West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 25 Sep 1919, p. 9

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on of the "lug to the klayor type esstul. Scotland \ & when he gol Up tno AUMWNTg T PC told a plain, clear, matterâ€"of fact &tor;: descriving each sheep in plain nguage, and giving his price for it. If he tad h:.fi twice as many sheep be could have sold them all. Now he is doing the same thing when he has cows, pigs or poultry for sale. It works just as well with one kind of k as it does with another.> Nor F(l a salesman of this kind need to confined to ste%. This plan will sell anything. cA ies The Way He Made Sales. I knew a man who had more sheep and lambs than he knew what to do with, and sales were slow. One day he went to town, had a fourâ€"page folder printed, got a few envelopes and sent a folder to everybody he knew that he thought would be interâ€" ested in worthâ€"while sheep or lambs. He did not try to see what big stories ho could tell about his sheep when he got up the folder; lu. !ust acid plays a part in the production of ethers which are used by perfumers and confectioners. Castor oll is used in the making of certain waterproof preparations, and a liquid disinfectant is obtained from the ‘seconds‘ or lower wrade oll. _ The oil is an admirable preservative for various kinds of leathers, is extensively used in the leather industry and is particularly serviceable in adding to the service life of leather belting employed in heavy work. Our flypapers would not be so effective if it were not for casâ€" tor oil, and the oil enters into the getâ€" up of a great many zgdhesive agents. Extensively Employed in India. "In the sugar mills of the West Inâ€" dies, upon the railroads of India and other parts of the Far East and in British shipping circles castor oil has long been used as a mechanical lubriâ€" cant; â€" afloat, however, it is generally blended. In India the oil has been tound to be an economical and suâ€" perior illuminantâ€"giving & markedly brilliant flame. Indeed, the peoples of India have found ways to utilize the oil and the refuse pomace which may suggest other services here in tho future. The pomace contains from 6 to 7 per cent. of nitrogen and a measurable amount of potash, and it is authoritatively gaid that the castorâ€" seed cake possesses 2.81 per cent. of phosphates. It is therefore easy to understand why the stuff makes an exâ€" cellent fertilizer. "In India, too, gas is obtained from a low grade of castor oil and is widely used for lighting. Finally, it has been found practicable to produce this gas from the seed cake after the oll has been extracted for other purposes. Notwithstanding the pretty general beliet that the castor bean plant will not be touched by cattle, it is stated as a fact by competent authorities that the leaves, not the stalks, are widely fed to cows in India, and added yield of milk is attributed to this forâ€" age. In Assam the foliage of the casâ€" tor bean is cultivated largely for the purpose of feeding silkworms, and an excellent paper pulp can be made trom the plant." "Castor oil yields sebacic acid, which is superior to stearic acid in the manufacture of candles, and from t also is obtained caprylic acid, which lends itself to the composition of varâ€" nishes peculiarly suited to the polishâ€" ing of highâ€"class furniture, carriage bodies and paintings, and is extenâ€" sively employed in the preparation of vellum, tracing cloth, etec. Canrylic Making of Transparent Soaps, Furniâ€" ture Polish, Candles, Fertilizers and Paper Pulp. A writer in "The Scientific Amertâ€" wan" dwells on the use of castor oil as ; Inbricant for the engines of aircraft 3f all sorts, showing it to be a most important ceommodity from a military standpoint. He says>~ "Fxtonsive experiments carried on »y the Allies proved conclusively that sastor oil was the lubricant par excelâ€" lence for fastâ€"running motors for agvial service. Up to a point various mlonds of mineral and vegetable oils 1i well enough, but none of these was tound capable of answering the suâ€" sreme tests of sustained flight under : wide range of temperature and of varied atmospheric conditions. Naâ€" twwre, somehow, had endowed the casâ€" tor oil with characteristics that were sincularly and strikingly united, as if t wants of mechanical flight had boen curiously anticipated." Used in Manufacturing. Alluding to some of the other uses +o which castor oil is adapted, the vriter goes on to say: The other fields of employment are h more extensive than most of us lize For instance, castor oil (@ures to a large extent in the manuâ€" tacture of substitute or artificial leathâ€" er. which takes the place of natural leather in the upholstering. Castor oil is an essential compoâ€" noent in some artificial rubbers, and thore are various kinds of celluloid which depend upon this product of the castor bean. Castor oll furnishes a very satisâ€" factory coloring for butter; and from castor oil is produced the soâ€"called "Turkeyâ€"red oil‘, which is an imporâ€" tant factor in the dyeing of textiles and in the treatment of the fabrics. (One of its largest uses is in the makâ€" ing of transparent soaps. was WIDE RANGE OF USEFULâ€" NESS IN INDUSTRIAL FIELD. CASTOR OIL FOR _ AIRCRAFT ENGINES A Sure Sign That the Blood is Watery and Impure. People with thin blood are much more subject to headaches than fullâ€" blooded persons, and the form of anaeâ€" mia that afflicts growing girls is alâ€" most always accompanied by headâ€" «ches, together with disturbance of the digestive organs. Whenever you h curring headaches After Meta Deal had gone, Pauline went up to her room and locked the door. She was angry and hurt, and she did not want to see anyone. To think that Meta Deal should calmly ask her for Roy‘s letterâ€"Roy‘s last letter, the most sacred thing she had in the worldâ€"to read to her club girls! It had seemed like a desecraâ€" tion almost to have it framed in her room; she had done that only because the thin paper would soon wear out, even with her reverent handling, and she simply had to see it every day! But the idea of suggesting that it be read aloud to a lot of girls who had never even known Royâ€"Pauline remâ€" embered how she had felt when Sadie Cummings walked up to it and read it onlyisthe other day. Halfâ€"unconsciâ€" ously she crossed to her desk and read for the thousandth time theâ€"words she knew by heart. "This is to tell you not to worry, dear. I got a few scratches, but noâ€" thing at all compared with most of the boys. If you could see their courage â€"I tell you, it makes life a great thing. When it‘s all over and we can begin our life, dear, we‘ve got to keep it as big as this. We‘ve got to keep our vision of the divine courage and patience and unselfishness and love hidden in commonplace lives. Of course I don‘t need to say this to you, of all people! But it is a joy to write it because I feel as if in this way I were coming a little bit nearer you." When Russia entered the war, part of Czarskoe Selo Palace was made inâ€" to a hospital; the younger daughters of the Czar, Maria and Anastasia, were made the hostesses, and Olga and Tatiana were nurses. I was at the hospital thirteen months, writes Capt. Geraschinevsky, and the girls came every day except when they did not behave; often the Czarevitch came, too. We all loved the boy and the girls. You could not have told them from the ordinary children exâ€" cept that they were so wellâ€"behaved. When his sisters were not round, the Czarevitch always complained that he was lonesome at the castle. â€" On one occasion at the front, when the Czar was occupying & simple house, Gen. Suchomlinoff, the minister of war, came into the room where the Czarevitch sat drawing pictures with colored pencils. The minister did not pay any attention to the boy. It is customary to ask permission before wa More disturbances to the health are caused by their blood than most peoâ€" ple have any idea of. When your blood is impoverished, the nerves . suffer from lack of nourishment, and you may be troubled with insomnia, neurâ€" itis, neuralgia or sclatica. _ Muscles subject to strain are underâ€"nourished and you may have muscular rheuâ€" matism or lumbago. If your blood is thin and you begin to show symptoms of any of these disorders, try building up the blood with Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills, and as the blood is restored to its normal condition every symptom of in ing y Aulori s ts s Irvanic Atcbacnici the trouble will disappear. There are more people who owe their present state of good health to Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills than to any other medicine, say so You can get Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills through any dealer in medicine or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. you may sit down in the presence of the Czarevitch. When the boy‘s governess came in to ask what he wanted for lunch, the Czarevitch stood up, spoke to her, and when she left the room turned to the general and said : FREQUENT HEiDACHEs ;I'he'weak: straggling writing broke most offitâ€"ht;;nâ€";l-; not hesitate to The Hlâ€"Fated Children of the Czar INSTANT POSTUM Yet Living. are not considered good for ? young people, but nothing is missed when you have Its rich flavor pleases, and ft contains absolutely nothing harmful. "TRkhere‘.s a PeaS;m' Tea and Coffee The old, overwhelming grief swept the girl. It was not for herself, she sobbed; it was not! It was because the world needed him so. He would have made such a wonderful surgeon â€"all his teachers had said so. To have a life like that cut short was cruel beyond words. 6 The Only Way. Mrs. Clymer was giving a little dinâ€" ner, and her housemaid left without notice during the morning. In despair the good lady tackled her new cook. He never had wakened from that nap. Forwarded with the letter was one from his nurse. "He will be an endless inspiration to all of us who knew him," she had written. "I wish I could make you understand what his mere presence and his example of courage and cheerfulness have been to others in the ward!" _ "Jane." she asked, tearfully, "what shall I do? Can‘t you wait at table?" "Not in the diningâ€"room,‘ was the cookey‘s firm response. "But I‘ve had some canteen experience, so if you‘ll line up your guests and send them out here with their plates I‘ll see that they get all that‘s comin‘ to them!" Did you ever notice that the man who whines and the man who wins are not the same? there, and then a line was added: "A bit tired. Think I‘:l take a nap. My love, dear, forever." And then a strange thing happened. As clearly as if it were before her, Pauline saw Sadie Cummings‘s face as she stood reading that letter. More than that: she seemed to see Sadie Cummings‘s very self as she had been sinceâ€"less wild, less flippant, blundâ€" eringly and crudely, but honestly, reaching out for better things. Pauline sat there, trying to think out this new, hard thing. Did she really want Roy‘s life to go on in the world, or did she want to keep it for herself alone, sharing its beauty and its inâ€" spiration with no one else? That was the question. At last Pauline rose and went to the telephone. _ "Is that you, Meta?" she called. "Meta, I‘ve been thinking about that letter. I was selfish. I see that now. You may read it to your girls." "General, it is customary to stand when a lady comes into the_room." When the Czarevitch misbehaved, the Czar would call the boy‘s male nurse, a sailor by the name of Dereâ€" venko, who would command the prince to about face, forward march, and conduct him to his room, where he had to remain and study for the rest of the day. The boy‘s pet was a spaniel, and he had a little automoâ€" bile that he drove himself. His Majesty, wearing Highland costume, inspecting the guard of honor of the Seaforth Highlanders at Ballater. Lord Aberdeen, former Governorâ€"General of Canada, is seen walking behind the King. Maria and Anastasia showed us their photograph albums. I noticed a snapâ€" shot that they had taken of the Czar and the Kaiser together on a battleâ€" ship. â€" The face of the Kaiser was scratched. I asked how that happenâ€" ed. Anastasia answered that Alexis did it with his nails. The children used to talk Russian very fuently, very fast, and I believe the reason they spoke so fast was that they were so rarely in contact with strangers that they were always in a hurry to tell them all they knew before they would be called away. The girls sat at the bedside of wounded ofâ€" ficers and soldiers and asked to be told stories of outside life. They called "outside life" anything that was not connected with the castle. . They would listen intently to every word. THE KING IN SCOTLAND. KEEP CHILDREN WELL _ DURIXNG HOT WEATHER Every mother knows how fatal the hot summer months » are to small children. Cholera infantum, diarrâ€" hoea, dysentry, colic and stomach troubles are rife at this time and often a precious little life is lost after only a few hours illness. The mother who keeps Baby‘s Own Tablets in the house feels safe. The occasional use of the Tablets prevent stomach and bowel troubles, or if trouble comes suddenlyâ€"as it generally doesâ€"the Tablets will bring the baby safely through. They are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Pompeii was destroyed by an erupâ€" tion of saliva from the Vatican. The function of the stomach is to hold up the petticoats. * up. Six animals peculiar to the frigid zone are three seals and three polar Three kinds of teeth are false teeth, gold teeth and silver teeth. _ The permanent set of teeth conâ€" sists of canines, eight bicuspids, twelve molars and four cuspidors. Guerillia warfare is where men ride on guerilias. Three heavenly bodies are the Father, Son and Holy Ghost. The invention of the steamboat caused a network of river to spring ‘The qualification of a voter at a school election is that he must be the father of a child for eight weeks. The four chambers of the heart are brain, mind, soul and chest. Tie Shocks Near the Top. As a nation we waste enough corn to supply many Europeans with bread. Much of the waste is due to poor shocking. i s Some of the Answers Given to Quesâ€" tlions at Recent School Examinations. Typhoid can be prevented by fasâ€" cination. By a little care in building the shocks and in tying them high near their tops, good protection is afforded both grain and stover. If the stalks of each armload do not slant in one direction onlyâ€"toward the centre of the shockâ€"and if the tying is not done high up near the top, the shock is very likely to twist. Tying near the top prevents twisting. Equal distribution of the armloads of corn around a shock is important. An equal distribution, with all the stalks slanting toward the centre, forms a conical stormproof shock, having each cornâ€"stalk acting as a brace to hold the shock erect. With more weight of corn on one side than on the opposite side, the shock is likeâ€" ly to lean or go down. Twisted and fallen sho and to hu: Got the Job. Anxious to travel for a big English firm in the ham line, an Irishman obâ€" tained an interview with the proprieâ€" tor. "What experience have you had?" the Irishman was asked. "Eighteen months," was the answer. "Eighteen months!" scornfully reâ€" peated the proprietor. "What could you learn about bacon in that time?" Why, I‘ve been studying for forty years and don‘t know half enough about it yet." "Bedad," exclaimed Pat, with a conâ€" fident smile. "If I had been studying it for forty years I‘d know how to make a pig!" What He Got. With the idea of being agreeable, the visitor asked her hostess‘s childâ€" ren what they learned at school. "I," said the eldest, "get reading, writing, arithmetic and spelling." "And what do you get, my little man?" said the visitor, addressing the littlest one, who had listened in a bored way while the others ran through their lists of accomplishâ€" ments. "Oh," he replied promptly ,"I dets readin‘, spellin‘, and spankin‘, Sheep are used &s beasts of burden in northern India and carry 20â€"pourd loads. It is better to fail in a go: than to succeed in a bad one He got the job © YOU CHILDREN! are difficult to handle in a good cause A mole can swim like anything, but a monkey is very helpless in the water. Almost all land birds drown very rapidly, if unlucky enough to fall into the water. They strike out with their legs, move round and round in a circle, but cannot get off the water. Lions and tigers are very good swimmers, and do not share the comâ€" mon cat‘s hatred for the water. But of all the cat tribe, the South Ameriâ€" can jaguar is the finest performer in the water. It seems often to plunge in for mere joy of a swim. A rabbit, as we have said, drowns as soon as its fur is soaked through, yet curiously enough its near relaâ€" tive, the hare, swims quite well, and will often cross a river when hunted. Bears are good swimmers, even those that usually live far from large sheets of water, and the.common rat is no mean performer. Throw a mouse into the water. It can swim a little, but as soon as its fur is soaked down it goes, and drowns. So, too, in the case of a rabâ€" bit. As soon as its fur is wet, it is done for. One of the best of animal swimmers is the horse. Horses have been known to swim a river nearly a mile wide to get back to their old stables. Monkey is Worst of the Lot, While Jaguar Excels. Have you ever noticed a gull dropâ€" ping on to the seaâ€"how it spreads its wings high, so that the feathers shall not be wetted? If a gull‘s wing feathâ€" ers get wet it cannot rise until they dry. Deer, too, can swim well. There are cases of caribou having swum across lakes ten miles wide when escaping from forest fires. Femalo Helip Wanted Girls and Women coming to Toronto can be plfid immediately at work in Factories, Hotels, Restaurants, Instiâ€" tutions and Private Homes. High Wages,. Experienced Cooks, Waitressâ€" es, Kitchen Help, Housemaids, etc., will find good openings at all times. Write THOMAS & CO., Central Emâ€" ployment Bureau, G. C. Burnham, Proprietor, 64 Church St., Toronto. Gentlemen,â€"I was badly kicked by my horse last May, and after using several preparations on my leg nothâ€" ing would do. My leg was black as jet. I was laid up in bed for a fortâ€" night and could not walk. After using three bottles of your MINARD‘S LINIMENT I was perfectly cured, so that I could start on the road. ' JOS. DUBES. * Commercial Traveller. St. Joseph, Levis, July 14, 1903. Minard‘s Liniment Co., Limited. The other day in the papers there was a story telling how a young boy, trying to imitate the hero of a certain lurid "wild west" magazine, hung himâ€" self. The reason was that the boy had probably never been educated at home in the matter of good reading. In many other homes it is the same. Boys and girls are not told by their parents the difference between good and bad books. And, sometimes, the parents themselves do not know the difference. Boys and girls should be taught the harmful effects that come from readâ€" ing such trash as "Wild West," "Deadâ€" wood Dick," Old Sleuth," and so forth. If any boy or girl wants a good Westâ€" ern or detective story he or she can join a library and get plenty of better books than these cheap novels, filled with impossibilities. There are so many Vanti‘ societies at present that it would be a good idea if some one should organize an Antiâ€"Dime Novel Association or a Good Reading Club and help strengthâ€" en, instead of weaken, the minds of some of our future Canadian citizens. MONEY ORDERS. The safe way to send money. by mail is by Dominion Express Money Order. When I‘m walking in the garden, Many fancy things I see; But the common old potato Is ‘bout good enough for me. Take it, say, for Sunday dinner, Or when company comes to eat, All mashed up so light and creamy, It is pretty hard to beat. And most any way you fix ‘emâ€" Boiled or fried, and all the restâ€" I don‘t know as I could tell you When I like potatoes best. When you smell the bacon frying, Then I think that dinnerâ€"time Is the time to eat potatoesâ€" Fixed with gravy, they are fine. But at night, when cold and tired Doing chores and cutting wood, Then a great big white potato Baked for supper‘s mighty good. And I like ‘em fried for breakfastâ€" If I really have my say As to when I like potatoes, It‘s about three times a day. Mr. MacTavish attended a party where the hospitality of the host knew no bounds. In the midst of the celeâ€" bration Mr. McTavikh rose up and made the rounds of the company, bidâ€" ding each a profound farewell. "But, Sandy, man," objected the host, "ye‘re not goin‘ yet, with the evenin‘ just started?" "Nay," said McTavish, "I‘m no goin‘ yet. But I‘m tellin‘ ye goodâ€" night while I still know ye all." Tinard‘s Lisiment Relioves NMeuralgia, WILD ANIMALS WHICH SWIM. ‘Took Time by the Forelock. Good and Bad Reading. When I Like Potatoes. & little boy was asked "Is your watch going, George?" the maiden asked sweetly, stifling a yawn. 7e L _ "Yes." answered George, blind to the hint. Cramped. "The flat suits me very well," said the prospective tenant, "but the kitâ€" chen won‘t do." _ Farmerâ€""Yes, he has been here for four weeks." "What‘s wrong with it?" asked the agent. "It seems to have been cut to fit a woman who weighed about ninety pounds. My wife weighs 200 pounds. She‘s got to have a kitchen she can bustle around in without getting jamâ€" med between the sink and the gas stove." Real Work. Visitorâ€""How long has this man worked for you*" Farmerâ€""About four hours." Visitorâ€"*"I thought he had been here longer than that." Would Do His Best. Sam Hodge came down from the heart of the clay belt mountains with a load of produce. * Oh, V;u the innocent but signifiâ€" cant answer, "by getting up eÂ¥ery time I fell down." Sam‘s oxâ€"team had hbad a weary twoâ€"days‘ pull, and when Sam reached the city limits he was confronted by a sign which read: "Speed limit twenty miles an hour." "Well, I know darned well we‘ll never make it, but we‘ll do our dogâ€" gone best. Gee up, you lazy critters‘! Gee up!" He pulled his whiskers meditatively and then drawled out to his oxen: Geography in Person. The school examiner was putting the children through their paces. His immediate subject was goography. EStanding in the middle of the platform he said : p "We will suppose this whole school is composed of water, and I am on an island. Now, what island would I reâ€" present?" Then, calling the teacher to him, he asked again: "Now, suppose we both stood together like this, what island would we represent?" % "The Scilly Islands, sir," came the answer in a loud voice. â€" "The Isle of Man," came a quick reâ€" ply. THERE IS ONLY ONE Your druggist gladly will give you the genuine "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" because genuine Aspirin now is made by Canadians and owned by & Canaâ€" dian Company. There is not a cent‘s worth of Gerâ€" man interest in Aspirin, all rights beâ€" ing purchased from the U.S. Governâ€" ment. ONnLY TABLETS MARKED WITH "BAYER CROSS" ARE ASPIRIN. If You Don‘t See the "Bayer Cross" on the Tablets, Refuse Themâ€"They Are Not Aspirin At All. During the war, aclid imitations were gold as Aspirin in pill boxes and various other containers. But now you can get genuine Aspirin, plainly stamped with the safety "Bayer Cross" â€"Aspirin proved safe by millions for Headache, Toothache, Earache, Rhevâ€" matism, Lumbago, Colds, Neuritis, and Pain generally. This famous reliever of rheumatic aches, soreness, stiffness, cFainful sprains, ncuralgic pains, and most other external twinges that humanity suffers from, enjoys its great sales because it practically never fails to brlAnf speedy, comforting relief. ways ready for use, it takes little to penetrate without rubbing and hrro- ducE‘results. Clean, refreshing. Made in Canada. At all dryg stores. Hlx;dy tin boxes of 12 tablets, a larger "Bayer" packages. | hax i’fllfln “ the trade mark. reg in Canada, of Bayer Manufact Monoaceticâ€"acidester of Szlicy. KNOCKS OUT PAIN THE FIRST ROUND Comforting relief from pain makes Sloan‘s the World‘s Liniment + "Ho w soon rl At all drug stores. 85c., 70c., $1.40 A Last Resort. zistertd 50 A" 18x23 inches, containing -u-lkla e‘omuu of King George, the Prince ‘ales, Premier Lloyd George, l‘l.:n Mapshall Haig, Admiral Beatty, Gen Currie, Marshall Foch, President Wilson and King Albert, a magnificent, lastl souvenir of the Allies victory. By mfl ready for framing, 25 cents, coin, of stamps. Sergt. George Moore (late 139th Batt.), 61 Yonge Street. Egypt‘s principal crops are cotton, corn, rice, wheat, barley, beans, sugar cane and leguminous plants, which inâ€" clude clover, lentils and peas. . The following figures show the approxi« mate total cultivated acreage of the above crops: Wheat, 1,280,000; barâ€" ley, $360,000; rice, 220,000; fiax, 10, 000; _ beans, 5606,000; _ leguminous plants, 1,650,000; _ corn, 1,830,000; cotton, 1,720,009; sugar cane, 50,000. An Uitimatum. "Willie,‘ said mother, consolingly, "you will have to wear one of your sisâ€" ter‘s nightgowns toâ€"night." "What, a girl‘s?" snorted Willie. "Yes, why not?" asked mother in surprise. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Burns, etc. FINE GROUP PICTURE IN COLORR 18x23 inches, containing striking WILL EQUIPPED NEWSPAPEE and *ob printing plant in Ontario. Insurance carried $1,5600. gg for g',:oo on quick sale. Box 42 11son blishing Co., Ltd.. Toronto. CANCER. TUMORS, LUMPS, . internal and external, cured wi K:ln by our home treatment. Wri fore too late. Dr. Beilman M« Co., LAmited, Collingwood. Ont. "I won‘t wear it," declared the small boy. "I‘d rather go to bed raw." The farmer who does not feed every pint of waste milk on the farm, sweet or sour, is not working for the greatâ€" est profit. GIRLS! LEMON JUICE for a few cents. The juice of two fresh lemons strained into a bottle containing three ounces of â€" orchard white makes a whole quarter pint of the most reâ€" markable lemon skin beautifier at about the cost one must pay for a small jar of the ordinary cold creams. Care should be taken to strain the lemon juice through a fine cloth so no lemon pulp gets in, then this lotion will keep fresh for months. . Every woman knows that lemon juice is used to bleach and remove such blemishes as freckles, sallowness and tan and is the ideal skin softener, whitener and beautifier. How to make a creamy beauty lotion Hospital records show that every time you cut a corn you invite lockâ€" jaw or blood poison, which is needlesa, says a Cincinnati authority, who tells you that a quarter ounce of a drug called freezone can be obtained at litâ€" tle cost from the drug store but is sutâ€" fcient to rid one‘s feet of every hard or soft corn or callus. soreness is instantly relieved. BShortâ€" ly the entire corn can be lifted out, root and all, without rln. This drug is sticky but dries at once and is claimed to just shrivel up any eorn without inflaming or even irriâ€" tating the surrounding tissue or skin. If your wife wears high heels she will be glad to know of this. Just try it! Get three ounces of orchard white at any drug store and two lemons from the grocer and make up a quarter pint of this sweetly fragâ€" rant lemon lotion and massage it daily into the face, mneck, arms and _ You simply spply a few drops of freezone on a tender, aching corn and @ticu s1 OINTMENT & TALCUN The poreâ€"cleansing, purifying and sterilizing properties of this wonderâ€" ful skin soap, using plenty of hot water and soap, best applied with the hands, will prove helpful to those who use it for the first time. ‘Touch eruptions, roughness or irritation, if any, with Cuticura Ointment beâ€" fore bathing. Dry and dust lightty with Cuticura Talcum, a fascinating fragrance for powdering and perâ€" fuming the skin. Nothing better than these ideal “r purifers and their cost is but Cuticura ., Ointment 25 and 50c Taicum 25¢. ;!u-u&num duties, Soid everywhere. For sample each free mdâ€" everywhere. For dross: "Cuticura,D TORONTO 30BSEECOUGHS Egypt‘s Chief Crops. IISUC No. 3Gâ€" 16 A SKIN WHITENER t

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