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The Brussels Post, 1919-11-27, Page 3ki ESCAPING FROM A PRISON CAMP THE FAMOUS TUNNEL AT HOL,ZMINDEN. Wonderful Feat of British Prisoners in Escaping From Enemy Camp. Wherever prisoners of war are con- gregated there are almost sure to be desperate attempts at escape ---some of which are successful. Lieut. E. 1I. Garland, a British officer who was several times captured anis was always reedy b) plan and execute some daripg means of escape, writes in the Wide World 1S7agueine of a venture that was a disappolutment so far as he was eon - earned, though twenty-nine of his com- rades got away. This was the famous tunnel at the Ilolzminden prison camp. The tunnel was dug by a picked party of men with every kind of im- provised tool; it started from a se- cluded part of the barracks and ran out Bone three hundred feet beyond the stockade into an open field. When the hole was finished, says Lieut, Gar- land, the working party went in first, about eleven o'clock, and then the other men, according to an arranged list, .As we had only five minutes' warn- ing, we did not know who was in front or behind. I was summoned about three in the morning. "Be in the tun- nel in five minutes, or you miss your turn." It was pitch dark when I got inside the triangle room, where the mouth of the tunnel was situated, and there was a gurgling noise, something like the sound water makes just as It runs out of a big tank and down a pipe, It was caused by the people still in the tun- nel, who were caning out to each other as they wormed along. The first part of the tunnel was very steep, and when I started to push my haversack iu front of n1e, it suddenly disappeared and rolled clown to the bottom. Going downhill was easy enough, but when I got to the bottom of the dip I found progress very hard work, A Terrible Adventure. The tunnel was so small that I hail to lie Rat on my stomach with me hands above my head. There was not room enough to pull one arm back or 'to raise my head far without hitting the roof. There was no sneh thing as crawling. The only way I could ad- vance was by pushing my haversack along in front of mo and then shoving myself forward by my toes. MIy elect- ric torch enabled nee to see what was in front. I came across tins of bully beef and chocolate, which had been lost out of bags. All the time the aw- ful gurgling noise was going on and the air began to get vary bad, It should have: taken about twenty minutes to worm to the end of the tun- nel, but soon tho man in front of me, who had been going very slowly, stopped and lay still, I ehought he had fainted, but when I shook him by the footite said, "The tunnel has fall - E aro u in and theytrying to clear it, Y g It will only take a few minutes." In the meantime, the chap behind me ran into my foot, "What's wrong?" he gasped. I told him that there was a block somewhere up ahead, but that it would probably be cleared in a few minutes. 'rhe tunnel soon got filed up with mon who know nothing about the block. This was dangerous, as it made the air very bad. There was now so much noise that it was not possible 'to communicate with those behind and tell them to go back. We waited and waited. I could feel my- self getting weaker. We had to wait in that suffocating place more than two hours before the man who enter- ed last gave up and got out. Tho next man then started back, and the next, until I heard the man behind me say that he was returning. Ten Reached England. It was terrible work. We had to pull our haversacks instead of pushing them; our coats came over our heads, and it was uphill. When one of the fellows got jammed and could not move, I really thought we should be suffocated, But after a lot Of strug- gling he got his coat off over his head, and that saved us. When I got to the uphill part I thought I should never manage it; but I struggled on, and by and by I felt some one pulling my foot. The men at the entrance had formd a human chain and were haul• ing els opt. It was now almost daylight, so I hurried upstairs to the secret etetranee. Unfortunately, .two officers were dis- covered to be covered with mud from head to foot. The Germans were very euspieious, and took thein straight' to Neimayer, who thought they had been attempting to escape, but who never dreamed that twenty-nine of his ene- mies had flown. When he discovered the truth, lo(+ was enraged beyond measure. A'tumbtle of high officers from Ber- lin canto down immediately to look at the tunnel, and they ordered it to be dug open from beginning to end, Nineteen of tate officers were recap- tured, but the other ten reached Bug - land safely, The Germans, even Nei• mem himself, admitted that it was a great feat. "Guartlnteesl" That leeks good on packages of poultry stuff:. 11 means that a maxi of backbone Ins ibae1tlrlg those phial l ;61a, Styles for Children TONIC TREATMENT FOR THE NERVES Neuralgia and Other Severe Ner- vous Disor'der's Cured Through the Blood. In many severe nervone disorder's the best remedy is often a tonic. The most active tonic treutnttttt is recent - mended by the highest medical authority to arrest the progress of such disease. Dr, Williams' Pink Pills are a tonic that acts on the nerves through tiro blood, which curries to the nerves the els, fonts needed to build them tip and restore them to a normal condition, Neuralgia, sciatica, nervous head- aches and a number of more severe nervous troubles aro properly treated by building up the blood with Dr. _ Williams' Pinic Pills and are often en- .tirely cured in this way. 1f you are t:ervons you can help yourself by re - No. 9116—nay's Norfolk Suit. Price, fusing to worry, by taltieg proper rest 2U cents. Coat cut Through at waist- and sleep, by avoiding excesses and line; knee trousers. Gut in 5 sizes, 4i$by taking out-of-door exercise. For to 12 years, Size 8, with belt, 2s/a medicine take Dr. Williams' Pink Pills yds. 36 los. wide, or 1 yds. 54 ins. and you will soon notice the beneficial wide; without belt, 2% yds. 36 int.1 effect of this tonic in every part of the wide, or 1'14 yds. 54 ins. wide, system, Bliss Annie L. Johnston, R.R. No. 9143—Girl's Dress, Price, 20 No. 1, Listowel; Ont., is ono of the cents. With shield, kimono sleeve numerous sufferers from nervous -s ith or without cellar and belt. Cut troubles who has found a cure through in 6 sizers, 5, 8, 10, 12 and 14 years.1Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, Miss John - Size 8 requires, with collar and belt,' sten says:—"For a long time I was a 2% yds. 36 ins. wide, or 214 yds, 44 severe sufferer from, nervous troubles, itis. wide; without collar and belt, with the result that I grew very pale 21% yds, 36 ins. wide, or 1%s yds. 44 and weak. Medical treatment did not ine. wide. help me, and various medicines had These patterns may be obtained no beneficial effect, until finally a from your local McCall dealer, or from friend advised me to try Dr. Williams' the McCall Co., 70 Bond St., Dept. W. Pink Pills, I began their use and took the pills regularly for several months, A Singing "Literary." with the result that I not only gained The people in our community had in weight, but have recovered my full health and strength. I cannot praise Dr. Williams' Pink Pills too highly for what they have done for me." To build up the blood there is one remedy that has been a household word for a generation, Dr, Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People. They tone up the entire system, make the blood rich and red, strengthen the nerves, increase the appetite, put color in the cheeks and lips and drive away that unnatural, tired feeling, Plenty of sunlight, good wholesome food and met regularly in the schoolhouse every Friday night for "literary" dur- ing several years, but they seemed to be getting into a rut. The younger folks especially were not very excited about the meetings. Attempts at brightening up the program helped some, and occasional parties of the usual "•bid -for -a -supper - basket" kind had a good effect, but not for long, The enthusiasm with which the younger people sang on their way to fresh air will do the rest. You can and from the meetings finally sug- gested an idea. Of course, they had get Di' Willianfs' Pink Pills through always had some singing at the "lit - 60 dealer in medicine, or by mail at 60 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 erary," but it wasn't of the jovial, spontaneous kind that was needed. At from The Dr, Williams' MIeddeiue Co., the next meeting they succeeded in Brockville, Out. getting the idea accepted that they •• shoeld get hold of the new popular songs and also work up some of the old favorites, and that there should be a song after each number on the program, but the big point of it was that every one must join in, singers and non -singers. They knew very well that 110 one would actually feel like joining in when the time came, so they gat all to agree that every one should pay a three -cent fine for every song not participated in. To enforce the rule, inspectors were appointed who, them- selves •singing heartily all the time, watched for people not joining in. It was necessary to choose exactly the right people for this. At first many people moved their lips and merely pretended to sing, but that led them on to singing heartily. By the fourth week of the new style the thing was an undoubted suc- cess. The spirit of the place was entirely changed. The old awkward- ness that every one had altered before gave way to a sort of thrill of interest in everything. Perhaps the people were all wondering what the next song would be. Whatever the reason, they took a keen interest in every- thing. They had now dropped the "fines" system, and use another method. Some one—•generlllly the school -teacher or the minister, but sometimes a real singing teacher—sits en the platform hiring all the singing, and after each song marks up on the blackboard a stroke for whichever side of the room sang the best. The rivalry runs very high each weep and each month for the highest score, and the room sic al- ways divided sharply into the two sections. Moreover, the rivalry is of a particularly merry and good-natur- ed sort. A singing "literary" after this fashion is a enure -fire success.— P. W. W. • Babies sometimnes acquire a dislike for cow's milk through improper feed- ing. What is a Tial Wave? Much of the storm's terrific damage at Corpus Christi is said to have been caused by a "tidal wave" of great height, wltilch swept away entire blocks of houses. But what is a tidal wave? It has nothing whatever to do with the tides. Any great onrush of the Sea that overwhelms the land is called a tidal wave, In 1867 'such a wave threw the 'United States cruiser Mo- nongahela clear out of the harbor and into the town of Friedrichstadt, on the island of Santa Cruz. Suclt waves may be due to various causes. They may represent a heap- ing up of masses of water by a hurri- cane of wind, as at Corpus Christi. Or an earthquake under the moa may be the cause. Submarine volcanic eruptions are of not very Infrequent occurence, and earthquakes are liable to accompany them. Or a more slipplug of strata in the sea -floor 'may cause earth- quakes. If, incidentally to the volcan- ic or seismic disturbance, one part of the sea -floor sinks or another part rises, there must be a consequent rush of water, which may assume the pro- portions of what is called a tidal wave. The great earthquake that destroyed Libson in 1755 was supplemented by a tidal wave which rolled up the valley of the Tagus from the ocean, sub- merging all the lower portions of the city and destroying thousands of lives. Twenty-five years ago Japan was visited by a series of terrific tidal waves, which ran fifteen or twenty miles inland. They accompanied great earthquake shocks. The tidal wavo above mentioned, at Santa Cruz, aleo etruok St. Thomas, where a wall of water that looked fifty feet high ran up over the land, There were severe earthquakes all night, and the people, believing that tho island was going to sink, besought the com- mander of an American warship (which had survived the wave by a AFdS7fI�N,iT PO BA A 05710500 4nlits g t i...%$ 4 Q, N rNal n,' hostum Cereal CompaoY, nrtn du. has taken the place of tea and cofi a in many homes Convenient Ecus Comical Satisfying •. Made instantly Sold by Grocers;) miracle) to take them off, ile did carry 2,000 of them to Santa Cruz. The Time to Cut Timber. The time of cutting has very little effect upon durability, if timber is properly cared for after it is cut. The method of handling posts, poles and logs at different times of the year, however, does influence their durabil- ity. Late spring and summer cutting: Posts, poles and other rengh products cut in late spring and early anmmer are more likely to be attacked by in- 511CLa and fungi, because the wood IS Irbehly cut and in the moot favorable condition for attack at a time when insects and the spores of fungi are most active. Seasoning also proceeds more rapidly during the warmer months and may cease excessive checking. If the wood is peeled when cut, and piled openly on skids for sea- soning, the opportunity for decay will be reduced to a minimum, but check- ing will not be retarded. In no case should the wood be allowed to lie in direct contact with the ground. Check- ing can be reduced somewhat by locat- ing the piles in a shaded but dry place. The baric peels most easily in spring. It can be removed at any other time of the year, but the labor and expense will probably be greater. Fall and winter cutting: Timber cut in late fall and winter seasons more slowly and with less checking than during the warmer months. When proper storage,`or handling is imprac- ticable, winter cutting is best. Fungi and insects do not attack wood out-of- doors in cold weather, end by the time warm weather arrives the wood is partly seasoned and less susceptible to, attack. It is for this reason that winter cutting is advantageous, and not on account of a smaller amount of moisture or sap in the wood in winter, as the popular belief has it. Nor does there seem to be much to the moon theory. HE ACI II FOIv TIfl BABY The baby of to -day is the man or woman of to -morrow. Thus the suc- cess of the future man or woman de- pends upon the baby's present wel- fare. If the baby is sickly and 111 nourished it is not to by expected that he will grow into a strong, active man who will hold his oevn in the business world a few years hence. Mothers, it is a duty you owe the future to keep your little ones well now. This can be easily done if Baby's Own Tablets are kept in the house. The Tablets are a mild but thorough laxative which regulate the bowels and sweeten the stomach and thus make baby healthy and strong. Concerning them Mfrs. W. Orser, Elginburg, Ont., writes:— "I have a fine healthy boy three years and have used Baby's Own Tablets for him ever since he was a small baby. I certainly think them a splendid medicine." The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Biggest Eyes. The most enormous of all eyes are those of the giant squid, a cephalopod teat attains a length of 150 feet, two- thirds of which, however, is represent- ed by its pair of long-distance ten- tacles. No specimen so large has ever been captured, but its eyes—circular, lid- less and glaring with a horrible green- ish lustre—would probably be not less than two feet in diameter. A small fifty -footer in the Smithsonian Insti- tution has eyes with a diameter of twelve inches. Minard's Liniment Co., Limited. Gentlemen, In July, 1915, I was thrown from a road machine, injuring my hip and back badly and was ob- liged to use a crutch for 14 months. In Sept, 1916, Mr. Wm. Outridge of Lachute urged me to try MINARD'S LINIMENT, which I did with the most satisfactory results and to -day I am as well as ever in my life. Yours sincerely his MATTHEW x BAINES. meek New Zealand Census. The New Zealand. Government sta- tistics relating to the census of 1916 have just been made public. In classi- fying dwellings by tate number of rooms the figures show that out of 229,423 private dwellings in New Zea- land 9,000 had one room, 8,380 too rooms, 10,500 three rooms, 49,000 four rooms, 58,000 five rooms, 50,000 six rooms, 22,000 seven rooms and 10,800 eight rooms. Country districts ac- count for most of the small houses. , The overwhelming prominence of wood in the construction of dwellings in New Zealand is shown by the fact that 219,000 wore constructed of wood, 7,000 of bl'1ck, 1,280 of stone and 1;680 of concrete. In many counties there was not a single dwelling built of brick or stone, but these districts were in the back -blocks of New Sealand, where there are but few houses. 01 the total dwellings and tone. matte 109,000 are being rented, 12,000 bought on time payment, 05,000 bought on mortgage and 50,860 the nneneum- bared property of the neeupttnts. In the Tucklencl metropolitan area 15,000 homes aro rented, 18,800 held under mortgage 'mid 5,000 aro unencumbeie ed To remove paint from clothes, sat- urate the spot two or three times with equal parte of amrltottdt and turpen- tine, and then wash out in soapsuds, 'SYRUP OF FIGS" 0 CHILD'S LAXATIVE Look at tongue! Remove poi. sons from little stomach, liver and bowels 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 laxative or physic for the little stomach, liver and boyvels, Child- ren love its delicious fruity taste. Full directions for child's dose on each bottle. Give it without fear. Mother! You must say "California." General and the Jug. General Bailloud, who commanded part of the French expeditionary force in the Balkans; was SO well liked by his men that nearly every good story that originated in his carps was either about him or attributed to him. Amoug the most amusing of these is one that has to do with the general and a soldier who was returning alone to quarters near Monastir with a water jug in each hand. Coating across another mud-stalned poilu sitting beside the road, the sol- dier belled him: "How goes it, old man?" "Very well," said the other. "Can't you carry one of these jugs for me?" "Certainly," carne the answer, and the two men went on together. "Would you believe it," said the first soldier, "they have chucked me into the grade of corporal?" "What of that?" replied the other. "Didn't they chuck rue into the grade of general?" The soldier nearly dropped his jug. then drew closer and made out three faint stars on a mud -stained sleeve. He drew himsetf up at attention and saluted. "Walk on, corporal," said General Bailloud, and together they trudged into camp, melt bearing a water jug. MONEY ORDERS. Buy your out-of-town supplies with Dominion Express Money Orders. Five Dollars costs three cents. His Special Gift. A school tl?ustee visited one of the! schools over which he bears rule, and! made something of a speech to the assembled children. "Now," said the great man, "the thing that you want to keep in mind is that you should always seek to do some one thing better than anyone else can do it. You can begin to do that right now. Tell me --is there any- one nyono among you who can do that one thing better than anyone else?" A youngster held up his hand. "Anti what is it?" "I can read my own writing better than anyone else can," said the boy. Minas 's Liniment Cnros Garget in Cows. Had a Better Ono. A college professor who was always ready for a joke wee asked by a stu- dent if he would like a good recipe for catching rabbits. "Why,yes," replied the professor, "What is it?" "Well," sold the student, "you crouch down behind a thick stone wall and make a noise like a turnip," "That may be," said the professor, with a twinkle in his eye, "but a bet- ter way than that would be for you to go and sit quietly in a bed of cab- bage heads tend look natural," _RASCLS Biliousness, Headache, Colds, Constipation, driven out with i'Cascarets" 'Why take nasty cathartics, sicken- ing salts, or stomach -turning oils to drive these rascals out? Let gentle, harmless Cascaras remove the liver and bowel poison which is keeping your head dizzy, your tongue coated, your skin sallow, Your breath offon- sive, and your stomach sour. Get a box of Cascarots at the drug store and rid your liver, stomach, end bowels of the excess bile, poisons, and waste which are steeping you miserable. ''as - carets neVOr grille, nevus Sic.ltrll, never inconvenience. They cost so little and work while you sloop, EI?. ISSU)IS No, 47.—'19. HUMORNerS or mom HERE &THERE Her Way Out. "Ould Mary Donohue," the moiler of egg's and n1111t, became Mrs. Dnnoltuo when She inherited her uncle's ,Honey and went to Dublin to live like "Hi' glntry." One day a lawyer's clerk, an English yotl.tlt, called on Iter, on hue!. nests, to request her signature to some papers. "Just ye sign thins yersel', young man, aft 01'11 matte me mark,' said the good lady promptly. "Since me eves got so bad, I've not been able to wruite a word." "And- and how do you spell your heave?" asked the clerk shyly. "Shure, just whatever way ye fan- cies," replied Mrs. Donohue, blandly. '•t;.ncu I lost ale teeth, share it's not a single blessed word I can spells" Pat's Discovery. etralling along the quays of New Yurk harbor, an Irlshtntt,r came across the wooden barricade which is placed around an inclosure where immigrants suspected of suffering from contagi- ous diseases are isolated. 'Phwat's this boarding for?" he in- quired of a bystander. "Oh," was the reply, "that's to keep out fever and things like that, • you know." "Indadel" said Pat. "Oive often heard of the Board of Health, but, be- jabers, it's the first time O'ive seen it," Buy Thrift 'Stamps. Sure! High Heels Cause? Corns But Who Cares Now e a o a • e o—o e e • - e Because style decrees that women crowd and buckle up their tender toes in high heel footwear they suffer from corns, then they cut and trim at these painful peets which merely makes the corn grow hard. This suicidal habit may cause lockjaw and women are warned to stop it. A few drops of a drug called freez- one applied directly upon a sore corn gives quick relief and soon the entire corn, root and all,' lifts out withoef. nein. Ask the drug store man for a quarter of au eines of freezone, which costs very little but is sufficient to re• move every hard oti aft corn or callus from one's feet. This drug is un( er compound and dries in a momentd simply shrivels up the corn wiihou,.nfl unaing or oven Irritating the mutIjundiug tissue or skin. Clip this ullt and pin on your wife's dresser. eanerlea'a -r"toue2T Dos 0 'BOB•fiy•r e tofA d- rr t tho anmew tekace 4. , :t17 r. ,.y 11: .�'VICt..... .'rrJl.i�3 WHEN YOU SUFkii FROM RMATI Almost any Tuan will tell you that Sloan's Liniluent means relief For practically every man has used it who has suftered from rheumatic aches, soreness of muscles, stillness of joints, the results of weather ex- posure. Women, too, by the hundreds of thousands, use it for relieving neur- itis, lame backs, neuralgia, sick head- ache. Clean, refreshing, soothing, economical, quickly effective. Say "Sloan's Liniment" to your druggist. Made. in, Canada, ..Get tt today. 85; 70c, $1.40. Classified Advertisements. •y�.�, P021 41.6.1.11. AIR XEM A Alas twenty other Mira, Jieldpwoo. Bothwell, On tarso, 'WANTED lS AW FtUIOO. WHAT HAVEYOU%, !! What price? reels] Bros., Bothwell, Ontario.. .. WA1PTi3D TonIST CLASS GARAGE MAN.. -12 State experience and wagoa wanted. ltetd Bros., Rothwell, Ont. 51517ATI0105 VAOA.D0T. Itkl 7011 LOOKING 000. AN OPEN., XI, INS/ to prove your ability? Or, are Yon just drifting along on the prinatPle that "everything cornea to him who watts" --without much thought of your efficiency? If you are in the latter class, be up and Being—train your mind and memory so as to bo ready for Op. immunity when it comes your way, In. other words, 1'elmanlsel IY you know you have ability. why not use the wait- tng moments to improve your efflelency and Inirlentaily acquire that Personality which means so much in seeking See- ress? Small town or 1115 city. or on the township aide nue, it matters not—the l'eltnan System is cunduoted by ail. hind and Meteor toile you all about it. It le a book that's free and lays no obligation upon you to enroll, though yawl: he surprised to And how moderate is the fee required. Write for the book and particulars to -day to the Palmeri Institute, 7E8 Temple Building, Toronto. Canada. setson"LI.ANEOVG- 7B'P N$ WANTED, ALIVE, 19 CENTS JL 1' a pound, any size. I pay express within 110 miles of Toronto. No deduc- tion for shrinkage. Samuel Lewis, 8e6 - Ilundes \Vest, T•• -onto. USIN.ESSE$, TORONTO PROPER- -AP - TIES, Ontario and 'Western farms for sale or exchange. Davis, 129 Victoria St. Toronto. CANCER, TUMORS, LUMPS. ETC.. Internal and external, cured without bele by our home treatment. Write us before too late. Pr. iletlman Medical Co. Limited. Colttnrwood. Ont Peat Yields 011s. Some of the peat mined in New Zee: land is so well filled with kaurl gum* particles that it can be made to yLeld elle that are valuable substitutes for gasoline or benzine or use in varnish- es. av ananrd's Liniment Cures Distemzlper. Buy Thrift Stamps. ORAY'R SYRUlj RED SPtitl 0 For Coughs, Colds, and the relief of in. flammatory conditions of the throat arising from Bronchial, Asth- matic affections and derangements of the' Respiratory Organs.; Organs.; Prepared from Spruce. Gum and other medi- cinal a5rnts. Success- fully us.d fer60 years. Ale 5a Bu/ the torus Size SINCE 1870 htj STOPSC -v'1„f CJ 0 T1s A:P ./.7•0h"r ba..tyo 4.l,tr, A�r1 prcce \ et first, nii4 t a d with die rvrsd it 0 were :y Were wzre scat - t ,.•. . a and etch "Thane c• rlyayear before .,a •LndGint- men,.and . -1 t -a_3 sccakes of Cn?icur : x., a::,ve flee -boxes of Gis t u.a wee healed." (t+ .11-4) a 11?. Doyko, Gardcaton, l.;.0 ac. 25, 1.13. having claim:,^1 n clear healthy skin by the r::e 0i et:tloute, keep it clear by teeing tete Soap for all toilet purposes, a;c.stcd by touches of Ointment as needed. Do not fail to include the exquisitely scented Cute. cure Talcum in your toilet prepare. tions. Splendid after bathing. For fre0 wimple moth of Cutim,ro Boon 0int- Depe A Snntsu, 11 ea a " li:1 nVoey 4cea.Se' ONLY TABLETS MARKED "BAYER" ARE ASPIRIN Not Aspirin at All without the "Bayer Cross" The name "slayer" McMillen the 12101-1111 proper dirortinns for Colds, only genuino Aspirin, --the Aalriria lleidaello, Toothache, Earache, Nott• 0 • • .r r 1'ia S.m1 a o tllculnatism Nervi. pre.cribcd 1 y physicians for 01 a rano u , , lb g , 1 teen years 1.,111 not: made in Canada. i tis, ,loins: Plaine, and Pain generally. i ore o .. tablet i s t1 Always buy an unbroken pual-t:yo � 1 u b n f 1 n Cat but of "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin' which a f5w cents. larger -Bayer' packages. Moro is only nue A.agr9rinu"13oyer"--btoaa roast say "nevelt' Aspirin is the tends merit (registered in <MMande) of tamr Manufacture 9f Mono. acottcactdentor of Salt.-,'fteaeid. W1 t•s it is wet known that Aspirin '00711,,,7Bayern Bayer manufacture, to 5001st tho public neatest imitations,.' he Mablote of Pe,7,1r �tgtupany, w111 1�6 0185/0011 with Choir getter 0 bade taarlt, tee ;Bayer (1105* '