Zurich Herald, 1950-01-12, Page 2-k your frlielnds -
to a fto t man tiles' •
"Deal- AMite Hirst: MY problell
is different. I'm 30 years old, and I
ail interested in marrying. I make
f r ie n d s easily,
but when I ask
' 4 girls fora date
n they begun mak-
s» V iug excuses,
~
feet
t
e T.
"I'm six
tall• with blue
eyes, \navy black
n
hair, and (no t
a4 c o ill plimeniing
i myself) o l d e r
people say Fin nice -looking. I have
no bad habits. 1 have a fairly good
job. I've a good personaliy and love
to make friends, and -lost of all, I
love to buy nice furnishings for my
home.
"Of course there are always some
girls waiting for the question, But
I am very particular about the girls
'f choose to go out with. I want to
ge married, not waste my time on
some silly girl.
"1�'hat'3 7'ou answer?
C:14ECk UP
* I an( sorry that I cannot give
* personal interviews any more, or
* it might be easy to answer yOUr
problem.
* Something is wronig with your
approach to the girls you want to
* date. 11 obviously is not your
ap-pearance-unless you are one of
* ttiese modern youngsters who
* think it smart to forget garters,
leave their shirt -collars open, and
* go without ties. Or whose clothes,
* however smart, are not properly
* pressed, nor shoes shined to a
* high polish.—Or whose skin, hair
* and hands show neglect.
*
Where call the trouble lie?
* Are you careless in your speech?
* Think ii s sophisticated to swear
*
now and then? (Nice girls will
* shun you.) Do you swagger about
* a bit? With all these physical and
t. .
4655
II /
/
/
F
/
i
i
\
v
0
ra•�
f
:u
�r
;.
SITES
I P-20
Something really spectacular!
New new casual has a wide wide
Sollar, and deep wing -up cuffs! The
Skirt is a l,canty. too, with a grace -
All flare, and a wide band!
Pattern 4055 conies in sizes 12,
14, Io, 18, 70. Size I0 takes a?q yards
30 inch fahric.
This pattern, easy to lie, simple
to sew, is tested for fit. etas coli-
pl"te ilhr.tratH instructions.
Sold TWENTY-FIVE CENTS
('2'5c) in coins (stamps cannot he
ac c.'I,ted) fur this pattern. Print
pl „illy SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS,
STYLE YLE NUMBER to Box 1, 123
1?, thio. nth ;^t., New Toronto, Ont.
vg Pitt 13,10t
1. Dltieli ty 4. ColliafnPC
6• fiat curl 6. t"„cll,b tetter
10 11x1, 0111 6. i',1"
t Iitopian 7. ('1t lllor
1 1'or lift ..,tion tS !nt.)
tieritte. Ntre,tces 8. \ u•,
i8. Stnal. and 2. t'1 ounmtt
weak
17 i r:lgments
IF A I auedor
211 ,r of Seth
�t t; iid sheep
23 loll„ Ivitrpe•
n: •r r:
2t I)ronl)a
H. (Ad (10"d
!y... P
26, i ;, i u- s
291)ut•'h aAofr-
r•>pbnr
30 N w1hwastern
Mate•
32. Ange'
34. I'Iuran ending
Sh. fndlan
37 Age
:38Spire omit-
n)Qn to
40 Itis) Page
41 Itever se ..urve
42 I:lPrrtivh
4? rernper
4C, Tvo,,
4t .1 1,
47 Pl,l.".nTit
brourl
�A ,�•.:. , try
1:7i1r 11 1,*�ar'+1
#,5. Pw•�t
.44. -Ie:wo.
f1Cr.
T1,10 reeve
I)OWN
t'srollor
* economic advantages, that would
* be a temptation.
* Are you the hind of lad whom
* girls would be proud to introduce
* to their parents?
* l
• l s bout Alto
or
Do you boast a }
* are, or your job?
* Do you love to tall: abOlit your-
* self,.
* DO you air your Opinions utr-
* asked'
At • o ruin a cod Jan( (. g
* Do you ask for date as a favor,
* or make the girls feel you think
* you are God's gift to woolen?
•Are you popularPalar with cii
er
boys. o Y or d t fee yourself
•ourself
> you
* superior and assume an arrogant
* manner' (iNrhy don't you ask one
•r nl(• you
of the boys where he • tlu �
Mfail with the gillsr.
)
.* chle.6"eacli of tllese qucs.lioils.
*.If
tro'ri�t c . yourself,
,w.r ri
'* you may find the ans)ver.
Remember that girls like to be
deferred
to. They expect
good
* manners in a young loan. J.'hey
il.e to be
consulted
as to places
* '1'1-11:1' want to go. They enjoy
a' compliments, but they expect
* theta to be sincere. Petting on
* short acquaintance offends them;
lasses are precious and saved for
tried and true friends.
ris.
d
• k •• l the you
1 take i for gramed t
t t g
attend church. :that you are not
* a "wolf. L'inat you don't try to
* pick up strange girls. And that
* you shote in everything you say
* and. do, that you thine: girls are
* worth all your thought and effort
* to please then.
* fonder on these facts, and con-
* duct yourself accordingly. I think
* you will not be loner long.
* One warning: Don't rush into
* marriage. h'ew young men harry
their first sweetheart. Date a girt
* for montes or a year or so before
* you propose; it takes a long while
* to :know a young woman well
" cuough to he sure she is for you.
* *
We all want to be popular. If we
analyze our faults and correct them,
there's no reason to fail.... Anne
Hirst has dozens of ideas that will
help. Write her at Box 1, 123 Eigh-
teenth St.. New Toronto, Ont.
10 rruge prP,hrs• ft Pont mnvr-
innI ,nimala tnPIO
11 Indians 33. stat r.rints
14. 4r ehbl,hop of 36. Kind of coal
(anterhnry 39 Splendor
16, (teen film on 42 1'Iurolieaa
Copper native
14 . [ hely dances 48. Turkey btta-
20, 1.41111%e hard
21IT ooh Covering 44. .Small wild
22, 1101, ;-rolls ox
sport 46, YaunIl .:lr,g
24. Phin 4s.,ifill ebug
27. Paining 4e. Rarore
2s. Arahfaif 61. Vor
gal'mPrlt0i 62. That man
is Ohl ; oorlocll
"tbwli Answer elsewhere on this page,
Wr
Same Boy! Did You Help Save Him?—Tlle horribly starved
European youngster at left abpve is a living demonstration of
what outside aid rnea:us to war's innocent victims. 'file clltibby,
bright -faced child at right is the sane boy five niontlis after
he was given special care by an agency of the luted Nations
.o• first, hod
-
:'� 1 1
11• L �� tt11C1, l
l:nternational Children's E1zie. bens l ..
building fluids were injected directly into his bloodstream;
later he was put on a carefully -controlled protein and calcium
diet. Almost 6,000,000 such children have been helped by the
UN:IC .PT. but there are still millions -vho need aid.
\Fell. by the tinge this gets into
nlelliber lvc• had to do not so very
print Christmas and Nein t'ear's
Many }ells ago.
will be -1 hope—just allotterhappy
Another thing which probably did
memory, added to those Aviion have
a lot to popularize the exchange of
gone before. And. until I get myself
ngng
organzied so that 1 can personally
Cotulim —was the adoption of the
acknowledge the letters and cards
Penny Post in Great J ritaiu which
wilich came to file through the laud
first carne into force on the birth -
thought of some of the waders of
thought
• in s .
day of rile Prince of Peace 98
this colunnl, will you please accept
Sending C'hri.tnlas carols must have
lily sincere appreciation for your
been an expensive business previous
good wishes. AVIlen each of you Ila&
to that date.
your own circle of friends to re-
— in t
•' u t a
•) •r •<, are. fl red ,
Sc ih(e volt
member 1 da appreciate your hind
origin of
• s 1 c 'the o
briefly, is the tc y rt g
thought in thiel>ing of lilt at all. It
the Christmas gvecting card. And
certainly gives isle a (lice warns
I and sure if you think of it. when
feelilig tofeeling know that \ve have reach-
tisS a%\ ay your cards,
,ct are iult s
'
t friendly t 011n
this f cl o
e g
d
Sir ) 1 171
l u v'Il be grateful o � 1 I -le
\ will t .Y
.
I Jav, yo!p: g'ot_. all those `tove,l)
"le, for iliventau such a good nay
'greeting cards gathered up ready `>.'oi
sperdlug_,otn nlcs.sa;�es o{ a{icc-
to put away --or have you another
tion • n
a d goodwill from nue to an -
use for thein? Perhaps you do as 1
other.
• c
1 inion
�1 out after tile r d
ill o a t
do—takei e
\1 at• , s(mc(,ne I • brain -wave
. L c t,ul a
t coal\
f > t've Season 0
bus 1e of tile <s t
1 e
it ` t •lel — , 1
I 1 e'�al cl <al Icl,frs c the of the
5, e s
thein • over once again and really
calendars are so pretiy, 1 also like
theappearance o' this ea ^s calen-
I }, l
n s me
v 11 seems to le o
i o tel 1t
el t
J
of greeting fall: get far More out s g
da -6 for another reason 1950 looks
cards than others. For instance, one
so -Much better than 1949! It is not
elderly lady to whom I always send
only the beginniugof a 91 year,
a card, studies every detail in every
it is also the closing- year' of _a half
card she gets—so 1 naturally choose
ceniury that has brougllt••i.its two
a card for her very carefully. After-
wort -wars n I t 11
d a d, e us (pi, will
wards'1 always get a "Thank"Thankyou"
e il about. the en
l e tl. lolly brio d of
•- bring
note, givingme her interpretation of
mirest.est thatt followed ill their wake.
the design and the greeting. She is
The very figures "1950- have a
a person with time on her hands
'finished look if you know what I
and 1. imagine her Christmas cards
mean, whereas :(949 looks odd and
are a real joy to her for several
ragged, or Maybe like a blind road
weeks every year.
that leads nowhere. I nevdr did like
Did you ]snow that the very first
a group. of figures that was un -
Christmas card ia'as produced as fat'
divisible by a digit .. • maybe just
back as 1846? It appears that a cer-
a hangover from the days when I
twin Englishman by the naule of
had trotlble with arithmetic,
Ilenry Cole ( later, lie was knighted)
wanted some original way to coil-
vey greetings to his many friends,
so hr commissioned all artist friend
tfPl4r!�',
by the name of Iforsley to design
>n
a special card for hire. It was then
litllograplled and printed, and then
coloured by hand, This first order
for Christmas cards was for it
thousand cardsl first of all people
,,c
thought it was a crazy notion but
gradually the idea "caught cru" and
soon developed into good business
t�
a
far sante pcupkl, as, of course, the
� orgy
cards were expensive. 1 -low.
ver •
� }
a�
( ) , ..11d
� e4 fa', gi'(`('1111 ,., cards s)011 illle
elabot'ate and more popular as
I time went on, although, as you may
e
have noticed, fashions charge. even
}n cards. In the Victorian era cards
'
were very ornate, even to silk fring-
1
es and ribbons, '.Chen came ills
d �4
1 "iro,te(}" card, -....the frost ei{ec:t he-
y
{ ing produced by crushed gra s•-•l'e-
:
nlcmh(l• them: From l"Ilgland tics
idea of sending greeting varcls
e l, u 1
lit o lean cont neat.
11 :r .
spread to
but by that Bute the quality of the
I t �•
card had deteriorates! considerably,
�
In 1874 a Boston manufacturing
� �<
company started the C'ht}socias earl,
j.
industry in tale Ii.S•A;••--bringing out-
ut
l r. i t mist}
cards
8rclti wit) a high artistic quality�
u
is Ohl ; oorlocll
"tbwli Answer elsewhere on this page,
Wr
Same Boy! Did You Help Save Him?—Tlle horribly starved
European youngster at left abpve is a living demonstration of
what outside aid rnea:us to war's innocent victims. 'file clltibby,
bright -faced child at right is the sane boy five niontlis after
he was given special care by an agency of the luted Nations
.o• first, hod
-
:'� 1 1
11• L �� tt11C1, l
l:nternational Children's E1zie. bens l ..
building fluids were injected directly into his bloodstream;
later he was put on a carefully -controlled protein and calcium
diet. Almost 6,000,000 such children have been helped by the
UN:IC .PT. but there are still millions -vho need aid.
\Fell. by the tinge this gets into
nlelliber lvc• had to do not so very
print Christmas and Nein t'ear's
Many }ells ago.
will be -1 hope—just allotterhappy
Another thing which probably did
memory, added to those Aviion have
a lot to popularize the exchange of
gone before. And. until I get myself
greeting cauls—at least, it, the Old
organzied so that 1 can personally
Cotulim —was the adoption of the
acknowledge the letters and cards
Penny Post in Great J ritaiu which
wilich came to file through the laud
first carne into force on the birth -
thought of some of the waders of
thought
• in s .
day of rile Prince of Peace 98
this colunnl, will you please accept
Sending C'hri.tnlas carols must have
lily sincere appreciation for your
been an expensive business previous
good wishes. AVIlen each of you Ila&
to that date.
your own circle of friends to re-
— in t
•' u t a
•) •r •<, are. fl red ,
Sc ih(e volt
member 1 da appreciate your hind
origin of
• s 1 c 'the o
briefly, is the tc y rt g
thought in thiel>ing of lilt at all. It
the Christmas gvecting card. And
certainly gives isle a (lice warns
I and sure if you think of it. when
feelilig tofeeling know that \ve have reach-
tisS a%\ ay your cards,
,ct are iult s
'
t friendly t 011n
this f cl o
e g
d
Sir ) 1 171
l u v'Il be grateful o � 1 I -le
\ will t .Y
.
I Jav, yo!p: g'ot_. all those `tove,l)
"le, for iliventau such a good nay
'greeting cards gathered up ready `>.'oi
sperdlug_,otn nlcs.sa;�es o{ a{icc-
to put away --or have you another
tion • n
a d goodwill from nue to an -
use for thein? Perhaps you do as 1
other.
• c
1 inion
�1 out after tile r d
ill o a t
do—takei e
\1 at• , s(mc(,ne I • brain -wave
. L c t,ul a
t coal\
f > t've Season 0
bus 1e of tile <s t
1 e
it ` t •lel — , 1
I 1 e'�al cl <al Icl,frs c the of the
5, e s
thein • over once again and really
calendars are so pretiy, 1 also like
theappearance o' this ea ^s calen-
I }, l
n s me
v 11 seems to le o
i o tel 1t
el t
J
of greeting fall: get far More out s g
da -6 for another reason 1950 looks
cards than others. For instance, one
so -Much better than 1949! It is not
elderly lady to whom I always send
only the beginniugof a 91 year,
a card, studies every detail in every
it is also the closing- year' of _a half
card she gets—so 1 naturally choose
ceniury that has brougllt••i.its two
a card for her very carefully. After-
wort -wars n I t 11
d a d, e us (pi, will
wards'1 always get a "Thank"Thankyou"
e il about. the en
l e tl. lolly brio d of
•- bring
note, givingme her interpretation of
mirest.est thatt followed ill their wake.
the design and the greeting. She is
The very figures "1950- have a
a person with time on her hands
'finished look if you know what I
and 1. imagine her Christmas cards
mean, whereas :(949 looks odd and
are a real joy to her for several
ragged, or Maybe like a blind road
weeks every year.
that leads nowhere. I nevdr did like
Did you ]snow that the very first
a group. of figures that was un -
Christmas card ia'as produced as fat'
divisible by a digit .. • maybe just
back as 1846? It appears that a cer-
a hangover from the days when I
twin Englishman by the naule of
had trotlble with arithmetic,
Ilenry Cole ( later, lie was knighted)
wanted some original way to coil-
vey greetings to his many friends,
so hr commissioned all artist friend
by the name of Iforsley to design
>n
a special card for hire. It was then
litllograplled and printed, and then
coloured by hand, This first order
for Christmas cards was for it
thousand cardsl first of all people
,,c
thought it was a crazy notion but
gradually the idea "caught cru" and
soon developed into good business
t�
a
far sante pcupkl, as, of course, the
� orgy
cards were expensive. 1 -low.
ver •
� }
a�
( ) , ..11d
� e4 fa', gi'(`('1111 ,., cards s)011 illle
elabot'ate and more popular as
I time went on, although, as you may
have noticed, fashions charge. even
}n cards. In the Victorian era cards
'
were very ornate, even to silk fring-
1
es and ribbons, '.Chen came ills
d �4
1 "iro,te(}" card, -....the frost ei{ec:t he-
y
{ ing produced by crushed gra s•-•l'e-
:
nlcmh(l• them: From l"Ilgland tics
idea of sending greeting varcls
e l, u 1
lit o lean cont neat.
11 :r .
spread to
but by that Bute the quality of the
I t �•
card had deteriorates! considerably,
�
In 1874 a Boston manufacturing
� �<
company started the C'ht}socias earl,
j.
industry in tale Ii.S•A;••--bringing out-
ut
l r. i t mist}
cards
8rclti wit) a high artistic quality�
u
bill with seenes that often ]lad noth
a t?
ing to do with Crhristalas, However,
t`
soon after the turn of the. eantury,
°r
Christmas dards became . really
rk
christmassy --- with .snow scenes,
,Tativity Pictures Bud ]folly and
evergreen deaigus. It is also to the,
U.S.A. that we tav(a to say ilia tik
No Nas-Been -^ Admirers of
you for picturing the r.Iterry pont.
1�1)illarV 1.a %rlafiell@, Allo
settia as typical of the Yulrlido
r,tt, elected Alti;s America in
season, Anotlwr Ai, eriCan into a»'
1(141, are tyf 't1le opinion that she
lion was tile il;aicl+ing envelope fill-
each Bard. whir it is just about thA
i its least donne of her charms
handiest thine; that over was , ,
int e 'thelf !%nd CmIltl, still wain
witl: tlla.t you will agree .4f r,,u
441)bod 's beauty volitest at the;
T6.
e xlierielire of i,l:(:.
have ever had the�
Lige of standing at poolside
itlg cards and tben bunting euvel•-
in Lai 'd'eg'as, Ro svinary flashes
open to matoh 01,sir ttiese, 44 l t'(a
4tet• vt'innil)gOSt sttllllt.
Holy Year
it, 1 io0 A.D.the Church was it,
difficult straits, The temporal power
,of 'the Pope was threatened by local
rulers. l here was a struggle with
the King; of France over taxation of
clerics, Irl that year rope Boniface
\' 1.l 1 proclaimed -tile first Holy
Year of jubilee, and pilgrims flock-
ed to Rouge for prayer and iudul-
genccs, 11.oly Fears, Boniface said,
were to be held every 100 years;
later :Popes shortened the interval,
until }n 1470 Paul I I set it at twenty-
five. years.
In Roine, oil the morning of De-
cember 24th, the hells of 500 church-
es pealed together. Pope ,Pius VII,
1)efory an audience of Vatican offi-
cials and distinguished guests, tap-
ped three times on the 1.-toly Door
of St, Peter's Basilica. The Holy
Year of 1950—the tw eaty-fifth--was
officially beg•uu.
The impact of the year is ti) be
primarily spiritual—a year of re-
dedication and strengthening for the
Church. But it has political over-
tolles. horn of the political strugf;le
between communisat and Roman
Catholicism, In an address oil the
Holy • Year, Pope Pius called for a
"return" to the Church of Rome to
oppose "the united front of militant
atheism," The Jubilee will also show
important economic results. Close
to a million pilgrims are expected
in the J401y Citl—malty of whom
will spend dollars. —�
Frogmen
l A new way of making motion pia -
tures of submerged wrecks, subfna-
rines, parts of ships, fish and other
forms of marine life has been devel-
oped by the British Admiralty.
"Frogmen," as they are called, wear
self-contained breathing apparatus
*and weblike rubber shoes, used in
the war, and swim like fish without
i stirring up mud, so that f6h can be
stalked with cameras. the Frogmen
have taken good moving pictures by
daylight or artificial light deep in
real;onably clear- waters.
They Argue Over
Clotted .;ream
There's an age-old argullteflt be-
tween Devon and 1 rl
a c Co lwall
d5 t0
wlu<Il of the two counties first pro-
duced the delicaer known as clotted
creast.
De rot
I t nhn a clainn •s the honour, � r
h u but
Cornwall dentes it, alleging that
Devoniaf s smuggled the
ac-
ross
ross the laver Tamar from Corn-
wall in the first place.
Iiven if, s nue Co this f t Cornwall's
1 nl•11's
c a n ^i' r e li 1 a i
] f n s not "leo t o subst lit ated.
a g
for Corm hnien were taught tile
secrets of ila Ingscalded cr•aill
b9
the old merchant adventurcrs of
West Africa who journeyed fromm
Cart age
to buy Cornish sh tin longi
before the Romans came to Britain.
n.
To -day the o n method of making it
are essentially the same as those that
have been used by the peasants of
North Africa for the past two thous-
and years.
In the Shallow Pail system im-
t '
mediately he milk has been re-
moved from the cowshed, arid while
it is still warm, it is strained and
left undisturbed i) a coolplace
u -
til the cream has risen—for .eight to
twelve flours according to the rich-
ness of the creanf and the time of
the year.
The milk is then scalded. Simplest
method of doing this is by using two
pans of different sixes. The smaller
pan containing the crearrt is stood in
the larger one and surrounded by
water.
The water is heated to a tenlpera-
tilre of 180-190 degrees F. in winter,
or 185-195 in summer. This takes
about 35-50 minutes, the length of
the scald being sufficient to cause
the Cream to )real: away slightly
from the sides of the pail,
'lf insufficient time is allowed for
the scalding the create does not ac-
quire file characteristic "Devonshire"
ffavotic or show the desired crinkled
appearance.
When the correct tenlperat•ar•e has
leen reached, tire. pan is lett stand-
ing in rte hot water for 15-20 min-
utes before being taken to tate Hairy
to cool.
The time during which the pan
should stand before the cream is
skimmed off varies with the season
Of the year. In summer, strumming
takes plane the morning after aaald-
ing, while in winter the pen Pan
stand for as long as 36 hours,
The result• ie, a delicacy which,
added to West Country strawberries.
was world-famous before the war.
To visit Devon or Cornwall without
regaling oneself with "ImIlings" of
delicious scalded er"m was un-
tltinkahln.
lJp=:ide d 1 sn to Prevent peeping.
By The Rev. R. Barclay Warrt'a
FELLOWSHIP IN TIIE
EARLY CHURCH
Acts 2:42-47; 4:31-33
Golden Text: "And the multitude
of them that believed were of o(w:
heart and of one soul; neither said.
any of theist that ought of the
t}ling•s which he possessed was his
own; but they had all thiel„ s sour
moil." Acts 4:32.
1\o, it wasn't Connuuiism; i.e., it
wasn't the brand that is in vogiie
in Pastern Europe. It differed ill
several important respects. Tilese
people were believers. They had
turned froul sin and believed on the
Lord Jesus Christ as their Lord alld
Saviour. They worshipped .Will.
Aloreover, there was no coin:l.ca•-
tion ill this instance. All giving to
the common cause leas purely vol-
untarv. Peter said to Ananias,
'-Whiles it remained, was it not
thine own? And after it was sold,
was it not in thine Oren power?"
Acts 5:4. Ananias aud SaP)litr
a
(lied, not at the hands of the Christ-
ians, but at the hand of God. tlin
was angry because they acted as
hypocrites, lying and saying that
they were giving all Alien they
were withholding a part.•They were
the first on record to near the beau-
tiful fellowship existing among the
believers who had received tilt
Holy Spirit, sent by the Father.
This sacrificial giving was an iit'-
tense expression of the waren fel-•
lowship of the early Christians.
Here was Divine love one for an-
other. But it is important to »ottr
that there is no command in Scrip•-
ture that this order should be dupli-
cated today. Believers are to care
for one another and indeed to cin
good works in behalf of all; to
feed the hungry and clothe the
naked. But it is not evil to pos-
sess property.
The disposing of property all:
fin-ned out for the best. A great
persecution felt upon the disciples
after the death of Steplieu and they
were scattered abroad. Their .
lands
had been sold and the money turned
into good use. The temptation to
deny their Lord. was lessened: for
they had already made the• break...
Spiritualfritoll interests werem more ilrll-
portant than material, l t sltoold ,.
)e,
that way with us all.
I WAIKE UP YOUR
LIVER BILE -
Without Caomet And You'll Jump Out
Bed in the IVs fiin -Rar- '
�' 8 ut to Go
The liver should pour out about 2
me o
bile iffice into ou digestive
treat every
yIt this bile is noflowing freely, your foo, may,
not digest. It msy just decay am the di ti
tract. Then Has bloats up your stoa(aeh. You
get constipated. You feet sour. sunk and the
world looks punk.
It takes those x1d, gentle Carter's Utdo
get; Chase `B pints Liver Pills to f of bile ffa
i (reel to m is on feel " d u .
a a u an
in Y Y P P
Get; package toda . festive in makiw%
Line Bow freely. Asko, niter's Littlo fi [edsi
Pi11e,
$86 at anY drugetors.
:`'�'
And the
RELIEF IS LASTING
There's one thing icor the headaclax
z 1 . the muscular aches and palnttsa
that oftenaccompanya cold • . i
r
PHaarANTxNs. INsTANTimn bringls really
laast, relief from pain and the, relief
is prolonged)
Bo get 1Na%,AfgTsNs and got quick
comfort. 1NSTANTIN8 is compaaanded
like at doct2r's 'prescription of threit
proven medical 'ingredients, You can
depend oal its fast action in ideating
relief from every day aches and 10ainsa
headache, rheumatic ,pain, for n(:(a
ribs or neuralgic
pain. i
eat Instantiile toley
and always i>;v°M4e°rii Hnt,.,y �+,.
keep it handy-"y�itix` , 11.,
17. -Tablet Tin 25 ¢
Economical 43 -Tablet Cattle brig
n
LM