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M Co WINDH BUGBEE CORNER, Smart Spring Suits Exceedingly Stunning and Distinctive * High-Class Models, in the choice va- riety of both plain and fancy effects, extremely well tailored. Many are perfect copies of high cost original models. Features of importance are smart braid trimmings, novel belt ar- rangements and silk Peau-de-Cygne lining. Priced $16.50 to $35.00. READY-MADE Spring Dresses At $16.50 An extremely moderate price for se- curing the latest dress ideas, presented in fine quality materials—new shaped overskirts—Bell shaped patch-pockets —new = slanting overskirt—Georgette vestees tucked or button trimmed. All the Spring shades. Petticoats GOOD AND GOOD LOOKING TO WEAR WITH THE NEW SPRING suUIT Petticoats at $3.98 Durable All Silk Taffeta and Wash Silk Petticoats, tucked znd ruffled Elastic fitted belt in new colorings and = changeable flounces. Spring effects. Watch Our Show Windows UNTY S TRADING CENTRE PUTNAM, CONN. Millinery To Match the Beauty of Spring | Easter is but a short way off—and’ Easter means new millinery. Never have we felt better prepared to mm! your every want. We announce with pleasure the re- turn of Mrs. A, R. Curtis, who for the past 15 seasons has successfully con- ducted our millinery department. We are displaying an extensive ar- ray of hats and findings. Let us show you how indivitually stylish and inex- pensive your Spring Hats can be made. New Spring Wash Goods PACIFIC FOULARD, 32 inches wide, all new patterns. 39 PACIFIC. FOULARD, 36 inches wide, all new patterns. Yd...... WOVEN PLAID TiSSUE, 27 inches wide, in all this season’s newest R s R B 9c PACIFIC PONGEE, 32 inches wide, all new sport patterns. Yd.. 3 POPLIN PLAIDS, 27 inches wide, a new printeq material. Yd. JAPANESE CREPE, 30 Inches wide, in plain colors. Yd....... WINDSOR COSTUME PLISSE, 30 inches wide, new dainty patterns. d . 25¢ some assortment of newest pat- terns. 29¢c and OLGA BATISTE, 30 inches wide, in plain colors for underwear. Yd. 29¢c SPLASH VOILE, 38 inches wide. Yd .............. PLAIN VOILES, in full range of colors. Yd . 23¢c and 39z FULL MERCERIZED POPLIN, in :‘l” the staple and fancy shades. d in white, 28c | Sc BYRON D. BUGBEE | BRIEF STATE NEWS Marion.—Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Bing- am will celebrate their golden wed- ding Monday evening. Middletown.—A si tering the honor roll at the park, and | work will be finished ready for the cation next Sunday afternoon. . New Britain.—Arthur Volz informed he police that his brooder was raided her night and a thief got away chicks about five weeks old. L-t_chf' Id.—The annual institute of eld Cou nday School: is to be held at the Con-t 1 rch in New Hartford | May | 24 ion of Rev. . Downey, who is a patient " hospital in Hartford, al. He now has typhoid | euro-pneumonia, malaria and pl Torringtol n.—The W. Halliwel ¥ pr iznation of John | cipal of the Tor- | rington High school was read at the meeting of the town school commit-| Rev. . . Lyon preached tee. Action on it was deferred. Balts in the Co 2 2 |church Sunday after a ps Berlin—Rev. S. A. Ficke, pastor of | s BE oftes b B Gl B e yon Have mmnde meng croihds c built a summer home in theigeld of mber n meocss i their new State and has been passing a few | oI Bera, VL. tol swhith 5 Sapiile g 2 feW | place they moved this week. days this week at his new cottage. S G Wogp L of ;flht 1 5 3 ligd f on has New Haven.— Anthony hall Sheffield Scient school is planning | to give a_house party at the time of | the Yale-Harvard boat race Saturday, June i{. A dance will be given the night before the race and a tea dance late that afternoon. Waterbury.—Opposing the granting of a liquor license to John Hubbell for a saloon in ‘Waterbury, Rev. James Egan, pastor of St. Francis Xavier's church, appeared before the county commissioners and declared the place “a moral blot on the community.” Cromwell. — Col. Timothy Shailer ‘Williams of Huntington, L. I, a de- scendant of Jehiel Williams, has of- fered to bear the expense of a steel flagstaff to go on the Revolutionary monument which stands in the Stock- ing triongle in honor of his ancestors. Bridgeport.—Houses will be built in six differgnt sections of the city of Bridgeport by the Housing company with the $3,000,000 loan secured from the federal government. These houses are to be built near the factory cen- ters and on lines of the trolley and jit- neys, so that it will be as convenient CORNS ACT LIE A PUSH BUTTON TELLS WHY THEY ARE SO PAIN- FUL AND HOW TO LIFT THEM RIGHT OUuT If you push on an electric button you form a contact with a live wire which rings the bell. When your shoes press against your corn it pushes its sharp roots down upon a sensitive nerve and you get a shock of pain. Instead of trimming vyour corns, which merely makes them grow, just step into any drug store and ask for a quarter of an ounce of freezone. This will cost very little but is suffi- cient to remove every hard or soft corn or callus from one's feet. A few drops applied directly upon a tender, aching corn stops the soreness in- stantly, and soon the corn shrivels up so it lifts right out, root and all, without pain. This drug is harmless and never inflames or even irritates the surrounding tissue or skin. 'LOUIS E. KENNEDY DANIELSON 'Undertaker and Embalmer . @pecial Attertion to Every Detall n painter is let-j A of | © -| seed which is being distributed by the e as po ible for the men who are to| live in the new houses to get to and! from their work. The houses are to be' of various types, in ng single houses, detached ang detached houses, and group dw They will be built mostly of bric acoord- ing to specific ns approved at Washington. New Britain.—Tn order xe! Dahlgren =5 Mrs. upon last| s secured p Dahlgren a s from | Sweden. rs. Dahlgren has been in| weden ng relatives for several months and for a long tim trying to get back to th i her family. Owing t 1 has il ure passnorts | and pa. ment officials | have been helning the family to ary papers for her. STAFFGRDVILLE Rev. C. C. Lyon Leaves For Vermont! Pastorate — Josenh Horavka Fatally | ( Injured at Woolen Mill. of Mrs. John Rollin- son in Hydeville. Mrs, Cora Gold has returned: to her home in West Stafford for a rest, aft- er being emploved as housekeeper for Georze Kmgsbury’s for a year. Miss Pan Neff, Mrs. Ida Converse and daughter, of Eastford. were the guests of Mrs. Frederick Sanger over Sunday. Fatally Injured. Joseph, Horavka, 44, a Bohemian was fatally injured in the Faban Woolen Co.'s mill Monday forenoon, when the extractor exploded near by the drver where the man worked. He Wwas taken to the Johnson hospital and only lived an hour. The funeral was held. from St. Edward's Catholic ¢hurch at Stafford Springs, Wednes- day morning at 9 o'clock, Rev. Felix . O'Nat] ing the requiem high mass. M X oravka leaves his wife, | but no other relatives. Burial was in St. Edward's cemetery. Fov. and Mrs. Von Deck and Mrs. Doolitile of Bolton were guests of Mrs. Edith Mathews over Sunday. NIANTIc Lewis Anderson Arrives and Starts Up Engines at State Camp Ground. Lewis Anderson of Hartford has ar- ed at the state camp ground and arted the engines at the pump- ation R. L. Manwaring has =zone to visit his son at Freeport, L. I. Mr. Trude has returned to his bus- | iness in Hartford after a week end stay with Mrs. Trude in the Pines. Mr. TLockhart and party of Hartford, motored to the Grove Sunday for a short stay. ‘Walter Barker and family are at Mrs. W. H, Barker's cottaze in the Grove for two months. Clarence Hawkes who has a farm at Jacksenville, Fla time at his cot ve soon. i v, and Mrs. J. M. S. Robbins have | returned from a motor trip to their home in Lewiston, Maine Cottagers Arriving. Several of the cottages Grove are open for the < number of out of town visi the Grove over the week at Pine season. An Unfortunate Habit. If New York is going to do its| full share in the liberty loan cam- paign it will have to put off hrag- ging about it and speed up in a hurry.—New York World. Application at Winnipeg for the flax- British Government has far outrun the supply. | start’ with ‘intensity. on Monday next| Blanc his recent severe k‘:i:_wrmfl |iTinass: lips iS to’go to Broad : 1&ain ¢ 10w ong; Broolt €8 Tor a time to re-|?ddressed to him returned S g Tn the letter he te-hiome ha cuperate.. neglected to mental or Now the Ninth Separate Company. ‘ompany da this may Capt, I. 0. Armington of the Den- |arcarmt for letter ™ here nat { M. S. Mrs, i ca. e et e e e o o N Yo A i £ A 'DANIELSGN' PUTNAM kS 3 2 2 G £ Mrs. J. W. Kennedy Returns from | Private Adelard Barbeau’s Hospital—Plans for Memorial Sun- | day—Home Guard to Be Ninth Sep- arate Company — Saretzki - Casey Wedding—Funeral of lda E. Hop- kins—New. Books at Library. Fate Causes Sorrow — Donia Tetreault, Who Enlisted at 17, Cannot Be Lo- cated—Deputy Inspector Catches Hartford Moterist Violating Laws ;—Home Guard at Armory. Members of the local exemption board ‘expressed regret Thursday over the disappearance in action of Private Adelard Barbeau, Danielson, G 'com- rany, 102nd infantry. The hoard had particular interest in him and Rich- ard J. Healey, also of Danielson, for they were the first two cted men to leave this district and they went as brave young men anxious to be up and at the Germans in the fullest pi formance of their duty to the co try. The last thing Private Barbeau said before leaving here for Camp Pev- ens was that he didn’t care much how soon they sent him to France, and the Sooner the better. He was an for service and events so shape themselves that he saw bvlenty of it jduring the few months that he was! on the western front. The reportj ! “missing in action” seems particular- | 1y sad, for it leaves grave doubt as to just what hag happened to him. Mrs. J. W. Kennedy, who has been a, patient at a Worcester hospital, re- turned to_ her home here Thursday evening. She is rapidly recovering af- ter an operation for appendicitis. Sergt. Earl;Geer of the .island forts returned to duty Thursday after spending a leave of absence .at his home here. ¥ Henry C. ‘Brady of Pawtucket was a visitor with friends in Danielson Thursday. b k Judge W. F. Woodward presided at| a. session .of the town court Thursdoy morning, disposing of a case of minor importance, A4 Louis A. Woisard has written from Camp, Upton that, he has been at.tend- ing a school ‘of small arms practice. Severa] Danielson men were admit- ted to citizenship at a session of the superior court held in. Putnam for naturalization purposes. German Shells Shown. window of the Danielson 5 o % TrIt:‘sLt::mpany is a set of shell cases Admitted to Citizenship. fired by German guns into the French ! The following men who apneared | line at Verdun ‘and other points Onihere for naturalization were admitied the western front. The shells have|to citizenship at a session of the su- been worked with designs DY POiluS.|perior court presided over by Judge Red Cross workers will be ready 10} Maltbie: Walter Alfred Dovle, Andréw o ette Fdoie Joseph Potvin, this district’s campaign to get $5.- | Hugh -Kelley, John Robert Ask. John 000. ‘An effort will be made to exceed ! Arvid Cllin. Exerie Chabot, Spiio] the amount. | Konstantin Talabac, Charles Demstn,* Young foxés are reported to be un-i Amadee T nussier. Joachim Caron. Jo- Cornoyer, Be | | usually numerous ‘in this section of seph . Dore, Hormoidos the'county this spring, promising good | Rernard’ Caron, Josenh Caron. Ge hunting during the coming fall for the | Goesslin, Maris Harrison. John Aasad men who like the game. | Fadoul. ‘Joseph Dvson. Morris Harr Many prudent heads of households|Lawsine. Emilien Dumand Odias M-- have placed their arders for next win- inard Rdmund Belanger Charles T ter's supply of coal through Danielson | heau, Henri Allerie. Joseph Boucher. dealers. Deliveries are being made as{Fdmund Durand. promptly as possible. The cases of several other m Memorial Sunday. were - either dismissed continned f further study or. in the case of my aliens, continued until after war. Sunday, May 25; will be-observed in Killingly as Memorial, Sunday, and the usual patriotic exercises memory of | the hero dead will be held at Soutp Killingly, membe: of McGregor post, G: A. R, oficiating. France si Sad. Writing from somawhe: the | ENLISTS AT 17. But Dorria Tetreault Cannot Be Lo- cated by Mother. i : vear old sen of France is ault. of Wood- though sadn eem ctc ¥ Dresents one :ri;(:)\rx;k on the majo of the little prohlems of the war in- . 2 5 smuch as he appears to have devel- Met Fricnds at the Front: oned a habit of gettine ont of touch Philip Reberze, who is on the west- ! ith his neonle mere and keeping them ern front, has w jin a state of worry. Arthur_Rainvilie, who i { - In November last hs loft here os- Massachusetts regiment, and &L | tensibly to visit relatives .in Wiliis Carl Anderson. who is in the 102d.in- mant No more eard from fantry. Private Roberge writes him until- late in when a how s S ame from K nl pears wearing a full .- Tevas, et a Superintendent Phillips Recovering. ted .in the service. . jsm, especia | in one lson Home guard company has re-|reachin~ him. Inquiry at Kelley fiel! ceived word that the local command, |shows that he is nof there now, a r the State guard orga I'there is no record of him in : n, will be designated as the Ninth [jutant =ene office - & Separate compa Trace of him max he found A Somnambulist’s Stunt. | the office of the adjutan | fice .at Washingfon ana r resic awdkene: . 5. > A Dyer street resident awdkened| ot Al Tashinzion and in from a dream in which he saw his| OUrce Is now bein= m: room’ afire to find_ himseit hanging by | SymeT bere that the ors } i ‘on e auts | BRiCH T s atfached s some over. & % JRCHES No effort w ha <o side of his window. He could not get | ors N0 effort will b~ made to <e- Be: i ih: forced .t his ease from the service. hut with him. Motor Laws to Be Enforced. Through the -police department of tie city, it is announced, a strenuous effort wiil be made to enforce the au- tomobile law and the trafic law in 11 particulars, including the regyla- tions pertaining to automobiles pas ing standing trollev cars parking forbidden areas, hitching liorses left standing in the street, etc.. etc. Warning are being issved of the plan to enforce the 1 One case de- veloped on Thursday morning, when Walter Wheaton ‘was charzed with fo . the ! anxious to get in touch o & cons sround, spraining his ankle. WEDDING. Saretzki—Casey. . James’ rectory at 5.30 Thurs- v morning Miss Winifred Elizabeth sey, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ber- nard R. Casey. of East Brooklyn, and Dr. William Saretzki of Putnam were united in marriage by Rev. John Roux, Vivian Lavalle, sister-in- law of the bride, was matron of honor and the best man was Dr. W. A. Da- mon of Hartford. leaving a horse in the street without The bride wore a tailoréd traveling hitching the animal. Because of what suit of sand colored poplin with hat | he considered extenuating circum- to match. stances, Judge M. H. Geissler of the There was a breakfast, attended only | city court took no other action than by relatives and intimate friends,Da! to place the case on file. the home of the bride’s parents. Dr. < 2 ang Mrs. Saretzki left by motor for Getting Ready For Drive. their wedding trip to Atlantic City. Thé_Pulnam Red Cross distri; campaigning organization to raise They will return here in a_week. c Mrs. ‘Saretzki is the teacher at the {300 of the $100,000,000 fund that the country will give next week was not Putnam Heights school. She will re- sume her duties there in about two|Completed up to Thursday afternoon, weeks. Dr. Saretzki will leaye Fridaybut it will be in time to start the of next week to enter the service of |drive with tremendous energy Mon- his country. day next. FUNERAL. lda E. Hopkins. At West Gloucester Thursday fu- neral services were conducted at her home for Ida E. Hopkins, 56, by Rev. G. H. Cutler, pastor at North Scituate. Burial was in the Turner cemetery, near the Hopkins home. Relatives acted as bearers. A. F. Wood was the funeral director. Warning Motorists. Chief Michael Grimshaw of. the po- lice force has begun to call the atten- | tion of automobilists to the necessity of obeying all the state motor vehicle laws. General activity along this line is now manifest in Windham county towns, and experienced motorists say the gooq results of the work that is being done is everywhere manifest. Road rules are being better observed and only a few cases of speeding are noticed. These are to be promptly | taken care of. Glaring headlights are the next in- fringements on the moter iaws that are coming in- for attention by in- Since the drive last fall the won- derful work and the urgent need of the Red Cross has been borne in more ; strongly upon hundreds of citizens and the giving is expected to be more liberal, even, than it was in the fall, There is also the consolation to the giver that every cent of every dollar given goes to make life more com- fortable for the v's fighting {men. TIn fact. statistics just given out ! show that for every dollar ziven in the drive last fall, so far as the mon- ey had been used up to March 1, $1.02 was expended for the benefit of the men in uniform. This sounds strange. but it wag made possible by the heavy interest earnings on the scores of millions that the Red Cross had on deposit. As good a record will be made with the next $100.000,000. The administration expense of the Red Cross is met from the dues paid an- nually by the 22,000.000 members it now has in this country. Girls to Cultivate Garden. - Fifty Pomfret girls have engaged in the unique undertaking of culti- Vating two acres of land, use of which § has been given by Willis Covell of zfl?fi;fi“;h Logal e‘:‘;f;;sc;‘“ be 'Te-| s\hington, to grow vegetables for the 6 Day Kimball hospital. The work will TR be done under the supervision of Prin- NEW BOOKS, cipal W, E. Hammond of Israel Put- S nam school. The ground has been Recent Accessions at Danielson Free Public Library. dor, A New England Childhood, The False Faces, In Happy Valley, The Sin That Was His, The Wishing Ring Won, The Lookout Man, Fannie Her-: These books have been added to the public library: uiture—Home Vegetables and Fruits. self, Comrades, Apron _ Strings, An} graphy—The Mad Monk of Rus-|Orkney Maid Sonia, Between Two sia dor, These Many Years, Years Our Square -and the People in Qf My Youth, Life and Lectures ofIt, The Kentucky Warbler, The U. P. John Tiske, Life and Lectures of Ed- Trail, My Doctor Dog, Green Fancy. ward Everett Hale, O. Henry Biogra- Juvenile—The Boy's Prescott, The phy, Charles Frohman, Manager. and ith the U, S. Mail, Uncle Tom Man, Russeil H. Conwell and His Work. a Fighting Costume—Historic ‘Dress in. Ameri- Natural Science—American Animal Cotton 2s a World | Life, Insect Adventures, Handbook of i Nature Study. Plays of Gods and Men. Religion—The Christ We Forget. concmice Americans of Past Observaticn, Thei ! Travel and Description—A Thousand ducation — Vecalional Guidance, ! Mile Walk to the Gulf, We Discover Educating the Child at Home. { the 0ld Dominion, My Unknown Chum, Buropean War—ifirst. Cail In the|Oregon the Picturesque, Rambles i Heart .0of German Intrizue, My War Old College Towns, Your National Diary, The Great Crime and Its Morzl, { Parks Nights, The Last Voyage of the Wonnded and.a Vrisoner of War, A|Korluk, Oid Seapert Towns of New Treasury of War Poetry, The Crime. . i ngland, In' Dickens’ London, Arizona Fiotion—The Lovers, j the Wonderland; Our Historic South- Long Live the King, The H west. | 3 PV ngsan: Telegraphy—Masters of Space. 3 G 2 e High Heart, | Tha T Talea of t):c‘hbn- 4 B ORI RIS bl When the boys strike that minor chord then you know what blend means Great stuff,isn’tit, when the harmony hounds get together, and tear off a few yards from those good old-time songs. Maybe their voices would make a regular music shark howl with pain. But when they strike those rich minor chords—boy, they’re there with the wallop. No music just like a quartet, you say, when the voices blend just right. Get that word “blend?”’ That’s the secret of the whole thing. Not Jim’s tenor, nor Bill's sub-cellar bass that starts down in his toes, but the way they fit together tells the tale. There’s a lot in that word “blend.” It’s the secret of a lot of good things—cigarettes, for instance. That blend idea has made Mecca the favor- ite cigaretfe with over a million smokers. There are twelve mighty choice —five taste t drag. No thing Mecc know and s He tobac passe: one— . Still- By the Mecca still-blending process, moist heat is passed through these twelve selected tobaccos. The full rich flavor of each is drawn out and merged into one, much as the full flavor of tea is drawn out by steeping. Only in this way can be obtained the Mecca flavor, © THERE ARE 5,000,000 LICENSED MOTOR CARS in the United States. In half a day enoughMecca cigarettes are made to sup- ply ecery automobile driver witha Mecca. process works. B Forons, Pocer © . tobaccosusedinMeccacigarettes kinds of Turkishand seven kinds of American—butyoudon’t he flavor of any one of them separately when you take a deep The only flavor'you get is the good old Mecca flavor. one tobacco has every- you want in a cigarette. Each of the twelve tobaccosin a cigarettes is picked for a special purpose.. One for frag- rance, another for smoothness, still another for body—to let you you're really smoking— o on down the line. re’s how the still-blending The different cos are not just mixed, but are placed together in the blend- ing still. Then moist heat is d through until all the different flavors are drawn into the flavor that has made Mecca the favorite cigarette with over a million smokers. prepared for.planting and the girls |the performance, had his afternoon of will begin their work tomorrow. They | ool performing rudely upset when h. : = tom 4 rming y upset when he will have the backing of the women | o ki in'the act by Deputy Au. o Forsles I tomobile Inspector Ralph C. | tomo 7 r Ralph C. Hartford Smart Aleck Gets Caught. |1, happened to come along in his A Hartford automobilist, who, out|machine and witnessed what was go- on Killingly avenue, was amusing|ing on. Deputy Young interviewed himself and a companion, by making |the .Hartford men, calling mgn* at- life miserable for the driver of a |tention to the road rules. and then Ford, by racing past him, blocking the [reported the case to the state motor road, dropping back and. repeating |department.at Hartford, Thursday. REMARKABLE PHOSPHATE MAKES THIN AUTHENTIC CLINICAL TESTS SHOW GAINED 23 POUNDS, ANOTHER 27 POUNDS Youngz, | S TR —— ] \ -Parents* Tay, May 22 has been sej observance as Parents' day in 48i@ublic schools of this city and .an_interesting pro- gramme of evemm%h for the en- 1xertainmen[ of those:who come to the exereises. -Af) 275 h ‘hools of the city will be. dismigsed- the pupils will assemble ‘dt” e school, where (Continued o Pags Moidve Sec, Col.) PEOP ONEPATIENT Bih'o-Pho.spha.te, the Organic Substance Discovered by French Scientist, Excites Interest of American Physicans New York.—-The discovery of an or- ganic phosphate which when taken into the human system is quickly converted into healthy body tissue, is regarded by medical specialists as of vital im- n_ev i portance to people who suffer from|Frederick Kolle, D.. editor of New ailments directly or indirectly due to|York Physicians’ “Who's Who,” says: d nervous vitality, such as neu-| “Bitro-Phosphate should be prescribed nervous weakness, thinness, | by every doctor and used in every hos- premature old age. insomnia, lack of|pital to increase strength and nerve energy, nervous debility, etc. force and to_enrich the blood. x In a paper presented by a New York Harrigan, former visiting alist at the annual meeting of the North Eastern Dispensa- ew Hampshire Medical society two|tory, says: “Let those who are weak, interesting cases are cited where by|thin, nervous, anaemic or run-down, the use of this organic phosphate one|take a natural, unadulterated strength patient gained 23 pounds, another 27|and tissue building substance such as pounds in weight; both patients claim \#nrlmphosphate and yvou will soon see they have not felt as strong and well | s8me astonishing results in the in- for the past twelve vears. Another ex-|crease of nerve energy. strength of ample 0f how this remarkable Sub-|body and mind and power of endur- stance increases strength and enrichesance.” 3 the blood is furnished by a New York| Bein, hospital physician’s report of a patien whose red cells after a short course of treatment were increased 430,000. 0s. 3 specialist to ted by the most delicate stom- S PSS ST e S fach and not a dangerous drug or stim- ulant. Bitro-Phosphate commends it- self to all sufferers from ‘mervousness, thinness. weakness, etc., and moreover it can be obtained from Lee & Osgood and good druggists everywhere in con- venient 5-grain tablets at a cost so low as to be within.tie of everyone. One of these- tidl 1d be taken with each meal and results in many instances are little short of mar- velous. Duli eyes become bright, sleep is restored to the sleepless, the herves Tegain their strength_ thin people put on flesh and the whole system becomes charged with that strength, vitality and energy which makes life so truly worth while. As there are a great variety of so- called phosphates, care should be ex- ercised to procure the genuine, stan- dard Bitro-Phosphate, which .is com- posed wholly of the nerve and tissue building substarice as originally dis- covered. — Although Bitro-Phos- surpassed for a nerve food that is readily|be to put on f