The Lucknow Sentinel, 1934-05-17, Page 6• filtafOritis .„. .c •
, :" • ,olyne EUirnau. e.• Rapt.' of • Imperial
r,waYs- travelling a Boccie:I "Fly-.
Vottriar; by the Air Mall to India
•terrYing two copies 01:4 taiklng lIlia OP
- the pi-nide:or Na.palata, ;which it: Is mot
• argent.81141 reach there palely. ;
. . •
.The..Wince is in LondOn. Wo 111 to
• travel and ..tha. tenting Aim- Is sent, to
loll the efforts Of TEE- Vol.4171tE„` his
•• balt.brother' in •
On the same Mailt• 11ne.traveTh Norah
,
Beaman...a ir1 Glynn had met onW e
week before.. :Stefan. 1+.1eAL ;and •,DE
-agents or.,',the ;Vulture ,are...•teitee in,
eeverat atterapte, but at.„Oolilee the at-
tache
Case,.In whiCh-':Glynn tarries one
• elin Is stolen. Next morningafter -the:,
Uner bas ,left Galilee, Stefan .and Maxi.
who have. stayed bebind, thinking their
„...work"Onished,, learn- that :tWo Copies' are
arrIet by the: Courier.. Stefan ;;hires. a
'small 'plane. and : hopes - . to •• 'catch .. the
but engine] trouble developes and
;theY leave without ,him.
•-Glynn .1s. again attacked in', Basra. •
. .
ne-bas-a-apeciat-ehoin made • ; •
; Glyrin-ii-ordered:-hy the-
wantthe man assistirie, non at Atheas,•
„ , . .
"My ' deer Glynn," cried .Norah, and
burst into Ititighter., "It's very eyi,-
-dent," -ahe Went on; "that- you don't
knew, the standard . of wealth the
Prince belongs t�, as his neighbors
• like.myeelf do. Why, I • sure the
-Print -W-4Yetdiiti,d*ijemdgkeigi.16;-
wering his,dignity if you offered Mr.
Doyle any ftesent•iess
•saiir: a brace of elephants, or a dist
mond', atudded:,cigarette case." .
'Which ,in tern's. , of hard -cash,"• .
"Said Glynn dubiously "is up inthe
ten of pounds ' Oita& I wonder if you
are tight. Sanaa to me I'll have. to
eableand--ask-towhat-eineunt-rm,:au--
therized to spend." . • : ' .
"That ..- Might .13e the best plan,
she agreed. • :
just , said Glynn
slowly, "the Prince seems. tole a ge-
, • „ ,
nerona• sort•Yof. chap Or rather appre;
dative of ' anything done. for .,, him.
And When he and AirweYs•leet,.all
*bent' the • syekinatie attempts to
nobble me, -AinwayB, will think itT a
feather:1i their calithiat one Of their
sten put this•Job., through." ,,•••
. She gave a41itt1e shiver: "Which is
-
a, reminder that ,The journey IS not
lini-shed yet,. and there may be, More
.danger for yon.'"I', ' •,:114 , .
'I don't see • 'it," answered Glynn
"Yell,.'Ve.' read ',What, the cable
, about eteps:.being,,...taken:,ter see
•:‘ [PM looked after it Karachi: It 'won't
,any wOrry, Of mine •; after --Mat.,
Airways have always ' been very
de-
cent to Me the last, hitbeing their
picking me, to recommend to the
Prince. What I'm thinking Of is that
'they. 'might' give Me- a leg -up after
thie,--prornatiintof some sort."
'You mean into the office. and the
management side?" she asked but
he made a little grimace at that and
rigid Jiesitatingly, "Pilot , of the big
•liners is about 'thebest they can, give.'
I Man in the air, and 'I'd .rather hate
to chuck outdoor work forthe'office.
But if I can :get promotion, I'm for
It whatever it means."
"EurvillY are yuu so liefr-011.
- motion all ,of a sudden," she 'asked; '•••
"Because," -he • said deliberately,
turning to look at the face to close to
liisas they sat side by Side "Because
I Want. to be, in a -position to ask ,
fertain 'girl to Marry me."
She 'smiled back At him and leaned
ever until heri
. 1ps were close to his
tar. "And 1 believe,' she said, oa
cer-
ain girl Might say yes -with or with
" otit ,tyour .prometion and better ,pos-,
' , • - ' CHAPTER XIII.
THE; STRANGLER CORD
When • they arrived at Shargah
;hat evening, they found it to be an
' Arab town of some 46)1 importance;
but Airways -had in -course -of --con- ed -of irelue-to-Glynn,-iLlielatLha
until the liner is ,readyto take off a,
•
"And if you volunteered twenty
times,". said Norah promptly, "you
,couldn't perePallo ine to 'go- 1 think
We've both had enough of banear
thanks." :
r
Vroud” Father
Demands Reco
"Pity, in a way t4.'t,oiCePOPed up
IAA this,",‘ ;said Glynn, '''!laut We' only
/or. to -night, , 'telnerrow We'li ke
Rt Karachi be under the, Wing.
f thq, Prince's People. I've Oct much
inignig' on togetting- nir., packet ,
,ihroagh, to take one he'perth ef tisk -
I don'tlarve.te. You've g the R •
side,' 1. suppose? ,
"I have," she said ,promptly. • "I
told you it would' not leave my, and
it hasn't 'and won't.•
- - "Reminds' Mei"- laughed-- Glynn,
Since tbe Prince is se prompt to rec-
ognize any help given to me on this
trip, 1,11 have to recommend you and
your key carrying as a bit ,to be sltit-
ably rewarded. Now, -what do - you
'think you'll ask him as a suitable re-
ward?" ' •.• . •
."Lhaye all that settled in my own
1114-ist----airead*"----s- he -a
and turned the subject by asking i :thou told mo ,,,.., with .emphasis.
- 'When they. told me the number,"
he said, "I, ahnest deznanded a. re-
munt ' :AS LIKE AS PEAS
"You are certain to get the Kings
bounty," 3 said.. - ...
leforo-dinnet-wesTserv tl-,7andAhen--tTl.::! wife's •al__Pu_tilserLixtd.,
they . went in to it, and Sat down, ,twins," he said reflectively. "Perhaps
Glynn ' called the wine waiter.. 'This that had Something to do,withit." .
is our last night on the mail trip,'.' ,-, He told, inc that, co ' "ig , from
untak\ve\T
he. said' to Norah, so we nuiSt 'cele- left to tight; the ebildien Ighed
brate it properly."• .}Ie :picked his •in at p, lbs. 13. ozs, a Ma, llillit.4, s,::
Wine and ordered it, and the - Wine A lbs. 2 oze.;. arid 3 lbs. 15174 °Zs., Xe,
stewatd went off to send, it:in. , 1 aPectiyely. • :
The Indian passenger before : he I -*We've named them John; Fred, Ar -
went in to 'dinner, 'had _a:little talk
withoneof the Arab winters ,;,Whe
Spoke enough English to understand.
, .'"It is a little'joke,slifine Of us wish
th'play On the, sahib,' said the Indian
"If, you can AO Whi0 I ,wish, 'apti say
nothing to anybody-" he passed the•
money into the man's readYband"-
and say no Word to anybody,- you
'shallhave the same • amount • when
you tell me Ayhat_you4aye..learned,"• ,..
It was the only long ' after that
Glynn learned the inner' meanirii-Orf-
the little incident which "followed --
learned too late for the information
to be of use to him, like a good .deal
More that ',came Out when the whole
.business Was. over, r
_
' The waiter,. in pouring the wine
and lifting the ,bottle, over Glynn's
shoulder , spilled a little splash of
it. Quickly and with ' profuse apolo-1
,
Shghtly Dazed When Wife
to,,,Row Sons
--,good Start Towards
Po.aball
a‘re. t1e views of the ,young
man whose wife gave birth to four
boys- in,- Pirminf(4aM*, • England, as
as
reported by a correspondent. ;•
First View: Nothing :just slightly
dazed.
Second view: More than a
inhabitants and it had to be mi."
Third view."Well it' S 'a geed start
%maids' n football,' team,. „ ' '
„Stanley •Ilitchine• the father, is
tWenty-Six, years old; his wife- is only
twenty-three • They haie-.4 daughter
aged two.
, •"Mt. and Mrs., Hitchins live inthe
Wailiwood Heath district.
I found Mr. 'Hitchins in ythe Bit-
mingham...Matrnity Hospital .shortly
after his family had been born. He
was standing unnoticed by the fus-
ing nurses and beaining doctors.
He had been called from work (he
is a painter), and after counting the
babies eareftillY; retained VI his wtirie
After Congratulating him. I asked
him heiv, it 'felt to be the father of
#00.1tairy4;nrel.:1;t1hoye. -;
he had found the Princes telegram;
- he said, "and I'm completely
puzzled how I• could have lost it. I'd
have sworn' I slipped ,it in my side
jacket pocket' but it isn't in it, or in
any other." .
This talk took. place ',the lounge
gies, he Whipped the napkin OVer :.is
atm, wiped. • over Glynn's shoul eri , Ouray, Colo., -For :4/ ; years „Mrs:
and down his back.. But as the wiping • Charles N. &mei.' as a, slit,er• to her
.reached doivn. 'Glyrni's' waist, deu hter it was •
•
Ihnr. and "Stanley. to save them' get-
ting They -
are ia-like , • .
ex-
ceptihe big one'who has got a snub
I told him. of Biriningliera's &On,'
ing birthrate, and how -grad Dr. NeWS-
holme, the Medical officer„ok health
would be. He renzinded-roe .of the o-
ther .million or sq inhabitants.
-1..L.relninfled him_ of the football
. • ' •
4se row,
0 ar Abroad
Russia Latest attori`to'Adopt
Game — japan `and 'Other
• Countries - Already--Enth:-
siastS •
Baseball, America's
national Pak-
tiznetis -hemming more and more in-,
ternatinnallii;eharadter, writes' .Irving
G. Gutterznan m the N. r Ac
cording to recent: dispatches, Soviet
Russia has4:a4ar,ogmira.found'a• ‘p the
lace for ofil:i.1:3•p•tionit4.,.,,,m, ra.:.eou..ntrY, is added to
the number aheWing. • interest in.
•
, •
While ,laseball is in its beginning
it,e0e in 'many.' countries, in .,TePan
it. his been enjoying: Vast .pepUlar-
itY ' for. .several.„' Years.. Introduced
.'iriere.•Than., a decade' ago and foser-
•
by , larger japaneset-ainitet6
Kea, it has became. •ene:'Of.fthe.'niost
Popular games the country. goantiy. ie
net lincommoil for ta,.etawd :of $6,000
to see a.•centest betWeen two collegeteanis
•• . . •
Picked American learnt have teur.-
ecr Japan, receiving Teuame--eyatiene
wherever ' exhibition . ganieff, were. plair-
----thatl.new-tke-Raltlea+-4.,,-aireh.
Stare, as %Babe.Ruth and Lou Gehrig
-
ate to , MOW „.;.4Paneie. The
visiting•,niajer:lettguersi;•.:have been
beset 'hy.,antegtephrluntere. Accord-
ing :to Gehrig,,,.lhet.intereet
in base-
bali :in, Japan just f borders On
the fanittitat° , •
• • , •
".' THE NIMBLE JAPANESE
. Naturally . end:. active,: • the
Japanese have prOVed, tete' exCellent.
flelde and , base ...runners. . Their
piecbere -arecleVer, and; Well ACquainf:-.
•ed with ' ,the yeriMie ., • curve balls,
lapaneie• teams, Played: Ameti-
•can,"Opllege ninee;.••• -and ?haYe been
Mere,' than a Match for ,sonie them.
Basehaifihasrl‘n ' well, developed.
Africa, North and.:.South,. Last Fall
it''..wite'reported ihat','incire'Ahan.forty
'Organized teams were active in 'TIMIS;
where there, are•inere than. a thenfiand.
ballplayers of at least a dozen
nation-
alities. Organized ' aniateur leagues
Play regularly and many finis turf
out 'Stir the,' gazilea, The 'first ''contest
•between an American and. North
-jtifieoy team :t-tiorliface. July,
/93g.. On the North African "team
were five, Arabs, Italian, One
Frenchman, one .Aliglii-Frenchreati
and one'I)erber. TeaMe, in the Lijgue
.Tunisienne . also ..Turks,
Spaniards,, ,portugtig,ei; English,
:South Africans, Airiericana,: Moroc-
cans,
, Sene-
galese and Maltese. • .• - •
.Within the Past 'three, years. • the
rise' of baseball in Sonth, Attica has
heen„swift.LOrieket4nd,LfootbilLclubi-
near Johannesburg have. been. turn-
ing their attention to. the , American,
game, and last Sununer a league ,pf.
eight :teame Was in operatien; The
sport has also thriVed. in Cape TOWn;.
Aast•;-year-46-the--teara-Ofthat
city' niltde a tour through the Trans-.
'vastl. The standard- of • , play ;' among
Setith,•Africars. is high, . .
• South •Ariieticana hive, else grown
•
to like the', American ,ginne Vizi:
ezeeia baseball : is :f,a'at' beeenfing,
national pastime.. There are testi* not
only in Caracas, but ,Maracaibo,
Valencia, Maracay and La. ,GtiaYra.
Many intercity 'rivalries have already
been `established . '
••• VENEZUELAN FANS,t• •
That the Venezuelans are •enthu-,
elastic •fang is evident in the ateetint
of a recent genies between the Santa;
'Marta tearir and the' Royal& rcotest-,
ing a decision, the ,Santa Marta tea*
and, ninny of theft teeters Warmed
the; playing field, yelling, "Ladron !
.Latiren I 'Proteste! ProteStel" in 'a:
partner that Would have put even an
American 'bleacherite'to shaine They
. aught to induce the inapite to Change'
.his deeisiori; finellY insisting that he:
be ejected and a new erie 'procnred. It
,
was the fifth inning and he was the
fifth Umpire to he ,,chased. from the
Baseball is played to a limited ex-
tent Pi-RrAlleee' Spain, Portu-
gal and .Rumania. There is a+base-
league in operation in Faris; and
at the Barcelona Exhibition. in 1930,
apicked Frenel...teenn. turned baek. the_
beat Spanish nine before 65,000 spec-
tators. •In England and Wales there
are also baseball teams. The game has
been well, developed among the Mem-
cans and i'Cubans, and. the Filipinos
have , been expertly taught at school
y American coaches. .
- In Moscow baseball classes have
e estrians
, John ()Taw in the Baltimore Sun
.: While I like to think of the; kinship •
between the 'liritish.,,oqpie Sind...Mir,
there is actually any affinity. My) ,,, ,.,: •
OcePtieiana AN:v tbis, POint intensified
)
a. feir days ago-hrthe receipt- of -a. .. • , . , - , -
iiiiiilar. from the Automobile ASE0.- i
elation; of Great Britain on the. sUb.,,i
ject of highway:. accommodations. for ` •
pdestilans. , ' J
' The- circular exPlated, to the effeet••''':-
•
of • some 400 words on the deplor-,
able failure of the British' counties
and Scotland to 'make provision for,
e_ ra..yel-sfoltat4alled at-
tention to ji "striking deficiency- in
footpaths, the sad neglect Of pecker -i. .
trians, etc., etc., ete.•And it empha-
sized the urgent' 'need . on all reain;,- ..
roads for footpaths having a continu-
ous all-weather surface, -smoother
and more attractive than a non-skid, '
carriageway. - ..
1
,
. riffiriEhard to helidiat a race,
of Men capable. of formulating stich,
an appeal as this has anything what-
soever in common with the inhali-'v .,
itants of rthie, great: nation of ours,
Where to give the Pedestrian anything ,
more than a ' disdainful honk is uti. s. .
t,erly, foreign to • the national charac-
ter. Our British `couiiiiii0 must be" '
--qUitellittarnetticli-e-alihrta- indulge4
themselves in such sympathetic . rha- '
posdy; Or. is that they are more far-
„eightedi
�t
er Drops .
year Pose
.11eveal-s- -Herself- 'As Wicithir
SisterNot.aii
gtellofrO7n
p
the brown fingers c.with ,the cloth 'on
top, that 'continued the inoVernent and
. passe lightly, two or ,thiee tants,
el- the sharp Outline- of .--the metal
case hanging below. the waist.,
• 'Yes, it is assuredly there," •die
„
'
Up and ;(10ii&n. the continent , they
trouped in a VadeVille act called
"Maxine and • eine, arshall" and
the • daughter' never knew ; that her
"slater" Was . really her mother: • • ; •
• The .story ,carne • out when the
waiter reported later that evening daughter, 1Virs. 11; E. Williamson; sued
to the- . He plated a hand On for an
the right 'to d ' ' ter
d' won' e .a minis
hie. Own, hip to indicate the position t
,- the. estate of a father- she had net
of the. ease Glynn 'carried.' "It is 'seen since', she Was, a baby.
hard and with firm edges; exactly .mrs. Jones, .7. who
was . "Maxine,"
like .a book ---as you expected."' . 'ter& the stand in, Mrs. NYilliarason's
4 Again money passed to the brown suit to become administrator of the
hand of the, Arab, who went off ,well •
large estate of John Donald, pioneer
,
„content.' • •mining-man_of--Ouray.-She' told how
. That night the Indian at in the she left Donald in 1893 taking their
privacy of- his own room, putting in -
daughter With her,. and how she pre -
to code a „couple of message ' to go 'tended they were sisters to prevent
off by cable in the morning. Again a. Donald from finding them. ,
knowledge of these would have prov- ,. Mrs. Jones said that after leaving'
' rtruction a strong Sort something stf-
:ler thestyle of the One at, ..Rutbali
Wells, and, the works, and officeti..ef
the CoMPanY Were: under •the guard
of 'eniformed, full-blooded Arabs:.
,The passengers were Warned, that
if any of:them, thought of visiting the
• Arab4toWth theYintistAalte the great-
est , care to avoid - giving any offence'
• to the Arabs, that tritiny of these
-..tvere fanatically Mohammedan, . and
Litt tobe touchy about anything they
tbougbt against their religious prie-4
eples; •
.`Then.I'm not volunteering Myself
Glynn told ,Norah onhearing this,
"as escort on a *promenade • through
the native ,quarter. going tb•stidk.
tight here on the Airways preinis4
. .
1. Instant ert 'landau 2.: .Ttititfo, why instant'
, .e4mplitelY In '40 second* Rit , Oyes truer,: none
61 .lielyttslueL411141:: Vklegehigla .17 eltahst
'throat,'Ind' through. m UCH., lenge.' ,
. •
FREE -.sled:ate front of 2 RIT Packages for
FREE.. copy of "The A IV .0 of Horne,
Making': to John A. Huston Co. Ltd., 40
Caledonia: Rd., Toronto.: •
WITH
:DistotieslintataINI„
it, then, instead of months ;later when
many details' of the 'plotting -genie to
One message was to . the nian Mi -
Chet' in London. It ran: (before being
coded in Hindustani) "Basra snake
information correct as to place where,
'case is carried. ir.YirPlihatqlcey'redeitt;-.
ea from 'smith hopemay he need Kar-
achi or •Hydrapore. Folrowing rae0-
sage •received by Ellinian to -day teed
by me •iniknown, to hint" and there
followed the exact words of the Icing
message from. the :Prince's secretary.:
The "sedond, message prepared was
' akidiessed to Karachi.. "previbui‘
itt-
fot'mation of position of is Cot-•
, rect. May be, able to act to -night, but
if, not arrange to, Meet me Karachi;
on arrival , and, arrange plant' • •
But Whatever plans the Indian had
'made for Acting that night had to en-
, eOunter certain 'simple' precaution
• Glynn' had taken with a memory, of.
the doping at Athens. •
While Glynn and Nepali wpre sitt-
ing chatting after dinner with JIM -
my ;Dbyle, the Idian mov4d, slow and
soft -footed as a cat, along past the.,
bedrooni doors Unlit he • Came to
.Glynn's. Bete he stopped, and was a-
bout to try a skeleton key itt , the
lock when he saw in the key hole the
ymoRE
tlan ic City
gift,
e teetriin' otet c (ivetnini
difold-she-Ivorked-Tas-,a-:dishwasher-
and waitress Until, she perfected a
vaudeville acteinto which she .and her
daUghter. fitted as sisters. From the
time-the--ehild was six years old, she
said, they were known as Maxine' and
Maxie Marshall. , When their vaude-
ville engagements • took them to Al-
aska in 1905 Mrs. Jonesi met and
married the ',Tee whose name ' she
now hears ,
It Was not until last JanuaryAhat
she told her daughter of their true
relationship. . ,'. • •
. •
. • .
Aeyeee, may 00 a casual act of -
good -nature; but a continuation of'
then' Shows It n part ofthe teMpera:
men t.:-..Siterne.
little round end of a key in place on,
, ,
the other side. The 'Indian paused *
moment, listening intently at the door
and then scratched softly on the pan-
el with his finger, nails.,
• (To be Continued)
- • .,,
•
Dr.Wernet's Powder F4* ,
ISE .TEETH.
A.-.1.1y,To All Users
• Cen"i Slip or Slide
' Sprinkle on Dr: Wernet's Powder and
you wen't' have to think ;about year',
Wee' teethed day long. Joyous com-
fort is yours. Eat anything you want
holds plates,firmly in 1)10;e -they I
positively can't slip or:"Slule..Forms' '
roteetiv,e euihion for sensitive gums.
Leaves no 6616161, gummy sithetnneo-
keeps Mouth sanitary, breath pleasant.:
t'rfq.7...P./.tki,IWA.n.(044,41-0t,075tfiA10
Ite.:;eost.,:SiCsm
great. • Any druggist. .'
tds ',You' and BA/sit:so
stitute, where the game. is ' being
,taught by an American and.by 'a Rus-
sian who learned play Japan.
`. While 'Ainerica's national Pastime
has been played abroad' for many
years, it is only recently that there
has been such a definite rise m its
'popularity , as to bring about the
,aball be made an
Olympia, sport-ra .suggestion put for -
Ward by the French Baseball Fed-
eration, which includes France Tun-
isia Algeria and Morocco.
•
"HOW Much a man as. like old-shqesi
For instance „beth a soul • May. lose,
Both, have been . tanned; ., both are
• lank
By ecobblers, both .get2left'afi4 right,
Both need mita to he complete,
And . both are Male to go on•feet...
They . bah. need heeling, oft are sokd
And both .in Alma turn 'old to Mould. •
With'ellees.the last is first. With men
The first shall be last ' '
,
And when the Atka Wear .out ,they
are Mended new.
When men wear out they're men
• dead .too. ••, • . ,
They both are trod upon and•both,
Will tread on others nothing
Both have their ties and hotiLincline
When.: polished, in the -world to shine
And. both • Peg. out. So would ou
To be a man or be his .shoes.
nosy' Little Bee ,
Was Electr9cuted',
called .out.--the
teei).bmitujipiti to Ttbahree't
hive iire alarm box and
came entangled, in. the '
Causing.. a short circuit that .set”. eft. ;
the •bells. When the firemen 'arrived ••,.• •
the beehailbeen electrocuted. • •
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. :Ad accept Executive 'position. in ;
Non-coinnetetive bUsti)esa.. estab-
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Toronto. apply . •
E.W. 'Dn.:wenn. Erampton Aiitiarkk..
,
rnost instairi
From Neuralgia
e ie
1.
Itt.• NAVE TO 6,617 A
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TERRIBLE
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AseuziN TABLETS.
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IN A, FEW MINUTES
l'T'WONDERFIA. HOW
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'erEARSTTAINLY:WOR149 ,e`
e•
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. NOW comes amazingly quick. relief
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neuralgia the fastest, safe relief,
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• l'hOse results are due, to nscien-
title discover* ,by which an Aspirin
Tablet heOns to dissehre,. or dis-
integrate, in the amazing space of
'
two seconds after teaching moisture.
And hence to start "taking hold" of
pain h few minutes atter taking.
:The illustration of •theglass, lere,
tells the • story: • An -•Aspirin Tablet
.', Starts to disintegtate almost instant-
ly you swallow it. And MOS is ready
• to go to work almost instantly. ,
' When you: buy,though, be on,
guard against substitutes. To be sure
, you get ASPIRIN'S quick relief, be
Sure the name Bayer in the formof
etas's' fs on every tablet orAspirin.
40.1-,:lit4's 844
Its frarant lather attpthe's ectianses
•
Iiisoe No. 1
, •
ARTISTS A
You
,•••
WHY. ASPIRIN . •, .! •
w.oRK: to 'FAtT
; Drop an Aspirin
Tablet in a glass of
water: Note that BE-
• FORE itlouches hot-.
,tom, it has started to
disintegrate.
What it does in thit
glass it dool in Your.
stomach. Hence . its
• fast action. • .
MAOIS,iN CANADA
, .
Does:AlO• 'thifrtit-the
,AMA'PEIJR OR PROVE8SIONAL
. .
Send Stamped Addressed envelope for Information On how
to sell illustrations and shed stories. • We will criticize
work and act as agents In selling it for a small fee..
THE ART LITERARY ..SERVICZ.
39 ..Leg' Av,entie'TARONT,
•
t9'
!W.