s Here's Way Science Now Relieves Pain in Minutes _ BAD HEADACHES, NEURITIS AND RHEUMATIC PAINS ... EASED ALMOST AT ONCE Remember the pictures below when you want fast relief from nain. Aspinn t-iises even a bail heauui'hc or iicural({iii oden in a few minutes I KnAsjtuin tablet bejjins "tukini; holJ" of your iiain practically us â- oon as you swallow it. Ami Aspirin is suft. For Aspirin does not harm the htart. Remember iliese two points: Aspuiii Sfjeed and Aspirin Sajrlu. And, see that you get ASI'l/ilN. lilt inelhod doctors prescribe. 1 1 is made ill Canada, and ull druKtllsts have it. Loolc for the name buyer in the form of a cross on every Aspirin tablet. Get tin of 12 tablets or eco- nomical bottle of 24 or 100 tab'et*. Why Aspirin Works So Fast Drop an Aspirin tahlrt In • glass o< wHet. Note that Bt- roKE It toucli« the twilom. It IS disinte- iritin(. IN a SICONOS BY STOP WATCH ^^at happens m thtM jUssM happens in your stomach â€" ASPIRIN tablris jiart "taking hold" o* piin a (fw minutes after takinK. An Aspirm tablt't starts to disinte- gralr and go to work. When in Pain Kemrtnhcr These Pictures Aspirin is the Trade Mark of the Bayer Company, Limited Five CR00K6D CHAIHS By FAREMAN WELLS K- :• .â- v***+++<<v<*»*+-i STWOrBZS Adam Meriuton. a farmsr's son. ftrtii-led to u Hollcltor, makes a brave but unsuccessful attempt to thwart three thieves In a bufr-snatchtng; raid Thu bag Was torn from the hands of a â- Irl who afterwards explains to Adam that It contains the day's takings of her father's shop. IIo attempts to track the thieves and yea'hes an old warehouse. Adams •nters the building while the girl Watrhes the door. Suddenly he hears footsteps. The man turns out to tic .^darn's •mphiyer â€" CorvlUc I'erkln. When all Ms formal busiues.s was crrer there was juBt time to catch the last train that sloppeii at Mensbridge, a station no more than (our miles from hlg home. The last Pennymoor train had departed an hour before. Adam would not even have conlein- plated that If It bail not been made clear that a policeman wa.s to be her escort, the bu.siness of identifying the contents of the bag having still to bo concluded to the official satis- iactioi . >•t•'t"^â- !•4•^v:••^â- ^v•>•{â- â- i>•l^•l•4••k'^'f•l'<•^4â- •^<••^4•<|•<S>4M She held out her hand. "You have be«n wonderfully good,'" she told him. "I haven't had a chance to thank you.'' "May I not come and see you? I should like to feel sure that every- thing has turned out all right." He felt he was being inexcusably bold, but he could not let her go like this. "If you are sure you would like to. We are always in on Sunday after- noons," she said. "Have you got the address?" He had not missed a syllable of either name or address as they had fallen from her lips in answer to the ofliclal demand. Their eyes met, held a moment. Then the big white lids swept down and slowly veiled the night-blue eyes. She turned to- wards the waiting policeman. Again- st his solid bulk she looked to Adam's romantic eyes, so ineffably frail that the sight Rave him a sensation of chocking. She was gone. DO NOT PUNISH YOUR CHILD Mere't Ea.y Way To Quickly Help Your Child's Failing Children should not be punished for ked-wettlng caused by weakness of Kidney or liladder. Mothers will find •ur pleasant Home Treatment quickly fcelpful to their little ones. .Send no inoni'y. but write today for FUEK THIAT. TRKATMR.N'T to prove It. ADULTS with Urinary weaknes.'jes that dlHiuii. i.'M .should also find our treat- Sient of amazing value VANDERHOOF & CO. LIMITED Box 247, ©•pt. 36 K3 Wlndior. Ont. Every Time You Eat MO PUfth food pftrtifUs bstwcan your teMk n« dark, mout vftrmch of th« muuth f urmib«a th« i^n^ect ca&diUoo f<jr quirk docay wliicli turns into liv* b»rt«ri&. An uiit*i«Au muutb ia 4iiTi<rrniui. Mer r>cntrifio« and Mer Lotiun nr% •netitifi'-&l>y niad« to ple«iwjit]y help you form lb« rlrftu tscth ftnd tnoutii h&lnt. Mftd* b^ Caulk r.f CanadA. for mor* tha.n &() y%An nuui^ ffft/'turrrif f niKtohKUfnrdfntiaU. A t«i>-<i«ka' t«i'if:4ro Ujt 20r at I^ru^ kiuI D«pt. eton*. S Nervous, Weak, Dizzy? IF your day begins with frayed nerves, backache, periodic pains or weakening drains, you should take Dr. Pierce's Favor- i t e Prescription. Read what Mrs. J. Gunn of 18 Power St., Toronto, Ont., 8 id "i was romplttfly rundown in health. » nrr\c» weff in bad shape and I had keadarhe day sfier day. 1 had no urength at allâ€" wu miserable. I took two bottles o( Dr. Fiertf'a Kavoritc Pttarripllon and it wis not long Ufon I gained In weight, my nerrcs swrr normal and I felt aUongcr and more â- •lural It ii a fine builder (or weak women." All druggisu New aiie, ubieu 50 c«»., â- quid tl 00 Large sIk. t*U. or liquid, II.JS. \Vrile Dr. Pierce'* CUoJc, BuSato^ k V, Nt frae medical sdTic*. All the way back to Mensbridge in, the dilatory local train Adam's mind' was a ferment of einotion.s and pro- i blems. I Most of the way he had the car-! riaRe lo himself, for It was a very' empty train, and he was able to speak his thoughts alound so that| the journey seemed to take the form] of a dialogue with the window-strap, in which the strap played the part cf the perfect listener. He'd be .seeing Priscilla again the day 1 fter to-morrow, having tea with lier if he were lucky. No I doubt illOy would ask him to tea; Ifj ho called about fonr o'clock they] could hardly get out of that. What sort of a home did she pos- sess, and had she a mother? She was well-educated, you could sense that from her nice low speech. Perhaps | they were very grand people who would not wish her to have anything to do with the son of a struggling farmer. But no, she had bc«n con- cerned about losing money because they had had so many bad weeks. They must be struggling folk like his own. That thought gave him • positive satisfaction. When his invention, hig new valve, was tried out thoroughly and proved successful, as inevitably it mu&t, he would no longer be a nonentity; he would be a young man with a scien- tific future, able to make money. Adam was something more than a mere articled clerk to Mr. Corclllo I'crkin; he was an inventor, and it was this very invention of hig that had in some wierdly inexplicable manner caused hira, only a few heart ago, in the dim wet gurroundings of (irail Street, to doubt his own courage, to imagine that he might at any moment be liable to react to a panic maddness, to bolt. The fact was that, although be was a solicitor's clerk, by an ac- cident in which he had had little volition, all Adam's most essential in- terests were scientific. He dutifully devoted two or three evenings a week to the study of the Law, but all others saw him engaged in the pursuit of science. Twice a week he attended laboratory classes in the' evenings at the Menston Technical College. His odd exjierionce of panic fright had occurred in connection with his scientific pursuits. For some time he had been engaged in the development of a new short-wave wireless valve, a sample of which he had succeeded in making up in the College laboratory, putting elements of his own design into a bulb of .<ilandard make and ex- hausting it under the college air- pump at a time when he was suppos- ed to be engaged on an extremely uninteresting routine experiment under the watchful eye of Professor Starling. Perhap."! the Professor had a special reason for being indulgent in such matters towards Adam, for he knew the lad to have the makings of a scientist if his opportunities had allowed of such a career, and Star- ling had seen too many examples of sound pegs in square holes in his long life to underrate the tragedy in- volved. On the evening of Adam's peculiar experience of being completely ter- rified he was about to test out his valve in his workshop at Penny- moor Farm. The workshop was a part of the stables that he had laid out for scientific work, and for him at any rate it was a wholly delight- ful spot, though for anyone else pro- bably no more than a cobwebby barn containing an untidy jumble of ap poratus tangled up in wires of all varieties. The new valve was intend- ed to make a notable advance in short-wave wireless and perhaps to prilWde an escape from legal drudg- ery to the scientific Ufe he desired. He had therefore thrilled with anticipation as he mounted it and connected it up. Having tested his circuit he had placed an earth- shield, made from a tin canister, over the valve. Then he had paused to think, for his scientific bent was taking control over his excitement. With an admirable resumption of patience he had decided that he was going too fast and that he had bet- ter begin by making a chart of cur- rent consumption and output in a scientific way. Time enougih, he thought, to try it out in a set when he had determined with certainly the sort of results be might expect. This decision was to involve results far in excess of his anticipation but, unaware of thi.s, as one usually is of the really decisive actions of one's life, he removed a earth-shield and remounted the valve in a circuit com- plete with meters. Then he switched on. The filament glowed faintly, the meter needles swung and dithered in their usual fascinating way, and the experimenter began to experi- ence an extraordinary feeling. At first it was just a tingling of the nerves, the sort of thing he could attribute to excitement. But inside a few seconds it was decidedly more than that. A chill shudder invaded the region of his spine â€" it was not a question of temperature, for the night was mild. Obviously, it was something more subtle altogether. (To Be Continued.) n SALAM Orange Pekoe ^ MLm mh Blend " ^^ Fresh from the Gardens up. He played alone most of the timet There were few children In the neighborhood and none his age. Jackie was three, plus, that li to say in his fourth year. REALISM VS. FANCY. His mother herself was a realist and so was his father. She had stacks of books that warned against dreaming and imagination and the "escapes" of people who could not face facts. Now here was "Tottynail." She had heard of lonely children, and even ones who weren't bo lonely, manufacturing dream children, but it never occurred to her that one would come to live In her very own house with her boy, of all beings. She had thought that was for girls, sensitive, sweet, cuddly little girls who liked to play with dolls. Jackie was all boy. He loved trains and cars and airplanes and noise- makers. He roared when he cried and stamped when he was mad. A born realist, she had told herself, who was certainly of the earth earthy. Where he had got the word Totty- nail goodness only knew. Nothing had ever been said or read or brea- thed to suggest the name. It was sexless and so was Tottynail. PLAYMATES IS SOLUTION. The problem was, however, what to do about It? His father would likely make fun of the dream child and that would kill him (or her) oft forever. But would she allow it? It had to be decided now. She went on weighing the facts. Jackie still was Jabbering to Totty- nail. He was very kind and polite and solicitous, unusually so. She de- cided that he loved the Uttle friend because the friend was silent, admir- ed Jackie, In fact was the Ideal per- son the little felTow craved and needed. She went to the bookcase and turned the key. A time and place for realism, but a time and place for Imagination, too. Then she did a wlse thing â€" went to the telephone and arranged for her friends to drive out once a week with their children. They decided to take turns having the party. And she decided that on Jackie's fourth birthday he would go to kindergarten. ,.^1^'4^J^'^ cv ^^ Children Create Imaginary Friends This Mother Thought Her Son Was a Born Realist But He Had His Dreams Too "Whom are you talking to?" Mrs. Smith asked. Jackie was in big play- room alone, not a soul within con- versatlon distance. "I was talking to Tottynail," said Jackie. Mrs. Smith suddenly said, "Ob, Tottynail. That's nice. Well, you and Tottynail go ahead and have a good time." And out ahe breezed wondering whether she bad done the right thins or not. This was the second or third time â- b^ had heard of "Tottynail." There was no Tottynailâ€" of course- Jackie had just made him i.or herl The Plugger He isn't very brilliant, and hi? pace is often slow; there's nothing very flashy in his style. He has to dig and labor for the things he wants to know, and he's busy learn- ing something all the while. The clever men go by him in a hurry day by day, and the "stars get all the mention and the fame. But the patient, steady plugger â€" in a thorough sort of way â€" keeps on going', and he gets there just the same. He's a quiet sort of fellow, and he's backward in his speech. You'll never find him clamoring for ap- plause. He will listen to another who has anything to teach, and he never wearies working for a cause. He may take a little longer with the task he has to do than the genius whose talents seem to run, but you'll find the patient plugger at the finish coming through and there's merit in his labor when its done. He is slow in getting started. He ' niu.= t know the reasons why certain things occur and in a certain way. There is nothing in his method to attract the passerby, and at times ' you'd think he's wasted many a day. But when brilliant men have faded, and stars have lost the light; when 'clever men have stumbled in despair; Relieved/ Un. Edward Jamce* baby had two teeth whan leai than thres fflontha old. Bhe writMi "He bos It Aow and I Mn truthfully aay that tHriuM him Baby'e Own Tab- lAi while euttinf Ut teeth kept iKi ii and wdr. Teethbg is • rlltlM* (eterigh time foi Sabiss tifit Uu Uttle ana eaa elways be â- both»l and the fetar rtdutsed by dvinf nMt, taft Babyg Own Tablet*. Ywr ea«y to take, no llftW tffeeta. nte* 26o aTsiywhera. Or.WiUitWt' I Old Reliable Remedy still Best For Chapped Skin Rough, rhappril liamU are irritating and ugly, 'lliev are also a wmrce 01 danger fmm infect ion, when the akin becomM very raw and cracked from eiposure. The old relLible remedj- â€" Hinds Honey and Almond Creamâ€" is still a favorite remedy after lioing on the market for over 50 years. Kvcr since 1875 this ooothing, healing lotion has boon the choice of men and women in every walk of life, for its in.<tant relief from siifTering, rapid healing and remorkalile prutcttive qualities. In cold weather, bamls, neck and fare need protcctiim to keep them free from chappmg and dan^'tr 01 infection. Hinib Honey and Almond (?pcam ia easy to use â€" qnickly absorbed by the skin and leaves no trace of stirkine.ss. Men like it after gbaving. Any druggist can supply you. k* ;.»si;e [â- io. 46 â€" 'C^ Intellectuals Russia Asks Aid of Once De- spised Group Asked in Art And Architecture NEW YORK. â€" Russia has done a very neat and generous about-face in both architecture and art, espe- cially painting, says Jean Lurcat. Be- cause of a shortage of technically trained men, she has been forced to turn to the once-despised "intellect- uals" who were anathema ten years ago. he says. Lurcat, one of the best known French painters, is in New York doing the decorating for the Monte Carlo ballet's new Andre Gide piece. He has come from Russia where, at the government's request, he made a study of artistic conditions in Russia. "The new situation is particularly noticeable in architecture," said he. "Russia looks now like America did in 1928 â€" buildings going up on all sides. But the buildings exhibit the most curious paradox. "I recall an immense one, 15 stories tall, a block square and in the best American apartment-house style. It is very modern and in the spirit of the new Russia. Next door there is another new building. It is two stories high, and just as pei'fectly in the old tradition. "So I asked the cause. It is that Russia has not yet been functioning under its present system long enough to produce thoroughly competent architects of its own. Many of its architects have been imported, mostly of the 'modern' stamp. But workinj; side by side with them are the rem- nants of the old 'intellectual' class. And these are turning out buildings just like they built before the revolu- tion." The Power of Will There is no task, be it ever so hard, No battle, though efver so long, But the task may be done and the battle be won. It your will to conquer is strong. There Is no truth, be it ever so deep. No change, ba It ever so great. But the truth may be thought and the change may be wrought. It you will to master your fate. There Is no sea, be It ever so hard. No obstacle ever so high, But the sea may be sailed, and the obstacle scaled. If you have the courage to try. There is no sin or mistake of the past. Can keep you from reaching your goal, It you but tap the source of that deep hidden force, Which lies In the depths of your soul. Nut Trees In Ontario when the great have come to failure with the goal they sought in sight, you'll find the patient plugger get- tinji there. â€" Anon. Dr. Wernet's Powder For FALSE TEETH A Joy To All User* Can' t Slip Of Sl ide Sprinkle on Dr. Wernet's Powder and you won't have to think about your false teeth all day long. Joyous com- fort is vours. Eat anything you want â€"It holds plates firmly in placeâ€" they positively can't slip or sbde. Forma Drotective cushion for sensitive gums, leaves no colored, gummy substance â€" keeps mouth sanitarv, breath pleasant Prescribed by world s moat noted den- tist*. The coat is smallâ€" the comfort great. Any druggist Not so many years ago Ontaria was rich in nut trees, beechnut, sweet hickory, sweet chestnut and hazelnut, but these have been gan- erally depleted until there is but a sprinkling of them left. Canada i» a large importer of nuts in spite ol the fact that the native nuts are of fine flavor and excellent in food value. There are large tracts of land unsuited for agriculture which would show a fine return if planted to nut trees. Of course a number of the varieties take a considerable time to mature, but they are long- lived and the majority of them pro- vide valuable timber. â€" London Free Press. Autumn Evening Marion Doyle in the New York Sun The wind has slept the whole day through, And now, at duik, he wakes In grumpy humor; striding round The town, his football shakes The houses till their shingles fly. And gates and trees complain. And sets the firelight fluttering Against the window pane. BURGESS FL22 FOCUSING LANTERN Red Enamel, size 4X4. Uses 2 Standard No. 2 Unicels. Sells at 90c, complete with Battery. BURGESS BATTERY CO. Niagara Falls, Ontario QUIVERING NERVES Yield to Lydia E. Pmldiam»a Vegetable Compoiuid When you are just on edje. . . when you can't stand the chil- dren's noise . . . when everything is a burden . . . when you are irri- table and blue ... try this medi- cine. 98 out of 100 women report benefit. It will £lve you Just the eitia energy you need. Life will seem worth living again. HOW TO AVOID ILLNESS When you begin to feel fagged out at the end of the day, look out. _ Ulneae ia just around the corner waiting to lay you low. At times like this there's nothing like Wincarois, the great tonic that has won over 20,000 recommeo- dations from medical men. Wincamis is a delicious wine, not • drug. In each bottle there are all the nourishing elemcuts of 2}^ lbs. of grapes added to the strengthening dements of beef an>l guaranteed malt extracts. These elements in Wincarnis will quickly restore lost energy. _ They will help you to sound sleep, vigorous awakeninj^-i and active, enjoyable days. Drink this delicious wine regularly three times each day, and soon year* will drop from your shoulders. To pick you up when you are out of *orts, to soothe your nerves, enrich your blood, or in ca.«cs of nervousness, insomnia, anaemia and debility, take Wincarnis. At all druggists â€" Sales A«enU: Harold F. Ritchie & Co. Ltd., Toronto. ii t2A §BIJRG 1 N BRAND (ORN SYRUP Oi. ^ pure, wholesome, and economical table Syrup. Children love its delicious flavor. TH» CANADA STAKCH CO. LIMITED. MONTKBAt