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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1912-8-29, Page 7vo• ZIGAS.10,a at +a�1w Young Folks 9i^Nr9. *L�Q� �'i7'Yn GRANDFATHER'S RABBITS. Grandfather Brooks loved the wild things of the woods. Perhaps he loved them beoau,se he knew them. There were bears, timber - wolves and an ocasional catamount near Grandfather Brook's home, but he never hunted them. He had • watched mother bears and their Dubs as they came to the pond to drink and bathe, and they seemed almost like friends to him. If that is the way Grandfather Brooks felt about bears, you can imagine what he felt about such harmless little creatures as rabbits. One day hie two small grandchil- dren, Harold and Helen; came from the city to visit him. They brought their dog, Duke, and the first thing they did was to go out into the newly made clearing, where Duke chased a young rabbit. The chil- dren thought that this was groat fun and that Duke was a wonderful hunter. With great excitement they told their grandfather about it. Grandfather Brooks was not pleased, but he did not scold his little visitors. He listened to their story, and then said, "Tell me, chil- dren, did this rabbit have a white tail 1" "Yes, but what of that, grand - pal" asked Harold. "Why, don't you want to protect grandfather's precious white-tailed rabbits? Now I'll tell you how you can do it. If ever you see Duke chasing a bunny that shows you a white tail, you will know that bunny is showing a flag of truce. It is his signal that he belongs to Grandfather Brooks, and you must help him by calling off your dog." Harold and Helen were glad to help grandfather. What do you think ? They spent all the rest of their vacation looking for a rabbit without a white tail, and they never found one, not one 1 Every rabbit in the fields and woods appeared to belong to Grandfather Brooks. Fre- quently they would come across a brownish -gray ball, but the rabbit would sail away, hoisting a white flag of truce, as if to say, "I belong to Grandfather Brooks l"—Youth's Companion. $25,000,000 FOR DEFENCES. Australia to Begin Schemes for Protecting Her Coast. Australia's defence schemes aro being energetically pushed for- ward. In the new cession of the federal Parliament, which has just opened, ministers propose to ask an inorease in the estimates of £],,000,- 000. mostly for the navy. For con- struction about £1,300,000 is need- ed; for stores at Garden Island and oil. depots, £300,000; for personnel, about £450,000 for the reserves, 820,000; for maintenance, £150,000, and for base works, upwards of £200,000. The defence estimates this year will thus probably reach a total of abopt 0,000,000. Meantime, important coast de- fence projects have been taken in hand. Work has been begun at the Flinders naval base, near Mel- bourne, 'where a gunnery and tor- pedo school, a. stokerstraining school and Worksh,op are to be erected, together with five barrack blocks, each of which will accom- modate 400 men. Later a floating dock will be provided. Large sums have been placed on the estimates for weak at the Port Stephens and Cockburn Sound bases, on the East and West coasts respectively. Port Lincoln, South Australia, which Admiral Hender- eon recommended should be made a sub -base for destroyers, is also likely to be utilized. In regard to the new Naval Col- lege at Jervis Bay, all the difficul- ties which have delayed the trans- fer of the, necessary land to the Commonwealth have now been re- moved, and the erection of the ne- cessary buildings will be proceeded with immediately. Meanwhile ar- rangements have bee made for the training of the cadets at Geelong, and the first: batch will be entered there in February next. Under the regulations the cadets will be termed "cadet midship- men," and will be entered under identical conditions and trained to- gether until passing the rank of sub -lieutenant. ' They may then elect either to become general ser- vice officers or to specialize in engi- neering, gunnery, torpedoes or na- vigation, They will require to en- gage for a term of twelve ,years from the date of entry. Appoint- ments will be made by the Minister upon recommendation by the Naval Board. All expenses (including travelling expenses) after entry will bo borne by the government during the period of four years of training at the college+, followed by six months in an instructional cruiser, 0 Miss Sweet --"These vegetables are stale." Waiter --"Yon ate wrong, miss. 1 trove eerved you only with delicacies of the season." AVM; Sweet "Yes, but what sen - INVITING SICKNESS People Whom Blood Supply is Soauty Are in Banger of a Breakdown Thin or impure blood le an invi- tation to sickness. The blood is at work day and night to maintain the health, and any leek of strength or purity in the blood is a weakness in the defence against disease. Anaemia is the doctor's name for lade of blood. Its surest symptom is paler. Anaemia does not confine itself to age or •sex, though it is par- ticularly common to young girls be- tween the ages of 14 and 17 when nature makes peculiar demand upon the blend supply. The same lack of blood, however, prevents full recovery after la grippe, fev- ers, malaria, and operations, and is present in old age, and in persons who have been under unusual men- tal or physical strain. In all eases of bloodlessness Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are the best medicine known to medical science. They actually make new pure blood, which brings with it a healthy appetite and new strength and vitality. Mrs. George Roy, Clair, Sask., says: "I have tested the value of Dr, Williams' Pink Pills time and again when a poor condition of the blood might have led to more serious trouble. 1 am a woman of forty and as occa- sion required I have used the Pills off and on since girlhood. I have proved their value in the ailments that afflct my sex, and I have never known them to fail. I also gave them to my son for nerve trouble which we thought would result in St. Vitus dance, but the use of the Pills prevented this and made him well and strong. I do not •know any better investment than to keep half a dozen boxes of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills in the house, as they will save more expensive doctor's bills." You can get Dr. Williams' Pink Pills through any medicine dealer or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Wil- liams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. m MOTHER DOCTORS. Why Red Flannel Is Not Now Worn for Sore Throats. The modern young mother knows that most of the old-fashioned home remedies worked off on her when She herself was a 'hilt' are practi- cally useless. The poultice is a very striking ex- ample. For any pain our mothers used simply to apply poultices, whose only merit was that they gave the sufferer another pain to think about. The modern mother simply keeps iodine handy, and paints it on. Gatherings .and boils, too, used always to get poulticed, Nowadays the knowing young mother gets some boraolc lint from the chemist, puts apiece in a Olean cloth, pours boiling water on it, and then, after wringing it out as dry as possible, ties it on, putting a bandage of flan- nel on tap to keep the warmth in. Goose grease is another home remedy that our mothers used to swear by, but which is rapidly dis- appearing. Many a man still young remembers his mother energetically rubbing this peculiarly nasty stuff into his chest. But if he were a child again, and had a weak chest, the chances are that it would be the much more efficacious camphor- ated oil with which he would be rubbed. Not. many years ago anyone af- flicted with neuralgia used to be provided by a sympathetic mother or wife with small bags of hot salt, CLO LMJY LogT CRALY IT ELE1A A Remarkable and Convincing State- ment of the Success of Cuticura Soap and Ointment in the Treat- ment of the Pain, Itching and Burning of Eczema "I, the undersigned, cannot give enough praise to the Outioura Remedies. I had been doctoring for at least a year for eczema on my foot. I had tried doctor after doctor all to no avail. When a young girl I sprained my ankle three different times, paying little or no attention to it, when five years ago a small spot showed 'upon my left ankle. 1 woes worried and sent for a doctor. He said it was eczema. 110 drew a small bone from the ankle about the size of a match and about an inch long. The small holo grew to about the 0140 of an apple, and ,the eczema spread to the knee. The doctors never could heal the hole in the ankle. The whole foot ran water all the time. "My husband and my sons were up night and day wheeling me from One room to an- other In the hope of giving me some relief. 1 would sit for hours at time In front of the fireplace hoping for daybreak. The pain was so Intense I was almost crazy, in fact, I would lose my reason for hours at a time, one hay a friend of mine dropped in to see mo. No more had she glanced at my foot than she exclalmed,'Mrs, Finnegan. Why In the world don't you try the Cuti- cula Remedies!' Being disgusted with the doctors andtheir medicines, and not being able to sleep at all, I deotded to give the Outieura Soap and Outloura Ointment a trial, After using them three days that night I slept as sound as a silver dollar for eight long h urn. I awoke in the morningR With but very Ilttle pain, 111 feet, I thought I was In heaven, Aftet using the Odtieura Remedies for three months I was meetly restored to health, tlhappke to the Outicura Soap andOlntment. I will be 01107 fo0R Years of age my next birthday, dale ettot hearty at present'," (Signed) Mrs, Jape, Finn°. gen, 2284 Hebert 8t„ St JAMS, Mo., Mar. 7;1,1 l cutiicure Soap and .Olntmett ate�° I 0. 00118., 47 OniBmbse Avege. HtootPn tOgr•A4 fiat FM sample of 85511 With 824 Decile; to be held against the cheek. But nowadays no one who has .ever heard of aspirin would think of us- ing bags of stint main. Aspirin tab - lots can be obtained at any ohem- ist'a, and in nine oases out of ten work like a 'harm. One of the most deep-seated of home superstitions used to be that a sore throat must be wrapped round with a stocking or a pieee of red flannel. Why the ilahnel should be red, or why any wrapping was wanted at all for an internal trou- ble, nobody knew, Nowadays the mother with a little medical know- ledge never wraps anything round a throat at all, and instead of mak- ing the child sip hat honey and vine- gar or blaek-ourrant jelly, gets it some formalinbl to els to suck, which not only soothe, but cure, Burns are always occurring where children are about. The small boy who burnt his hand fif- teen or twenty years ago used to have a very bad time of it, as the flour or oil his mother used to ap- ply smarted nearly as badly as the burn itself. Flour and oil are quite good in their way, but their only merit was that they kept the air out and gave the burn a chance to heal nicely. But the modern mother dips clean rags in a pint of hot water in which a teaspoonful of bicarbonate of soda has been put, and wraps them round the smarting palm' or finger. This treatment not only compels the burn to heal properly—bicarbonate of soda being an antiseptic—but also eases the pain. M. RAYMOND POINCARE, Premier of France. WELL PEOPLE T00. Wise Doctor Gives Post= to Con- valescents. • A wise doctor tries to give nature its best chance by saving the little strength of the already exhausted patient, and building up wasted energy with simple but powerful nourishment. "Five years ago," writes a doe - •tor, "I commeneed to use Po•stum in my own family instead of coffee." (It's a well-known fact that tea is just as injurious as coffee because it contains caffeine, the same drug found in coffee.) "I was so well pleased with the respite that I had two grocers plane it in stock, guar- anteeing its sale. "I then commenced to recommend it to my patients in place of coffee, as a,nutritious beverage. The con- sequence is every store in town is now selling it, as it has become a household necessity in many homes. t'I'm sure I prescribe Postern as often asany one remedy in the Materia Medica—in almost every case of indigestion and nervousness I trent, and with the best results. "When I onoe introduce it into a family, it is quite sure to remain. I shall continue to use it and pres- cribe it in families where I prac- tice. "In In convalescence -from pneu- monia, typhoid fever and other cases I give it as a liquid, easily absorbed diet, You may use my letter as a referenee any way you see fit." Name given by Canadian Postern Co., Windsot, Ont, Read "The Road to Wollville" in pkgs. "There's a reason." Ever read the above letter? A new ono appears from time to time. They are genuine, true, and full of human Interest. 04 CEDARS OF LEBANON. Very carefully enclosed and guarded are the 200 remaining ce- dars of Lebanon, those famous trees that once clothed all the sides of the Syrian mountains. So tall and beautiful were they in compare-; son with the trees of Palestine that the Hebrew writers celebrate them with extraordinary praise, and from the earliest times their soft, White, wood was the glory of Jewish architecture. They were used in Solomon's Temple and in its sun- cessor, and also in the church that Clonstantine built at Jerusalem, The surviving trees are called by the Arabs "the trees of God," and under their wide spreed]ng 'mamb- os the clergy of the Greek Church occasionally celebrate Masa. Sev. eral of the trees in the grove are Over 1,500 years old, and have a height of 100 feet and a elrcumfer- e11e0 of 50 feet. Within .the tiondbn Metropolitan Pato *ma there are close upon 12,000 miles of streets. The flies that are now in your kitchen and dining -room were proba- bly feasting on some indescribable nastiness loss than an hour ago, and as a single fly often carries many thousands of disease germs attached to its hairy body, it is the duty of every housekeeper to assist in exter- minating this worst enemy of the human race, WILSON'S FLY PADS kill files in such immense quantities as cannot be approached by any other fly killer. • OIL FOR FUTURE WAR SHIPS. Commission to Investigate Value as Against that of Coal. Much inkexest has been excited in British maritime and engineering circles by the announced determi- nation of the Government to ap- point a royal commission to inves- tigate the problems associated with the future means of propelling war ships, with special reference to the use of oil. The chairman of the commission will be Admiral of the Fleet Lord Fisher, formerly first sea, lord of the admiralty. It is believed that the appoint- ment of the commission is a tacit recognition that the future propel- lant of war ships will be oil instead of coal, and the prophesied death knell of the steam engine is causing some uneasiness. In the days of sail propulsion the British navy was supreme, for the Britons were excellent sailors, and when steam supplanted canvas Bri- tain remained in the premier place because the British engineers not only mastered the new power, but the enormous coal reserves of the United Kingdom gave the nation a great advantage. With the advent of oil England loses several of these advantages. A new age is at hand when the British nation will .not have an ad- vantage over the other powers. With the exception of a small amount of shale• oil in Scotland the British Isles are without any ap- parent supplies of the precious fluid. In a measure the coming of oil has been prepared for better than the coming of steam, for already at various naval ports enormous oil tanks have been erected and two immense oil ships for service with the fleet are now being built. Growth of the internal combus- tion engine promises to be so rapid that the existing sources of supply for the British navy will soon prove inadequate. - g SIX FOOLS AND ANOTHER. Shabby Old Man Showed That He Had the Coin. At Dussaux's restaurant, in the Grand Morskoi at St. Petersburg, six officers of the Imperial Horse Guards sat drinking champagne. Not far from them sat an insignifi- cant little manwith a shabby coat and an unkempt beard, and a glass of liquor in front of him. It was not long before Ise became award that he was being ridiculed by the officers aforesaid. By and by, as they beoamo more and more offen- sive in their remarks on his person- al appearance, etc,, he called for the waiter and said "Bring me six bottles£ o your bask champagne.l/ The waiter hesitated. "Did you not hear what I said ?" asked the little man. The waiter brought the wine and six glasses. "Take these glass- es away and fetch a basin—one as large as you can find." The waiter again hesitated, but obeyed instant- ly at the peremptory repetition of the order. "A piece of seep," was the next order. It was broughe. ".A towel," The .waiter handed him one. "Now open the bottles." The waiter did so. The little man now filled the basin with the contents of the six bottles, rolled up his sleeves, washed himself in the cost- ly finial, wiped his hands, laid a hundred -rouble note on the table, and casting a look of withering oon tempt on the officers, strutted out of the room. LIGHTNING IN THE TROPICS. Storms in Central Africa --In Mada- gasoar 800 Deaths a Year. Thunderstorms never occur in the Arctic regions, Nearer the equator the more severe are the electric manifestations. In certain parts of Central Afri- ca the average run of thunderstorms is 250 days a year, yet there are some very curious exceptions. In Sumatra and Java, both very hot climates, there are only ninety-two storms yearly, and in Borneo only about fifty, The gold coast of Afri- ca has only about sixty a year, 'which is less than occur in Florida, though tho latter country is outside the tropics. In Java there is a thunderstorm every day for five months, Perhaps the most astonishing fact in regard to thunderstorms is that the island of Mauritius, which is only 550 miles east of Madagascar, has on an av- erage only one thunderstorm in eighty years" Yet in Madagascar the lightning is more destructive than anywhere else in the world, the annual num- ber of deaths being more than 300. a; INSECT STINGS AND SUMMER SORES. Insect bites and stings, blistered feet and sunburn! These three things, or any one of them, may spoil some days of your vacation, or make your work a bore! Zam- Buk is the remedy you need! It takes the "burn" out of these red, inflamed patches where the sun has got home on you; it eases bad mos- quito bites, and it soothes and heals blistered feet and hands. In the hot weather young babies suffer greatly from heat spots and chafed places. Here, again, Zam- Buk will give almost instant ease 1 For cuts, burns, and more serious skin diseases, such as eczema, blood -poisoning, etc., and for piles, Zara -Bak is absolutely without an equal. All druggists and stores 500 box ox Zam-Buk Co., Toronto. e• Mr. Goodwin—"According to this paper a man leas lived on beer alone." His wife—"Well, that's as it should be. Any man who lives on beer ought to be compelled to live alone." A safe and sure medicine for a child troubled with worms is Mo- ther Graves' Worm Exterminator. Martha—"John, why are you shaking the boy like that?" John "Well, he has just taken his me- dicine and I forgot to shake the bottle, so I'm giving it a good mix- ing now 1" Minard's Liniment Cures Distemper. "Did you make a success of keep- ing chickens?" "To a certain ex- tent. Where I failed was in trying to sell them or persuade them to lay eggs." If attacked with cholera or sum- mer complaint of any kind send at once for a bottle of Dr• Kellogg's Dysentery Cordial and use it ac- cording to directions. It acts with wonderful rapidity in subduing that dreadful disease that weakens the strongest man and that destroys the young and delicate. Those who have used this cholera medicine say it acts promptly, and never fails to effect a thorough sure. As many as 442 rocks and shoals were disoovered least year on the high seas. Minard's Liniment Cures Corset In Cows. On the Western Railway of France, which is owned by the State, there is a deficiency exceed- ing $15,000,000 for the past fiscal year. Relief for the Depressed.—Phy- sical and mental depression usually have their origin in a disordered state of the stomach and liver, as when these organs are deranged in their action the whole system is affected. Try Parmelee's Vegetable Pills. They revive the digestive processes, act beneficially on the nerves and restore the spirits as no other pills will. They are oheap, simple and sure, and the effects are lasting. . MUSIC AS MEDICINE. A medical journal has recently announced the results of sono ex- periments made to ascertain the re - lotions of music and medicene. One curious piece of news obtained is, that, if a lively air is played on a harp or mandolin, a man's tired musclea regain their original vigor. The music of a violoncello, on the ether hand, has a precisely opposite effect, in temporarily loosening the unusual strength and vitality of the hearer. In nervoua and impres- sionable people, sad music in a mi- nor key, such as Chopin's "Funer- al March," actually weakens the pulse and makes the beating of the heart feebler and more irregular. An American doctor caused some amusement a little time ago by sug. gesting that almost every mental trouble could ba cured by suitable selections of elassical music regu- larly administered, Jealousy, grief, overwork, lsomieldal 'mania, ner- vous breakdown, all had their col, responding air,, . The medical world is taking the idea seriously, 'TO submit to a headache Is to waste energy, limo and comfort. To atop it at onoe simply take NA- °i RU -C® headache Wafers Your Druggist will confirm our statement that they do not contain enythtng that CAP barn heart or nervous system, 25o, a box. NATIONAL bona AHO CHOMIGAL Co. of CANADA, UMITE°, 124 Tho Heart *fa Piano la the Action. Insistenthe "OTTO A O HIGELor Piano Action ELECTRICITY ON THE FARM. Hydro -Electric Will Demonstrate at the C.N.E. Just how electricity can be util- ized on the farm will be fully shown at the Canadian National Exhibi- tion. The Hydro -Electric Commis- sion have taken a large space in the Proeass building, where all kinds of farm machinery will be run by the white juice from Niagara.. It will be a demonstration no up-to- date farmer can afford to • miss. SKITTISH RELATIVES. A team of horses belonging to Dr. Karl Elrich of New Minden ran away on East Main street Satur- day morning. The doctor had driv- en in to meet some relatives who were frightened near the public square by the single -trees hitting their hind legs. Costiveness and Its Oure.—When the excretory organs refuse to per- form erform their functions properly the intestines become clogged. This is known as costiveness and if neglect- ed gives rise to dangerous eompli Dations. Parmelee'sVegetable Pills will effect a ,speedy cure. At the first intimation of this ailment the sufferer should procure a packet of the pills and put himself under a course of treatment. The good ef- fects of the pills will be almost im- mediately evident. THE OTHER SIDT. He—"If a man marries a prudent girl two can live as cheaply as one." She—"Pshaw 1 A prudent girl wouldn't think of marrying a man with as little as that." This is to certify that I have used MINARD'S Liniment in my family for years, and consider it the beat liniment on the market. I have found it excellent for horse flesh. (Signed) W. S. PINED. "Woodlands," Middleton, N. S. NONE TOO SOON. "Alfred, dear, I didn't think a trip across the lake would be like this! 0, I'm so sick! Let me lean on you." "0, no, no, darling! Don't do that. Lean over the rail." It Makes New Friends Every Day.—Not a day goes by that Dr. Themes' Eclectric Oil does not widen the circle of its friends. Or- ders for it come from the most un- likely places in the west and far north, for its fame has travelled far. It deserves this attention, for no oil has done so much for human- ity, Its moderate cost makes it easy to get. Some persona give cheerfully ac- cording to their means. Other per- sons give grudgingly according to their meanness. Let us not be of the latter sort. Minard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria. About 8,000 new species of in- sects are named annually. "Why are you so bitter against Uncle Nebuchadnezzar 1",; "Ho lost his money shortly after we named the baby after him." Warts on the hands is a disfigure- ment that troubles many ladies. Holloway's Corn Cure will remove the blemishes without pain. First instituted in Switzerland, savings banks were started in 1787. Minard's Llhlment Cures Colds, Eta FATHER TO THE RESCUE. A little lad was desperately ill, but refused to take the medicine the doctor prescribed, His mother finally gave up. "Oh, my boy will die, my boy will die," she sobbed. Presently a voice piped up from the bed. "Don't cry, mother. Father'll be home soon and he'll make me take it." C.i - PA p55 0,55o RDEIDER IIEELS Tread softly M;„;°;y Step safely. " —ts CAA PAW DUBBER SOLES Emb6dy the patented features of Cat's Paw Heels. 0518 FARMS FON sate. H. W. DAWSON, NinotY Colborne It.. Toronto. ®and AlbVER FIFTY GOOD IMPROvZD Farinerta a at to righManitprictobesa, Saolratooneasybewater,ne,Il Darn FARMS IN THE BEST P320115 district of Ontario. All sizes at tie prices. B TF TOU WANT TO ART OR SELL A 1 Stock, grain of dairy farm consult me. N. W, DAWSON, Toronto. H. W. DAWSON, Toronto. MALE HELP WANTEA. RAILWAYS REWIRE YOUNG MNN for positions in stations. These Molt are placed In positions all fast dB we earl prepare them. Railway officials endorey our Sobool. Now ie the time to make are rangemonte for Fall studies. Free Boo No. 10 explains.- Dominion Sobool Railroad. Toronto, MISCELLANEOUS. A 'tfi'TAY AND FARM SCALES. Wtliiorlre Al Seale Works,.9 Esplanade, Toronto. (y ANDER TUMORS, LUMPS, etc. Iyr 4J teraal and external, Cured withop pain by our home treatment. Write 5 before too late. Dr, Gellman /Radical Co. Limited, Collingwood. Ont. TON 80A5.E GUARANTEED. W11son4 lY - Seale Works, 9 Esplanade, Toronto. TENTRILOQUXSM 'J -LEARN TO THRO your voice; complete instruotions, 26o. ventriloquism box 401, Wingham, Ont. S ALARIED POSITION AWAITS COM 01,000 in potent going who can F business. Manager, 601 Kent Building, To- ronto. aronto. r Overcoats and faded Suits would look bettor dyed. 11 no agent of ours in your town write direct to Montreal, Box VIII Gold Medalist. British American Dyeing Co. $a e� 411:31-1 la 31: ° sal oenlos0T19 ENJsta.3af1.® -tvs11,3.an.ai Proteot — Proaorve —Beautify Bamples and Booklets on Application JAMES LANGMUIR & CO., Limited 1874+ Bathurst Street TORONTO THE ARLINGTON 00, of Oanada, Ltd. oe rssxen nvanue TONONTa cLLENGE coLL AR2 5. Ackeei•I.hato the(iauter,a. tion of proof de. Ak to ace, end bn no Otho} direct All %r 25.. ,inti -Dust disinfectant sweeping powder, is a life -pre- server because it kills all disease germs. Floors clean; car- pets bright; home fresh and sweet. No dust while sweeping. Ask your Dealer for it. IaoLaren Imperial Cheese Co. Limited Sole distributors for Ontario THE SAPHO MFG. CO., Limited Montreal TWO CRUISES -ON TEPI- S.S. CLEVELAND (1e.h00 Tons} From New York Oat. 10, 1012 From San Franslaao Fob, 0, 1013 Will Hit Wain, avid, Italy, ret. Imks, Cl,,.oStr.11. S.ttLmeot., r.Fon, Philippines, Chloe, Innen, Setif wide ldnd., with Ctrerlend American Tenn INLAND EXCURSIONS AND SIDE TRIPS OPTIONAL 117 Days in India TOURS 1 14D sin Japan Days A Duration 110 Days Each d.t't A ud(i,oh,4u nil nue. `AYID�jI p f<WurY en nee. ab rd s.hor.. "Ark anyone tnho ha mad. the c.af,.. Wale for ,?lookl,L HAMBURG - AMERICAN LINE 61-45 BROADWAY, N.Y. or Ocean Steamship Agenoy, 61 Yongo St.. Toronto, Canada. To -day --Right now- before you forget, asst your grocer for 'KING OSCAR' SPDINES those delicious little Norway fish that are packed with such scrupulous care in the purest and most wholesome Olive Oil. Cut Thom From Veer Rr000r r•— Trade eupplled by John W. blade a Oreening, Nnmllten