500,000 WAR - = | PRISONERS ABSENT. MANY HAVE BEEN AWAY | FROM HOME 6 YEARS._ Lo AUTO: SPARE =PARTS 2 F for most makes and models of. cars. | Your old, broken or worn-out: parts replaced. Write or wire us describ- ing what you want. We carry: the jlargest and most complete stock in Canada of slightly used or new ects and automobile equipment. - We ship C.0,D, anywhere in Canada. Satis- 'factory or refund in full our motto. Shaw's Auto Salvage Part Supply, 923-$31 Dufferin 8t., Toronto, Ont, | Mrs Wiking, althy young | | American whe recently took his. bride for a honeymeon "as near the North Pa Ae "vacuum | railroad" Fig? the newly} patented ideaof Robert B. Davy, of § -- E 0 now the nerve | Hayward, Calif. It runs through aj §@ _TacKimgagonies of Neural- ~ 9 Rites eS BR & gia you will bless the. ee tube that has been exhausted of air that = ey Sy by powerful engine pumps. eae A railroad of this kind may run on! §- 'Tempieton's the surface or underground or under} Rheumatie water. : : : Say 'day. know the nerve- your order 'omae Mail E. Schofield, 24 Dathousle S8t., Toronto. _ your order to-day. E. = Dalhousie St., ATES Bohossla, "a4 tpt» ipnprance caprog, 42800. Wann Fibltsnine Gee Ean rene ta 'SOFT ELM WANTED. ovr HLM WANTED, 2 IN. AND | Pole as he can comfortably get," ts by no means the first bridegroom who has spent his "month of honey" in this chilly environment. es F A few years ago Mr. Max Fleisch- - Where Candles Grow! . S man, The candle-tree is to be found in the Pacific Islands. The nut which it ~ yields produces a large quantity of oil, andthe kernels of this candle-nut are strung together on a stick and lighted as a candle! 3 The fruit of the candle-trée is usual- ly about forty-two inches long, and about an inch in diameter. Of a yel- lowish tint, the fruit, as it hangs on the tree, looks exactly like a collection of wax-candles. Not only have these wonderful trees been discovered in the Pacific Islands, but it is recorded that some have been known to thrive in the Isle of Wight. Then there is the Japaness wax- tree, the fruit of which is mostly pure wax. This is used for making wax- candles. The "wax fruit" which this remarkable tree bears, grows in bunches, just like grapes. ) In China,-too, a wonderful wax ts obtained from a shrub called the "Stillingia Sebifera." This tree pro- duces bunches of berries, and in the autumn, when these are quite white and the leaves have put on their -"autumn-color," a beautiful, striking, ature picture is presented. _ And, finally, there have been known to grow certain luminous mushrooms! This may seem incredible, but the fact remains that Dr. W. H. Harvey has recorded that when in Port Jack- s0n, in some woods one night, he was able to see the time from his watch by the aid of the light from some luminous "agatics" (mushrooms), ~ it White Cannibals. Among the remarkable adventures of Dr. A. H. Rice, who has returned after exploring the upper reaches of the Amazon and its tributaries, was a meeting with white cannibals, seven feet in height. Accompanied by a number of na- tives, Dr. Rice set forth in a single tance to map th6 Upper Orinoco. While they were engaged on their work one of the natives saw a gigantic white savage, stark naked, making his way through the underbush. The na- tives explained that he was one of the legendary white Indians," whose ferocity had made them a terror to their dark-hued neighbors for cen- luries. ; Several shots were fired in the direc- tion of the savage, and instantly the Jungle seemed alive with his com- panions, Every one was between six and seven feet in height. They were armed with spears, bows and arrows, and blow-pipes, 'and Dr. Rice recog- nized them as the mountain cannibals who are regarded as the most ferocl- ous in Brazil, Venezuela, and Colom- bia. They have been seen only once before by a white explorer, when En- sign Bobadilla, during explorations on behalf of the Spanish Government, found them in 1793. a Still Looking For Him. "Jones," said the manager of a bank, "there'll be a vacancy at the head of- fice shortly, and I'm thinking of nomi- nating your twin brother for the job." "My twin brother, sir!" exclaimed Jones. "But ie "TJ mean the one I saw watching a baseball match yesterday, while you were at your aunt's funeral," said the manager. "Oh--er--yes," said Jones. member, sir! I--Ill go and him!" "Good!" said the manager. "And don't come back till you've found him!" "J--I re- fetch Siberia, together with a dike number |----and, roughly, the same number of | Russians in Germany. - est problem of all. 'Technically Free, Chief Con- cern of Captives is How to Get Out of Siberia. Ee The lost tribé of Israel may have its counterpart in the 250,000 or more German, Polish, Czech-Slovak, Rou- manian and Jugo-Slav prisoners in of Russians in Germany, says a Lon: don despatch, Eighteen months after the signing of peace they are still "lost." Dr. Fridtjof Nansen, the Nor- wegian explorer and one-time Minis- ter to the Court of St. James's,*is in London, after having undertaken an investigation of the condition of lost prisoners at the request of the League of Nations. Some of the prisoners, Mr. Nansen found, have been away from their homes for six years. Krassin, the representative of the Soviet government, now in London, will be asked to obtain assurance from that government relative to the re- patriation of the exiles. "How many prisoners there are still to be returned," said Dr. Nansen, "no one can tell, for they undoubtedly. in- clude many who have been written off as missing or dead. Probably there are 160,000 to 180,000 in Russia and Siberia -- including "Germans, Aus- trians, Hungarians, Poles, Czecho- Slovaks, Roumanians and Jugo-Slavs Of the former there are some thousands in Turkes- tan, and to extricate them is the hard- Transportation Chief Difficulty. "Many of the prisoners in Siberia are trying to get home_on their own account--for they are technically free; the transport difficulty is the only im- pediment--walking, working now and then to earn a little money, getting on a few miles by train where they can. "The trouble with the men in Si- beria was that they did not know which direction to take. They saw the Czecho-Slovaks going toward Viadivostok, and heard that some of them had got home that way, so others tried to follow their example. Some of those furthest east are concentrat- ing around Vladivostok--the Germans have got a number of their own men out that way in Japanese ships--put conditions there are much disturbed and instructions have been sent by the Soviet government to all prisoners al- ready west of Irkutsk to make their way westward to Moscow as best they can." The Vladivostok prisoners, Dr. Nan- sen explained, it is hoped to repatri- ate in French and American ships, but it is imperative that this should be done at once, so as to get them through the Red Sea before the hot | season. "What is the attitude of the Soviet government in the matter? Dr. Nan- sen was asked. Bolsheviki Aiding Return. "They are really behaving extreme- ly well," he answered. 'They are ex- tremely anxious to send home the prisoners they still hold, and despite their difficulties of transport they are sending trains of prisoners regularly from Moscow through Petrograd to Narva, on the Esthonian frontier, where an exchange of prisoners from Germany and Germans and others from Russia takes place. "There is an old fortress there used as a depot and disinfecting station, but : it is found that at present a trainload | a day means more than the shipping | available can clear, so one train every two days is the rule at present. The Bolsheviki are prepared to double this service when required." Probably few of the thousands who visit Windsor Castle every year have seen the museum, near the Equerries' entrance, in which King George trea- sures his private collection of curios, ranging from war relics to walking- ticks, Here you will see mementoes of every campaign of recent years, in- cluding King Theodore's cap and gold ; seal, presented to Queen Victoria at the conclusion of the Abyssinian War; the scarlet saddle, edged with gold, captured from the late Ameer of Af- © ghanistan; and the crimson banner of Wad. Bishara, which fell into Lord Kitchener's hands at Firket. Here, too, is to be seen a wonderful collection of old china, consisting of 10,000 pieces, and valued at $750,000. One, a beautiful desert-service of Servres ware alone represents a value of $150,000; while a breakfast-service given to George III. on his birthday in 1810 by his daughters, is worth $150,000. " Among the furniture are the wrii- Ing-desk given by Henry VIII. to Anne Boleyn on their wedding-day; and a ~ His Majesty's Curies Venetian chair, and dated 1670. There is also a solid silver table of the same period. The» King's collection of feather cloaks is valued at $50,000. They are | composed of gold, black, and crimson feathers from the wings of a now ex- tinct species of parrot, and were given used by the Doges, to George IV. by the king of the Sand- |, Not far away may be found the col- lection of walking-sticks King Edward inherited from his mother, numbering | 187 in all, many of them of great value. | One, purchased at the Culloden sale: in 1897, 'is carved to represent Wis- | dom and Folly; another, of black oak, | originally belonged to Charles IT.; | while a third is made from the wood of the luckless Alabama. Not the least interesting feature of | the Royal Museum Is the collection of } gold keys, presented to King George | and his royal predecessors on the oc- | casion of opening buildings, to each of which is attached a brief account of the ceremony with which it is con- nected. | wich Islands in 1824. | | | | | / == fea Drinkers who find it advisable to leave off tea amd coffee. find Z 'Thousands of for - drinkers now use | é ee E "There i and Coffee INSTANT P ~ delights che taste and satisfies the appetite with no harm to health. ostum. i A BEVERAGE inde of dit ras of Wiest of Molaens? nto a epee 2: STUM "Air itgaenw OMI scant er tea and coffee a "And how have ihe men been treat- ed?" he was asked. oa "Very much better than I expected," was the reply. "They have, of course, had a hard time, but most of them say they have no reasons to complain, as they got as much food as the ordinary population of the district they were in. I met several batches who came through to Berlin, and was favorably struck with their appearance. "They: said they were well fed in Moscow, where some of the prisoners have formed a German Soldiers' Coun- cil to care for their fellows. There is no doubt that the Soviet government is acting in good faith in the matter and doing all it can to get the prison- ers out. -- Money and Ships Needed. "The essential need now is shipping and money. Only one route, Narva to Swinemunde, is being worked at pre- sent, but I want to open others through Riga and the Black Sea. The normal routes through Galicia, Rou- mania and Poland are, of course, out of the question while the fighting con- tinues, "The Germans have four ships work- ing on the Baltic route, but we want at least ten. I am hoping to be able to get the loan of some hospital ships from England. As for money, at least $5,000,000 is needed for the 60,000 men I hope to get out by the western routé before winter. ? "The Soviet government is making no charge for the transport to the frontier, but after that there is the voyage, including the necessary food, to pay for, and many of the men are almost naked. We must give them some clothing and boots, particularly if they are going Wack to a country in such a condition as Austria,' Dr. Nansen's report has been sub- mited to the League of Nations. % 6 Primitive Lace Making. Examine a piece of fine and costly lace. What is it fundamentally? It is a net. By origin it is a fish-net, The first lacemaker was a fisherman, or perhaps his wife. All of the beautiful laces we know to-day are developed from that clever invention, the fish-net. They hark back, therefore, far into the prehis- toric. The first white men who came to America found no lace-makers on this continent, but they did find the In- dians weaving fabrics of cotton, yucca and other fibres, with elaborate pat- tern designs. They were particularly skillful at a certain sort of "drawn work." The California Indians of to-day make cotton lace, but the art has been taught to them by white people. The pottery hey make for sale is some- times adorned with this lace. Which suggests mention of the fact that the early Indians often decorated their pottery with textile paterns by impressing the latter upon the clay while soft. *, +S Reflections of a War Horse. Back again in London, trotting round the same old places, Now that war is over and my fight- ing days are done; at last, we put those German beggars through their paces! How it made us horses laugh to see them on the run! How, Every night out there I used to watch the searchlights playing, See the star-shells shooting up, and hear the whizz-bangs fall. How I miss "the guns," I loved to lis- ten to their neighing, Here we've none at all except some tame ones in the Mall. Back again in London, but I thought that it was larger, Noisier and broader--life in. camp was full of fun; Though J'm a civilian now, and not a battle charger, Often I am sorry that my fighting days are done! GUIRD BABYS HEALTH IN THE SUMMER The summer months are the most dangerous to - children. The - com- plaints of that season, which are cholera infantum, coli¢ diarrhoea and dysentry, come on so quickly | that often ~a little one is beyond aid be- fore the mother realizes he,is ill. The mother must be on her guard to pre- vent these troubles, or if they do come on suddenly to banish them. No other. medicine is of such aid to mothers during. hot weather as is Baby's Own Tablets. They regulate the stomach and bowels and are ab- solutely safe. Sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. et: The Pas Salute. We pass and leave you.lying. No need for rhetoric, for funeral music, for melancholy bugle-calls. No need for tears now, no need for regret. We took our task with you; you died and we live. We take your noble gift, salute for the last time those lines of pitiable crosses, those solitary mounds, those unknown graves, and urn {0 46 Our ilVés out as we may. ' Which of us were the fortunate--- who can tell? For you there is silence and the cold twilight drooping in aw- ful desolation over those motionless lands. For us sunlight and the sound of women's voices, song and hope and laughter, despair, gayety, love--life. Lost, silent, terrible comrades we;,: who might have died saluté you. 2. The purpose of prayer is not to get God to see things as we do, but to get ourselves to see things as God sees them. ; a compartment where the air is at normal pressure. This is done with- out admitting air to the tube by the help of a novel locking arrangement of sliding and hinged doors with air- tight joints. aX Passengers are thus enabled to leave the cars or to get aboard, and the train, resuming its journey, enters the tube again by the-same means. : The cars are necessarily airtight. Inside of them the air is at normal pressure, and it is kept fresh by a flow of oxygen from tanks provided for the purpose. Of course, the vacuum in the tube could not be total. But with no air resistance worth mentioning, the trains could attain tremendous speeds --1i50 miles an hour or more, It would not be necessary to guard against crossing accidents, because there would be no crossings. The inventor says that the crowding of cars is due largely to limit of speed. With greater speed there could be correspondingly more trips, thus reducing traffie congestion. -- -------}e---. TO SAFEGUARD YOUR DIGESTION iThe Blood Should Constantly be Kept Rich and Pure.. If you suffer from any form of in- digestion, your diet should be care- fully chosen. Over-eating is always harmful, but at the same time one must take enough food to supply the needs of the blood. It must be re- membered that the blood has to carry nourishment to every part of the body, find fuel for energy and defence against its enemies, as well as the re- quisite juices for digestion. Hence, when the blood becomes weak and fails to do its work, indigestion arises; also when indigestion begins the blood still further suffers. Therefore, to safeguard your digestion the blood should be kept rich and red, and this can best be done by taking a course of Dr. Williams Pink Pills. These pills are a blood-building, nerve-restoring tonic and through their use your di- gestive system will respond naturally, your appetite will improve and your food will do you good. The value of Dr. Williams Pink Pills in cases of stomach trouble is shown by the ex- perience of Mrs. J. H. Alexander, Bar- riefield, Ont., who says: "Some years ago I was in a terribly broken down condition. I had indigestion of a severe nature, and sharp pains of agony all through me. My stomach was so weak that it was difficult to re- tain food, and often after eating I would have vomiting spells. I was un- der medical treatment, but as I did not improve my nerves were in a ter- rible condition and I was always in much misery. One day I read of a woman who had been relieved of simi- lar trouble through the use of Dr. Williams Pink Pills, and I decided to try them. The result can be summed up by saying that after using the pills for some weeks I was entirely bet- ter, could eat a hearty meal and was again enjoying life: If I feel run down at any time I take Dr: Williams Pink Pills -~and always get benefit from them." : You can get these pills through any dealer in medicine, or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Brock- ville, Ont. cae fe -- --___---- - fo The Read to Paradise. Where lies the road to Paradise? By mossy bank of sylvan stream Beneath the peaks of the Hills of Dream-- There lies the road to Paradise! Where lies the.road to Paradise? It runs across a sunny plain Toward the castles of Spain-- There lies the road to Paradise! distant Where lies. the road to Paradise? Beyond the arch of the far rainbow, Deep in the shadow of its glow-- There lies the road to Paradise! Where lies the road to Paradise? The truth to tell, 'tis in'the heart Of each who doeth well his part-- There lies the road to Paradise! "Good thoughts are no better than good dreams, unless they be execut- ed."--Emerson. Minard's Liniment used by Physicians, A majority of the royal commission that was appointed to consider adopt- ing the decimal system of coinage for use in Great Britain has reported itself as opposed to the change. In the opinion of the commissioners, the large part cf the British people that reckons its income in shillings and pence would resent such interference with established terms of value; and though the decimal system would be of advantage to those who keep ac- counts, to the majority of the people the benefits would be too slight to compensate for the confusion that would inevitably result from it. JINARTED Young women to take the Nursés' Iraining Course in the Ontario Hospital for the Insane, Toronto. Three years' i Course in general nursing secures a Graduate Nurse's Diploma from the Ontario Government. } Wages--First Year: $25.00 per month, i board, uniform, and laundering. Second | Year: $30.00 per month, board, uniform, laundering and high cost of living bonus. Third Year: $35.00 per month, . board, uniform, laundering, and high' cost of living bonus. : ef Write for particulars to the At the station the train runs into|. | wings will become so small that they mere}: | Provincial Secretary's Department of the |. i Capsules were discovered. This! famous remedy is abso- -- jutely guaranteed to give -- relief to sufferers from -- Nearalgia. -- ie fend for free 3 cy to Templetons, 142 King &t. ., Toronto. : Doctors recommend them, and reliable drug~ ts everywhere sell them or $1.04 & box. . aa | ee ASTHMA -* -Templeton's RAZ-MAH Cap- sBules are guaranteed to relieve ASTHMA. Don't suffer an- other day. Write Templetons, 142 King St. W., Toronto, for freesample. Reliable druggists seli them at $1.04 & box. Bits of Information. The Bible languages, A whale is able to remain under water for an hour and a half, Tests actually made go to prove that disease germs cannot live long on metal. The Bank of England was establish- ed in 1691, making it the oldest nation- al bank of Europe. The Paris Zoo has just exchanged two camels for a monster boa con- strictor valued at £150. Potatoes should always be boiled in their skins, since the best part of the tuber is just. beneath the skin. "Ti we want an Al race, we must have food prepared in an Al fashion," says an eminent medical authority. The teak, which supplies one of the strongest timbers known, grows slow- ly, attaining a height of only 150 feet in over a century. Of Queen Victoria's grandchildren, one is a reigning monarch--King George--and three are Queen Con- sorts of Norway, Spain, and Roumania. German prisoners in Great Britain were employed in two ways--about 25,000 on the land, and over 6,000 in clearing up.camps and filling in trenches-on the East Coast. Three hundred and forty-three death sentences were carried out in the Bri- tish Army during the war. Of these, 266 were cases of desertion. India and China contain about one- half the total population of-the world. is now printed in 528 a GIRLS! A MASS OF WAVY, GLEAMY BEAUTIFUL HAIR Let "Danderine" save and glorify your hair In a few moments u can trans- form your plain, dull, flat hair. You can have it abundant, soft, glossy and full of life. Just get at any drug or toilet counter a small bottle of '"Dan- derine" for a few cents. Then moisten a soft cloth with the Danderine and draw this through your hair taking one small strand at a time. Instantly, yes, immediately, you have doubled the beauty of your hair. It will be a mass, so soft, lustrous, fluffy, and so easy to do up. All dust, dirt and ex- cessive oil is removed. Let Danderine put more life, color, vigor and brightness in your hair. This stimulating tonic will freshen your scalp, check dandruff and falling hair, and help your hair to grow long, thick, strong and beautiful. ie ee Birds That Can't Fly. Why don't barnyard fowl] fly? They can make a fluttering pretence at flight, it is true, but for real flying their wings are useless. Barnyard fowl have lost the use of their wings through neglecting to use them. They .have been valued for their eggs, and, as a consequence, they. have been 'well fed.. Thus the necessity for-flying from place to placé in search of food has not existed. They have'for the same reason been protected as far as possible from. at- tack by wild animals, and from other dangers that would make flight, as a méans of escape, a necessity. In course of time, therefore, their wings have become practically useless for purposes of flight, The wings of barnyard fowl are gradually decreasing in size. It may be that in the course of time their will "be nothing more than stumps, and later still it is quite pos- sible that they will disappear alto- gether. nt een / Winard's LinIment for sale everywhers "The first Englishman to settle in Japan was a sailor named William Adams, who cied there in 1620. | Medical Superintendent, at $99 Queen Street West, - - one a-Chicago millionaire, at His Do not sell until y ou _commu::'cate bride's request, took her straight from the altar to the Arctic wastes, where they spent, on their own evidence, "delightful" months, hunting seals, reindeer, and polar bears, two ot Mrs. Fleischmann's honeymoon ward- robe, we are told, consisted of an as- sortment of sheepskin dresses, lined with leather, : ak was the honeymoon journey of Major _| Powell-Cotton, who took his bride on! a long and hazardous journey through age pigmies, who had neyer before even seen a white woman, ous of all recorded honeymoons was that of Captain Andrews, an American sailor, and his bride, who started to cross the Atlantic in a "Cockleshell," twelve feet long, and Weve never seen again, : : SNe ee HET ~ MOTHER! "California Syrup of Figs" Child's Best Laxative Accept "California" Syrup of Figs only--look for the name California on the package, then you are sure your child is having. the best and most harmless physic for the little stom- ach, liver and bowels. Children love its fruity taste. Full directions on each' bottle. You must say "Cali- fornia." a "A Filthy Custom." The cup of tea with which you re- fresh yourself after your work, has been handed down to you through many generations, and its story is one of the romances of beverages. The Chinese drank tea in the fourth century, valuing it for "relieving fa- tigue, delighting the soul, strengthen- ing the will, and repairing the eye- sight." It was drunk by the Taoists as an ingredient in the elixir of im- mortality. The Buddists used it dur- ing their long period of meditation to prevent drowsiness. And it must ef- fectively have done so, since their par- ticular concoction was boiled with rice, ginger, salt, orange or lemon peel, spices, and sometimes onions, In Japan, tea is practically a re- ligion. There are special ceremonies in connection with it, and special build ings in which it is drunk. Tea has been praised and condemn- even denounced as "a filthy custom." But it has survived for sixteen hun- dred years! Minard's Liniment Co., Limited. Gent#--I relieved a valuable hunt- ing dog. of mange with MINARD'S LINIMENT after several veterinaries had treated him without doing him any permanent good. Yours, &¢., Prop. of Grand Central Hotel, Drummondville, Aug. 3, '04. Many men can rightly assert that their opinions do not change; but they are not wise in boasting of the fact. It shows too often that they have Jearned nothing since the day on which they reached their opinions. So obvious an evidence of ignorance or foolishness no man should adver- tise. which fell to the bride's own gun.| Less chilly, but no less adventurous, Africa, spending many months in the' heart of the Ituri Forest, hunting the | okapi and making friends of the say- | But the most daring and adventur- thicker, shipped green from sath ue Keenan Bros. Limited. Owen Sound | n ence : : : Bulk Carlo TORONTO SALT WORKS | (@.J.CLIFF +. America's Ploneer Dog Remedies + @nd How to Feed Mailed Free to,any Ad- ar by the Author, i. Olay Glover Co., Ina, 118 West 31st Street . New York, U.B.A, | 30 23988 COUGHS: Bird Cries. The bobolink says "Tiddleywink," -- The cathird says, "Meow," ; Between his love songs to his mate Upon a leafy bough. : The little wren says, "Babies mine," | With sweet and twitter cheery. The oriole says, "Honey pear," But the robin he says, "Dearie." , oe aes The spotted thrush says, "Cherry ripe," * The cuckco says, "More rain," The sparrow says, block!" "The dove says, "I complain." The guail says, "Bob White" all day long . : And never seems to weary, And the magpie says, "I told you so," But the robin he Says, "Dearie;". 2 SEARLS I.eep Minard's Liniment In the house Through a powerful microscope such things as a nettle sting, the scales of a butterfly, or the solid par- . ed, and histery records that it was" WILFRID GAGNE. | ticles in smoke are plainly seen. MONEY ORDERS. The safe way to send money by mail is by Dominion Express Money Order, However damp your boots or shoes may be, a splendid polish can be ob< -- tained if a few drops of paraffin oil are added to the blacking. This alsa. prevents the leather cracking. Ack for Minard's <nd take no other. Much timber suitable for wood pul having been found in New Zealand, the Government will foster the indus< try. renders instantly, always -the source of flattering comment. For Skins That lich, | Burn aud Scale Bathe the affected part with 'Cuti- S, cura a and hot Pare, Water. gon 4. and rub eh C a cura Ointment. This treatment is usually best on ris- ing and retiring. Por every purpose of the toilet, bath and nursery" the ~Cuticura Soap and Ointment are ideal, The Soap to cleanse and purify, the Oint- sment to soothe and heal, Sold 25c, Ointment 25 and Depot: hronghouttheD Laaara Listed, t. Paul St., Montreal.' ticura Soap shaves without mug. é peaeemeenennnaientrennennnsentprenteemmmemnee | ONLY TABLETS MARKED "BAYER" ARE ASPIRIN Not Aspirin at All without the "Bayer Cross"* The name "Bayer" Always buy an unbroken. packaze acéticacidester of Ealicylicacid, ' Issue No. 28--'20. ; . i identifies the}contains proper directions for Colds, only genuine Aspirin--the Aspirin} Headache, Toothache, Harache, Neu- prescribed by physicians for over nine- | ralgia, Lumbago, Rheumatism, Neuri- |? teen years and now made in Canada.| tis, Joint Pains, and Pain generally. 'Tin boxes of 12 tablets cost but of "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" which|a few cents. Larger "Bayer" packages. There is only one Aspirin--"Bayer"--You must say "Bayer" Aspirin is the trade mark (registered In Canada) of Bayer Manufacture of Mono- While it is well known that Aspirin means Bayer manufacture, to assist the public against imitations, the Tablets of Bayer Company will-be stamped with their gencral trade mark, the "Bayer: Croeg,"* "COARSE SALT | LAND SacT | "TORONTO! [Doe DISEASES | "Knock off your. eB (i --