Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - April 14, 1925, Winnipeg, Manitoba
Editorial Section pages 13 to 22 Freedom of Trade Liberty of religion Equality of civil i Juhls Fiare Winnipeg tuesday april 14 1925 printed mud published the Manitoba free Tress company limited a joint Stock Row pity. Incorporated under the Laws of Manitoba at its Jami Al office and place of business 300 curl Tou Street in Tuc its of Winnipeg Manitoba. 13 u. Mac Xix president and general manager. Scr metered at the general Post office London for throw flu the malls in the British Isle it Iii Inri shutting out British Trade Gir Henry Drayton it must be assumed Snoke for the con 1-vp party in parliament when he proposed his Panacea for he spoke in direct reply to the ills of Canada. H deet announcement by or. Kobb and at the end of his speech moved the party amendment to the budget. His deliverance on announcement of party policy. The conservative cure All for Canada s ills can be very simply s to Kec p manufactured goods which compete this occasion must therefore be interpreted As a deliberate h fined Vith oods manufactured in Canada. Sir Henry developed his hemp in some detail. Canada s imports now reach an annual sue of 892 million dollars and of this volume imports to the Lue of too million dollars can be and should be barred out by Ivy duties. Sir Henry specified the imports that would still be omitted were his plan to be put in operation. These include. In Cotton raw Wool raw silk crude rubber Iron Ore Coal and similar raw materials. It will be noted that none of the imports which Are to bellowed can be brought from great Britain except perhaps a Little Oal our imports from great Britain would be sponged off the -1 the completely. We should still expect great Britain to buy la wheat flour Bacon butter and cheese manufactured oods and All the countless articles for which we at present find a Market in that country Init As fur reciprocating by buying a corresponding amount of British made goods thus giving employ ment to British workmen there would be nothing doing. Only one question would be asked with re spent to a British import does to compete with goods made in Canada if it does shut the door and keep it out. A s assuming that the British continued to buy our goods after we had put no the Gates against British manufactures How would payment for them be made by Gold says sir Henry. Putting aside the Little matter of the impossibility of great Britain paying in sold what Good would the Gold be to us beyond adding enough to our reserves to re establish a convertible currency none whatever. Once that Point was readied we should have to impound the Gold As fast As it came to hand to prevent inflation. Great Britain of course would not pay us Gold under these circumstances even if she could. She would proceed to draw her supplies from countries not so unfortunate As to have sir Henry Drayton in charge of their affairs. Freight rates unduly High. Owing to the absence of West bound cargoes would assist in shut Ting the British markets against us. In losing the British markets ire should also lose the european markets and from the same causes. Can anyone seriously consider a fiscal policy that would Cost us the British and european markets sir Henry Drayton has it All figured out. That if we made at Home the 700 million dollars Worth of goods which we now import it would give work to men meaning an addition to our population of souls. This is the vain est of Hopes. With no markets for their products the agricultural population would Fly the country by hundreds of thousands and there would be no buyers for the goods produced by the additional workers. Sir Henry has worked out nothing but a Short Cut to National ruin. The whole proposition is so preposterous the reasoning behind it so absurd the consequences that would flow from it so evident that the average sensible a Anad Icin would simply laugh at it ii asked to give it his support. Yet it represents the considered policy of one of our political parties which will be asking the electors one of these Days to put it in Power in order that it May give effect to the Seh in Manitoba Long before Manitoba had at Talas the dignity of a province to bad an educational system chiefly under the Aegis of the Church. One of the first acts of the first Legisla Tive session was that providing for system of Public schools. Not much More than half a Century has elapsed but that time has been marked not Only by a tremendous growth in lines of material Progress out by a growth in Public education second to none continent. This a Eek the various factors making up that system will hold their twentieth convention and teachers from the Rural districts the new Canadian consolidated City and University will give licence that they Are in truth members of one whole. Chief outside speaker will lie or. John Lewis Paton retiring head Caster of Manchester grammar school n is n0t in any sense de. Tog Atory to the value of an outside speaker and a speaker of such reputation As or. Paton to remark As an englishman coming to this new province has something to teach England when to a system of Public school educator. No od8 with any experience Wilts that the teacher is the chief in any system of education is there any doubt As to the of education to the a j whereas in Manitoba the very be percentage of children Are in Tendance at publicly controlled a and whereas in Manitoba in instances the school is not the school in the Ordinary or he term but the one Centre and culture it Maes Clear How great a respond it 5s that is placed upon the r therefore the annual g of this body carries with it for the whole province deed for the whole Dominion. Report made by the so Bureau of statistics furn is evidence so far As figures can regarded As evidence that the torn of 01 our educators is bearing Rait. During the year 1922-23 enrolled in our educational 155-ss7 pupils of whom in state controlled elementary and secondary schools and 505 in private elementary and secondary schools. The rest were at the University business colleges or other special schools. Of those in the Public schools were enrolled in elementary and in secondary grades. It is in the secondary Grade s that an astonishing increase is recorded nearly 50 per cent in two years. This follows on a general raise in level All along the line As recorded by the census figures of 1911 and 1921. First there is the increase in regularity of attendance. The Cen sus of 1921 showed that s0.8 per cent of All children Between the Ages of 7-14 attended school upward of seven months in 1911 the figure was 61.7 per cent. There was a larger attendance in 1921 at 14 years in 1911 at 12 years and the average Grade at the age of 14 is Between 7-8. In 1911 this average child apparently reached no further than a year in Grade 5. Now to raise the general level from Grade 5 to Grade 7 and comments the compiler is an accomplishment the full significance of which is difficult to realize Grade 5 is Only a few Steps beyond illiteracy the knowledge acquired in Grade 7-3 satisfies the minimum requirements Tor admission to technical or Agi l cultural schools and to business schools and enables the child to read Good books and magazines by which he can further improve his the figures further show that this improvement is not confined to the Urban communities. It has taken place in like proportion in the Rural although there is More room for improvement in the latter. Of the children Between the Ages of 7-14 inclusive in Rural communities in is s per cent attended school for some period while or per cent of those attending school were in school for seven to nine months also 72.5 per cent of the population from 14 attended from 7 to 9 Mont pcs. Of the at the same Ages in Urban centres 95 5 per cent were in school for some period and of these or 96 s per cent attended from .7 to 9 months. The proportion of children of this age who attended less than seven months therefore was 27.u per cent in Rural communities As compared with 7.75 in Urban communities. The corresponding Fig ures for 1911 were 45.5 per cent in Rural and 21.5 per cent la Urban communities. So far As the teachers themselves Are concerned it is noted that among the the proportion of men is rising it. Being now 1 to . Permit teachers have practically disappeared. Politician and judge lord Oxford or. Asquith is now a judge. He has been appointed a member of the judicial of the privy Council and he will also sit. In Appeal cases carried to the House of lords doubtless he will make a most admirable member of these courts in View of his great ability his wide experience and his Legal attain ments. But he is also going to continue to Lead the Liberal party. His political he has announced Are not affected by this appointment. This combination of judicial and political offices in the same Man with alternating activities in the court room and political Ros Trum seems extraordinarily archaic to canadians. The political judge or the judicial however he is to be described was a very Active figure in Canadian govern ment a Century ago but the Divi Sion Between the two offices has been for the past so years wide and unbridgeable. French fear proposed pact Paris correspondence Manchester guardian emphatically French opinion does not share or. Chamberlain s vision of the Dawn of a better Day rather is the German offer regarded if As Dawn at All As one in the lurid color of the Shepherd s warning As the prelude of one of the most difficult lays that French diplomacy has Ever had to face. The foreign Secre Tarj s professions of love for France do not in the least mitigate the Chilli Rig and depressing effect of a speech that in one key sentence killed a persistent illusion it is not within the Power of a British government to offer to the French government or the belgian government a one sided pact of guarantee of their Frontier directly it is this sentence above All others. That is picked out for melancholy comment. It is rightly perceived that this emphatic unambiguous pronouncement Means not Only the death of illusion but inevitably implies the abandonment by France of her in enious and Long continued Effort to attain Security through a ring of military alliances around Germany As for the German offer it has received much less attention. Cer Tain voices complain of m. Herriot s concealment of the offer though he has had it in his pocket for weeks past. The majority of press commentators refuse of course to endorse or. Chamberlain s testimony to its sincerity. All describe it As a Mere trap. No attempt is made to disguise the belief that the this jus Sions thus provoked by Berlin will come to nothing and that it will not be too difficult to throw blame for the failure upon Germany when the end of the Cul de Sac has been reached. The Semi official Temps repeats or. Chamberlain s words Given above and adds Here at last we have the naked truth All rhetorical Mirage. In no event will England accept either the protocol or an Anglo Franco belgian pact within the framework of that pro Tocol. For the first time in five years when British policy tries not to be hesitating it is against the Isca of Mutual assistance and the Solidarity of the allies. Thus it finally declares itself. We cannot disguise the regret we feel at taking formal note of the naturally the melancholy of the Temps take.? a bitterer form in less response if papers. But the real problem created by or. Chamberlain s shattering phrase is How now to reconcile France s policy with her duty to Poland. If m. Lie riot consents to follow great Britain s Lead May it not Lead to the creation of a mutually Guaran teed zone Rhine which France too dare not invade if one Flay she wished to carry out her duties As an ally of Poland the British initiative threatens to shake the whole Continental Block built up by the French general staff and the qual d orsay since 1919 for the enforcement of the treaty of ver Sailles and other peace treaties. If Ever we come to such a West Ern pact As London and Berlin de sire argues Pertinak everything else will fall into Thuc background including the treaty of Versailles. Whatever we do whatever is promised this five Power pact if nver it comes into existence will out weigh both the Versailles treaty in its entirety and the covenant of Tho league of nations just As the Lon Don agreement of August 1924, has wiped out All the reparation clauses of the is evident that France so far from welcoming the British initiative really deplores it and will enter upon this new Avenue Only with the greatest reluctance and the de termination to take the earliest Opportunity to spoil the adventure. Tha world s greatest map from the Boston transcript when president Coolidge initiated his Campaign for Economy he thoughtfully remarked that me pro gramme not contemplate neglect of the natural Progress of the coun try this attitude is reflected in a minor but interesting Way in his signing of the Temple Bill which affords financial and other facilities for completing what probably will be the greatest Topographic map Over made. This will consist of six thou Sand sheets covering More than an acre when Laid out a erecting the United states in detail so minute As actually to show not Only every natural Bat every Road rail Road Bridge House and every other outstanding work of the hand of Man a compilation so stupendous As to be encompassed by the Eye Only in its lesser features. Even Square mile of Earth and water is being reduced to a picture by the combined forces of the geological Survay and coast and geodetic Survey. The work has proceeded haltingly for years and will cost1 when finished about meet the East by . Hull. The Queen was sit Ting at a table for six Tilting John dab att s Beer into herself when we arrived. Kate is Large and fat with a baby doll s face and bobbed hair and she informed us that she had been imbibing the Beer brewed a Monsieur Labatt since five o clock in the afternoon it was then eight thirty and we thought that Kate s baby doll head must be made of plaster Paris or Efte that Mona. Labatt s Beer was made of ditch water. Kate swallowed another Glass called for her Bill fished her Money out of her stocking gazed with her Ero ogly Eves at the Assem Blage and agreed to take another one. Gas ton too it the orders. Gas ton was the it was a Longbow room with a patterned beam be liner. It was full of tables Olmi in note cloths the chairs were Light Cane chairs a strident pianola jangled in a Corner and at the tables parties of men and women were sitting quaffing the in Ebria Ting bowl and smok is Cigar ettes and laughing and chattering. Aiters ran about through the smoke with bottles of Beer Etc. Business was excellent customers were pour nor in. It was a tavern a Hull Hull a in Quebec and. Is just Over the River from Ottawa. You can walk into a Hull tavern and buy Beer or wine and sit and drink it till it reaches its level and come., out at without Bren the Law. Had. Hearl a it about Hull and Here we were in the Depths of one of its famous taverns watching the game As it was played. 1. 6 our tavern ran on what is called a restaurant License. That Means you cannot buy liquor unless you buy food. But As nobody wants to eat and everybody wants to drink the food stipulation is overcome very simply. When Gaston asks what weel you and you Tell him you want a bottle of John Labatt he brings you with your bottle of Beer a cheese Sandwich for which you pay ten cents. But Yoji do not eat the Sandwich 3rou. Preserve it or Uso it for an tray but you do not eat it and strength of your Sandwich which is or had been food you can drink bottle after bottle of in. Labatt till you Are. As full As the Ottawa River. All on a ten cent Sandwich. Tavern can Only sell liquor till ten o clock at night. But who wants to go Home at ten especially on saturday night the Law is that no liquor must be sold after ten but there is no Law that prevents it being ing drunk after ten so Here is what we do at about Twenty five minutes to ten Gaston goes to the switch Ana switches the lights off and them for a couple of seconds and that is your signal. You then give Gaston your last and your last order May be for a Case of Beer or As much As you think you would like to drink before you totter Home. You have thus ordered before ten o clock and when ten o clock comes round you can go on pouring it Clown till the tavern shuts up shop which for All we know May be six o clock in the morning. We left at eleven fifteen and drinking was gowns on apace and an irritated French youth moderately huddled was scowling ferociously at his lady Friend and telling her that for next to nothing at All he would beat her up like pan cake Batter and it might have done her quite a lot of Good too. The liquor is not cheap. There were two kinds of Beer costing thirty five cents a bottle the. First bottle you drink costs forty Flye ten cents being added for Tho Sand wich. A Glass of wine costs the same As a bottle of Beer. You can not buy whisky or hard liquor. Red and White wines Champagne mixed drinks your Sandwich for a raft you can put far out do sea on those but though the Tav Ern was crowded with both sexes none them got really stewed except one citizen just behind us who insisted on keeping his Cap on and finally keeled out Well shot doing his Best to sing and fortunately not succeeding. And then there was Kate the Queen and her numerous slaters. They were at All the tables. They had the free entry to the tavern. They came without escorts and. They poured the liquor Down their White and powdered necks and puffed out Clouds of Snoke and tumbled Cigar Ette Ash All Over the White table cloths. Kate and company were supposed to add softness and Glamor to the gilded scene. We h and wine Little bitter in the Glass we had hot old Josh gered out growling a catch and not the pianola Clang like 7l demented Belfry and Kate and her Sisters were celebrated. In the famous lines let us have wine. And women mirth and laughter sermons and soda water j the. Day after. Well. Kate and company May. Have added color to the scene but n o soft Ness. Little parisian types blondes with peach Bocim faces and pretty Dove s eyes keen As giblets even when suffused by the Vapours of five bottles of Beer Large ladles in party dresses and " Marcel waved hair who seemed to Bloom. In the tobacco reek like those remarkable Lowers which thrive the Depths of caverns Plain ladies pretty ladies Pale ladies Pink ladles thin ones fat ones tall and Short ones sitting puffing smoke and shaking their bangles and sipping from Tho Glass the pianola jangled itself when you fed a dime into it and the White faced marvelled lady fed it dimes All evening. So this was Hull was it this was the wild night life fre had heard so much about and our tavern we assured one of the Best of the most re Hull. Helen i who had been soul Viliy eating a Beefsteak and smiling dreamily at the fat Man at the next table drifted away with her Sester Kate crackles. Of laughter sounded through that rcom Gaston ran about serving up Piast Ain t it asks one of our companions. Says we with a Yawn of and we get out there and into the Chilly night to blink the cigarette smoke out of our eyes. The air has a keen Fine Edge a dark night with Twenty million stars. On the Heights across the River Are the parliament buildings and the lights of Ottawa and we Are thinking very kind and Wistful about the Prairies. Lord Balfour it is Plain should keep off the Jericho Road. A o France is to have a. New govern . It seems so easy to get a new government in Europe. They can get two or three new govern ments without having a general election while Over Here in Canada we have to put up the same old governments for four and. Eight and twelve years at a time. It is getting so that the City of Chicago alone can provide enough tragedies to carry the newspapers Over the week end thereby making it unnecessary for persons in other parts of Canada and the United states to charge railway engines at Crossings Point guns at each other in sport and have them go off drown themselves while bathing in the Creek sunday afternoon after having a heavy dinner failing to have the brakes work while putting the car ferry Etc., Etc. Chi Cago May yet save the country. Neither the unionists nor anti unionists Are satisfied with the Church Union Bill passed in the on Tario legislature. Does this mean that the Bill must be pretty nearly All tight Hon. A. B. Hudson s suggestion that Canada proceed to develop her Industrial life in connection with the things she can make better and cheaper than other nations has so much Good sense to it that it is not Likely to make much of an Appeal to the Industrial moguls who. Prefer the Protection of a Tariff Wall As High As their necks. The fairest Flower in the Gar. Den of Spring is the fresh rhubarb pie. M now if someone will come along and invent a Garden Rake that by turning a Small Thumbscrew can be converted into a Brassie or the country May yet be saved. Complaint is made from Europe of a hidden Agency at work to run Down Canada this is not Surpris ing. Right Here in Canada you can find a lot. Of unhidden agencies do ing a. Similar work. You. Ever hear a. Californian knocking California fifty five progressive candidates . Against the liberals in the coming provincial election in Saskatchewan. This will mean Candi dates in All but five of the sixty Ridings. The Saskatchewan House consists of 63 members. Moose jaw regal a and Saskatoon each electing Tilro members Liberal govern ment will contest All seats. But where do the conserva Tives come in or is the name dying out in. Western Canada senator Couzens of Michigan says that women would make better senators than men. Is based , . Theory that they could not very Well make much worse. The daily saying of Sam Slough a tree pow feature produced by free press staff. Writer. Free advice from the cities about How to make farming pay but to far they be found nothing to beat blowing Aoi conservation of health by f. C. Routley general Secretary of the Canadian medical association repairing hand injuries in Winnipeg not Long ago a store keeper while preparing an order of cooked Ham by Means of a rotary meat Slicer contrived to take a slice from the Palmar surface of his Rig fat the slice was about an. Inch Long and included one third of the Circum Ference of the Finger. The profuse bleeding resulting from the Caria de so much excitement that no thought was Given to the piece of Finger which had been sliced off. Tho injured with Hie hand hastily tied up in has apron ran half a mile to his. Doctor a surgeon of. Careful tort to knew All about him and his business. On opening the unwrapped hand the sliced piece of Finger could not be found so in the doctor s Automo bile the Man was rushed Back to his store where diligent search was made for the lost slice of digit. Eventually it was found wrapped in tin undelivered parcel of cooked Ham. It was now fully half an hour since the Accident but the doctor thought it was still possible that the Finger Licci was still alive and that plastic surgery should Ibe tried. The Man was a healthy subject the Cut had been made by a Sharp knife Edge causing Little tearing of the tissues the meat with which it and the sliced Finger had come in Contact was cooked in its Interior and therefore sterilized so that in Hia estimation the Chance of blood poisoning was All these factors so much reduced that he thought it Safe to try re placing the slice Finger. Suc Cess in the attempt would mean More speedy Healing absence of deformity and a. Better sense of touch so the fragment was carefully washed in halt solution and accurately re applied. No stitches were used but a slender ribbon of Gutta Percha was wrapped about the Finger to hold the Patch in its place. Light dressings were then applied and nature was left to do her work. Recovery was Complete with the exception of a very Small part of the thin Edge of the sliced fragment but today it requires the closest inspection to locate this graft while the sensation of the. Finger is practically Normal. This is but one Case which shows How modern surgical methods Are directed definitely along the line of conservation. In Case of Accident the whole idea is to restore the injured part with the least possible loss of tissue function time and expense. Industrial accidents stand second As causes of permanent debility and the loss of a right hand Means in the Case of craftsmen artists musicians and Many other people an almost fatal disability it is Well that everyone should know what can be done nowadays in the Way of plastic repairs after injuries. Recently a Carpenter while splitting firewood placed his left hand Block. Unluckily he lost c Matrol of the axe in his right hand so that it dropped and Cut off the thumb left. The Severance we is Complete except for a strip of the Weto of skin Between the thumb and Index a piece about two thirds the thick Ness of an Ordinary Lead Pencil. The Cut went through the far end of the first Bone of the. Thumb damaging the joint Between that and the second Bonfil and dividing All the tendons leaders in the thumb. Did the surgeon just Cut through the strip of skin and close up the wound after discarding the severed thumb no he remembered How important the thumb any hand. He thought of the disability a car Penter f in particular would1-suffer from the loss of one of them so he deemed it Worth while to try plastic repairs. Fortunately the axe had been newly sharpened and had a keen Edge so that the lips of the wound were not crushed. The too was tolerably clean the stump of the is always the would have an excellent blood sup ply and there was just a Chance the thumb could Ibe patched in place. Carbolic acid solution and iodine As were discarded As too drastic. Dry cleaning of Bone and was resorted to instead. Nothing must interfere with the at tempt to reunite rapidly the severed thumb with its stump. The tendons and front were stitched with cat gut one stitch at the Bone steadying these while the skin , closed by three stitches equally placed around its margin. Bent was then rested on of Gauze held in the Palm of the hand that if it healed but was stiff it would be in a better attitude for Normal functioning. Weak iodine was applied to the margins then the hand and wrist bandaged the severed thumb when applied to its stump appeared quite lifeless. later dark Russell tank s social stationery dept. Special for one week Only to keep cur engravers Busy we will Supply a lady. Or gentleman s Copper engraved in wedding script Type and 50 cards embossed from the plate All for or 100 cards for delivered free to any address in Canada. Will out of Eity customers please use this Coupon to r u use i l a n g s Bop is hop Winnipeg. Supply me with card plate and cards. Name on plate Send same to my address at p. O. s. R. Hunter co. On display this week some very tasty Spring tweeds in Bannock and scotch. Her ringtones. Importing tailors 189 Lombard Street Blue but gradually this changed to dark void. Infection appeared Only in two tiny spots and was carefully controlled by proper cleansing. The softer parts of the thumb at first ii rank and lost sensation. Stiffness developed As was expected with Tia knitting of Bones and ten As the Healing process went -.thumb once More filled out sensation returned and by the application of the Best methods of physio therapy even the stiffness had disappeared extent. Thus the Carpenter has his thumb. In other a tips with other even today unless the greatest care arid skill had been would have gone the Way most severed flesh. C v perhaps the War. Has taught a face to face with the re sults of accidents such As these the Man verbose Job it is to make repairs Lias to Call up every resource Given him by his Long arduous training his experience and his workaday knowl Edge til men things. A rapid but Complete Survey of the whole situation must show him How the Accident occurred the nature of the Ocie Patlon of the patient and some tiling of his general health a. Careful Swift estimate must be Mads of the actual damage done and what the outcome is be. Then can he proceed with either repair or treatment. Fortunate 13in the Case of hand injuries the life of the patient is not the first concern but with careless or mistaken handling1 even simple wounds May become so. Good judgment the trained mind skill and an ability to act promptly Are All features of Suc Cess in plastic surgery. Growing tired of turmoil Fum the London Spectator in of the Irish habit of being ail i government and the government s inevitable unpopular Ity earned by keeping order and collecting taxes the Southern Irish Are apparently growing tired of. Republicanism and Are Content to give the treaty a fairer trial. Birthday congratulations to col. D. Macpherson .ex-m.l.a., born Forest. Ont april 14, 1877. J. Leech Winnipeg born Lansdowne on april 14, 1866 Earl 02 Athlone governor general of South Africa born London 14, 1s74. Princess Beatrice aunt of King Geo tre. Born april 14, 1857. Solomon Budnitsky Winnipeg born Russia april 13, 1s53. From the Golden books Calvary by Isaac Watts . When i Survey the wondrous Cross on which the Prince of glory died my richest gain i count but loss and pour contempt on All my Pride. Forbid it lord that i should boast save in the Cross of Christ my god All the vain tilings that Charm Mornac i sacrifice them to his blood. See from his head his hands his feet sorrow and love flow mingled Down e or such love and sorrow meet or gems compose so Rich a Crown his dying Crimson like a Robe spreads o or his body on Tho tree. Then am i dead to All Tho world and All the world is dead to me were the whole realm of nature mine that were 11 present far too Small love a maxing so divine. Demands my soul my life my All. What marshal Foch has found in Germany from the York world marshal food directs attention to the German Preloh swear. The Green police the general staff and says that All these together could be made the Frame for an army of vast size. Quite possibly is True but the Point is not How much of a Force Germany might Bave but How much she has. That is. It is a question of How Many artillery pieces air planes and of ice tangible equip ment Are Aat Bialiy premises. For if the will to believe is there any paper plans Tor any military organization by regarded Cap Able of indefinite expansion. So far the worst that has alleged against on t score of tangible equipment is the secretion of a negligible Quantity or arms mainly in places occupied by French troops. If a True Bill can be returned against Germany let us have it. But if indictment by hypothesis is All that is forthcoming let us care fully distinguish Between what is and what might be. A strategic silence from the Washington Star you have been strangely silent of i answered senator sorghum that the people do in Flke a Man to talk continuously. It a bet Ter to permit the impression that you Are taking time Oft to do a Mettle protect Jour hands Wien washing dishes for nearly an hour and a each Day your hands Are exposed to the harsh Ness of Strong common soap and afterwards you look at them sorrowfully. Whiteness red and dried out. Don t use common soap any longer a spoonful of Lux skipped into z Foamy suds will enable you to Wash dishes quickly and easily. Lux softens water. It is As easy on your hands As the finest toilet soap. Lever Brothers limited Toronto ims keen forceful illustrations alive with Mere make Jour advertising step right out of the Page. Let to photographers engravers Notro Roami at landside St
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