The Huron Expositor, 1921-09-16, Page 6Medlelne' SiA " R ITItBtt..,,diA+di� twavttw.w. •!eideq
alupr .t b'e" .,. Otani f eh 1'la' • agCIfl , aa, D preve ng 7?nte 'Y'.
17 'tta Itel1 a'f steel al ittfacbioau..:Thi inteaEbanel antieeP-
dleni ka a u er
Well h 'Be,•A cog' an BOTH p
el -� an e j
1, d
r let"%.,'co a 1pOfois t '�de�, , trips'.
tent New York ,Q
to ' Mao
al I,natl 'te,
Aden Square Thtatlt �u 1
on, Eng. At Mr;
e Seaforth, third Wedge*' 1
eae{z Month from 11 a.m. to
;• 68 Waterloo Street, South,'
ord.- Phone 267, Stratford.
CONSULTING ENGINEERS
fames, proctor & Redfern, Ltd.
E. M. Proctor, B.A.,Sc., Manager
36 Toronto St., Toronto, Can.
Bridge., ravemente, Waterworks. sewer-
age Systeme, Incinerators. school..
qpm 1 igation- Housltore,
n'.afnrtes. Aeb1-
Our }'. e3 Uoudly paid out of
the ,money wo .ave .ar clients
MERCHANTS CASUALTY CO..
Specialists in Health and Accident'
Insuran. e.
tricted.
Policies
ver $1,000,000 paid in losses.
Exceptional opportunities for %peal
Agents.
904 ROYAL BANK BLOC -
2773 -60 Toronto, Ont.
ere e# a co a tie g
xg'
an
as W li card e the Seveso''
man
er•
,_ , Pa,
ove�lttutent b de- bra,P
ions for hydea Oa. ta� ItiAe•
shall be granted only bad Force .a g
ga.t
Companies constituted "his Dead alae.;"
p Spain. t eat deeertcY d
lar cutting .Medea conduct hers
of a bargeon (which cared raabhin fpr,
cheque{ ouch e o usually about on decaying anattsr hick afor t ;sta built at , •'Orleans far cleaning was bhinkliag'of eviler t'llingo-1,' Alf she
Gump to the gond Not long ago �y stomac1 Ech chronic
con for gas oft
crook took a large sum of money stomach or chran�k conatipatioaF It sand and Ma' oro shallow •channels. bac} stood before the wimil9sashe bad
remover matter Which, you never Followin vest} atio a Britith 'felt that her ,.soul had never been sa
Exam a Toronxp bank by means, not 'g' Chas decided black as it w b h t nod a a
of Y t Ire R� th drawer
though was a fpm' s stem and � Y
of a cheque but. the forged initials 'which nothing el a can dig edge. One
ems'
and lower• bowel removing' All oui, mounted i�I g tole co mosest,' or
Mune ' i way .liatlks and • the ng; A' , is a auebl axnal
which rt � ,hedge compass a ,craRt the Mast arse uai decelzey. She
a forged signature o e r wer 19 �'
4
JAMES McFADZEAN
Agent for Helmick Mutual Insur-
ance Company. Successor to John
Harris, Walton.
address BOX 1, BRUSSELS
or PHONE 42. '1769x12
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
tem.
J. M. BEST
Rarrister, Solicitor, Conveyancer
and Notary Public. Office upstairs
aver Walker's Furniture Store, Main
Street, Seaforth.
PROUDFOOT KJ}.i.t)RAN AND
HOLMES
Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries Pub-
lic, etc. Money to lend. In Seaforth
on Monday .of each week. Office in
Kidd Block. W. Proudfoot, KC., 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.
A11 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-
nded to and charges moderate. Vet-
erinary Dentistry a specialty. Office
and residence on Goderich street, one
door east of Dr. Scott's once, Sea -
forth.
MEDICAL
DR. GEORGE HEILEMANN.
Osteophatic Physician of Goderich.
E ecialist in Women's and Children's
diseases. reheumatism, acute, chronic
and nervous disorders; eye, ear, nose
and throat. Consulation 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 Of6ec. Phone 56
Hensall, Ontario.
i
Sr,
15
DR. F. J. BURROWS
Office and residence, Goderich stree
east of the Methodist church, Seaforth
Phone 46. Coroner for the County o
Huron.
of the clerk whose business it was man reports at is unbelievable theaw-
to certify that there were sufficient ful Impurities• Adler-i--ka brought out.
funds to 'meet the check, and the E. Umbach, Druggist.
stamp .of certification. Be presented
the uncertified check for payment,
and was told by the teller, to whom
the man and signature were unknown,
that he would have to get the check
marked. He turned toward the wick-
et of the accountant, and in a few
moments came back with the check
apparently certified. It then was
cashed. This swindler, no doubt,
appeared at the bank with two checks,
one already forged with the initial
and the stamp, and the other requir-
ing certification. The assumption of
the paying teller that the customer
Lad had the check initialed almost
under his own eyes led him to pay the
money.
.About twenty years ago, or a little
stere, three or four Toronto banks
•.cert the victims of one of the neatest
swindles ever put over. A man open -
,et an account of several hundred dol-
lars in two or three banks. He drew
tin them frequently for small amounts,
rleays presenting the checks in per -
s.?), so that his face became familiar
to the tellers. One day he went the
rounds of the banks, with checks
which he had the accountants initial.
instead of immediately presenting
them for payment, he went home and
raised the rhtri<s. On the following
Saturday, shortly before the time the
banks closed, he appeared with the
fiir•ged checks bearing the account-
ant's certification, and they were
cashed.
He c't:se Saturday, just before
closing time. because the tellers would
be bast, awl ;Ilse because before the
Cc (mall be discovered he would
i•rt; C.c t .',ay <' start. One teller, as
i.e• paid .the money out, seemed slight -
lc d::hieus, and counted very deliber-
ately. Tu hits the swindler remark
ed, "You'll have those bills all worn
out by the time I get them." ile
smiled genially and the money was
handed over. He was never caught.
Ila prevent swindles of this kind the
banks adopted the perforation sys-
'..•ni. which announces that the cheek
is for nut more than a certain amount.
A cheek thus stamped could not be
raised. In the case of the latest
swindle, apparently fhe check was not
perforated, and though the swindler
had no account in the bank, the teller,
seeing the apparent initials of the
accountant, did not hesitate to sur-
render the money.
In Canada and the United States
when ther is a forgery, the bank is
the loser. If a swindler is clever
enough to imitate the signature of a
depositor and who has an account
so that the bank will be deceived,
then.the loss falls on the bank and
not on the depositor. In England it
.' different. The loser is the deposi-
tor whose signature has been forged.
Tq protect themselves against this,
English checkmakers cross their
checks, which means that they will
be paid only through the clearing
house. In this case the endorsements
will usually be verified by the collect-
ing bank. The difficulty of the banks
is that, while they are familiar with
the signatures of their depositors,
they are not, as a rule, familiar with
.he signatures of those who endorse
checks, rind unless they make a
thorough identification of unfamiliar
payees, or until depositors describe
them in detail, the banks are likely
to be defrauded.
In some cases the courts find it
difficult to discover whether the bank
or the depositor should be held re-
sponsible for a lass. In one well-
known American case the employe of
a firm rented a post office box in the
name of James Wilson, printed letter
heads, and opened an account as
Wilson with his omnloyer's bank.
Then he made out a bill to the com-
pany, as if goods had ,been sold by
Wilson, and got the proper official to
sign the check payable to Wilson,
which was mailed to the address given
en the bill. There the clerk received
he check, endorsed and cashed it.
I The court in this case held that the
firm was liable, r nce the case was one
1 of impersonation, and that the bank
t , had, in fact, paid the money to the
person whom the cnmpany intended,
f namely, the person from whom it
thought it had bought goods.
DR. C. MACKAY
C. Mackay honor graduate of Trin-
ity University, and gold medallist 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 Ophthalmic Hospital, London,
England; University Hospital, Lon-
don, England. Office—Back of Do -
=limn 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.
• R. T. LUKER
Licensed auctioneer for the County
131nron. Sales attended to In all,
As: of the county. Seven years' ex -
see In `Manitoba and Saakatehe-
Terms • ifadanable. Ilene No.
Vii, Exeter Centralia P+' 0., R.
Ordeiril TOO shAhe H an
t�fiei Sn Tor p
on the island of Guadeloupe.
Among the new 'packages for Ship-
ping freight is a reinforced canvas
bag that folds compactly when
empty.
To prevent sunburn while bathing,
masks to cover the heads and faces
of women have been invented in Eng-
land.
The present production of fuel oil
in the world is only sufficient to re-
place about 11 per cent. of the coal.
A London electrician has establish-
ed a museum of electrical equipment
from the earliest known to the most
modern.
A garden rake has been invented
that can be widened by pulling out
the end sections of the three of
which it is formed.
The census taken at the close of
last year gave Chile a population of
:1,806 3Lo8, a gain of about 500,000
in thirteen years.
A quickly attached paryper cover for
tumblers has been inv'ented that is
said to keel carbonated drinks fresh
until wanted.
For scientific and experimental
work in the cast iron industry a re -
starch assn iation has been formed in
Great Britain.
To prevent automobiles backing
.down•hills a ground gripping attach-
ment, almost automatic in operation,
1las been invented.
German builders have utilized the
light alloy duralumin, invented for
use in airplanes, in the manufacture
of motorboats.
The inventor of a new portable fire
extinguisher claims that the liquid
used will not freeze even at extreme
tem peratu res.
More than 90 per cent. of the vana-
dium produced in the world has come
from a deposit in Chile owned by
American interests.
To enable blind persons to write an
inventor has patented a guide made
of parallel wires between which a
pencil is inserted.
Compact apparaitns using a "kero-
'-I nc stave has been invented by a
French physician for treating frozen
hands or feet with steam.
A device consisting of a number of
cardboard tubes has been invented to
enable a person to hear his own
voice as others hear it.
At less cost than with flax or jute
twine, ops and bagging are being
manufactured from bark or eucalyp-
tus trees in Australia.
A Chicago man has patented a pro-
cess for making fuel briquets from
garbage, waste dust from coal mines
,rod a small amount of tar.
Processes for staking vinegar for
home ase and for commercial pur-
:,hses from oranges have been worked
. it by a Los Angeles laboratory.
A competitive international exhibi-
tion of inventions along several in-
dustrial lines will feature the Lyon
fair in France in October.
An Anglo -Danish technical socie-
ty has been formed at Copenhagen
for co-operation between Denmark
end Great Britain in a number of
lines.
Employing hydrochloric acid to pro-
duce hydrogen gas, apparatus has
been invented to measure the amount
of zinc in galvanized iron surfaces.
Shoes with wide wooden soles hav-
ing pmjeeting points are an English
invention for persons who walk on
sand that would engulf ordinary
shoes.
Though a new automobile fender
which.' ppicks up a person struck
weighs"bnly 75 pounds its inventor
claims it will sustain a weight of
four tons.
Ready made asbestos jackets, de-
signed to fit all standard types of
residence heaters, 'have been patent-
ed to conserve fuel and protect the
metal.
An English railway is experiment-
ing with locomotives in which both
coal and. oil can be used as a fuel
at the same time or either without
the other.
For persons who move about in
;their work and carry seats with them
a South Carolinan has invented a
chair attached to a man's body by a
art of jacket.
A new French process for the man -
NEWEST NOTES OF SCIENCE. ufacture of artificial silk from wood
fibres yield a finer thread than the
Ahnut one-sixth of the world's qui- viscous process, from which velvet
nine is used in India. has been made.
A new electric fan can be screwed Planing down the waves that occur
directly to a light socket. screwed(
bituminous surfaced roads is the
Within a few years Denmark has purpose of a new heavy machine in -
greatly increased its tobacco produc-
tion.
According to an English scientist
there are 16,000,000 fat globules in a
drop of milk. -
Acetylene when used for singeing
chickens works so quickly the flesh is
not even heated.
India's production of about 17,000,-
000 tons of coal last year was the
smallest since 1914.
Even engine vibrations are claimed
to be eliminated by a new stabilizer
for steamship berths. i
A method for extracting pure oil of
turpentine from fur needles has been
developed in Germany.
Cheese ,can 'be squeezed to the com-
pact consistency of the Swiss product
with 1 new hydraulic press.
Corsica annually produces about (1,-
000 tons of roots for the manufacture
of briar pipes for'smokers.
A mechanieal hammer that has 'been -
invented for a number of purposes
can deliver 420 blows a minute:
Of French invention is a vehicle
that runs like a launch over water_
and upon endless treads on land.
Two Waterfalls will he harnessed to
provide power for an electric railway
versos • 'e mission
that'1)e'Peg made in Egypt from
rice etre*, gyrus, 'reeds, sugar
cane refuse and some other materials.
For wanking' automobiles without
injuring tIie'. yhnish there has been
invent€d a` perforated metal ring to
Se screwed sit the end of hose,
sponges ibeing-fastened over the per-
forations.
Instead of using a propellor, a
French engineer plans to propel air-
planes with jets of gasoline and air,
burned in a combustion chamber and
driven .out"through a nozale he has
invented.
A telescoping window ventilator
has been invented that can be install-
ed without tools and with which the,
amount of air entering a room can
be regulated, at the same time ex-
cluding rain.
Of English invention is a single
cylinder commercial motor vehicle
which carries its loads in a box be-
tween two widely spaced front wheels
while its rear wheels are set close
together.
Searchlights with which a Los
Angeles motign picture studio is ex-
perimenting are claimed to provide a
billion candle _cower in a beam of
light having sever, times the actinic
value of gunfight.
A Bolivian city is having built in
the United State: a police patrol
automobile with. three compartments,
one an office for the chief of -police,
one for the driver and the third for
prisoners.
An experimental road in London
that has lwithstoed much wear is
made of wooden blocks, coated with
tar, covered with heavy tarred felt
and given a top layer of tar with a
cement and sand surface.
Radio telegraphy is used by a
manufacturing corporation to com-
rnunieate between :tants in Ohio and
Pennsylvania and the service is to
b< extended to oiler plants in New
Jersey and Mass,u•husetts.
Argentina's government 'has ap-
pointed a techni:•al committee to
study the eontemp!.1tcd distillation on
a large scale of cr::,ie petroleum from
state-owned wells for the production
of light oils for i + industries.
For protection against bandits a
San Francisco m:,11 has invented a
pistol to be carri,.I under a person's
arm pit and fired with an attachment
runping down a ,•sat sleeve without
any apparent motion of the hand or
arm.
T. Tembarom
as w en s e. ur w
from M li`
es HugoM1s Aavtr'ait4-azever,
never. She wanted to hurt people:
Perhaps Nero had felt as she did and
,was not so hideous as he seemed.
The man's tailor hadput him into
proper clothes, and hie features' were
respectable Amuck hat nothing pn
earth could' make �hizn anything but
what he so palpably Was. She had
seen that much across the gallery as
she had wiatched him abating at Miles
Hugo.
I should think," she said, dropping"
the words slowly again, "that you
would often forget that ypu are Tem-
ple Barholm." • -
"You're • right there," he answered.
"I can't nail }myself down to it. • It
seems like sort of a joke."
She looked him over again. .
"It is a joke," she said.
It was as though she had slapped
him in the face, though she said it se
quietly. Ile knew he had received the
slap, and that, as it was a woman, he
could pot slap back. It was a sort
of surprise to her that he did not
giggle nervously and turn red and
shuffle his feet in impotent misery.
He kept quite still a moment or so
and looked at her, though not ae she
had looked at him. She wondered if
he was so thick skinned that he did
not feel anything ,at all.
"That's so," he admitted. "That's
so." Then he actually smiled at her.
"1 don't know how to behave myself,
you see," he said. "You're Lady Poen
Fayre, ain't you? I'm mighty glad
to see you. Happy to make your ac-
quaintance, Lady Joan."
He took her hand and shook it with
friendly vigor before she knew what
he was going to do.
"I'll bet a dollar dinner's ready,"
he added, "and Burrill's waiting. It
scares me to death to keep Burrill
waiting. He's got no use for me,
anyhow. Let's go and pacify him."
He did not lead the way or drag
ler by the arm, as it seemed to her
quite probable that he might, as cos-
termongers do on Hampstead Heath.
He knew enough to let her pass first
through the door; and when Lady
Mallowe looked up to see her enter
the drawing-ryom, he was behind her.
To her ladyship's amazement and re-
lief, they came in, so to speak, to-
gether. She had been spared the try-
ing moment of assisting at the cere-
niony of their presentation to each
other:
(Continued next week.)
•
to tNt nee el.
hat:S ensues,
are college edit
to PAitticf. enc
pga $raptors ;lir•algdute!'(f, elpenfini
e a: Clem s� ll eoir.I lennaf4. et
al walk a k ` 7s of. eAso la• of Ainrriai
, e.41esa than 79 %O Or d ��ad 'Wife i usihe� •
.4111411; Chart c�n e -from Minna/reap Waitaki
- '
Shall
tQw','boy becoang'oittaf of the Leaded;?
Western Vniyersity'is right atyour door and o
complete. courses ,in {Arts, -Medicine and Public He'alt
Entrance is by Junior :Matriculation exec C for special
and nurses courses. The fees are low The teaching
staff numbers I i`I professors, lecturers ar d instructors....,
Individual instruction is featured.
Moreover, your boywilt get all the best influettces'
of college and home by attending a university in your
own district. Registration Day, October 3rd.
Western,degrees.are universally recognized. .
- For information, apply to
DR. K P. R. NEViLLE, Realatrse, London, Ont,
e
WHY . SUFFER PAIN ?
YOU oen't do justice to yourself in business, social or home fife 1f
yon Buffer from headache, daekache, neuralgia, monthly pains,
or any of the thousand and one pains with which all of us are
afflicted at one time or another.
These pains indicate a very real physical danger. But there
are very few pains of any nature that are not promptly relieved by
Dr. Mile's' Anti•Pain Pills.
Get them in
handy boxes at
ourdrugstore. A
box is iueurance
against head-
ache, carsickness
neuralgia and
pain of almost
any nature.
There are no disagreeable after effects. Dr. Miles' Anti -
Pain Pills
STOP THE PAIN
without upset digestion, drowsiness. buzzing in the head, or danger
of forming a drug habit. Guaranteed Safe and Sure.
SOLD IN SEAFORTH BY E. UMBA CH, Phm., B.
(Continued from page 7)
fying of Pearson, whose respectful
unhappiness wodld otherwise have
been manifest despite his efforts to
conceal it. Ile dressed quickly and
asked some questions about Strange -
ways. Otherwise Pearson thought
he seemed preoccupied. He only
made one slight joke.
"You'd be a first-rate dresser for a
quack -change artist, Pearson," he
remarked.
On his way to the drawing -room
he deflected from the direct, path,
turning aside for a moment to the
picture -gallery because for a reason
of his own he wanted to take a look
at Miles Hugo. He took a look at
Miles Hugo oftener than Miss Alicia
knew.
The gallery was dim and gloomy
enough, now closing in in the pur-
ple -gray twilight. He walked through
ii without glancing at the pictures
until he came to the tall boy in the
satin and lace of.Charles II period.
He paused there only for a short
time, but he stood quite near the por-
trait, and looked hard at the hand-
some face.
Gee!" he exclaimed under his
breath, "it's queer, gee!"
Then he turned suddenly round
toward one of the big windows. He
turned because he had been startled
by a sound -,-a movement. Some one
was standing before_ the window. For
a second's space the figure seemed as
though it was almost one with the
purple -gray clouds that were its
background. It was a tall young wo-
man, and her dress was of a thin .
material of exactly their color—
dark-gray and purple at once. The
wearer held her head high and
haughtily. She had a beautiful,
stormy face, and the slender, black
brows were drawn together by a
frown. Tembarom had never seen a
girl as handsome and disdainful. He
had, indeed, never been looked at as
she looked.. at him when she moved
slightly 'forward.
Be knew who it was. It was the
Lady Joan girl, and the sudden sight
of her momentarily "rattled" him.
"You quite gave me a jolt," he
said awkwardly, and knowing that he
said it like a "mutt." "I didn't know
any one was in the gallery."
"What are you doing here?" she
asked. She spokes to him as though
she were 'addressing an intruding
servant. There was emphasis on the
word "you." /
Her intention was so evident hat
it, increased his feeling of being " t-
tled." TO find himself -confront[ g
deliberate ill nature of a superior and
finished 'kind was like being spoken
to in •a foreign language.
"I—,I'm T. Terabit -nom," be answer-
ed, not able to keep himself from
staring because 'she was such a
"winner" as to looks.
"T. Tembarom 4" she repeated slow-
ly, and her tone made him at once see
what a fool he load been to say it.
"I forgot," he half 'laughed. "I
ought to have said I'.m Temple Bar -
holm."
Ohl" was her tole Foment.She
actually stood still and looked, him up'
gnd ddten.
$he knew perfectt1' Weil wbe
ice las"
RELIEVES DEAFNEE.4 o:td
STOI'S HEAD NOJSIiii. Simply
Rub it Back of the Fare and
inscrlin Nostrils. 1''r:xif cf sue -
cies. win be r:iv"n F? 1}1e ,t'srg'i.
MAt]E IN CAlstADit
1810101 SALES CO, Salto 171515, 'Worts
S. 0. Leeward, Ina, ,rho., 70 61a Ago„ a. 7,,1117
For Sale by
E. UMBACH„ Seafortk
•
5
11llhIIHIU1IIilhIl1IIN1
MACDONAL
Cut rier
More Tobacco for the Money!`
Packages 154''
3/2 1bTins 854)
C) •
�y u�ieninuuuunun
'`Grey Sox' 9 lobes
:i. Fy, , Carlin Bros, 'Broughton8 Son, Seaforth
Phone -102.. Phone 07 . ;; ' '.Phone 107W
High Average Mileage
Sometimes you find a tire that gives
extraordinary mileage—one in a dozen
perhaps. Whereas the average of
mileage given by a dozen—or a hundred—
Ames Holden "Auto -Shoes" will be as high
as that given by the exceptional ordinary tire.
It's the high average that counts—that, encs
the cost of miles—that makes it worth while
to get Ames Holden `Auto -Shoes" instead -of
ordinary tti�irres..,vv
"AUTO -SHOES"
For
AS LDEN
Cord and Fabric Titres in all
Standard.. Sizes -
Sale By ' "Red Sox" Tubes