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The Brussels Post, 1912-5-23, Page 7TEETH AND GOOD LOOKS l'AIN BECOMING AN UGLY NATION.. Dental Irregularities Are Changing the :features of the Race, Say Dentists. The theory that the British are becoming an uglier nation was ad- vanced in a paper read by William Rushton at a meeting of the British Dental Association, says Tlio Lon- don Express. Mr, Rushton said he had previ- ously emphasized the fact that den- tal irregtllaritic.s had much in- creased in recent years, and that they were accompanied by changes in the jaws. In fact, we were be- coming an ugly nation, the round - well balanced face giving place to the long, thin one. Adenoid vege- tation and enlarged tonsils had also greatly increased, and this, inter- fering with nasal breathing, caused the mouth to be held open. He had just read that the presi- dent of the ,Society of Miniature Painters bewailed the fact that THE BEAUTIFUL MOUTH was disappearing. That gentleman attributed the, fact to the strenuous condition of modern •life, but he (Mr. Rushton) attributed it to mouth -breathing. "The royal house of Hapsburg," Mr, Ruston's paper stated, "offers many object lessons, its long des- cent, interenarriages, history and portraits offering a unique field for the investigator. Dr. Gallippe says: "The Hapsburgs having fixed by consanguineous unions a stigma of 'degeneracy, and having transmitted it to the families with which they have allied themselves, Have thus created a particular hu- man type by the same process that a particular typo of animal is pro- duced." "HAPSBURG" FACE. "I deny entirely that the type of face, occurring in the Hapsburg family is necessarily a sign of de- generacy; it is a type met with day by day ; it is often associated with large tonsils, adenoids and mouth - breathing in childhood, and is pos- sessed by people probably neither more nor less degenerate than others." Dr. Aguilar, court dentist to the Ring of Spain, said that what had been alluded to as "the abnormal- ity of the Hapsburg family," origi- nated in the thirteenth century. He had some drawings of the medal- lions of the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, and in the portrait of Henry IV. of Castile the prognathic jaw was clearly seen, and in the de- scription givon of the figure of that king they found the clear definition of the "jaw thrown forward." Many possessors of the prognathic jaw had been brilliant intellectual- ly, and others had shown signs of great physical strength and were in no way degenerate. The peculiar formation of the jaw in idiots was clue to the position in which they placed their tongue. They could improve the race, and the royal race, by correcting early any ab- normality. INFANTS' COMFORTS, Dr. E. A. Bogner pointed out that it was difficult to find any man of power, any leader of men, who had not had good teeth, at least up to maturity. Frank Harrison, dealing with the ill effects of faulty breathing and of the perversion of the act of sucking by infante, said that' the prevailing use and abuse of the "comforter" were responsible., not only for de- formities of the face and mouth but also produced an oxygen starvation extremely detrimental to the child. Children who were allowed to in- dulge in excessive sucking became mouth -breathers, and this predated an expression upon the features which could not be mistaken. NEW USE FOR STATE ROBES. Boys) Ladies in Europe Show Thrift in 1Ctilizing Old Gowns. Gift chairs are a fad among cer- tain women of fashion in Europe. Dainty designs aro chosen and carved from rosewood, white wal- nut, or birch, and they are covered with silk brocade, which has a per- . zonal significance to the receiver. Queers Alexandra has had a set of small gilt chairs made for each of her 'grandchildren, and each is up- holstered in silk, velvet, or brocade, which served the 'Queen on state occasions. Almost all ;leo parts of opera cloaks or outside wraps of some.:description. Queen Alexandra, who delights in gifts of the possessions of her husband, Edward VII., has had several footstools covered with fur sleigh robes or small personal fur rugs for various faithful friends of the monarch. The idea of covering chairs with parts of gowns has hang been a favorite keepsake device of .91ee11 Alexandra, and also of her sister, the Dowager Empress of Russia. :doth royal ladies .have, for yeast exchanged chairs and cushions for Ion)lges and kr dressing tables Made from scraps of hall gowns and soon ing oo'veriu'gs, AN INVITATION TO SICKNESS Thin, Watery Blood Loads to a Breakdown in Health. Thin, impure blood is an invita- tion to sickness. The blood is at work day and night to maintain the health and any lack of strength or purity in the blood is a weakness in the defense against disease, Aiiae- t is is the clocbor's name for lack of blood -watery blood: There may be an actual loss in the quantity of the blood, or one or more of its constituents may lie lacking. The surest symptom of anaemia is pal- lor. The trouble is particularly common among young girls between the ages of fourteen and eighteen, but it is also found in women of all ages, and quite frequently at- tacks mon. It is nearly al- ways present and prevents re covery after grippe, fevers, ma• laria, and operations and for this reason a tonic medicine is required in all those cases to enrich the blood, build up the nerves and re- store health and strength. And there is no other tonic as good as Dr, Williams' Pink Pills, as has been proved in thousands and thou- sands of cases, among them that of Miss Annie Turner, Marie Joseph Post Office, N.S., who says: -"Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have been of inestimable benefit to me. I was so badly run down that I could hardly go about, was net able to help in the work about the house. As my health grew worse the trou- ble brought on some species of fit, and when these attacks would come on I would sometinfhs remain un- conscious for half an hour. After many other medicines had failed to help ane, my brother got me a sup- ply of Dr. Williams' Pick Pills and I began taking these. In the course of a few weeks I felt much better, and after taking the Pills for a time longer I was again in the full enjoyment of good health. I feel that I cannot praise Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills too highly and I recommend them to all weak girls." You can get these Pills from any medicine dealer or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. When the Panama Canal is open- ed the sea passage from New York to all American ports north of the Isthmus of Panama will be reduced by 8,413 miles. Relief for Suffering Everywhere. -He whose life is made miserable by the suffering that comes from in- digestion and has not tried Parme- lee's Vegetable Pills does not know how easily this formidable foe can he dealt with. These pills will re- lieve where others fail. They are the result of long and patient stn 'y and aro confidently put for- ward as a sure corrector of disor- ders of the digestive organs; from which so many suffer, The mere fact that you are not having a good time while you are young won't necessarily keep you out of the county infirmary when you get old. Ash for Minard's andat ke no other. SUPERIOR CREATURES. "Women are certainly the mental superiors of us mon." "What makes you say that?" "Seeing my wife spank the baby, read a book and carry on a conver- sation with her mouth full of hair- pins all at the same time." SA M Covered ith Eruption N. Demi Tardit. Tried Many Remedies 3 or 4 Years. Cutloura Soap and Ointment Cured. A Quebec man, N. Henri Tardit, of St. Casimir, writes in a letter dated Mar. 81, 1911: "1 hxd a very bad skin, all covered with eruption, eight years ago, T have had ail of both my shoulders covered with it, and the high part of my arms, and my face, but it was the worst on my aheouieers, I tried many ditterent remedies to cure it, but nothing was any good. At last 1 wont to an apothecary. 130 asked me if I bad ever used °taticura Soap and Ointment, 5 told him no, and I bought a box of Cutloura Ointment and a cake of Cutloura Soap. I used three boxes of Cutloura Ointment, but I am glad of the same, for Cutloura Soap and Ointment completely cured me of my skin eruption I spread tho Codeine Ointment on all my sora parts, and I think that in washing my tee) with tho Cutloura soap, it hindered my eruption from itching and burning. I triad many remedies during three or four years but Outloure Soap and Ointment cured ,nod' (Sifted) N, Henri 'ramie1lh,oure Soap and Ointment aro' fold throughont the World, but to those who have Sufferedmuch, lost hope and aro with- Out faith is any trsatnicn't a liberal Semple Of each with re 52.11. booklet on the skin and 'scalp will be mailed free on application, Address Potter. Drug 6e ehom, Corp., LO C$ A4 4,, Boston, W. S..1. • DREAMS 01 TILE BL1ND. Sight Lost After Seven. They Can Distinguish Objects. Curious data have boen gathered abroad with reference to the dreams of the blind, It appears that all droams of normal persons are sight dreams, and that a dream is spoken of as a vision. 1£ the blind have nob been barn so, it is said they may remember enough of what they have seen to enable them to imagine haw things look, and, when the imagination has free play in sleep, to picture themselves as in full possession of tho sense, of sight. Physiologists •would explain this, remarks a writer in Harper's Week- ly, by saying that during the years in which the subjects possessed the sense of sight a certain part of tlio brain had become educated to re- ceive and 'interpret all these mes- sages which the eye :sends, and that when this part of the brain acts spontaneously in sleep the person dreams of seeing. Of some two Hundred blind per- sons of both sexes who were ques- tioned, it was found that talose who became blind before their fifth year never dreamed of seeing. Of those whose, sight was lost between the fifth and seventh year some did and some did not see in their dreams, while all whose eyesight was lost after the seventh year had quite as vivid dream visions as normally en- dowed persons. The fifth to the seventh year is thus shown to be the critical period. This period corresponds with the age which authorities assign as the limit at which a child becoming deaf will also become dumb, and also with the age of one's earliest con- tinuous memory of oneself. It is interesting to note that blind persons dream quite as frequently as normal people, and that with these who ,do not see in their dreams, hearing plays the principal part. When dreaming of home, for instance, they will hear the voices of relatives, and perhaps will feel the familiar objects in the house- hould. MOTHERS PLEASED WITH BABY'S OWN TABLETS A mother who has once used Baby's Own Tablets for her little one never fails to show her plea- sure at the result. She at once rea- lizes that they are the ideal medi- cine for baby -being absolutely safe and free from injurious drugs and at the same time a sure etre for all the little ills from which babies suffer. Mrs. P. Theriault, Pacquetvillo, N. B., writes :- "Please send mo another box of Baby's Own Tablets. I was ex- tremely pleased with the last. My baby was greatly troubled with con- stipation and vomiting, but the Tablets quickly cured her." Tho Tablets are sold by medicine deal- ers or by mail at -25 cents a box from Thea -Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. DOGS AS CUSTOMS OFFICIALS. Dogs are being employed by the Austrian customs authorities to hunt down smugglers. They are a cross between a greyhound and a wolf, and are trained to detect per- sons endeavoring to cross the fron- tier with contraband by attacking the dogs employed by them. The smugglers' dogs have shown them- selves of great use in carrying packets of contraband and eluding the revenue officers at the .outposts. Now they aro being hunted and killed by the customs dogs, which afterward lead customs officials to the trail. The, smugglers trained their dogs by a course of whipping on ono side of the frontier and feed- ing on the other. Then the dog - usually a comparatively small ani- mal -was fitted with the skin of a larger dog, usually a poodle, and the space, between filled with sac- charin,, tobacco or other contra- band. OURED BY GIN PILLS. Bridgeville, N. S. "For twenty years I have been troubled with Kidney and Bladder Trouble, and have been treated bymany doctors, but found little relief, I had given up all hope of getting cured when I tried Gin Pills. Now, I eau say with a happy heart that I was cured. "DANIEL, F, PBASER." Write us for free sample of Gin Pills to try. Then get the regular oleo bone at your dealers, or direct from us -50c. a box, 6 for $2.50. Motley refunded if Gin Pills fail to sura National Drug Si Chemioal Co. of oanada, Limited, Dept. W.14„ Toronto. A QUESTION. Clerk (to woman who has fingered over everything in the store with- out buying anything) --"Excuse me, madam, but aro yotl shopping hero " Cust1omer - "Certainly. What, would I be doing?" Clerk -"I thought perhaps you might be taking an inventory." Ono Gleam of Hope. -Wife - "Dearest, if you and I were thrown on a desert island what would you dol" Husband -"Thank heaven, I can swim." ]3o sure you understand a subject before you talk about it --then you can out out most of your talk. Keep Mlilard'e Liniment in tale house, BORDERING ON THE MIRACULOUS JOHN UIeELROV'S HEART TROUBLE CURED BY DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS. Could Not Work all Summer, and Doctor Failed to Help, but Cure Was Quick When He Used Dodd's Kidney 1911s. Benton, N.B., May 13 (Special), -Bordering on the miraculous is the cure al John McElroy, a young man well-known here, He was suf- fering from heart trouble and was so bad that all last summer he was not able to do ea day's work. Docld's Kidney Pills cured him. In telling the story of his cure, Mr. McElroy says: "I went to a doctor who said I had palpitation, but his medicine did not seem to reach the spot. I suffered for over a year and all last summer 1 was not able to do a day's work,' My sleep was broken and unrefreshing. I felt heavy and sleepy after meals and I was always tired and nervous, I perspired freely with the least exertion. "After I had finished taking the doctor's medicine, and as I felt no batter, I read in an almanac what Dodd's Kidney Pills could do and made up my mind to try them, Bo - fore I had finished the first box I felt different, and by the time the second was half gone I was working in the woods and doing good work." .v SOLVE SERVANT PROBLEM. Woman's Industrial Council of London Start Investigation. The Woman's Industrial Council of London, England, is just now grappling with a solution of the do- mestic servant problem. To gain reliable information on the subject they have addressed a series of questions to employers of house ser- vants, asking about their . require- ments, what they are willing to pay, what they expect to obtain in the way of service, what working con- ditions they provide, and what their troubles with servants have been, Another series of questions have been addressed to domestics, ask- ing about their experience at ser- vice, as follows: 1 -Did you have any training be- fore you went to your first place? 2 -How long have you been in service? 3 -What are your wages? 4 -How much free time have, you each day (1) out of the house, (2) im the house? 5 -How much free time have you on Sundays (1) out of the house, (2) in the house? 0 -Have you a bed to yourself? 7 -How long holidays have you in the year? 8 -Arc your wages paid during your holidays? 9 -Why did you go into service? 10 -Would you advise any young friend to go into service? If not, why not. Nearly all children are subject to worms, and many are born with them. Spare them suffering by us- ing Mother Graves' Worm Exter- minator, the best remedy of the kind that can be had. If it's the unexpected that always happens, it's a wonder we don't get to expect it. It Rubs Pain Away, -There is no liniment so efficacious in overcom- ing pain as Dr. Thomas' Eclectric Oil. The hand that rubs it in rubs the pain away and an this account there is no preparation that stands so high in public esteem. Thera is no surer pain -killer procurable, as thousands can attest who have used it successfully in treating many ail- ments. CAUGHT. De Broke -"Very sorry, but I can't pay you to -day. My shoe- maker has just been here, and—" Tailor -"Yes, 1 know, Just met him on the stairs. You told him you couldn't give him anything because you expeotod your tailor. Hors's the bill." MENTAL ARITHMETIC. Teacher - "Why, Willie, these problems are all wrong! What is the trouble?" Willie -"I dunno. I worked aw- ful hard before I could even get 'em wrong." J0I) 4 ISSUE 20 2 805112 RUG1 SUPERSTITIONS. Oriental Maidens Weave Their Thoughts Into Carpet. The little cottage Oriental rugs often made by girls who are shortly to bo married, in Turkey, Persia, on the Armenian plateau and in Af- ghanistan, carry with them all the poetry and mysticism of the, Orien- tal girl's naiad, as she is, just bud- ding into womanhood. She weaves into the rugs almost her very ..thoughts -so much is the rug-weavng a part of the Oriental life, and se little is it a purely com- mercial pursuit, Time is not count- ed of value in the East when rugs are made. Consequently, Ameri- cans have found it impossible to compete with the Orientals in the manufacture of these practically everlasting products. In some parts of the -Oriental -rug. countries, it is considered wrong to have the rugs 'seen in the making by Christians, If such an accident occurs, and one from the western world views one of the rugs, the workman offaehs the suspected by weaving a small white spots in the rug, to keep away the "evil eye." ' ,Sometimes, when the rug is not - made for sale, but as -the dowry of some girl at the time of her mar- riage, and when 'something inau- spicious had happened, a little break is left in the border of the rug. by which it is hoped that the devil may escape from the, house- hold. Were the border continuous, the Orientals believe that the devil would run around and around the rug and never leave the house. di MINISTER PRAISES ZAM.BUK. Tolls How It Cured His Wife's Bad Sore. Rev. Henry J. Munton, of Black - folds, Alta., writes: "My wife. had a very Baca sore foot, which it seem- ed impossible to get anything to heal, The sore would heal to a certain point and then fester again, and so on. I procured a box of Zam-Buk, and after persevering with this herbal balm for some time the sore was completely 'healed. "I have since recommended Zaln- Buk to several of my parishioners, and it always gives satisfaction." Another instance in which Zam- Buk proved of unequalled value is told by Mr. N. L. Gerry, of Bran- don, Man. He says: "I had my left foot run over by a waggon load- ed with wheat. The foot was very badly crushed, and my little toe and the next toe were laid open. I applied Zam-Buk, and only had to miss work for two days. Zam-Buk healed the wound so quickly that on the third day I was able to put on my boot and walk to my work. In a very short time my toes were quite healed, and the foot is now as sound as ever, thanks to Zam- Buk." Just as good for chronic sores, ulcers, piles, blood poison, burns, scalds, eruptions, eczema, and all skin injuries and diseases. 50c. box at all druggists and stores, or Zam-Buk Co., Toronto. Try Zam- Buk Soap, too, Ole. per tablet, dr Mrs. Kawler-"So your daughter is in Paris having her voice culti- vated. Does she intend to enter professional life?" Mrs. Blunderby -"Oh, yes, indeed. She is study- ing to be a, belladonna." A Purely Vegetable Pill. -The chief ingredients of Parmelee's Ve- getable Pills aro mandrake and dandelion, sedative and purgative, and have a most healthful effect upon the secretions of the digestive organs. The dyspeptic and all who suffer from liver and kidney ail- ments will find in these pills the most effective medicine in concen- trated form that has yet been offer- ed to the suffering. Nautical -"I hear Jones the sea captain is in hard luck. He mar- ried a girl and she ran away from him." "Yes, he took her for a mate, but she was a skipper." When Year Eyes Need Care Try Marine Parc Remedy. No Smarting—Feels Vine -Acts Quickly. Try it for Reil, Weak, Watery .Eyes and Granulated Eyelids. Illus- trated Book to each Package. Mauriac is unmpounded by our Oculists—not n'Talent Mod - Wino" —but used In 9aocessfnl Physicians' Pram ties for many roots. Now dodleatod to the POb- 1 and sold by Drnygists at ice and 60a nor nettle. Murtha ityo salvo to Aseptic Tahoe, 2fia and No Marino Eye Remedy Co., Chicago Ono interested listener an orator hag in himself. Minard's Liniment Used by Physicians. SIZES. Lady (to shoe dark) "I should like to gat at pair of shoes." Clerk -- "Yes, ma'am. What size ?" Lady -"Size three." Clerk -"Yes, mat'am, Just let me measure your foot." Lady "But I told you the size." Clerk -- "Yes, ma'am; but we have 'throe sizes of size three -size throe for a size. three foot, size thee° for a sine four foot, and size three for a size five foot." Army statistics for last year show that there were only four foreigners In the &itiga Arley, l.\valeeme\..at' eesela\*e+\raexes ^\"AVM' 1 IZetei\ac'n\nv5,b "t4,S\Vt\ di- oto ilk Por Fi.l L i phi shtppiye,r earache. bj !9 d lY� lr•r and Catarrhal Paver. Sure cure and positive preventive, no matter how horses at any ago are infected or "exposed,. Liquid, given= the tongue, acts on the Blood and Glands, creole the poisonous germs tram the body, Curse Distemper in Dogs. and Sheep, and Cholera in Poultry. t.argest gelling live stock remedy. Cares La Grippe among human beings and is a fine kidney remedy sac and ix u bottle; 96 and err a dozen, Cot this opt, Keep. it. Shaw Si to yonr druggist, who will get it for ycu, Free Booklet. "Distemper, Cauaou and Cures." DISTRIBUTORS -ALL WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS SPOHN MEDICAL CO., Chemists end bacteriologists, SOSIITS, IND., UyL a, $1.00 PER HOUR This le what yen can make) !' selling 'Evergrip" Clidint' Casters, Many of our agents are making more Every home. ebureit. hotel, barber shop a customer. 200 per cent. profit. Full sample set and agents terms sent for 10 cents. We want a gond agent in vour town. RYAS MANUFACTURING CO., Suite 111, Mali Bldg., Toronto. CREOSOTE Protect --- Preserve —Beautify Samples and Booklets on Application JAMES LANCMUIR & CO., Limited 1874) Bathurst Street TORONTO r r, Awry, Tha Arta course may be taken by correspondence, but students deals Ing to graduate must attend one session. Short Course for Teachers and gen- eral students July Both to 3ut. For calendars write the Registrar G. Y. CPIOWN Kingston, Ont. EDUCATION, THEOLOGY, MEDICINE. SCIENCE, including ENGINEERING Arts Summer Session July 3 to Aug• 17 ICTNGSTON e e - ONTARIO IMPERATIVE MOOD. Mother -!`Louise, you must not slam down your doll in her crib like that. It is just as easy to Iey her down quietly." Louise -"It ain't when you're mad." Dr. J. D. Kellogg's Dysentery Cordial is a speedy cure for dysen- tery, diarrhoea, cholera, summer complaint, sea sickness and com- plaints incidental to children teeth- ing. It gives immediate relief to those suffering from the effects of indiscretion in eating unripe fruit, cuotunbers, etc. It acts with won- derful rapidity and never fails to conquer the disease. No .one need fear cholera if they have a bottle of this medicine convenient. SHORTENED HIS TOIL. "Do you always keep a -smiling about your daily duties?" "New; I look grouchy all the time. Then I ain't asked to do no extra work." I cured a horse of the Mange with MINARD'8 LINIMENT. CHRISTOPHER SAUNDERS. Dalhousie. I cured a horse, badly torn by a pitch fork, with MINARD'S LINIMENT. St. Peter's, 0. B. EDW. LIN1,IEP. I cured a Marge of n bad swelling by MINARA'S LIINNIMENT. THOS, W. PAYNE. Bathurst, N..13. Better a night worker than a day dreamer. Minard's Liniment Lumberman's Friend. A friend may be a person who wants you to work for him for noth- ing and board yourself. Wily suffer from corns when they can be painlessly rooted out by lasing Holloway's Corn Cure: WHERE HE WILL LAND. "I try to do my duty," said the exceedingly sincere person, "and I do not hesitate to remind others of their duty."' "Go ahead," replied the easy-go- ing citizen. "You may prove to be a very useful member of society. But when you get through you'll have about as many sincere friends and admirers as an alarm clock," CAT'S iW6,��, RUBBED Tama 'HEELS Tread softly Step safely. CATS PAW RUBBER SOLES Embody the patented features of Cat's Paw Heels. 150 FARMS FOR SALE. H. W. DAWSON, Ninety Colborne Street, Toronto. "E-1IGH'r THOUSAND DOLLARS 'WILD Lid buy beanciful hundred acres in Nortltttmherland County, including Stock and Implements. There is in the stook 4 horses, 10 cows, etc. This 11( a soap, and can be had on easy terms. Possession at once. !`I oon FARMS IN LINCOLN, WtrELLAND, Vf Halton, Peel, York, Durham, North- umberland, Prince Edward counties at reasonable prices. ' 4 LBERTA, SASKATCHEWAN AND t3 Manitoba laude in large or small blocks. ani SUIT FARMS -ALL SIZES, IN THE l� Niagara Frnit Belt. H. W. DAWSON, Toronto. NINET):-NINE ACRES IN BRUCE County -Soil, clay loam; frame house, barn and granary. Priori $1,660. W111 exchange for oity, town or village property or for larger farm. Western Reel Estate. London. MALE HELP WANTED. AILWAY AGENTS, TELEGRAPRERS 15. and Clerks in great demand through- out Ontario and North West. Six months will (leerily you. Day and Mail coureee. Positions secured, Free Book 18 explains. Dominion School Telegraphy, Toronto. MISCELLANEOUS. if 'AY and FARM 80ALE8. Wlleon'e EL Scale works. 9 Esplanade. Toronto. CANCER. TUMORS, LUMPS, eta. In. ternal and external, cured without Pain by our home treatment. Write us before too late. Dr. Bellman Medical Co.. Limited. Collingwood. Ont. ,e TON 80ALE GUARANTEED. Wilson's Bogle. Worke, 9 Esplanade, Toronto. TX ELI, SUPPLIED CONTRACTORS - 1C.91 Farmers, Hotels, Factories, Mines. Boats. 139 Front West, Toronto. Tele. phone, Adelaide 855. Men's Suits Fo`.nDANED DYED Best Work in Canada. Gold Medalist BRITISH AMEZICAN DYEING CO. P. 0. BOX. 233. MONTREAL filhen buying your Piano insist on having an TT, !GEL. Piano Actiot\ ti tdiaypoie Soap F DYBINGE Washes and dyes et one operation, giv- ing remarkably clean, bright, fast colora,Dyes cotton, wool, silk or mix- tures. 24 colors, will give any shade. Colors 10c, black 15e at your dealer's orpostp d with b'k- lel "Flow to Dye' io5 Irom p, L, BENEDICT & CO. Montreal Keep Flies Off Your Cattle DY USING CCW -CO __ FORT (Guaranteed) Ueo Cow•Comfort to improve the con. ditlon rind yield of your cows: $2 per gallon. Freight paid, (Dilute with 4 gallons of water, reducing the price t0 40o. Dor gal). Agents wanted everywhere, Write for terms and ptmphlcts. SAPHO MFC. CO., Montreal, TWO CRUISES -0N TES - VICTORIA. LUBE 110,100 Toone From Now York Nov. 12, 1912, Froin San Francisco Fab, 27,1913 1V,11 viiii Mndeitat Spain, hair, Esiffpt, ludic Ceylon, Strode Setllomenb, JeVa, Pell hi iota, China, hose, Sandwick bleed., with 0vedaedd AmeiconTout, iN AND SIDE EXCURSIONS OPTIONAL 1 00 buys in Leda TOURS 1•i Dort Waren Duration 110 Days (racer ��end001 indudiaa0 pII nee« p onuty exd nla,ard ed a2natd. ",4e5 noon., CmaltrYlo hot Mede the ," Wilk lot :booklet HAMBURG - AN1llR1CAN rINt 41.45 BROADWAY. 'N.Y. or Oscan $teanttlllp A5endy, 5 YOngo St„ Toronto, Canada,