run sun‘:slums1antritiumHmililttifiitttiflmiluntuiiuiiitifii . . 1 a nu r . ._.. n» 3" id l Sir Francis Castle duties as high commissioner oession to Sir Willis-m Clark. flvw-o- Fluud.1(.C.B.. who will for Great Britain in soon take up his Clllldngingsgq. . w Commissioner to ‘Canada NOTICE Charlottetown Wool- len Mills will be ready to re-open for business in a few days. " WM. coupon suocassoa ro WM. LANDRIGAN ...l 85 Queen Street .,. “Finn run sue AT MARSHFIELD Six Miles East of Charlotte- town, now occupied by FRANKLIN MILLS Will be sold in lots to suit l A A L-1415-10-23-27 Charlottetown. 7 r B. Bennett. 'U.K. Wheat P001 Agency a Surpise Clearance Auction Sale MT. HERBERT, MONDAY, OCTOBER 29, of high class Ayrshire Cattle at AT 1 UOLOOK 1934 (C. P. By Guardian's Special Wire) OTTAWA. Oct. 24. — Announce- ment that several wheat export hou. see and the wheat pools of Bask- atchewan and Alberta planned to m. augurate a point grain selling agency in the United Kingdom was unex- ected in official circles here "I nev. er heard of it," said John I. McFar. land, General Manager of the Can- adian Co-operativc Wheat Producers " -' who is in Ottawa discussing the wheat situation with Premier R. NOTICE My wife Annie Myrtle bceco (nee Mclnnis) having left my bed and board, I will not be respmisible for purchasers’ any bills contracted by her. Apply. Dated this 26th day of October, MORLEY M. BELL, 1934- SAMUEL “Eco S“mm°"5‘d°' L-1785-10-27-1i. ' Our Senior herd sires Netherton Ambition Inqi. A. A. and Springburn Dinshrnite. Also 4 young bulls by our senior herd sire and out of R. 0. P. oows. Eight It, 0. l’. cows with exceptionally good records ranging from l0 to l4 thousand lbs, mostly all due to freshen this fall. Two twc-year-old Heifers bred. Two-ycar-old Heifers bred. Two Calves. Two Cows not bred will be sold for beef for cash. All animals will be sold without pedigrees. but pedigrees can be arranged for if desired. No reserve. INGS d: SON ‘Six months approved joint notes besrfmg 4% interest will be scooptod. Silo positive. J. A. MMDONALD, Auctioneer. ‘lrl46d-10-24-26-27. Farlly Bus Service & Taxi Service TIME TABLE Holdqllften in §0Ilfll—-LENNOx HOTEL GIIARLOTTETOWN to FORTUNE " having Charlottetown .. 4.00 p. m.|Lesving Fortune 815 s. m. " " llnzelbrook 4.20 p. In. " Diugwellfi . " Koch's Lake 4.35 p. m. “ Dundss ........ 8.45 a. m. " 48B .......4.45p.m. “ Bridgetown 8.50am. " Cardigan ..... 5.00 p. m. “ Cardigan .. ... 0.05 s. m. " Bridgetown . . 5.15 p. m. " 4i! Station . .. . ' Dundss 5.20 p. m. ' Keefe’: Lake 9.80 o. m. " DingwelPs ...... 5.40 p. m. " flsselbrook ..... 8.45 s. m. Fortune 5.50 p. m. Arrive Charlottetown. 10.05 s. m. Bcndqurte" in Charlottetown -— DIANA TEA RDOMS, CITY BUS SERVICE an. .1"... lesdlusrters in Charlottetown, Old Spain Toe Booms. signal at any point on route. DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY ;;l%EtiE'.BlLS..LlhHE , is time sy, Ililllllgfoli the‘ '_" CoismeucirigMoudsy,‘ Octobeiflzznd. Blue Bus will days a weskzjbidiidsy. Wednesday and ssisesclicdule. Bin.- $1.75 1.50 Li) 1.10 1.00 .00 Sgle. 81.00 .00 .70 l-personsimportsrittobcnshero- THE CHAR broadly from his pen: he felt the cramp of his fingers in the inten- sity oi his emotion. Seldom, indeed not since the war, had he been so stirred. He reread what he had written and took up the sheet to tesr it, realizing how his mother would wonder at this demonstration from him. Then, his hand stiffened again and he determined to let the letter go. In fact. he added to it : "I put the punishment of the Boyle girl ss more i t than the punishment of Ketlar, although probably the law can not touch her," and signed his name. He took the letter to the mailbox on the street, and, after dropping it in, immediately assailed himself for the violence of his lest lines. What would they mean to his nwther i‘ What did they mean to himself? he asked. as he strode across the street to the lake, his mother for- gotten, his mind and soul absorbed by “ n roused by Joan Daisy Boyle, daughter oi a drug addict. accomplice to Ketlar, false swearer and dcflcr of the law and challen- ger of Calvin Clarke. Over the lake stood stars and his eyes sought s patch of them cen- flsurins the constellation which Joan Daisy had shaped in gums; on the sand. Calvin stirred to rills of warm blood at memory of her voice when first she met and challenged him, her eyes even to his, her head up, "What's the matter with me?" he arraigned the thumping of his breast, and turned toward his rooms, determined to dismiss her and the whole affair of Ketlsr until tomorrow. CHAPTER XXVII. SHADOWED But a woman awaited Clarke out- side his building. She was alone, and she stood quietly, never moving when Calvin approached. She was middle-aged or more. he sew. with a. fine, straight figure. endowed in the dark with s. brooding dignity which impelled Calvin to remove his hat. “You are Assistant state's Attor- ney Clarke?" she asked. "Yes." "I am Anna Ketlar Edweii. I am his mother." "What?" said Calvin. “I'm his mother." "Uh," said Calvin and, believing that the dark deceived him, ho moved lo have a better light upon her; and he supposed that he was in for a painful and utterly useless 07599-1; but the woman only said, in a low voice: "I've come Jllbt about his child. A neighbor has her now, one of Adele's neighbors." “Yes.” "Can-can't I have her?" r "l-ler grandmother," said Calvin, choosing his word stupidly. but without intent, "will he here to- morrow for the child. She is com- ing from Minnesota." "I am the child's grandmother, too. I want her. Let me have her- oh, lee me have her, st least while my boy's in jail." "I've sent for the moth ‘s moth- er." Calvin said, stub‘ suq, and the woman turned away, abandon- ing her appeal so suddenly that he watched her with surprise. ‘Ihen he realised that, being wlist she wss, she had expected only to be “ ' " that she was in perfect control of herself and she would not trouble him again. oooo Habit, With the Ill-I'll 0f regu- for work on y morning. Hob- ituslly she was outof bed ins mo- ment, alert and lively, however late she might have been the night before: bur, this morning she felt tired and heavy; and as she sot up in orient herself in relation to the FOR £41.15 lnrity, aroused Jcsn Daily in time . Honda wurthdn the world. which s. girl needed for a goal on s morning lilke this with sunlight over the c y. So Joan Daisy arose, tired no longer. Quietly, out of regard for the sl ‘ cf her mother and Dads, she went to the kitchenette and started coffee for herself and put on an egg to boil. After her shower bath, she extinguished the after having dressed, sbo- break- fasted, washed the dishes which she had used and reconvened her bed into s couch. It was likely, she considered, that Dads had plenty of money, which had been got no more diahonestly and, if he hsd cash, he would be he might have had money last night and have none now; so Joan Daisy took her usual precaution of hiding a couple of quarter dollars in the cinnamon jar, where her mother would look for money, if in need. None of these domestic doings. and least of sll her hope and dream could have been so much as sus- pected by the many whom Calvin had posted to watch the fist». l-Ie merely saw her emerge from the building at s. quarter before eight when, after hesitating. at the door until the walk momentarily was clear, she h ed away and mingled in the crowd for the ele- voted. "She looked cool and 0. K,‘ re- ported the detective who had been detailed to observe her. "I'll any she rested all right: she went straight to the office of G. A. Ho- berg and is there with him now" Calvin received this information in his oflice where, on this ‘Mon- day morning, he was busy assem- bling and asserting the reports. re- cords snd exhibits of evidence, memonmda, photographs, plates and affidavits which he would offer to prove, beyond any matter of reasonable doubt. that Freder- ick Ketlar had killed Adele. his wife. and which proved, in Calvinis mind. that Joan Daisy lltoyle had been implicated with him. The gathered evidence, as he sorted it before him, was damning —thrilllngly, ’ , l; damning. If it was not yet complete, still it was sufficient forrthrpurposes of the day; it would start the moving of the machinery of punishment roposited in this building sud in the building beside it. For tiiis, in which was Calvlivs office, was the Criminal Courts Building of Cook County-a. grim. grimy and very gray structure of rough-howls stone rising to s height of no more than six old-fashioned floors and situated in s. drsb. dingy district of fourth-rate importance only but for the presence of the courts building and its ion. The Criminal Courts Building warrants. fully. its name; from round to roof. it is given solely to encounter with crime. The sherifl’: quarters claim the first floor; the state's sttomey, the second, and above floor by floor, to right and in the loft, are the courts-the courts exclusively devoted to the hearing of serious crimes. Felonies, or offenses punishable only by im- prisciiment or death, crowd the generous with. mamma. Howeven! We vet a s. ‘ So the man went tuuLungs burners under the pot and pm and, h‘, I given i than by "borrowing" from Hoberg; m‘ mgsiomrrythemuscle-menall they need." "very good," said the muscle- men of Heart; "but we cannot take un’ | extra food and oirysen to 10s! less we hove the hell-l 0! muscle-men of mouthing Digestion." the Ind and Stomach. g "I am going to run a race." Self! "You must sec the blood is extra oygvn sue food t0 carry to Les!- "Very good," said all the muscle- men together. "But u you are w win the race we must all have the help of Brain. Unless he sends us the right orders we con do noth- Bo the mun went to BrI-ln Hill explained it all to him, and Brain promised to do his best. just as the others had done. ‘well, the day of the race ceme- "suppossthe muscle-men fell incl" sighed the men “$099059 Brain is careless!" "You want a plck-me-llli l0 steady your nerves," said his friends. “Try s glass of beer, or c. nip of brandy—thst will stop you Bo the men took s glass of beer and in s few minutes he form t0 worry any more, and felt as thcush tho race were as mod l8 W011- But the muscle-men of Legs were not so heppy. and before the 1MB was half run they b08811 W 1°91 unusually tired: and. I'll!‘ I" more they found supplies were running short. “Helloi" they cried ‘u: Heart- "Can you hurry ‘hill 510°‘! llml better than this?" "We're doing out but." seemed the muscle-men of Heart. ‘Mt woke geltlnl quite fasted. And what is the use of hurrying the blood when Breathing and Dllfltlw are so slow about putting in oxygen and food?" "We're doing all we can," whined the muscle-men who had lut been ‘lamed; ‘but works seems awfully bard to-day." "It's Brain who had failed us!" cried :3. the muscle-gen $0103; "It's use we are n I! orders promptly and chub! "M we are all working so badly." "And whose ftvult is that!" cried 1mm indignant‘ . ‘we've nu been m down, not picked up. by that glass of beer. I'm and so sroyomsndnoonecsndohisbest when he is ill." “Make hostel bloke hosts! cried the man, "I shall never win the race." But all the haste they could make "Bu? enouah". Ind "l0 m“ cams in . "Didn't you all promise to M19 ms win" he cried angrily. "To be sure we did!" cried the muscle-oven and Brain. "And We would have kept our premise 11 youhsdleftusaloaabutifybu pcisonuswith beer. ihllll 11°‘ creating us fairly, Nest time, let us have s chance in show whet We can do or you? Bo the man became a ieetotailer. and now, when he runs in s race. his brain and muscle-rneiganbrlnl him first tbowinniiil - "atom ‘Three Partners" ‘by Margaret Baker. Used by calendars of those courts; felons side mom-burglars and burners of} homes, iootlilds. bandits, glmmexi, murdered his wife. v (To be continued) MORTGAGE SALE To be sold by Public Auction in from ill! of November A. D. 100i, It the hour of twelve o'clock noon, ALL that parcel of lend situate, lying and bo- lug on Lot 0k Township Number sixty. vlle. ‘ sud ‘ ' so tol- lows that il in us , COMMENCING st s stoke fixed 0n use north side of st, Kerr's lose and u the southwest engine! cfsrm farms fronting. on- the turge lhenec‘ west four obs as and OI ;-'°-'-'?'1“‘ ""'-'-b‘""'" ml l" “sinner-n .".':..:-f::'.-.': stare...’ ' "w. "l" ‘rm ;.i "hr-r: new c‘ 5's ' , _ I II I nuyls months an i. in» u 10mm lie-Guru nu wm n n- “m 1 m” w‘ l Ho‘! ‘lrli “if”? gr: mlihi“. l bulk‘ of .ts other . ‘l; ‘lvgiei sold . a 1 ir as: no mum u» ‘ - ' n “Fr-Wu” l‘ 1.3%‘;- '_ hm‘ .114! ~ ~ _ ,_ sfphmv. nix-n mule iaI-"iliig . I v iiznipeymsnt ct its Mink’! _ , . nosing this isn any cc deacon s.‘ I scsxsirouisansr, .' .~ T: ‘Am’ ulm-ion-a-a-r-ss-so-ii. ; . are brought. with ‘tail bailiffs be- W | the man lied to polwflm: kidnappers, pstrlcidesu psi-h of his body to win the rsce. mstrlcides, slsyers of s brother, of They were his muscLis, heart lunil. e rival. or s paramour. the girl who i stomach and brain. rust let us sec has shot her husband, the man who ' what happened to his ‘ when he drank the Alcohol- of the Law Courts Building in Chsrlot- . tctown iu Queen's County on the 10th ’ iii? . ssion. ‘ I I In the mry we have 1M 11""!- depend on five muscles ‘the .5 9 S i n Eieétii 10g 3 sight, and weaker oonwol of the .ll1\l50lB6. Alcohol has been truth- fully called "firewater" by the North American Indians. It cooks the cells as firs coon food. Because it attacks first the upper regions of the brain, it gives the drinker a ' sense of well-being and releases i him from a sense of social obliga- tions snd from self-criticism. The Japanese people have this provmb, which means that once men start drinking they keq; right on until they are permanently in- jured by Alcohol: "The man takes a drink; The drink takes s drink; The drink takes the men." Quetion l. If you were going s long distance in s very cold climate would you drink an alcoholic beverage before you started? State reason for answer. Value l5. Question 2. How does alcohol burden work of the stomach? Value i2 LITTLE STAINS THAT _._ oausii mo cassuss sum t. Octcber an. m4 (senior) It was something new for the Black family to go about the house on tipwe and speak in whispers. 01ers, watching at the widow for the nurse, say Ben Hennessee corn- ing in and she hurried to the door to warm him against making a noise. "Sh-Ben, be very quiet," she cautioned. "Mother is very sick. Bhc was token with pneumonia in the night and we had in send for a doctor." "My, I was coming to ask if she could come and help mother take care of father," Ben muttered. "Ho's been very sick inc with pneumonia and mother has been up with him two nights and hasn't had a wink of sleep. She thought per aps Mrs. Black could come for s. ittle while until she getfisome slsspsoslie can hold out- The doctor says the crisis will probably come tomorrow." Just then the doctor arrived snd Ben went on to get help for his mother. rm- two days Clara stood guard st doors front and-back. charted the ice-man not to whistle and milhnsn not to rattle his bottled. watched over Jack, kept M!!! 811D- plled with Playthings and every few minutes asked him if he wanted s drink, so he wouldn‘t forgot and shout for it. Clara guessed what the "crisis" meant when hcr father men i» mule again and playfully filled her "little mother." Alec made it more clear when lie told her he had heard tho @0501‘ nomendifshehadgoodcs-Mlllfi will get better soon." "But," added Alec, "we must not tell her yet that Ben's father is gone." ‘What?’ exclaimed Olin. Didn't Mrs. senders go and help l!" M" of him?" "Yes, she went and two or three other neighbours went. He hlni s big strong man sud mother only s. slender little woman. lfld lhe h" stood it and he couldn't." "I guess it's the drink." Alec answered. "He's been s. hard drinker and mother has never touched it." "I'll at “ dsclsredJndsliodd thenextwnc become. "Yes," ‘the doctor ss-id u z ii; i” _, i; f: '§§ Es; 523E221 ssyflmuisssfelypsstthserlsilu from - BIl."_?;,Z§‘T,‘l234, P". l . . .. .- v 1 1' ., ' " , ‘ ' ' ~ "1 - ' - , e , a °y° "i .- Sturdy" Course For ~ a l“ t l” 9 l "ill "MW so 1 r1934 "nun uni esiion“ _ ,. . an a. 4200s,. . 3 (ommaomu llflilempty cal-nonhuman“? ‘ ' ‘l I case on _ was s, " mersllyssbsdssfliatsslinstpoiicreoilindsflnltslyloedted g - xsumluswcrsenuticgsipreci downtown. —--- ,°'ll'-'°““"“'°°‘ m ' “number”. nfnudml _nobm'm'nodhq*u¢mu, stuqtodobsrltihltdd sscoodilnhieclwlhssdens cam‘. MAWAYTHAT cerium 1 have released her but m hsr-doorlwitlrhdds lost night’ ~ s WM"! ' ' Thulflmyllliehwlll * with the expectation of roomsting but sincesiis was in us, Dad had‘ , , llqum he" w t" dilfiilw 1 a 111i her soon. - new“ pyhphlgrm; : ones upon s. time them was s. one notable effect of Alcobo CAUSHNA “Even morotiian Kotlsnshoiss ncwismwsswctnrrnsicm- meow» :‘°W'"'°'-'° 19°11"! “"1"” 4"“ u?‘ M, d“; _, o; “new, m.____v “l dmlymmgu mQ-ylmmm‘ 1m. he weulflto littir anon increased quantity of blood in the HW NUTES curciviilsstioinshetoldmeioday,pcrtsmesclrsgwuqpgpgmmgvnscstcodsbouldsr'to:shmudorinsfln.ihisfeelimhdeceptlve,bo-~~ ~ ~ - whenlhadherincustodmthstthe phlegm -uo,,wh,,mg_when_ himdrods and. _, and cause we wewwr the Ill" “xseleuusumm country would be better off when" ever ‘shetbok char ' , in pulled his lNl 1110f"? "My hid wmel. ill m“! 11°“ ll 1°“ m“ mthhgmmy-fimplo there were more Ketlars and fewer was w. Clarke of the state's ut- to I0. c . ‘ . . ' the body. and in s. short ‘time h . of our blood. There was no com- krney‘: olice. who was bound to "I "I! Iiimfwlm‘ "-"°'"' u“ a” ma“ m‘ ‘m’ “d. Ma‘ but w again} m” h“: ‘wuk 'w.'n' c“ at’ ‘ norm‘! dm wmm“ imriwmlnher mlmtoftiwvsiusu kluxstJfhc ooulinllqdgmgllghlhd. "You mull- et bohcoidflrbevhple Moisture sclu crilndiguticirndnrsahty dlilicultyi _ of plsylnsilfllflil "Ilvrflnslsw. inhor‘ rereuuruwiueumabflwwmlfl" - '° W‘ “hi-Md? h" 1*" "W" pimplybsvcoeidsfomucll. Tkythisjustonconsxtum, ‘rhis is what our country is coming which m, “m; gyqucsn make my legs run quicker Arctic explorers and other men _, B“ dolflwonvu, o“ do T”: hi" acid Edi. u d Y?! tel‘ v flugfltht, gflgglmgd Lhggugh he; than anyone eiss's sud than I shall who have to fsce grout cold never _ - l! - _ 8°! 011 8n youll Do not imagine that she is us]; wlmlcw m‘; u“ ma“ o; m, Wm," - . . , . . , take intoxicating liuuors, on their condition tr one that can usually be wonder why someone hadn't told unlque- Murderers. when they K111 ‘sun, the spread of the city below “Very 800d." Illll We 111ml?‘ Blpedllloul- ‘I119 311W W“ 4mm“ rcliwedinfhespucanolmqfmfnrdu. you about it before. Butte suretll for love, become heroes hem: s it, the morning murmur o; mu. ;"butifwcorstn-wcrk herd would lessen the best of their An udohuh mtdpmm bow .b b . " thousand siru would mm: Keri-r ma. ‘no. m m about we must be woil fem-sud m mu ma. and m» would probably cu , Y° "_ P" ° °' °‘ Y" “Y l’ clwlv tomorrow. ‘their-task excited Joan Daisy and need tbs help ct flie muscle-men cs wig m4.“ mm, “W1, who .MiikofMsguesis—citheriniiquld marked Genuine PHILLIPS’ Mills “A W101’ elshleen lflrwi he!‘ wly rslnspiroddier to fight she would of Heart w ‘hurry the blood slung have been found dead in the snow form or tiny little tablots—after of Magnesia. Made in Canada "P m my ‘Mm-i W“ "wine *0 in- flshtm cum m. u. and save with plenty or woollen!’ I have when Iwelwlle W" W" meals This acts u. aim t iin ' form me that Ketlar had not killed him! Saving rm she could on So the mun to nun. ' they went out. l - ' °' ' Al» In Tlblet Form: for the l-‘toyle girl but because of about m, balm; a mm? 1.1m ~r am going to-run a said. ‘Hie action of Alcohol on - the “mull "‘"'"‘"“ u“ ‘wmd’ nun ' mun ofldsglssls heéself. she desired the honor!" m“ m; could work work work he "You must ssetbst the blood 1mm l4 gnflgfly m; e1 g, depfflfl- acidity tlistbdngson your trouble, Irlblgmnowoilsél: stglg alvln realised that he was wrlt- ' ’ ' ' . 1111s m“ r ' m: hum)’. with buck mt "on" with him and through him for her u rcpt moving quickLv through army with“. ma? 60;: You feel likeunow person! any mum u eouivslcn You have fewer headaches. You 1 lose those annoying "acid indiges- tion pains." And soon again you i PHILLIPsVfi/zéé 3 I Wayncna. injury may not me big strain, like then it tells." “Isn't an illustration. doctor?" joined in Mr. Black who had come into the mom while the because it didn't show any sand sifted into the crack which W617 winter. extended underneath out of sight. That day, just befcie the excursion train came up, a big freight train went thundering down and the jar finished the qilit and off lie went just as the exclusion train was passing." "A vu-y good illustration," com»- mented the doctor. “'l‘he damage had been going on gradually for a long time and none suqaec ’ it. Eliot's. the way it is with your lmbltual moderate drinker who u, doesn't always show the damage from the disease." ‘this k one field in particular when scientific investigation has‘ proven that many popular ““‘ are without basis. For many years it was believed that alcohol was s. tonic and m aid to dlzestion. Doctors used it widely u s narcotic. Only recently has its usefulness been questioned and limited. We have already seen that with-, in certain limits alcohol th pain. It is helpful when the sick‘ person cannot digest other foods. During "’““'°' ,. “ . 1'6 has little value es food. In fact. it may lemon the dssiio of the patient for more nourishing food-food which would not only supply energy but oho build up the body. We have seen from our study, of aicoliolsssdrugfliotitdeceivesa person es to his real condition. Be fools that he is botior. We know mm sirpsriencs that this feeling aids recovery. The appetite is shsiponed. Hence alcohol gets it: reputation as s tonic. 0n the other hand, the patient, thinking that be stronger. may over-exert him- self. Int us examine some mccific cases in which alcohol is oom- monly regarded as s. useful medicine, first of all, in bringing back to consciousness l. person who has fainted. Them is no basis in the popular belief that alcohol stimubtcs the heart. It may make the heart beat footer. but the force of the bests is lomened. Orlle, in his experiments on dogs in csse of shock has diown that, according to 60 <Kniie Through igate, 26. was stabbed ted he exercised with 100 prisoners iii s gig-g of Welfare, Island penitentiary protruding from his forehead. the prisoner calmly stepped group and asked an amazed guard for medical attention. pital where the handle of the slic- iuch blade was broken off siolans attempted to extract 9111*!!!’ s cite-re quietly with attendants, the prisoner, serving an indeterminate sentence or felt no pain as the physicians sought Sitnsuccessfully to remove the blade. qrly r‘ by Bettina dumb 0i some he ever said Austin n. MacCor- 6098!“ llwly! (U6 1mm Dlwllllwlllflulmiok. commissioner of correction. but his drink increases his dancer "Fatigate has full possession of n facilities, and says he feels no pain.’ litigate insisted he did not know whether the dose of alcohol wet large or small. _ harmful or ineffective. stance which d throat and mouth passages would, do just as well in these cases Alcohol. was fonneriy freely used may be in fight/in! Mfllnlt lllfflcilgilllkfllldéfl oonsideredsssfoodsndsssdrug.lW-YdmI°“°°l4"-“d ' ' Andsrtintliccsscofsicknemit ""°M1W'm“-mud°m°' may have these two actions. It msyl mflotlillezf b3: ‘m’ kg‘; m en W’ r provide needed energy and dead l ‘bdhm do” mu” m the Wm“ ccrpuscles of the blood which fight of o serious bflllcoeroful not to talne anythlll which WOUIG desire for it. We have many "W?" prepared pI-rtlculsrly people; more modern, and more of» fectivo narcotics are used. Alwhfll should never be used for medldllll purposes without the consent of I competent doctor Question i. regular drinking on the brunet body? Value l0. Question I. Discuss the use d alcohol as s. medicine. Value 10.: (m; Brain Causes Little Trouble (A. P. By Guardian's 5900b! wuq YORK, Oct. fip-ldseph Farr mysteriously q y. With the handle of a. kitchen knits from tbs He was rushed to the prison hos- Ifi Phy- ’ m» and chdttlng ’ degree assault, said ha f. showed it rough the brain. "It was the most amazing thing l , passed _ e identity of his assailant. result WM Any sub- irritate tlil the a m1 germs. And since l, ld m- chill is often the beam- iliness we shcul i lower our bodil! of resisting disease. Alcohol makes an effective iul UNI“! .'l‘hey have learned tion that sirnful w o... body- ‘morally knoi "medicated for Sli-‘l ‘w... effect has f’ - Relieves Pain IASID ALMOST Rsmwnbsr th laelowwheu B woo-wont- } ~rol --frcm~ . Aspirin eases even s bad hen ache or neuralgia often in s few minutes! uin tablet begins " your cticsliy u ow it. And Asfirrin Arplrln deer not m Here’s Way Science Now -_ IAD HEADACHES, NEURITIS AND RHEUMATIC PAINS -a tide.“ 3d mudo in Canada. and sll druddll." have it. Look for the name Bey‘? l‘: flfii"i."ééi‘fifi'fii'ul°u'tili.ii’éit '_ ll csl bottle offld or 100 tablets. 4 in Minutes AT ONCE cmcmbsr these two POM" sud""A ins d- ui. u gs, ASPIlliltl/tl- hod d or: prercribe- " l can l hi?‘ E i? E c 35?; if? it . s; * 3%: xiii grill: .2? still. i; ‘T Why Aspirin Works So Fest Dior so A lrl . W. on‘ t E ' R it '. it is ts- ‘é ' urn-u. mm" mew ‘m... rerun.‘ liéiltsdmilsrb u! ti! 1291m- IIMWI ‘WM