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The Exeter Times, 1919-11-27, Page 7i !ect The •r F ad Cold F TO - DAY IT MAY BE SERIOUS Tengtrii0MFM May ireveaap into Bronchitis, !Rion. mania and.txerhaps Cos mu relation. Miss Mary 1'rouse, R.R. No. 1, Cedardale, Ont,, writes:—•"1 had 'ht Influenza in November last, and Wien me with a terrible cough. 1 did not a'atend to it until it got sosevere people —iceirned me it was time to see about 1 went to the doetr and got some medicine. elk told ne it was a bad attack of bronchitis. 1 could not sleep, and would have to sit up nearly all night, it was so difficult for me toet my breath. The doctor's medicine did not seem to be helping me theeleast bit One of our neighbors carne in one day, and told me. about Dr. Wood's'Noravay Pine Syrup. 1 tried it and took two bottles. No person could believe how it helped me, I have recommended it to different people since, for 1 believes I have reasous for doing so. Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup has been on the market for the past 30 years anti stands out by itself as a remedy for all coughs and colds, e Be sure and get the real "Dr. Wood's" when you ask for it Put up in a yellow wrapper; 3 pine trees the trade mark; price 25c. and 50c. Manulactured only by The:3h Milburn Co,., Limited, Toronto, Ont. THE TRAPPER. Don'ts Few :farmers like to write letters, especially business letters; and after I moved off of the farm to eur little village and eventually became post- master, I was daily galled upon to write letters for my farmer friends. They ranged' in character from an inquiry far a pure-bred 'bull to order- T a fain 'high-pvieed ing chilaxen's underwear from a mail - Care of -The New -Born. purchasedct've article order house, but the letter that seem - Many stockmen in his ..,.country, desk that makes an attractive e ma giveths ed othst txable was the would save enough money each. year of furniture. Thus the desk adds to one to ib oeedoAtreus ted to dere to pay their taxes if they would only the appearance of the room instead ofp devote more attention to live stock at detracting from it. A comfortable tribe something for sale. I never obs thetime the animals.. desk chair seems quite as essential jected to this small service—in fact, Tito g thenfemales of lI was glad to help, But the fact that Tl�; pregnant .females should be di- as the cleslc• the men, and young men, too, who were provide an Another advantage of having eted and me sures taken to p is engaged in the enormous business of adat the house office headquarters e to keg i themvhee mount of exercise pfamily will farnriing, who hired men and were them healthy and strong. Breeders are that some member. of the f m Xy represented by thousands of dollaxs very loath to work their mares when likely be there to give attention to of invested capital, who were goad heavy with foal, preferring' rather to a business caller. breeders and feeders of live stools and have them well,fat and sleek, appar- Where possible, `the telephbne experts 'in soils,made such a de- should be within reach of the desk `were pd entl thinkin • that b this the I Y g Y For Fur Shippers Young and Old. The actuaal shipmennt of furs is one of the most important phases of the business of trapping, and it must be done right if the trapper is to realize the full, high value that pelts are bringing in the markets to -day. , Before giving a formula for pack- ing furs it might be well to list a few "dbn'ts" for the benefit of the young trapper, who is likely'to do the very things that these "dent's" aim at. Here they are: . Don't send your furs while pelts are still green. Scrape of surplus fat and flesh. They should be dry enough to hold their shape before shipping. Don't place slsins pelt to pelt. Pack thein fur side to fur side. Don't place one skin inside another. Don't roll, fold, crease or bend skins. Don't wrap each skin in a separate covering. This practice shuts out air and allows decomposition to set in. Don't -ship furs by freight --send by parcel post or express. Don't fail to list the contents of your -shipment and write your name and address on an inner card attached to the pelts and to the outer card at= tacked to the bag or bundle. ounces, gager one tablespoonful, whole If you follow these instructions, milk twelve ounces. Use half of this about all there is left for you to do is for the first feeding, the remainder place your dried pelbs fur side to fur to be given in:two liours. Great case side, with the smaller pelts forming must be taken to have the nurse bottle the centre of the bundle in a fiat pile. absolutely. clean. Tie this pile securely with stout may Orphan colts be hand -fed and twine (never use wire, as it cuts the p �' reared in this manner. After three pelts), and place it if a sturdy burlap days the sugar may be omitted, and bag. Sew the top of this bag up, or regular .feeding periods established close it with a pucker string. makeg three times in twenty-four hours. At sure always that this job is well done, the end of two weeks they will learn and you will lose no furs in transit. The package ready, it should be sent to market, • eithee by express or parcel post. • If the latter method is used, always insure your shipment, In either case, always get a receipt for your shipment. iter 'inc first lamentable effort at letter -writing, Dive stock, 1 found to be the most"lost correspondents. The tendency seems either to make the article in question too perfect or to depreciate it; with the :balance in favor of the former. Men whom I' knew to be absolutely honorable, who would not wilfully mis- represent anything in a sale for worlds, would go wild when they tried to describe it on paper. If they sent out this description while it was "hot," they regretted it later. If they left it for a rereading, they sometimes went to the other extreme and left out most of the good points, Orte of zny patrons used to do a considerable business in cattle. He would come in and tell me all about the particular animal he had far sale, and then have me write to a prospective buyer for him. "That sounds all right," he would say. "That is just the way it is,, but I'll be doggoned if I can make it sound veloping young will be better nourish- I also have a typewr was sometimes a little sad—almost right -when I try to write it out." ed. One of the' fundamental, principles one I' procured was a standard make, �- pathetic. 1 He could not write as he talked. It detracted in no way from the That is the trouble with many men sterling worth of 'these men. The with stuff to sell. It also affects the rn is uni- with all the modern conveniences, two - there fact is that until recent years sales letters of many business men in tion of file developing young spacer, tabulator,there has been but little need for much other lines. The best writer of sales fon and constant. This is true unless color ribbon, backsp e ,knowledge of correct correspondence letters that I know says he holds an the mauler be so poorly cared for and etc., which cost very near $1.00. The on the part of the farmer. He has al- imaginary conversation with. every fed that her vitality is greatly ins- cheaper machines, however, are very ways been compelled to take what the' prospective buyer, and then attempts paired serviceable, and I find that my old p p p y p regarding the development of the but, being of an old style and seaon embryo is that, regardless of the state handed...or rebuilt, it Cost me only $20. of nutrition of the mother, the nutri- Now 1 have an. up-to-date ma'hine, The circulation of the blood is the machine served me about as well as channel through which this, nourish- my new one. nient must react. the young. The blood By careful selection from a variety is propelled through the vessels over of designs, and having it made to the body by the action of the heart. order instead of selecting it Froin a The vigorous, moderately fleshed ani- dealer's stock, I secured a desk h t things. mal has a stronger and steadier heart encloses the typewriter within at w action than the fat, idle one. Exer- not in use. .cine is a great factor in the even, I have a small file to guide -me in steady circulation of the blood. This my transactions. This I keep on my is especially true of hogs, cattle, and desk. Then I carry with me at all sheep, which at the best have an im- times a small note pad with 'leaves perfect, pampered heart action, due easily detachable. Thus, if while out to being bred continuously for food in the field 1 happen to think of some - production. thing that should be done two weeks Rations containing high percentage ahead, 1 jot it clown on the pad, and of fat and protein should be cut in. then that evening I make a memoran half. or discarded for a laxative carbo- dum of it to be filed under the future hydrate diet, ten days to two weeks date. Each evening I refer to the file before the date of the expected ar- for all notes and memoranda that have rival of the offsprings accumulated for the following day, •so Someone should always be in atten- as to be ready for them in the morn - dance at the time of parturition to see, ing'. that the offspring receives, the all- One very great advantage of the important first nourishment, which is typewriter over the pen is that it necessary to strengthen the vital pro- enables one to keep a legible carbon ceas and supply body warmth. copy of all business letters, which A. blanket and rough towel should! should be filed for reference along be at hand to dry the young, and if with all correspondence received. A necessary keep it warm. Soinetimes'typewritten letter on the farm's betel - the young become entangled in the nese letterhead speaks niuch far the fetal membranes or after -,birth, and ,s modernness of efficiency df the owner. suffocated. These should be removed, and if the connections have ,riot'been severed with the body of the young, do this, tying the cord close to the body with a stout string clipped in pure tincture of iodine and finish the operation by . painting the stump of the severed cord twice with iodine. If the little fellows are weak, hold them up to nurse and syringe out the Ships. • rectum with a solution of glycerine "Just wait till daddy's ship conies in," two ounces, soap one ounce, and water My mother .says to me, eight ounces, warmed to body temper- When I want things that cost a lot. attire_.. (100 deg. F.). This will aid the Now is it far to sea first bowel action so necessary to I wonder,with the ponycart: the subsequent life and health of the young. I've waited for so long? If the mother has fever or the udder But when I ask my dad himself, is naked, artificial feeding must be He says the wind is wrong, the order. This does not present a And it won't be .in for quite a• spell; difficult problem for any of the young And then he takes a map except the colt. Here a low fat -con- And makes a dot in some far sea. twining whole milk is most desirable. "There's where.•it is, old chap." It must be fresh, clean, and warm, and I hope the captain of the ship should be made up as' follows: Will take the best of care For each pint, lime water four Of everything that's in the hold, Of all my treasures there. other fellow offered. He has been too to transfer it to paper. busy to write letters, he has had little There is a difference between writ - to sell that needed describing, and he ing a sales letter to a personal friend paid little or no attention to corres- and one to an entire stranger. In the pondence. Every man who writes a first case, a letter may be intimate, but business letter should observe certain in the latter case it ,can hardly be more intimate than your talk would He should 'be direct without being be if the buyer came to your farm, If stilted. A letter should be natural and you were a breeder of Shorthorns and not rambling. The day of "I take my' a man came to your herd for a 'Short - pen in hand to let you know" is past, horn, you would meet li,im with ease just as the letter that begins by say- and tails without embarrassment or ing, "Yours of May 10th at hand and intimacy. If you can do that in a letter contents carefully noted," etc., is pass- it will be a goad one. ing, although the latter example may i Then there is the letter of inquiry. be found in the correspondence of No matter whether you write concern - many progressive business houses. It ing a farm, a cockerel, or a flock of is sufficient to begin a letter and say sheep, carry the same directness that what you wish to say without any a sales letter Carrie:,. Furthermore, wordy meafiderings. I do not describe an ideal and expect to "Mr. John Jones: , buy it at bargain prices. There used "Dear Sir, -I have two heifers that to be a lady -who wrote to me every from your description I believe would year for cockerels to head her poultry suit you," etc., is just as complete and flock, She always filled a letter -size much more businesslike that "I have sheet of papef, and invariably wanted your letter concerning the two heifers two cockerels for $5. If I could have at hand and contents noted, and will filled her order for the sort of bird say in reply," and so on through a she described I should have considered half hundred words. i myself a marvel among marvels. In Mr. Janes wants to know about the ten years of breeding one variety of heifers he wiote ahput. He cares no- chickens I never came up to the ideal thing about what you did. or are doing that woman set for her $2.50 bird. to his letter,. He knows that you have Proper stationery helps the appear - received it and noted contents, else ance of the farm correspondence. you would not , be answering his Letter -size paper, either ruled or un - inquiry. `ruled, is best because the entire letter The letter that eliminates useless can be made on one .sheet. It is Bili words is a great saver of time and x11 inches, and the most commonly paper. Business houses are short of used size for a typewriter. One of both. In ordering from mail-order these machines makes your business concerns, always use the regular letter readable and more businesslike. order form that is usually mailed with If there is a youngster who will learn or enclosed in the catalogue. It con- to operate a typewriter, and if you do tains all the necessary information if any considerable correspondence, the properly filled out, and a letter is un- $25 or $30 invested in a good second - necessary unless special information hand or rebuilt machine will be worth is desired. r while. . The ordinary business -size Men with something to sell, farmers envelopes, called No. 5 by your post - with pure-bred cattle, hogs, or other master, are the most convenient. • "My friends, let us never despise anyone. Contempt is the resource of u;istarts, of parvenus, of ugly people,, of -fools- the mark which hides insig- nificance, sometimes rascality, and which renders intellect, judgment, goodness, of no avail." --Alphonse Daudet Head I hope he'll feed the pony and Be sure to clean my gest, And keep the tracks of' those toy trainee, Tagether,;so they'll run. I hope he knows the way to here. Perhaps he'll come at night, And just unload and slip away. My daddy said, "he might." to drink readily from a bucket. It's rather nice to think of when Colts reared by hand should be I'm all tucked up in bed, carefully guarded against cold and indigestion, as they are usually more delicate for the first month than. others. How I Equipped My Farm Office. I know a very successful farmer. He has been retired for many years now, but he diel not quit farming until he had become the owner of several hundred acres of land, practically all of which he acquired as the result of hard work and good management. ""`1" I have been in his ‘home often, and And just exactly how it looks Is all inside my head. I see the oaptain •and the crew, The- shining sails and mast; You know, it is a sailboat, so 'stilt •can't come very -fast ' his life for IIIc .sake. Bat he had yet to learn his weakness and wherein lay the true source of strength. I.le. thought it was seine danger which his Master would have to meet, or some coniliot which He was facing. Had ,it been that, unquestionably. Peter would have followed, and would have follow. ed to the death. Eager, impulsive, generous, brave, he would have been the leader of ,the little and of diu ciples, or of larger companies of the Galilean adherents of Jesus, in any battle that would have to he fought, But for. Jesus' complete self-renuncia- tion he was not prepared. To ,see his Master. apparently helpless in the hands of His enemies, betrayed by one of his awn comrades, struck him with astonishment. He was,perplexed • and angry, and it was thus that he denied his Lord. The lesson of ren'uneiation, of for- bearance, of self-denial, was and is hard to learn. It is hard to believe that there can be greater strength in weakness than in wrath, that there can be victory in non-resistance, that there can be triumph through death, just as it is hard to believe that there is no true greatness apart from humble service. This was the lesson Peter had to learn, but that he did learn it is abundantly clear in his awn subsequent life. Long after, in one of his epistles, he wrote as fol- lows: "Beloved, think it not strange concerning the Any trial ,among you which cometh upon you to prove you, as though a strange thing happened to°you; but insomuch as ye are par- takers of Christ's sufferings, rejoice; that at the revelation of His glory also. ye may rejoice with exceeding joy." It looks quite like a pirate ship, • With flashing deck and spars; My daddy bays the mast's so tall It reaches to the stars. Oh, when my daddy's ship comes in How happy we will be! But I wonder if I'll miss thinking the most distinct impression of good Of ,it and of the seal filed So Bad management that I have had of this farmer is that of ,his spending his his clesl in one corner of Caution Regarding Canned Foods. l rili9 I Go To ievenings kit his living room. -- - He seemed never to be better pleas- When..the liver becomes sluggish and ed than when he had sorie bulletins or inactive it does not manufacture enough reports, and was making sketches and bile to thoroughly act on the bowels and calculations relative to 'the adoption carry off the waste matter, from the of a new method or practice in his own farming operations, Somehow 1 grew up with the desire to emulate the success of this farmer. As to the success I have had, much is system, hence the bowels become clogged up, the bile Sets Into the blood, con- stipation sets in and is followed by .sick and bilious headaches, water brash, heartburn, floating, specks before the eyes, and painful internal, bleeding or yet to materialize; but I have already protruding piles. emulated his methods and proved Milburn's •Laza-Liver Pills regulate their value. the flow of bile so that, it acts properly ( Realizing tha% my means and re - on the. bowels, and stirs the sluggish gi•lirenieuts did not ,justify the creation liver into activity. -• of a special office structure, I followed Mrs, E. Bainbridge, e riherst,, l" rf3•, the example of my predecessor and placed my desk in one coiner of the living room. There is now and then a time when I find the environment non - writes: --"I take pleasure in writing you of the good. I received by using . Mil- burn's Laxe-Liver Pills for headache. was so bats I lead to go to bed, and could not sit up. A friend told me about conductive to-offztea iexuirements, but your wonderful nnecine • and two vials there are vastly mo.re times when 1 have mado mens well as `t catn b . am glad that my desk is where it is. Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills are 25o. In the evenings I cats visit with. the fl. vial eteall dealers, or roe ied direct •,sines anti then' do -,tile b The Milburn fainly, at, ;t ,�t .e cut realist d, Triouy . daily desk waffle in theiiiteritn Coe I,i.in ;+.od, T,oranB i1, Ont. r' � Y r No canned products should be used which show .any one of the following signs of spoilage: 1. Gas bubbles in the jars, the tops of the jars blown, and a squirt of liquid as the top is unscrewed. 2. An odor somewhat resembling rancid .cheese. 3. Aimtshy or- disintegrated appear- ance of the solid parts of the contents of the jars. Do not test for spoilage by tasting but discard all products showing these signs. INTERNATIONAL LESSON NOVEMBER 30. nt. Jesus Teaches Peter True Greatness— John 13: 1-16, 36-38. Golden Text, Matt. 20: 28. 13: 1-16. To Wash the Disciples' Peet. The `sandals which they wore strapped to their feet would have been Ieft, in Oriental fashion, outside the door. It was a welcome refreshment to have the hot and dusty feet bathed in coal water, This office would usual- ly be performed by a slave, but these ntbn were away from home, in a hired or borrowed room in the city, and servants were lacking. Good friends as they were now, perhaps not one of them would have thought of so min istering to the rest. He would have regarded it as a menial task, to which he would not stoop. Jesus presents us here with conduct truly human, and not less truly divine. He 'was their Master; it was His high privilege to serve them. Removing His outer garment, He girded Himself Cheese Salad Dressing. One cup of milk, one tablespoon of flour, one -reenter cup of vinegar, one- half cup grated cheese; a little white; .pepper and Dalt, also •a tablespoon of onion juice if • lilted. Add flour to warm, fat, Add milk arid cook as fpr .white sauce,- "Gool, slightly and- add. the vitiegai• v4i tth ,liar, beer warmed, ,then add ;fseasoniJi;�n "and chhese• ,• mans. .r THE PSTEN EFFECTis F T " ,O g Has Lett RIR eek Heath. This terrible scourge has left in its train weak hearts, shattered. nerves, and a general run-down condition of the system. Thousands of people, throughout Can - ad,. are now needing the timely use of Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills to counteract the effects of tins trouble which a short time ago swept our country. Mrs. C. C. Palmer Keppel, Sask,, writes:•—"I wish to inform you of the great good Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills did for me. After a bad attack of the "Spanish Influenza," my heart and nerves were left in a very bad. condition. I got two boxes of your pills and I must say they are the best 1 ever used, and 1 have taken •11 great many different kinds. I will always keep Heart and Nerve Pills in the holtse." Milburn's :Mart and Nerve Pills are 50e. n box. For. saki by all dealers, or riaailed direct on receipt ofprice by The ]1,',itin Q,p ,,Xailnl tc l Torout i Ont. • with the towel and poured water in the basin and proceeded to wash and to wipe their feet. Amazed and strick- en dumb they permitted Him until it cane Peter's turn. The impulsive and generous -hearted Peter, would not suf--v fee his Lord to so demean Himself. With what gentleness and tactfulness Jesus answered his protest! The meaning of what He did was, of course, not clear at that moment, but, He said, "Thou shalt know hereafter." Jesus. gave tiers act of His not only the character of a lesson in unselfish service, but also the significance of a parable. Peter was quick to see what He meant when He said, "If I wash thee not, thou hast no part with me," and with immediate surrender he said, "Lord, not my feet only, etc." The figure of verse 10 is drawn from the custom of the public baths, so common in those clays. He 'oho had been in the bath, when he returned home needed only, of course, to wash his feet, soiled by the dust of - the road. Jesus makes, therefore, the washing of the feet here a" symbol of complete spiritual cleansing: Whether or not there is more than this in His words it is difficult to say. Yet there was one there wliese heart no outward .washing could cleanse. Judas, the traitor, had submitted to his Master's kindly servlee but he did not put away the buck treachery • which lodged in his heart. "I have given you •as ex: en ell'." Jesus had shown thein hots fir love might go. There was no service, no humblest office of kindness,- which he would not perform far those nien who had been His companions and whom He loved: He would have thein r so think and so act in filth' relations with each other. It is not the mere form of foot -washing that is here Ineserib- ed; it is rather the spirit that will express itself in many and various acts of: ministry. ea "The trivial round, the doinmon task, Will furnish all we ought to ask. Room to deny ourselves, a road, ] To lead us daily nearer God." "The servant is not greater than his lerd," We serve the Lord Christ{ Into all our socials and business vela- tions we must carry ,this• spirit of service. • "If • arrry .man have not the spirit of ("r:riet•.he is none 'of His." Compare Phil. 2; 111.- 13; =11 ..13: 36-38. Lerd. Whither Genet Thou.? Peter .asked,.ltis •question and declared hips purpose,- in till 'sincerity, • When Cows are given ice cold water in winter the heat from their bodies must warm the water and it takes feed to make heat. Often they will not drink much ice water from a tank where the ice has been broken ap with an axe. A tank heater takes the chill from the water 'and,,the cows not only enjoy it but they will drink larger quantities and this has a direct re- lation to the amount of milk produced. When cows have to drink from an outside trough several hundred feet from the stable they seldom drink enough water during cold weather. They eat expensive feed without tak- ing the water into their systems which is needed for health and the production of large quantities of milk. Some- times this condition can be improved by using galvanized pails as individual watering troughs beside the manger of each cow. Then the cow always has water available in spite of the outside storms. She will drink more often and give more milk. Some dairymen have watering sys- tems installed in their dairy barns and Sat Up to Too t to Sedl, Tilt awful epidemic, the Spanish influenza, that swept Canada from One end to the other a short time ago, left in he wake a great roan' bad aftr effeete, In some 00850 11 was a weakened heart:" in others shattered nerves, bat in a great many ogees weak kidneys have been left as .a legacy. Where the kidneys have been leis weak a5 an after effeet of the "Flu," Doan's 1 lclney Pills will prove to 134 juttire remedy you, requireto strengthen them, i >m, Mrs.Barvey D. Wile, Lake Pleasant; N,8., "wx'itet9;- -"Laat winter I 'wee take*: sick with the "Flu," .and when 1 did get; better I found that my kidneys were very bad, and et night 1; had to sit up to turn around in bed+ I used Doan's Ridncy Pills and found that they dial me a wonderful amount ofood. I also recommend them to my husband and;, he started,in to use them, I will alwaysr recomrn.endthem to anyone who is bothered with kidney trouble, for they: are wonders." Dean's Iridney Pills are 50c. a box at all dealers or mailed direct an receipt or iirice by The T. ' Milburn Co., Limited, Y Toronto Ont. See that our trade mark, a " Maple Leaf." anrx.ars on the box. find them practical, both as to that amount of woric saved in watering the stock and the increase in the milk produced. wow Invest Y<r-ur Money In 5 VE % DEBENTURES Interest payable halt yearly. The Creat West Permanent Loan Company Toronto Office 20 King St. West 3ighesolr Prices Raid ri or RAW FURS & GINSENG Write for price lists and shipping tags 22 Years of Reliable Trading Reference --Union Bank of Canaan. _. N. SILVER 220 :St. Vaal St. W., Montreal, P.Q. Iti'ttmited rtnnntity;'o6 lig$ GrsdE'M U Ends for, tale Cheap. Samples Free' tNDOWS &DOOR° CIZFS to suit you opecin,a. Firma with glare. Safi de- livery ere --snared. a �,• Write for Price r...4 Cet down Nei ..a tilts. insree winter comfort. The FSU.1.17MAY COl SPAP1Y, Limited Y•Arn LYON FACTORY LisrRIMUTORS CANADA ENDORSED BY HORSEMEN UNIVERSALLY Splint's Distemper Comeurati: enioys a reputation equalled -by no other veterinary remedy.. For 25 years it has been used and recommended by the lead- ing horsemen and stockmen of America. For 25 years ith use under trying' conditions has won for it the highest es- teem of veteran trainers and drivers. SPOZX''S should be in every ratable to prevent contagion. whether ZNIZt1B 28, nzaiz nYFi, rnsTE' melaz, cola etB or COLD. SPOiSN PrSELId,0,L CO. - + fkosthen, to fellow isteu , and; even, to lay, doe ..:e9tr Mid, How -strange the old•tinie pictures of sport would look today— baseball teams boasting at least half•a-dozesa sets of whiskers—full- bearded cricketers --champions of the scull with their chins concealed. Today the athlete knows the importance of the well -shaven chin. He is conscious that he is most keen when he is well-groomed—just as is the business man and the soldier. For men who love outdoor life and sports, men of virile minds end active bodies, we have designed a Gillette Safety Razor with an extra stocky handle—the "Bulldog" Gillette, shown to the left. Not that the Gillette needs a sturdy grasp. A light touch, with the angle stroke, removes the most stubborn beard with surprising comfort. But there is a certain appeal in the thicker handle of the "Bulldog". Ask to see this special set and appreciate the poiut for yourself. r The "BULLDOG" Set includes oval Morocco Cane with two blade boxes tosnatch, and IZ d tublc.adged blades. The case, you wall notice, as closest aocanpe'ct as the famous Pocket Edition Gillsttec, and She price is .the earns, $S.00. Sold by alt deafercatering to men's needs. 573 1 •