The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 27, 1922, Page 6

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Ss THE |The Seattle Star mall, eet of city, tte Howth; F mowtha, FE) € mentha BTS: yoan 4 win (he ‘state et Waeninaten. Outside of the etate, 800 por mamth, per year, My carrier, elty, 60¢ & month. Preve Mate e400 ' Citizens who are protesting against the school board’s rushing thru the selection of & new superintendent should be upheld. ‘The board ought to postpone this highly im- t matter until after the coming election. We all know that a great deal of sharp difference of opinion prevails over various policies. Superintendent Cooper, who resigned a few days ago, has been for time back, a storm center; his successor, whoever he may be, will likewise oc- y the pivotal position in a clash of issues. 5 is Some of these issues will be before the people in the coming election, and the voters thru their selection of candidates will have a chance to register their verdict. "It is only fair that the field be kept clear until the new board, thus altered, takes i seat. The choice of a new superintendent and all other matters of major concern which can safely be postponed should be postponed. Air Liners Here Soon Merle Thorpe, editor of The Nation's Business, tells Seattleites that air liners will be our city a port of call before two years are up. ) Interesting, because it is an IDEA. Bigger than the FACT of the first liner ar- that probably will get more space in the newspapers. “Do not marvel at Mr. Thorpe’s prediction, Marvel rather: that we haven't had air- for two years. | Every city in Europe, which is ahead of us in some things, has been connected by anes for several years, Ever since the war, in fact. society women slip over to Paris tor a day’s shopping and back again. Busi- ‘men board a plane at Hendon, a North London suburb, and fly the skyways to Warsaw, Marseilles, Hamburg, Vienna, Budapesth. ts are fewer, in proportion to the number of people carried, than on our railroads, ; Star hopes you are discontented with present modes of travel. that way, and in that way only, the world moves ahead. It was Ruskin, great you remember, who said that his life work, he hoped, “would be to stir up a deal of discontent.” you are thoroly discontented because it takes 12 hours to get to Spokane, for we shall have airliners making the trip in one third of the time. finder of his lost wife. Let ’er go Gallagher. : editor, which ° os did anyone hear her questioning the est etter atime ty our _ “The sun of prosperity is shining,” says Mr. | pottcies of the Seattis schoo! board > ’ al * lor thore of Supt. Cooper? for other Star readers, Gary. Lots of us can't see it for our umbrelias. fy msypon tee. ahr «ged EN for many months been an Cc Seem NR Pp jtoo high then, according to her ‘ jy interesting and vain. You can’t tell whether some men are making a | opinion? - > ;, + ' Did the taxpayers general or Be feature of thin newsparer. § = garden or digging bait. say we atom denaiee ee At " . cite the Maire for baying a home amsidans efere will com Many a candidate loses the race because his gas | costing what theirs aid? Why might mere attention gives out. not the school architect have been au ome ia ome en ead eek noe te Mra Aowen’ * euutributions mend & they teachers paying high room rent peup tam short Keep the Styles When We Spend Why dovan't she Lire up to her ideas colume of cold type . a vestion? a * - Over There! With Care podhn gh gregyf oureng Ma Bea. & reader. Remember, pleas, “According te the Paris style in Only really interesting hing | feet, minus the view of Lake Wash 7 bad woman, the 1922 woman is to be sbout the income tax is the report, [ineton, we'll may over in the Lake % te reed. That te the irs and then soma from nearty every community, of | Burien district or some other unpre Pt uty of an cditeriah—to get The 1921 vogue was the roxy, some one who paid a tax of one % athletic, eatabielooking woman; of two cents. second duty fo to make the ini, year's is pretty nearly the A taxpayer whe whittlen athing | gator The star: THINK. Then it becomes that closely Is certainty living up | 1: may be of interest to Beattie — ee Instead of keeping her school to his obligations to the geverm | people who at one time lived in the wink met More TH irl complenon redy to handand tent fame ome of serie, anion, ith it, it he Dol te show, the 1922 woman must When the spending branch of | 585 people 1.290 went to hear Harold wear = face the color of dead government begins paying a6 | jauer, the pianiet, at what was once great editor ef the New " ith biuish shadings be much attention to the mighty pen | known as the old “Croswoll” opera X oe ee eee ceneretes ty neath the eyes, and appear alto ny, government will be living up | hou". ae 5 2 worker asked i peopte. | Tf Detrott wae an fo Wi ‘write an editorial gether newracthenle and lang $0 He eitariage to the lan its neishboring city, It would be rh crt Gan” Ge SO Ore Se we ee a “ere. |Prommary to built an orchestra hail ® slow, snakish movement, sinu- jeneva Mitchell, star or }to meat 100,000 people at a aingte Dana tt eee. *dOuts, who ripped soctety up the | ncert: figure but yourself, you & short editertal,” pleaded kimono by marrying into the high | athematicians what Seattle needs sickness and Indicating general toned Sovage family, says she now lto house one-tenth of ite population. laziness great wealth valiees that she's “t to te yet,” sald Dana, “Any pipet the . PCS porary cai, oa ieee Sone rs This is not surprising to those who “ know and love the fair “Maple City. write a long editorial perfectly wonderful how early Ais hort ed, as be staggered down the 1104. New York girls get that | Adrian is a college town, a commun in . one stairn” How in thander is a fet (4. “4 lity ench as one finds envirening any time.” ether teil et, Ea | college or university, Adrian college toe. ae we sd 4 Tou cannot see the distant heac- | 1% & Methodist institution, itn cam- picking « 1922 full-style woman, or @ confirmed tubercular? Las Angeles courts are testing the mentality ef an old Buffalo capitalist because he demands as- paragus for breakfast and “a drink once in a while.” Any fellow with the real thing im the voay of as- Qaragus thirst sure has boll-weev or something in Als cerebellum on. enaels. surediy that you know the love o} God, But you do know that /oul.—Phillips Brooks, becomes soft and flabby from of normal air pressure, and he would freeze instantly if '¢ not for his electrically- clothing. How can we do reason of what is known supercharger, to collect and ‘esa the air with the gases of engine, 40 that the full force the horsepower of the engine “May be maintained in the light at- “Mosphere where the air ts #0 thin. Representative Fitzgerald (it.), “Ohio. Tlead of the Air Nitrate corpora- ton declares that Henry Ford twill make a failure of the Muscle Shoals project. Lots of corpora~ tion heads predict that Henry will fail—but they don’t bet a red cent on tt. donus boys. able to sing opera like blazes. Tt has taken New York four months to “clean” Princess Fatima of all she had, down to the clothes she's im And she's darned incky that she didn’t fall into Chicago's hands, Politicians know the ropes—they @moke s0 many of them. California soul-mate, @n inverted “stein” on it? “Men should walk on all four ‘a @ prof, who must be backed Dear Folks: in an inn They ta very fine sign I've seen.” "The is Said one, The other's t sig golar” So they began to rave and there; and words were flying other lied; and #0, to prove their swords and had a fight. They let their swords and Typteal “American” Pengalow “American” Roady-Cut method of preparing tumber sav you money by reducing the Material-Labor-Time waste. We manufacture any sige or style of house desired. You can decided he'd investigate. He went outside and looke: American Homes Inc like you and me! A Mr. Gallagher offers $10,000 reward to the You connot hear the songa of You cannot even say as- be brave and true and pure is better than to be cowardly and false and Treasury Comptrotier Crissinger declares that the banks won't loan on those bonus certificates because the latter couldn't be rediscounted and would become “frozen credita.” Is one freeze after another for the Anyhow, Mateenauer ought to de the mad scenes of Bhe muapects her husband of having @ 50-year-old Washington is in dowdt about « flag for the prohibition enforcing navy. Why not a white square with AQ, etter From AIVRIDGE MANN. From the Libe Lor Crrttven EATTLE STAR Cporny or your — CRAP BOOK tn Leavenworth Prisom) FREEDOM BY RALPH CHAPLIN Up an the lookout, In the wind and alect; Out In the woods of tamarack and pine Down in the hot slopes of the dripping mine, We dreamed of you, and oh, the dream was sweet! And now, you bless the felon food we eat; And make each tron cell a sacred shrine: Por when your love Ubrisis in the blood like wine, ‘The very stones grow hoty to our feet! We shall be faithful, tho we march with @eath, And singing storm the battlements of wrong; One's life ts much « little thing to give; Bo we shall fight as long as we have breath— Love in our hearts, and on our lips a song: Without you It were better not to live! LETTERS ic LD TOR Editor The Star: burean. eteran must have “Inside pull” be fore he oan get government compen. mation for his Injurtee. ‘This i not true Officials of the American Legion bave coonsion to be ip close touch with the personnel of the Veteran# bureau constantly, We know that claire of men absolutely tion. It is my belief that the Veter. allows in the Judgment of the bureau officials There are driays many times tn The American Legion has often criti Cleed the burean becnuse of its pro- PAitor The Star: When the husband of Mre m4gar Blair wan an employe of the choot district in the capacity of architect, | pus covering about 60 acres: St. Jow eph's academy for girls being in ? | University carrying the honors of « finishing school tn addition to a bual ness career One of the professors at the Unt versity of Washington at present is a fair type of character prod by Adrian College, Former Counctiman A. F. Hinas was at one time super. Intendent of Adrian city water works, There were real tears shed by some of the coworkers and pu: Editor The Star: Down past Fidalge island rune a broad, calm stream. White farm houses dot tts banks, and children play beside the green dikes. Mild eyed cattle graze upon the winding shore, and all ls beautiful to look upon. ‘o bint ts there, tn the fatr pto- Way back tn days of 014, when knights were nervy, brave and bold, and found their only real delight in running round the land to fight, @ pair of knights, all dressed in tin, were eating dinner 4 about the landlord's eigen, which both agreed wan “It's “quite the best 1 ween, of any silver one was firm but cold, as he replied, glare, and raise a rumpus then and high and wide, till each declared the which knight was right, they drew Jances whiz, til both were dead as business is; and when they'd drawn their dying breath, and closed the argument in death, a stranger who had watched their fate, 4 about; the eign was ailver—not a buy the materials and erect the house yourself, or we will doubt! But still he wan't watiafied, until he'd seen the other contract to build it for you. wide; and he discovered, I am told, the other side was beaten gold! Our Mill and Office are located in Seattia, We ship ANY 0 exe ke ad On. 0“ a or fellow's mice, WHERE. Call or Wits tor cur nations So if these knights had only tried to see the other fellow’s side, they would have saved a fatal fray, and might have been alive today. And so the moral scems to be, these knights were nuts equally high favor; Brown's Pusinens | Legion Man Defends Bureau jewdure, We cooperate with the bo- I have before me « efipping of a |reau, however, in an effort to better ber sort of talk letter signed by Mra 2B. J. Bakin,| conditions rather than make bitter|—~@!l about the people published in The Star last Thureday, |attacks aguinat it, The public must | WHat a rum crowd they were. Devil in which she attacks the Veterans’ | remember that the Veterans’ bureau '#h funny, I thought, some of her She states that a dimbled|ia governed by federal laws which | Stertes. must be obeyed. The officials of thi Pow he'd heard ‘em before. like to | there government agency would make awards many times which the awe probibit. The record ef the Veterans bu reau, which is but seven months old. in not #0 bad. Official records show | (at checks totaling more $1,000,000 time. Efficiency of the burean is ane bureau here ts making all the becoming higher every month. Prob.|@et our taille wy compensation awarts which the law /lems are being met squarely and | Pals. openly. Let's give the Veterans’ bu |roau credit when credit is due and loffer constructive criticiam when HENRY A. WIah, Aéjutant, American Legion, Department of Washington. Mrs. Blair’s School Criticism tentious part of the city, and let other people live as they ere ft? If I remember correctly there waa a time when perfect harmony pre vailed. A $400 a month salary was fine, The Bri, organizat ong drawn out affairs subjects Ike “Serving Soup to Schoo! devoted to Children.” with Mrs, Minir taking an | AN this eriticiam of the Seattle lachools somnds to | 4a originating tn [with soar grapes as | Now that Mr, Cooper wouldn't it be wixe for board to advise the new ent to take up the study of schom administration ander Mra Bialr and Mr. Axpayer? They evidently con sider themnelves experts on the mub- joet. ELIZABETH WHITE. Adrian Devoted to Music | pls of the Methodist Mptecopal Scn- day school when Mr. Haas resiqneda | to come to Seattia, city, and Adrian has contributed her torney, and his sister, Mra. Mary slaughter of al] concerned, that he| might satiafy bis craving at leisure. | And dally, nightly, down the slough |rolous Hapgood had said of Penny | to the village Green rather as if they Down | Green; and it was well mid. At its; Were two old ducks turned out share. Joseph W. Gregory, an at- | Morgan; Mies Telle Wheeler, ll brarian; Albert Richardson, post- man, and wife (nee Chapman); the late Rev. BE. B. Sutton and wife; Frenk Sutton and wife (nee Brain. ard); Mra, Ralph White (nee Sutton); Mr. i. K. Cole); Mr. Thomas If Wiliams (nee Nash), and many oth- era whose names cannot be recalied. Adrian still boasts of betne the county neat of the richest agricultun al county in Michigan; Lenawee county has the largest number of farma of which every foot is good to plant Fdupational advantages may be an | mood ak those of Seattle, but there would be a big controversy before the young people belonging to thene milies could be convinced of it; other things being favorable, even love of the old home town and the loved onen wtill abiding there conld not matinfy the favored citizens of the Queen City of Puget Sound. @Qira) IDA M. RICHARDSON, 915 32nd Ava Swinomish Slough, Pathway of Vice ture, of the dark traffic that night |sets loone on Swinomish slough. The sun goes down, the cattle wend their way to the big, red barna, that «peak of thin prosperous farm land; dark. ness falls; the flats are hushed, with cool winds softly blowing, and then, so many vile creatures might crawl from their holes, come, silent and dark, the boats of the illicit liq uor and drug runner, Down the coast they go, evil birds of passage, hard-eyed, hard-lipped men, crouching in their gloomy hull men made recklessly ready for theses night runs thru the stifhulus of the liquor and drugs they carry, Out of Vancouver they have made their way, and swiftly on thru the night, engines racing at terrific speed, muffled to the faintest ec sweeping into Swinomish sloug they shoot past the quiet farms and the silent village, darting out thru the tiny passage known as the Hole in the Wail | How little know the innocent, sleep- jing people of this industrious farm |land, sleeping in well-earned repose, of the foul brutes sweeping past them, thousnnds of dollars of contra band, perhaps, concealed beneath the |decks of their speed boata. | On down the coast they go, and later, in some unthinkable revel, in Los Angeles, the liquor and drugs |these madmen risk their lives to “run,” is given to young girls and iveipated men, | Could anything be fairer than fair Swinomish slough? And yet, almost nightly, down this peaceful waterway, goes the sordid trafficker. Not long ago four des- perate men, making their way down from British Columbia with drtsgs land Mquor, headed for California, | ! En. | (Starts on Page 1) oped’... Eh? . , . Yen; God help jit; T agree, After all these centuries sleeping there it's su covered.’ People are « \Tidborough and Alto [bury to get away from their work |and live there, Making « sort of gar den suburb business of it. They've got & new church already, Stupen- |dous affair, considering the nim of the place-—but that’s looking for ward to this development movement, the new vicar chap saya, He's doing the developing Ike blazes, Megular tiger he is for shoving things, par |teularty himself. Chap called Bag: shaw— oom Hagehaw. Character tf over there was ona But they’re%all lenly been ‘dis “Yeo, you co down there and have \@ look, with your sketchbook, Old |Mabre ‘ll love to see you. . . Hie | wife? ++ » OW, very nice, distinctly \niee, Pretty woman, very. Some how I didn't think quite the sort of woman for old Pusiehead. Didn't |appear to have the remotest tnter fut In any of the things he was keen about; and be seemed « bit fed with Here was «ll gomtp there and Suill was something—something about the two of them. You know [that sort of—eort of-—what the devil ‘ia it? —sort of mtiffish feeling you fwometimes feel in the alr with two [people who don't quite click, Well, | that was it. Protebly only my fancy unknown to officials of the bureau js day are being mailed to veterans |A* to that, you can pretty well cut Tronive fair and impartial considers-|by the U. &. Veterane bureau at thin the welkin with « knife at my place sometimes when me and my minus , and we're fearful Daremy T Just took ‘em on an loft day. But that was my tmpres. sin, tho~—that she wasn't jun the sort of woman for olf Bahre. consideration of compensation mat-|things seem wrong to ua, Sincerely, | Mut after all. what the dickens sort ters, which are very embarrassing | of woman would be? Fiddling chap for a hustand, old Puraichead. Can imagine him riling his wife with wrinkling up his nut over sore plain as a pikestaff thing and sying, *Well, I don't quite see that’ Ha! Kum chap. Nice chan Have a érink™ CHAPTER 11 1 Thus, by easy means of the rarru lous Hapgood, appear persons, aces, Institutions: lives, homes, ac tt i the web and the tangle and the amenities of a minute fragment of human existence, Life An odd burtnesn Mystertous journey! stopped tn the quiet haven of La \Conner. For several days their boat lay at the dock, unsuspected. Time and again did thewe lawbreakers walk in nenn Days later, farther down the coast, the boat was found, beating on the shore, her costly cargo at the mercy ] nlanhed throats Then a sodden wretch, fetched to Justice, told of the cold-blooded ge such characters as these fair Swinomish slough, the pathway lof the bootlegger. | In the long ago days, when only }lowest of mankind, the evil being | who fattens on the folly of the fool. fash, who stamps the weak still fur. jther into the mire? + Ob, beautiful Swinomish slough, will the day ever come when you will be what the Great Dosigner of all meant you to be, the pathway of |lage pound surrounded by a decayed | tages of the villagers; also upon the decent commerce? K.P. La Conner, Wash. Hut old Babre—well, I eup- | M ©IVU ASHHUTCHINGON jens arrival, tremendous and myn terious passage, mysterious and jalarming departure, No escaping it; no Volition to enter It or to avoid It; no Prospect of defeating it or nolving it. Odd affair! Mysterious and haf | fling conundrum to be mixed up in! . Lafel Come to thie pair, Mark Babre and bis wife Matel, at Penny Green, and have a look them mized up in | thin 064 and mysterious businems of lif- dome apprehension of the o44 | affaty trat It was, was characteristic ef Mark Babre’s habit of mind, tn | creasingly with the years—with Ma bel ™ Penny Green—*ptet jaquaint if ever a place was,” in gar rulous Mr, Haprood's words—ties tn & shallow @epresnion, in shape like narrow meat dish. It rans east and | weet, and slightly tited from north |to south. To the north the land slopes pleamontly upward tn pasture and orchards, and here wan the mite jof the Penny Green Garden Home Development ficheme. Beyond the nite, a considerable area, stands Northrepps, the wat of Lord Tybar Lord Tybar sold the Development site to the developers, and, as he mimned the deed of conveyance, re marked in his alry way, “Ah, noth- ing like exercise, gentlemen. That's made every one af my ancestors turn In his grave.” The developers tittered respectfully as befits men who have landed a good thing. Westward of Penny Green ts Cho vensbury; behind Tidberough the fun vines Viewed from the high emtnence of Northrepps, Penny Green gave rath- er the impression of having slipped, like @ sliding dish, down the slope and come to rest, slightly tilted, | where tt impetus had ceased, It was cortainly at rest; it had a restful air; and it had certainly slipped out of the busier trafficking of its sur- rounding world, the main road from |Chovensbury to Tidborough, coming from greater cities even than these and proceeding to greater, ran far above it, beyond Northrepps The main road rather slighted than ac knowledgerd Penny Green by the nerveleas and shrunken fesler which, & mile beyond Chovensbury, it ex- tended in Penny Green's direction. This splendid main road in the | course of its immense journey across |Southern England, extended feelers to many settlements of man, provid ing them, an it were, with @ talent which, according to the energy of the settlement, might be increased a hundredfold — drained, metaled, tarred, and adorned with splendid telegraph polen and wtres—or might be wrapped up in a napkin of neg: | ject, monstrous overgrown hedges and decayed ditches, and allowed to wither; the splendid main read, hav- Roman lineage, diedainfulty did net care Myvteriow and bap | tuppence either way; and for that, matter Penny Green, which had acre ago put ite fecler tn a napkin, did not care tuppence either. | It was now, however, to have a railway. | And meanwhile there was this to the midat of decent and peaceful citi be said for it; that whereas some | then gave certain jot the dependents of the splendid main road - constituted themselves jabominably ugty cartuncies on the end of shapely and well-manieured jof the storm, her crew dead, with fingers of the, main road, Penny/and Sabre commented, | Green, at the end of a withered and lentirely neglected finger, aborned it as with @ jewel. m1 A Kate Greenaway picture, the gar eastern extremity the withered tal- ent from the splendid main road |divided into two talents and encir Comings and wife (r6* the silent cance of the Indian passed cled the Green which had, as Hap-| 8nd said, “What a dashed stupid and Mrs. Ogden Cole; Mr. lover the smooth surface, I wonder, food had said, a cricket pitch (in| business, They might have had tea umphrey; Mrs. Lewis F. | diq the Great Spirit jook down on the| summer) and a duck pond (more es the roof for all I care.’ |pesceful scene and dream that today | prominent in winter); also, In all jit wae to be but the runway of the | seasons, and the survivors of many | the maid. eats maa ages, a clump of elm trees surround- ed by a decayed bench; a wel sur- rounded by a decayed paling, so de eayed that it had long ago thrown itself flat on the ground into which it continued venerably to decay; and at the southeastern extremity a vil- | eray wall and now used by the youth lof the village for the purpose of im- ONDAY, MARCH 27, 1922. a LEARN A WOR EVERY DAY Today's word Is EXPOSITORY, It's pronounced — eks-powl-toery, with aocent on the second myliabie It means—explaining, rerving to interpret It comes trom—Latin “exponer to expose. Companion words. bor It's clarifying, Exporition, ex used Ike this—Moat people retand the present bonus mn without reading carefully weveral expository articles.” cannot unde pounding one another in parties oF sides in @ game well called “Pound 1” At the southwestern extremity of the Green, and immediately opposite the Tybar Arma, wan a blacksmith’s forge perpetually inhabited and di- rected by & race named Wirk. The forge was the ouly human habitation Or personal and individual workshop actually on the Green, and tt was said, and freely admitted by the muc- consive members of the tribe of Wirk, that it had “no right” to be | there ‘There it nevertheless was, |had been for centuries, so far as |anybedy knew to the contrary, and | diministered always by a Wirk. The preaen' representatives of the | tribe of Wirk were known as Old |Wirk and Young Wirk. Young Wirk was sixty-seven. No one knew where a still) younger Wirk would come from when Old Wirk died and | when Young Wirk died. But no one troubled to know. No one knows, precisely, where the next Pope ts | coming from, but he always comes, and successive Wirks appeared as wurely. Old Wirk was past duty at |the forge now. He sat on a Wind- sor chair all day and watched Young | Wirk. When the day was finished |Old Wirk and Young Wirk would | walk across the Green to the pound, j not together, but Old Wirk in front and Young Wirk immediately behind him; both with the same gait, bent and with a stick, On reaching the pound they would gaze profoundly | into it over the decayed, gray wall, rather as if they were looking to see |i the power that was going to turn out the forge was there, and then, |the power apparently not being | there, they would return, tralling |back in the same single file, and |take up their reserved positions om the bench before the Tybar Arma, Iv Mark Sabre, intensely fond of Penny Green, had reflected upon it | sometimes as a curious thing that there was scarcely ome of the vil lage’s inhabitants or institutions but | had evidenced little differences of at- | titude between himself and Mabel, who was not intensely fond of Penny Green. The aged Wirks had served | their turn. Mabel had once consid. ered the Wirks extremely pie. jtureeque and, quite early in their | married life, had invited them to her house that she might photograph them for her album. They arrived, in single fle, but she |4i4 not photograph them for her al- bum. The photograph was not tak- en because Mark, when they pre- sented themselves, expressed sur- prise that the aged pair were led off by the parlor maid te have tea in the kitchen. Why on earth didn't they have tea with them, with self and Mabel, in the garden? Mabel did what Sabre called “flew up” and at the summit of her flight up inquired, “Suppose some one had called?" e | “Well, suppose they did?” Sabre inquired, | Mabel im a markedly calm voice orters to the maid, who had brought out the tea |and remained while the fate of the | aged Wirks was in suspense, } The maid departed with the orders “Sending |them off? Well, I'm dashed!" Mialf an hour later the aged pair, having been led into the kitchen and having had tea there, were ed out again and released by the maid on | grass, | Sabre, watching them from the |lawn beside the tea-cups, laughed Mabe! tinkled a little silver bell for The houses of Penny Green car- ried out the Kate Greenaway effect jthat the Green Itself established. | Along the upper road of the tilted dish «were the larger houses, and upon the lower road mostly the cot- llower road the five shops of Penny (Turn to Page 11, Column 1) WARNING! Colds Toothache Neuralgia Lumbago Always say ‘‘Bayer’’ when you buy Aspirin. | Unless you see the name “‘Bayer’’ on tablets, you are not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by physic ,and proved safe by millions for Headache Neuritis ians over 22 years Rheumatism Pain! Pain | Accept only ‘‘Bayer’’ package which contains proper directions. Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tableta—Also bottles of 24 and 100—All Druggista. Aapiim le the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Mowoaceticacidester of Salicrlicscid 4

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