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The Clinton News Record, 1920-7-1, Page 7
PALE AND WEAK WIVES AND MOTHERS. Call iiep till Health and Strength .Thr. oath . Hl'. Williams' Pink Pills, Many women,evhe had a good coior in their girlhood grow pale and color- leee''when they become wives and mothers. When, the fading color in the eheeits and lips is accompanied by n lose of brightness in the oyes and an. increasing heaviness in the step; ilia cause will be found in the state of the blood. Many causes contribute to the eon- _ clition of the blood known as anaemia, Overwork in the hame,,a.•lack of out- door exercise, ineudicient rest and sleep, improper diet—these are a few of them, The important thing 'is to, restore the blood to normal, to build it up so that the color will return to cheeks and lips, brightness to the eyes and lightness to the step. Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills are 'the great blood. builder and nerve strengthener. They begin with the very first dose, and through .a fair use make new blood that earries strength and health to every part of the body,. The appetite increases, tligeetion becomes Inere perfect and energy and ambition -re- turn. The case of Mrs. Wm. McNish, Abbott Street, Brockville, proves the value of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills' in cases of this kind. Mnn. McNish says: "I was quite young when I married, and in raising my family I became all rim down and a nervous wreck. I be- came 'soweak that I could hardly' walk across the floor without sitting down to get ray breath, I slept poorly and at tinges my nerves would twitch so that I could not keep still, and I, was in_ constant.umisery, I tried many medicines but they did not help me; indeed my condition was growing worse, until one day a friend told me that siie'hacl been in a somewhat simi- lar condition and ]tad been helped -by Dr. Williams; Pink Pi11e, so I decided to try this medicine. After the use of a couple of boxes I -felt they were helping ma. My appetite was .better and I slept better. By the time 1 had need half a dozen boxes I` felt like a new woman, my health had fully re- turned and I could do my housework with ease. In view of what Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills have done for nie I cannot recommend' them too highly," The best time to begin taking Dr. Williams' Pink Pills is the moment you feel the least bit cut of sorts. The sooner you do so the sooner you will regain your;old time energy. You can get these pills through any medicine dealer or by mail at 50 cents a box or six -boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Wil - hams Medicine Co:, Brockville, Ont. Deathless Journeys. The Wandering Jew.is not mention- ed in the Bible. He is merely the principal character insa story, like Rip r Van Winkle. • . The story is certainly of very aneient origin. In its most commonly accepted form, it is that Jesus, weary of carrying the cross, sought to rest for a moment on the doorstep of a shoemalter,narned Ahasuerus, who told Him to "get on, and be quick about it." To which the .Saviour replied: "I shall soon be at. rest, but you will wander until I come again." Ever since then Ahasuerus has been doomed to wander over the earth; and, strange toesay, he seems to have turn- ed up urned.up now and again, at long intervals of time. Dr. Paul von Eitzen, Bishop of Schleswig, met and talked with him in the year 1547. Hetoid his story to the bishop, who described his as very. tail, 'barefoot, with, an •astonishingly long beard and hair hanging over his shoulders. He was seen in 1575 in Madrid and again in Paris in 1604. In 1.040 he turned up in Brussels—an aged and tattered man, who accepted food, but refused to sit down and eat—and in L eipsic two years later. The description of his appearance is invariably the same. Ile tells his story to somebody, passes on and dis- appears, The last occasion on which he was seen was in England, nearly two cen- turies ago. Many people talked with bila, and he gave an account of the Crucifixion, speaking as an eye- witness, -He told anecdotes of the Apeeties, some of whom he .professed to have personally known. He 'spoke many languages, with all of which he teemed equally familiar, Then, sud- denly, he vanished, and nothing more was heard of him, =—v HEALTHY CHILDREN ARE HAPP HILD N YC RE The well child is always a happy obild—it is a baby',s;nature to be hap- py and contented. Mothers, if your little ones ale cross and peevish aid cry a great deal they are not well— they are in need of medicine --,some- thing that will set their bowels and stomach in ardor, for uine•tenths of all childhood ailments arise From' a 'enblurrae ed slaae tin iiia bowels slid stomach.' Such a medicine is Baby's Own Tablets, They are a mild but thorough laxative which regulate the bowels) sweeten the stomach, and thus drive out constipation, colic, indiges- tion; break up colds and simple.Tevers and make the baby healthy and flapper, Concerning them, Mrs. Albert Hamel, I'lorrevl11e Qua,`; writes:—"Baby's Own Tablets are the best medicine know of for little (Ties, They relieved my little gni rpom Ceilitipatien when nothi ng pould and I can strongly ereeeniMend thorn to other mothers," The Tablets are sold by metltcele dealers er by mail at e5 ceinte a !sox Prem The Dr, Williams Medicine Co,, Broekvlile, Ont Canada's so-called Barren' Lands, welting to'tlie,Arctic, rife estimated to have 80 million caribeu. ellnard's Liniment used by'Playsi'olane: OLD IRON Ily 0, A, Stephens +J' Sumo time after Addison, IIaistead and Theodora had left the old hone itsenttri 1 old C squire@ off 1@ farm, ll0Jl l0 q 1 u a horse wagon and to buy , hareems that we• had heard were fo gale at it farm in Waterford. The farmer was moving away. ,"You may as well begin to learn about $uch things, my son," the old' gentleman sale to me. n11 you are go-' ]ng to live here on the old, farm, you will have, to buy a horse ence.,iii,a while, or sell ono, When it comes to trading horsos,.there is nothing like experience, Experience, particularly in horseflesh, ie. eonleteing we general- ly have to pay for," As he handed mea hundred dollar's Ise added, "I'm not going to giye you any. advice, Look the horse over and buy him if you think best. We,don't need the wagon, but since the man is selling out we'll take it along with the horso, if he doesn't ask too much." It was a walk of more than eleven miles to Wetertord, but the cool Oc-, tuber air was fresh and exhilarating, and I walked on at a good pace, going aver in my mind meanwhile all I had over heard of the ins and outs 'of horses—,spavins; ringbones, heaves, cribbing, blindness, locking, balking, 1 regretted the place about noon, and the farmer and his wife seemed un- usually glad tosee me. They insisted on my sitting down to dinner with them. During the meal neither the man not his wife sad anYthi gg about the horse. •Alter dinner the fernier took me out to the barn to sem the ani- mal. I lilted his looks at once. He. was a handsome bay roadster with a good eye, and so far as I could see he was sound in legs, " feet and wind. "Seven years old,". the man said, "1 ]snow his age, for I raise( him from a colt. We will hitch up. I want you to drive 11101 yourself." While we were putting the animal tato the shafts the farmer said, "I warrant hint to you as sound and kind. I never knew him to kick or bite; my wife has driven him for three years.. T shouldn't think of parting with him 11 I -weren't moving away this fall." . We (,rove out on the road, and the man handed Inc the reins. There' was no whip in the socket; the farmer re- marked. that he had got .out of the habit 01 carrying one, because the horse _never needed it. In the bottom of the wagon body on the side where the man was sitting there was a small chain, such as teamsters call a trace chain, which, I supposed, had been accidentally left in the. wagon. I drove for as much as two miles, first slowly, then at a good trot. Once. or twice, at forks in the road, the horse paused in what seemed to me a rather odd way, and each tune I no- ticed that the man, in moving his feet, rattled the chain. The farmer remark- ed emarked that his horse was .accustomed to take the other fork of the road, which seemed so likely that I thought no more of the circumstance, The price of the horse and wagon was, as we had heard, a hundred- dol- lars. For all I could see, it was a fair bargain, and after dickering, as usual, by offering hien ninety at first I closed the trade and paid the money. Rather :well pleased with . myself, I set Off for home with my new outfit. The horse trotted on at a good clip for four or five miles, but when we came to a woodland where a long ascent in the road began he suddenly slowed up, stopped and, glancing at me, sat down. An old pussycat washing her face oould not have taken a sitting Pasture rnoee naturally, • My first thought was that the horse had been taken ill, and I was much chagrined. "Great Scott!" I said to myself, "He's paralyzed in his hind legs,,, I hopped out and went to his head. He did not look 111, but sat there im- movable and apparently helpless. I took him by the bit and tried to get him up on his feet, but I might as well have pulled at one of the tree stumps beside the road. Presently, as I fussed about him, a horse and wagon driven rapidly ap- preached from behind, and the man shouted, "What's the matter there? Turn out, can't ye? I want to get by." The road was narrow, and there was a large stone on one side and a clump of birch trees quite close ou'the other. I replied that my horse was down, and that I feared he was ill. "Well, I'ni in hurry!" the man ex- claimed impatiently, "Put the whip to him, Make him get up!" I should not have lashed him even if I had had a whip. But the man Montag out, fuming, and came along, whip in hand, "That horse doesn't look sick," he said, and, before I could remonstrate, he gave the horse three'or £our hard cuts. My new purchase never so much as moved an eyelash. "I''m in great haste!" the pian re- peated angrily. "You nest get your team out of the road." "I'm not here for the fun of it," I re- torted, • The man laid hold of the horse's tail, and I pulled sidewise at the off wheels of my wagon, and at last we got the wagoli a little to one side of the road, The man got into his rig and managed to scrape past us. Ho then throve on without so mph as a butckward glance, it 'woe a little -travelled road, and no one else manse along.. I did not to leave my horse and wagon re.... there while I went in search of a veterinary; so I stayed with my "pare 'yzed'',horso for two hours• or more, during which he' moved only When I pullers h th iiy iiia tail, Toward sunset I set off in desnera- tion to go to a farmhouse that I had passed a mile or two back, But when. I lead' gone fifty -yards•, perhaps, 1 heard a sudden ,ttiing',ovt• anal to phi g W That the arse had ef5 i Co hie feet and was walking on, 1 made. liege to overtake hint and then drove home by starlight at a fair pials. Tho horde gave no further eine' of hie paralyzie. ' At the supper table l rather sltante- faaedly gave the old squire an extend of any trading..:and of what Iliad htip- penes pe, the road, "I.'vo been badly taken le, sir;" I AleTo ()PARE PARTQ for moot makes and models of care, ritelaoetli. Write Prt•wii'Rxuaudslc*'Ib.. lee what you want, lee carry, the 1at'geet and most complete stook in Qanada of pl8htly naevi Or new parte, 1.Q eutemoelle egliileerfetfett, We Mile ,D, aalywh. re l manses, ria i* faotory-or refund In Sall our motto, Elb.4w'd Auto Salvage Pait impel.", 813.987, BuegrA l $b,,. ' 0gaitto, Q>llf, said, "The Woe looked' all right, but there?e ne doubt he is subject to paralysis of his hind legs, He went clown like a stone and was perfectly belpless there in the mail fol' more than two hours:" �. The old gentt'ennan said nothing, ex•. sept to. remark that- he had never heard eb paralysis coming, and going so ',snipe as that, After supper he lighted a lantern and went out with me.to look the horse over, • "elle lege look and .feel all right," the old squire said at last, "I don't believe there's anything the !natter with them. I guess, my e'en, that what you have here is a "sitter',' `! • "A 'sltter' l What's that?" I asked. "Well, it le at peculiar kind of balite tress, Which is liable to be destructive to wagon shafts. I've heard that It's Bard to break a horse of it," The next day we drove the horse to the post office and the following day to a grange meeting without bis lugs but t(vo days afterwards, while the old squire was out alone on the road with hint, he "eat" again fortwo or three hours. He had been -warranted to me as sound and kind, and the question arose whether. -"sitting" efoiatod the war- rant. The old squire thought that wo might find 1t hard to compel the man from whom bought 1 his to take him I back. None the leas, I wrote him a letter charging that he had grossly deceived me and hinting at legal pro- ceedings. A week or so late!' we re- ceived a reply, sent tram an adjoining state to which the farmer had moved. "I aan sorry you are having troable with that house," he wrote. "I war- ranted hien sound and kind, and he is both. You didn't ask me anything about his sitting- down in the road. But as you seem to be having trouble with your liorse, I'll tell you how I managed him when he 'sat.' There was a trace chain in the wagon, and if you haven't takeu it out It's there now. • I thought like as not you might want it. Now, if that horse stops and goes to sit down, you Just, rattle that trace chain with your foot ;and hold on to your reins. The horse will go on and go fast, too. "That's about the best i can do for you," the letter ended. "You will take, notice that I made no charge for the chain, I thought that perhaps that ought to go with the horse." 'Phe old squire laughed heartily when I read the letter aloud to him, but I considered the missive as a piece of brazen Impudence. We found the trace chain under the seat of the wagon, and the next time that the horse started to sit we rattled it. He changed his mind at once and started on at a good pace. We infer- red that the former owner of the house had et some time thrashed him with the trace chain until the, animal got up and went on, ane that the beast was in deadly fear of it. As time passed, we found that any pieces of old iron that would jingle sharply served as well as the chain, and so we came to call the horse 0111 Iron. Whether the antidote for "sit- ting" would have answered indefinite- ly is uncertain. We used 01d iron as a driving horse rot only about a. year. Then wa set hint to drawing lumber in a four -]gorse team. He never tried to "sit" when working with other h•Orses. A Curious Throne. A massive chair made of copper which natives believe was givenby, the late Queen Victoria to an Ashanti chieftain and used by him as his throne, has been discovered in the midst of a Jungle far tram human habitation in the Gold Coast Colony, West Africa. According to native le- gend ft was placed over the grave of the chieftain - who had occupied it when alive. The natives believe, according to a despatch to The London Graphic, that the cbteftain still sits upon his old throne hi spirit at certain tidies, and • for this reason they have never tried to novo the chair which, they declare, has now rooted itself in the ground, A Gold Coast surveyor fleet stumb- led across this curiosity. A search party returned to the spot and found the Jungle so dense that the natives had to hack a petit with cutieesea through the .undergrowth, SAY "DIAMOND DYES" Don't streak or ruin your material in 1 poor dye. Insist on "Diamond Dyes." luasy directions in package. "CORNS" CORNS Lift Right Off Without Fain Doesn't hurt a bite Drop a little "lereetone"'en an aching core. instant- ly that corn stops hurting, t tet ahort- ly you. lift it right off wilb Angers !Melly! i ;eve •y Yeeet druggist sells a tiny bot�tle of ""FI'esaone" fora ten` Mesta, eilfi -tient to remove every Jea,rd a'"`en, soft 'eon. or ora tetweet the toes, and the cal. !uses, without soreness or irritation, Tlla Chinese Irave it (lower which to white nt night or in the shade, and red in the Sunlight, Ask for Mineed'e tend trite ra other, ,Photographing the X'icnicers, No pionia le oanlplete withotl( 'a group peotogratpls, so a few hints fcr the amateur photographer My be Ilse, (I) Don't wait 1111 after supper, ter yell±' picture, Get the cuss together de eerie ns A300511)10, while the light Is good,. (2) Group thein teeing the Buil, brat '11 pee,eible 1nake your exec/pure s2le ivhile the sun is.tattnly veiled In aloud, se as to have t4 strong diffused light and no hard 1lhadows, (8) 1f in direct sunlight, hate welsh tlu'ow a heavy sllntlow on the face should be removed, (4) Ceder trees, tamer are often 'Maned by leaf shadows, Look, out for this, (5) Dan't let your own shadow spoil the foreground, (6) Advance isle ends of a group .@o that ail are equielistant front the eam- ern. (7) Wetter snakes a good foreground but a bad background, (8) Before pressing the bulb for a snap, say something to make the class enille, (9) 1)otr't hey re enap after .four o'clock. :Fake a "abort time." Feed Cart in Cow Stable Facilitates Dieting. The cow•stahle "tea wagon" makes its bow. 11 comes in answer to th,e need of the sclentido dairyman who feeds each cow differently from the rest, in conformity to its dietio re- quirements. The feed cart, to name it more .exactly, is lamented on two small Wagon wheels, And is divided by artilions into Jive or six comete- P D manta containing bran, ground corn, etc. A Scale and measuring pail are suspended by a frame above the mid - die compartment. A "Corner" in Storms., 11 you want to study storms go to Java. That island owns up to an average of ninety -sot -de a year, or ap- proximately two a week, the world's record. Sumatra, stands beside Java, with eighty-six per annum, Borneo and. the Gold Cost have fifty each, Rio de Janeiro fifty-one, Italy thirty-eight, Buenos Ayres, Canada and Austria twenty-three. France and South Russia, the colder regions, have sixteen apiece, Spain and Portugal fifteen, Sweden and Fin- land eight, Great Britain seven. East Turkestan gets off very lightly with a total of—none! FALLING? HERE'S WHERE IT SHOWS fro ?Hann have IVcurIlder pplat painful, parstyyl ng eafiarntnistieli of the • nqrvoc: leo nttOberass•' other day, el 500 are ,R vtetttn, try of Okistiles leotiallnts_elno brings relief 50 00 O y and ao aunt's' tectatt for ' 1100 a 1•n1i10 to rem intone, 142 )Ling fit. %,'orpnto.. 1"'or sale at reliable drug - ghat 001 91.04 a box. ASTHMA Templeton'e RAZ -MAH daps sAHleA.arptntd ctuollrellane other day. Write Templetous,142 Ring St. W., Toronto, for freesemple. Reliable druggists sell them at 03 a bog. To remove a ring from a finger swollen by its tightness, dip the finger. in cold soapsuils. ' A useful coat -hanger can be made from a newspaper rolled up and sus- pended by a cord around its centre. Mineeres Liniment for sate everywhere The Bible is issued, in whole or in part, in over 100 languages and clial- eets in Canada. MOTHER! "California Syrup of Figs" Child's Best Laxative Accept "California" Syrup of Flgs only—look for the name California on the package, then you are sure your child is having lee best and moat harmless physic for the little stom- .j ach, liver and bowels. Children love Don '.Vorryl Let „ Da nderinett its fruity taste. Full directions on sage y.1ur hair and double each bottle. You must, say "Calf - its beauty forma." Not A Blemis mens the perfect appearance of her com. piesion. Permanent and temporary skin troubles are effectively concealed. Reduces un. natural color and corrects greasy skins. Highly antiseptic, used with beneficial results as a curative agent for 70 years, ,1 ((i To stop failing hair at once and rid the scalp of every particle of dantirull, get a small bottle of delightful "Dan - derma" at any drug of toilet counter for a few cents, pour a little in your hand and rub it info the scalp. After several applications the hair usually stops coming out and you can't find any_dantlruff. Your hair wlil grow strong, thick and long and appear soft, glossy and twice es beautiful and abundant. Try it! 1 Just This Minute. "If we're thoughtful just this Minute, in wtlal'Or we say and d0; If we put a purpose in it That is honest through and through SVe shall gladden ilre, and give 'it Grace to snake 11:' ell sublime; For, though life is long, we live it Just this minute at a time, "Yesterday is gone; tomorrow Never comes within our gt'ttsp; Just tele minute's joy or sorrow, That is all our hands sna.y clasp, Just this minute! Let us take It As' a pearl of precious price,. And with high endeavor make it Fit to shine in Paradise," Mlnard's Liniment Co., Limited, Dear Sirs, --This fall I got thrown on a fence and hurt my chest vary bad, so 1 could not work, and it hurt me to' breathe. I tried nil hinds of Liniments and they did me no good, One battle of MINARD'S "LINT- MENT, warned on flannels• and ap- plied on my breast, relieved me cote pletely, 0, TI. COSSABOOM. Ressway, Digby Co., N,S. ' A good coat of paint on the build- ings will make them sell betters—will make them look so good that -seen won't want to sell 'emi "• ee;i •" MO�NERDftee. 'Buy yotu• out-ef•tewn supplies with Dominion Express Money Orders, rive Dollars costs 1tu•ee cents, The Ocean Terminal transit sbefla under 'way at Halifax Are the largest of their kinds in Canada, Ease MInettee Lhlln,rnt in the Iletite. 108115' No, 27—'20, 30s7oPsC".>UGHS FACE COVEREDPPIES Hard Alit Awf lly Sore. Itched, Wan11 & a • "5 had teeter had a• pimple and then my face became covered. Later on the pimples e Deanne bard mid awfully a sore, and they itched se that I could not rest ole ff "inotoent. I had to scratch so that at last I thought �Oarr' my face was poisoned. "I was advieed totryCuticura Soap hnd Ointment, and after using them three weeks I was healed." (Signed) Miss Edith Grover, West Oldtown, Mo., Dec. 16, 1915. Use Cutacura Soap, Ointment and Talcum for ell toilet purposes: Soap 25c, Ointment 25 end 50e. Sold throaghouttheDominion, CnnedianDepot: •ne% Limited, St. Paul St., Montreal. CinticCra Soap shaves wltboutmue. The Greatest Joy,. Tbere's lots at Jay in Ibis queer Old world, • )'hour h lie xemolimes lamed to stmt± An11 the rose ,seems long Ise you Jour - nee on, With Poul' home left tar behind, Tbere's lots of Joy in, the 5111117 eines) In the green fields, treat and fair; Jr* tee wore well do!ueintheb battle m wen, And the coul'age to do or dare, But of all the Joys Whiett the world MRS' boast, Alike to the great or small A contented mind and a heart that's kind Is the greatest joy of all. • — People who buy their food' in small packages aid eypect• the grocer to deliver it imam' from the cost of high living; It doesn't speak very well for' n roan when all the animals on the place get out oii .hie way when they see hint coming, Remember that plants root shallow and that the roots run deep. Deep plowing and shallow cultivating suits the plant. N!TQBA LR Tell rue what you need and I will gladly give you full particulars at chola improved. an danae ro ad In a of lta t ba. You farms 11 parts adi a can still buy within 15 miles el the centre of the City of 'Winnipeg (popu- lation 300,000) at from 550 to 5100 an acre. Sample: -543 anacre, highly im- proved section•, 400 acres cultivated. Good buildings and water, 135 miles from market and school. This price includes 10 -horses and a full line of implements. R. A. MoLOUGHRY, 603 McIntyre Bik., Winnipeg, Man. __ClaSelta_ad AdVertigenlient80 .04.1474X*VAI S"1""YJQ5,5PL11r,}'11 Pl;ftTlbI'itla s willnab you. o ('eozw* inevenm. Peterboug CT.., rj , _ *on sax '1[7j7 L )14p11'1'Ittt3 .N.I66W VA0'3 *, TY and, Joy na'iniing pines t madtoz Qetarlo, xneuranw curried $l"to0, 'W i a far 11,500 .on4ulcg Nate, 'lo. 5+ WIbeaa t ebnalting Co„ 145., 'Y'oroato, Pere 510.15 WAIOTZD, 59 oiler gi.,M.'.,)NANITQP, i 15.1.' Attie l,bicker, ebippad green Irani , ali.7V, De not melt until you cotnmut.leate Wick us, tceenan lima. 1,llutted, Owen Sound. Ont, ' . �i ejizxl7ai 1bcrnooz, roil inrsom ; /p]� 1OG1ST10rU') eenAININat 10(511001. 11, for. eaureos: St, j.§l!zabeth H'odpltal. 104 South Broad 13treet, Elisabeth, Neve Jersey. Complete 'tonnes. Monthly al. lawance , first year $6,.00, aecond $10.00, third $16.00. Aedeeest Rpperintendent. AGENTS W'A1U'TBD. VxT ANTED—AGA/NTS WITIZ roan r ♦ care, everywhere 111 Ontario to handle a fast selling guaranteed device that improves the lighting system on . the Ford ear 200 percent; agents mak-' Ins' $60 to $200 a week profits: apaceor whole time. 'Write 501010, territory 15 ggoing lest, The Arlington Co., Lorne Parte, Ont COARSE SALT LAND SALT Bulk Carlo TORONTO GALT WORKS C. J. CLIFF - TORONTO Cut You.. Peel Bills In fiah'by Using "OLE N -'' LL" BOILER COMPOUND Manufactured by The Mien Feed Water Purifierer Co . r L/miteHr 21CamAen et., Toronto Antorlea'aP Pionoo. Dog' 0omedies Took on DOC DISEASES '" and now to Weed Mailed Free to,any Ad• dress by the Author. R. Clay Glover Co., Jae. 114 West 61st Street New York, V.B.A.. Cord or Fabric. "A well shod la©r'ce travels surest and farthest" THE 'car equipped with Part- ridge Tires runs almost free from the delays and inconven- iences caused by tire troubles. Partridge Tires have so unques- tionably proved their depend- ability and economy that they are to -day recogniz- ed as "the nsost service for your money" tires. • 1168 Daae as Their Tine . ne,ener etteerenizen a e6imsuee" ' me ••.•-Res• ny I ONi( TABLETS MARKED "BAYER" ARE ASH'? N Not .Aspirin at Ail. without the "Bayer Cross" For Colds, Pain, Neuralgia, Tooth- ache, Headache, Earache, and for Rheumatism, Lumbago, Sciatica, Neu- ritis, take Aspirin marked with the name "Bayer" or you are not taking Aspirin at all. Accept only 'Bayer Tablets - of Aspirin" • in an :unbroken "Bayer" package which contains complete di-, reetions. Then you are gutting real Aspirin—the genuine Aspirin toes scribed by physicians for over nine- teen years, Now made in Canada. Handy tin boxes containing 12 tab- lets cost but a few cents, Druggiete also sell larger "Bayer" packages. Themes is only one Aapfrin—."ager"--1'ou wast day "Bayer" Aspirin is the trade nlartc.fregletered in Canada) of Bayer Manufacture. of Mono- acetloeakiestor of eatloyllcneld. While It is wall known that Aspirin moans Bayer manufacture, to assist the public against Imitatlene, the Tablets of Bayer Compeay, wilipe stamped with their general trade mark, the "Bayer Crosti" "., ....,:l� 3 M ',. t'� snot equalled, nor approached by any (' i ... a chewing tabaccoo That is why other Gb g 1: ANCHOR PLUG is supreme. ta,,vvit}ttt! 5" r