'Save your hands and lessen your noise-cleari- ing worlr by‘ always using The soft, flat, flaky particles cover lots of sur- face and erase the dirt with little ef- , fort, and ensure healthful clean- liness. Won't. toughen or red- derl ‘the, hands. w h \ Thaillclihway‘ There ls absolutely no suilerer from who cvcr used. this we the ate! ‘not... t.‘ uw rcllcl’ _ T!‘ 3| , I Tli: lflnr 81.00 bottle rolhver you or you, mom-y back. Try D. D. D. us), loo. E. A. FOSTER. "DRUGGUFJT HUGHE$ DRUG 00.. LTD._ Iioy be a blood disease — but they certainly’ -"come to a head--' quickly and heal clean- ly, when a few drops of ~ir~J1 "-1. .‘~“'."l-vw “>4 Ulflltinjiri —l'ull strength-arc applied ‘every ‘few hours. _ Absorhine Jr. eases the pain, cleans the sore. destroys pus. kill: _all germs and starts a healthy lwflllhii from the bottom. Equally good for ah cases. Old Sores and Ulcers, and; un-around- $l.25 a bottle at mm drullllll oi-‘aeoerpllo-ld by w. I‘. YOUNGINC. m liyriun Building - - Mfllllfill Professional (Jards ilk-Donald & iiltePliooJl. .-\ . ‘I. .\. ‘\lrl)0.\'.\l.Il l}. Ikirrlufl-ril, Allorntiv. Ell‘. Money lo L V llllny min-mu: ' i "lu-"liilltldw" ...._-... .__. _ >._‘»--—- ——-- --- ~ir mm‘. c Ziilciiiifihi) tiriillilioln nl’ N, r. vow flrulluillu Medical ‘ssmoi mut- llolhlflll Priuvlln- umimi t» 5w. Er. Mu» M" ‘l rolll . - noise‘, linger" _ii“ll.n»¢..., on“? oootoi llirvet- . ‘ < - (llflre liooro-‘lvtu l: n. in. Llu ii p. m. Telelnlpiio ldflpl. . -" Blot-k 1t._hic(1>trl_gt_ui. B. A- ‘ imuniicriiii. column-git, are. Mime! u. “not... vol-u‘ ‘ (‘hir ltflowri. rum. ox! m" .v~.ioflN80N' mum‘. lj-f i.» ’ l‘, ilniliinronirohhnv, '1‘. IMRDLIJ JOIIIMIN. f‘. A. FRANK I. NMITII, (‘. A. Public Accountants and Auditors Membership In Inolltlion of (lliortereil Accountants of I’ Inland Non leotlit. nnll 21 li-B-Tlttflmol. - her. Sir Edward Marshall Hai-L-‘Dhe mun you told us wboul. yesterday, were prevented from years Emmi lit hec f l _ d m thinsdwfiillifyeud did not]. ‘W ll Cl’ - | Ci "ii-furl!" ‘Ballast lthe'll._¢ <uiken a t‘ . _ s, gives instant. . rpsslng skin diseases. i ll. ir. i\li-l‘lll¢ll; A MOUNTAIN CHALET in ‘Switzerland which ‘Mr. ‘B took. Mr. Bella's name was oiled, be did not answer. M‘r. Justice lMCClirdl6-iHBd‘ Iioiin any ‘moneyl-Jie was in League of ‘Natlonsfi ‘tinge in SwitzenlanM-Yes. man lbere. tain. in-ali. W-hy did‘n't you marry Bella? me not ‘to inanry him. Perhaps ivas ‘right, because lie was a er than myself. I ‘was ‘guided whom you ‘~ marrying, ivas siiso some younger than you'.’—I cannot mriilbei" exactly. tioii. hom0‘.'—We bim. - Did you tel] Lady Carnarvon t were ullowed ‘to un‘d ask her to use ‘her inillue After General Cowans left ‘home, said nursed there. Cowans at Lady ‘Caruarvorfs lioi powerih-Yes. When he ‘was at Mezitono did _ write to you at Barcelona and More, you ‘to ‘go ‘to him?—I was te-iograipbed ‘that I was coming 01108. lnliaw was going to visit ‘him. q The witness (lenied that lMai-guer- “You have ‘been lite ‘said to h-er, leverythlng to him. i .. P39‘ . .1onn. but they You ougbit ‘were u‘ot alo ‘that General gCowans ilfideflflpl l0 London, forbidding them to ,know what the general did." .-lti!f0i"l‘lll_i,’ to ik action hrouglizi- l'l!(!()\'l!i'}' Oi. i.- iby her for lllu lcur, the Wllllldii sud that she i him it had shall Ilull that lilllillTy‘ Mr. Bolin. HilC \\ Jill“: ‘Sir Edward Marshall Hall's Advice you actually ‘bi-lug Mi‘. Iloiiu u worth your while, ‘for the sake any oi that conversation. llid you not elicit ‘the warms din-lug letters which hud —-l told her everything. this man iloiiu?-'l‘hero was rupture ‘between us at any ‘time. bu‘: only asked mo ‘lur A3100 ( 12150. Silcuklng with mnolion, lilo wi uess ziildi-d: Ulilulwl livlllllllloll must inivu spout thousands pounds in hunting ‘me with 1M0 lives tor ‘lll0 last Y0"?- Mrs. Dennistoun turned would continue fol‘ u little long‘: ,,‘Vlr. Justice Mc(‘.iirdlia.---Sir PIMP-LES‘ ITGHED All. TllE TIME Face and Arms Covered. Could Not Sleep at Night. ’ Cutlcura Heals- , " My flee and arms were with maples and blndrilllil. Th! ‘time 4 scaled over. They itoheitiltid burned all aniline. and l would»! | ‘night. My lheelooliud so ‘ .4 that people lolhd about .12. " ind on advertisement for Cu- , ‘ileum Beep and Ointment and not for a free dimple.‘ Alter hill!‘ ll i got relief no purchased more nail if: i o weeks twee completely baled- ( ilnod) Min 104ml Jollymen. Lower Wlntwmfli,‘ Nova Beetle. Clear the pore: oi’ lni idol dolly use oi Cilllflre Bil? "a iouehoo of Cerium ‘Ointment u needed to eootbednilhlll» Clfllflll Talcum is ltqrlnt and rdrollllllb We. "'- The witness spoke of a cottage Did he ‘pay the rent of the cot- Whan you were there you ‘were “living openly togetherY-Tliere was only my maid, ‘Marguerite, and a The witness said that ‘the cottage was isolated on the 101p of~a moun- She ‘was there about 12 days The -wl‘tnesa.——l told ‘Lady Cal-nar- von all about it and she adlviefld eignei- and about live years young- The witness agreed ‘that she was at Barcelona in 1921. Mr. Bolln was also ‘there during part of her visit. She ‘first met Lady (Iarnurvon in - illie nursing home where General ‘» (Iowans was alter a serious opera- We-re both you and the gen- ,erui's wife visiting him at this you -were ‘devoted to the general that you could ‘see him?—'l‘he gen- ‘nral asked that ‘I should ‘be allowed . to see him. ‘the witness, die went to Lady Garnarvoifs house and was ‘She visfitc-d General] ‘Sir Edward Marshall ‘HaIL-Gen- oral Cowans‘ was a man of enormous popularity, wit-h ‘very ‘many friends and of ‘great ‘brain power and will ‘bed with influenza ‘myself, ‘but I ‘ lie telegraphed back telling ‘me not to go because his ‘brother- Mr. Boiln was than at Barce- iTllePe were others iii the ‘party, l Sir ‘Edward ‘Marshall l>lail.—Was ausc you did -uot,‘go to him Yflu have the motorcari-l do not out to tr ‘Sir Edward Marshall iIfliL-‘Dldifi, introduce hlin to me, and was not my advice to you that, as you hud got your divorce and were going to marry Mr. Boiin ‘it was hardly a ‘motor-car worth £350, ‘to adver- tizo to the world that You had ‘been Sir John Cowan's mistress for all those years?——l do not remember sympathies of Lady Cowans ‘bypro- been written ‘to you by .S.r John Cowans? was not the cause of the rupture between you and Sir John Cowans no liuvo you paid any 0i’ the costs of this tictloul~Slr George Lewis of to tho Judge a low minutes later and ask- cd that she should have n rest. Ills LoYdshi-p offered to odiourn for w" minutes, ‘but the witness Hi1 d Bill’ Ed- ward Marshall Hall. Y0" 114"" ‘ll-ml’ were bard and red Ind ‘ BANK oi= l-iEALTl-l Do you realize that yo Th m t r- m t | 4' ' - How ‘much did malls Mr- Bo- .:. .12. .'.'::."'...'..:.'"r.i. P“ d‘ he“ aerial pa‘ mo‘... m. TB: m money. , _ _ “m”: safe” way m your I lillvliero was he living la 19201- ~ oa’t think h ‘had yet gone to N» health-wet: intacqistokeep the Leis“ o, 1918mm. m Emu“ ‘c°““““°‘” , your body well-nourished. “md- " oliu but Mr. the helps you keep your deposit of strength inmctp < museums-moose. she for- lng your cross-examination. by house had not died you woul re‘ hini?~i am quite sure that I neve told Marguerite any ‘such thing. kucw Balllndailech She ma stayed. ‘it house rnrlie there. Mr. Senbouse visited ‘there also. you actually foilnd by your hus s“ -—It is not true. hat , tion was made against 1011-111’ Y0" “Ce husband, and that he true. Mm. Dennlsto the had never hear in, Jamaica. ‘ I88. devoted to her. and that sheiook ed upon him as a very dear friend should this young soldier be devot he im- in should. ' many?—-I do not think so. 8i- ‘Sir Edward Marshall Hall case—her intimacy with Cowans. of this case by your counsel -to no. that tho price you ‘paid was to be come his ‘mistress. ‘say that? l(‘(l The ‘pluintiflZ-l do. ‘let No, I did not do such a thing. illlu t.“l§l‘i'.ii' Ollie; on er said that.‘ tlon of this great man to whom you were immensely attracted. and you ‘became his mistress apart from anything to do with your husband? ——'l‘bat is not s0. My husband was discontented and wanted another position. 11.1 of “So-callled Sodiety." Your liaison with" the general was well-known to so-called soci- etyih-Yes. . - ,‘ I ‘put it to you that this was tlie position with regard to you and tho general and your husband: that you had ‘made up your mind that you were going to occupy that posi- tioii and nothing that your husband could have done would have dissu- adcd you trc-m ItZ-That is abso- lutely and entirely untrue. When I first met the general l hardly knew lilni, but at erwards I was devoted ‘to him. on must remarri- ber that ho was 30 years oldorthuu myself. t. ‘iii July, 1916, were you having n trouble with the generaIZL-Lleyond little potty quarrois“'wo never had any rows. The plaintiff afterwards‘ said she wished to ‘amplify that answer. in 1919 the ‘gonorabwus not hini- self, and ‘they ‘may have had what might ‘be called rows, but there was nothing serious. i " Sir Edward Marshall ‘Hail refor- icil tlimpiainilfl‘ to the letter ofJiily i2, 1916, in which tlindefondaut said "-Now, darling; don't got ‘le- prorserl about the luture," and ask- 8i ll‘ c. i‘. wanted your husband? Mrs. Deunistoun. ‘~— In spite of what he wrote h-u did not 's‘ticir like glue." H9 allowed mo‘ for his own ‘sake to go to the general. Sir Edward MarshallllaiL-You wcut ‘because Your husband could not control ‘you aadiiievsr did cou- trol you '!~-~'i'h_at isnpt true‘. I Do you know tum-ova‘- and-over filflllll application , haalieen made for the date of ‘tin-alleged =iigiieew mont‘ under whldhtyour lilunblnii agreed to ‘provide for you aad‘.tl_le_ the anawerhaiyuiways lltoeh- All!‘ they could notglvo a aeororfiotq than ‘betweoaihllrch 2s ant-Kw 28, 1921? -‘ I‘. . nest. Johli aisle-rim lain- unouraite. "'2 , su- Edward Ml‘ in Hall. -u‘ 1920 you were 1U at intervals during.“ ‘ “ ' _ I €“ i“ You say I no. " V The plolnlur denied‘ that lie‘- hum blind lave her any; Edeaee dor thq divorce. 3hl,~ilhid“.llllt sits. 11012011 discussed with‘ hint‘ wbothnt- he would defend the-divorce. ‘pP°°"'i‘ inns. . iliitlon for his not defending’ the w l-lt'on was that she‘ should return musfmalre deposits in the Stills Emulsion is the food-tonic, rich u‘ vita- mins V flint laclps thousands realize "dividends on their depositsin the bank of health. ' A little of Scotfis Emulsion It'll nothing more thiln your duty dur- Slr Edward Marshall l-laiL-i a-m ‘because it is a most painful duty- (To the witness.) —— Dlfl You W" at your maid, Marguerite, that if Sen- have run away to Australia with Mrs. Dennistoua agreed that she in Scotland. constantly Sir Ildwsrd Marshall Hall.—Were band's servant with Mr. Senhouse‘! I put it ‘to you that ‘this accusa- accepted your’ denial of it? ~— My husband knows {that that is absolutely un- sald that she a word oi’ any scandal about her, while she was Later tho witness ‘said that her husband know that ‘Senhouse was Sir Edward’ Marshall HaIL-Why ed to you'.’—i ‘do not know why he ‘How many men in your life have you had devoted ‘to you’! Agood said he now came to what he regarded as ‘the ‘most Important ‘part of the Generab Ho aekedi-Jfho Oilénlnl-Tieald that he had deserted you ‘for W215 that Sir John ‘bought you and the price he paid was that he obtained prcfernient for your husband and ‘Do you still Did you deliberately lay yourself ziptivulcfienoral C0wnns?—— 115.1 you lcii Lady (Jziruzivon ‘that lznncrzil had soon you at the nsvltrzzi occusionfl told ‘Slrucoigc Lcivis, and throwirru; '1 Hill h.- wus fll\\'~l.\$ vqry kind got to Si." lodwar-il .".l:‘r-;fl11ll ulwfli/ll sfivv yvu ‘in interview -_-_~|howevci- ‘busy he ivasZ-‘No, I ne_v- You were flattered by the alien-l oil: is it not true that you never‘ o her on thirpeveinolit it was nol/trueilhat the onlyeoii- 0"" ‘ ,- .. - 1"‘ . practically flllWlIQ-fW-PIHI ‘4-5- I ‘ llnsw that he bod very little money. o you know ~ at _vii execut- ing comimlsslong- ‘if, ‘tvéé both very bard Ill). aliiiwhenevor I went to ‘Perla l goivo him something. Ll When did you last sec‘ Mr. Bollu’! ——l have not seen him to speak to for two years. . - The Alleged collusion. l suggest that the whole matter was ‘settled in 1920, that if. you signed the. document which your husband required be ‘would. not de- fend the divorce petition, so ion! as he got reieaseiH-Jfhat is not true. You are now alleging ‘that in spite of the documents you signed ln November and December, 1920. and in spite of his ‘letter to you of I November 14, your husband, in April, 1921, made an entirely fresh agreement w-ith you?——l‘am alleg- in‘g that he ‘made an‘ agreement with ‘me in that April. You told your husband ‘that you were going -to ‘marry Mr. Bolln? —- Yes. ‘ Do you ask the Jury to lbeiieve that, knowing that you were ‘going to ‘be married, this man, your hus- band, in spite of his fluauolal {posi- tion, agreed ‘to support you ?—Yes; I was not going ‘to ‘marry a million» 1'0. I-le was going to support you as d the ‘wife ol’ another man?—_Cer- tuinly. I had been lending him l‘ money, and it was only ‘fair that he should ‘keep his promise"to me when he could. Was it reasonable that he should 5 ‘make suob a‘ promisei-Yes, irom his ‘point of view. Continuing on Friday the cross- examination of Mrs. Dennistoun. ' Sir Edward Msnshzill I-iall asked her.-—‘—Dui'ing the two years that you‘ were staying with Lord and Lady ‘Caruavon did Lady Caraavou l‘ practically dress you ?—- ‘She gave me a great lot of clothes. Did you ever ‘tell Lady Carnavon whwt a scoundrel your- husband was?——No. Did you say that he bad sold you to Sir John Cowans?——l don't think that I ever discussed ‘my husband with Lady Carnavon. Until you discovered that Lady Carnavou and your discarded hus~ band were ‘in love dd you ever - say a word against him?—I ‘told Lady Carnavon all my ‘personal - life. ~ glad to hear your Lordship say that The French Divorce. ‘Did you know that to get a div- orce in France ‘that would be valid in England you would have to prove‘ not only adultery but desertlon 7, Did SirGeorge Lewis tell you that? —-l do not quite understand. You wrote to your husband and over two yearBZL-Slnce 1919 ‘all had ‘been ‘broken ‘between us. Mr. Justice McCardie.——-I thought that you told us that you were hav- - lug relations with your husband at tin,- samc time us you were Sir John Cowans?—Not after 1919, Sir Edward ‘Marshall ‘i-lali. —"1ii .1920 you bad ‘been having negotia- tions with h-lm about ‘the divorce in Paris?-—\Ve discussed the posi- tlon. - Do you suggest that your husband ever deserted you?-—He was living with other women in Paris. Mr. Justice McCardle.—-When do with ‘ youusay that thefdesertlon began? -u‘ 1919. _ _ Were you willing to give up Sir John Cowans in l9l9_.and live with your husband as his wife‘!-—l can‘ not say what I should have done. Sir John Cowans was taking my husband out lo Mesopotamia. I suppose that we all three would have gone there. Sir Edward Marshall Hall. ~- When poverty came-ion you, didirt you prefer to lead your own life apart from your hllsbllndl-—Thatls » not ‘true. - - - ‘ The witness denied that when silo went to ‘Paris in March. lilill. slio took ‘to her husband a reply to her letter eihoill, ‘the divorce which reply had ‘been drafted. ‘by Sir George Lewis. ' _ _ ' Referring to Colonel Déanistounh _ reply, counsel asked whether. he ' had ever ‘before addressed the wit» ness ‘as "Dozir Dorothy." The witness _‘ cannot roman? ""“"'""—'“"'é “w, ‘fixin- fiu, yi,..w,pt;tuh‘,-‘i from lb‘ 1“I> n‘ <"-"‘r_\' olliwi‘ who shuttle ships aud other vessels bel0l1$il18 iber. Silo fllltiléliliullltl. she did no: BRIGHT HAIR imlllill"? ri;'|nid“i'in" All-ll lW-lchid I i‘ iiii-liiiliir;‘:l“"i“"i]“‘li-i"lHi-iiijilii) U) m “in UnuHiil-lulm. know whether u statement -by her “'l“"' "",'l"""_“f_ ." m’ , " , ,. . ' ‘ i _ f’ ‘ ‘ r . 1. .| I y" 05L" M " husband that. ‘M?’ domlcll“ w?" A Bllke“ halpbms" is “~“°",‘° gin‘ nil UH‘ “l, lnmllillnlk‘ ztwqll‘ mm“ l“ i‘-..-' ;: L "fifth. u l‘ ll'll(" flirlhlllil ill: lwklirlii i): thee (3'0tl'0°." French was in his own words. Sh»? iustreto the hair. A Millie “l """'"" ‘~‘ ‘l “"‘"‘ u, w“ m“. . (‘in-I I m‘ (‘||ill‘ll‘\‘Iil\'."| smut-limos known as the putrid 8'6 told lilm roillriily what to say when wool ‘is folded ‘into a [int ublong- ' _ w H. _'_ r m, q, I .,=. H I ‘qlip? "iwlrur; p, Adam's apple. i4 Hllllll" 9877c“- slm “w mm’ shaped ‘pad and (“Him-Cd Wm“ a Al. m‘ ‘H l IH- "it riiiliri"; li-riiild- -| 5i ' ll and rbr‘ ii"il up when ~]ll‘('lllii “t i=1 which will sell-JO!‘ ti! ii Mr. Justice McUordic.-— Where sqilelvetli silk. ’l‘hi-\= is WPIl l" llillfl’ -“ ‘- __ ‘f?’ f‘ “WV; ‘n hm‘ ' “m, r H, M. m“ um“ M1,“, “mm m, $35 ‘ ‘LL "_ m , had you got those-Points from?» ish the head after it itus bee“ brusn- ‘ml c‘ .. u.‘- _,‘ V‘ 1g} ' _] ‘ V“ “ ' ' , ' ' ‘ , 0h, I asked Sir George Lewis. ' 0t]. in rlre ordinary, way. Tho silic.““‘.<> ‘nun ‘i“~“- 4.‘. ‘.i.‘ i.‘ ‘o ,._ ‘Sir Edward Marshall H-all.— 11p to the time you-wont ‘to Sir-George Lewis the ,wholo_ basis of the pro- ceedings was that your husband was domiciled in ‘ScotIandY-d do, not agree, The $eottlsh lBWICTnl said that my husband had not go!‘ a Scottish domicile. ' not domiciled in~_Scot1antl. He sakil that as my husband-had said th-til lie was going to live in France hi: , domicile .mu"st- be French. ‘but that I to make sure, ho would draft ‘alet ler to wblcblny husband could rc- nlyjil he liked to do e0. ‘ fd Sir Georga ‘Lewis tell you’ that "you could. not get a divorce Against "your husband in France unless he ind o. French domicile? 7No.-l d‘ n't resilzehthat. "Hi6 wl nose lddallilllldl she did t tellflflir George Lewis about t r. “Blflhlillllllfll later. Siietidli not in ‘ of-‘Slr George Le I ‘ -a.l ‘or of Mr. Bolln. W-l} in i (To ibvcoatlaueihf " \ i ' -1; "‘ .,‘ iA notoriously ihliirit-‘ntlo urns f sooryvas one dilyholruetl, walk- r dawn than with go. m: c atimiai-ly in 4h .~gtitte_i'.‘ the ‘A pupil uieelixilfiiim his: rem n5, Jar-pioneer. iiow one you?" r" »sv.:::.‘ w 1 doift know her wedding presents. Sir Edward ‘Marshall Hall. -- Do you know that your husband was been limping for the lost hell-hour." Didn't Sir George Lewis suggemi h runomlmrrcrowu GUARDIAN BBRGT. lidAJrOgij "Pi-rammed (llziioihalilyfligomlgllltn look an" the . ' "h, _ p any more; did you on w o c s hots the matter with e w "mum, l1 Engineering Surprise oi 1- - - APoweriul Another Sensation at $925 17.0.8. Fat/Jory, Toronto, Talus Exlm Is the World’s Lowest Priced Four Cylinder 5 Passenger Sedan With Sliding _ Gear Transmission M olaine Sixwitltout arivalnear its Price T is an accepted fact that the new Overland _."' Six is the most brilliant engineering achieve- ment of the year. A new delight _to the eye! A new thrill to drive! A joy t0 ride in! A revelation in six cylinder economy-today the V most talked about car in Canada. Peoplesay it far outclasses any other car in its price field . . in charm of design . . . in beauty 0f finish. People are actually with its acceleration on hills and with its flashing response in traffic. The new Overland Six outclasses other cars in all of. these things because of its advanced engineering. You should see the New Overland Six—and don’t deny yourself a good ride. Then judge how precisely Willys-Overland has sensed and gratified the ideal of those who seek style and distinction without extravagance. Standard Z-door Sedan, 81,400; De Luxe 4-door Sedan; $1,635. F.O.B. Factory, Toronto. Taxes extra. Service Station 186 Grafton Street 1\/l ‘l. Q) C) [kc t idaclen MacDonald I l-‘l' ,\' l']li.\ l. DlItEWYOR-S Mi i i Service Completely Satisfactory , Wt‘ are cminenblyifitted as a result of study, experience and equipment ‘lid “er a complete ‘and satisfactory serv- ‘ w.‘ are prepared at all times" to. thoroughly disinfect rooms and buildings w here there has been contagious disease} v --1=iio1\'n 14o.‘- .\ inlrLA Ni-in SERVICE. i l ‘ l a , wouldn't swell!‘ _..1.~y|¢-, Passing Show. ... I ‘nwilmr, JJIJt-aul . mail