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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1926-8-19, Page 3»EVELOPMENTSIN YUKON MINING AREA ESTABLISHED AS PERMANENT PRODUCER. - Large Amount of Silver.Lcs►d " Ore in Si t ---T b readVtell Company Doubles Mill" Capacity. The sneer -lead mining industry of the Mayo district, '.Yukon,Territory, has en ere•d from the prospecting stage and may seer be- considered en -e vernnan- eni producing basis in the op1nden of officers, of the North Weet Territories and Yukon. Branch of the Deparrtment of the. Interior. The significant an- nouneement made by the Treadwell Yukon Company; that it had °been de• cieled to procesdl this year with the ens dargement ofi the mill on their property 'at Wernecke to double its present ca. pinny c z y of one hundred tons per day, is taken to indicate that the turning point has been reached in: the development ofth s area This, couple& with the, further stateinent that the company now has ten years ore in sight on thole • own property for the enlarged mill, is regarded as ..the most `important an nou inement made so far with regard' to silverneadamip•ingein the Mayo dis- trict. Operates Group -of ' Claims: • The Yukon Treadwell Company, which is the largest;,li -oduceriii the Yukon Territory, has. ,been operating a 'group of claims,situated on the we at ern. slope of Keno hill, continuously since 1921. Their mill was,;'pleced in operation In 1925 and marked the first attempt to eoncentz'ate, the Mayo ares before shipment. To the end of Aug- ust, 1925, the Treadwell Yukon - r Com- pany had shipped 1,135tans of cancen- trates with ' an essay value: of 584 ounces of silver to the ton' and 52 per cent. lead. A shall amount of crude ore, which did hot. require c•o•mcentra tion ware also shipped; Haulage to the point of shipment usually takes, .place in the winter; the movement of the ore to:outside points: beginning in the spring. On that account onlya small amount of concentrates is •ineiuded in, the total quantfen.shiPned during 1926. Although there were no discoveries of major importance during 1925, the .�" development of established . properties has been 'steady with gratifying rse sults. Several properties on winch ore had previouslybeen discovered were brought to the pointeofrgrod•uotion. On Galena .lull, immediately to the west of Keno hill, the veins niscovered in 1924 were prospected end' seven -al promising ore bodies have been found, On`.some of these ore as• rich as, any yet Lound- in the cantle has been lo- cated, One property, emisietingg of the , Arctic and letastiff claims; shipped.37d ,Itrstons of high-grade ore. The oie on this group was.el countered in a vein drift- ed on from the shaft at a depth of 38 feet and the ore shoot ire the drift proved to be SO feet long and .9 feet wide. Surface workings indicate. that the ore body has been out off by a fiault and that the ore shoot may be expected to continue on the other side of the fault for a distance on 300 feet. Encouaaging prospects have also been found' on' the Ruby, Coral, Wigwam, Elsoi. Dragon and Rector claims: Attract Prospectors. In the more reoently discovered. ' ° Beaver River area, which lies about 45 miles in a northeasterly direction from IKeno hill, some prospecting was done during the summer of 1925. - In In' the autumn of.1926 the ,Consolidated Min- ing' and Smelting Company, had . erten on the ground, intending to take op- tions on, and .prospectsome of the claims on McKay hill, tare original point of• discovery of siiver-lead .;area in Beaver River .area. On account of the lack of transtportation facilities, -no. shipments of Beaver River oto are expected, as it is believed that large ore reserves• will have to be demon- strateObefore the expense of providing facilities for transportation can. be justified. The ores of the Beaver River wee are much, lower in silver content than those in the area around, Ketio bill. The action of the Consolidated Mining and Smelting Company in pros; petting these claims will, however, un - Si. 3oubtedly encourage .'the holders of . surrounding claims to`'gieater efforts, and will serve to attract=, i dditiona,l prospectors to the held,_ se that fur- ther discoveries may be confidently. awaited. River Reeds. Green fairy pipes, 'That/play their music On a shady bank, Or trail their viol strings Among the grasses • Of et'iohanted . groves, Where blent with elfin mutm urin /a gs; There unties the rustling -Oft Of unseen witicle•: Warant themorning songs ` Junong transcendent beans , Of dewnthung day, gotThe quiet, cbant.of noau,— Beneath a drapery, beatvetespuri. Of woodland trees, Changing at even tiine To denting strains, of dreaxus, Music that with the night wind singes,' Along LIFO star -filled streams. ' —Sarah Wilson Middleton, Cc -steed lawn -terra is 'Courts are pro - 'dried oneench floor of t new block of eats in Pei, •. RETAIN YOUR VIGOR This Can Only be Bone by Keep ing the Flood Rich and Red. Ifo Y u would regain your vinox an ambition, keep your blood and nerve is good condition, ,Anaemia, •or thiu. blood, lowers the vitality, starves the nerves and causes a general run-down condition. When the blood ie thin the skfg loses its color; the shoulder droop and weight is lost. The victim v anaemia loses appetite, suffers" from in- digestioe, headaches and sleeplessness, and is nervous and exhausted after slight exertion, If You have any of these symptoms do not delay but be- gin treatment now with Dr. 'Williams' Pink :°T ills and you will be gratified with the prompt improvement in your condition, Among the thousands who have found new health' through . th use of this medicine is Mrs,. Herber Nagle,. Ludlow, KB.,t�'who says.;-" had not neon feeling well' for some time and was gradually growing weak- er: I would take .dizzy ene�lls and of- ten faint. I' was subject to severe headaches enda.found. it hard to do my work:: 1 took doctor's medicine ee some tixire, but it'did me no good, and G3 was still growing weaker. In condition,I'ebegan the use of Dr. Wil Hams' Pink 'Pills and''In a: short ,time found they' were helping me. I con- tinued tie' use of the pills for a while longer, and found.that the trouble that had bothered me awas gone and I was once more a well woman,'« -Get Dr. Williams' Fink ;Pills at your druggist's or' write The Dr. Williams' .Medicine. Co., Brockville, Ont., and the anis will be sent post paid at 50 cents a box. • ,: The` Master. Old things are gone, but I have fouled a blaster By whom my soul, in'silve>• tether held,. Grows strong, beyond rebuke, beyond disaster, Her love unquenched, her pitiful an- ' • ger quelled Through life and time I race forever faster ° a .Toward'the far goals . of God forever impelled. Bternl:ty seems nearer now, •: and vaster, And showers, on me the Love .malar alie1ed. More tender than a mother„ He keeps, ' and leads me' Where the hard everlasting pathway goes Between the rising and fading lights, He feeds nee Wtih the sound Word. All that I ask He knows.- -• And neither pain, nor death, nor ulti- mate space ` Can tear'' away my' spirit " from ,His ,grace. Margu�erite'; Wilkinson. The $cis The beat of toot omes. up the 'Arent, The vagrant beat of a rover's feet,--,, It nears, it nears, as Dan: ,appears,. As Dan the sclesor-Man appearsi d s I Ie beaus a. pack upon leis back, An `novel' manue'^:of lattensack1 Anil as he ,.ears, With nomad e'wingi The ,laughing •children fal7tlwing, s You catch a'fraginent of hie song -- f A bit of rhyythm borne along Upon the wind that wanders nn, A fond wayfar er' of the Sky: "Scissors to. grin�ti'eeissors to grind!" The echoes reach before, behind. Now a window's opened wide, Now a cprtain's thrust aside, e� t And now a little lady waves Her dusting-e1Qth—anti ends his staves. He faces toward her uizziei lly: q "Scissors to•grind • to -day?" asks he. f M �, Srnanies and Their Origin Variations — Chamberlain, Cho ° Isyne, a i — or a . • r Fi .sale! :Oflp, n !� zn n f ench. Source.- -Titie of, Office, To understand' the freciuenoy with ,which- this family name is met to -day Some explanation, of the social orgaui- ration of England in the Middle Agee,. following' the Norman-French occupa- tion, is neGsssary The life} and business and social cue.: toms of the Normans were highly or- ganized. lJIneiplinad, perixaps, would be a better word.. The Normans ex- tended their conquest over .such a large portion of northern Europe be- cause of the very high organization and disci/tittle, .structure, They won their wars because they rogard'ed war and. the preparation for it as "thor-` ouglily a business Proposition," to ap- ply a modern phrase.' In this they ul 0 n. alae rPa N' 1 ss i ti on of the e Aublo•Sa ber-,on tongue• SMITH.. Varia'tlona.-- Smyth, Smythe, .$ehmidi, Faber, Lefevrc, !were,• Faure. Racial Origin --Anglo-Saxon, Old Gee. man and Qid En0lich, 8ource*An occupation; also gee, • graphical. Tb ere: was a preeident 4f France, not se many years ago, whose name was often in Canadian newspapers and is known to'virtuallry vcrybody. His name was• Felix• Paure. You wouldn't think that was . the seine as Felix Smith ---but it is. Smith is the most widespread family naine in the world; bar none, The name of Smith, in its Various. forms, and. compounds, not to mention various tongues, occurs thousands of times to. a satire instauoe of auy other sutneme with the sole exception of Sone but were like the Romans, and, unlike the even, the Tones of the world could not AngIo-Saxons and the Celts. who pre- , hope to o Mere than P pot). r a weak iniuor- oeded thein in. England, and who,'' IVY' of a a ty v e g fust the Smiths. • though fighters cf the utmost personal It. would be fettle to try* to tell ever - y r She nods and holds aleft a pair bravery and prowess, lacked that dis- thing about the Smith names in a y s re.. • elpiine, sense of co-operation and retie- n ,, article of this size but Just o r j t lay out Of scissors toilia sane to • el' scientific attitude which marked the he t ground t u or g f E ter disc., sf n o u e s o s E ppetit. Aimportant part. of the Norman. pointed° out. 'organization, for peace and war both, I A smith, in medieval alines, was a He stance. "Now linnet work, alack1'a Normans. its various forms;' this match may be He muses and uu d sty' a s his a An A Scotsman• is untta ly Winne -tea blending eo_ors than an Eng' ishnian, :according to •a textile expert,. P/rinB00% Handsomely illustrated with plana of moderate'pdcod homesliy Canadian Ar- 't:hitects. MacLean Builders' Guide will help you to decide onhe typo of Bone, exterior finish,materials,interiorar- t�aanggement`and decbrattoa Scnd 25c for a copy: NfatLenn Buildera'G .ide 1144 - adolatda.: St. Weal, Toroetw, Ont. ; ..s • Th ' held Threy--eroven about, they laugh, they called because he lied access to his of • metal working c oitstituteil the e c • ren gather in a .ring, was the office -of the "ohamberialn," se ' worker In metal, and the various forms sang: • "Dan, Dan, thcseissor-man,f Sharpons things• the beet he can!" Thompson Rich; in "I Come Sing ing." superiors" inner privacy. The oham- I largest and most profitable industry of berlains were, in fact,a, the private the Middle Ages, throughout .ePuro e. secretaries and treasurers 'of the •rulers Smith, Smythe and. Smyth come down to us from the old Anglo-Saxon tongue. The word means, specifically, one who,s'mites, the name being de- rived from the same root as theverb tem, And it was, natural that their "to . s"mite." .Smythe and Smyth are offices, like the.authority of their closer to the original spelling ' than Snaith. Old spelling's are "Sinethe," "Smeyt, "Smyth" and "Smyt." - Schmidt is the German name; Le- fevre (Ie Fevre), Fabre and Faure are French forms det~elopedr from the of the various feudal divisions' 'of the . country. .:TIiey were the expert a•c- 'Coxtants.• They constituted. the busi- -"--'.►--- nettsend of the Norman feudal eye - Moon: Take a wallc in the woods in the bright moonlight , . and You will marvel at the tricks which those black shadows of the trees cap play with the most" familiar scenes • Keats knew those impenetrable shadows well: _tender is the night, And haply the'Queen-moon is' on her throne, Oluste"r'd .around by all .,her starry But here there is no light; ` Save what from heaven is: witli the o breezes blown' • Through verdurous' glooms and wind-, Ing mossy ways --Annie of the Plough, he "Leaves iii' the Wind." - When the Tide -Turned. "It is not possible; my dear, for you to keep these 'children quiet for a iho- F nrent?'' asked the tired business man of his 'wife. "Now, 'sack," she answered, "don't be unre sonablenewith the poer;, Irmo- . a cent little darlings. 'Ilt's only natural ._ annee.•en. for then . to be full of spirltsq and DO You Know Where That Iso superiors, .should beoome hereditary and that the title of "de la chambre" ("of the chamber") and "le chamber- lain" (the • chamberlain") should eventually come <to designate the family instead.of'the office and that Latin word for smith, "faber," which the 'tendency toward simplicity should also comes down through English from g eliminate the prefixes 'de la" and "le" Norman-French days.. they're being as quietus the '" " Hum! Perhapse came: the loteltt . Hungryone—"Where eau you get the KEEP CIIILDPIEit IEEL • DURING i G Il('l minim l llm Every mother knows Ito* fatal the hot summer months are to small- child- ren. • Cholera ni:nfantum, diarrhoea, dysentery, cane and stomach troubles are rife at this time and often a pre- cious 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 Tab; -lets prevent stomach and bowel trou- bees, or if trouble :comes suedemy-as it generally does—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. Wil "beet stewteace` Waren-- " nen n'ne 't Decors' lele; ieiiie- Co:; }3raekvine; ante ful rejoinder. "But 1f'I thought I eeted Thirstvon'e— "Wherever•ou can: get S the best hooch" , have a n tom sots peace I d sit d and fill in 'that, chequeou've bsen rying me about" • "Children, -'called the motherer stern-` ly, "nff•to bed at once and shrarp'about it; and if there's any noise upstairs there'll be trouble in_the morning." Virtue In Country Scenes. There is virtue in country;houses, in gardens and orchards, in fields; streams and groves,. in .rustic recrea- tions and plain manners, that neither cities nor universities.•enjoy,—Alcott. you've Ourmer On thee, littie pest Peenl Pithy fly, unwelcome guest . c 4 need to tole• rate a single fly in your house. IN Flit kills flies. Flit spray clears your home in a few minutes of-dii ease -bearing flies and mosquitoes. It is clean, safe and easy to use. Kills All Household. Insects Flit spray also destroys bed bugs, roaches and ants. It searches out the cracks and crevices, where they hide and breed, and destroys insects'and.their eggs, Spray Flit on your gain1elsts Flit,i*-ills moths and their larvae which eat holes. Extensive tests showed that flit spray did not stain the most delicate fabrics. Flit is the result'of exhaustive research by expert entomol- ogists...and chemists. It is harmless' to mankind. Flit has replaced the old Methods because it kills ail the insects—and does it quickly. 'Get Flit can and sprayer today. _ e. STANDARD OIL CO. (NEW' JERSEY) Distributed n'Canada by Prod J. Whitlow &.Co. Toronto. PEST1tO1'i!'S rlies htosjuitoes Moths'' is bell Bus Roaches "5'hsulrrolovqot wroth* bratek bard" i Hay Fever. From thousands of patients tested during the last few''years, it has been found that Hay Fever is seasonal and caused chiefly by pollenating grasses in June, rose pollen 'in July, ragweed pollen in August. Nine out of every ten people suffering from Fall Hay Fever in Ontario can blame ragweed. This plant begins to-pollenate August 15th. The pollen, being as light as down, is blown by the wind to a dis• tante of 100 miles in ali directions. .Cause: Some people can breathe the pollen of certain plants and the lining of the nose treats it as'ordinary dust; but others. suffer • 'extremely after breathing air laden with pollen, due to inflamiiiatlon of the nose and eyes be- cause the lymph in their blood (for some unknown reason) tries to digest the pollen as it touches the lining of the nose. Once a person becomes sus- ceptible to this irritation, he will Suffer from it for the rest of his life. Helpful Hints: Prevent the attack by avoiding the pollen; during the pol- lenating season of the particular plant which irritates you, go to a district where the air is free from that rioiien. Three days in such air will see a com- plete,pure. Treatment: No inhalation or other treatment for the nose is of any use; no patent medicine will cure hay fever. The only—helpful treatment found as yet is .injections of an extract of the particular pollen causing the individ- ual: case. It is effective and many peo- ple who have been pletints for years have found the treatment reduced their suffering . to about only one -twentieth of the usual time; it must, however, be repeated each year. The tredtment is rather :costly and can only be ob- tained from -the few physicians who have given, it special • study. f I.:Think of You. Wben I see a gray. cottage With rain at the door, A bine rug, faded, .cross the floor A candle at the °window, A -curtain blue, - And a winding stairway -- 1 think of ydu. When I see a gray pottage With books on a shelf, I am very sorry For myself, -To think I am not living The Iong days through, And the rainy evenings, In it with you.i • —Mary Caro•I'yn Davies. Long Practice. A boy of twelve years, who was din- ing at his uncle's house, ate such a good dinner taht his aunt observed: "Johnny: you appear to eat wen." "Yes," replied the lad, "I've been practicing eating an my life!" Includes Both Sexes. A little girl, after saying her prayers, always added something after the ".omen." Her mother, after listening vainly, asked the child what it was she said. "Ah, ladies!" replied the little one; "that makes it fair." Secrets, • An employer walked into Ills ship- ping room and was startled at the 1 sight of two employees in an u,•,nusual posture. One was reading a letteis,l while the other was listening, at the same time holding his hands over the ears of the reader. 'What are you men, doing?" inquired the puzzled employer. "You see, sir," answered the One who wasereading the letter, "he got a letter from his girl this afternoon end. I aum reading it to him." "But whatin the world are you do- ing?" the employee' asked the illiterate one. e "Ole," replied Jones, "I'm 'stopping - up his ears. l don't Intrad his reading my letters, batt 1 don't want Wim to hear what she has written,'.' Minatd'$ Liniment fol' Corns end Warta • • A:y Wagan. There wee t a hay wagon along the lane ow! summer evening, a wagon, heaved l llYll with the sweetness of the. year. tt.load tossed up and up into the faint blue, overflowing ,the wide -spread sides, and t , balF neing ekll:falrY above the horse's back. There lay• a harvester atopof .tlie load with his face to the evening air, His pitchfork stood upright in the fray where he had thrust it beside hien, and his gaitered legs dangled down among the buttercups and the glover honda. Slowly the won trundled' along, lurching In theratted way, a clumsy - tee seeming, things Wide for the little lane: Anti the hedges snatched at the wool of ,the cheep, and the spiders' webe that float by in the early morn- ing Sometimes 1.4 a distaprt land of sand and beat, when evening is heavy above and below, I ,think of the harvester atop of the load, with Rite 'scent of warmed flowers about ,hfna, and. the sound. in this ears of honey bees, wills hovering 1•n" the 'wake ar one e or two white butterflies Pike gulls around the stern of a ship; And then t close my- els and feel for the cart ruts with MY feet, and lift my head, for the caw of the evening rooks; but only sand is there and no sound, and d a route i- d ye low sun caught by my eye, and thrown upon the 'tracics'before`me. It might have been a buttercup—it might have been! -but the sands have swallowed it up. It will be evening+—soon;- will, in „ Eng- land, and therewill be hay wagons in the lane's? Keep Minard's Liniment handy. Correcting Poetry hi" ° .. Mathematics. How often distinguished intellectual gifts lack the saving salt of "common, sense,'' or to put it another way, the sense of humor!- In Dr. Hanbury Ran - kin's "Common Sense and Its Cultiva- tion" we read an amusing failure of the -merely scholarly mind' to perceive that it was making itself ridiculous. 'Charles Babbage was an • eminent English mathematician . and philoso- pher of the nineteenth century, the author Se a good _many profound and impressive ..works. When Tennyson .wrote his poem, "The Vision of Sin;' Babbage . read it. After • doing- so 'he wrote the followingeectraordinarr let- ter to the poet: "Iii' your , otherwise beautifulpoem; I there is averse which reads: 'Every moment dies a man, - Every moment one .is born? _ "It mustbe manifest that, were- this trite, the population of the world would be ata standstill. In truth the rate of. birth is slightly in excess of that of. death. I. would' suggest that in the next edition of your p.)ein you:haveelt read: 'Every moment dies a man, Every moment). nne te'_1kc_?r e Strictly speaking, this is as COT- rect. h a The senal figure is 'decimal so long that I. cannot get it .in the line, but I believe 1 1/16 willbe sufficiently accurate for poetry. I, am, etc." Woman on 'Change. Smyrna has the first woman mem- ber of a stock exchange. in Turkey, The commission ttirecting the ,Smyrpa exchange' has elected to membership Fatma Zebra Hazouri, already well known as one of the few Turkish wo- men engaged in commercial affairs and. prominent in Smyi'xxa ae owner of several factories:. Tse t�j�s ICU: 'U'se an,.earthen jar.- 1 • ailon vino , i5.... gam' 1 cup Keel's Mustard. 1 cup sunt Add onions, sliced igen to, matoesr email cucureters, told co'Per la the usual Weee These pickles will be readyto sat at the end of sur weeks, and will keep tieriectty. This' is only one of the many recipes for delicious home- made on-i made Pickles, Cat -sups s and Relishes in our Recipe e Book, Write for a free copy. Colman-geen Canada ',tusked, Dept. lir 1000 Amherst St.. Montreal htlista rel d26 aidsth:.es1 Imanismamommaimommex Dream Cottage. The lowest whitest s. •weetest house of all, With a brick path to Ate honey- suckle gate, And lazy roses climbing over a wall -- Oh, T can hardly wait, Until' you find the littlest house—with sun And trees to make a pattern on the. floor; Until you know that I'm the very one To stand within its door. —Mary Carolyn Davies,. Su nti i rn • &Fig Mlhard's ., with- sweet oil or cream . and apply. Quick and per- manent relief. COT -f Freed Psoriasis . The discoverer of SOREMA, a. Canadian Druggist of 35 years' experience, finally freed his skin sof Psoriasis after 14 years of the usual treatment had failed. SORE. MA ;has since been used with equal su-•cess in long standing cases of Psorienie, Eczema, Acne, etc. SOREMA The NEW Skin Remedy Is sold at your Druggist's, or write us direct. Sorema Ointment, $1.00 per box. BIood purifying Tablets, 76 cents per box. FLASH PRODUCTS, LIMITEA 0 T. - TORONTO Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for Colds Headache Neuritis Lund ago Pain Neuralgia Toothache Rheumatism' DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART .. �a■,.,,.ter. Accept Gn� "Bayer"• package which contains proven directions. ' Handy "Bever" boxes of 12 tablets Also° bottles of 24 and 100---•trctggista, • esterin is the trade mark tragtsterad in Canada) of Bayer liantfacture of;Menoacett-w actdestcr of Sallcylicaieid (Acetyl Salicylic Acid, "A, S. A.."). while it is resit knotou that Aspirin means ,sayer manufacture, to *Heist the panus against ietitatlons, the Tab1Ata A.t Bayer compeer Will bo oatmeal with their general trade Writ. f ;illyem OroAB," TO WOMEN OF MIDDLE AGE Mrs. WiIson's Experience a Guide to Women Passing.. through the Change of Life Hamilton, Ontario. an "I have taken several bottles of Lydia•E.Pinkham's: .:w Vegetable Com- pound anti' I can- not speak too" highly of it as I was at the Change of Life and was all run-down and had no appetite. I was very weak and sick, and the pains in my back were so bad T couldhardl'y:move. I got very sad at times and thought I had not a friend on earth. I did not care if I lived or -died. I was very nervous, too and did not go out very much. A friend advised meta try a bottle of Lydia E. 1'inkham's Vegetable Compound, so 1 did. I am a farmer's wife, and al- ways worked hard until lately, and was in bed for two months. I began to feel like a new woman after the first bottle. and I recommend it with great success also Lydia E. Pink - ham's Liver Pills. 1 am willing to answerletters • from women- asking about your medicines, as 1 cannot speak too highly of them. "--Mrs. EMMA WILSON, 471 Wilson Street, Hamilton, Ontario. Sold by druggists everywhere. o nannrIentnta Was In Agony With Blisters On Hands Cuticura Healed "Eczema broke out in very .small blisters on the hacks of my fingers. After a few days the blisters would': break and then dry up. It itched and burned terribly and scratching caused very 'red eruptions. I could not put my hands in water or ilo ,any work without wearing rubber .gloves. I could not, Sleep nights on account of the irritation, and was in agony mom of the time. The trouble lasted about a -year, "I reed an advertiscn'ient for Guticure Soap and Ointment so purchased some ,After using teem a short time I could see an improve- ment. I continued the treatment and now I am healed." (Signed) Miss Bernice Shannon, R. F. D, 2, Orleans, Vt,, Sept. 15, 1925. Keep your skin nicer ;and your pores • active by daffy use of cud. - atm Soap, Real irx cations and'; rashes with Ctelettre Hatment. sample toe Free 15S- OWL Ark�rean tlanalirn begat: "Otathoeia; Ltt, p2ontra, " Price, Saab ISe.. War 25 ane! no.n,'Alaae Y„c. W'.',•• CUtiettra 3ht,Ying-Stick 2Sc ISSUE No. Ski-.. ,