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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1921-1-27, Page 7RECOVERS MILLIONS IN LOOT •--•-•••••• REPORT OF -111E WIES- BADEN COIVIIVIISSION. Exposes Huge Robberies by Soldiers -- Restorations of Booty Secreted int Belgium. Elaborate defenees by erudite Ger- mans against the charges that the in • 'Paden stole everything they could get their hands on in. French territory during the war are substantially offset by the report of the Wiesbaden cora- Fission which directed the restora- tion of stolen •articles to French Mt - stens under special provisions in the treaty of Versailles. a result the world probably can expect another set of blue, white, yel- low, green and other -rainbow hue bound books explaining how- more, than 18,000 francs worth of paintings, books and furniture identified' by the French owners as having disappeared *heir -the Germans crossed the Rhine homeward bound happened to be pick - Ti -d uj) in err r • . Activities of Robber Army. In addition, as an astounding ex- ample of the devotion of the German troops to the Ideals of the former Crow -n Prince, the Wiesbaden commis- sion 11M sought out a quarter of a -mil- lion tons of induStrial material, 30,000 tens • of agricultural machinery, be- sides millions ot francs worth of varied securities, which the German. bold:ers learned to their dismay were not negotiable. These restorations are all confined to German territory, but nearly as much has, been recover- ed from parts of Belgium where Ger- man troops were concentrated. ' The edminission is said to have discovered evidence' of tlje inner workings of a separate •army -service ,for the trans- portation of stolen material from Bel- ' glum across the -Rhine and which was. about to cominenCe extensive opera- tions as far east'as the'Prussian fron- tier. The restorations from the Belgian districts include 50,000 Cons of Indus- trial...nraterials, 2,000 banal boats and 12,000 tons of 'railway material. In some' cases owners Were so disheart- ened by the damage done to- their teems as to relinquish their rights to the stolen material. This undefined material has been sold by tho French Gowernmente both here mid to German citizens, with the result that 24,000,- 000 francs and 26,060,000,mark_s were added to the French treasury, more than enough to pay the whole cost of searching- foa 'the material and its re- shipment to the proper owners. Winning an Indian Throne That the Orieut is still the land of the strange and romantic is shown by " a story that comes straight from everyday modern life in India, but vlaich 'night have been. invented by Scheheheeade herself for the enter- tainment of the sultan. It Ls area; count of how the Gaekwar of Baroda won his. throne. It appears that ht 1875, after the Maharajah Malear Rao was' deposed, the council sought a worthier member -of the family as his successor. Four sons of the house lived in theeity, but the council felt that theywere'too eld and inconipetent to become efficient - rulers.. " ' In a distant village, M' a mud ...hut, the council found a poverty-stricken family of the tayal race. In this family were three sons, each of whom wee young enough to be molded into a capable ruler. After some delibera- tion the council decided that one of these boyh shoeld have the throne, but left the selectionto the dowager ma- haranee. ' re Accordingly, the three brothers - Gopal, Da:da and Sampat-were sum - moped to the cityof Baratta. Shortie after their arrival they were admitted to the presence of the maharanee. Her highness astred each in turn why he bed come to Barodat The yoringesta•avas 'SO awed anti be- wildered by' the magnificen.ce"tif the 00.Mtgistti,after-srni1ing foolishly for Moment, .he burst into a storm of 'tears and sobs. , , The next in age, who was more 'stolid, did' not behave so Jayeterically. He answered the query as any well- ,., - behaved Hindu lad of his age erdild laaae done._ He, had come to I3aroda, he declared, because his relatives had brought him there. • But when Gopal, the third boy, was• waked the same question, he airily re- sponded: i "I have come to be the maharajah of Baratta." The naa.harance and her councilors with One acaord decided that the youth who gave this bold reply show- ed the most promise of becoming,an ablinaglea of his people. He was chosen and there was no need to re- gret the choice. ' 4.0 Have Some Grit. "Be. cheerful keep smiling, no matter how things, are; Be kind, be gentle, and the react will not geom far. Standing still and moping wilt nem help'a bit- • r Ther folkswho're up and doing are the t,allts who have sone gait." From a shark weighing 500 pound* ft is possible to ebtoka 10 square feet o leether suitable for onots oid !sheet. FRAGILE, AND MISEllAB The Melaueholy State of ,Thous- ands of Bloodless Children:and Young Crirk How often do you hear the remark, "She is very delicate?" How often it meane that some young woman is Hat- ing in misery, suffering from ,periods of prostrationt dizzinesa, lose of appe- tite and disordered digestion. ' Heath aches afflict her at leaser/As; pain in the back and limbs „follow any ekera, Wire She ie never really well. This fragile state et health, this lack of vitality, calls for prompt treat- ment. The blood must be nourished and made strong enough to vitalize the systemthet is so lacking in, energy. In such eases Dr. Williamaa' Pink Pills have proved remarkably successful in making the new, rich, red blood neces- sary in restoring tone to the aystema Lira. L. 'M, Duncan, South laaiuntain, Ont., tells of the wonderful benefit Dr. WilliamsPink Pals made in the case of her seating daughter. She says: "It Is only right that I should let you know of the good derived from the use of Dr. WilllerasaPink Pills by our girl af eleven years. She was always very thin and not gaining in weight Her appetite was poor and she had no de- sire for wholesdne food. Finally we decided to give her Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. After taking one box, she went away an a three weeks' vacation, tak- ing three boxes of pills witeher, which she tookregularly whilealiewas away. Wheu she reiturnetaliceiaiiaave were sur- prised and .delightecleto see how well she looked, and'to 'find that she had gained seven pounds in weight. She had aenuchabetter colo e and her ap- petite had improved eio that she was always ready for her meals. She. con- tinued using the pills until she had taken Seven boxes, and the great im- provement they made in her condi- tion- was noticed by naany around here. I can only add that I believe Dr. Wit: Hams' Pink .Pilis are a splendid .medi- cine." The best time to begin taking ,Dr. Williams Pink Pills is the moment you fed the least bit out of sorts. The sooner you do so the, sooner you will regain your old time energy. You can get these pills through any medicine dealer or by mail at 50 Cents a box or six boxes for $2...50 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brackvillee Ont British officers and men still serv- ing in France number 37,000 • The Glory Kele. As we came into the- furnace room the stoker was turning away from the' glory hole, through ,whieh ee Itaa been, lOoking inte the great furnace, ' The glory hole is a little peePhele to,which the at -biter oart put his eye and exam- ine the ,fire without opPniag the big doors ; .and, thus' losing some of the heat. , Seeing as. with our guide, lie sea& "Would you like to look at the hotteet place ia the world?• Do not look too lona,. for it. 'Might Wald you for time." ' One after another we put an eye to the hole and for a moment looked into iiabrightness like that a the sun, Weeti we turned away, everything for a moment wee. black, One eater another tie we filed eat a the room,' we remarked, "Why, am still loeking through the glory hole! I can, see into the furhace just as plain- ly as I could wheu I had my °eye to the hole. It makos. a spot of light everywheee I look, I did not suppose anything could be so bright as that." And as I likened to their talk, 1r0 - membered the. words., "And the city had no need of the sun, neither of the moon, to shine it; -for the glory of God did lighteu it, and the .leirab Is tbe. light thereof." If the brightness of the furnace, and of the sun ere too much for our eyes, what must it be to be- hold the glary of Gaily who gives. light to the heavenly city! God does not now let us. leak into that glorious place; but sometimes He holds his. hand over us., as He held m ever Moses in the cleft of the rock and gives- us a glimpse of the glory. Anl hawavon- derail it ita-the glo.ry of God! There is nothing with which we can compare it. It is brightnessthat yvould 'hide the light of the sun as the risen. sun hides the steam Can it be that God intends his child- ren to be glory holes through which others can catch a g•limpse of His grandeur and the glory of His heaven- ly abode? If we are true children at Goa, surely something of the bright- nes.s of purity and love and holiness will shine through us, so that others may at least, "take knowledge of es that we have been with Jesus." Canada's Indian poetess was Paul - ane Johnson (a daughter Of Chief Wil- liam Johnson of the Six- Nation Indian, Reserve, near Brantford), who wrote several volumes' of poems and gave rectitals of her work. She died_ in ..Vancouver. Picture -frames are -oftenhung be:, cause of their gilt. lelinard's Liniment Relieves Distaiape Surnames and Their Origin SINCLAIR Variations -St. Clair, St. Clare, Sink - le r. Racial .Origin -Norman-French, .also Scottish. Source -Geographical. In the classification of 'the Norman- French contribution to the nomencla- ture of the English must be included this group of family names. in a 'sense they may be _ regarded as having been family names at the time of the Norman invasions, though it is certain that only a minority of the men who bore it as a designation of the localfties from which they came actually bequeathed it to their des- cendants. In a sense, too, the name of Sinclair may be regarded as Scottish, for it is Ike name of one of clans of Scot- land. But the Scottish name is sub- ject to the same explanation of Nor- man-French origin, ,• as the English. Lake many Scottish names, including those of several of the clans, it ie'eat a native name. . The 'forms St. Clair. and St. Clare of course, explain. the source. The forms Sinclair and Sinkier are but variatailis hi spelling which have .de- tfeloped from spellings whioh original- ly were by no means Simaar. There is' a, "Thames de St. Clare," referred to 'in the alleles:it writs af Parliament, and the name occurs variously in the old documents as "St. Clare and "St, ea " The Scottish clan name traces back to a follower of William the Conquer- or, a ebonite de Sa,ncto Claro," through his sail William, who in the _reign of King David -I. of Scotland,' at- tached himself to that monarch's court. Through grants of land at arst, and intermaialage later, the Sinclair line grew into the clan system of the northern Goels as'S distbret entity, and, won the recognition of King H&c° VI. Of Norway, to'its"sway over Ork- ney. Other old strongholds ot the clan were Caithness a.nd Stratherne. MOONY Variations - Oa/looney, 0°Moynagh, Money. Racial • • Source -A given name. The family. names M. the Mooney group, like virtually all Iriain sur- names, are derived from a given name, and originally bore either the, prefix "0" or "Mac," signifyingin the Irish tonaue "descendant of," andcame into being first as tribal or clan names, be- ing ad'opted by all the followers- ot the chieftain's, banners as weal as by his own 'family. Strangely enough, one of the varia- tions of this -family nanaeof Mobney,_ or "O'Maoinaigh," which =dent' Irish form, comes very dose .ina. its English meaning to the meaning ol the given n.aihe from- which the family name is developed.' This varlatilie is Money. The :given name in tee an- cient Irish was "Maoleach," film the Irish ward ,"maoale.' meaning:. "wealth.'" The .domivatiou of English „custara and language, as well as English law, - in some instances compelled at vari- ou.s periode the Anglicizing of Irish family names, and the existence of such wisely varying forms as Mooney, Moynagh ansa Money is traceable to the fad that the English and Irish alphabets do not ,paialiel each other completely, and the pronunciation of the Irish alphthougs is suito different from English. a •'• .Family names of the Mooney group ale common, both in- Ulster and in King's county, having' been derived from different chieftains of the same name. ' The Home That Wins. 1 Right into the bands of every father,. the Boy Scout movement puts an in. suranee pulley for bos boy's future *couting is flat something outside the home to ttar-11' you boy ever to, and, forget about. Scouting Is the most actice force ever let loose in Vie world for welding father and on togetime into a winding teara for home and country. , Every father does not realize teat the average ()Atari° boy is asvaao 5,500 hours a year. :You put aim ie school forma00 of these hours ani everlasting- . ly keep after him to make good.' You plea) him hi church and Sunday' , School for Perhaps another 100 hours and act Iiim,anaw you are booking for resultea" Youkeep him around home ' and unaer your watchful eye for prob. ably 1,500 of his waking hours and then turn him loose for his play --3,0Q0 hours a year -and that'a the end of it. Why? Because you are past the play age,- or thiek yeti are. -Yet right here, in these hoars he is away from home and other wholesome influences, is where your bay forms. his chra,racter and needs you most. Scouting gives,you, as a father, a com- plete, playtime programme through which you can win your son foe life. Scouting wine, and the home that "putealn" Scoutiag Wins too. Scouting is the manliest programme ever devised • for a boy. As associ- ate members of The Boy Scouts Asa sedation fathers unite with their bays in &muting. They became pals with their sons and' "home scoutmasters" backing up the regular scout leaders. The home with couting in it wine. If Scouting is not, in. your home, a let- ter addressed to the Provincial Head- quartersof the Roy Scouts Ass-eel:l- ion, ,Bleor and -Sherbourne Streets, Toron.to, wiu bring back a reply tell- ing how you can help to put it there. 'KEEP. LITTLE ONES WELL'IN WINTER Winter is aadangerous season for the litale ones. The days are change- able -one , bright, the next one cold and .stormy, that the mother is afraid to fake the. childien out for the fresh "air and exercise they need. so much. In oonampieace they ars often cooped tw In overheated, badly ventilated rooms andaare eaten seized with colds or 'grippe. What is needed to keep the little ones, well is Baby's Own Tablets. They will regulate the atom - itch and bowels and drive out colds and by their use the baby will be able to get over the winter season in per- fect safety-. ...-The Tablets are sold by medicine .dealera or by mail at 25 cents a kbox tram' The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. A Little Knowledge. --Young Anthony Giles, son of Farmer Giles, upon demobilization went to one of the special echoolsarranged for ex -Service men. There he learnt- all the newest "'hinter" about farming'. Old Fanner Giles, some time after his sonreturnedto the farm, met an old friend, and together they discuss- ed the bay's return. "Did your boy learn anyhina at the Farm Schaal?" inquired Giles' friend. "Yes," answered Giles. "He learnt a little too much for us." "Haw so?" „e'lie came back with a lot of new- fangled notions about -how to run a farra, and seemed to think the old honiepla.ce was a sort .of experimental affair, and that me and the hired men were just the fellows to do the work." PNEUMONIA and other Lung D15452308 (Halms many victims', In' Canada and , should be guarded against 'Mioar' - linimont a -Great Preventative:being one of the -oldest remedies used. Illinard's Lind- rrisnt has cured thousands of cases of g;IrE4(iilie.Sore farft11"tlm dVndredClsgse It to Germs. Thousands of bottlee being -used eltnedrTcerleTia d':°,:ierss'.tte 'nit drug165ts rginards TAntment Co Ltdo, 'Srammouta. ZIF48;1., , rs1.4:1,,askantAttsAss,...aso.ssub.42maezs4abacmachoss442,8.4iskt,mi..art.. ,Grocers Jsed To Wonder why some of their tea and coffee trade switched to M'et‘ .Maw of them uncierstand now They use Postum in their own families and. kina a big gain in health, and some economy, with no loss in satisfaction • Thera a Reeisozis , Lor Posta:urn instead of coffee Wens. ,werv.*Nor4s0.100 • Was That Not Wise? KingNoraalos was the wisest of , , kings who has ever reigned, and every Tuesday from. seven to nine -thirty of the evening he would distribute wis- &neat° the most foolish of -hie dub- jectsi One day there came to his court at very foolish main. He had ten, women running after •him, all demanding that he should marry them, and, it was not law in the country teat he should take unto himself more than one wife, and the foolish fellow Aare not face the Wrath of nine even. to gaiia the favor of one. • • - He was not dreadfully keen on mar- rying even one. And he appealed to his king for wis- dom; arid the women stood by glower - "Let me think," said the king, re- moving' his crown, and calling upon ,his two scratchers -in -chief to scratcb his head for llim. .And having thought for the spaoe of three asterisks the great monarch commanded: "Let the ten woneen etep- forward arid give their ages." Silently, and one by one, the ten women disappeared, There has been none so wise as No - moles since. hie day. ResourcefultiesS is the star aeeam- Plishagent. It is the master-ltey that fits all the loelts of bueinesa require - merits. aaa-aaaa......-ae-aeasa AUTO SPATIE 'PART for tuost rn4lcos ,a.nd et rktrfs, Your old,brok,n fil. rOPlarod. Write, or wire us, What you want,::- .\\*e carry CMS largest stnd most c,ornpfete stocd-r. In Canada or slightly used or new,part$ and automobile equipment: "We ,,hip D, anywhere in Canada. ‘Satis- fagtory or refund in fail our rnOttf, Aloo. saivag. sup,;4y, Dulreri4 St., . Toronto, put. What Is a Silo? The best we have seen on this sub- ject is an article by Lyman ,Carrier in the Anierican Journal of Agron- omy. He says: "A silo was used. as, a' grain -pit in the dry Mediterranean. countries be- fore the Christian era, From this original structure' we get the name silo applied to the structure used to- day in preserving green forage. "The modern practice is ,traced di- rectly to Germany -and Huhgery and is suppose(' to be the applicaaion ad the principle of preserving sauerkraut. The fact that the Germans use4 salt In making their .first sour hay lends weight to this opinion. "The first silos were pits dug in the ground ana made wider at the top than at the bottom. Into these pits green grass was packedaind tramped down by five or six men. Salt was added at the rate of one pound to 100 pounds of grass. "The first attmnpt to ensile earn was made by a German sugar manu- facturer in 1861. The Fre.neh and Gentians then persevered in similar attempts but , met with varying de- grees of success. A Frenchman, Count Poederer Peret, through his In- vestigations and efforts, earned the Legkre of Honor and the popular name Of `Father of Ensilage.' Introduction into America came about through articles in agricultural papers. "In 1891 Prof. F. If. King, of the Wisconsin Agricultural Experiment Station, began the study of the whole subjeat of silo construction and ensil- ing. King's silo tables for determiu- ing the tonnage in a silo are classics. No man has done more than he to make the silo a success." X -Rays Snapshots Remarkable progress has been made in X-rays work owing to the dis- covery of a new photographic plate which is 25 times more rapid than any- thing known hitherto. • This new plate makes it possible to take radiographic pictures of the heart lungs, or stomach, in a fraction of a. secend with ordinary appiratue, amid, besides saving the patient and opera- tor from the risk of exposure to the Xasys, photogaraphs ean be taken of organs of the living body so rapidly that they appear perfectly distinct, whereas with tho. longer exposures at Dreamt required organ() such ss the heart or lungs make movements -which ,bluar the image, rendering diagnosis difficult. "Papes Diapepsin" Corrects • Stomach. "Pape's Diapepsin" is the quickest, surest relief for Indigestion, Gases, Flatulence, Heartburn, Sournes-S, Fer. mentation or Stomach Distress caused by acidity. A few- tablets give almost immediate stomach relief and shortly the, stomach is corrected ao you can eat favorite foods without fear. Large case costs only 60 centsat drug store. Absolutely harmless and pleasant Millions helped annually. Largest selling stomach corrector in world, - Adv. Case In Point "Of course dogs have intelligence," Bibbs declared warmly. "Now here is bubbs; he's a lover of dogs, and leave it to him it some (legs haven't more intelligence than their masters." "Sure!" Dabbs respended heartily. "Why, I have+ a couple of dogs like that myself.' And Dubbs -even yet stenettm wonders why they all laughed t ' Faith as an invisibleania invincible magnet, and attracts to, itself what- ever it fervently desires and calmly and persistently expects. -Ralph Wal- do nine: tea -- To makean ascent of 'Mount Ever- est would 'oceupy two years. No white man 'has ever scaled this, the higheat point iiathe world aboare sea-leveL DANDERINE Stops Hair Coming Out; Thick.lns, Beautifies. Chissifi His Two Ears, , "It seems to rne, TomraY," said a father to 111s smo.11 son who was very forgetful, "that everything I say to you goes la one ear and out the other. "Well," replied the youthful ob- server-, "I guess that's what I've got 'two ears for." ,.. First Come. , A little boy called on his aunt who Lived next door, allured' by °eaten', savory smells. "Hello, Aunt Sue," he greetea her, "nice day." Then, after a minuteai emaarrassed pause, he came to the point. "Aunt Sue, I smell somethini that smells like fast rate' mince pie with raisins in it" "Yea, Will, I have some' raince pie, but they're for company. He pondered Oita end then suggest- ed hopefully, "I come to mak-e a little bit of a visit myself." Neutral. "But are you a _British -born sub. jeet?" angrily deratiCaded the official- at the Passport Office. "My mother waa British-----" began. th.e,applicant. "Yee, yes----" "But she married a Frenchman - intes.00 "In. Italy," "Yes; but where were you born?" "I was born on a ship flying Spanish colors whilst she was lying at anchor an ,Hanolulu Harbor, but my parents died in Brazil when, I was' only four years old, and I was adopted by a Chinaman, who brought ma up in Ruis- sia----" „ he's—" began. an officiat "He's a bloorain' League of Na- tions!" exploded the official who had fleet spoken. MONEY ORDERS. It is always safe to send a DOMiniall Express Money Orden Five Dollars costs three cents. The first cotton manufacturing mill in China is scarcely more than twenty years old, yet the nation has to -day 1,250,000 spindles and 5,000 power looms, producing annually 260,000,000 pounds of yarn and 60,000,000 yards of cloth. The curiosity of iam wee wishes to see fully .for anmself how the dark side of life leaks, is like that of the man who took a torch into a powder seak.whether amnia, aaally blow up or not. Nervou's Headache yields -to BAUME BENGUE it soothes and stops the pain. BEWARE OF SUBSTITUTES $1.00 a tube. THE LEEMING MILES CO, LTD. • MONTREAL Agents for Dr. Jules Bengu6 RELIEVES PAIN Send for list of inventions -wanted by Manufacturers. Fortunes have been made from simple ideas. "Patent Protection"- booklet -and "Proof of Conception" on request. HAROLD C. SHIPMAN & CO. - PATENT ATTORNETS/7 2111 SHIPMAN CNA/4E1610 '• • 04TAWA• CANADA INVENTIONS A artI,' ?'WANI a?;.f11,;,'2itt 144.147. irAoloption. 7314.#0, Rheumatism, manila' .• Troubles.. It', weii-knoWn, having' boon eitteneiveia vertisedi since it 'was first roantifeetutt ie 1888, by distribution of laiSci, qUftlitt , tics 46,druiartitoS. COok peek's, 1049,14* • n te agents tree at charge. The, remedies. care sold et a pries that allows egents 'to mildolotuonbatlle.maaetiricilaviriemnotoot:n'ertih413Wt_pral,otiii:,u,.' i.s.isotnic4o4stt 13o t aro Dragonflies as Food. In the Malay Archipelago, at tho season when the rice fields are in flower, dragonflies. are , exceedingly numerous' and every day boy e may be seen, catching them with birdlime. Foe t.his, purpose a derider stick is used, with a few twigs at tho and well anointed, so that the least teacls cap- tures the insect, whose wimp are thereupon pulled off, the body being ()unsigned to a basket, The draganfliea are thus gathered( for the table. Fried in oil with 0,114011; they are esteemed a great delicacy. 0.••—•—••••• Minard's Liniment for Dandruff. The ten invaded and pillaged de, .aartments of France' haae precluced this year 500,000 tons of wheat and one-fourth of he riaticin'S oat mop. _nen, The first railway bridge atiress the St. Lawrence . River was the Victoria Bridge, near, Montreal, opened in 18591; the second, the Lachir.e Bridge, 1886; the- third, the Coteau, in 1890; the fourth, the Cornwall, in 1897; the fifth, the Qadbec Bridge, near the Cita of Quehec. ASPIRIN "Bayer' only is Genuine oik.VER Warning! Take no chances with substitutes fottgenuine "Bayer Tableb§ of Asiirin." 'finless you see the name "Bayer" on package Of Cn tablets yoa are not getting Aspirin at all. fa every Bayer package are directians, tor Cottle, Headache, Neuralgia, Rhea- matism, Llara.che, Toothache, Lambs.. go and for Pain. Handy tin boxes,oE twelve tablets cost _few' cents, Drug, gists also sell limier pads; _ in, Canada, Aspirin. is the trade mark (registered in Canada), ot Bayer Manua facture of Monoaceticacklester a sciicyucactd. America's Pioneer Dog Remedies Book on DOG DISEASES and How to 'Feed Mailed Free to any Ad- dress by the Author. Z. Clay glover Co., line. 118 West 81st Street New York, U.S.A. TEN IS YOU DI Liniment should be kept, handy for aches and pains iitivie.HY wait for a severe pain, ati ache, a rheumatic twinge fel- lowing exposure, a sore muscle, aciatiat, or lumbago to make you quit Work, when you should have Sloanal Liniment handy to help curb it and keep you active, and fit, and on the job? Without rubbing, for it penetraees. apply a bit today to the afflicted part. Notethe gratifying, elean,prompt relief that follows. bioan's Liniment couldn't keep its many thousands of friends the world over if it didn't make good. That's worth remembering. Ali druga gists -three sizes -the largest is that most economical. 35c, 70c, $1.40. A few cents buys "Danderine." At - ter a few applications you cannot find a fallen hair or any dantaniff, beaides every hair shows net' lite, vigor, brightiless, MOM CORM` and abundance. Prevent Falling Hair With Cutictara Shafill1300.11 The first tiling to do in restoring dry, thin and falling hair is to get lid of dandruff, itching and Irritation of the scalp. Ruh Cutictra Ointment into the scalp, especially spots of dandruff and itching. Next mornieg ehairipoo with Cuticura Soap and hot ^water. Snap 25e. (Metros( 2I1 end Sta. Takes, f3Sold throughouttheDominion. Cittuidise t, spot: Limited, 344 at. NO W. Diestresi. araiiieure SORSI llhaVell 'Without osus. VFtT ER! alifornia Syrup of Figs° Child's Best Laxafive Acesoyt "California' Syrup of rip oniipwleek tor this mune California eta, the violtago, then you are sure your hiftVing- the hest mat most . . hex/3114w Vh.vslofor the little stoma* Id -ver and beiVels. Children love Its tritity teale. Full iii,reottons on each bottle. Yon Must say ' Califorrilai" S Lit. No. 4-j21..