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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1919-8-28, Page 7QUER RRENTS IN i `I , OLD COUNTRY STRANGE COVENANTS ENTERED INTO IN QLD LEASES. A Recent Irish Incident Recalls Some Quaint Examples of Payment. in Wad, Male or Faraalle Some of 'Lord Massereone's tenants Experienced on Woolens and in -Co. Antrim still hold their farms on Worel edS. leases which reserve to their landlord Good pay and steady C'.iClpl•ay- ci,3 „ill tut.108, .such as so many days' Inca, under ideal working con - work of a man ani a horse, so many ditions. ducks, capons, or hens. They have recently been warned If. you Cannot call, write or that they must either perform these telephone. duties or else agree to an increase in rent proportionate to their value. Few people. have the least idea .ef the amazing number and variety of queer covenants entered into in old leases. Here is a sample of one such ancient lease in the exact words in which it was originally grantecer "I, William, king, give to thee, Plowden Reyclon, my hop and my hop ivalds, with all the bounds up and down from heaven to earth, from earth to bell, for thee and thine to dwell, from me and mine to thee and THE BA.RRYMORE. CLOTH COMPANY 1179 King St. West - Toronto Telephone Parkdale 3200 GIVE QUEEN WONDERFUL VEIL. 'Belgian Lace Experts Worked On It Four Years. The Queen of the Belgians has re- ceivod from the lace and embroidery thine, for a bow and a broad -arrow, works of Belgian Flanders a marvel when I come to hunt upon Y€fri'ow. In ( ous veil. Surrounded by all the mis- witness that this is sooth, I bite this fortune and misery of war these loyal wax with my tooth in the presence of subjects have toiled in secret for four 11Iagge, Mand, and Margery, and my third son, Henry." The document is much shorter than any nmodere. lease, and not half so dif- long years to produce a unique piece which they offer in homage, to their queen. Such is their devotion to their sovereign, ficuit to understand, It amounts toleA French publication describes the this -that the king gave Royden these vil—designed by the most famous of lands in perpetual leasehold on condi- Beigian artists and executed by the tion that he himself received hospi- most expert workmen, perfect in tality when ho carne hunting, and every detail of mesh and was provided with instruments of the motif. Twelve thousand Hours were required chase, in workmanship, for the veil contains Any number of tenants held land on' not less than 12 million points. It similar terms. Some had to provide , displays the almost unknown art of arrows, some spears, some horses or 1 light and shade, a difficult effect and dogs. William de Grey held his land i oue of rare beauty. It solves for the at Hokenhall, in the County of Not- I first time, perhaps, the question of tingham, by the service of carrying 0,.' petepective. _. The entire piece weighs gerfalcon from Michaelmas till Lent at but four and one-half ounces. the king's caurt. In the centre of the veil are the ittBelgian arms, and in the four corners "Booting" Corn. ightesty, also in Nottingham, was held upon condition to find dogs 40 destroy wolves and foxes. The tenant of I3erchin, in Lanca- shire, got a good estate free on con- dition that, whenever the king came to Lancashire; the tenant should meet him with a horn and a white wand, conduct him through the county, and .remain with him until he left it. of the central panel the arms of the cities of Ypres, Nieuport, Popeminglme and Fumes. The four side panels re- present the industries of weaving, fishing, hop picking and dairying. • Tommy Was Surprised. Though the Prince will be glad to have a house of his own, he's not al - Sometimes the service rendered in a together thrilled at the idea of York House. For one thing there's too lieu of rent was the provision of some } "nidal publicity about it. Kitchener • delicacy for the royal table: Walter s jrad it, of course, when he was at the de Burgh held Rakley, in Norfolk, by,�i'War Office. paying two mulcts of red wine and I happened, says an English writer, two hundreds of pears, called Por to be passing through the courtyard "raises, yearly. From tenants at one evening just as the great man, Westbury, in Wilts, honey and ale dressed in civvie, was coming out of had to be vent to the king. We hear of wool lambs, hemp, flax, butter, and cheese being paid instead of money as rents for farms during the middle ages. Freme's lands, in Gloucestershire, were held by what was called heriot service. Thomas Freme, of Lypiatt, paid to the owner, Lord Berkeley, twenty horseshoes and their nails. It may be mentioued that a horseshoe was more valuable in those days than ie these. Rent in kind paid for land at Had- denham, in Bucks, was called "boot- ing corn," which means that it was paid as bote, boot, or compensation. At Grinlston, in Norfolk, all resi- dents having a cart and horse were obliged to do several days' work year- ly in reclaiming the common. But their food was given them free while they did this work, At the same place, all tenants who pastured their cows on the common did one day's work for their landlord at harvest tinre, Cheap Rent! The town. of Yarmouth is, we be- lieve still nominally bound to send to. the sheriffs one hundred herrings, baked iu twenty-four pasties, to be delivered to the king. So lately as the year 1778 the sheriffs attended in per - with their offering Some of the rents asked were pure- ly nominal.rmaton, in Co. Dur- ham, was -held in capite by the ser- vtee of three grains of pepper°. For other lauds, the rent asked was one rose, or a gilt arrow, feathered with a peacock's feathers. One ofthe oddest of such tenures was that under which Kingston Rus- sell, in Dorset, was held. By the terms of the agreement, 'the tenant had, whenever required, to count or tell the king's chessmen, and to put. them in a bag when finished with. Relieved His Mind. .A. Forfarshire farmer of the old school, who- had, against his better judgment, allowed his daughter to be "finished" at an expensive board- ing school, bore ' a long time her supercilious corredtion of his speech and ideas. But one night he relieved his mind on the subject to a circle of friends. He had a habit of prefaoing any iltterat co which he considered weighty and sage with the formula -- "Fat ye may say, and yea thing and anither." So his mature judgment on boarding schools was delivered thus— "Fat yo may say, and yea thing and anither, in ma opeenyin bardin' skills teaches naething bit eoevilised im. pidenee." Cabbages and 9a/trots were unknown before 1547.• his front door. A very "tired" look- ing Tommy who was walking in front went up to him. "I say, guv'nor," he said, "can you . get this way to Vic- toria?" "K" looked at him hard for, a moment, and pointed toward the Ma1L But before he could utter a word of explanation the Tommy had fled with a muttered "Gor-blimey!" and an air of such noisy precipitation that the corporal of the guards came out to see what was the matter: It e,as the only time I saw Kitchener grin. Anything exceeding half a ton of waste per acre in a potato crop is regarded as abnormal in Great Bri- tain. Life is made up of compensations. By the time a man is old enough to realize what a lot he •does•not know, he is too old to worry about it. "In the hour r of danger a man is proven: the boaster hides, the egoist trembles; only he whose care is for honor and for others forgets to be afraid.—Donald Haukey. A spider's web makes a good baro- meter. When wind or rain is ahead, the insect tightens up the web elong- ating the filaments only when fine weather is coming. The British Government made a .profit of 110,500,000 by insuring pro- perty against aircraft and bombard- ment risks; £13,610,000 was received in premiums' and only £2,970,000 paid out. 5 „re ste. eteke a X PRINCE IN MINE. This unusual picture of the Prince of Wales was taken as he em- calm and used as the sitting room, ergecl from a wolfram mine on his estates in Cornwall shortly before his has among other curious furniture of departure from England for Canada, two hundred years ago, a table and chair of rough • design made by sol- diers who served under General Mont - calm in the Siege of Quebec in 1759, and actually used by the General up to the date of his last fatal battle with the troops of General Wolfe. The writing desk in the same room was formerly an altar in the old Ursuline G i "aUY G a .L rare k V.! FROM HERE & RR Now is the time for the best bar- gains. Iluy now and save money. We, have hunirea.is of good bicycles at prices ranging from $10.e0 to 32f;.00, Write or call for particulars. it. G. McLeod, 179 Xing St. \Vest, Toronto. HISTORIC, FURNITURE IN PALATIAL HOTEL. Champlain, Jacques Cartier and Montealm, three of the heroic figures in the early settlement of North America along the St. Lawrence River have been happily united in a suite of roosts which have been named af- ter theta at the famous Chateau Fran- tense, in Quebec. This suite is in the baronial tower which forms one of the most noticeable landmarks in the ancient city, and commands a won- derful panorama of the great river and of the blue Laurentian Mountains. The central room, named after Mont - BIRDS OF PARADISE. Brilliant Plumes Adoan the Natives of New Guinea. New Guinea is the home of a large percentage of the world's birds of paradise. The supply of these beauti- ful birds is fast failing. Not only do the worsen of Europe and America demand feathers for their bonnets, but the natives of New Guinea and sur- rounding islands make lavish use of the plumage as head dresses. Some precautions are now taken to prevent visitors to New Guinea from killing the "most beautiful birds in the world:" but the natives aro left alone, and they, continue to deck themselves ..............a : gor- geous than any seen on our stage beauties or the wives of our million- aires. In New Guinea it is the man who affects birds of paradise decorations. The women, like the female bird of paradise, are inconspicuous in dull colors. To obtain the much prized feathers the New Guinea natives set out for the forest, knowing that the bird of paradise seeks to conceal his rainbow hues in the dense foliage of the trees. If they can find no haunt of the de- sired birds they start calling in excel- lent imitation of the shrill, ugly cry of the bird of paradise to its mate. This ruse is usually successful, "and a bird shows itself only to be snared or shot down with arrows. In mating season the male bird dances before the female he desires ee a mate to display his beautiful feathers, and at such a time so ab- sorbed -are the birds in tlfeir own af- fairs that large numbers . are taken easily by the wily natives. DELICATE YOUNG GIRLS .Need New Red Blood to Give Them Health"and Strength. Muscles or Brains? A cartoon in a city paper repre- sents a siendor, intellectual looking young man as applying for employ- ment at a factory office and asking about the rate of pay. The boss re- plies: "Twenty dollars a week for brains; 42 for muscle. In the same paper appear, side by side in the "Help Wanted” columns, two notices, one offering $18 a'week for a "bookkeeper with fang experi- ence," xpertence," and the other offering $23 for a bootblack. These facts might be duplicated al- most anywhere. The old standards seem strangely reversed- to -day. Is it going to continue so? Humane Animal Muzzle is Regulated by Gravity. The secret of a recently introduced humane muzzle, which allows the ani- mal wearing it perfect freedom of the jaws when the head is in a lowered positien, but which restrains when the head is raised, lies in a gravity - operated catch. This catch holds a rubber -covered metal bar firmly under the lower jaw when the animal's nose is not pointed earthward, but is disen- gaged by the force of gravity when the nose is lowered. • Reliable rubbers save much loss in canning. If tea or coffee disagrees The sure way Qui, is drink rST r•� •� x� t •r; �e$e�, r« No loss of leasure, but, a dis±inc± citiain.in hearth Not an experirnen ti . No Raise iri Price!. . Ask the rrocer .410 0I Does your daughter inherit a doll- Chapel, while the autique Grand- ctito organization from you? The father's Clock used to figure out the moose, then whit are yer rats like?" anaemia of young girls may be inkier- hours and minutes in the Old Jesuit •— ited, or it may be caused by bad air, School. The habitantz, or peasant peasantimaym A go unsuitable• food, hasty and irregular Proprietors of French Canada, are as H EM famous for their skill in handicraft, particularly weaving. The floor -cover- ing used in these rooms is a specimen Reciprocity. "Did time doctor pay a visit?" ":Yes, and the visit paid the doctor." Their idea of Luxury. An old farmer, says the $idinburgll' Weekly lieotsnian„ who, by hard worn; almd Parsimonious habits, had 'got to- gether a little fortune, decided that the time had at last arrived when he was justieect in ordering a family carriage, Ile went to a carriage builder's and describedindetail the kind of vehicle he wished to buy. "Now, i suppose you want rubber tires," said the carriage builder. "No, sir!" replied the old farmer in aaE"oairw NUM. niimbi SRA Eel leAVIDON (Oi' SOI4- A l)..TI.D (,old Alines at 12.44 per share. W. Hyland, 217 .George St,. Toronto. 'volt FiALB.. -3 eAso 4N13 EN1311113F7, t 3-5-7 FLP., also Drag Saw and Double. Unit Milker. Will sell lot or separate,. all new, P.O. Box 343. Montreal. "jV1;WS1'1'l:R. WEEKLY, p3 YiTtl1(:1D .4.1 County. Splendid opportunity. Write 11o;± T. Wilson Publishing Co., X.Imited, III Adelaide St. W. Toronto. WOW* j x. i3Qirsi z�l8D ivl�ikSt' 11 ani lob pritttlna plant in Eel:axe Ontario. Insurance carried 21,500. Will go for $1.200 on ouiek sale. Box St. Wilson Publishing -Co- Ltd., Toronto. + HMV W11.11•:CXiit, 1i A'1 tigi —MIN A.Sl C °t11,1 Y. TtB- I'ItE�m1'NTATIVI1s to handle won- cierful new gasoline -saver for Ford ears; save ten cents par gallon; exclusive terrltom•y; write to -day fol• particulars. Post Office Box 715, Toronto. Ont, POULTRY W&TITZZ �T IiAvlt YOU )'UFt S 13aAGP I11 11 love Poultry, PancY Hens. 1'tgeona. Elk g,. etc.? Write 1, Weinrauch do tion 10-18 St. Teas Baptiste Market: Mont real, Que, tones of resentment. My folk aia t that kind, When they're riding they no= 1staletD' 118Si want to know it. The "Zoo" Mouse. ll Jock, fresh from the Highlands, was visniothe London '•'Loo." Seein TOlin kt1TL,FOIL On F1'8Ekm BOOR or1 V House Plans, and information tell. Ing how to save from Two to Four Hun* dyed. Dollars on your new Home. Ad- dress Halliday Company, 23 Jacksop IW:, Hamilton. Ont, g g so many strange animals. he called out; zlaBOELLAITBoUB. to an attendant: i el.aNC•F1R, TUMOrtS. 14.1.141.1)S. !OTC, `�i✓J internal and external. cured with- out ithout vain by our home treatment, Write se before too late. Dr. Hellman 11fedical Ass:, Limited, colltngwood. Ont "Here, mon! Ye micht tell's the names o' thao bit beastiea," "Certainly," said the attendant. "That large black one is a bear." . "Ay!„ "And that one with the small horns is a wapti" • "Ay!„ "And that one with the large horns is a moose." "A moose! Awa', neon! If. that's a eating, --insufficient out-of-door exer- cise and not onough rest and sleep. it comes on gradually, beginning HARD ON BABY with languor, indisposition to mental of this habitant handicraft, known as — or bodily exertion, irritability and a "catalogue," a waehabie material of No season of the yenr is so dan- feelirg of fatigue. Later ccmnes pal- fast dyes, gerous to the life of little ones as is pitation of the heart. headache dizzi The two adjoining rooms, one on the summer. The excessive heat ness following a stooping position, each side, are used as bedrooms, and 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 re- alizes he is ill. Summer is the sea- son when diarrhoea, cholera infan- tum, de -sentry and colic are most pre valent. Any one of these troubles Colne serious, but if taken intime are actual antiques. Bore can be seen may prove deadly if not promptly there is no need to worry. The treat- the old warming pan of the pre -radia- treated. During the summer the ment is quite . easy and simple. Dr, tor days and the old pipe lighters of mother's best friend is Baby's Own Williams' Pink Pills, which are free the days before matches were invent- Tablets. They regulate the bowels, ed. The old fashioned open hearth sweeten the stomach am:d keep baby with its bellows standing by and the healthy. The Tablets are sold by family kettle give their welcome and medicine dealers or by ":ail at 25 tell their tole of hospitable byegone centi a box from The Dr. Williams' days. On the walls hang old prints and priceless tapestries. frequent headaches and breathless- except for the private bathrooms ness. In a majority of cases constl- which have been built in to meet with pation is present. There may be no the requirements of modern habit, are great loss of flesh, but usually the faithful replicas of rooms in the seig- complexion taken on a greenish-yer- norial Chateau of Old French Canada, tow pallor. The four poster beds, chairs, fire Cases of this kind, if neglected, be- irons, crockery and cliarcoal burners from any harmful or habit-forming drug, are just the tonic needed to remedy this wretched state of health. Though it is not noticeable, improve- mermt actually begins with the first dose. As the blood is made rich and red, the pallor leaves the face, strength and activity gradually re- turn and if the treatment is continued until the ]last symptom disappears, the denger of a relapse is very slight. If any symptom of anaemia ap- pears, prudence suggests that Dr. Williams' PHIS Pills should be glycol at once, and the sooner they are taken the more speedily will the trouble be overcome, ou can get these pills through any dealer in medicine, or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes fol $2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. ' An Essay on Geese: The following composition on geese was written in a western city by a schoolboy: Geese is a heavy -set bird with a head on one side and a tail orm.the other. His feet is set so far back on his running gear that they nearly miss his body' Some geese is ganders and has a curl in his tail. Ganders don't lay or set They just eat. loaf and go swig inning. If I hag to be a geese I would rather be a gander. Geese do not give milk, but give eggs, but for me give the liberty or give me death. Minard's Liniment Co., Limited. Gentlemen,—I have used MIN- ARD'S LINIMENT on my vessel and in my family for years,. and for the every -day ills and accidents of life I consider it has no equal. I would not start on a voyage without it, if it cost a dollar a bottle. CAPT. F. R. DESJARDIN, Schr. Storke, St. Andre, Kamouraska, SAVING KAISER'S STATUES, ` Germans In Thorn Fear Poles Will Destroy Them. Tho Germans are 'carefully remov- ing all bronze statues of former Kais- ors from Bromberg and Thorn last the Poles destroy them on their arrival, The statue of Frederick the Great tit. Broinberg already has been taken to Schneidemuebl and re -erected there. That of William time Great will be removed iu a few days and the former Kaiser's statue at Thorn will be taken from the market with a fes- tival parade. Tile German Govern- ment will bo asked to erect it else- where. Memorials of Bismarck and other German chiefs also -will be re- moved from the bridge across the Vis- tula River. Except for a few hours' stay at Ot- tawi}, where certain State formalities must bo complied with, the first and only stop of His Royal Higlmesa the I Prince of Wales in. Ontario until Oc- tober will be at Toronto to open the Canadian National Exhibition. RINGS QAROUND THE SUN. In Many Cases Followed by Rain Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Best Time to Weed. Do not let any weeds go to seed, as that will mean extra work next year, Within 36 Hours. weeding out the seedling weeds, start- ed by the gardener's neglect this sea - Rings around the sun or moon are . sere properly called hales. They may be Early morning, before the sun is up, defined as somewhat complicated ar- is the best time to weed. If the weeds rangements of arcs and circles of are left out on the top' of the ground, light surrounding the sun or the moon exposed to the sun, until the next day, accompanied by others tangent to or the sun will kill them. intersecting them, with spots of - --- special brightness called piarhelia ap- lt¢inaxd's Liniment Cures Colds. ata peering at the points of tangency and intersection. Parhelia are most often observed about sunrise or sunset, fre- quently when the intersecting arcs are themselves invisible. except at the points of intersection. In order of frequency halos average about 22 de- grees, 46 degrees, or 90 degrees in radius, but on rare occasions other sizes have been observed. Halos are observed only when there is present in the higher atmosphere a cloud sheet which meteorologists term cirro-stratus. The floating par- ticles forming this cloud sheet are ice crystals, as the cloud is always above the plane of permanent freezing tem- peratures. These are the highest clouds known, the average height be- ing five to six miles. When the sun or the moon is observed through suck a cloud sheet, refraction and reflec- tion of some of the sun's rays 'by the ice crystals produce rings in which the colors when visible are invariably arranged with the red on the inside of the arcs. - Halos are Food weather signs. Many weather proverbs based upon the ob- servation of halos are founded upon sound scientific principles. Studies of the relation of halos to rainfall show that during the summer months 56 to 60 per cent. of all halos are followed by rain within 36 hours. During the winter months 70 to 75 per cent. are so followed. Lost and Found and Lost -Again. If professors are not all absent- minded, all absent-rninded men in the humorous papers are professors. The Professor—I went to the rail- way office to -day and got that mmmnbrel- la I left on the train last week. Isis Wife—That's good. Where is it now? The Professor—Eh? By Jove, I --- really, my dear, I'm afraid I Ieft it• on the train. • Horses are fend of alfalfa hay; far this reason it should be fel to tlmem in limited quantities. If fed judiciously it Will suffice as the sole roughage, even for working. horses. One-third: to one-sixth of an ounce of potassium iodide to each 100 lbs. of feed will prevent hairless pigs. Do not use more. Dishes that have become brown and burst through baking in the oven may be easily cleaned if allowed to stand awhile in borax water. With the Fingers' Says Corns Lift Out Without Any Pain When Thirteen Was a Dozen. There was a time in early English history when a heavy penalty was in- flicted by the authorities for short' weight, and the fear of punishment was so great that rather than run the risk of violating the law, bakers gener- ally threw in an. extra loaf, when cus- tomers asked for a dozen loaves. Thus a "baker's dozen" came to be not twelve pieces of a given article, but thirteen. MONEY ORDERS. Pay your out-of-town accounts by Dominion Express Money Orders. Five Dollars costs three cents. The Victoria tower of the houses of parliament at Westminster, took twenty years to build. From base to summit the tower contains 140 spaci- ous rooms, each fireproof and packed with state papers, the records of cen- turies of. English. history. g tinard's Liniment .(Pares Distemper. To preserve whole lemons for months, place a layer of dry, fine sand an cinch deep in an earthenware jar, then a row of lemons with stalk end downward and so lemons do not touch one another; cover with sand three inches in depth, then another layer of lesions. Repeat this until jar is full. Store in a dry, cool place. THERE S ONLY ONE GENUINE ASPIRIN ONLY TABLETS MARKED WiTH "BAYER CROSS" ARE ASPIRIN. if You Don't See the ,"Bayer Cross" on the Tablets, Refuse Them --They Are Not Aspirin At All. Your druggist gladly will give You the genuine "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" o -a because genuine Aspirin now is made b C di d by a Cana - 0 0 0 t 0 Sore corns, hard corns, soft corns or any kind of a corn can shortly be lifted right out with the fingers if you will apply directly upon the corn a few drops of freezone, says a Cincinnati authority. It is claimed that at small cost ens can get a quarter of an ounce of free - zone at any drug store, which is suffi- cient to rid one's feet of every corn or callus without pain or soreness or the danger of infection. This new drug is an ether compound, and while sticky, dries the moment it is applied and does .not inflame or even irritate the surrounding tissue. This announcement will interest many women here, for it. is said that the present high -heel footwear is put- ting corns on practically every woman's feet. LEMONS WHITEN AND BEAUTIFY THE SKiN. Make this beauty lotion cheaply for your face, neck, arms and hands, At the cost of a small Jar of ordinary cold creat" one can prepare a full quar• ter pint of the most wonderful lemon skin softener and complexion beauti- fier, by squeezing tho juice of two fresh lemons into a bottle containing three ounces of orchard white. Care should be taken to etrnin the juice through a fine cloth so no lemon pulp gets in, then this lotion will keep fresh for months. every woman knows that lemon juice is u;;ed to bleach and remove such blemishes as freckles. sallowness aril tan and is ------------ -------;1./11:the ideal skin softener, whitener and beautifier. Just try it! Get th=ree ottnccs of •S-';;$4'.77' art�i:ard `white 1t ray drug rtc:•e scr.cl ,1 h.i' ei``: two lemons from the g roc t r an m .•°•••i1 e up it rue ter 1' ;mt a: this t v °r grtmt:t lento" me c i ' !t daily into the fact:. e • le , . el 0 SINCE iee0 �� qq� �� hands It h m t..,s:t5 i.1 ....... .. 0sTQls `UE �r��',i rough, tc:.l h l.,'.s, ISSUE No. 34—'19, y ane ens an owne dian Company. There is not a cent's Worth of Ger- man interest in Aspirin, all rights be- ing purchased from the U.S. Govern- ment. During the wee, acid imitations were road as Aspirin in pill boxes and various other containers. But now you can get genuine Aspirin, plainly stamped with the safety "Bayer Cross" —Aspirin proved safe by millions for Headache, Toothache, Earache, Rheu- matism, Lumbago, Colds, Neuritis, and Pain generally. Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets, also larger "Bayer" packages. Aspirin is the trade "mark, registered in Canada, of Bayer Manufacture of Monoacetic-acidester of Sallcylicacid. Clear Your Scalp and Skin With Cuticura After shaving. and before bathing tnuclm dandruff or irritation if any, withCuticura Ointment. wash all off with Cuticura Soap and hot water, using plenty of Soap best applied with the hands. One Soap for all uses, shaving, sharnpooing,bathing. Finally dust shaven parts with Cuti- cnra 1;dam, The Soap Ointment and Talcum sold everywhere.