HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1919-2-27, Page 7B `° t DOWN O Id
'.HU MR SER 10E
WAS APPARENT LON i BEFORE
THE ARMISTICE.
MViorile Crumbled More Quickly Than
in Any Other Section of
14Rliitary Enterprise.,
Long before the war came to its sud-
den end there was plenty of evidence
that the German air service was going
to pieces, as much through the faulty
corlatruction of their machines and
lack of material, and much of it bad
at that --as the difficulty of maintain-
ing an efficient personnel. It would
seem, from information that I have
been able to obtain from the best pos-
sible source, that morale in the Ger-
man air service began to crumble
much more rapidly than their army
moral generally, after the first appeal
for an armistice. This was perhaps
natural, having regard to, two impor-
tant factors, First there was the dead-
ly influence in aerial work of any
shortage or deterioration in equip-
ment and rkw materials of construc-
tion, and, secondly, there was the fact
that in an air service the standard of
morale required for successful work
is exceptionally high, because so very
much depends upon individual -initia-
tive, outside the observation of superi-
or authority.
Several German prisoners interro-
gated on ono day gave interesting evi-
dence on various points about the
German air service The losses due to
bad landings, for example, were des-
cribed as very heavy, especially in
training centres. A mechanic who was
at the Second Pursuit Flight School
for six months during 1918 stated that
in ten weeks 243 crashed machines
were sent to Germany from this school
only, and that during the six months
he was there the average number of
crashes per day was eight.
Shortage of Pilots.
Some four months ago there was a
dangerous shortage in Germany of
pilots for scout machines, and pilots
were compulsorily transferred to pur-
suit flights from other types of units,
or if coming from training squadrons
were not allowed to go to two seaters.
In this connection it may be noted
. that pilots formerly always volunteer-
ed for scout units.
The situation is said to have arisen
from the fact that reports of enormous
casualties in pursuit flights had been
circulating in -the German air service,
whereas previously they had been con-
sidered very "safe" units, and had even
been dubbed "life insurance com-
panies."
There was also a marked shortage of
certain types of machines. With re-
gard to personnel, an attempt was
made to meet the shortage by compul-
sorily transferring Zeppelin mechanics
to the aeroplane service for training
and employment as pilots.
The shortage of petrol, already re-
ported by prisoners in reconnaissance
and battle flights, had also been felt
in pursuit units. Pursuit flights in the
Sixth German Arnie, were allowed to
fly for an hour only every other day,
and pilots were not permitted to carry
out independent patrols.
To sum up, there was shortage of
machines, men and petrol. while the
continuance of bad landings, especial-
ly at training centres, suggests that
sompetent pilots were growing fewer
and that training was quite inadequate.
These conditions will inevitably affect
Germany's post-war status in aero-
nautics as compared with that of the
Entente nations, which enter peace
time aviation at the zenith of their
war time strength and efficiency.
MODEL VILLAGE IN LONDON
British Government Intends to Build
One in Capital.
What is the type of house that the
Britfish Government regards as
ideal? According to official details
of the Local Government Board's
housing scheme, which is now pub-
lished, the following are the princi-
pal requirements suggested :-
12 houses per acre in urban areas.
8 in rural districts.
Maximum of sun in living and
working rooms.
Minimum of sun for larders and
stores.
Comfortable living room, 3 bed-
rooms, washhouse and bathroom or
bath. ,
Standarized essential fittings, such
as doors, windows, ranges, baths,
bolts, locks, door handles, etc.
A good garden.
In view of the present famine in
houses, the official announcement
that a model village is to be erected
in London is particularly timely. This
villacile, the exact site of which is not
specified, will embrace all the essen-
tials mentioned above. The work of
erecting the flat houses will, it is ex-
pected, be commenceed almost im-
mediately, and developed as fast as
the schemes are approved.
When a woman sweeps she should
stand erect, with her head up and her
mouth- dazed.
.Tustice is merciful when there are
extenuating circumstances, but when
there are none justice must be stern,
—Lord Reading.
One teaspoonful of salt to one gimlet
of water is the proportion for the
water in which ceeeale sae to be
Wel
The =-1 WAS BRANDED BY
Fashieui ( GERMAN ORDER
• This straight -hanging ' dress has
Pleats from under the yoke, and a
convertible collar. McCall Pattern
No. 8726, Misses' Dress. In 4' sizes,
14 to 20 years. Price, 25 cents. Trans-
fer Design No. 912. Price, 15 cents.
With a pleasing grace this model
drapes itself at either side' in a sort
of pleated fulness. McCall Pattern
No. 8750, Ladies' Waist. In 7 sizes,
34 to 46 bust. No. 8395, Ladies' Four -
Piece Skirt. In 6 sizes, 22 to 32 waist.
Price, 20 cents each.
These patterns may be obtained
from your local McCall dealer, or
from the McC.ali Co., 70 Bond St., To-
ronto, Dept. W.
Park at Home of Evangeline
The home of Evangeline at Grand
Pre, N. S., immortalized by Long -
fellow's poem of that name, has been
purchased by the Canadian Pacific
Railway and will be maintained as
a public park. A statue of Evan-
geline, which was being sculptured,
by Louis Phillipe Hebert at the time
of his death, will be completed by
his son and placed in the park.
The Canada Food Board is calling
for greater production of maple
sugar. Well, it will pay.: '
The hottest fire is made front char-
coal, as the latter is virtually pure
carbon.
in$te d of
tea or coffee
Try the thongs
for ten logs
if health or
other reasons
appeal to !jou
-You'll like this
excellent tabic
bevera e with its
delicious, mild,
flavor and the
results of -the
chane will appeal
to i jou.That's wh j
so much Porstum
is sold nowadhuus
w►
'�ia+nsvietiv6;rag'
AN AMERICAN TELLS STORY OF
FEARFUL BRUTALITY
A Prisoner in Turkey, Horribly Muti-
lated—He, Was ,Forced To
Witness Many Atrocities
Many have been .the tales, exagger-
ated or without foundation, which
have passed from mouth to Mouth,
and even found `their way into print,
of prisoners of war who have been
sent home with faces disfigured by
brands of the German eaglemelees"
Many • other horrible objects. of
these stories could not be traced by
the authorities and were attributed
to heated imaginations. A correspon-
dent of Lloyd's Weekly, however, has
discovered a very bad case of Hun
savagery, which sufilciently' testifies
to this method of mutilation by brand-
ing or tattooing, being no exaggera-
tion. •
Following up the clew given to him,
this correspondent found the' man he
was after. His name is I'>,oughton and
he lives in a miserable • slum near
Waterloo, hating to go out in day-
light. On his forehead was a ,dis-
figurement, says this English writer,
"that seems almost unbelievable in
these days of so-called civilization,
13r and Covers Entire Forehead
"The man's head is cored with
short stubby gray hair, and his na-
turally fine forehead gives plenty
of room for a sinister sign that
stretches from temple to temple and
from the arch of each eyebrow to the
edge of the scalp. It is a heavily
tattooed design of a huge crablike
creature which he afterward told
me is called 'The Spider of Death' or
the scorpion.
"In some horrible frenzy of imag-
ination this creature, which had been
pricked with red, white and green
inks upon his forehead, has been given
three bodies. One lies over the other
and each outline is clearly visible.
It shows first the shield of Bulgaria,
above that the military drum of Ger-
many, and superimposed upon these,
the fez, the star and the crescent of
Turkey. On either side stretch eight
human booted legs, while from the
middle, or head of this horror, hangs
a ring showing that the man branded
thus is the property of the Turks for
eternity. -
Famous as "Strong Man"
.."'Yes, that is what I have to show
for my share in the great war,' said
the branded man. 'I have seen a lot
in my life. I was --born fifty-seven
years ago in Chicago and I guess
there are a good many mein there yet
who remember the name of Roughton,
famous for feats of strength and phy-
sical endurance right through front
Maine to California.
"'My life has been one of adventure.
I have been a "strong man" and an
acrobat in circusses. I have circled
the world with a herd of Eskimo
dogs—I guess there ain't much in
the wild adventure line that I haven't
done. I have been mixed up in Bri-
tish wars for the last twenty years—
in the Soudan, the Boer war and now
this greatest war of all time.
"Way back in 1913 I think there
must have been some sort of idea go-
ing round the military heads of na-
tions that sooner or later there was
to be a big bust up. Just about
that time—April 27, 1913 to be exact
—General Sherman, knowing my rec-
ord, gave me a letter to Mr. Tumulty,
President Wilson's secretary at the
White House, recommending me as an
interpreter.
Enlisted Early in the War
"Here, you can see the letter," and,
with a bent and scarred forefinger,
Roughton underlined the words of a
letter from the General, saying:
"Mr. A. Roughton possesses unus-
ual qualification as an interpreter. He
gives me to understand that he speaks
twelve languages . with facility."
"Well, anyhow—that was in 1913,
and then came '14 and with it war..
Me and war was old acquaintances,
and we just had to get together, so I
joined up with a regiment of royal
engineers that was being recruited in
the States, and over I come to the
fighting front.
"People have, asked me why, if I
had to be a soldier, I joined the Bri-
tish army. Well, what would you
have me do? They wouldn't take me
in the United States' outfit. I was
too old, and, anyhow, I wasn't going
to wait until President Wilson gave
the word 'Got' So over I came, and
with the sappers I laid mines and
built bridges and put down barbed
wire in France for a spell.
through h more torture and then 0110
day Turk under the dices tion of a M THICKEN 1171
German officer, put this upon me,,r
N J
w#til E UTIF Y YOUR HAIR
O STOP AEE
and the man smote his forehead
a terrible gesture..
"If you ask Inc of. the Bulgars, the
Turks, or the Germans, which are the
worst, I will tell you that there is
nothing worse than any of the three.
They're all alike, except in color. The
'blonde beasts' and the 'black beasts,'
they have no hearts and their souls
"do not exist.
Made Guard in Harem.
Try this! Your hair gets wavy,
glossy and abundant
sit once,
„
To be possessed of a head of heavy,
By and by, over there in Turkey, beautiful hair soft, lustrous, fluffy,
my captors realized that my phy- wavy and freefrom dandruff is mere-
ly a matter of using a little Danderine.
it is easy' and inexpensive to have
nice, soft hair and lots of it. Just get
a small bottle of Knowlton's Dan-
derine now for a few cents --all. drug
stores recommend ite•-apply a little as
directed and within ten minutes there
will be an appearance of abundance,
freshness, fluffiness and an incompar-
able glees and lustre, and try as you
will you cannot find a trace of dand-
ruff or falling hair; but your real sur-
prise will be after about two weeks'
use, when you will see new hair—fine
and downy at first—yes—but really
new hair—sprouting out all over your
scalp--Danderine is, we believe, the
only sure hair grower, destroyer of
dandruff and cure for itchy scalp and
it never fails to stop falling hair at
once.
If you want to prove how pretty and
soft your hair really is, moisten a cloth
with a little Danderine and carefully
draw it through your hair --taking one
small strand at a time. Your hair will
be soft, glossy and beautiful in just a
few moments --a delightful surprise
awaits everyone who tries this.
sical strength' was beyond the ordin-
ary and I was turned over to a pasha
who bought my body for his service.
I was put to work pulling a plough—
oxen were scarce in these days; it
was intecember, 1917 --and I dragged
this plough across the land, and when
I didn't cover enough ground, or the
furrows that ; made were crooked, I
was beaten with a leather cat-o'-nine-
tails. that had na;ls at the end of each
thong.
"Then the great potentate for whom
I worked seemed to realize that he
was wasting good material in rough,
unskilled labor, and after many weery
punishments he placed me (with this
badge of shame upon my brow and the
price of 5,000 marks upon my head
should I try to escape) as the guar-
dian of his harem.
"Among the many women slaves in
this place there was a young Arabian
who had been stolen and sold to the
man who was our master. She was
unhappy to the verge of madness,
and the horrors through which she
went on many occasions nearly drove
me out of my mind. I witnessed
things done to women that are past
belief, and I was helpless, a branded
Prisoner with a price •upon his head.
By methods that are too long to tell
you, this Arabian and myself plotted
and planned tovether and succeeded
in escaping: Finally we managed to
get in touch with British troops.'
v
DEPTH CHARGE USED IN 1914
British Navy Has Many War Inven-
tions to its Credit
The development of the depth charge
method of defence against submar-
ines, which had a great deal to do
with tire lessening of the submarine
menace, was the work of the British
navy. The actual circumstances are
declared to have been as follows:
"The commander-in-chief of the
Grand Fleet recommended in 1914
the formation of a depth charge de-
fense, and experiments and investi-
gations were made. The Vernon Ex-
perimetal School took the matter in
hand and the submarine attack com-
mittee of the Admiralty ultimately
recommended •the adoption of a design
which was virtually the same as that
used throughout the war. There were
improvements from time to time, but
the British navy adopted and devel-
oped the depth charge method of de-
fense two years ago.
"Tire British navy also led the way
in the use and development of the
weapon and in the fitting out of spec-
ial vessels for its extensive employ-
ment. The invention of the 'thrower'
and other devices in connection with
the use of mines was purely British."
DISEASE GERMS ISOLATED
British Army Doctors Trace Causes
of Typhoid and Influenza
•
The virus of trench fever and that of
influenza and of some forms of ne-
phritis have been isolated and iden-
tified, according to a report submit-
ted to the director general of the army
medical service in France by a number
of army medical officers, who have
been investigating tire causes of these
diseases. The report, which is pre-
liminary to one promised soon, is
signed by Major General Sir John
Rose Bradford, consulting physician
with British expeditionary forces in
France; Captain Dashford and Cap-
tain Wilson, and is printed in the
British Medical Journal.
According to this official statem^r,I.t,
the virus in each case has been proved
to be a minute globular cell, varying
in size and behaviour in the three
types of disease. Investigations
which have been conducted have re-
sulted, it is believed, in the isolation
of the germs of mumps, measles and
typhus, the causes of which have
.hitherto beet obscure and the bacilli
of which have never before been iso -
later.
--er--c:---a--o—o---o---a—o-;- o—o—a
1 SUFFERING CATS!
GIVE THIS MAN
THE GOLD MEDAL
Was Decorated at Mons
"I was at Mons,and Iget the rib- Let folks step on your feet hereafter;
wear shoes a size smaller; if you like,
bon right here," and he produced a for corns will never again send electric
little blurred ribbon. "But I never sparks of pain through you, according
wear it. Af£er I'd finished with the to this Cincinnati authority. -
Second Army in France I was movedlie says that a few drops of a drug
to Salanica, and then to Mesopotamia,called freezone, applied directly upon
and that's where I got caught. a tender, aching corn, instantly re-
lieves soreness, and soon the entire
"It was while I was doing some corn, root and all, lifts right. mit. •
work !with barbed Wire one night This dreg is a. sticky ether cola -
alone out under the stars in that 'hies- pound. but dries at once and '.simply
sod land' of Mesopotamia that I gotseri ei.; up the corn without.. inflaming
nr a den irritating the stirrousr,,anl;
done in. They got Inc., bat it took tivsue.
a lot of them to do it, and I account- it is ,;laimed that a quer ter of au
ed. for a ;fair number before I was ounce of freezone obtained at any drug
bound and tortured. and smashed into `,tore will cost very little but is :mill -
unconsciousness.
„ tient to remove every hard or sat corn
or callus from one's feet. Cut this out,
I was put to work, and I tried to especially If you are a Weriltrn' reader
escape, and I was caught and put who wears high heels,
TO PERPETUATE FOREST CROP.
Conservative Estimates Made For
Forests of British Columbia.
To maintain the forest capital intact
the annual cut must not exceed the
annual growth. In British Columbia
it is very much less than the amount
which could be cut without endanger-
ing the productive capacity of the
forest, British Columbia includes so
large an area and contains so many
different site classes that it is difficult
to make anything more than a rough
estimate of its growth. Moreover, the
probable loss from fires must be con-
sidered. Again, where natural regen-
eration is depended upon for refores-
tation, all degrees of restocking occur;
fully restocked areas are the exception
rather than the rule. Also, a certain
percentage of the are forested with
merchantable stand contains mature
and overmature timber where the de-
cay approximately offsets the incre-
ment.
Selected areas on the coast that
were fully restocked have been found
to produce an annual increment of
1,000 board feet per acre in forty years
growth. ' Obviously, this figure is much
too high for a general average, even
for the coast where the rate is ex-
ceedingly high as compared with the
interior. Taking the foregoing fac-
tors into consideration, it has been
assumed that the average annual in-
crement might be estimated at 100
board feet per acre, over approximate-
ly 60,000,000 acres of comparatively
accessible timber -land, under reason-
ably effective protection from fire.
This assumption will give 5,000,000,000
board feet as the total average an-
nual inerenrefit for British Columbia,
and consequently, this amount could
be cut annually without endangering
the present forest capital. This is ap-
proximately five times the actual cut.
The results of the investigations un-
dertaken by the Commission of Con-
servation show that there is 95,580,000
acres capable of producing merchant-
able timber, but a large part of this
area is commercially inaccessible at
the present time. With the develop.
meat of transportation lines, large
areas, especially in the interior, will
become more accessible. On the
whole, therefore, the estimate of 5,000,-
000.000 feet is considered conservative.
HUN MINE SANK "HAMPSHIRE."
Admiral Jellicoe's Book Reveals Bri-
tish Unpreparedness In 1914,
A book written by Admiral ViseQnnt
Jellicoe, the former Commander of the
British Grand Fleet, and just publish-
ed, gives the Louse of tire sinking of
the British cruiser Hampshire, on
which Lord Kitchener' lost his life.
Admiral Jellicoe explains that the
Hampshire struck a German moored
mine, which had been laid by sub-
marine.
The book contains revelations of
British unpreparedness at the begin-
ning of the war. The Grand FIeet had
to run out of harbor several times ,
because submarines were reported in-
side.
Admiral Jellicoe says he avoided
night action with his big ships off Jut-
land because the British searchlights
and fire controls were defective, lie
recommends a greater superiority of
all classes of vessels than in 1919.
"Anyone --a fool or an idiot—can,
be exclusive. It comes easy. It takes
a large nature to be univer al."••--
Raiyh Waldo Trine.
stinarQ'n Liniment nares Diphtheria.
Almost as many of the people of.
Canada died of tuberculosis during
the four years of war as there were
Canadian soldiers killed in battle dur-
ing the :game period.
.r*
1'.,c hale of a raw potato foe deem-
ing knives. Dip the cut- side of the
I c't tte into brick dust or any cican-
irg powder and rub the blade. It will
T
s.�,taaye the .knives quickly and give
olein a ir'gh polish.
ISSUE No. EIGHT
' SUNLIGHT TO ORDER
Experiments With Electricity Acing
Made in Great Britain.
By degrees ligan is becoming master
of the seasons. Light and electricity
are being pressed into his service, and
he omit already force on plant -growth
so rapidly that he can heat the .ordin-
ary process of Nature by many weeks.
One method is to treat seed, b.efreel
planting it, with small doses of high-
tension electricity. In 1910 a trial was
made of the method near Burnham -
on -Crouch, in Esse*. Spring wheat is
usually sown in March or April, On
this occasion, the wheat, of which the
the seed had been treated by this
special process, was not sown until
July 19th. It was up in five days, and
on September 16th was in ear. It was
reaped twelve weeks from the time it
was sown, whereas the ordinary time
for wheat to mature in Eligland is
eighteen weeks.
Another method of forcing crops is
to run a current of electricity through
overhead wires. In this way the
yield of oats and beans has been near-
ly doubled. Experiments tried last
year in Lineluden Mains Farm, in
Dumfriesshire, were particularly suc-
cessful. A third method is to use
artificial light, either electric or, bet-
ter still, acetylene. Plants are thus
made to grow by night as well by
day. Cabbages and Iettuce are easily
forced in this way, but other plants,
such as carrots, seem to resent it.
Flowers bloom earlier under arti-
cial light, and are more brilliant.
For Spanish
Influenza
The Liniment that Cures All
Ailments--
:
THE OLD RELIABLE—Try It
MINAItD'S LINIMENT CO., Ltd.
Yarmouth, N.B.
A Beautiful Princess.
Princess Patricia is one of the most
beautiful Royal Princesses in Europe,
tall and fair, very simple and unaffect-
ed in her manner, and a great favorite
wherever she goes. She is one of the
most versatile members of the Royal
Family, and besides being a painter of
merit she is a noted sportswoman—
proficient in tennis, hockey, golf and
riding. She is very fond of skating
and ski-ing, in which she was able to
indulge to the full when in Canada
with her father when the Duke of
Connaught was Governor-General.
>Lzinara'a Liniment Cures Colds. Its.
What Great Britai alone was to the
world before the war, Great Britain.
and the United States together must
be to tire world of the future, Mr.
Mark Sullivan.
MONEY ORDERS.
Buy your out-of-town supplies with
Dominion Express Money Orders.
Five Dollars costs three cents.
The smallest roadside pool has its
water from heaven, and its gleam
from the sun, and can held the stars
in its bosom, as well as the great
ocean.
The Allies fought to save the world
as certainly as if they were striving
to save the planet from being consum-
ed by a comet.—G. K. Chesterton.
Maple trees on until ed land in
Canada copl,d be made to produce all
the sugar Canada e•or.'aames.
6»inard's Liniment Cures nisterunen
There is an eager export market
for Canadian maple products in the
States zchere there has been a great
decline in the home production. Eng-
land and France are also est airing
for oar maple Elgar.
Cause of t
Early Old Age
Tho celebrated Dr. W clter:ltoff,
ala authority on early old age,
e9 says that it is "caused by poisons
0 generated in the intestine."
• When your stomach digests food Et
A properly it is absorbed without
forming poisonous matter. Poi-
'® sons bring on early old age and 4
tv premature death. 15 to 3.0 drops
t of "Seigel's Syrup" after meals
make&our sir -estion sound. to
y s
��.-¢ice,-�r~�-�� ���e-�cS-wa•dp
•
•
tiff
d.4baa eland Reids os..a otbw
Ont.
z'c►lls PAIGE
Ai 41W. STOt'IC, ISIPLISMI+NTS, iag%
seed; excellent buildings,, `location'
and soil; 1'10 acres; part cash, ballanco
exchange. F, E. Smith,IBrantford, Out,
Wgu.4 I QUIPPBBD aieeW,s, P E r
and -job printing plan in 1'laste •
Ontario. Insurance carried 41.600, Will
go for $1,200 on quick sale: Box 02,
Wilson Publishing Co.. Ltd., Toronto,
BL''KLY NI,,'VV51aA1 i511. FOR SAt_
in New Ontario.. Owner going to
Franca Will sell $2,000. Worth double
that amount, .Apply J. H., cis, Wilson
Publishing Co Limited. Toronto,
ZatOnspLA.NEOUr'a
l ANCSiR, TUMORS.-1,,UMI'S E C.,
�1 internal and external. cured with-
out pain by our home treatment. wrote
us before too late. Dr. Gellman Medical
Co., Limited. Colltngwood, Ont.
/ ADIES WANTED TO DO PLAIN
J and light sewing at home, whole or
spare time, good pay. work sent any dis-
tance, charges paid. Send stamp for
particulars. National Manut'met uriug
Company. Montreal.
Prices last year for maple sugar .
and maple syrup were the highest
ever known. Good sugar sold at 25
cents a pound, syrup from $2.25 to as
high as $3.00 a gallon. There has
not been much sign of decline this
year so far. In 1911 the price oft
maple sugar ranged from five to ten
cents a pound only, to the farmer.
Stfmard's Liniment Cures Garret in Cows
~ l
ORtiQIIEY REFUNDED. ASK ANY DRUGGIST
or en to Lyman -Knox Co., Montreal, P.Q. Price 60c.
Reme neer the name es It might not be seen again
STOPS
LAMENESS
from a Bone Spavin, Ring Bone,
Splint, Curb, Side Bone, or similar
troubles and gets horse going sound.
It acts mildly but quickly and good re.
sults are lasting. Does not blister
or remove the hair and horse can
be worked. Page 17 in pamphlet with
each bottle tells hove. $2.50 a bottle
delivered. Horse Book 9 R. free.
ABSORBINE. JR., the antiseptic liniment
for mankind, reduces Painful Swellings, En.
larged Glands, Wens, Bruises, Varicose Veins
heals Sores. Allays Pain. Will tell yolt
more if you write. $1.25 a bottle at dealers
or delivered. Liberal trim bottle for YOe soaps.
1$. F.YOUNG. P. D. F..516 !mans 9idg„Montreal, Can
.sosursuia and Absorbing. Jr.: ate mute hat Canada,”
ARM a PIERCING
SCIATIC PAINS
Give way beforethe penes
prating effects of Sloan's
Liniment
So do those rheumatic twinges and
the loin -aches of lumbago, the nerve-
inflammation of neuritis, the wry neck,
the joint wrench, the ligament sprain,
the muscle strain, and the throbbing
bruise.
The ease of applying, the quickness
of relief, the positive results, the
cleanliness, and the economy of
Sloan's Liniment make it universally,
preferred. Made in Canada.
30c., 60c., $1.20.
Heals Skin Trouble With
One Cake Soap and Two
Foxes Ointment.
Terrible itching on back of neck
After three weeks got flaky and be.•
came sore. Was red and scratching
caused sleepless nights. Got Cuticura,
Soap and Ointment. Itching not so
bad after using them. Now healed.
From signed statement of Mrs. Wil..
liam Quigley, Windsor, N. S.
If Cuticura did no more than soothe
and heal eczemas, rashes, itchings and
burnings, bringing speedy comfort to
tortured, disfigured men, women and
children it would be entitled to the
highest praise. But it does more. By
using the Soap exclusively for toilet
purposes, allowing no other soap to
touch your skin, you will in many cas es
these distressing preventgist s easingg cxpedences.
For Free Sample Each by Mailed -
dress post -card: "Cuticura, Dept. A,
Boston, U. S.A." Sold everywhere.
IN EVERY STABLE
e 'ar's Didemper Compound,
Is the one indispensable remedy for contagious and infee.
How discs+scs among horses and mules. Its success • as e i
preventive and cure for DISTEMPER, INFLUENZA..
PINK EYE, COUGHS and COLDS for snore titan twenty -
dye years is the highest tribute to its merit as a medicine.'
It is endorsed by the best horsemen and Iive stook mens
in America. gy1
SPOHN MEDiCAL DO!VIPANY,dGt shen, Indiana, U.S.A.: •
,STOPS THE PALN ,--- AND ACTS QUICKLY
Rheumafi.m. lumbago,neuralgia, sprains,. lame back, toothache, ear-
ache, core ti roat swollen len joint' •:n:i ail similar troubles are quickly
relieved by I lirsl's roil i ;tern sittate.`, It has been sold forge years,
and should NI in every lintrebald—luts a hundred uses.
AUAlitIcr.der,r or uslie si r Ilit - t 1+,,,' lt't)hi CO., Hamilton, Canada;
nt 114
x..1,0
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