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The Huron Expositor, 1921-07-22, Page 6R.Fob; osa 4114. %I ankh edict , University of New York Onhtbal-, Institute, Mooref ehra den Square Throat Rea - Eng. At Mr. J. Ran - Worth, third Wedtms- month rom 11 a.m. to Waterloo Street, South, Phone 267, Stratford. NSULTING El' IGINEERS Tames, Proctor & Redfern, Ltd. E. M. Proctor, B.A..Se., Manager '.8B Toronto St., Termite, Can. BRtdgers, Pavement. Waterworks. saws. rbucStags. Indq rsma. Bdhoot. trains. t Iwo. byotoriaa. ArEt- et Our Feet we ear sad • t the m.� n ease sue clients MERCHANTS CASUALTY CO. Specialists in Health and Accident Insurance. Policies liberal and unrestricted. Over $1,000,000 paid in losses. " Exceptional opportunities for local Agents. 904 ROYAL BANK BLDG.. 2178-60 Toronto, Out. JAMES McFADZEAN Agent for Howick Mutual Insur- ance Company. Successor to John Harris, Walton. address BOX 1, BRUSSELS or PHONE 42. 2769x12 LEGAL R. S. HAYS. Barrister Solicitor, Conveyancer and Notary Public. Solicitor for the Do- minion Bank. Office in rear of the Do- minion Bank. Seaforth- Money to lean. , M. BEST J. light socket to boil water in which p,, -,e. per."cites- r„w�••nnee- - ,kir- ''itersils are placed. .. ,,r•,tr- .,<n trout,-,i)ent that can be operat- e ,., s i 1.., . . .., . DI;, , , �., . .land has- been invented - •,' c,-afurh, I ....,c rnetal bands around I' ,cis i fastening the ends. ....visa mission has arriv- ed in Brazil to investigate the pos- sibilities of the extension of cotton production in that country. Eliminating shoe laces, an inventor has designed plates with which to fasten women's shoes, which can be made as ornamental as desired. A Norwegian inventor's resilient wheel for all kinds of vehicles is featured by steel springs tangentially applied within an outer rim. An adjustable bracket to be attach- ed to music stands to hold idle instru- ments is a recently patented conven- ience for orchestra musicians. Australia's production of 993,692 ounces of gold last year was the smallest for any year since the great discoveries half a century ago. New York, Ohio, Michigan and Vir. girds mined more gypsum last year than all of the fourteen states west of the Mississippi in which it was produced. A South African railroad has equipped a locomotive with a jib crane of two tons capacity mounted over the boiler and operated by steam from it. A Chicago man is the inventor of a machine to dip fresh eggs in boil- ing oil to seal the pores in their shells so that they will keep in- definitely. Results of the experimental pro- duction of quinine in the Philippines have indicated that large areas are well adapted to its culture in the islands. A novel portable seat for two per- sons intended for tourists or use in crowded Street cars or places of amusement, folds into small space for carrying. Australia has been experimenting with concrete in the construction of cottages and found it as acceptable and much cheaper than the use of brick. The French government is en-' couraging experimental cultivation of flax in Morocco to meet the needs of French linen manufacturers, here- tofore supplied by Russia. Believing a person can work better if alternately seated and standing, an inventor has patented a typewriter desk that can be used equally well in either position. A Belgian is the inventor of a boat that can •mount and run astride a m:norail railway with its own power when water too shallow for it to navi- gate is encountered. Pm- medical use French physicians have developed an X-ray outfit that an he ascii at a natient's home, being upplicd with. current by the motor ruck transporting it, in which photo- graphs hoto- s hs be developed g P can nom promptly. Y To prevent large windows being hattered by street jars, an inventor as patented a tube with a telescopic nd that rests against the glass and bsorbs o bs vibrati n o s. Curly hair is straightened by an English device which passes it be - ween rollers from which olive oil xudes, the hair first being treated 'ith a softening solution. Invented by a Californian, a weight mounted on a resilient handle is in - ended to give a person the same ex- rcise in a small room as batting a aseball out of doors. Japan has eight plants which har- es whale. fish and some vegetable nils for soap making with hydrogen heaply obtained by the. decomposi- ion of water by electrolysis. Fm' store entrances a Boston man as invented apparatus which pro - ides a current of air that keeps out EWEN' NOM OF BCURIM' The manufacture of soap In Japan has tripled in the lest 'tea yeah, /For an Ili}noir railroad a derrick car lies Ripen built which can handle 26 ton leads at a Teach of ,85 feet. An English inventor is working on the problem of compressing coal gas in tanks for use as automobile fuel. An adjustable seat for locomotive cabs has been invented for the ac- commodation of engineers of differ- ent stature. Because spider 'webs seem to have an attraction for flies an Englishman has designed a Ay trap that resembles one. An air space in the bottom pre- vents anything being cooked in an aluminum kettle burning and stick- ing to the metal. The world's largest telescope has been completed at Berlin, being more than seventy ty feet long and five feet in diameter. Three longitudinal rollers feature a new truck for handling rolls of lin- oleure of other heavy weights bf similar shape. Sweden is planning to electrify the state railways between Stockholm and Goteborg at a cost in excess of $16,000,000.00. An easily attached handle has been invented with which bottles of milk can be carried or hung clear of a shelf or floor. A rental attachment for soft hats to restore their form after they have beer, pinched is the idea of two Eng- lish inventors. Handled like an ordinary jack plane, a new electric tool does much more work with rotary blades oper- ated by a small motor. Owners of a copper smelter in Japan are building a chimney 1,000 feet high, believing its fumes wilt he carried out to see. Featured by a counter weight, ap- paratus has been invented which en- ables one man to pour a 500 -pound crucible of molten metal safely. An electric cooking stove of Ger- man invention uses current from a PROUD!oO'f Fitt'tits\ AND HOLMES Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries Pub- -11c, etc. Money to lend. In Seaforth on Monday of each week. Office in Kidd Block. W. Proudfoot, H.C., J. L. Killoran, B. E. Holmes. VETERINARY F. HARBURN, V. S. Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin- ary College, and honorary member of the Medical Association of the Ontario Veterinary College. Treats diseases of all domestic animals by the most mod- ern principles. Dentistry and Milk Fever a specialty. Office opposite Dick's Hotel, Main Street. Seaforth. All orders left at the hotel will re- ceive prompt attention. Night calls received at the office JOHN GRIEVE, V. S. Honor graduate of Ontario Veterin- ary College. All diseases of domestic animals treated. Calls promptly at- tended to and charges moderate. Vet- erinary Dentistry a specialty. Office and residence on Goderich street, one door east of Dr. Scott's office, Sea-. forth. MEDICAL DR. GEORGE HEILEMANN. Osteophatic Physician of Gcderich. Specialist in Women's and Children's diseases, reheumatism, acute, chronic and nervous disorders; eye, ear, nose and throat. Consolation free. Office above Umback's Drug store, Seaforth, Tuesdays and Fridays, 8 a.m. till 1 p.m C. J. W. HARN, M.D.C.M. 425 Richmond Street, London, Ont., Specialist, Surgery and Genio-Urin- ary diseases of men and women, DR. J. W. PECK Graduate of Faculty of Medicine McGill University, Montreal; member of College of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario; Licentiate of Medical Coun- cil of Canada; Post -Graduate Member of Resident, Medical staff of General Hospital, Montreal, 1914-15; Office, 2 doors east of Post Office. Phone 56. Hensel', Ontario. DR. F. J. BURROWS Office and residence, Goderich street east of the Methodist church, Seaforth Phone 46. Coroner for the County of Huron. DR.. MACKAY ACKAY C. Mackay honor or graduate of Trin- ity University, and gold medallist of Trinity Medical College; member of the College of Physicians and Sur- geons ofOntario. O tanto. DR. H. HUGH ROSS Graduate of University of Toronto Faculty of Medicine, member of Col- lege of Physicians and Surgeons of Ontario; pass graduate courses in Chicago Clinical School of Chicago; Royal Ophthalmic Hospital, London, England; University Hospital, Lon- don, England. Office—Back of Do- minion Bank, Seaforth. .Phone No. 5, Night calls answered from residence, Victoria street, Seaforth. AUCTIONEERS THOMAS BROWN Licensed auctioneer for the counties of Huron and Perth. Correspondence arrangements for sale dates can be made by calling up phone 97, Seaforth or The Expositor Office. Charges mod- , trate and satisfaction guaranteed. It. T. LUKER Licensed auctioneer for the County :Huron. Sales attended to in all of the county. Seven years' ex - ace in Manitoba and.Saekatche- Tering reasonable. Phone No. if, Exeter, Centralia P. 0., R. Orders left at The Huron r - Obits, Seaforth, Ilromptly S h a t a t b d v CASTOR IA InfanCitildiml. Tial KW You !Inlays Beers is EgguaturaCe imitate, halal rails, MeV, 'cOld air in' lis' Whiter and' tot in sumer, Two rivers will be harnessed to provide electric light and power fol the Philippine provinces of Bataan andR{tanpanga and the ameltimg of large ddeposiats of, miagnetic iron ore. The wireless station at' Carnarvon, Wales, has succeeded in sending mes- sages clearly to Sydney, Australia, a distance of 12,000 miles. Two gear wheels and a chain, operated by a crank, have been in- vented to raise and lower the win- dows in limousine automobiles. WHY DOES LIGHTNING STRIKE TREES? If, for purpose of experiment, we were to take a small motor and generate a mild electrical current, we would find that this current passes without any apparent diminu- tion in force through rubber or sub- stances or a finely wove though flexible nature. The latter are call- ed "nonconductors” of electricity, just as asbestos As a non-conductor of heat and wood is a non-conductor. of light. As a general rule, wood will not ' carry electricity and does not there- fore attract it --hut a tree projects a number of feet above the ground and the lightning (merely another form of electricity) follows the line of least resistence in reaching the earth, sometimes striking with a I force sufficient to tear a huge trunk asunder. In cases of this kind the tree is the lightning -rod of the earth, pointing upwards and literally pulling the lightning down, though without having the same at- traction for the electricity possess- ed by the metal rods on houses. For this reason, it is dangerous to stand under a large tree during a tuunder storm, for the electricity in the air is seeking to reach the ground and will take instant advant- age of anything which will ,be of assistance to it in accomplishing this purpose. --o THE BEST W AY TO HEAT CARBUNCLES At a recent examination by the State Board of Ohio, medical students were asked how they would treat a carbuncle. The official answer is quoted from Rose & Cariless's Manual of Surgery, as follows: "The most thorough and satisfac- tory is to lay the carbuncle freely open under an aesthetic and scrape with a sharp spoon or cut away all sloughs until healthy tissue is reach- ed, and then to disinfect the cavity thoroughly with pure carbolic acid or peroxide of hydrogen (10 volumles). The hollow thus formed is packed with gauze soaked in an iodoform emulsion (10 per cent). and allowed to heal by granulation. Good food, iron, quinine and alcohol according to judgement, must be administered, while appropriate medicine (e. g., codeine or opium) and limitations of diet are necessary in diabetis pa- tients." MARY BAKER EDDY'S HUNDREDTH ANNIVERSARY On Saturday Christian Scientists from many parts of the United States and Canada will make a pilgrimage to the birthplace of Mary Baker Eddy, for it will be the hundredth anniversary of her birth. There will be no stately, formal ceremonies, for Mrs. Eddy was understood to have curious ideas on the subject of birth- day celebrations. She once wrote, "Why this meaningless commemora- tion of birthdays, since there are none?" Not being here to answer her own question, the directors of the church she founded can only conclude that it was not her wish that her anniversaries should be observed, but the strong desire of many of her followers to see the place where she was born and the noted monolith that marks the spot have caused them to organize the pilgrimage, For Christian Sci- entists, Bow, New Hampshire, where Mrs. Eddy was born, or Pleasant View, Concord, where she lived in dignified state for seine years, are what Mecca or Medina are to Mahometans. Pleasant View is a beautiful estate of some eighty acres, with a noble stone archway on which the name Eddy is carved, but there is only one house upon the estate and it is a small one, formerly occupied .by her secretary. The .lovely home which she occupied, and where on June 27, 1903, ten thousand Chris- tian Scientists visited her, was de- stroyed yrd after her death by her explicit directions. ons. l t wa sd is - mantled and, according to her orders, not a fragment of it re- mained as a souvenir. This is only one of the many remarkable things Mrs. Eddy did in her life, some of them so eccentric that had she been_, a less distinguished woman, doubts about her sanity might have been expressed. But so far as we can understand her character she was a shrewd and practical a person as any of her generation. In her' business affairs there was none of the vagueness critics seem to find in her writings. She estab- lished a great church, became the head of many business enterprises and ruled her kingdom with a rod of iron. The ability of Mrs. Eddy was never so widely recognized as after her death. Ever since then there have been schisms and dissensions in the church. Readers have started up and their right to interpret `Science and Health" has been questioned. There have been lawsuits and struggles for control of the paper, the Christian Science Monitor, which remains one of the finest newspapers in the United States, esteemed not alone by Christian Scientists, but by newsy papermen all over the world. We believe that the end of the strife is not yet, for occasionally we ob- serve whole page and double page advertisements in New York papers appealth putt ,.yup ,# a pu ic and tO brother' . /lel ili. There was ni such. trot - hen Mrs. Eddy was alive -01H oftpiq . the ops of. the church.' No $y disputed. her ,author its. Hera Was, the final word on all matters, We do not'suppose to discuss Christian Seleitee as a religion. It is established, and while its adherents are by no means as numerous as those of sects which have been •in existence for hun- dreds of years, their average social and mental standing is perhaps higher than that of any other re- ligion in the world. Christian Science makes no appeal to the ignorant; it flourishes rathbr among the cultured. ' It hilt been the sub- ject of bitter attack, one of the most savage, perhaps, being that of Mark 'Twain, n ai who sought g t to prove from her own writings that Mrs_ Eddywas one of the greatest fakers of the age. He asserted that she was not the author of the books that bear her name, and quoted extracts to prove that the person who wrote some of them could not possibly be the person who wrote the others. Criticisms appear prat to have injured Christian /Science. It has a strong publicity committee, and if a news- paper makes any unfavorable com- ment upon it, 'there comes promptly a well-written defence. Nowadays -,when Christian Science is criticized, it is not on religious, but on medical grounds. The idea that disease exists in the mind only, and that it can be removed by prayers and the ministrations of readers with no medical experience, 'has brought Christian Scientists into conflict with the law on 'ninny occasions. Christian Scientist par- ents who afforded sick children no other medical attention than that provided by the readers have, when their children died, been accused of manslaughter. The essence of the belief which Mrs. Eddy claims to have discovered is that Principle is God, and that therefore Christiani- ty, correctly understood, must be demonstrable as science. It is ad- mitted that as yet the science is but faintly discerned. Mrs. Eddy herself said that few of her ad- herents had grasped the deeper sig- nificance of her discovery in rela- tion to the larger problems of exist- ence. CLEVER SWINDLERS HAVE ROBBED OF ENGLAND BUT NEVER WiTH IMPUNITY For more than two centuries the "Old Lady of Threadneedle Street" has jealously guarded her money bags; but, in, spite of all her vigilanc i they have been plundered again and again until her losses have soared in to seven figures. The first of these swindlers was a rogue of genius known as "Old Patch," son of an old clothesman in Monmouth street, a man who had been in turn stockbroker and brewer, 'lottery office keeper and gambler. When these variegated callings failed to keep his purse full he determined to relieve the -Bank of England of a goodly store of its gold. He made his own ink, we are told, manufactured his own paper, and with a private press worked off his own notes by the thousand. Then, in a score of clever disguises, he set to work to cash his bogus notes in all parts of England, and succeeded in reaping a harvest of £200,000 be- fore at last he was laid by the heels and lodged in prison, where 'he an- ticipated his fate by hanging himself in his cell. To Old Patch succeeded Fauntle- roy, a' shady banker of Berners street, who was so incensed by the Old Lady refusing to honor his bills that he vowed "the bank should smart for this." By forging powers of attorney he was able to sell stock 'belonging to his clients to the- tune of £360,000 before he was invited to mount the scaffold steps. Even then, it is said, he saved his life and escap- ed to the continent by the expedient of placing a.silver tube in his throat. No less daring was Richard Vaughan, a young linendraper of Stafford, who, with the object of im- pressing with ,his wealth the young lady he was about to marry, forged a large number of the bank's notes and proudly placed them' in her hand, with the result that he spent his honeymoon in a cell; and the prison chaplain pronounced the benediction at the foot of the gallows. William Guest, one of her own cashiers, waxed rich at her expense by starting a mint of his own. He would take home a small bag full of new guineas daily, skilfully file down the edges, reproduce them, and take back the "do ctored"cin e a the next morning, each a few grains lighter. The filings he converted into ingots, which he sold, thus adding many thousands of pounds to his bank bal- ance before he was caught red-hand- ed and sent to his doom. A cleverer rogue than William Guest was John Mathison, a clever mechanic and engraved, who gave the Old Lady many sleepless nights be- fore an end was put to his mischiev- ous activities. After successfully practicing his hand on the Darlington Bank and the Royal Bank of Edinburgh, he was emboldened to attack the •Bank of England itself. Buying the necessary opper, he manufactured his plates. ngraved them, forged the water- mark, and printed notes by the hun- 0 Hay - Fever SUMMER COLDS, ASTHMA, spoil many a holiday. RAZ - MAH Positively stops these troubles I Sneezing, wearing, coughing, weeping eyes aren't necessary,. unless you like being that way. 81.00 at your druggist's, or write Templeton, Totbnto. for free trial. , SCold by E. Umbach led •` eat* nuc i s 'sats llouty' simileof a genuine note ' * the ttleverest expert. had the utiuoat diM- cultyy in 4eteeting the fraud. Txtiie efDiliiped with hie bundles, oP spurious notes : he travelled "like a duke"all over England, cashing' them to .feed his extravagance, For_gtontha his notes never aroused the least sus- picion, and he had put thousandq of pounds into his pocket, and spent most of it, when at last" the fraud was . discovered and he was arrested, 3n vain be offered to explain the secret of his forging of the water- mark if the bank directors would spare his life. His offer was reject- ed, and he paid the full penalty of his crime. Among many other rogues who have grown rich at the Old Ladyes expense appear Edward Beaumont Smith, one her own mo st trusted a sere t s, who robbed her to the ex- tent of £800,000 before the hand of the law could grasp him; Burnet, en ex -convict, who reaped a fine harvest by forging notes printed on paper stolen from the bank's factory at Laverstock; and those arch -scoun- drels the Bidwell brothers, who are said to have relieved her exchequer of a round million pounds by means of forged acceptances. But, as we have seen, it is a dan- gerous game to play, with heavy pen- alties to counter -balance ill-gotten gains. Within four years from 1797 no fewer than eighty-five forgers and circulators of forged one -pound Bank of England notes were sent out of the world by the hangman. And hun- dreds of others, before and . after, learned the same tlesson—that the man who dared to tquch the Old Lady's gold did so at' the peril of his life. T. Tembarom (Continued from page •7) tura who had allowed her to be fond of him. There was moisture in her eyes as s•he let him put her back into her chair. When he had done it, he sat down, on the ottoman again and poured himself forth. "You know what kind of a chap I am. No, you don't, either. You mayn't know a thing about me; and I want to tell you. I'm so different from everything you've ever known that I scare you. And no wonder. it's the way I've lived. If you knew you'd understand what ,I was think- ing of when I spoke just now. I've been cold, I've been hungry, I've walked the wet streets on my uppers. I know all about going without. And do you expect that I am going to let a—a little iihing'like you—go away from here without friends and with- out money on the chance of getting into an almshouse that isn't vacant? Do you expect that of me? Not on your life! That was what I meant." Miss Alicia quivered; the pale - purple ribbons on her little lace cap quivered. "I haven't," she said, and the fine little dignity was piteous, " a shadow of a claim upon you." It was nece- sarry for her to produce a pocket - handkerchief. He took it from her, and touched her eyes as softly as though she were a baby. "Claim nothing!" he said. "I've got a claim on you. I'm going to stake one out right now." He got up and gesticulated, taking in the big room and its big furniture. "Look at all this! It fell on me like a thunderbolt. It's nearry knocked the life out of me. 'I'm like a lost cat on Broadway. You can't go away and have me, Miss Alicia; it's your duty to stay. You've just got to stay to take care of me." He came over to her with a wheedling smile. "I never was taken care of in my life. Just be as noble to me as old Temple Barholm was to you: give me a sort of home." If a little gentlewoman could stare it might be said that Miss Alicia star- ed at him. She trembled with amaz- ed emotion. 'Do you mean—" Despite all he had said, she scarcely dared to utter the words lest, after all, she might be taking for granted more than it was credible could be true. "Can you mean that if I stayed here with you it would make Temple Barholm seem more like home? Is it possible you—you mean that?" "I mean just that very thing." It was too much for her. Finely restrained little elderly gentlewoman as she was, she openly broke down tinder it. "It can't be true!" she ejaculated shakily. "It isn't possible. It is too—too beautiful and kind. Do for- give me! I c-a-n't help it." She burst into tears. She knew it was most stupidly wrong. She knew gentlemen did not ike tears. a s. H r e father had 'told her e hat men never really forgave women who cried at them. Ahd here, when er fate .hung in the balance, she was of able to behave herself with fem- nine decorum. Yet the new Mr. Temple Barholm took it in as matter-of-fact a manner a he seemed to take everything. He tood by her chair and soothed her n his dear New York voice. "That's all right, Miss Alicia," he ommented. "You cry as much as ou want to, just so that you don't ay no. You've been worried and ou're tired. •I'll tell you there's een two or three times lately when should like to have cried myself if 'd know how, Say," he added with sudden outburst of imagination, "I et anything it's about time you had ea." The suggestion was so entirely within the normal order of things that it made her feel steadier, and she was able to glance at the clock. "A cup of tea would be refreshing," she said. "They will bring it in very soon, but before the servants come I must Fry to express—" But before she could express any- thing further the' tea appeared. Bur- rill and a footman brought it on splendid salvers in massive urn and tea-pot, with chaste, sacrificial -flame flickering, and wonderful, hot butter- ed and toasted things and wafers of bread and .butter attendant. As they crossed the threshold, the sight of Miss Alicia's small form enthroned • lis silt '?l ea rAildr. wst o4$ ebv ot�b1� t>hian> cipated that Burrseiir moue a l aekwar thef man almo ' d and phis lent the firmness of his hold' on Ie a n llet tray. Ugh 're- covored melt .in time, however, and not until the' tea was arranged lupon the table near the fire was any Outward recognition of Miss Alicia's presence made. Then Burrill, 'paus- in'g :made an , announcement entirely without prejudice: "I beg pardon, sir, ' klut Hig'gin'e cart 'has come for Miss TempleBar- holm's box; he is asking when she wants the rap." "She doesn't want it 'et all," an- swered Tembarotn. 'Carry her trunk upstairs again. She's not going a- way " The lack of 'proper knowledge con- tained in the suggestion that Burrill should carry fru nks upstairs toit a eauired Miss Alicia to quail in secret; but she spoke with outward calm. "No, Burrill," she said.. "I am not going away." "Very good, Miss," Burrill replied, and with impressive civility 'he pre- pared to leave the room. tlembar- oin glanced at the tea -things: "There's only one cup here," he said. "Bring one for me."' Burrill's expression 'might perhaps have been said to start slightly. "Very good, sir," he said, and made his exit. Miss Alicia was flut- tering again. "That cup was really for you, Mr. Temple Barholm," she ventured. "Well, now it's for you, and I've let him know it," replied Tembarom. "Oh, please," she said in An out- burst of feeling—"please let- me tell you how grateful—how grateful I ami" Hirt he wanl t not 'let het.. elf 'you do" to aid, heel I,grateful.th am, and at worse. INo, that's all "fixed ;up ibex' tvyeen us. it goes. We don't say, any more about it." xis took the whole situation in that way, as though be was assuming no responsibility which wire not.. the simple, inevitable result of their drift- ing amass oath other—as though it' was only what, arty man would have done, even as lihough she was a• sort ' of delightful,nexpected happening.. He turned to 'the tray. ' "Say, that looks all right, doesn't it?" he said. "Now you are here, I like -the way it looks. I didn't yes- terday." Burrill himself br'ou'ght the extra cup and veneer and plate. He wish- ed to make sure that his, senses had not deceived him. But there e e she eat who through years had existed dis- creetly in the most unconsidered rooms in an uninhabited ming, know- ing better than 'to presume upon her privileges there she, sat with an aw- ed and rapt face gazing up at this new outbreak into Temple Barholm's and "him joking and grinning :as though he was as pleased as Punch." (Continued next week.) ANY PAIN OF THE BODY Headache, Neuralgia, Rheumatic, Back- ache Soiatio,and Ovarian Paine. One or two DR. HILES' ANTI -PAIS PILLS—and' the pain is gone. Guar- anteed Safe and Sure. Price We,. Sold in Seaforth by E UMBACH, Phm., B. F -R -E -E 1000 watches absolutely free. Owing to the enormous qes- eess of our previous puzzle advertisement, which gained for us hundreds of new clients, who, being so pleased with their free watch, that they are now our permanent coat mere, we have decided to further advertise and gain rem gnitibn in 1000 new homes, by giving away another 1000 valuable watches, to those who are clever enough to 6R in the missing letters in the following phrase, T -ES- W--CH-S A-E F -L -Y G--R_NT_ED By correctly filling in the missing letters, you can obtain absolutely free a watch, that will equal for time any solid gold watch made, which is sufficiently proven by the large number of testimonials that we have received. Solve this puzzle norrer- tly and comply with our simple condition of which we will write when we 'inform you if your reply is correct, Write clearly, your name and complete address, so that we may without delay inform you of your success. REX MANUFACTURING CO. DEPT. 203 ill Cet42135.¢s,r SL' afealtttr There is only one way to kill all the Flies alalia_ This is it—Darken the room as much as possible, close the windows, raise one of the blinds where the sun shines in, about eight inches, place as many Wilson's Fly Pads as possible on plates (properly wetted with water but not flooded) on the window ledge where the light is strong, leave the room closed for two or three hours, then sweep up the flies and burn them. See illustration helmet Put the plates away out of the reach of children until re- quired in another room. The right way to use Wilson's Fly Pads meamssir Mania, SMPLUG migisON SMOKING 0 'THE man who smokes Master Mason KNOWS the flavor of good tobacco.. He demalLds the big Master Mason plug, because to the last pipeful it gives him the best for the least money. t,