IMI 0 MAKING THE MOST OUR CHILDREN y A Series of Plain Talks to R*y c. Beery, A.8., MJL Spjfe^P^ PrfMWnt of the Parent* Association, No. 35. Do You Ever Give Foolish Commands? The quickest way of spoiling a! child is to give foolish commands. | So If you want your child to be J disobedient, careless, lazy and dis- , respectful, just give some foolish i commands. Let us consider just a few. A mother writes to me: "I certainly had a terrible time I with Chester this morning. He | • took his shoes and stockings off to i go barefooted when it was too chilly. | 1 told him to put them back on as \ quick as he could. He refused, saying, 'No, I don't want to.' As punishment for refusing, I had him stand in one corner of the room, j But he would not remain there un- | less I stayed right with him and j made him. Whippings I found only j make him worse. What should I have done?" After your boy refused to do one j thing, it was very unwise to com- I mand him to do another. This • method is very often used but as ; a rule it does much more harm | than good. The trouble with it is j that you are working against the i child instead of with him. You [ antagonize him. And the moment , you seem to combat your child, he j immediately takes up arms against j you. The less time that you spend in combat with your child, the better ! COLDS INTERFERE WITH BUSINESS Dr. King's New Discovery relieves them and keeps you going on the job. Fifty continuous years of almost] unfailing checking and relieving ] coughs, colds and kindred sufferings is the proud achievement of Dr. King's New Discovery. Grandparents, fathers, mothers, the kiddies —all have used and are using it as the safest, surest, most pleasant-to-take lemedy they know of. Sold by all druggists everywhere. Keep Bowels On Schedule Late, retarded functioning throws the whole day's duties out of gear. | Keep the system cleansed, the ap- : petite lively, the stomach staunch' with Dr. King's New Life Pills. | Mild and tonic in action. Sold ev erywhere. Quickly Ended by n Pleasant, Germ killing Antiseptic The little Hyomei inhaler Is made of hard rubber and can easily be carried in pocket or purse. It will last a life time. Into this inhaler you pour a few drops of magical Hyomei. This is absorbed by the antiseptic gauze within and now you are ready to breathe it in over the germ in lested membrane where it will speed ily begin its work of killing catarrhal germs. Hyomei is made of Australian eucalyptol combined with other anti septics and is very pleasant to breathe. , , It is guaranteed to banish catarrh, bronchitis, sore throat, croup, coughs and colds or money back. It cleans out a stuffed up head in two minutes. Sold by H. C. Kennedy and drug gists everywhere. Complete outfit, including inhaler and one bottle of Hyomei. costs but little, whils extra bottles, if afterward needed, may be obtained of any drug gist.—Advertisement. Bookkeeping, Shorthand (pencil or machine), Typewriting and I their correlative subjects. SCHOOL OF COMMERCEI Harrisburg's Accredited Business College l r 15 SOUTH MARKET SQUARE Write, Phone or Call for Further Information STICK TO SENRECO AND YOUR TEETH WILL STICK TO YOU THOUSANDS DAILY JOIN SENRECO FAMILY TEETH BECOME WHITE, CLEAN AND FASCINATING IN FEW DAYS—GUMS FIRM AND HEALTHY Dealers Amazed at Fast Growing Popularity of Remarkable Dentifrice Don't neglect your teeth whatever else you do or you'll surely be sorry Inter on. Your dentist Is one of your best friends—don't forget that—see him orten—many thousands of men and women are enjoying life today be cuuge of the dentist's knowledge and skill. You can have white teeth so ra diantly clean and fjscinating that they will compel unstinted admira tion. You can have firm healthy gums with no taint of disease If you will only visit your dentist occasion ally and use Senreco toothpaste every day. MONDAY EVENING, .lit will be for you. You can be Ifirm without losing a bit of your j friendship. And by showing a calm j attitude, you will secure much better | results than if you allow your tem per to go uncontrolled, j A better policy to adopt when | your boy refuses to obey a com jmand, instead of commanding him ito do other things is to quietly ap- I proach him and when he stands ! directly in front of you, give him jone more chance to obey the origi inal command. Say in a very low | voice, looking him straight in the I eye, "You probably will not want jme to deprive you of some privilege jthat I have planned for you next I week. You may go now and do las I suggested." After saying this, | it is up to the boy to decide his own [fate. If he goes, all good and well; I if he does not, make it a point some ! minutes later, after his mind and , : blood have resumed a normal state, Ito announce that you are sorry but I that he will not get to go with you jto such and such a place on a cer tain day. And don't change your I mind about it at the last minute, i Simply talk about his not being able ito go in a matter-of-fact way sug gesting that you hope you can take j him next time. | Parents so frequently put them i selves into a box by issuing thought less commands. How often we hear mothers say to their children, "Sit i down and be quiet a minute," when j other children in the same company |are up and acting] They never ] suggest anything to occupy their I'hands or minds, while sitting— 'simply a foolish command, that's all. Equally foolish is the command, "Come here," when a child is run ning away from you. It never is obeyed (unless the child has had special training) and so giving the .command weakens your influence in ; the future. ,I Perhaps two of the most common kinds of foolish commands are the ' ! half-hearted command and the re ! peated command. Some mothers ,liave the habit of issuing commands I while talking to another person and in a moment seem to forget that 'they had requested anything at all. ; others give a command and feel it is necessary to keep repeating it, "Come in now. Hurry up, quickly; Charles, I said, hurry. Come to Mother." Is it any wonder we have ijso many disobedient children? Turks Admit Loss of the City of Horns to British Constantinople, Oct. 21.—The loss ' of the city of Homs to the British was admitted by the war office yes terday. I make all eye examinations personally and guarantee every pair of glasses. 12 N. Market Square, 2nd Floor Senreco is a dentist's formula, a combination so perfect that,'besides being the finest cleaner of teeth and the most enjoyable deatrlflce, it Is an active enemy of the vicious germs of pyorrhea—that all too common and abhorrent disease that attacks the guma and causes them to bleed, recede and grow soft, tender and spongy. Get a tube of magical Senreco today—the good i caults will astonish you—in Just a few days your teeth will radiate puiity. Bringing Up Father Copyright, 1918, International News Service *— * *- * By McManus BY COLLV-I M I <•". Oo -KXKiE. KEEP ] IF I DON'T SELL II I SOW "S 6 " I I THE FRESH ONEb ARE I UFI I - 1 COIN' TO OO THEli^i- { T THG.H - I'LL HAVE ARE THET? EWSHTY GENT?> A 002 * MI Z. IA . A* IJ TO V.OOPUE • • - ' > u Little Talks by Beatrice Fairfax By Beatrice Fairfax I A girl has written me a letter that I might be out of the pages of "Little j Women," modernized and with a world war as a background. And, like Louisa Alcott's delight ful story, there are four sisters and a mother —four of them are doing war work and my correspondent keeps house for the rest. She goes to market, gets two meals, darns, mends and generally acts as lady's maid for the others. A laundress comes in once a week to wash and iron, and there is a half-day s sweeping and heavy cleaning done by someone else, but, apart from this, everything else about the little home is done by the • girl who has written to me, and i who feels that in running the flat well for the war workers she is do ing her bit the same as if she occu pied a desk in a Government office. The workers are all healthy, happy and comfortable; they have escaped ihe dreariness of dining on I a revolving stool and eating melan choly canned vegetables out of dishes that suggest a canary bird's bathtub. Martha Gets Into Trouble My correspondent, whom I am gcw ing to call Martha because she looks after the house, has an allowance from her war-working family. It consists of her room, board and $4 a week apiece from each member of the household. This gives her about $65 a month as her very own, and Is a handsome allowance for any girl. It was this embarrassment of riches that got Martha into trouble during the first months of her ex perience as housekeeper. She spent over half a month's salary on a hat {hat "dwarfed and shabbied" every thing else in her wardrobe. The $35 hat made her good, honest blue I serge seem che&p-loking. And she continues: "The high champagne colored boots completed my tragedy. I bought them expecting to step into happiness, and found they were a little old-fashioned, a little passe, that it was not quite the thing now to wear boots so light or so high." Her family, it appears from her account of Ihem, must have been very sensible people. They did not laugh or make fun of Martha for her foolish extravagance; they let her have her own head and depend ed on her native commonsense to work out her own salvation. 'I hoy even borrowed the gorgeous hat oc casionally when they were going out anywhere, so that Martha wjuld not bewail her white elephant quite so plaintively Now Called "The Hat" "No one calls it my hat any long er," Martha continues. "Ece.vone now calls it 'the hat,' and says, 'l'll take it if you haven't promised to lend it to someone else.' It looks like a cross between the plumed hat of a medieval knight and a melo drama," When Martha, who is the young-! est, was not buying swaggeringly pic turesque hats and champagne,col ored boots, it seems she was invest ing in ice cream soda's, sundaes and candy. Life at this period was spelled in the terms of an orgy, end yet the fam.ly patiently wafted for 'her relorm. The war workers were all salting down Thrift Stamps, which they turned into War Savings Certificates, and later into Liberty Bonds; only' Martha blew hers in in riotous liv ing. Then she made the awful dis covery tha' she was getting fat— twelve pounds of it —and that her compelxion was getting spotty. And this complerlon, it seemed, had al ways be6n a thing of rose leaves and lilies, a complexion to inspire a poet. So the young prodigal took her self in hand. Why did she have to VNDEKTAKEIt 1745 CHAS. H. MAUK *•?, Butli Private Ambulance Phones id / ; FOR CORN S M V wJa M M BUNIONS I CALLUSES GORGAS DRUG STORES ! \ Star Carpet Cleaning Works Let Us Clean Your Carpets We also do genera> upholstering and recovering automobile tope. J. COPLINKY Eleventh and Walnut Sts. Both Pkoaea HAHRISBIJRG TELEGRAPH THE PLOTTERS A New Serial of East and West By Virginia Terhnne Van do Water CHAPTEK LiV. The light in Mrs. Chapin's room was turned low shaded, so that it would not strike the eyes of the slumbering woman on the bed. For, worn out with weeping and soothed by the voice of her com* panion, the widow of the murdered man had at last gone to sleep. When Elizabeth had made sure of this, she moved away from the side of the bed and, seating herself in a great chair, closed her eyes. She was very tired. She had not appreciated this until now when, for the time being, she need not exert herself. The long tramp through the woods, and the fact that she had had noth ing to eat since noon, made her physi cally weary. Strong emotion and "the necessity for self control had told on her nervously. But she must not yield to any sense of weakness. She must try to think out all that had happened. Amos Chapin had shot himself. She had not been sure of that at first, had not, indeed, formed any decided opinion of how he had met his death. But Mrs. Chapin's words had confirmed her in her suspicion that he had fired the shot that had ended his life. If this were so, examination of the bullet wound might prove it. Then there was no need of anxiety about John. There would be, of course, the formality of a Coroner's inquest. He would be asked many questions. Perhaps she and Mrs. Chapin would be interrogated as to j what had happened Just before the accident. It would all be painful and trying, but then it would be over. Douglas would come and take her out .West with him. John would accompany them. She would re main in Wyoming only long enough I to make arrangements for her mar ! riage there from Douglas's apart | ment. Then she and John would be j together always,—she did not care | where. I Leaning back, she mused on these I things while a langour stole over her body and mind, before she was I aware that she was drowsy, she was fast asleep. • Downstairs various things were taking place. The Coroner had examined the body of the former master of the | house and had given permission for it to be carried into the parlor which— John Butler had said yes terday—was only opened for wed dings and funerals. He remembered this as he saw the men laying the dead man in this room. Years seemed to have passed since he had made that jest ing speech. Then he turned bis thoughts back to what concerned him most at pres ent. He knew that it was doubtful if he would be allowed to remain here many hours longer. But someone must be on hand to look after Eliza beth and Mrs. Chapin. Going into the dining room he had a talk with Mr. Miller. The result of this conference was that the kindly neighbor got his car out of the shed where he had left it, and drove over to his own home, return ing later with his wife, a buxom woman of forty. indulge in an Ice cream soda every time she went downtown? The flesh she lost in ".walking she more than regained indulging herself In that adipose-producing delicacy. Be sides, and again Martha's conscience smote her. she was not laying by a single War Stamp! Those little folders, full of cheer ing green patches, that the rest of the family took such pride in, oc cupied no space in her top bureau I drawer. Instead, she had a collec tion of fflimsy handkerchelfs. empty candy boxes, spotted veils and a gen eral accumulation of fluffy useless ness. Invests in Certificate Ore Saturday, which was domestic payday, Martha bought her first , War Savings Certificate, and it seemed tr work a miracle from the first moment of possession Instead of the pang she used to experience on regarding her purchases the day after, this small "sticking plaster" brought no remorse. It represented all sorts of things to her, from salve to her conscience down to the wherewithal to be riotous should the temptation to break loose again prove too strong. After a while these stamps began to grow one at a tim \ because, as she writes me, "like a dope fiend, I could not reform all at once. I would make up my mind when I started downtown not to buy ice cream soda, candy or purple veils, but sometimes I fell by the wayside, and indulged in all three forms of dissipation. And next morning there they would be confronting me, like so many of Blue Beard's wives. "I believe I know Just how a man feels when he is struggling not to take a drink, and finally yields, for it was horribly hard for me to pass by a certain ice cream soda place at first, and another, where they sold maple sugar candy with pecans, rep resented real martyrdom for me to pull myself past the door. "Well, finally I accomplished this bit of stoicism. I was able to walk past the ice cream temptation, and then the maple nut temptation, and go proudly in and buy a few Thrift Stajnps. And after I had done this a couple of times it wasn't hard at To her Butler explained conditions in a way that made Iter consider him a very remarkable young man. He was a type as foreign to her as Elizabeth had seemed to Samuel Miller. The matron liked John Butler's manned and looks, and promised to carry ibut his requests. These were that Hlizabeth be looked after care fully and that Mrs. Chapin be waited on and comforted until the brother of one and the son of the other should arrive on the scene. "I may be called away," Butler explained briefly before asking Mrs. Miller to perform these neighborly offices. She, dully impressed by the im portance of the occasion, and feei ing a sense of superiority that she— instead of any other neighbor—had been summoned to this house at this time, took the position assigned her with pleasure that showed itself in volubility. "Now don't you bother about poor Martha or about the girl," she said. "I'll look after them both. I didn't know till the other day that it was Douglas Wade's sister that was stay ing here. I knew there was some young person here, and I caught a j glimpse of her several times when I j was passing and stopped to talk to Martha. But she said something about a cousin being with her, am! I thought the young person I saw walk ing across the fields one day was her. But I guess likely the cousin's gone, hasn't she?" "Yes. she's gone," Butler admitted, tersely. "Now if you will make a cup of coffee, I will take it to Miss Wade, as she had no supper at all. But first I will go and see If she is awake." Women Exhausted by Sorrow Ignoring the woman's inquisitive look, he tiptoed upstairs and. when his gentle tap on Mrs. Chapin's door brought forth no answer, he turned the knob noiselessly and looked in. What he saw satisfied him, and he j nodded approvingly. ! "Mrs. Chapin is asleep, and so is | Miss Wade," he announced to Mrs. Miller three minutes later. "We must try to keep the house as quiet as we can. "Aren't you going to have anything to eat yourself?." the matron asked. "Suppose I make you and my husband a nice cup of hot coffee." "Thank you," Butler replied, "That will be most kind." He certainly was a stylish young man. the woman mused as she made a pot of coffee in Martha Chapin's immaculate kitchen. Weil, this was certainly an interesting situation, and she whs glad that she, Emma Miller, bad been the person sent for to- 1 ' night. From what her husband had told her on the way over here, she knew that a mystery was cdnnected with Amos Chapin's death. It was not j often that she had a, chance to be present at a real mystery. So much Interested was she that when, an hour later, her hushand advised her to go into the spare- bed room and lie down for a while, she went reluctantly and was careful to leave the door of the spareFoom open that no sound from below might es cape her ears. (To Be Continued) all, my moral muscles seemed to have grown less flabby. The family Insisted there was the making of a heroine in me after all. .JJow here is where the reward of vtrtue be gan to set in. "After several weeks of this noble conduct on my part, Miss Fairfax, will you believe it when 'I te\l you that I began to get slender again and [my complexion did not make me mis j erable time I looked in the mirror? "And with the slow accumulation of 'sticking plasters' the craving I for buying sweet things seemed to leave me, or, if it didn't leave me exactly, I was able to withstand It for the sake of adding more stamps to my collection. And now I have as many as two of my sisters. We are all well, happy and'so comfort able in our flat I thought, perhaps, you might like to hear the adven tures in thrift of what I am going to call an auxiliary war worker " Belgium Reckons Up Bill For Hun Pilage Washington, D. C„. Oct. 21.—The Belgian government already has taken steps to compute the enormous total of the damage done to prop erty in Belgium by the Germans dur ing their occupation of the country, said a cablegram received to-day by the Belgian Legation. The Council of Ministers met at Havre and adopted measures for ver ifying claims for damages to civilian and public, property. These will be employed as a means for determining the total compensation .to be demand ed from Germany. The assembly also discussed meas ures for insuring the resumption of the circulation of Belgian coinage in the liberated territory, and decided on various modifications of the com munal law to meet the changes in the Internal situation due to the Ger man evacuation. "In order to demonstrate its grati tude and admiration for the army," the message adds, "the Assembly took under consideration a plan which would greatly Increase the compensation to the families of the militia." Daily Dot Puzzle I VwCT i tv. xf j: M a. .^4 1 \ {? A • /? \ i 1 • ./♦ \. 8. \ !*• 1 *\ A. , s® ? j mJ\ Spent $1,432,374 in Belgium in Ten Months Washington, Oct. 21.—For relief work In Belgium during the ten months ending last June 30 the Amer ican Red Cross appropriated $1,432,- 374, and it has set aside $1,947,325 for the remainder of the present year. The money spent in the ten months' period went to provide comforts and medical assistance for Belgian sol diers, 90,000 residents of that part of the country then outside the German lines and 600,000 Belgian refugees scattered through France, England, Holland and Switzerland. FOOD PRICES MOVE EVER .CP Washington, Q, C., Oct. 21.'—Retail prices of food increased 4 per cent, from August 15 to September 15; 14 per cent, from September, 1917, to September, 1918, and 72 per cent, from September, 1913, to September, 1918, the Bureau of Labor announces. The increases were determined from reports by retail dealers on 28 articles of food. [ FROM OCEAN TO OCEAN Women Praise Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound for Health Restored. In almost every neighborhood In America are women who have triad this standard remedy for female ills and know its worth. \ Athol, Mass. —"Lydla E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound has done me a world of good. I suffered from a weakness and a great deal of pain every month and nothing brought me any relief until I tried this famous medicine. I am a dif ferent woman since I took it and want others who suffer to know about it."—Mrs. ARTHUR LAW SON, 559 Cottage St., Athol, Mass. San Francisco, Cal. —"I was in a very weak, nervous condition, hav ing suffered terribly from a female trouble for over five years. I had taken all kinds of medicine and had many different doctors and they all said I would have to be operated on, but Lydia E. Plnkham's Vege table Compound eured me entirely and now I am a strong, well wo man."—Mrs. H. ROSSKAMP, 1447 Devisadero St., San Francisco, Cal. For special advice in regard to 6uch ailments, write Lydia E. Pink ham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass. The result of its many years experience is at your service. TO PEOPLE WHO CHAFE Over one hundred thousand people in this country have proved that nothing relieves the soreness of chafing as quickly and permanently as "Sykes Comfort Powder." 25c at Vino) and other drug stores. Trial Box Free. The Comfort Powder Co., Boston, Mass. OCTOBER 21, 1918. Advice to the Lovelorn BY BEATRICE FAIRFAX SAYS SHE FLIRTS DEAR MISS FAIRFAX: I met a girl some time ago who is about one year my junior and very "taking." I have already visited her home and met her mother, who is also a wonderful woman. But what is very ■ puzzling to me is the fact that she always speaks to me of all her men friends and how. they flirt with her. Now, Miss Fairfax, I love this girl dearly and she seems to care for i me just as much. I would like your ' advice as to whether her attitude is only to tease me or whether she real ly does not care. - A. W. You might drop a hint to the young lady that promiscuous flirting is not in the best taste, though I am rather inclined to believe that the vast ar ray of friends, all of whom she de scribed as flirting with her, Is largely mythical. The girl who actually flirts is secretive about it, particulariv to other men; her game is to make"him think he is the "only one." You might also begin to talk of the scores of women who are in love with you. A like sauce for the goose may some times be effectively administered by the gander. DIFFERENCE OF RELIGION DEAR MISS FAIRFAX: I have known a sailor for the past five months, during which time we have grown very fond of each other. He was on two trips overseas and is now on a third. He always, brings me back some iittle token, which I hesi- I tate to accept. I care for him, but do I not know whether or not to see him I on his return trip. We are of dif ferent faiths and cannot think of one another as anything more than | friends. He has told me that religion ] should not stand in the way when I people love each other, but I think dif- I ferently. Is it advisable for me to i see him on his return, or do you think i it best to write to him, but my letters j contain nothing of encouragement, while his talk of nothing but love and ! how much he misses me. Please ad vise. ANXIOUS. Many people of different religious beliefs have married and have been ! very happy together. If you do not ! interfere with his creed and he with ; yours, what real difference does it ] make if you love each other?. The tremendous world war in i which we are engaged seems to have j given everyone more of the spirit of Whnt Gorgas Slakes]" I Gorgas Guarantees 1 GORGAS' Iron, Quinine and Strychnine Fortifies the System Against Grippe, Colds, Malaria, Influenza Iron for the blooil. Quinine for the system, Strychnine for tlte stomach and nerves. BUILDS—HEALTH, STRENGTH, FLESH An excellent tonic for those convalescing from Grippe and Influenza and $l.OO North Third st. Gorgas' Drug Stores suuC \ SAFE, GENTLE REMEDY BRINGS SURE RELIEF For 200 years GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil has enabled suffering humanity to withstand attacks of kidney, liver, bladder and stomach troubles and all diseases connected | with the urinary organs, and to build up and restore to health or gans weakened by disease. These most Important organs must be . watched, because they filter and , purify the blood; unless they do i their work you are doomed. Weariness, sleeplessness, nervous ; ness, despondency, backache, stom l aeh trouble, pains in the .loins and . lower abdomen, gravel, difficulty I when urinating, rheumatism, scia ' tica and lumbago all warn you of • trouble with your kidneys. GOLD: . MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules are I You Need Not i Suffer From Catarrh But You Must Drive It Out of Your Blood to Get Rid of It Permanently. You have probably been In the i habit of applying external treat ments, trying to cure your Catarrh. You have used sprays, washes and lotions and possibly been tempo rarily relieved. But after a short time you had another attack and wondered why. You must realize that catarrh Is an infecUon of the blood and to get permanent re lief the catarrh infection must be driven out of the blood. The quicker you come to understand this, the quicker you will get It out of your system. 8. 8. 8., which has religion and less of the letter. .The other day I read in the paper where the Knights of Columbus, a Catholic organization, had loaned their hall to the Jews for religious services at one of the cantonments. Imagine such a thing even fifty years ago! Real re ligion means brotherhood, not bitter ness. Do you remember Who said "I came not to bring peace, but a sword ?" tIF YOU HAD A NECK LONO A 8 THIB FELLOW. AND HAD DRE THROAT DOWN INSILINE IULD QUICKLY RELIEVE IT. 35c and 60c. Hospital Size, $l. ALL DRUGGISTS. fr ~ Buy War Stamps with the money you save .• having your last sea | son's hat clone over in stead of buying a new one. Bring it to us if you want a first-class I job. We have been re making hats for a num j tier of years and we can do it to your entire satis faction. Gold's 1210 North Third Street "At the Sign of the Arrow" D 11 the remedy you need. Take three !or four every day. The healing oil | soaks into the cells and lining of the kidneys and drives out the poisons. ! New life and health will surely fol j low. When your normal vigor has I been restored continue treatment | for a while to keep yourself in con ' dition and prevent a return of the . ■ diseuse. j Don't wait until you are incap | able of fighting. Start taking GOLD I MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules to ! day. Your druggist will cheerfullv j refund your money if you are not ' i satisfied with results. But be sure to get the original imported GOLD 1 MEDAL and accept no substitutes. >|ln three sizes. Sealed packages. At I all drug stores. been in constant use for over fifty years, will drive the catarrhal poi sons out of your blood, purifying and strengthening It, so It will carry vigor and health to the mucous membrances on Its journeys through your body and nature will soon re store you to health. You will bo relieved of the droppings of mucous iin your throat, sores in nostrils, bad breath, hawking and spitting. All reputable druggists carrv S. 8. 8. In stock and we recommend you give It a trial immediately. Thw chief medical adviser of the company will cheerfully answer all letters on the subject. There Is no charge for the medical advice. Ad dress Swift Specific Company saa Bwlft Laboratory, Atlanta, Ga. * ..--r 5