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araanana ■»’■««■■■■■■■■■■ ■ ■ ■ m » ■■—H— The Mind LOWELL 16 tCF © HENDERSON © 801 l Syndicate.—WNU Service. ! he Four-Word Test In this test there are four words given in each problem. Three of the four in each case have a definite re iafionship to one another. Cross out the one word that does not be long ii» each problem. 1. John C. Calhoun, Stephen A. I Oliver Cromwell, Henry Clay. 2. I’WA, HOLC, YMCA. TV A. 8. Scotch. Catholic. Irish Spanish 4. Thirty, forty, fifty, sixtieth. 5 George B McClellan, “Stone wall" Jackson. William T. Sherman. ITHip 11. Sheridan. 0. Cure, aggravate, remedy, heal 7. Jefferson City, Columbia, St. Louis. Frankfort. 5. John Galsworthy, Thomas Gainsborough, Rudyard Kipling, Wil liam Shakespeare. !*. Henry Picard, Babe Herman. Johnny Uevolla, Horton Smith. 10. Charles Curtis. Thomas It. Mar shall, John Tyler, Charles W. Fair banks. Answers 1. Oliver Cromwell. 2. YMCA. ft. Catholic. 4. Sixtieth. ft. “Stonewall" Jackson. G>. Aggravate. 7. St. Louis. 8. Thomas Gainsborough. 9 Babe Herman. 10. John Tyler. BOYS! GIRLS! Read the Grape Nuts ad in another column of this paper and learn how to join the Dizzy Dean Winners and win valuable free prizes.—Adv. Needed Cure An able-bodied sense of contempt would head off many a demagogue. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription makes weak women strong. No alcohol. Sold .by druggists in tablets or liquid.—Adv. Our Illiterate* So many people who are ignorant don’t mind it. of infection, enjoy instant relief from pain and quickly, safely remove your corns— use Dr. Scholl’s Zino-pads. They soothe and heal; stop shoe pressure; prevent sore toes and blisters. At all drug, shoe and department stores —only 25j5 and 35j£ a box. gjjj Another Sock for War After every war the taxes go up— sometimes scandalously. Beware Coughs from common colds That Hang On No matter how many medicines you have tried for your cough, chest cold or bronchial irritation, you can get relief now with Creomulsion. Serious trouble may be brewing and you cannot afford to take a chance with anything less than Creomul sion, which goes right to the seat of the trouble to aid nature to soothe and heal the inflamed mem branes as the germ-laden phlegm is loosened and expelled. Even if other remedies have failed, don’t be discouraged, your druggist is authorized to guarantee Creomulsion and to refund your money if you are not satisfied with results from the very first bottle. Get Creomulsion right now. (Adv.) EVSrs. Bailey's Sensitive Skin Rash Broke Out But Cuticura Soothed Read this letter—how smarting rash and blisters due to external causes were relieved in almost no time by Cuticura. "I noticed an itching sensation on my face and arms. It afterwards formed blisters that left the skin very tender and sensitive. Finally a rash broke out which, when rubbed, caused a smarting and intense itch ing. It was agony. "A sample of Cuticura Soap and Ointment relieved me so much that I bought some. After using one cake of Cuticura Soap and one-half tin of Cuticura < fintment, the rash disap peared." (Signed) Mrs. Grace Bailey, 890 East 201st St., Bronx, New York City. Cuticura also soothes the irritation of pimples, ringworm, burning and itching of eczema with wonderful speed and effectiveness. Buy today. Ointment 2.1 c. Soap 25c. Samples FREE. Write to “Cuticura," Dept. 19, Malden, Mass.—Adv. PARKER’S HAIR BALSAM Removes Dandruff-Stops Hair Falling dsfe Imparts Color and Ww l Beauty to Gray and Faded Hair LsSfsKVrf andil 00 at Druggists. Hisrnv Cherol Wks,, Fatrhoyue. N.Y. FLORESYON SHAMPOO ldeal for use in connect lon .vith Parker's Hair Balsam. Makes the 1 air soft and fluffy. 60 cents by mail or at drug gists. Hiscox Chemical Works, Patchogue, N.Y. 'HOS7>RE i DAY f DR. JAMES W. BARTON < Talks About ® Use of Dinitropheno! s TSE of the drug dinitro e vJ phenol should be adopt ■ ed only as a ‘last resor f ’ for re s;ducing weight, but ill spite of " the danger attending its use it is a valuable drug when properly admin • istered.” P The above quotation is from the group of physicians in San Fran cisco—Drs. Maurice L. Tainter, A. B. Stockton and W. C. Cutting— who have been experimenting with this drug for about three years. The • above statement was made- at the annual meeting of the American Medical association, Atlantic City. However as dinitrophenol may be I obtained in any drug store and the 5 dosage is on the package, it is im portant that physicians study this drug and its effects so that if no • good is obtained by its use at least no harm can come to their patients. There are a number of points that must be remembered in the Dr. Barton use of this drug. The size of the dose depends upon the size or weight of the individual, be . cause an individual weighing 150 pounds may weigh more In proportion to his figure or physique than one weighing 300 pounds. The usual dosage, however, is pre scribed in aceord- ance with the weight, one weighing I 150 pounds taking half the size of the dose of another weighing 300 pounds. This would be simple enough except that all overweights do not react the same to the drug. Thus one gets a skin rash, anoth er abdominal symptoms, another the symptoms of shock, all by the use of the “average" dose, while others take almost twice the average dose with no symptoms except that of heat and profuse sweating. The fact that must always be re membered is that while fat is a liability or menace to health, nev ertheless while it was being put on it was in a gradual manner, and the body was able to add the few ounces daily without trouble. Simi larly if fat is to be removed you can understand that it should be removed in the same gradual man ner and there will thus be no “shock” to the system which is the danger in using fat reducing drugs. As stated by Dr. L. F. Bishop, Fordhaip university, some months ago, “Fat may be removed by tak ing certain drugs, but only at the expense of strength and health, and an alarming weakness of the heart often results. The reduction of J weight by drugs disturbs other or- j gans in the body. May Cause Shock. ■ Now while dinitrophenol does not put the extra work on the heart that is done by other drugs—thy roid extract for instance —neverthe- less the severe sweating and the rapid loss of the fat, which fat may be supporting,certain organs, so up-: sets the usual workings of these organs that shock or ill health may result. Doctors Tainter, Stockton and Gutting state that so effective is the drug in burning up the tissues that the temperature of the body is raised and the drinking of much water to dissipate the heat is urged.l The treatment was administered toi 170 patients. I venture to say that any physi cian by studying his patient’s food needs, supervising a carefully se lected reducing diet, and prescrib ing an increased amount of exer-! cise—however slight—can obtain a weight reduction of three to four ounces daily without shock or dan ger to the patient, and the patient will be stronger at the end of the said 88 days than before the weight was reduced. • • * Coronary Thrombctis YOU are reading very often these days of individuals dying of coronary thrombosis. This means that the coronary ar tery or bloodvessel that carries the j blood to the heart muscle so as to , enable it to squeeze blood out through the big tube to all parts i of the body has become blocked by i a clot of blood called a thrombus. 1 Naturally if blood cannot get ■ through this vessel which is the ’ size of a goose quill then the heart will have no strength with which [ to pump and the patient will die. However all these patients do not ! die because when the blood finds | that it cannot enter this hloodves ' sel because the clot or thrombus ; blocks it then it “makes" its way " j around this vessel through smaller i tubes or bloodvessels and gives the I; heart muscle enough strength to l keep pumping the blood. • Dr. Warren B. Cooksey, Detroit, ’ in a paper read before the Central Society for Clinical Research. Chi cago, says that if the shock of the j attack is not too great and the pa- I tient lives for a few weeks after ! wards, lie often will recover so com ! pletely and the blood circulation supplying the heart muscle will so ! thoroughly re-establish itself in time, that many useful years will remain to the individual. ©—WNU Service. Improved I SUNDAY! International li SCHOOL LESSON-:- By REV. P. B. FITZWATER. D. D.. Member of Faculty. Moody Bible Institute of Chicago. © Western Newspaper Union. Lesson for March 22 JESUS TEACHING TRUE i VALUES LESSON TEXT—Luke 12:13-34. ( GOLDEN TEXT— Seek ye first the . kingdom of God, and his righteous ness: and all these things shall be added unto you.—Matthew 6:33. PRIMARY TOPIC God's Good Gifts. JUNIOR TOPIC—When Is a Man j Rich? INTERMEDIATE AND SENIOR ! TOPIC—What Is Most Worth Living { For? The common tendency of men Is to be engrossed with the gifts of j God instead of knowing him as the | heavenly Father and enjoying his j blessed fellowship. Man’s supreme need is to know and enjoy God himself. I. A Warning Against Covetous ness (vv. 13-21)'. 1. The occasion (vv. 13-15). One of the company requested .Tesus to be umpire in a disputed estate. Two brothers were in trouble over an inheritance. Christ refused to en ter the sphere of the civil law and warned against the spirit of ava rice. His mission was pre-emi nently spiritual. 2. The warning enforced (vv. 16- 22). This was done by the parable of the rich man. He showed most clearly that to be concerned with earthly riches while neglecting God is the highest folly. Concerning this man, note; a. His increased goods (v. 16). His riches were rightly obtained, for the ground brought forth plenti fully. A man may he rich because the Lord’s blessing is upon him. h. His perplexity (v. 17). His lands were producing more than his bartrs would hold. He did not want it to go to waste. No frugal man wants to see the fruils of his toil perish. If he had possessed right views of life and a sense of stew ardship before God, he would have seen that his barns had enough for his personal needs, and would have distributed the surplus to the needy. c. His fatal choice (vv. 18. 19). He chose to enlarge his barns, and give up his life to ease and luxury. It ought to be a delightful task for men whom (tod lias made rich to devote their lime and energy to the distribution of their possessions to benevolent objects. d. The awful indictment (vv. 20. 21). God calls him a fool and this is no arbitrary judgment. Riches j furnish neither contentment in life ! nor guarantee of the continuance jof life. It is not only foolishness but madness to forget God while I engaged in heaping up riches. Soon the man must die and his riches may get into the hands of unwnr j thy men or even curse the* lives of ! the children who inherit them. 11. The Certain Cure for Anxiety (vv. 22-34). Having shown tlie folly of the rich man who gained gold and lost God, he now urged the disciples to trust God and dismiss all anxious care. 1. The argument (vv. 22. 28). This is summed up in one brief sen tence: “The life is more than meat, i and the* body is more than raiment.” 2. The illustrations (vv. 24-28). a. God’s care for the fowls (vv. 24-26). The ravens do not sow nor reap, they have neither storehouses nor barns, yet they live, for God feeds them. If God does not forget the fowl, certainly he will do inure for his children who have heeti cre ated in his likeness and image and redeemed by the precious blood of his Son. h. God's care for the flowers of the field (vv. 27. 28). If God is so j careful of those flowers which np j pear but for a day, how much more will he clothe his children? 3. The exhortations (vv. 29 3-1). a. The getting of food and dot lies should not be man's chief concern. b. Seek the kingdom of God (v. 31). Those who make God’s king dom first shall have all of their needs supplied (I'hil. 4:19). o. Be not afraid (v. 32). God’s good pleasure is upon his own and all good things lie will givp them. d. Practice self-denial in order to give gifts to those in need (vv. 33, 34). 111. Be Ready for the Coming of the Lord (vv. 35-40). Having warned the* disciples against the acquisition of worldly I goods, while forgetting God, and shown them the needlessness of j I anxiety for food and clothes, tie shows them the blessedness of be ing in a state of readiness when the Lord shall come. Conviction as to the certainty of the Lord’s coming is a sure cure for worldliness and ! anxious care. This attitude of heart he made clear by two parables; that of the return of the Lord, and that of the thief. The Lord will he so pleased with those who are waiting for him that he will take delight. In sitting at the banquet with them, and he will even serve them. I TTIE COOTjTDfrE EXAMINER s*sst -about: Corned Beef and Plagiarism Hollywood, calif.— The luncheon of our Writ ers’ Club, Inc., (Red Inc.) is a weekly function, with corned beef and cabbage and plagiar ism charges. This week we had with us the leading fiction writer of the Pacific slope Mr. Daingerfield, the local weather fore caster. Another guest was William A. Brady, the grand old man of the American stage, with great tales of the ancient days. when, to qualify as a trouper, one had to be a pedestrian. Before they asked you whether yon could act, they found out w hat kind of a walker you were. But how many of those sure-footed Califor nia beginners counted eross tie s as they ' .r’' • . v Irvin S. Cobb trudged into enduring fame? Be lasco and Tom Wise and Frank Bacon and Holbrook Blinn and Dave Warfield and many another. We also welcomed some new members. We’re very exclusive. There are groups here that’ll take in people who even failed to make the Book of the Month club. But to join up with us, you must have written something significant in surance or promissory notes or booster slogans. We’re angling now for a distinguished new figure in the field of literature. He does sky-writing, by the way. * * * New Deal’* 3rd Birthday. THIS being the third anniver sary of the New Deal, I was just thinking that, whether or not it lived through the early part of next November, its folks could nev er reproach themselves that they’d failed to give their darling baby kins the best nursing money could buy. Just then who should rush in but Michael Strogloff, the cour ier of the czar, shouting that the U. S. marines had landed with a con tradiction of the exciting announce ment made only yesterday by the same fellow who took the message to Garcia that time—? Hold on. I’m getting all twistl fied. What I’m trying to say is that one day the for a pal pitating planet was that Douglas Fairbanks, Sr., was positively go ing to marry Lady Ashley, where as but 24 hours before, he positive ly was not going to marry Lady Ashley. Then finally he did it. * * * Main Street Ambition ONE hears San Francisco would lure more inhabitants in an ef fort to overtake Los Angeles. But why? And why do Americans get drunk on population statistics? It’s their headiest tipple. Every time Uncle Sam looses his census figures, some towns go into mourning because they haven’t grown any faster and other towns have public dancing in the streets because a swarm of new people have moved in to make traffic congested and living incon venient and pleasant neighborhoods crowded. Offhand, I think of hut one city whose ruling citizens mainly are content with things as they are— the lovely and fascinating city of Charleston. Elsewhere we appear to share with the red ants the mad passion to take on additional red ants until tlie anthill overflows and all the old resident ants are lost in the shuffle. * * * Feminine Bank Rolls WHY can’t people mind their own business? A merchandis ing expert, who probably was just sitting around tlie house during the cold spell with nothing to do ex cept feed the stove, made an ex haustive inquiry to find out what American women carry in their handbags. He now reports that, in addition to gobs of other things in cluding lipstick, cigarettes, hair pins and recipes, the average wom an's pocketbook contains $6.74 in cash. It was perhaps all right for the gentleman to satisfy his morbid curiosity. Where he erred was in making his discovery public. Just consider how busy the boys in con gress will he thinking up new taxes, when they hear about that much money still being in circulation. * * * Politicians Making Claims IX CONGRESS these mad March days are being much used for plain and fancy claiming. The Republicans claim the Demo cratic party is to blame for the re cent bad times and deserves no credit for the better times now prevalent, the Republican theory being that the good fairies must have brought ’em. The Democrats claim that such bad times as we’ve had since they moved in were really inherited from tlie final stretch of tlie previous ad ministration, which, as they seem to recall, was one of tlie Best times for bad times anybody ever saw. IRVIN S. COBB. -WNU Service. Tall Tales s As Told to: FRANK E. HAGAN and ELMO SCOTT WATSON Echoes as Alarm Clocks MODERN Americans who have to Invest in alarm clocks in order to be certain of waking up in time for work each morning may well envy the good fortune of Jim Bridger, famous frontiersman, who was able to draft Mother Nature into service to assure early rising. Neor Bridger’s ranch in Wyoming were some obsidian cliffs. Frequent ly he heard the sharp crack of a rifle which puzzled him, because he knew there was no one within 147 miles of his home. Finally it dawned on him that these reports were the echoes of the rifle shots which he had fired the previous day when he was getting his daily sup ply of fresh meat. These obsidian cliffs had caught the report of his rifle, held it overnight and then sent it back to him each day to re mind him that it was time to go out hunting again. Next it occurred to Jim that he might just as well make use of the echoes in other ways. So every time he knew that he had to get up early the next morning, he would step outside the door, face the cliffs and shout: “Hey, Jim, it’s time to get up!" And, sure enough, the next morning he would be awak ened by the echo shouting in his ear: “Hey, Jim, it’s time to get up!” Cooking Under Difficulties TEDDY BLUE of the Three Deuce ranch in Montana re members what an annoying time he had when he came up from Texas with a trail herd back in 1883. When the cook died, the boss found out that Teddy knew something about slinging grub together and made him take charge of the chuck wagon. In it he found plenty of bacon, flour, beans, baking powder, sugar, colfee and everything else needed to feed the hungry crew of punch ers. But the only trouble was that they were out on a treeless plain where there wasn’t a stick of wood visible anywhere. Then one of the punchers lit a cigarette and snapped the still-blaz ing match into a bunch of buffalo grass. It flamed up and right then Teddy had an idea. He ran and got the coffee pot, filled it up, threw some bacon in a skillet and start ed toward the place where the fire in the buffalo grass was spreading. Holding the coffee pot and the skillet over the flame he followed the line of blazing grass and in a short time the bacon began to siz zle and the coffee began to steam a bit. After a while Teddy said to himself, “Well, I guess she’s ready to serve now.” But when he looked up he discovered that he had followed the flame until he was 11 y 2 miles from camp. By the time he got back the bacon and the cof fee were cold. The boys grumbled about having to eat cold chuck, so Teddy quit as cook right there. The Patriotic Hen JfM FITCH, a former resident of Manchester, N. H., remembers it just as well as if it had happened day after tomorrow. He was riding in the cab of a locomotive on the Boston and Maine railroad with his Uncle Ira, the engineer. North of Concord, a gray and white speckled hen started across the track. Uncle Ira tooted his whistle and the hen started running up the track. A moment later she disappeared. “Too bad,” said Uncle Ira, “but she ought to have made up her mind about crossing the railroad sooner." Jim was pretty sad about the fate of that hen. But imagine his surprise when they slowed down for the next stop, the brakeman went through the train calling out “Plymouth! Plymouth!” Off the cowcatcher jumped the hen and she went clucking away as much as to say, “Os course, I know when it’s time for me to get off!” Suddenly she began cackling and made a dash up the street as though looking for something. As the train pulled out the last thing Jim saw was the hen stooping down and creeping into a small dog kennel in a back yard. Three weeks later Jim went back to Plymouth to its Fourth of July celebration and he heard some more about her. That morning the patriotic hen, who traced her an cestry back to Plymouth Rock, hatched out three chickens. One was red, one was white and one was blue. But all three had bow legs because the kennel into which their mother had stooped to enter had been built for a dachs hund. © Western Newspaper Union. Greatest Gambling Resort Macoa, said to be the world’s greatest gambling resort, is forty i miles by steamer from Ilonsrkong. I It is the oldest European Settle ment in China, settled as a colony by the Portuguese in 1557. At one time Macao was a great commercial city, but its trade has dwindled to almost nothing, although its opi um dealing still affords a good liv ing to many residents of the island. [BRISBANE THIS WEEK Maybe Peace, After All rj Building in a Big Way A Level-Headed King • One Strike Method The real war news from Europe , —it sounds like peace news—is that England has re- Artlmr lirlMlinne fused France’s request for im mediate assist ance in forcing Germany’s arm ies from the Rhineland. Eng land even hints that France may be partly to blame. France appeals to all members of the League of Nations “in a fight for peace.” But, with England holding back, other signers of the Locarno pact are not inclined, in the language of the day, to “stick their necks out." , The United States is doing and ’ spending in a big way. The Public Works administration says more than $1,000,000,000 worth of proj ects have been completed, with $2,- 200,000,0(X) of other work still under construction. Twelve hundred mil lions have been spent for materials, all involving labor; $030,000,000 for , wage payrolls, by PWA. Organized , labor presents a building program of $500,000,000 to occupy the idle building trades. If money holds out, and the infla tion bonds keep their value, this will be remembered as the building age. A level-headed young man is the new English king. After seeing the new giant Cunarder named for his mother, walking seven miles up and down in it, he visited the slums of Glasgow, called the worst and “red dest” in England. Some ultra "left wing” city councilors refused to be presented to him. “That’s perfectly all right,” said the king. “Tell them I’ll come and have tea with them instead.” This he did. Two thousand ship workers cheered and called him “Good Old Teddy." The king, who visited individual tenements, knocking at the doors, patting babies on the head, keeps up with the times. No English king did that before. There are different ways of han dling strikes, depending on public officials. At Akron, Ohio, a strike of milk drivers disturbs consuming families and producing farmers. Herman E. Werner, public prose cutor, says coldly: “Anyone who in terferes with milk deliveries will face guns, and the order will be ‘Shoot to kill.’ ” Akron has 16,000 men out of work; too many, at one time, for that sized place, and the city is tired of it. How many millions would be killed, gassed, bombed, ripped to pieces by shrapnel and machine gun fire before Hitler or the na tion back of him could be persuaded that he is not a reincarnation of Frederick the Great, or Napoleon? This time a murderous war would be deliberate. No grand duke heir to an imperial throne has been mur dered to supply the spark. The Department of Commerce cannot explain the Arkansas air crash, on January 14, that killed 17. It says some passenger "may have incapacitated the pilot or in terfered with controls.” The local sheriff says somebody inside the plane tired a kind of pistol. Bullet marks were found. Let air passengers before em barking pass before the electric de vice that reveals instantly a pistol or any other metal object. No de cent passenger would object. Guns and knives might be “parked” on entering a plane. Japan is the question mark in the war situation, but Japan would not deliberately antagonize all her customers and friends in western Europe by striking at Russia, in a war Interesting to all of them. It is probable that Japan this time, as in the last war, would send “observers,” thoughtful and silent, to w r atch the white races cutting each others’ throats. Mrs. Akeley, who used to help I her husband iiunt lions and gorillas before he died, has been in Africa on her own account and reports that in Southeast Africa natives cling to their old ways and meth ods; nothing will change them. The chief who is sick wants a witch doctor to come, howl, dance and tell him that he has been be witched into swallowing a small crocodile, which is biting his in sides. The treasury finds that in the first eight months of this fiscal year it has accumulated a deficit of $2,- 410,IKK),(MMl. The country took rn $2,348,000,000 and spent $4,755,000,- 000. In prosperous times tlie coun try’s total income is $00,000,000,000; but when will those “times" come back? © King Features Syndicate, Inc. WNU Service. FEW CHANGES IN A CHILD’S WORLD AS TIME GOES ON ‘‘To say that boys today are more sophisticated than those of a past era, that modern girls are young ladies at twelve, is to lay oneself open to a charge of reckless judg ment, says Charles T. Muller in Scribner’s Magazine.” “Because, un til approximately fourteen, normal boys and girls of every generation live in a world that has nothing adult in it. i “Their juvenile universe is a sim ple, wholesome place. They guard it jealously from all who do not ap proach with friendly understanding. “Basically, there is no difference, no change in what appealed to chil dren of yesterday, and what appeals to today’s youngsters. The cut lasses of ancient searovers and the machine-guns of Twentieth century bandits carry, in themselves, no moral significance. “They are merely the peculiar trap pings of distinctive eras. And, while adults of each era are viewing the outer trappings with alarm, boys and girls are admitting the bravery and loyalty of the men and women be neath the trappings. "The simple virtues of bravery, loyalty, and fair play are what boys and girls look for. “Given intelligent guidance in handling their own problems in their own way, boys and girls will make a fine job of living. “Being imitative, and eager for praise, the youngsters often ape the worst adult externals. With the re sult that they are criticized for an unbecoming sophistication. “When left to themselves, how ever, when allowed to develop their own ideas, the vivid imaginations of the average boy and girl carry them into fine fields, and urge them to splendid accomplishments.” Curled Lovelocks for Men Was Vogue in 17th Century Some of the most absurd fashions In history hnve been followed by men. One of the classics, which came into vogue among the noble men of Seventeenth-century England, was the wearing of lovelocks, two long locks of hair that came down the sides of the head and reposed gracefully on the chest. Each lock was nicely curled and tied with a dainty ribbon. —Collier’s. Don’t Guess But Know Whether the “Pain’* Remedy You Use is SAFE? Don’t Entrust Your Own or Your Family’s Well - Being to Unknown Preparations 'T’HE person to ask whether the preparation you or your family are taking for the relief of headaches is SAFE to use regularly is your family doctor. Ask him particularly about Genuine BAYER ASPIRIN. He will tell you that before the discovery of Bayer Aspirin most “pain” remedies were advised against by physicians as bad for the stomach and, often, for the heart. Which is food for thought if you seek quick, safe relief. Scientists rate Bayer Aspirin among the fastest methods yet dis covered for the relief of headaches and the pains of rheumatism, neu ritis and neuralgia. And the experi ence of millions of users has proved it safe for the average person to use regularly. In your own interest re member this. You can get Genuine Bayer Aspirin at any drug store simply by asking for it bv its full name, BAYER ASPIRIN. Make it a point to do this and see that you get what you want. Bayer Aspirin PERFEGROBRANDVegetabIe and Farm Seeds will pay you rich profits \ —Flower Seeds will beautify your \ J garden. Specia) Q{fer; V1 I-oz. Mixed Spencer Sweel Peas 10c postpaid \ Write for this big Seed Book. \J Box 388 - - Denver, Colo. AUALFAJi SEED fas For lasting fields use Bartel- wHjSWgfip des hardy, mountain-grown V tVnjf alfalfa seed. Less winter kill ing, resistant to disease, abun- t|gr dant production. Costs Less. j ms m Aik your /f * t Ps