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The Exeter Times, 1922-6-1, Page 7Fet*,(i '0a/circle to bed.' , • From ,reports We hear from some of our young reader§ We',are lead to be- lieve that a' slumber of the "Dade edee read theBoy Scout column and i,n,""the hope that. we an make it more , (interesting for' them' and at. the, same 'stint° perhaps,'Mke them gain a view of what Scenting is really' trying to. do for their boys, we are printing th.e followingextract from a recent publi- cation cif the Canadian General' Coun- cils- . The Boy in the in There is only ably sure that our' sOns safely in theirlives, a iag their churns 1011111 Meets the Man the Boy. one way to be reason - we are going to see over the rough places rid that is by becom- . -We must not allow 11,11EUJIA`Cle This 'Trouble Can Only be Got Rid of.by Enriching the Blood. Ir no dlsease does the blood become thin eo rapidly as in rheumatism, Not only deem it become thin, but ite is load's(1 withrheumatic poiso)is, With- out proper treatment these poitiene in- crease, the general health is under- mined, tile inflanied *joints swell,' and are Very,' painful, and often:the Sail- forer becomes crippled. Dr. pioc il1s balid up the blood and enable it to cast out the rheumatic' poisons with the natural secretions of the _body, thus driving out the veins and benefitting the gen- eral health Sound proof of these statemeats Is offered by Mrs. George Stanley, Sparta, Ont., who says :— "Poi. a number of years I was troul)led with rlegumatien , which at tl 'very Painful. My general health was tale affected, M 1 oould scarcely drag myself around. I had been doc- toring a good deal, but did not get any better, until one day my dtattghter brought me a bof of Dr. Williams' , our waking hours to be so full of Pink Pills By the time eee..se. we,re ,business that we -shall lack. time to used I 'contd. notice a slight' unProvet help the boys fightthosebattles every', meat and I continued taking the pills lad s m.ust face. The boy within the until used about a dozen boxes inan Must come out to meet the man by which time I fc.elt lil e who is within the boy and they m -- ust -and- looked likea now. person one, I could do my with ease. and have ince enjoy - walk, talk and play together. work ' Charlie's Case. ed the best of health, I have since • recommended Dr, "Williams,' Pink Pills usual, contains a note of warning to The following ,anecclote, though un- to several oth•ere who received the which every father should give heed: same benefit as myself." The best time to begin taking Dr. A prominent Canadian judge of a Williams' Pink Pills is the moment Juvenile Court tells of a visit which you feel the least bit out of sorts. The he made bo a place of .detention, where • he became interested in two bright sooner you do so the sooner you will regain your old time energy. You can looking boys of alsont 'sixteen years of get these pills through any medicine age. In conversation with one he dealer or by mail post paid at 50 cents said,' "Charlie, how did you come to, a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The get into this trouble? I knew your Dr' 'Williams' Medicine Co., ,Breek- father well. He was one of the best ministers in Canada. It must have I ' O' , e nt broken his heart ,to see you 'going wrong. Why didn't you take him iThe First Company.nto your confidence when you found your- A Wall Street. man was very keen e411' slipping? The boy hung his on having profi.cient ,clerks in his ern - head and mumbled: "I never &out& Ploy. Before a clerk could enter his get Within forty feet of my dad. He Was alwaya too busy." ' Jim's Case. There was a 'wonderful silultanity between Charlie's case end that of ,#e other boy, Jim, whose father was a writer of legal books, Tim complain- ed that several times when in trou- ble he had tried to have a talk with his father, but -was' always greeted with "Run away, Jim, my boy, I am just in the middle of a very lamer - tent chapter end I cannot take the time just now to talk to you." Your Case. A yo•uith ,sidled into a jeweller's Perhaps by this time you are aay- shop with a furtive air. He handed lag, "Yes, I know and I only wish I the jeweller a ring with thestem- hasVt, nore thne to devote to my boy, meted statement that !he wishecl it ball' seem in that respect to be tied marked with "shale names,," hand and foot. My business taken me "What names, do you wish?".-iA- --m\_ away from home a great deal, or I quired the jeweller. • . must attend meetings at night, or It "From Arthur to Mand," the young: work long hours in the office. My life: man blushingly whispered. just now is peculiar." The jeweller looked from the ring It was to meet stic,h cases as your:el to the young man arid 'mid in a :fatherly manner, "Take my advice, young man, and have it engraved sim- ply 'From Arthur'!" office he was required to pass a writ- ten examination on his Icntowledge of business. At one examination tone of the cues' tions was: "Who formed the first 'company?" A certain •bright youth -was a little puzzled db this, but wag not to be floored. He wrote: "Noah successfully floated a /com- pany while the rest of the world was in liquidation." He p as sed, ken__ Experience. Phone Service Measured Like Electric Light. The fleet metered telephone Service' in the world is naw given in Everett, ash:, whore about 6,000 subscribers are paying for Just the amount of talk- ing they de, The new rates which are new on trial Junder ordere of the Washington State Board 61 Public Works, ere based ea -the time eonsum-, ed in actual talkilig 'over the, tele- phone, as gas; electricity, and water ere metered. Under this eystem the service company asserts that it is peseible to reduce the cost to 85 per cent. of its zubeerib-ers and, increase the capacity of -Replant by 2,000 tele- IA,3,-91-ree 'without adding to the ex - These change§ tire made possible threugh the developMent of, 4 device known as a "teleathronometer," which accurately measures the length of time each telephone is used by the calling party. Interning calls are not registered. For more than a year the teleohronometers have been tested, and last December they were ordered placed on all'telophones in the Everett system. Among other advantages of the tele - chronometer, the 'company elainas that it will diseeurage and probably eliminate "listening ia" on party lines, as it will cost the•eaveSdrePPer money to take down his receiver and gather the neighborhood gossip; unnecessary and Tx -iv -aims conversations will be re- duced to a minimum, and the use of ten, eight, six, and four -party lines will be increased, because there will be less traffic on the lines. Telephone service is now given for as little as $1 a month, which entitles the subscriber to 60 telechrones a month. If he- uses more than that, ELMOUnt he pays one cent a telechro- ne for it. Single -party business tele- phones that formerly oost.$6 a month are now $5.25 e. month, which entities the •eubecriber to 600 teleehrones, or almost 24 minutes of conversation, each buidness day. The telechronometer is a little de- vice located 'Giese to each telephone and registers the time consumed by the calling party, after "centied" has made the teennection. Registration is stopped the instant their receiver is replaced on the hook. No influence outside the control of the subscriber can cause registration. The largest sailing ship afloat is a ' French five -master, La Franee, a steel barque of 5,633 tone burden, which carries 30 sails and a crew of 54. Her beet f air eveather run is 322 knots in la 24-hour day, though she has logged as much as 421 knots .in a hurricane. Not many st'e'am freighters could bet- ter these figures. that- the Scout Movement was devised by Sir Robert Baden-Powell, who Spent years studying every phase of the different movements among boys. What Scouting Is. , • Baden-Powell says: "Scouting is, a game in which elder brothers can -give their younger brothers healthy en- vironment and encourage, them to healthy activities such as will help them to develop CITIZENSHIP. "Its strongest appeal is through Na- ture Study and Wood -craft. It deals with the individual and net with the company.' It raises intellectual •xis vrell as purely physical or purely moral qualities. At first it used to aim for • A man's lungs 'contain two hundred cubic inches of air. Sir Arthur Balfour's full title is Earl of Balfour and: Viscount Traprain of Wittinghante. Balfour is -4 small place in Fife, the original home .of the Balfoure. Witti.ngheme is the Earl ef Balifour's Seettish home and place of birth, in East Lothian. "If a child refuses to eat," says in expert, "do net 'try to force him; in- stetai dole out the food with apparent reluctance and try to make him be- lieve that he must not eat too much" The boy and girl club leader who put "earn" into "Ilearn.'2 did much to farther the club movement Novel Meth d of A acting Settlers Wisconsin's method of adding to the population and -wealth of the state is distinguished by absolute originality, and what is bebter, by unparalleled success, says an. AITIOP109.11 writer. Like all etatee, riot to mention 'Canada, these ends—now by experience it fiwhere. immigration is desired, WI:scan-. known that, where properly handled, see uses. /3./eated, pamphlets a,e,sataahag it gains them." Fathers of,, boys and ether persons interested in. boy welfare who would like to have n copy/of ,the complete pamphlet from which the above ex- tracte have been taken, as well as other information with reference bo ,peas, an appeal from man to mait the Boy Scout Movement, should write from the direetor of immigration ,dilre- to Provinci•al Headquarters, The Bhylctly to the prospective settler, and a Scouts Aesoetation, Blear and Sher- selpe,eelsieei, or his interests after his bourne Ste., Toronto. Recreational Uses of Forest. Reserves, The forest reserves are steadily com- ing Into more general use for recrea- tive purposes. Each year shows nu Increase In the number of cottages erected at the various sunlit) er resorb. Camping, and pientleine parties -find healthful pleasSure onthe shoi.es, of the various lakee, and those resorts which are a,ceessible by automobile are visit- ed by oonsiderable minThers• each week end and holiday during- the season. -- Annual Report Talreoto•r of • Forestry, Ottawa.; How Forest Fires Start. 'Do your part in preventiag fire be- ing master. Look after your camp lire-. See Itis dead, out. Do net throw' matches, or burning Ina terlal or ashes where they might ignite leaves or tw,Igs or rubbish tuna thus set fire to the forest. Described as the, moat valuable' in the world and the only specimen in eiciatence, the 911Cellit British Guinea ,Istaanip of 1856 was, recently offered iokr 'Sale in Paris, the attra•otive featnres of the state, but it uses these only as a .secsondary feature --the primary feature of its method of attracting new residents, 'and of retaining them after -settle- ment, being an ,entirely personal tap- . 'Although ants ,communiciate with one another,by tench, ,there are many insects ,VlliLdh make noises' to feint that they ate' inaudible to the 'human arrival in the tsttabe. This method cant he beet illustrated by describing a typical example. In reply tu a tbureau of •immigration classified advertisement, there came an inquiry tr0111 a man in Iowa. In reply to this went is long peestanal, letter from the director of the bureau, interpreting an ,accompanying pam- phlet an "Perm Making in Urpper•Wie- cousin," and pointing out the use of an inelosed "teeri,ifiCabe of inquiry" to be presented to arty person or firm from whom the prospective settler might purchase land. This 'certificate is a protection to the land purchaser, and it warns the land salesman that the Wisconsin Bureau of Immigration intends to keep in teueh with the pur- chaser during the whole transaction. Thus is the immigrant in a Large meas- ure protected, from falling hire the hands of unacrupuleus land agents, arid should he nevertheless do so, he coulci appeal to the bureau to Rave his wrongs righted. The result of this kind of work has been that since the war, 5.280 families have loea.ted in northern Wis,correin to develop farm homes, Two large el'ares have been made, one 'covered with dots representing new families located on the land during the last three yeare, and the other showiag, with similar .,dots,' each new farhily tit:tut has been directly assisted by the immigration bureau. The second chart has nearly aa many slots as the first, ced theet y w11 Right food for -the body is more important than right fu.el. for thC en inc. is a s_cieutific food,coutainingai the nutrintent of -wheat and malp ea barley. Crape4futs digest's easily and oickly, builds toward health and %strength. and is delightful in flavor and crispness acres a 1' eason ,.rrapeffllis sok. HEALTH EDUCATION ,BY DR. J. J. MIDDLTON Previneial Board ef Health, Ontario Dr, IVIlddleien Will he glad to attlwer questions ou Health mat, ters through this colorna. Addrese him at Spadina Reuse, Spina CreSeeet Toronto, "Yes, I am,inierested in your work —very much ihtereeted, but how tan iielP? What can.' say or do to be of assistance to .Fon?" Only a few day ,s ago a lady asked this question of one of the Public Health Nurses from the Provincial Board of Health. s Of course from the poincof view off the ,Community Nurse, there are ee many ways that volunteer ladies and gentlemen can help that the answer to this lady's question seems obvious, but it is not so frern the point of view of the layawdrken it is lines- saty, therefore, to previcie practical and authentie thxformation that ti volunteer worker oan make use of. Here are a feW suggestions put in question and answer form tvhich may (f) To make the ehildren a to -day healthy so that theynnay grow up to be healthy men and women. 3, Will the carrying out of a Child Welfare scheme he aa additional burden on the taxpayer? Work of thus kind is 'never an ex- pense. It is money invested ,Tia is repaid a hu•ridred-fold 111 raising the 'standard of health of the entire com- munity, The trifling cost of main- taining a Community Nurse is over- whelmingly surmounted by a recite - tion in the expenditure for hospitals, asylums and institution's which are now in many caees filled to ever -Slow- ing and are supported by the tax- payers of the province. Many of the inmates of these institutions would be healthy men and women to -day if their help to make the situation clear, presont aeSocts asucih ' epo 1. 1,v,h,, is behind, this week et had been given medical and nursing Child 'Welfare? It ib the Ontario, attention in early life' These nnfer" Gorernment working through the turiate people have become chronic Maternal and Child Welfare Division of the Provincial Board of Health. 2. What is it's object? (a) To re- duce the death rate among infants and young children in this province. • (b) To give advice arid instruction to prospeetive nuabliers;en how to care for their health, during the critical months preceding childbirth, in ,order that the children may be well-borti, and get a good start in life. (c) To instruct mothers in the pro- per care and feeding of infants so that they may survive the first criti- cal year of life. (d). To provide means whereby mothers can have, their children weighed alit' measured for physical ,ailments or ',defects. (e) To advise the parents of a child having physical defects to provide medical treatment for the child, so that the defects may be early cor- rected and thus give • the child a chance to grow up normally, without any unnecessary handicap in its growth and development. invalids and are now a burden to the state. 4. How many children were born last year in Ontario? 72,611. 5. How many of these died before reaching one year of age? • 7,804, or more than one hundred out of every thousand births. 6. What is the infant death rate in New Zealand, where Child Welfare work has been carried on for about twenty years.? About 46 per 1,000. Knowing these facts, tell your friends and neighbors. Interest every- body you know in the great work that is being carried on in your city and community and, if possible, persuade indifferent people to beeome enthusI- asts. Remember it is a labor of love. It is work that is worthy of every good citizen. It is the work of the Master, who said, "Inasmuch as ye have done it to one of the least of these My brethren ye have done it unto Me." and "Suffer little children to come unto Me and forbid them not, for of such is the Kingdom of Heaven". CHI 110 D AILMENT The ailments of childhood—consti- pation, indigestion, colic, colds, etc. -- can be quickly banished through the use of Baby's Own Tablets. They are a mild but thorough laxative which in- stantly regulate the bdwele and sweet- est the stomach. They are guarantees' to contain no harmful drugs and can be given to the yoilligeet baby with perfect safety. Gene-et:ante them Mrsa Aletcle Lepage, Ste. Beatrix, Que., writes:—"Baby'e Own Tablets were of great help to my baby. They regu- lated her newels ansi stomach and made her plump and well." The Tab- lets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25c a box from The Dr. Wih- Iiains' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. • Scandal.. If you're the butt of scandal's aim, This thought to you appeals: Thopo,orest fruit is not the game On which wasps gnaw their meals. The vicious word, the 'ball of -snow, They gather as they roll and gTow. Throw a handful out upon the. stree't, It's a mountain when the neighbors meet. Nurses War Memori I Fund. Caaadiall nurses from coast to poest are railing funds to erect ai,monument at the Genital M commemoration of Canadian Nursing Sisters -who lost their lives during the Great War. On- tario nurses are requested to send thieir contributions either individually or through their local .association to th.e Provincial Secretairy-Treasurer of the Fund, Miss Holland, 410 Sher - bourne pi., Toronto. 41, Tree Planting in Canada. This is the season of the, year vrhen tree planting is being actively carried on throughout Canada. In Orttenio and Quebec, farmers are improving their woocilots by planting, seedling trees' sent out from the provincial foreSt ( nursery- stations at St, Williams and • l3erthierville, respectively; and la ' both provinces there is considerable activity in regard to municipal forests, particularly in Oatarto, where the first planting wotic is being stone on S,0.111.8 of the newly established county forests. In the Prairie Provinces about five million seedlings aed cut- tings, all told, will be sent out from the Indian Head and Sa.skaboon forest nursery stations of the Dominion Forestry Branch These are all for planting shelterbalts on farms. 13e sides title, these same nursery stations arestendling out a considerable quantity of planting material and tree seeds for planting and sowing on different Dominion forest reserves. Tills is only a beginning in roto,re•Btation, but it in. dicates that the tide la at last turning In that direction. Rules Olffer, In ibalY wheeled traflle keeps' to the left in large towns but to the right in the country. The Miens "pert" end ",starboarti" have. been. used when giviag dre3- lions to the man at the helm of since the sixteenth century. The Pine Tree and the Star.. In the vaulted blue a shining star, Brightest of the hosts op high, Sheds its radiance from afar, A rare jewel of the sky. A humble pine tree on earth below Lifts its arms unto that star, Like a giant index it {loth show What it worships from afar. The pine tree can not the' star attain, If stands reeted in the clay; - But worship of the orb shall not wane Till the tree shall pasa away. Winds the pine tree's branches toss and, sway, But the gale it still defies And with its giant finger points the way To its idol in the ekies. My sold look -s upwar& to heights of fame, As the pine tree to the star, In dreams I Dee an immortal name Where Fame's deathless glories are. And does my soul look up all in vain, While my feet cling to the clay? Should I scorn heights I may not at- tain And choose a more humble way? Better that my soul should ever yearn For heights I shall never know, Than to be content to humbly turn Into ways obscure and low. As the pine points to the star on high It grows ever straight and true; And uplifted ever, so may I Attain some 'small glory, too. —Hattie Washburn. Minard's Liniment for sale eve.rywhers Too many heads are turned to the appeal of "luck"' and 'froni the mod.est returns •oll thrif 1. - v6.od Hear and Cie Scalp Free from dandruff and itch- ing. It's easy. On retiring tub spots of dandruff and itching with Cutienta Ointment, getting °int - meat well on scalp. /Tex tnaornin shampoo with CutieUra Soap an hotwater. B inse with tepid Water. Soap250. 0intment25 and 50c. Talcum25c. Sold throughout theDornin ion. CanadianDcpot: ttmann. timitied, 344 St. Paul St., W., iaontccal. 032r*Cutieurn Soap clutvon without alas. ISSUE, No. AYS SBE HAD ACTUAL READ :0V.MEALTIMg Moritreal IA/roman Was On Verge of Breakdown But Eats Anything 14-9* and Nervousness is Gone, Too. "Tenlas: is wonderful. It has simply me feel like a different persOfl," said MN, Wit.. Allen, 1515 Wellington St, Verdun, Montreal, Quebec. "For five years I never ilnew what it was to be free from stonia,eli trouble and filially was on the verge of a break- down, I actually dreaded mfor 'neat - time to come as I knew no matter hew ca,reful I was about my diet 1 vrouid be sure to Suffer afterwards. "'faille° has just ehanged things ell round for me. Per a 'long time I b,m1 been going Without any breakfast alto- gether and now I get up in the -morn- ing so hungry Loan oast bacon or raotst anything else I want and enjoy it. I have gotten over the nervousness, too-, and am able to sleep all night long without waking up once and I get up merninga feeling thoroughly refreshed. r am still taking Tanta° arid improving steadily. In tact, 1t just seems that every dose iucreases my strength and energy' Tanlae le sold by all good dtruggistl. Advt. Port 0' Happiness. To happiness! A foreign port we think • Toward which we proudly- steer, Our sailti • all set, our bows tafoam, Were pleasure is the reef ahead, my lads, Helm down, haul tent the gear Our port of happiness is horriel —H, C. Chatflekl-Taylor. MInard's Liniment Rellevee Neuralgia "Mystery roads" on which motor ears travel' more quickly "of their own free will," are new said to he due to, the extra profuse, vegetation on either side; the plante give off oxygen which helps the motor engines to run more freely. STO CH T OEBLES E DUE TO ACIDITY Tells Safe, Certain, Speedy Relief For Acid Indigestion. So-called stomach troubles, such as indigestion, gas, souruess, stomach- ache and inability to retain food are in probably nine cases out of ten, simply e-videnee that excessive seca-e- tion of acid is telting peace in the stomach, causing the foemation of gas and acid indigestion. -- Gas distends the stomach and causes that fall, oppressive, burning feeling sometimes known as heartburn, while the acid irritates and inflames tee delicate lining of the stomach, The trouble lies entirely in tho excess de- velopment or secretion of acid. To stop or prevent this souring of the food contents of the stomach and to neutralize the acid, and make it bland and haa'uuiess a teaspotantui ot Bieurated magnesia, a good. anSi effec- tive corrector ot acid stomach, should be taken in a quarter of a glass of hot or cold water after eating or when- ever gas, eourness or acidity is felt. This sweetens' the stomach and neu- tralizes the acidity in a few xnoments ancl is a perfectly harmless a.m1 inex- pensive remedy to use. An antiacid, such as Bisurated Mag- nesia, which can be obtained from any druggist in either powder or tablet form, enables the stomach to do its work properly without the aid of art id dal dig est ents Magnesia Comes in several forms, so be certain to ask for and take only Besurated Magnesia, which is especially prepared for the above purpose. Almaselows 291oneome Dor Polltmediefs Book on DOG ISEASES and How to Feed Mailed rree to any Ad- dress by the Author. Et."Clay Glover Clo„ Ina. 129 West. 24th Street New York, — • • ..... Classified A '"ft'ANT glItf bib"SN'iteont 1'0'151'4 Acirialde it. AY,, TP1.0 2608 WAIN1T,1) POP., TitATNING seboof. 'iit eliargo of greatmte )ohns,ttopkins 1lopl Lal. Apply SuPertA, tendent, rinnzewood- Sanitarium, Guelph, WAIVATD--vrAtifi WANTRD I'IMSONS cAn,o-cv Inns), rooms flor us; waiito op4oe In out-huee gardene call be made`, yield 125.- to $50 per -week] illus- trated, -bdoki!et an,r 'Oar tionl k.re serif 4or le stanip. • Woronto SepPlY Ce,, attInfitookl TING PORI SALO ALL KI,NOS 015 NEW ' AND T.T.MinCo bel ting puiieyur, saws, cabIe,hospac1ti ng, eubjeci te,tenoresral at low- est pyiees In Qanetia. YOR-K,Beliatexii CO, "115 YORK ,STREIDT; TORONTO, Forest Fires arid the Citizen. Forest fires have made sueli inroads upon tarna s foramt.s, thab no eiciaen having the country's interests id hoar1 can refrain from adopting every sensi- ble precatition in hie personal ("undue's, Unextinguished camp fires; lighted ruatcbes; and tobacco have robbed.. the nation of millions of dollars in public -- owned property. To leave a carp -fire burning, while in or neat standing tim- ber is a plain invitation to a disaster. The lighted, match and the cigarette are in the same eategary. IVIONCLY OROERS. The safe way to send money by Ma% s by Deminion Exprass Money Order. Two oabins, a heating sbove which will also warm food, end a life-saving net, into which shipwrecked, people can jump, are the main features of a new type of lifeboat now being built. R8E SALT L N EYS8 A L T J3ulk Ca.riots TORONTO SALT WORKS C. J. CLIFF TORONTO Those Having Sick Animals SHOULD USE Good, for all throat and chest diseases, Distemper, Ga,rget, Sprains, Bruises, Colic, Mange, Spavins, Running, Sores, etc'„ete.., Should always he in the stable.. —SOLD EVEL-Z.Y.WEIERE. 11 E jOY PERFECT 11EALTH Every Woman's Wish—, Read Mrs, Cassady's Experience Paris, Ontario.—"For five years suffered with pains in my back and from other troubles women often have. All of this time I was "milt for work and was taking the different medicines that I thought were good. I saw the advertisement in. the papers of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege- table Compound and have taken ft faith- fully. I am now in good health and do all my own work. I recommend it to others and give you permission to publish this 'otter 311 your little books and in tho nears - papers an a testimonlal,"—Mas. a CASSADT, Box 461, Paris. Ontario. This medicine which helped Mrs. Cassady so much is worthy of your confidence. If you are troubled with such ailments as displacements, In- flammation, irregularities, or other forms of female -weakness you should give it a trial now. Lydia D. Pinkham's Private Text - Book upon "Ailments Peeuliar to Tv -omen" will be sent to you free -upon request, Write to The Lydia E. Pinleham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass. This book contains valuable info> nation. v./inked on-l1:7111-13,sielans during 2 2 ye.sars and proved safe by ,., 13........t, ,..- -.... 4,. VVAI-UNING! Say "Bayer" wtion you buy Aspirin. i''f-17;'-',,';se‘f'e".1.-1'4'leflattle "Baye'r" on tablets,, you are not get- ting Aspirin at all. Accept only an "unbroken package" of "I3,..iyer Tablets of Aspirin," which contains directions and doss 511k00s for Colds Headache •RheLtmatistri Toothactio NeurallaNeuritis ,. Earache Lumbago ••Pain, Pain Tianay "Ifittyer" boxes 0112 tablete-.--Aiso boiLies of 24, and 100,—Dro.ggisto, the, trade marl; v.ortatoroet in ('tis;, 5 Itri:\ro‘ "At-,Irror31"hore WtomY. „ neetteaaidont en. et Selicyllerfelkl. 5511115 51. 5 we Scrlown 01;11 Agnfrin ni0333t, 3inYer ri)drrergettlr,'N13 iRffist le pohllC ag5S4t iroltatlorAt,ihri r^trihthc?Al 1J 1 li thOr, 2- 11215 teeas seers..