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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1931-10-29, Page 2Gunton News- ecord CLINTON, ONTARIO Terms of Subscription—$2,00 per year le advance, to Canadian addresses; $2.60 to the U.S. or other foreign countries. No paper discontinued Until all arrears are paid uotees at. the option of the pubtieber. The date to which every subscription is paid is denoted on the label: Advertising Pates—Transient adver• using, 12e per count line for 'first insertion.- 8c for eaob eubsequent insertion. Heading counts 2 lines. Small advertisements, not to exceed one inch, such .as "Wanted," "Lost," "Strayed," etc., inserted once for 35c, each auheequent insertion150- Advertisements sent in without tin structious as to the number of in• sande, a wanted will run until order. ed out and will be charged accord-. Ingly. Rates for display advertising made known on application,. Communlcativns intended for pub. Ilcation must, as a guarantee of good faith, be accompanied by the name of the writer. G, D. HALL, M. R. CLA,I;I;, Proprietor. • 0d1 tor. M. D. I &TAGGART an c'i er A general Banking Business transaeted. Notes Discounted. Drafts Issued. interest Allow- ed on Deposits. Sale Notes Pur- chased. H.. T. RANCE No'i:ary Public, Conveyancer Financial, Real Estate and Fire In- surance Agent. Representing 14 Fire Insurance Companies, Division.ourt Office. Clinton. Frank FingHand,. &A., LL.B. Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Public Successor to OP, Brydone, ILO. Sloan Block — Clinton, Ont. CHARLES B. HALE Conveyancer, Notary Public, Commissioner, etc. (Office over J. G. Hovey's Drug Store) B. R. H-HIGGINS Nota/ Publ,c, Conveyancer Genera) Insurance, including Fire, Wind, eiekness rnd Accident, Automo. bile. Huron & Erie Mortgage Corp- oration and Canada Trust Bonds. 13 2.1: 127, Clinton P.O. Telephone 57. DR. J. C. GANDER ()Mee Hours; -1,30 to 5,80 p.m., 6.30 to 8.00 p.m., Sundays, 12.30 to 1.30 p.m. Other hours by appointment only. Office and Residence — Victoria St. DR. FRED G. THOMPSON Office and Residence: Ontario Street — Clinton, Ont. One door west of Anglican Church, Phone 172 Eyes Ex:mine,. and Glasses Fitted DR. PERCWAL HEARN Office and Residence: Huron Street • • Clinton, Ont. Phone 69 (Formerly occupied by the late Dr. C. W. Thompson), Eyes Examined and Gimes Fitted. DR. H. A. MCINTYRE DENTIST (Mice over Canadian tinny. Eames, Na;Tinton, ') :t. Extra..ion a Sp, -laity. Phone 21 D. H. McINNES - CHIROPRACTOR Electro Therapist Mlasrour Oraoe:. Huron St. Crew doors west of. Royal Bank). ours—Toed„ Thurs. and Bat., all dayy, Other hours by appointment. IIeneati Mee—Mon., Wed. and Fri. forenoons. Seaforth office—Mon.. Wed. and Friday afternoons. Phone 907. CONSULTING ENGINEER S. W. Archibald; B,A•Sc., (Tor,), O.L.S., Registered Professional En. gineer and Land Surveyor. Associate Member Engineering lnstituee of Can- ada. Office, Seaforth, Cntnrib, • GEORGE ELLIOTT Licensed Auctioneer tor the County of Huron. Correspondence promptly answered. Immediate arrangements can' be made for Sales Date at The News -Record, Clinton, ur bi calling Phone 203. Charges Moderate and Satisfaction Guarauteed. THE McKILLOP MUTUAL • Fire Insurance Company Hoad Office, Seaforth, Ont. President, .1. Bennawels, Brodhagen. lee. president. James Connolly, Goderich. 7a'ee,-treasurer .1), 0.. McGregor, Seaforth. Utr•'otura: .lames Evans, Beachwood; JamesShouldloo. Walton; Nm 'linox, 7ondetbono; 14obt. Ferris, klullett; John Posner, Brueeileld; A. J0roadfoot, Sea- Aortht G. P. McCartney, Seaforth, Agents• W, .1, Yeo, R,R. No. 2, Clinton: John Murray, .3eaforlh; James Watt, Ely.,rOd, Pinchley, Seaforth; ny money to be paid ;my le paid to the Hoye] Bank, ;linton; Bank of Com- merce, Seaforth, or at Calvin ^,utt's Gro. eery, Goderich. Parties desiring to erfeet insurance or transact other business will be promptly attended 1 onapplication to any Of the ab.ve officers addressed to their respec- tive post offices. Losses inspected by' the director who lives nearest the Some. tCANADIM4 NATIONAL RAILWAYS TIME TABLE Trains will arrive at and depart from Clinton as follows; Buffalo and Goderich Diva Going East, depart 6.58 ani. " ft a 9.05 p.m., C,'oing West, depart 11.55 a.m. 9.44 p.m. London, Huron dt theme Going South" 8.08 p.m, Going North 11,58 a.m. Such delicacy of ,flavour is not found i other teas t! i1'1 esh from th gardens' Wh t New York h Wearing BY ANNEBELLE WORTHINGTON Illustrated Dressmaking Lesson Fur, nis7ied With Every Pattern Ilero'.J the new t.'. tr lines that all Paris is talking about. And how effective and slenderizing besides be- ing smart! • An inverted skirt plait at the cen- ter -front gives graceful fulness and height to wearer. The neckline is comfortable and flattering in open Ar with narrow rolled collar. It is blaelt crepe,satin with egg- shell collar, repeatd in fan -shaped wings of the sleeves. Style No, 3318 may be had in sizes 36, 38, 40, 42, 44 and 46 inches bust. Size 36 requires 3' yards 39 -inch, 3 with % yard 39 -inch contrasting. Sheer printed worsted, monotone t lightweight tweed effects and canton- f&ills crepe also suitable, t HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS b Write your name and address plain- ly, giving number and size of such a patterns as you want. Enclose 20e in stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap b it carefully) for each number, and a duress your order: to Wilson Pattern p Service, 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. a Lands Farthest North. 1'-langing from the Arctic Circle like so' many pendants_ from a necklace, aro several islands and groups of islands. The largest and most north- erly is Iceland with its volcanoes and geysers and barren wastes.' A few miles southeast of Iceland are the p'aroe Islands, and still farther south- east lies Shetland, an archipelago known to the- early Roman explorers as °Ulti'ma Thule;' the farthest known point of laud. 'Undoubtedly the ancients .thought it was the farthest north, and really it is very far north, and but for the kind!"y influence of tile gulf stream, it would bo more frigid than Labrador. At is is, the climate is sometimes more. charming than that of California, but more oris ranch aka n to Labrador, with a -great deal of snow and fog and rain. Thule once belonged to the Nor- weigan Crown, but was presented to Great Britain as the wedding dowry of Margaret of 'Norway, who married James the Third' of Scotland, It is often classed with Scotland, but it is a different land in many respects ... a little world of itself; full of interest, novelty, and romance. Here the sea is seer. in its sublimest splendor, in all the marl/Mous phases of its moods. In no place in Great Britain is the grandeur of the rocky coast scenery surpassed. With a stiff arctic breeze sweeping down from the north, and a full tide, the drama play- ed presents a magnificent spectacle. Great billows with caps like white snow 'hurl themselves against the im- pregnable rocks, and then shoot hea- venward with silvery breath as of a steaming geyser. Only thirty of the hundred islands are 'inhabited; the. largest is Main- land, and the capital city le Lerwick, the queerest and quaintest town that was ever built. The buildings all seem to be huddled together, with a few very narrow streets, some of 'the houses at the south end so near the sea that the waves break on their gable ends, The town hall, in Gothic style, elaborately decorated inside and out, has stained glass windows presenting portraits of ]rings and queens of Nor- way There is a central-Tlubl1c school, a fine fish mart and excellent harbor works. The nominal population is five thousand, but during the fishing sea- son it rises to nearly. twenty thou sand, Fishermen of many. climes here dispatch their' varied catches. Ice. antlers, Soots, Englishmen, Germans, Scandinavians, are all to he seen in he motley throng. Scarcely a tree grows anywhere on he bosom of tiro sterile land, but eautiful ]leather, bearing myriad pink !towers, is. God's carpet for the land, nd often one finds a sprig of rarest white. In summer, the banks of • the urns ai'e garlanded with primroses nd sometimes a solitary bluebell ap. ears. A11 day long the .:a gulls hover nd cry over the roofs of Lerwick. Every house has its own familiar ulls; every street its own ban dot ells, and they never mix The chil- dren of each house call them by name, ed feed them every day, The pets sem to know what food 18 meant for hear and never does a gull attached 0 one house try to eat the food scat erect from the place next door. hould a traveler;• come across a pile f rice out on the roadway, be would tep aver it with care, knowing It was ere for, some pet gull. A familiar sight on the islands is lassie going over the hills to fetch rovisions or to carry the peats,' her liter skirts pinned up, a white ker- chief beer her 'read, basket on her tuck, ltnitting all i• . while.—Prom A Sturdy Little Northland," by T. aro]d`Grimshau'. An Autumn Morning TDB TULE MA ,, kr URDER, STORY OP A MISSING ACTRESS AND•THE:'1'A.X ING 013 WITS; TO EXPLAIN HER PATE. BY NANCY BAI ,e l41�iVITY, SYNOPSIS Don e Ellsworth's wife, formerly ti actress Shelia O'Shay, disappears. D Cavanaugh, criminal psychologist ]ear that their married life hag been ver unhappy. Peter. Piper, a -Herald reporter,'wh1 trying to interview Dr. Cavanaugh race Barbara -Cavanaugh, -andfinds that al was engaged to Don Ellsworth. before h marriage, Dr. Cavanaugh- identifies the burro remains of. a body as hat of Shelia''1 Shay, and,Barbara'faints when she hear this, Peter climbs. the porch. of the 17110 worth home and ands. Dr, Cavanaugh -1 Sheila's boudoir, and is invited in, The find the breach of promise papers Wit which Sheila forced oilsworth to ma?'r her, have been. taken from the safe. B they find something else, .. CHAPTER XXVII. Dr. Cavanaugh finished his righti'n Of the overturned chair. Then h reached deliberately ,for the sheet o paper, holding it gingerly by th edges. "No use gumming up the finger prints," he observed. Camberwell's very fond of nice fingerprints." He laid the sheet of paper face up n ward -on the dressing table, securing each corner with one of the toilet articles for a paperweight. "It's your find, young man. Conte and ltave'a look." Together the two men bent over the flattened pages. "I/certainly wouldn't," he said to sharply. ,; 'There! You see how careful we y must be not to jump to conclusions, le Even you, who had nothing whatever, is to do with it, looked momentarily e guilty when confronted with a sugges- • tion which seemed to carne; home to ;d you. You are not David Orme, but s you.remembered that you had express- - ed a rather extreme dislike for the y lady in the case." • it "I never saw ser in my life!" Peter t .protested. "I know you didn't," Dr. Cavanaugh .said soothingly. "But I wanted to warn }'ou to be very cautiouyi about g theorizing. The race is not always e to the swift—they sometimes race in o the wrong direction. Dy the way, did e you happen to notice the pages of the directory where the letter .vas - thrust?" "I'm afraid I didn't," Peter admit- ted, "I ought to have told you 'and Id you take it out yourself. I just didn't think! It was somewhere near the front of the bock—that's all I remember." "Well, don't worry. It can't be help- ed, It just gives the pollee a chance to exercise their own wits instead of ours.'" "I'm sure it wasn't as far back as the 'O's'," Peter said dejectedly. "And yet it was stuck in with the edgtejust a little beyond the margin, as if to mark the place. I do.l't think she had any idea of hiding it there." ' "No. She wasn't hiding it. Mr. Orate, whoever he may be, wouldn't be in -the telephone book anyhow. If he were, he'd have telephoned probab- ly instead of writing—and. he wouldn't have 'found her out' at this late day if he were living in the same town with her. She was rather a public character, you know. But she -might have known how to get in touch with hint through someone else. They may have met since that letter was writ- ten, for ..II we know." , "I'm awful sorry," said the crest- fallen Peter. "I've -made an awful footle of it." "On the contrary, you found th3 let- ter, which may be important evidence. and is certainly well worth looking into. It is your . , er, scoop." ".You mean I can have it for the office?" Peter L•emned. "Hardly that—you forget Mr. Catn- berwell's, penchant for fingerprints, Besides, your enterpr se in getting it at all might not be appreciated by the police department, But I see no ob- jection to your matting a copy, if you think your editor would like it—you've certainly earned that much." "Like it!" Peter was already scrib. tiling frantically with a stubby black pencil on a sheet of copy paper snatched from his coat pocket, "i'll say he'll like it," "I shall tell Camberwell that you assisted me in my unofficial inquiry," the doctor said. "That will allay his curiosity—and there's no reason that I sari see why we should try to keep the letter secret. If it was written by the criminal, he'll expect it to be found sooner or later. And when the police begin to look for him, he'll be a very poor criminal indeed'if he isn'tI aware of their efforts. I'm beginning to take a personal interest in the news -gathering projects of the 'Her - aide" "It'll make the 'city' edition," Peter sighed happily. Suddenly his pencil paused in mid-air. "Here's another thing," he said. "That letter was written on cheap paper—almost as poor as this stuff in my pocket. et would hardly take the ink. And yet it was written with a good smooth pen point. It must have been foun- tain pen ink, or it would have blur- red more than it did. Unless the pa- per is a blind—and the only apparent blind about the whole business—this Orme person carries an excellent fountain pen, but is reduced to the cheapest possible kind of paper. Gee, e'm beginning to find him interest- ing!" "So. urn 1," said Dr, Cavanaugh, CHAPTER XXVIII. 'Well, look what the cat brought in!" Jimmy, who prided himself 011 being the fleet of the Herald editorial staff to arrive in the morning, had signaled the freight elevator as usual n the gray light of a 6 o'clock dawn, swung around the jutting corner of ,o photographers' dark-room—and was brought up short in his headlong progress across the local xoom by the sight of Peter hunched over his type - leaner, the light from a battered green shaded uesk lamp outliningeaharsh circle about his slouching shoulders. (To be continued.) Lucky It was the firm's annual dance. The junior bookkeeper, had chosen a very attractive partner. ' .. "By the way," he volunteered as they danced. "I'm glad our manager isn't here tonight. " He's about the biggest ass of a man one can meet, and not fit for intelligence company." She stopped dancing and stared hard. "Young man;" she snapped, angrily, "do you know who I am?" "Not the ,faintest idea," he said, easily. "Well, I'm the manager's wife!' she informed biro. "Gee 'Whiz!" he exclaimed. "Now, do you know who I am?" "1' o," said his partner. "Thank goodness for that!" he re- plied, as he backed hurriedly away. —....—___4„.._—_......, t`Do you plead guilty or not guilty?'' "Er: what else have you?" • A Harbor 'film 8 The harbor was set to a slower tempo than the city. The ships lay by a the ducks, quietly; the current flowed almost imperceptibly, though the sur- face of the data dimpled and shone, te danced and glinted. A great steamer e moved up the charnel, pushed by a tug—stately motion en stately water. ° One fell into tune with the motion of s it, as if here the natural rhythm of th things was near enough to the sur- face to be perceived, caught, and was- a tered. At the end of the jetty, the waves lapped the rocks in the same ° tempo; never, any sense of hurry, nor delay, but a natural lift and lap, and e a receding. A motorboat hurried out to a battleship and kicked up its heels H in a whirl of white water, until only the gleaming spray shone back. A. quicker rhythm that was, cutting into the andante of the general theme. The fishing schooners drifted itt. w each with an upturned dory on the after deck above a tangle of brown fish nett. They came singly, in a Ipng line, their notion giving them beauty; they came from the deep, from beyond e the Iighthouse, and passed on up the channel to their berths. They kept the game rhythm of motion, like notes in a composition of wave, air and wind. The lighthouse et the far end of the breakwater lifted its round tower as if to mark the passing of each vessel, to accentuate the tempo of each one's due appearing. Even the ferry' fell into the came recurring time 'beat, as it crossed the channel not too fast; the two-man crow cast off and make fast again in in easy, capable way. Sailors move in time, always making things fast or setting them loose, as they fall into rhythm with water, wind and 'wave. So men take advantage of currents and tides. They catch the tempo, and keep it, One cannot forget the little waves lap- ping on a rocky doorstep, nor the brown fishing boats, beautiful because of their motion, The gossamer on the grass at dawn Is silvery these autumn days, hen the bright morning star has gone And mists are on the mountain ways; see upon the level pond eon glints like living diamond. Father: "You are going to marry that insignificant little fellow, Percy! Why, you used to say you would never marry a man less than six feet high.". Daughter: "I know, dad. But I de- cided to take off twenty per cent, for cash." .. ISSUE No. 44—'31 Dusk still is in the hemlock boughs Although the birches lift 'their gold; The lonely lowing of the •cows Drifts downward fromthe distant fold; ;The clarion crowing of the cock Is punctual as is the clock. • There is a clattering of cans, The milkman's rude and raucous shout, .0ne of the rustic Calibans In open -throated roundabout; He ,squints and eyes the weather- _ 'vane, And growls_"I think it's going to rain!" The day expands. Let Dome what will There's in the ,air a tonic taste. If I go out and climb a hill , I shall behold a wonder -waste Of oolor sweeping free and far To where serene horizons, are, Clifton ,Soollard, be The; Christian Science Monitor. "Perkins seems to be le self -Inside man." Well, if you saw him opera his wife 'is about, you'deehmlc lli#'W f� made to order!! • "Dear Shelia,"'it"read, "I've found you out. You sentenced me to a so- journ in hell, such, as you would neither understand" nor care about. Did you ever in all your life, I won- der, care about anything but your own desires? You've attained them every time, those desires, riding roughshod over all who opposed you. You've used everything you have—your beauty, your terrible charm (yes, it is ter- rible, Sheila; even I, who know you weli enough to hate you, feel it even yet) for your own purposes, destroy- ing others along the way. But you, who have destroyed others, may yet be destroyed by the very forces you have raised. There are things that not even you can manage. I have come to myself at last, and you have me to reckon with. You'd better ar- range to see me at the earliest op- portunity. "DAVID ORME." "H'm!" the doctor's deep bumble- bee hunt brolo the silence as he straigh.ened from his leaning position over the dressing table. "What do you think of that, Peter?" "It's a brand new angle—thank heaven!" Peter exclaimed, "You needed a new angle?" "I did," Peter agreed emphatically. A new .angle—and one with which Barbara, at least, had nothing to dol "It's a threat, obviously. Who's Da- vid Orn.e?" • "Precisely. Who 's David Orme? It's going to be somebody's business to find that out." "It might be an alias, of course," Peter suggested. 'I hardly think so. The writer of that letter expected Sheila O'Shay to know who Inc was." "Yes," Peter broke in eagerly, "and that handwriting doesn't look as if it were disguised, „does it? It's a bit shaky, but quite natural and flowing," "I'm not a handwriting expert, but I'm inclined to think you're right. Camberwell, of course, can tell, Tak- ing it et face value, it's the writing of an educated man -the letters are very small, for one tiling, and there's the Greele'e' and the final 'd's'. While an educated man might try to imitate the handwriting of one who was al. most illiterate, the reverse would hardly be feasible." "The:e's the'choice of words, ton, 'Attained your desires.' Nothing royighneck about that—and yet it's not exactly stilted, as if he were try- ing to talk. big. See, this begins to look good!" Peter was rocking back and forth on his toes with suppressed excitement. The doctor reached absent -windedly for a cigar, and then regretfully thrust it back into his case. "Too bad," he murmured, "but we can't leave a lot of snrolte about. I'll have to tell you again, young man, that you've a good mind fa seizing significant points. Perhaps you no- ticed also the choice of ideas. That is a threatening letter, yes; but it goes in for what are called glittering gen- eralities. The writer was thinking more about his own feelings than i about any definite pia., of action. Fee's what we psyehologiste call an intro- t} vert. There's the double parenthesis, too—correctly punctuated, by the way. His mind wound in and outamong his emotions. He couldn't resist that bit about her 'terrible charm.' Unfor- tunately, though we knew all this about his insides, there cent much of a cru, by which to pick him out on the street" "What about the envelope?" Pater grovelled a'nmoment on hands and knees and retiievud the envelope where it had fallen under the tele- phone stand. This time he was cars- •ful to touch it only at the edges. "It wasn't posted at all," he said disap- pointedly. "Delivered by hand. Still, this is sort of funny, isn't it?" The envelope, which he laid on the table beside the letter, was addressed in a single line: "Sheila O'Shay (Ellsworth);" "A regular demon for parenthesis, that bird, Now what do you suppose 1)e put that ono in for?" "If he 'were being facetious, I'd nay he was imitating the newspapers. You wouldn't say, now, that this letter was Written by a newspaper reporter go?iO wrong?" Peter looked ad startled as if a. ggen- and suddenly been pointed at him, bah* foremost, - healthful food.. KR APT' Cheese is rich in calm eine', pho1horus a .;. . and body-building vita„ mina. It is the most highly concentrated" source of highest quail ity protein known. Fag. a balanced diet, include ' Kraft cheese with every meal, 1.2'add in Canada Made by the makers of Kraft Salad Dressing and Vclveeta Mariner Some seamen build a, quiet !louse 'By fields of drowsy clover, Where sunshine -sated beese carouse, And call their voyaging over. A garden plot, to them as wide As all the ocean, blotting The memory of turning tide And long -furled canvas rotting, But I go on, though nights be pale With rain and winds be wailing— There are so many seas to sail, So littletime for sailing. —John Hanlon ie the Commonweal. "The Needhams live beyond their income during the summer." No wonder. While she goes away and plays bridge, he stays in town and sits in a poker game." Urges ---- Urges Constant Care All motor vehicle owners and opera- tors are urged to exercise the utmost care in operation and to co-operate, at all times, to eliminate needless sorrow and Ioss, is the advice given by Malcolm D. Rudd, Deputy- Com- missioner, Department of Motor Ve- hicles, Connecticut. 'You look worried. What's the mat- ter?" "Our little Jack is in financial difficulties." "Nonsense! The child is only one year old." "Yes, but he's swallowed a penny.". m Railways Facilitate Improved set How railways and refrigeratitue e have changed the food habits oii, America, - with the development t1 seines at new industries and, proal:, ably not 'without damage to some oleo ones, is explained by Ralph Budd'. president of the Great Northern! Railway Company, it, a recent "Re. search Narrative" issued by the En gineering Foundation of -New fork City. One example is lettuce, a; plant once much used in medicine and which is reputed once to have] saved a Roman emperor at the point • of death. Nowadays lettuce may bd saving millions of Americans frond illness due to lack of the important vitarnines which such green plant&' contain. In the ten years between 1920 and 1030, Air, Budd states, rail. way shipments of lettuce in the Uni- ted States increased nearly fivefold. In the winter, lettuce and similar fresh 'vegetable foods cannot be grown in the eastern and northern parts of the continen', exceptenderglass and at prolribitive Cost. On the Pacific coast and in a few other places in the west, however, lettuce can be grown virtually all year round. Hence the development of country-.,. wide sale for this western lettuce, something which never would have been possible without the availability of fast, refrigerated freight lines across the continent. Application ofthese same benefits of modern rail- way transportation to other food - materials has had the result in the past few years, Mr. Budd states, of giving the average man diet much more variety than formerly, especi- ally in the way of fresh fruits and vegetables 'which science now re - ( 18 essential to good health. "Erica, I don't care for that young man who comes here to see you." "Ali right, Dad. He doesn't care for you, either." treeesee litres at Aar ancitweeter syr /ay BERRI cJ The CANADA STARCH CO., Limited MONTREAL r A8t, x'l.iL",:.e.87,f2,,,!wol."+.°b"°Cd+ t,& •orA;'` ,g 9 fust postpone it!' "No, I don't have 'nerves.' You can't have them, and hold this sort of position. My head used to throb around three o'clock, and certain days, of course, were worse than others. "Then I learned to rely on Aspirin!' The sure cure for any headache is rest, But som times eve must postpone it. That's when Aspirin saves the tray. Two tablets, and the nagging pain ##s gone until you are home. And once you are comfortabl4 the•pain seldom returns! leeep Aspirin handy. Don't put it away, or put on taking. it. Fighting a headache to finish the daymaji be heroic, but it is also a little foolish, So is sacrificing a night's sleep because you've an annoying cold, o irritated throat, or grumbling tooth, neuralgi, neuritis. These tablets always relieve. They don i depress the heart and may Inc taken freely. That medical opinion. 'It is a feet established by the las twenty years of medical practise. The only pautionto be observed is when you tt buying Aspirin. Don't take a substitute because it will not act the same. Aspirin is made in Canada.