, Dentist, graduate of the Royal College of Dental Surgeons, Toronto, also honor graduate of Department of Dentistry, Toronto 'University. Office in the Petty block, Homan. Will visit Zurich every Monday, commencing Mon- day, June lat. 1587 RAGNEW, Dentist, Clinton, will visit Zurioh On •. the second Thursday of each month. 1692 MEDICAL. 99.10 Dr. John McGinnis, Hen. Graduate London Western University, member of Ontario College of Physicians and Surgeons. Office and Residence -Formerly occupied by Mr. Wm. Pickard, Victoria Street, next to the Catholic) °bomb IfErNight calls attended promptly. 1468112 ARMSTRONG, M. B., Toronto, M. D. C. AL, 1..1 Victoria, M. C. P. 8,, Ontario, successor to Dr. Elliott, office lately occupied by Dr. VIM, Bruce- tild,Ontario. LEX. BETHUNE, M. D., Fellow of the Royal [foliage of Physicians and Surgeons, Kingston. r to Dr. Maokid. Office lately ocenpied :Dr. Maokid, Maie. Street, Seaforth. Residency --Horner of Victoria Square, in house lately ocerupied •by L. E. Danoey. 1127 OR. F. J. BURROWS, Late resident Physician and Surgeon, Toronto GOO - oral Hospital. Honor graduate Trinity Univenity, *umber of the College of Physicians and Surgeons af Ontario. Coroner for the County of florets or OFFICIE.-Ssme as formerly ocoupied by Dr. Smith, opposite Publio School, Seaforth. Telephone No. 46. N. B --Night calls answered from office. • 1886 DRS. .SCOTT & MacKAY, PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS, • Goderioh etreet, opposite Methodist ohureh,Seaforth J., O. SCOTT, graduate Victoria and Ann Arbor, end member Ontario College of Physicians .end Surgeons. Coroner for County of Huron. --tta hopor graduate Trinity University, gold Medalist Trinity Medical College. Member College of Physicians and Surgeons, Ontario. 1410 DR.• F. H. KALBFLEISCH, Physician, Surgeon and Accoucheur, summer to -Dr. W. Graham, Brunet+, Ontario. First Close Honor Graduate of the Univereitiee of Trinity (Toronto), Queen's (King- eton), and of Trinity Medial College ; Fellow of Trinity Medical College and member of the College of Physicist:le and Surgeone of Ontario. Post Graduate Course in Detroit and Chicago, 1896. Special attention paid to dioceses of Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat, and Dieeeeee of Women. Ce,tarrah tre,ated successfully in all its forms. Coneultation In English and German. 1581.tf AUCTIONEERS. WM. M'CLOY, teictioaeer for the Countleo of Huron and Perth, and Agent at flensall for the Massey -Hanle Menu - :adoring Company. Saler promptly attended to, obarges moderate and ssilefaction guaranteed. Olden by mall addreeeed to Hensel! Poet Office, or left at Ids residence, Lot 2, Concession 11, Tuck. • ./smith, will receive prompt Attention. 1298-11 Per over a year we have had the agency for the sale oi INDAPO. Our first order was for a quarter of a dorm our last for One Hundred and Forty.four Dollars worth. TRADEMARK 4411rin REGISTERElL, X.U.S11111 Made a well Man of iNDAPO 711E GREAT VerD00 REMEDY ?nor:mess anovn seats in 80 dame. (antes all Nervous Diseases. Pal lug Memory Paresis, Sleeplessness, Nightly Emis- *ions, eta., caused by past abuses, gives figor and size to shrunken organs,. and quickly but *urely restores Lost Manhood in old or young. Easily carried in vest pcteket. Price $/.00 a package, ix for $5.00 with a written guarantee to cure or tnoney ref untied . DolsaT LIVYAN ImrraTrott, but insist on having INDAPO. If your druggist has not t ot it, we will Head it prepaid. .INDOO ILEDIVIYT CO., Proprs, ChIstago, in. or our Aries. This rapid increase proves it is a remedy that everyone , pho tries it speaks well of. Yours respectfully, • I. Y. FEAR, Seeforth, Ont. AUCTION SALE OF 'Threshing Outfitt. Mr. William McCloy has been instructed by Mr. Jones Bell, Jr,, • to pelt by public auction in the village cf Rental!, at the rear of Petty's block, on MONDAY, NOVEMBER 14th, 1808, at 2 o'clock p. m., the following- :-One threehing mottle and eive-herse power steel boiler, mode by E. leonerd ..one, L ndon'all In gond running order. Also 12 feet of ais inch belting, also fireaelaom. Thie or party will positively be mold evithout reserve. Te ins and conditions made known on day of mile. ; YM. McC-LOY, JAMES BELL, JR., ioneer. Proprietor. 1611.1(3 It nvAll a I brave man IAshudders at the thought I of being torn k yaild tended ta 1.0 t e jaws V of a fero- icious ti er. In evety alk of life, from that of the 1- •orer to that of he pro- fessiona m a n , there e thou- - -sands at the / \ mercy o a tiger more ,r lentless -ow. ..0.... .0 than an found In all India. That tiger il the dread disease k own as consumption'. slays More Men and wo. wen yearly than there are rain dr ps in a summer shower. It steals upon i s victim with noiseless tread. 1 There is a sure and certain protection against this deadly disease, and a sure and speedy cure for it, if it is re orted to in time.. Discovery. his wonderful m dicine acts It is ij[sDr. Pierce'Gol en Medical s directly on the lungs through the blood, tearing _down old, half-dead tis ues, build- ing up new and healthy ones, drivmg out all impurities and disease germs and ga- vandink the lungs and introducing life-giv- ;ing oxygen into the circulation. It' has wonderful curative powers :and allays all inflamntation of the mucousim mbraiies of the lun s and bronchial tubes. i It makes the app tite keen and hea, the digestion and assimilation perfect, the Over active, the bloOd pure and rich with thth life-giving I elemen.s of e!food, and the nerves strong and steady. It is the great food -maker and flesh -builder. It has the most marvel- ous sustaining powers of any known med- icine. Thousands who were upon the verge of a premature grave have testified to their recovery through its wonderful -virtues 11tIeclicines dealers sell it, and have/nothing .. else " j ust as good." When a dealer urges some sOstitute he' thinking of the larger profit Le'll make -- not of your *el fare. Dr. Piercer book, "The Common Sense Medical Adviser," is a treasure in an fam- ily. It contains rooS pages and 3oo ill stra- tions. A et:nip FREE to everyperson who will send to the World's Disp nsary Med- ical Association, Buffalo, N. Y.,, 31 on -cent stamps, to pay cost of cu toms and m iling .only. For cloth binding, send 50 sta ps. THE FLOWING 8 0I4STR NG. i Presently, Edith Meye a came up •ehind Sara and begen fairly to f rce her seal -skin from her. Deep in a disc mien with Hast- ings, Sadie laughingly • ubmi ted. Then, just as Edith Idrew the oat way, Sadie gave a, little I cry and hastily snatched it back. I glanced at her ju t in time to Mitch the force of the situatiOn, but ad, alas! had both Edith and Hastings. And what a sit- ', • Dear, careless Sadie! he had been writ- ing up to wit in . five minutes ,1 of our de- partureeand iad amazed me by her quick toilet. Here was the explana ion. • With- out removing Ithe well-worn re blouse she usually wore in the morning at her desk, and which wa so shabby I had threatened to put it in t e rag -bag, she had donned the skirt of a etre t suit, and had drawn it up over the belt f her blouse, leaving no finish- ing but the sl4irt.belt, adorned as it was by sundry hook and eyes. The all -covering sealskin had lidden this iniquity from ..my eyes; but no*, having forgotten it herself, she steed be ore Mr. Ward Raetings in a costume whi h caught his qui* eyes and held ' them a1s if the sight fascinated him With horror. Poor Sadie! She had her coat on again in a minute, murm ring, with scarlet cheeks and drooping e es---" Whet am I thinking of? We must no stay !" but it was too late to hide the reeelation cen- corning his ideal, which the seeend accident in one shor afternoon had ripened before the would-be over's astonished aze. - I got Sara day as some as p stable, and she was only too glad t� esca le. • I could 17, not help fanc ing that the tone f Hasting's voice, as we t ok leave, was a rifle graver than usual, en that there was a shade upon his face. •I .As for Sar , since outside the door, she was in a et te of depression deeper than ever before k own to her, and we walked home in silen e. • There was o writing done in the sanctum next day, I w s sure of that. Not one word did my girl sa in allusion to the mishaps of yesterday, bu the usual signs of her work were missingj In the afternoen she was away; and on the day followieg, though' she spent the morning at her desk, it was easy to see that something wasedistracting her attention That evening ber waeher- woman carrie1 away, with a smiling face, a big bundle of kld clothes. Tfir4 days -later, Sara came into my room, in te morning before breakfast, looking as I had eever Keen her look before at that hoar. Inetead of the worn-out street and evening gowns which had always been her waking garb, she were a close -fitting black dress, made in irreproachable, though in plainest, style. Over this was a pretty black silk apron, well adapted to the inky demands sure to be made upon it. Her hair wee in as per- fect order as its curly perversity would allow; and the ' neat, new little slippers upon her feet, the dainty handkerchief tucked into her belt added to the startling- ly trim look she bore. As to her face -nev- er had it seemed more charming, though it was soberer than I had ever knewn it. "Don't Bay a word, Ern," she bominanded, as I began an impulsive speech of delight. "Of course, you will think it won't last, because bad habits are not dropped so eas- ily ; but -it will. I have had , my lesson, and r have begun to be the typical, tidy , spinster Who writes thy romaneos she never experienced." , And, indeed, before the month was over, I began to think she was right. , 'Mr. Hast- ings allowed a much longer interval than usualto elapse before he called,1 and when he came Sara was nowhere to be found. He came a second time, but she wee, out of town for the day, and we held a soreewhab for- mal, and decidedly short, conyersatien op various commonplace subjects: He \ was going on is long, southern trip,eine • hes had often spoken of - taking, and which brelness bow most opportunel- ly demanded. For, of course, the man, thorough gentlemanAhat he was. would be very careful at to the manner in which he ceased market attention to a girl like Sara Randolp ; a d nothing could make the matter 1 ss co spicuoue for her than his ab- sence upon w411 understood busieese. Alas! for my aear girl's oae sad fault. A ripped ruffle, a careless tnilet--and the aseeeeeme nation! EP0405 WLING GIN BKIN bi IA Ea RELIEVED 13V DNS AR • OLICATIOWQ11JJr. . ,Agll iw's Ointifient,, • 3 , CENTS. Mr. James 0 tott, merchant,Wilkesbarre, Pa., writes o -a or nine years I have been dlsOgured vrlth •totter on hands and But at last I have found a ciire In pr. Agnew's Qlnit ent, ?,ly skIt is VOW smooth and scifIt and free from every blem- ish. The first ppllcatlon gave rellef.-30. For tale by L msden & Wilson, Seeforth THE love which hnd b en almost hers, wee lost. How I struggled with myself lest I dare to defend her to her clieappointed admirer -an act which 1 well knew would rouse her fiercest iesdigi ati n, if the ever found it out. How could lie give up that sweet, warm nature, that bright nand, these winning ways, that b aut tut face? Was the man perfect hime lf, that he demanded perfec- tion in his wife a Arid yet, what one fault, Onless b weri tint. of an ill -governed lte i - per, co Id sp a a home like its mistreats' u tiainese. a • slI could not bl4ne Ward Hastings, as e stood there bitori me saying good-bye, a d leaving a pleasarui message of farewell f ir " Miss Rand lph " More perfectly appoint- ed masculine dre s -I never .saw -the whi ig its wearer was fu thest from seeming a m tf who adi,ertis d liis tailor, or who thoug t to be f ultle sly aims in his ways as for of him7lf at all. , Ie was as natural foe hi poor Sadie to be 'aultily lax. , And dams lf-Ward Hastings -was o e of those sple did fellows who make a gravid • thing of life , whose ,friendship is a richer possession than niost men's love, and whom Sadie must sorely' mists now that he ,wes gone. .... , Was there'i shade less rose in the exquis- ite face wheu it Was all over? Ware Sara's stories a trifle ilees vivacious, and did her heroes take qn a Iraver cast of feature? 1 I •could hardly tell, for my proadapirited girl would have t keti her own life -blood to dye her che ks b fore she would have let a tell-. tale p llor betrsy her suffering. That it was rea ly su eri ng I knew ; for the intense nature was a devoted one, and Sadie had quietly aid e day that she was glad she had not missed at least a trial of the great experie oe sho mast so many times portrate The lack work:dress was worn out and replaced by another and another, but to one ever saw Sad e shabby again, even in her most, seclul4 busiest hours. It was ex hard struggleer her'she confessed. it was so Much earlier to let the rips go; and the glove-fi gele always . needed 'mending j when the wrting fever was at its highest. .But she per ev ed, though she had no lover now, nd therm who would'gladly have been lo ,ers were kept at arm's length by the busy ming euthoreEs, whose best work was f t winnipg her the -reptfttion she was dete mined to have. It we d ring the next summer; that Sara's that n vel made her name familiar, and "The rumpet-Flower" Was read as few summer tories are. It Was not a great aehievernent it was not meant to be a study ie phyoholog , morales or . (esthetics ;.but it was so orig nal, so spider, so fresh ,and chanting th t all were captivated. I amid n t help wondering what a cer- tain person, eldom mentioned now, thought of it,I if it ' ad fallen into his hands. It seem to m lee must see the rare, sweet Noel • f the girl looking out through its pages and f neer that he might have judged her htLstily. , Late in -the season Sadie and I took a lit- tle run ciowa to .the coast, for both were weary with the summer's work, and the ma, er als for la salt -water story were ivant- Mg. own On the sands one day, in a!quiet IC, e mune suddenly face to face! with H Hastiogi. ,And strange to say, after the first'glaace I looked not at him, but at Sara. Couhl any man resist her? , As dainty'and freah as the sweet summer sir, she stood there iia her pretty Summer gown and lititkwhitei sailor hat; while her face, rosy with climbing over the reeks, was as lovely as ever face could be. The glad surprise thee leaped into 'Hastings' eyes, as, taken unawares, he came suddenly apon the girl! he had n t succeeded in forgetting; the way the color left Sadie's face and then surged into it again, betrayed • to the the welcome fact that indifference had not yet done its changing work, and the story waS not ended after all. I Vile held a aittle matter-of-fact conversa- tion for aboatithree minutes, Hastings look} ing down into Sadie' si face a dozen timeis il fulness of th civties due the daenna where he looked at line once, with a forget - l wheh I could asily forgive. If the ma' had not come back more in love than . ever in spite of himself, and willing to riek hi happiness and his ledittons in the hands o the ' charmin ly untidy little genius," was much mist ken. .1 A sail -boat glided round a rocky pima in to the little cove, and a party of gentlemen Mr. Hastings' Hondo, claimed him for thei own, He was off again almost 1 before • w realized that h had leen with use, but no without a hurilied in uiry as to the date o ouareturn, anI a 10-s" I shall come ver soon, if I may" wallah carried a theanin unmietakable. He certainly did c me soon; forave wer barely unpacked and at work again when h appeared. A appy thought struck me as admitted him: "Mr. Hest nge," E said, pausing on m way to -the pa lor, w ere we had always rei .ceived him, ' did yon eyer see Sara in het. sanctum, at w rk ? wonder if you would- n't like to. hall wesurprise her?" . "1 should e very glad," Ire said, eagerly -so eagerly that I smiled to myselt, and wondered if 1 vend troublee often ended as easily as this ieemed about to do. Sara's was a tiny room at the head of the • stairs, furnished only' With a desk and two chairs, a few hotographs .and a fine little • bust of Viotoi Hugo. ' Here she invariably spent her mo nings, amidst the pleasant lit- ter always foiind in a tieribbler's workshop; and 'here I k ew she was busy now. No anxious doub s concerning the state of her apparel trou ed me. I was conadetat of the attracti e pietate the pretty figure would make, beading- with flushed face over the flying pei. And could not resist' the temptation lo rewai4 the man who was coming back to his 'Old love, in spite of those dreadf 1 revelations of months itgo, with a Sight f the exauisite neatness which Sadie never, or a monient, rehaced now. Se, with a other eaeited knock, I threw openthe doo . Sadie did not look up for a mpment, bei g in the Midst Of a hard sen- tence, and fa dying the intruder the only one who eve dared to invade her seclusion. Ward Haetings sto d there si ently and watched her, and if aver a man's ljetirb came into his eyes,his did then: Not the most fasticlioue o lovers eould have fund fault with the ebaeming figure in its iiain black gown; and if the face bent,. over, the paper was pne to bewitch even an old naid like me, What treader that Sir' Lancelot lost his headidace rais d her syos, started at the sight of hr visite , blushed like a rose -a vivid, burning, be utiful blush which took away the hist rem ant of the coolness of the man who loved hcr. He went two steps into the room, and stood before her, looking down at her as if in a moment more he xnust sweep her ihto his &rills. . heard him say breathlessly, " maiy I corre back -ted ask you -Th ' But the tljird person of the party shut the door upon t em, with the greatest self-sac- rifice of whi h a women it capable, and nev- er knew how it is that a love story ends, but could irriagine, jutt as she had done all ber life. I [The End.] The Ba "It is fro tracts that ckbOne bf Our Nation. rn the farm' and the country dis- the great brain power of the country has, ' come as coming today, and must come n the futare," writes Edward Bok in the ctober ]adies' Home Journal. " "instead o deprecating country life, and saying that to live ip the country means to live out of the world,' intelligent people - know that he free, ettraminled life of the country umq estionabiy gives broader viewe. The human mind always grows to suit its outward au roundia a Originality and a developmentl for gret4 things, has naught to check its gr wth evli re one can look with earnest eye4 from Nature up to Nature's HIMON EXPOSITOI APPALWN DEATH From Kidne by Dodd's • Disease Prevented idney Pills, Only, • "Kidney D seas ' Do you know what it means It reans that the id- neys are either roll n, or rotting; the blood is full of poisonnis, de th- dealing corrup ion • ;that the Kid eys can't do their ..vorlE,) that the victi is a walking charnel -house ; that his - hours are -numbered ; that the victim mini* take Dodd's Kidney Pills i he does not want to die. Have you Kidney. Disease? • Is your skin hot and idry; memory ail- ing; breath sort; urine, reddish , or pale colored; doe it scald: w .en passing ; is your a etite changea s le; do your ankleswe 1; have you bi ter taste in the mou on getting up mornings; is ther a brick -dust de- posit in your urine Any of these si Dt is proof posi we, of Kidney Disease. *ill you be cu ed, or will yoti die? iDodd's Kid Pills are the o ly means on earth will cure you. They never fail. A God. o speak of 'the ignorance o rural r lona ' is to 'stamp one's self n ignore, us; not 1he country people. he e • is a sou daess of core and an intelligen e n the bac oisuntry of this nation of ours th t people who live in cities and think teia1 selves isei never susp' et. We Can tal 1 we like of 'social rev lutions' and kin eed evils t at are Rupp° ed to threaten this nation. When t ey o threaten our inatitu- Mobs the d Anger: igna will not come froai the back coon ry. aoh houghts are born land ; fed amid he fo I at ospher of the ei ies. In the cleT, cou try.air of the farm not ing threatens his co ntr , and when anyt ing in the sh pe o 9. ocialistic; anarchistic revolution does men ce this land the true voice whici will tam it out will come rom the countr, . T e b pkbone of this Land mete in the coutary aid on the farm." 1 • HOW A SORE HEALS. When the B1ood Is Pure a d Rich It ill Heal Rapidly. This Fac Demonstrated in the Case of Chest4r Gaw ey, Who Had Beep Troub- led ith a Running Sore For More i Than Yea . From the times, Ower Sound. of S rawak, Grey couety, no better known or re - than Thomas Gawleye of . L arning that his age- nts about ten ' yearn of ed 91 a disease of his leg, no ri only the loss of the ow, and Mg ale ves. wley.in one of the lrug tovitn, • he was a ked cure was a fact. His ith a smile as he said, 'In - was afraid we were oing t he is now as we 1 as strong." Aeked for par- ley did the most natural , referred the report4r to lli g the dame said : t. In tem er, 1897, my nephew, who lives withsus, berme ver , pain in his leat le . 111 h ecame badly) sw lien the family physician was se as a perplexing one, aft r a few days to 1 nee s do e, but the woun in - heal pp, but became a un- littl fellow soon wa re- skel ton. This conti ued ✓