Ontario Community Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 31 Jul 1924, p. 7

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The steadily increasing travel into| our northland along the Mackenzie valley has rendered necessary the m' vey and charting of that great system of waterways which extends from tho‘ centre of the province of Alberta to the Arctic Circle. For over a century this has been the great thoroughfare for northern travellers, but the large increase of late years in the number and particularly of the size of the boats employed makes it necessary that the aids to navigation be corresâ€" pondingly improved. This work has been entrusted to the Topographical Survey of Canada and during the past three years a programme of surveys has been carried out, which by de fining the prominent features of the district has done much to aid navigaâ€" tion and development. From the surveys made of the tract under investigation, which comprises an area of over 250,000 square miles, a serics of maps has been prepared showing navigable channele and topoâ€" graphy of use to the navigator, prosâ€" pector, and economic investigator. (On » of the most irteresting of these surveys has been that of Great Slave Lake. The through travel in the Macâ€" kenzie valley passes along the western alde of this lake ard in the seasons of 1921 and 1922 special attention was devoted to alds to ravigation here. This work was continued in 1923 and the lights established at the entrance to Hay Rivor harbor and the buoys and beacons placed at the dangerous @pproaches to Slave and Mackenzie rivers have proved of great assistance to navigation. The need and value of this work is shown by one incident. Some years ago a steamer ran on & boulder reef a considerable distance from shore. A pertod of calm weather permitted the saving of the steamer, but the know‘ledge of the eistence of this reef, of which the exact location was not known, was a cause of anxiety to navigators. In 1922 an ursuccessâ€" ful search wes made for this reef by the Survey, but efforts continued in 1923 led to its discovery and to its beâ€" ing marked on charts and located by a buoy. During 1923 attention was chiefly directed to the northern and eastern parts of the lake and to the territory lying beyond. The north arm of the lake is surrounded by a district rich in furs and minerals. Surveys conâ€" ducted into this region during the past season resulted in the discovery and mapping of nearly 1,000 small new isâ€" !ands, the correction of the location of Fort Rae, by some 20 miles in longtâ€" tude, and the finding of a connected body of water over 30 miles long. The eastern arm of Great Slave lake was surveyed in 1922. Exploraâ€" tion the past season was directed into the country lying to its east and north. The work extended from the east end of the lake to the straits of Tha NaKoie, joining Aylmer and Clinâ€" tonâ€"Colden lakes, which are situated some 200 miles within the soâ€"called "Barren Lands." The survey showed that in addition to mineral possibiliâ€" ties the country is suited to the muskâ€" ox and caribou, with sufficient grass, mosses and other vegetation to supâ€" port the great herd of the latter freâ€" quently seen. The waters teem with fish of a size and quality unknown to the warmer waters to the south, and at the very edge of the timber line, in sheltered places, spruce and tamarack reach to commercial proportions. General Smuts tells an amusing anecdote concerning the arrival in what was then German Southâ€"west Africaâ€"it was in the early stages of the warâ€"of certain small reinforceâ€" ments from England. The draft was made up mostly of young soldiers from one of the southern shires, and the lads, fresh from their own green flelds, viewed the dusty landscape with manifest disapproval. Presently a swarm of locusts hapâ€" pened along; thereupon one of the boys exclaimed in deep disgust: "I say, Bill, I‘m blessed if everything in this ‘ere worthless country ain‘t in khaki! Look at them butterflies!‘ A Top Game. One boy spins his top in a threo-\ toot ring, runs as far as he da.res,] sticks a peg in the ground and runs back to pick up the top before it ltops\ spinning. Then in turn each of the other boys spins his top, races to the! peg, lifts it and plants it a little farâ€"| ther away, and then tries to get back‘ in time to catch his top before it ' falls. If the top falls before the lpln-| ner gets back, the peg is returned to its last position. Each boy has three“ trials. \ Canada has the lowest proportion of divorce cases in the Englishâ€"speakâ€" Ing world. Her ':{ure last year was .8 per cent., against England‘s 2.2 and America‘s 13.2 per cent. The World‘s Dialects. There are said to be 22,424 languages and dialects in th eworld. The main line is usually open for the fellow who travels with a full head of steam. A man too busy to tak» care of his health is like a mechanic too busy to take care of his tools.â€"Cicero. Carrying on Surveys in Great Slave Lake Butterflies in Khaki. inzgh, as long as the thing TUE SYMPTONS OF LYPOYERISHED BLOO0D Show in Pale Faces, Tired Feelkâ€" ing and Breathlessness. Poople who are pale, langu!ld, with palpitation of the heart and shortness of breath at slight exertion are sufferâ€" ing from thin, impure blood. If they have the resolution to take the right remedy and stick to it, they will mm‘ new health and strength. The ngod! that can always be relied upon is Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. With every dose they improve and invigorate the blood, and this new blood means health and strength. Mrs. A. Griffiths, Plerson, Man.. is one of the many thousands who have proved the value of these pillis. She says:â€""I was so badly run down in health that I was almost bedfast. â€" The least exertion \ would leave me breathless. I suffered from headaches and backaches and }nw no appetite. 1 could only drag about the house and found even light ! housework almost impossible. I tried several remedies but they did not do jme a particle of good. Then a friend came for a visit and she urged me to ;try Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. When I had finished the second box I could feel that they were helping me. By the time I had taken four boxes more !l was a well woman and every sympâ€" ‘ tom of my trouble had disappeared. | It would not be possible for me to say | too much in favor of this medicine, and I always recommend it to runâ€" | down people, and have seen it prove | just as satisfactory in other cases." If you are weak and run down you can begin getting new strength toâ€" day by taking Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. Sold by all druggists or sent by mail at 50 cents a box by writing to The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Of unusual holidays few can have occasioned more interest than that of a retired American brewer now visitâ€" ing London on his way to Greenland. At his home in Milwaukee he has a globe of the earth‘s surface. When his annual holiday is due he takes a hatâ€" pin and, giving the globe a spin, sticks the pin into it. Where the pin sticks, there the brewer goes! Last year the pin indicated the Vale of Cashmere, in India, whither the brewer made his way. The previous year he found himself obliged to visit Germany, while the year before that a town not fifty miles from his home was the holiday resort thus chosen. He has visited in this way places as far apart as Christiania and Mel bourne, Montreal and Cornwall, and Stockholim and Cairo. When the pin sticks into the ocean the originator of this decidedly novel plan allows himâ€" self a second try. A pin was dropped on a desk by Dr. Gano Dunn in the course of his adâ€" dress at the dedication of the new building of the National Academy of Sciences and the National Research Council in Washington. That pinâ€"fall was perhaps the most significant and widely heard of any in history. Without being warned to silence, every person in the highâ€" domed, wideâ€"winged hall heard the pin as it struck the woodwork. Thousands of wireless listeners hundreds of miles away, also heard. Specially designed artificical stone walls made the sound clear, distinct, and without those hollow echoes which characterize old (highâ€"vaulted buildâ€" ings. That pinâ€"fall sounded an enâ€" gineering triumph in the longâ€"neglectâ€" ed science of ocoustics. Minard‘s Liniment for Rheumatism. A Chinese editor enclosed a rejecâ€" tion slip, when returning contribuâ€" tions, which read as follows: ‘"We have read your manuscript with inâ€" finite delight. Never before have we revelled in such a masterpiece. If we printed it the authorities would take it for a model and henceforth would never permit anything inferior to it. As it would be impossible to find its equal within 10,000 years, we are comâ€" pelled, though shaken with sorrow, to return your divine manuscript, and for so doing we beg 10,000 pardons." Say "Bayer Aspirin‘‘ INSIST! Unless you see the "Bayer Cross" on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by phyâ€" sicians for 24 years. whichcontains proven directions mmoyer" boxes of 12 tablets Also of 24 and 100â€"Druggists Broadcasting a Pinâ€"fall. Holidays by Chance. Politeness. Accept only a Bayer package ENGLAND TO MAKE RAK SELFâ€"GOVERNED Treaty Granting Independâ€" ence is Signed, but British Must Shape People Into a Nation. By a narrow margin Irak signed the Angloâ€"Irak Treatyâ€"the only possible instrument assuring her eventual inâ€" dependenceâ€"and theâ€"British will conâ€" tinue in the rather thankless task of shaping an irresponsible and inexperiâ€" enced people into a nation, éays a Bagdad despatch. Great Britain having accepted the mandate of Irak, under the League of Nations directly after the war, obliâ€" gated herself, accepted a trust, and she intends, if possible, to bear with this trust to the end. Since 1917 Great Britain has done more with Irak than any other nation could posâ€" sibly have done, but even so has sucâ€" ceeded only in setting up a more or less fallible monarchy, presided over by an Arab figurehead, and liable at any time to be thrown, without forâ€" eign guidance, into internal anarchy. Great Britain has long since realized that as an investment Irak is thor-‘ oughly bad, and that the pounds (6,â€" 000,000) which she annually pours ln-‘ to this investment, could be much betâ€" ter put to use elsewhere. She has done all in her power to mould this disjointed section into a nation, but one cannot make a durable crock of sand and water, and it is plain that the Iraki, at least at this stage of their development, are little better than sand and water. And since in addition to this there has been an appreciable amount of irritation caused by the petâ€" tiness of some Irak officia‘ls, the Briâ€" tish are quite prepared to leave the country. _ But they do not wish to leave it in its present vulnerable and unstable condition; it would be a very severe reflection on their ability and wisdom. It thus became very evident that a departure of some sort was necessary. Tenor of the Treaty. The result was the negotlation of a treaty with a protocol and subsidiary agreements following in its wake. The muchâ€"discussed Angloâ€"Irak treaty sets certain stipulations for the future which will give the Irak investment less of a failure ccomplected aspect, and which grants to the British cerâ€" tain financial and military rights that will allow them to carry on in the country for another four years and esâ€" tablish the Irak Government as a perâ€" manent institution. But some Iraki contend that the treaty is severe; that it wrests from |‘ them certain inviolate rights, imposes upon them restrictions which will imâ€"|â€" pair growth and retard them in their struggle for independence; lays upon them rigid financiacl demands and obâ€" ligationsâ€"in short, is an instrument which will preclude realization of their ideal. In their stigmatism and youth they are not aware that the clauses of ‘ the treaty, generally speaking, point| toward their eventual benefit, and that without the protection and guidance it affords they will be left a prey to inâ€" vasion. Charge British With Imperialism. Since the acceptance of the mandate the efforts of the British have been highly favored with altruism, but this fact in no way checks the bitternese of excitable tongues, for the British have been accused of having imperialâ€" istic designs in their policies concernâ€" ing Irak. When one stops to consider that Great Britain‘s policies are deâ€" termined not by individual and isoâ€" lated countries but by worldâ€"wide inâ€" terests, and it is understood that the occupancy of Irak by the British has ibeen an exception to this rule, and that by her connections with Irak she f injures her more universal interests, it ;is beyond reason to accuse her of imâ€" perialistic motives. Situation at Present. Now that the treaty is ratified by |\ the constituent assembly the Iraki have made their first move in the diâ€" rection of an eventual independence. The British will stand by them for anâ€" other four years, will protect them and their interests. will shape them for membership in the League of Nations, will develop their country and will then, at the end of the stipulated period, leave the management of the country entirély to the iraki and wish them Godspeed. A rejection of the treaty would assuredly have meant the downfall of Irak and than an evenâ€" tual invasion by outside Powers have been determined only by the amount of ambition and avarice of such naâ€" tions as Turkey and Persia and the less friendly tribes of Arabia, except for the possibility of international Child Vagrants. . In Russia vagrancy among children is so prevalent as to shock even peoâ€" ple who for ten years have seen little except suffering. Soviet newspapers report efforts by the Government to deal with the evil, but the children are many and the means of caring for them are insufficient. The newspaper Pravda recently estimated that there are fifty thousand vagrant children merely in Moscow and its suburbs. THROUGH LEAGUE MANDATE. TASK Sir Henry Imbertâ€"Terry photoâ€" graphed while leaving Buckingham Palace, following an investiture of members of the Order of St. John. The spring was late in coming, The flowers were very shy, When in my Devon garden fair The sweet West Wind swept by. She dropped some tears in passing, What magic in them lay That on the wall jJaponica Leapt forth in crimson spray? The violets just unfolding Were startled into bloom; The witch in the genistaâ€"bush Waved high her golden broom The pixies through the soft red earth Thrust up their small green spears, Ahb, would I had the magic touch Of West Wind and her tears! â€"Janet Read. A swan on the river is sailing; I gee her drift down to the bay! A convoy, she, unfailing To craft that know not the way! Oh, white the sails that are going To an isle in the waters below; And golden the paddles rowing In the calm of the stream‘s still flow! A harbor there is in the rushes, A harbor all safe and sure With scarcely a bough that brushes The pool to a rippling lure! Then meadows there are outâ€"spreading Where tufts of seaâ€"rice grow; And a convoy heading, heading Her fleet of yellow and snow! â€"Leslie Clare Manchester. Under the Ontario Act requiring fathers to maintain children born out of wedlock the sum of $67,000 was colâ€" lected last year in cash, and additionâ€" al amounts due would bring the sum up to well over $100,000,. Steps are taken to ensure the health and best welfare of infants and to this end adâ€" vice and assistance is given to mothâ€" ers. This Act will, it is expected, preâ€" vent a great deal of neglect and abanâ€" donment of infants and prove a deterâ€" rent to men who are guilty of this great wrong to young women Mr. J. J. Kelso is the Government adminisâ€" trator, assisted by the various welâ€" fare officials and social agencies. "Before I extend credit to a man," said Uncle Eben, "I got to be satisfied he will make honest use of it. There are fellers that would buy a beef stew on the noâ€"moneyâ€"down plan if they could." PINKERTON Racial Originâ€"Norman French. Sourceâ€"A locality. Perhaps you have wondered about this family name. It is misleading. In spite of yourself you keep associatâ€" ing it in your mind with the word end! The name, however, is a eplendid example of the way in which a name developed in one language can be inâ€" fuenced entirely out of its original form by another tongue. The original form of this family name was "De Pontcardon," Pontcardâ€" on being a place name in Normandy. It was of course first borne by men, probably in the ranks of the Conâ€" queror‘s army, who came from that loâ€" cality. . But in the course of time its pronunclation was a bit slurred, and men, forgetting that it was a French name, began to spell it as it was pronounced. Hence Pinkerton. Father‘s Responsibility. In a Devon Garden. The Fleet. Surnames and Their Origin ‘The report of the Mining Recorder of the Yukon Territory for the calendar year 1923 contains some interesting inâ€" formation regarding progress there. ‘The statistics in regard to claims are as follows: fli’lrt'cer Mining, grants ‘5; renewals, 5; relocations, 5. Quartz Mining, grants, 121; renewâ€" als, 1,05%; claims in good standing, 1,312. In connection with the claims in good standing it is interesting to note that as a full quartz claim is over 50 acres in extent these claims represent an area of approximately 65,000 acres, or over 100 square miles. The total amount of ore shipped from Mayo Landing in the summer of 1923 was 8,762%4 tons. Since no ore is bagged that assays less than 200 ounces in silver to the ton, this outâ€" put represents a large revenue. Of numerous new veins uncovered last year the most promising are those of the Lake Group where interested parties combined in diverting a large flow of water with the result that the overburden was washed in several places to a depth of thirty feet, exâ€" posing veins of silver ore from which assays have been obtained sufficient to warrant the owners arranging for the neccessary equipment and supplies to carry on additional exploratory work. The Keno Hill Mining Company ceased operations on Keno Hill and transferred its equipment to the Friendship Group adjoining the Treadâ€" well Yukon Company property on the south. This company has built a perâ€" manent camp and carried out a conâ€" siderable amount of exploratory work to date. It employs an average of thirtyâ€"three men. Progress in Mining in Yukon The Treadwell Company employs an average of eightyâ€"one men for its work inclusive of the work of the wood camp. It carried on extensively durâ€" ing the past year and erected a large new office and warehouse and has several tenâ€"ton caterpillars â€" hauling ore to the landing. In addition to the number of men employed by the different companies in both quartz and placer mines, there were about 150 prospecting and workâ€" ing their own ground. _ There have been no serious accidents, no labor troubles and very little sickness. A new placer strike was made at the mouth of Gull creek, as a result of which over twenty claims were staked. SUMMER HEAT HARD ON BABY No season of the year is so dangerâ€" ous to the life of little ones as is the summer. The excessive heat throws the little stomach out of order so quickly that unless prompt aid is at hand the baby may be beyond all human help before the mother realâ€" izes he is ill. Summer is the season when diarrhoea, cholera infantum, dysentry and colic are most prevalent. Any one of these troubles may prove deadly if not promptly treated. Durâ€" ing the summer the mothers‘ best friend is Baby‘s Own Tablets. They regulate the bowels, sweeten the stomach and keep baby healthy. The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockâ€" ville, Ont. Raw, But Well Done. "How does he succeed in putting over those raw deals?" "Don‘t know ; but you must admit Buy your outâ€"ofâ€"town supplies with Dominion Express Money Orders. He that riseth late must trot all day and shall searce overtake his work at night. Varlationâ€"Lalor. Racial Originâ€"Irish. Sourceâ€"A given name. It would take you a good many guesses to arrive at the Gaelic spellâ€" ing of this old Irish clan name which has become with us a not uncommon family name. It is "O‘Leathlabhair." But between consonant combinations which, in the Gaelic, neutralize each other into sll-‘ ence, and others which are but faintly | enunciated, and dipthongs which have ; entirely different sounds from those‘ we would give them in English, this | rather difficult looking name resolves} itself into the sound of "O‘Lawlor." ; And in this phonetic spelling it was taken over into English. | "Leathlabhar" was an arcient Irish given name compounded from the words for "half" and ‘speaker," as well as can be ascertained, for, of course, as a given name it far antedated the period (in about ‘the tenth century) when the clan name was formed. The chieftain of this name who founded the clan belonged to the still more ancient line of the O‘Harts, and unquestionably the bulk of his followâ€" ors at first were more or less distant relations and members of the same clan. LAWLOR "But, doctor, I‘m different; I‘m afraid of people. My hands and feet seem so big, and I can‘s talk, and if I walk into a room I‘m sure to fall over something. How can I ever get over it?" The doctor looked quizzically at the raw, halfdeveloped boy before him. "When I was your age," he said slowâ€" ly, "I was about as you are, only worse. I was poorer, bigger, slower in school and more awkward. It was real torâ€" ture for me to meet people, especially women and girls. "One day as I was going downtown barefoot I saw coming towards me two girls whom I knew by sight; they were well dressed and jolly. I thought of skipping down a side street, but I was in the middle of a long block and had to face them. Suddenly I noticed a cow in one of the side yards. Perâ€" haps if I could seem to be driving her, my big hands and feet wouldn‘t show. Gathering a handful of pebbles and calling to her to ‘huyâ€"huy, boss!‘ I started her off. "The girls came to where I was vigorously driving the animal from her chosen pasture. Then a clear, loud treble voice called from the " ‘You, boy, what are you doing with my father‘s cow? * "You can imagine the rest. I had made a ridiculous spectacle of myself. In my confusion I stepped into a patch of sand burs with my bare foet. The pain made me wince; I lost my balâ€" ance and fell into a muddy ditch. I can still hear those girls laugh! "I hid out in the haymow for two days to think it over. When I came back I told my mother that I had been visiting, and she wisely professed to believe it. As a matter of fact I had visited myself. 1 reasoned that my fears of other people were groundless and foolish, and that I had been silly to imagine that the whole world was watching me. The roads and all the world were free to everyone, and I reâ€" solved to use them without fear. "It was a fight of course, but I won. And I learned that people are not to be feared or avoided but to be loved and enjoyed. I‘m not lonesome any more; you see that everyone calls me doc and how we all enjoy it Why not live as you go along?" "Why, doctor, I suppose that Iâ€"But there, I‘m still trying to believe that I‘m different from everyone else. I‘m not! I‘m going to have friends as other people have!" And with chin up and eyes shining the boy started off to seek the great adventure of friendship,. â€" Youth‘s Companion. Every now and then the origin of the swastika crops up in connection with the huge black hooked cross sign displayed on the banners of nationalâ€" ist organizations of more than usualâ€" ly adamant tendency, says a Berlin despatch. _ "Death to Jews" is the signification in German party politiâ€" cal circles. The Danish expedition in Palestine, under the leadership of Gunnar Sommerfeld, has discovered in Capernaum, in the Synagogue of Tellâ€" Hum, a handsome friezee decorating one part of the ruins which shows a swastika running ribbonwise along the wall. As a countenance is made beautiful by the soul‘s shining through it, so the world is beautiful by the shining through it of a God.â€"Friedrich Heinâ€" rich Jacobi. Many a man leads a dog‘s life beâ€" cause he growls too much. The Cure for Bashfulness. Thin, nervous, underweight people take on healthy filesh and grow sturdy and ambitious when Bitroâ€"Phosphate as guaranteed by druggists is taken a few weeks. Price $1 per pkge. Arrow Chemical Co., 25 Front St. East, ‘"oronto, Ont. TE A is good ted ‘The ORANGE PEKOE QUALITY makes finer tea and more of it * Origin of Mystic Swastika Baffles Research. "‘Wll/ RIN f@ _ JP _ _,_‘_'E';EX.E‘E.E‘.’?.-. m wealtetin SUN.WIND.DUST 6.CINDERS d dAAA esP e ie y RECOMMENDED & SOLD BY DRUGGISTS & OPTICIANS P IEMEBT WO TUMT ND ULEC EiLE sn amSsABLEE REUVIMMRMTET TT D IICCCUNINIUC LA Cuvecsausd waurs rOR PAE® EYE CARB BOOK MUAINE co. cticacoÂ¥48 Th' Peop| Thin â€" nervous. underweigPt peot He takes a lot of staccato steps, sto0pE Like a busy toedancer with diszy tops ‘That never cease spinning, twinkling Until they come to the end of what‘s in it He runs on & line like a tightâ€"rope Tries not to look scaredâ€"mor to anâ€" No matter how fast he may go or stop He holds his head stillâ€"an oblivious But just down below, they twist and they squirmâ€" Minard‘s Liniment Relioves Pain. No, He Went to Bed! * Here is a laughable story of an abâ€" sentminded manâ€"no, n# a college professor this time, but a young felâ€" dow in his early twenties. He had been invited to attend a leapâ€"year party andâ€"courageous youth! â€"had rccepted. The young lady who was to be his escort called for him at the apâ€" pointed hour and was informed that he was dressing. (Men are always late, aren‘t they?) She waited for some time, but the young man did not appear. o At last his mother went up to his room to hurry him, and gracious! she found him in bed! While he was reâ€" moving his everyday clothes his mind had wandered to some other matter, and habit had done the rest. Our contributor who sends us the story adds that, if the young lady who called had been "his own particular young lady," he might not have for» gotten all about her. Perhaps not. As it was, perhaps, he was more cautious than absentâ€"minded. Remember, it was a leapâ€"year party! THEY TELL THEIR NEIGHBORS Women Tell Each Other How They Were Helped by Lydia E. Pinkâ€" ham‘s Vegetable Compound Wood'hrld"e. Ont.â€"**I took Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Compound for fe= male troubles. I would have headaches, backaches, J)I.lnl between my shoulâ€" ders and under my shoulderâ€"blades and dragging down feelings on each side. I was sometimes unsble to do my work and felt very badly. I{ motherâ€" inâ€"law told me about the Vegetable Compound and I got some right away. It has done me more good than any other medicine I ever took and 1 recâ€" ommend it to my neighbors. You are quite welcome to use this letter as & testimonial if "onthink it will help some Eor sufferer."â€"Mrs. EDGAR SIMMONS, R. 2, Woodbridge, Ont. In nearly every neighborhood in every town and city in this country there are town and citLin this country there are women who have been hamby Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable pound in the treatment of ailments peculiar to their sex, and they take pleasure in passing the good word along to ot!\::r. Jwa o lll Mipccee wien Srecoulal women. Therefore, if you are troubled in this way, 'thot give Lgdin E. Pink ham‘s Vegetable Compound a fair trial. This famous remedy, the medicinal ingredients of which are derived from roots and herbs, has for fortvem proved its value in such cases. Women everywhere bear willint testimony to the wonderful virtue of Lydia E. Pinkâ€" ham‘s Vegetable Compound C Did He Attend the Party? TORONTO Rough Pimply Skin Cleared By Cuticura You may rely on Cuticura Soap and Ointment tocarefor your skin, scalp, clear the skin of redness or roughness, the scalp of dandruffand the hanes of ch‘ppfng. Sample Each Free by Mail. Addrers Canadian E; * Catiewrs, P. 0. Box ux l:m.}‘ ..'.I’.‘M.- and 80¢. T ale sin the. 188VE 1Mo., 20â€"24. â€"Alfred Krenmborg.

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