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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1921-6-16, Page 7hyado-a, Sitookele'ss, Bathed .mins A bight dee. luts dawned In London out of the darianees of tile coalsetrike. FOr three weelp 7,Q00,000 Persona there have been aetonished by the re- markable improVernent in the air theY breathe. Far the first time in their memory London is practically a emolte- less city, an meteorological experts can give no other reason for this tha the enforced cutting down in the use of coal, It is fur absolute fact—suepec ed for sonic time, but no fully rea ized and appreciated—that Londe can see, breathe, smell, touch an taste the beneate of the miner strike. The great, gray curtain that has a ways been as much associated wit London as is the Thames has disk peered and the city is bathedin wari sunshine, and is seeing the blue sk There has never been such a theroug spring cleaning in the memory of li ing man. The atmosphere is cleane the people are happier and it la no apparent that one of these is contin- gent on the other. Observers readily eay that it is reasonable to believe -that the coal miner's' strike is •respons- ible for all this. Dr. John Owens, superintendent of the Advisory Committee on Atmos- pheric Pollution to the Meteorological . Office, said there had been a gradual Improvement in conditions since April 16. He insisted that the reduction in the amount of coal consumed here had had a remarkable effect and urged the public to take steps to make the at- mospheric purity more or less perman- ent. For year he has -been expert- anenting by filtering air through paper discs, anti the density of one period compared with another was easily dis- cernible. On the last day of March,' the day before the beginning of the -strike, his discs showed a deplorable dirty state of atmosphere. Three weeks later improvement was noticed until the last day of April, when it • -was ahnost clear. Since then the -discs ime-e- continued to improve, and now Dr, Owens is forced to use more delicate discs in order to get finer re- • sults. London air is always dirtiest in win- ter, when household fires are princi- pally to blame. The lest months an., -the wear, 'bring •the • fallacies London fogs, but since the miners' -strike be.. •came serious the public have been un - .able to burn coal in their homes. Dr. Owens said the London fogs were caused by the hundreds of -thousands of chimneys which send forth smoke at such • a rate that beween 7 and 9 o'clock in the morning more than 200 -tans of soot have been sent over the city, where it hangs like a black cloud, causing the fog. He denie(1 that the chimneys of industrial plants were mostly responsible for this. Jack O'Leary's Coat. im,veivatIttivnlmvarAola.vm,in 11EALTH E66 A 1 $ By DR. J. .1, IVIIIIDLE'TON provincial Board of Health. Ontario 11 ea Or/ Middleton will be glad to answer questiona on Public Health maa 0 tare through Ulla Column. Address bleu at the Parliatueut Illdra. gil a Toronto, . "Ilage. Vile ‘i2'a ailla Ilial 41 VI I& Vilik riiIii la Maa Ira NU %I Ma WI ta Vilas a 1 t' Ile -health in various form -s, and cer- That there are different vithmines 1 1" taia definite diseases can be prevented on by the different diseases tha ne if inere attention is paid to the kinds result When certain foods are laclein a of food we eat. This is becoming in certain essentials. Take for ia S' more and more elearly,underetooct and stance the caee of beri-beri, a diSeas 1. appreciated as a result of recent that is very common in certain east , Studies on what are known as acces- ern countries rhere eice forms th " Sory food-prOducts or "vitamines." chief article of diet, and where polish f- on account of the absence oe these ed rice is used, Polished rice cenaisb of the kernel of the grain with th husks removed, and this process in volves not only the removal of th husk but also the outer lining of th kernel known as the "silver skin,' tural state there is little danger of which contains the vitainine. any such disease developing. But when A type of disease more heard of in the variety is limited, or the natural this country is infantile scurvy, be qualities have been impaired or lieved to be clue to the absence from changed through boiling, heating or OT deficiency in a diet, of a vitamin preserving,tas in canned foods, then it with .well-defined antiscorbutic pro is that deficiency diseases may make PertieS, Infants, fed for long periods their appearance. • exclusively on condensed milk or pre Errors he diet ate, tasait in s.toms served foods, have been shown to • ach troubles, due to over -eating or the sometimes surfer from a form of food such • 1 use of too many meats and starchy scurvy, with hemorrhages under th as potatles,\ bread, eta. outer layer of the long bones. Where Other errors of diet include a too -free an infant is brought up entirely on .. eauces, candies, etc., which often or sterilized milk, ark smal use of foods fried in gravy, oe of boiled duce indigestion, i p r G... quantity of grape, orange or lemon uice should be administered daily. In It is not, however,. with over -eating this country scurvy is seldom seen or with indiscretion in diet that this nowadays except during times of want article deals._ It is rather with the or among crews of ships on long voya nature and ingredients of the food ages where the diet is of the tinned used as regards the presence or ab- or canned variety almost exclusivelYi sence of vitarninee in its composition. It has. also occurred in construction The question ifs:—What are vita- camps in this country where canned mines? 1 will answer in a somewhat goods form the chief articles of diet, rounclaabout way: and where fresh meat, milk and vege- Science for a long time has be- tables are not easily procured. This lieved that •the eesential compositioe vitamine is also deficient in fresh of food that maintains life consists of vegetables that have bee -n dried, or carbohydrates, fats and proteins hi drying ture for long periods without certain proportions, with due admix- —'-'1". ture of salts and water. Though this When vegetables are boiled the pro - is -theoretically -correct, modern re- eejss should be short, and ,the e-ege- search on -metabolism has shown.that tables not • a pure diet df carbohydrates fats pro -1- sooner the 'boiling is finiehed -anclethe alloeved to oak long. The terns, salts -and water is not 'sufficient vegetables removed the more nutri- to maintain health. Something else tious they will be. must be present, although by compar- The fear of destroying the vitamine ison it is infinitesimal ineamaunt, and in fresh milk has been one of the this something is described as a vita- chief 'objections to the wholesale pas - mine, • teurization of milk. However, by ex- awprofessor at Cambridge who has posing milk that has been previously clone much work on this subject, re_ cleansed by filtration to a temperature ce-ntly fed a number of rats and puppy not exceeding 158 deg. F. for a short dogs on an artificial diet of protein, period, the vitainine in the milk is not fat, starch and sugar; and by carefully destroyed but only slightly impaired. watching the animals he found that This eaheoe be avoided, however, and they ceased to grow, although the am- the deficiency is more than counter- ount of food they consumed was act- 'balanced by the -greatly increased. pur- ally more than what was necessary to HY of the milk after pasteurization, maintain normal gxowth. On adding and the clestruction of prelatic -ally _all a small quantity of raw, fresh milk the harmful bacteria that the milk to this diet a marvellous improvement might have contained, in the health and •growth of the ani- The more this subject of vitamines mals became evident. The imprcve- is investig-ated, the more apparent it ment was not due to the lact-albuinin becomes that their absence or de- er salts in the milk, as an equal rate ficiency is associated with many of ef growth was obtained from protein the diseases of metabolism which are and ash -free extracts of the milk so obscure, and which hitherto have solids, and from yeast, in exceedingly been. difficult to account for in human small Sfuantities. This • Cambridge beings. professor therefore came to the con- Mortar is comparatively an ex- clusion that there was some other es- trernely small fraction in .the mater - sen -ti -al factor in food, in adding to the ials that make up a house, but it is protein, fat and sugar, that is essen- a very necessary part. yitainines, tial to growth. similarly are an in•finitesimal part of . The next question is ".re there the amount of food necessary for the More vitamines than one?" Yes, up maintenance of health and growth in to ,the pees -mat there are three kinds the individual, but without these ac- deenabed, viz:— ees•sery food products the body will (1.) The Fat Soluble A, vitarnine, not thrive. The small fractteri of vita - present in fresh milk, butter, animal mines usuallsr yielded by articles that fats, etc. . ' . contain them is a serious difficulty in . (2) The Water Soluble, B, or anti-- the way of finding out their exact na- beriaberi vitarnine, ture and composition. It is improbable (3) The Water Soluble ' C, or anti- that vitamines are in themselves nu - scurvy vitamine present in fresh tritive, but they produce co-ordination fruits, vegetables, etc. of metabolism. By this means the Nor are those carrying on the re- body is able to adjust itself to carry searches by any means certain that on life and maintain ,health under these three are the only ones. varied conditions and surroundings. IralA With the Bcy ens:Dalt% "Gee! i sviSb. I ccula belong to that troop," sent a youag Toronto Scout j the ether day when he heard of the , plaus the lainet Penetanguisheefe'Troap' 1 is inaking for R.; eummer outing. It is one el the mast fotereeting snter- Prises yet „ attempted by Ontario, Scouts and take e the form 01 an ea - Donation from Ponetanguisheue down Ito Ottawa and Derilana Mentreal by ;the route followed' by Champlain and I his ileet of two hundred wer - a • in 1015, The boys will make the tria in canoes by way of the Georgian Bey at • twa, and LI tiiey g� tterar) we:-faao IzILLtniaii:aetLuNde exit: the St. Lawrence too. The Hudson's ej Bay Company officers in isTeeth Bay - and alfetta,wa, are endeavoring to se- cure the old-timo large voYageur birch - e bait cane() of the Chateee-Galerie type, - in order that the trip iney be made as e realistically hietorical as possible. e * substances many so-called deficiency y. diseases such as rickets in this coun- h try end beriabeei in the East result. e, r, As long as there is a eufficieht var- y," lety of foods and the feed in. its lea- / Most prisoners would oe content to escape punishment for a crime they had,committed. But not so with Jack O'Leary. He wanted his coat, How badly he wanted it is told in the Canadian Magazine by Col. George T. Denison, who as a young barrister was asit.ed to defend O'Leary against a charge of burglary. He was almost caught In the act, says Colonel Denison, being found in a lane in his shirt sleeves behind the shop that he had broken into; in the shop as his coat. There was little chance of getting him off, but I did the best I could with the jury, making a strong point of the fact that the Crown had not proved that the coat was his, and that there was no evidence that it was his coat. To my ama.zement the jury acquitted him. I left the court, and O'Leary came after me and asked me to ap- ply to Chief ' Justice Draper for the restitution of the coat. I refused most emphatically, told him to say nothing about it, and advised him to leave the city at once. The next morning I was passing through the courthouse when Dan Dwan came up to me and said: "Good morning, Mr, Denison. I was In the court yesterday, and I heard ye pleading for Jack O'Leary. Be japers! Ye did it well. Ye mulvath- ered that jury till they didn't know where they were at. For he was bloody guilty." "I am afraid he was," said 1. "'Yes," said Dan. "But you know, he had no business to ask for his coat." "I refused to apply for it," I replied. He then told me that O'Leary had gone in himself, just as the court was opening that morning, and had asked the chief justice to order the return of his coat. "But you said that•it was not your coat," replied the chie-f justice . "No, nay lord, I did not." "Well your counsel did." 'No," said O'Leary," he did not. He only said that they did not prove it was my coat. But I can prove it is -nay coat." "I think this is the most impudent request ever made of me," said the -chIef justice. And he ordered the coat to be sold and the proceeds given to a charitable institution and order- ed O'Leary to ba removed from the court. I do not think I ever defended an- other prisoner. I was not pleased with nay• experience in that case. The coronet of a baron carries six silver balls, Sweden occupies the leading posi- tion in the lumber market of the .world. For use en toileletableet.a new per- fume atomizer 4Yorics on the pumai principle witheaut the use ef a 'rubber bulb. „ "" ' At the Victoria County Boy Scout Rally held in Fenelon Falls on Victoria Day the let Fenelon Falls Troop cap- - tured the George Beale 800 yard pa- trol relay race trophy which is one e of the big incentives to Scout athletic - work in that part of the province. In the other field day events, Fenlon - Falls s captui-ecl five first prizes and three seconds, while Lindsay took home four second.- 0 'The Scout Movement "keeps mov- ing-." Grimsby had one troop last fall. Since then it has grown so large that it has been found necessary to reor- ganize It as three separate troops un- der a District Scoutmaster, Mr. J. A. M. Livingston. .And that is not all, because two whole patrols of boys who came from Beamsville have be- come the nucleus of a new troop with headquarters in thcr own town. Ren- frew, too, has experienced a similar growth in Scout interest, and Kincar- dine has a troop which is also suffer- ing from growing pains and plans are being made to divide it into two. * * Baths by Order. In the near future baths on board ship may become compulsory- for all steerage passengers. This knowledge has struck terror in the hearts of some of those emigrants who prefer to be warm in the winter time! This sudden attacic of cleanliness is dile to the fact that a steamship of the Holland -American „line, • possesses a very particular phYsician who used to be with the United States Public Health Service. After inspecting the immigrants in his boat he immediate- ly made daily baths compulsory, much to the surprise and indignation of many of the "passengers, some of whom had not been out of their clothes for months! Every (lay during a recent voyage the steerage passengers were Invited to bathe. If they protested they were seized and scrubbed, free of charge, by the tdoctor's bathing battalion, which, consisted of stewards, ser- geants -at -arms, and a few of the more intelligent immigrants._ The fact that no diseases broke out during this- voyage speaks- for itself, yvanjuip,,H141,100t,pmquiyilimmitemiliiiiitimonnuintetil Let This Food lielpYou to ifiealth 1. Sound nourishment for body and brain with no overloading and no tax upon the digestion, is securedfrom ra erNut It embodies the nutrition of the field grains, -and it makes for bette health and bodily effIcienc ' Ready to serethi1deal btak :— fast or lunch'. "rheties':a Reasoi2" kE=TMMBIMII trium11111111/1111,111111fIl!litli, V•:e , 111 a Preparations for the summer camps are proceeding wherever there are Scouts, according to Provincial Head- quarters in Toronto. A recent double number Of "The Trail," the Ontario Scant officers' paper, was devoted en- tirely' to tlie subject of Camping and Camp.•Mana.gement. WHEN BAY IIS ILL When baby is ill; when he cries a great deal and no amount of atten- tion or petting makes him happy, Baby's Own Tablets should be given him without delay. The Tablets are a mild but thorough laxative which re- gulate the bowels and sweeten the stomach and thus drive out constipa- tion and indigestion; break up colds and. simple feyeresand make teething easy. ConeelningsAhem Mrs. Desire, Theberge, Trois Pistols, Que., writes: I am well satisfied with my use of Baby's Own Tablets._ I have found them of great benefit to my baby when he was suffering from conetipation, and I can strongly recommend them to other mothers." The Tablets are sold by all medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr, Wil- liams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. • Miser. I have seen many things, Too beautiful for words; Twilights tremulous with mlst— Birds-. I have heard music That was to me -- Soft as the clinging fingers Of the sea. I have known many things; Now I am old - 1 am a miser Counting my gold. MONEY *ORDERS. It is always safe to send a Dominion Express Money Order. Five dollars costs three cents-. :es Allowing Peony of Time. Parcel Post Clerk—"On that live turkey the postage will be a dollar and thirty cents." The Poultryman ---"Guess I'll start him on four bits' worth of stamps. I expect he'll lose enough weight on the way to make that about right before he's delivered." Ask for Minard's and take no other. Dressed Like Adam. li the wilds pf the Chichihu dis- trict of Japan live a group of moun- tainers clad only in the costume of Adam. Their existence was unknown until the taking of a recent census re- vealed their whereabouts. Pas -sing through the Crystal Val- ley, census officials were amazed to meet human beings, wearing long hair, whose only- cov-ering was leaves. They made no response when spoken to. Their chief occupation seems to be hunting with the bow and arrow and the making of charcoal, which they exchange in the neighboring dis- tricts for neceeeities, it is thought that the ancestors of these weird folk were refugees of the Samurai class, who,, defeated in bat- tle hundreds -of years, ago, fled for safety to the 'Safely heights which alir• round the Crystal Valley. Uruguay alas about 1,600 miles of railroads, but :only one tunnel. Sufferers from rhetimatisrn , should eat celery; while bananas are 'useful in the case of those suffering from ohest complaints. ©al CHILDREN Need Rich, R,ed B op , to Begain Health awl Strength, • • .< Many children,start school in elecele lent health', but after a ehort time hoiue work, eaaminations, hurried meals end crowded school rooms cause their bloOd to become weak, their nerves' evcsrevrought and their color and spirits Wet: It is a mistake to Iet matters drift when boys and girls show symptoms oS nervousnese or weak blood, They are almost sure to fall victims of St. Vitus dance, or drift into debility thet leads to other trouble. Regular meals, out -door exercise and plenty of sleep are neces- sary to combat the nervous wear of school life. But it is still mon) im- portant that parents should pay atten- tion to the school cbild'S blood supply. Keep this rich and red by giving Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and the boy or girl will be sturdy, and fit for school. The value of Dr. 'Williams' Pink Pills in cases of this kind is shown by the statement of Mrs. Watson, Grand Falls, N.B., who says: "In the spring of 1919 my daughter Thistle, then 12 years of age, began to show symptoms of nervousness which developed into St. Vitus dance. She seemed to lose control of her 'limbs and at times every muscle in her- body seemed to be twitching and jerking, and the trouble seemed to be growing worse. We finally decided to give Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and the result was better even than we had hoped for, and she is now enjoying the best of health." YOU can get Dr. Williams' Pink Pills through any dealer in medicine or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Truth. When I must die I shall not fear the going; There will be daybreak somewhere, a new dawn Spreading before Me and new strength' bestowing, And I shall be no more an earth- bound pawn. There will be life enriching, pulses leaping, Vision unveiled before ray 'eager eyes; And I shall still be loving, learning, keeping The zest of life in some fair para- dise. I have no fear that I shall be but blended With Being infinite and undefined; Only the service of the body's ended, I shall not lose my eager soul, my mind; I shall not lose my love, and you, 0 dearest, Seeking your way, will meet once more my own And when you fear me farthest find me nearest; All that is true, though each must go alone. All that is true—but truth does not de- ceive me; These poor wise words no shield of comfort make; If it were you, and death did thus bereave me,— If it were you—were you—my heart would break. Minard's Liniment RelievessNeuralgla How Tall Are You? Most men are quite positive as to their exact height and would become indignant if you questioned the ac- curacy of their statements in that re- spect, but, as a matter of fact, no man can say, unless he has just then been measured, exactly how tall he is at any particular time. If the original feasurement on which he bases his statement was made early in the morn- ing, he has been crediting himself with too much height most of the time, while he has not given himself all the height to which he is entitled if the measurement was made in the even- ing. This for the reason that all per- sons are- taller in the morning. The disks of cartilage between the twenty-four vertebrae of the backbone yield considerably to the pressure due to the weight of the body when it is erect, and expand themselves while the body is in. a recumbent position. The effect in the case of a fairly heavy man of average height may amount to a half inch, and in the case of a police- man or postman who walks upon pave- ments all day ,the difference in height at morning and night might amount to three-quarters of an inch. These are facts worth keeping in mind if you contemplate a physical examination for some appointment re- quiring a certain height, and you are very near the minimum. Do not stand or walk much before the examination —and take it in the early morning. In Germany there are now only 813 men betWeen the ages of twenty and thirty to every 1,00,0 women. 1 AUTO ' REPAIR PARTS Ifor most makee and medels of' care, replaced. „Write of "ma ud.descilb- .1.111:1,1:(vli°_,ladt; ybtirUoke:"06;...wworen-coauatryP, atrt: Laqj,tt "and ,insi; coMp1et-6, stook, Cainda."45f ;slightly used or naweiai and atitornohlie equipment We .shiP C.0.1), anywhere itf Canada. Satis- factory or refund' in full titir Motto. Shaves 'Auto' ainvage r*rt suvoy, 033-931 IrittffOrin ift,., ToSoi4oi Out. FROM IRE &1EE- - lalght Description. Tencierfoot--"Goe that dog hag a bloaapeglic_rtsy7ailra.df.t.,;s7sauss obuet—"Yes, ally; OSEPH DI/Otaialo ot VI • ctaejeresi be ouffey1 eI yacs s I clYsPePsia )0t'1,:ftte Tardn'e Made a new mao of nira Gained 35 ,nounds, Habit. Medd (reporting)—'There' S a matt at the door with a' wooden leg, mum." "Thank. vou, Maggie; we don't need any." ' Right Description. Poor Suitor—"Is it .true that your father has lost his fortune?" His Lady Love (sighing)--"Ye,s, all is swept away, but you are left, dear!" "Great Scott! I should eay / am lef 11" Dividing It. A case came before a court involv- ing the ownership of an eight -slay clock. After listening to both sides, the judge turned to the plaintiff: ‘;111-e:‘3AudlelgcfleentICrltlalhanett.cd1Goell."get?" c°111Plained1 "You dlg_e.get the eight days," replied thej Adding Class. A family named Stubbs, which he - came very rich during the war, pur- chased a stately home. It happened that someone who had known them in less prosperous' days was in the neighborhood, and thought he would call. He did so, and. asked for i'Mr. Stubbs." The butler regarded him with a per- fectly straight face. "There must be some mistake, sir," he said. "This is the house of Mr. St, Ubbs." Quite True. A pompous manufacturer of machin- ery was showing a stranger over his factory. "Fine piece of work, isn't it?" he said, when they were looking at a very ingenious machine. "Yes," said the visitor, "but you cannot hold a candle to the goods we turn out." "Indeed!" said the chagrined manu- facturer. 'ataahat is your line?" "Gunpowder," was the reply. His Title. The nine-year-old s -on of a New York doctor recently sought out his father and put to him this question: "Dad, do you know what nickname they gave to Napoleon Bonaparte?" Now the father desired that his son should. have the pleaeure of bestow- ing this information; so he evaded. the reply by an interrogatory on his awn part: "What was it, my son?" Whereupon, to the great astonish- ment of the physician, the lad replied very proudly: "The Little Corpuscle." His Hearing Restored. The invisible ear drum invented by megaphone, fitting inside the ear en- tirely out of sight, Is restoring tha. hearing of hundreds of people in New York City. Mr. Leonard invented this drum to relieve himself of deafness and head noises, and it does this so successfully that no one could tell he is a deaf m -an. It is effective when deafness is caused by catarrh or by perforated, or wholly destroyed natur- al drums. A request for information to A. O. Leonard, Suite ,437, 70 Fifth Avenue, New York City, will be given O prompt reply. aclvt How Did He Know? Freddie—"Ma, what is the baby's name?" baby hasn't any name." Freddie—"Then how did he know he,belanged here?" Salt mixed with starch will prevent it from. sticking. Forest fires benefit no one and they rob the workingmen, the merchant, the farmer, and indirectly every citi- zen. Forest fies are fought not only in the bush, but in towns and cities. When Canadians of town and larin and forest are all determined to stop forest fires, then our forests will be freed, from the ravages of this fiend. ASPIRIN "gayer" only is Genuine "I could hardly believe my eyes when I stepped on the scales after taking six bottles of Tanlac and found that I had actually gained thirty-five pounds in weight," said Joseph Drenin, 2194A St. Denis St., Montreal, who, for the past twenty-six years, has been passenger conductor on the Canadian Pacific Railway and is well and favorably known along the line of his run between Montreal and Mount Lauriers. "Before I started on this medicine I was in a bad way. For years I'd had to take my meals here, there and everywhere and, as the result of this irregular eating, my internal machin- ery got all out of working order. I lost all desire for food and what little I ate would form gas and bloat me up until I could hardly breathe. be- came so nervous I couldn't sleep, at all well at night and was often so tired in the mornings I didn't care whether I took my train out or not. I fell off twenty-five pounds in weight and became alarmed about any condi- tion, for I had tried all sorts of medi- cine without getting any relief. "Then, one day I read a statement in the paper that decided me to give Tanlae a thorough trial. Well, I never would have _believed any medicine could do a man so much good in such a short titne. It quickly settled nay stomach and gave me such an appetite that I could eat three good square meals a day and no longer have any trouble with indigestion or gas and I sleep so well at night, even when on the road, that I think it would take a collision to wake me up. I now turn the- scales at two hundred d.nd ten pounds, which is ten pounds more than I ever weighed in my lifeseand feel better in every way than I have for a very long time. Tatilac is the best medicine r ever tried." Tanlac is sold by leading druggists everYwhere. Adv. An Easy Thing. Next to making his own mistakes the easiest thing in the world is to criticize the mistakes of others. To clean a photograph wipe with a soft cloth wrung out in warm water and a little ammonia. Dry with an- other cloth. NOTHING TO EQUAL For Sprains and Bruises The first thing to do when you he.ve au injury is to apply Minard's famous Lir i- ntent It is antiseptic, soothing, healing, and gives quick relief. r=etoaNa Pioneer Dag Remedies Book on DOD DISEASES and How to Feed Mailed Free to any Ad- dress by the Author. elOvas CO., lino. 119 'Weet 31st Street New York, U.S.A. Warning! Take no chances with 1UTICURA substitute's or genuine "Bayer Tete/. 1 a es al lets of Aspirin." Unless you see the , name "Bayer" on package or on tab - j lets you are not getting Aspirfn at all, Itt every Bayer package are aft -GM -lens for Colds, 1-leadael1e, ,athee-e inatism, ilaractie, Toothache, Lumbago and for Pain. Handy tin boxes of twelve tablete cost few cents. Drug- gists also sell Iarfer packages. Made Oithaaa. Aapirin is the trade mark (tegistored in Canada), of Bayer Manufacture .af .Marioaceticacidester o Salicylicaeld:ie 1"ereSs'a--', FOR 'Tirg-nallf2*-117/W;ir Use Cntiattra Soap daily for thetoi. let and have a healtaiy'clear complex- , ion, soft White hands and 060 hair. Ataist'when necessary by totiChee of Ctiticura Oitatmerit, The Cuticula 'Tektite is also ideal for .the skin. sotto 2c,, Ointratittslikid154.'tidetaitir,, Sold -,elitoeetanittheliasitiiitildii.Canediataaelesi: ',Ieeewee Lirefiedi 344LiPeid CuicurAS�*p *hives wathotOsaUS: Iktue.