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The Brussels Post, 1912-7-18, Page 344,11 ee+e'wrlleels q►'InAVa1t Young Folks Onwoemwmesoose•+n► HIS RICHES. Johnny Smith lived in the coun- try, but he ofen longed to live in the city, wherethere are ao many things to see and do. One summer some boys came to the country to board at Johnny Smith's house, and he saw how glad they were to leave the city. Ho began to wonder about it. "I should think you would be glad to be so near the woods and the whole outdoors!" said one of the boys. "Yes, I suppose it is nice," said Johnny Smith, slowly. "You suppose 1" said another. "Why, if I could live in the coun- try, I'd be so glad I should not know what to do ! See all the things you have 1" "Why, I haven't much of any- thing," said Johnny Smith, "I think it is you who have the things." "Oh, but we haven't half such nice things as you have," said the first. Johnny Smith stared. "Why, what do you mean?" he asked, when he could find words. "Just what I said," the boy re- plied. "We haven't any chickens. We can't have cows in the city. We have no big garden, where you can pick your corn fresh f.r m the stalks every day." "And," broke in another, "think what a lucky fellow you are to have such a lot of space to play ball in, and you don't have to keep off the grass!" "Why,'" said Johnny Smith, "I never thought about that. I've al- ways had such things." "And we have never had them," said the first boy. Johnny Smith had never known before that the things he thought so tiresome were really worth speaking about. "Well," said he, • after a few minutes, "I shouldn't wonder if they were pretty nice; and," he said, with pride, "I've got something else!" "What?" asked all the boys. "Come on, and Pll show you. 1t is a mile away, in the north mea- dow.," Proudly he led the way. If the boys thought the things they had seen were worth more than their own, they would open their eyes wider than ever at what he had to ▪ show them in that north meadow. "Is that north meadow yours, tool" asked one. "Yes." said Johnny Smith, with soy "Think of owning so much land • that one of your meadows is a mile away!" said the boy. On they went till they came to the meadow, and Johnny Smith took them to a row of willows. There ho showed them a beautiful brook, running along and making a pretty, babbling song. Then how the boys' eyes did wid- en! id- en! Think of owning not only a meadow, but a brook ! Then Johnny Smith began to show them the wonders of the brook. There were things in it that he once thought most common. Now they were riches indeed! There were thing, in there that the city boys had never seen in their lives 1 Be- ginning at the top of the water, there were the water -striders thatran along the surface of the brook without falling into it. Then there were little pinfish in the shallow parts near the edge. There were the"shiners," as Johnny Smith called the minnows that swam gaily about in the stream. There were the water -snails carrying their • shell houses round with them. The boys saw caddis -worms in v queer, tiny pebble cases. They ex- amined pully -wogs and frogs, and found a lizard among the weeds. There were crabs under stones. There was a small catfish behind another stone. There was a whirl - gig beetle. bobbing about. There were water -boatmen upon the mild floor of the broods, and all at once even ashy trout darted out from a dark holo. What a place it was! The boys hardly could leave when the dinner -hoar came. Never, after that summer,. was Johnny Smith known .to wish for things he did not have. Ho bagan • to think of the things he owned. They were no longer poor, common things. He loved them more and; more eachday Youth's Compan- ion. om anion. ITAS . SAVED 101 LIVES, Charles Williams, a lighterman, of Limehouse, London, a young married man, thirty-four years of age, has just eemmeneed-his second century in life-saving. A resident In the east -end all his life, his work has been on the river or in the docks. Since 1800, the year• when he tongued a lad from the Regent's .;Canal he ` has sated 101 lives, all from drowning, fWilliarna holds the certifi tato and decorations of the Royal Humane Society, and hashad the dfr tin;otion- c f._havang his. name mentioned in connection with life. having In every poise -court in East. WEAK, TIRED PEOPLE Aro Usually the Victims of Pale, watery Blood. Anaemia is the medical term for poor or watery blood. It may arise from a variety of causes, such as lack of exercise, hard study, impro- perly ventilated rooms or work- shops, imperfect assimilation of food, etc. The chief symptoms aro extreme pallor of the face, lips and gums; rapid breathing and palpita- tion of the heart after slight exer- tion ; headaches, dizziness, some- times fainting spells and a tendency to hysterics, swelling of the feet and limbs, a feeling of constant tiredness and a distaste for food. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are a cer- tain cure for anaemia, because they make new, rich blood, which stimu- lates and strengthens every organ and every part of the body. The following is one among thousands of oases of this serious trouble cured by the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Miss Georgina Raymond, Sb. Jerome, Que., says: "About a year ago my health began to give out. I suffered from headaches, heart palpitation, dizziness, and appeared to be threatened with a general breakdown. I was at this time employed in the family of a doctor, who, seeing my condition, gave me medicine. I took this faithfully for some time, but with no benefit, and I grew much dis- couraged. Then a friend advised me to try Dr, Williams' Pink Pills, saying that she had found a cure through them in similar conditions. I took her advice, got a supply of the pills and took them regularly for some time. Gradually I be- came strong, and in the course of a month or so I was again enjoying the best of health, and have not since had the ]east return of the old symptoms. I can heartily re- commend Dr. Williams' Pink Pills to all weak girls." Sold by all medicine dealers at 50,cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 or sent by mail, post paid, by The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co. '9- — WRY HE WAITED. An elderly gentleman, clad in an immaculate suit of black, was seat- ed on a bench in the park enjoying the lovely spring day. A small boy lay on the grass not far away and stared intently at the man. For a while the man said nothing: "Why don't you go and play with the other children?" he asked at last. "1 don't want to," the boy replied. "But it isn't natural for a boy of your age to be quiet. Why don't you want to ?" "I'm just waiting," answered the boy. "I want to see you get up. A fellow painted that bench about fifteen minutes ago." OBEYED ORDERS. A doctor, amazed to find a pati- ent in a cold bath, began to scold him. "What's this?" ho said. "Did I order you to take a bath?" "In- deed I You told me to take these pills in water." The man who sings his own praise seldom gets an encore. Upwards of 625,000 miles of rail- ways are in use in the entire world. Servant—Please, sir, man at the door with a Owens—Tell him we are plied. there's a bill. Mr. well sup - "Does your wife ever admit that she is wrong in an argument?" "No, the nearest she ever comes ,to it is to say that I'm not as big a chump as I look." Terrible Itching Got little Sleep Mr. T. William% Winnipeg. Until Cuticura Remedies Cured Him Those who have suffered long and hope - sass from torturin 'skin crit tions will read hope- lessly this letter from lir. T. Williams. 1i8 Pacific Ave,,. Winnipeg (dated Jan. 14, 7911)1 "The Cuticura Remedies certainly did work finely, and I am thankful that there 19 nosh a remedy, and that I tried It. About three months ago a terrible' itching com- Jounced on my body. 'I could not understand , 1t. It gradually grew worse and covered a large portion of my body. There was alto. a alight eruption of the skin, sort of a rash. 1 Buffered greatly with the halos and at eight time I had little sleep. I tried oneor two remediti which did no good, and then 1 tried Cuttcurn Beep Ointment and Re- solvent. In about .tea days I was completely eared.1e For more then a generation the Concur& ltenledies,have afforded the immodest and most elaitomlcal'drebtment for itching, bUrn- lig, scaly and bleeding skin and ecell) hu- mon, of,young and old, Bold by druggists and deale o evergwkete. rot a Ub at Bamplo .el Cul inure. Soap .and. OtntMent, .ertth: 32-p. book en the rate of.theektn and treatment of he affectlone, bend a penial to the Potter , Dnig At Gbem, Corp., dole proiam., al colum- no ton U d 'a1 A HYMENEAL EXPERT. Sir Samuel T. Evans Se one of the greatest experts in Great Britain on matrimonial problems. As Presi- dent of the Divorce Court he passes his days listening to tales of woe, and no judge is harder worked. But ho is never depressed, and refuses to answer the question as to matri- mony being a failure in the affir- mative. This keen -witted judge started his legal career as a solicitor. Realiz- ing that the Bar offered more scope, he changed over, and was so suc- cessful that he took silk in the re- markably short space of nine years. He was the last Q. C. to be ap- pointed. For over twenty years he represented Glamorganehire in Parliament, and was Solicitor -Gen- eral from 1908-10, when he took his place on the Bench. By his hat shall you know Sir Samuel Evans. No matter how Sir Samuel T. Evans. fashions may change in toppers he clings to a weird type of headgear which is fiat in the brim and tall in the crown, something like those hats you see on women dressed in. Welsh costume. Sir Samuel has several good stor- ies to tell relating to his profession. One which concerns a man who stole a pair of trousers is decidedly naive. This man received a favorable ver- dict, but when the case was over he showed no signs of leaving the court. At last his lawyer asked him why he didn't go. The innocent (1) man whispered in reply : "T 'ie fact is, sir, I did not like to move till the witnesses had left the court. Yon see I've got on the trousers wot I stole." I. GOOD NIGHT'S SLEEP. No Medicine so Beneficial to Brain and Nerves. Lying awake nights makes it hard to keep awake and do things in day time. To take "tonics and stimu- lants" under such circumstances is like setting the house on fire to see if you can put it out. The right kind of food promotes refreshing sleep at night and a wide awake individual during the day. A lady changed from her old way of eating, to Grape -Nuts, and says : "For about three years I had been a great sufferer from indiges- tion. After trying several kinds of medicinethe doctor would ask me to drop tiff potatoes, then meat, and so on, but in a few days that crav- ing, gnawing would startup, and I would vomit everything I ate and drank. "When I started on Grape -Nuts, vomiting stopped, and the bloated feeling which was so distressing dis, appeared entirely. "My mother was very much both- ered with diarrhoea before com- mencing the Grape -Nuts, because her stomach was so weak she could not digest her food. Since using Grape -Nuts food she is well, and says she don't think sho could do without it. "It'is a great brain restorer and nerve builder, for I can sleep as sound and undisturbed after a sup- per of Grape -Nuts as in the old days when I could not realize what they meant by a "bad stomach." There is no medicine so beneficial to nervus and brain as a good night's sleep, such as you can en- joy after eating Grape -Nuts." Name given by Canadian Postum Co., Windsor, Ont. t Look in pkgs. for the famous lit- tle book, '`The Road to Wellville." Ever road the above linear? A now one appears from time to time. They ere t au hunted' gonnlnii, true, and tutsnlrrYt,, 011i1VESE SIGNBOARDS. Poetic Gents to Attract Business to )t'okln Shoe. W.Simpson in "Meeting of the Sun,, writes , I saw in Pekin a list of signboards and a ren sam- plea of them will illustrate their general character. 'Shop of B?oa- e n -Bent Luck,"The e u The Shop of Celes- tial Principles,' 'Vie Nine Fetid. ties Prolonged,' 'Mutton Shop of Mornieg Twilight' 'The Ten Vir- tues an Complete,' '.Flower$ Rise to the. Milky Way.' "In these signs. .we'loan sea that the Chinese oat combine the s,it,l of a' poet with the pocket 'el a alio'p- filall, ; Oofttrast "iatieh'`; effof't,g *ith A SannityrP oteetOit against such pleas Cnolcra Morbus, Diarrhoea Cholera Intuition and Sweater Complaint - a protector in which you can safely piaee�lmpUclt confidante -is Na=DrmCo Extract of Wild Strawberry Compound Io 058, and soc. bottles, at your Druggist's. National Drug and Chemical Cu. of Canada, Limited. 212 Tei. h'.-. "4 tail The Noted Eelpie House' of the London streets, and one must feel that we are utter barbarians. Car- lyle quotes a Chinese signboard, 'No Cheating Here,' but I could not find anything like it in the list, 'Good and just according to Hea- ven' ought to satisfy the ideal no- tions of the author of 'Sartor Re- sartus." "The Honest Pen Shop of Li" implies that other pen shops are not honest. The "Steel Shop of the Pockmarked Wang" suggests that any peculiarity of a shopman may be used to impress the memory of customers. Snub noses, squint eyes, lame legs or hump back-, might all be used in this way. A charcoalshop calls itself the "Fountain of Beauty," and a place for the sale of coal indulges in the title of "Heavenly Embroidery." An oil and wine establishment in the "Neighborhood of chief Beauty," a description the realiza- tion of which it is hard to conceive anywhere in Pekin. "The Thrice Righteous" one would scarcely ex- pect from an opium shop.—London Globe. NEW GOVERNMENT BUILDING Magnificent Structure for Exhibits at Canadian National. The new government building at the Canadian National Exhibition is being rushed to completion and will be ready for the Year's Fair. 15 will cost $160,000, of which the Do- minion Government pays $100,000, the Ontario Government $25,000 and the City of Toronto the balance. It will be used for Provincial, Do- minion and Educational Exhibits. FORECAST FROM SEA WATER. English Chemist's Method of Fore- telling the Weather. What kind ofsummer are we go- ing to have this year? Orthodox meteorology will not commit itself to long shots of this sort, but there is one quite serious man of science who correctly forecasted the bril- liant summer of last year and the gloomy, wet one of the year before. And he has already expressed his opinion of our chances this year, says the Manchester Guardian. He is Dr. H. Bassett, late of the chemical department of Liverpool University. He has been appointed professor of chemistry of Reading University College, but he is still going to carry on the examination of samples of sea water obtained during the hydrographic cruises of the Lancashire sea fisheries commit- tee's officers and report upon their salinity. So at least one gathers from the 1911 report at the Lanca- shire sea fisheries laboratory at the Liverpool University and the Piol hatchery, It is from these examitvations of sea water that Dr. Bassett gets his weather forecasts, He finds a defi- nite connection between the condi- tions of the sea and the general. weather conditions of the British Isles. Dr. Bassett correctly forecasted the unusually wet summer of 1910 from the late appearance and re- duced salinity of the Gulf Stream drift early in that year, Again in his report of observations of the. condition of the Irish Sea during 1910, published in May, 1911, Dr. Bassett wrote that "the renewed vigor of the Gulf Stream drift also gives us good reason to expect a more genial summer quite different from the dismal ones of 1909 and 1910." Both these shots were bulls eyes, but what of this summer Having discussed the values of the salinities at the three stations af- footed by the Gulf Stream drift in December, 1011, and on February 14, 1912, Dr, Bassett makes the fol - lasting rediction for this year t. "I Fn. 4. ISSUI; have little hesitation in aaying that the summer of 1912 will probably be like neither the brilliant dry one of 1911 nor the gloomy wet ones of 1009 and 1910, but just one of the somewhat variable and uncertain summers which are usually experi- enced in this country." IMPOLITENESS OF CURIOSITY, The goose had been carved, and everybody had .tasted it, It was excellent: The negro minister, who was the guest of honor, could not restrain his enthusiasm. "Dat's as fine a goose as I evah see, Bruddah Williams," he said to his host. "What did you git such a fine goose?" "Well, nowt, pahson," replied the carver of the goose, exhibiting great dignity and reticence, "when you preaches a speshul good sermon, I never axes you whar you got it. I hopes you will show me de same consideration." 1 SUMMER SKIN TROUBLES. Sunburn, blistering, and irrita- tion are the comrnouest form of summer skin troubles, and Zam- Buk ends those very cllickly. It works in two ways. As noon as ap- plied, its antiseptic powers get to work and kill all the poison in a wound, asting or a sore. This gen- erally ends the smarting and the pain. Then Zam-Buk begins the healing process, and fresh healthy tissue is built up. For sore, blis- tered feet, sore hands, heat rashes, baby's heat spots, sore places due to perspiration, etc., you can't equal Zam-Buk. Druggists and stores everywhere sell Zam-Buk, 50c. box, Use Zam-Buk Soap also, 26e. per tablet. All stores, or Zam- Buk Co., Toronto. F Manager—"So you are looking for a job. What can you do?" "No- thing in particular; but work is not so much an object as good wages." Sometimes a woman enjoys hav- ing her husband stay away from church on Sunday so she can throw it up to him all the rest of the week. Pills for Nervous Troubles.—Tlie stomach is the centre of the nervous system, and when the stomach sus- pends healthy action the reault is manifest in disturbances of the nerves. If allowed to persist, ner- vous debility. a dangerous ailment, may ensue. The first consideration is to restore the stomach to proper action, and there is no readier remedy for this than . Parmelee's Vegetable Pills. Thousands can attest the virtue of these pills in euring nervous disorders. New York has an orchestra of one-armed men. Mlnard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria. In England and Wales the aver- age death rate per thousand head of the population is fifteen ; in Ger- many it is just over eighteen, and in Russia thirty-one and a half. Time Has Tested It.—Dr. Thomas' Eclectric Oil has been on the market upwards of thirty years and in that time it has proved a blessing to thousands, It is in high favor throughout Canada and its excel- lence has parried its fame beyond the seas. It has no equal in the whole list of liniments. If it were double the price it would be a cheap liniment. Judge—You are charged with breaking a chair over this man's head. Prisoner—I didn't mean to break the chair, yer Worship, Minord's Liniment Cures dews, Eto. "Oh, mother," sobbed the young wife. "I've discovered that John doesn't trust me." "Why, child, what has ho done?" "Well, you know, I cooked my first dinner for him to -day and he invited a friend to dine with him." The sobs broke out afresh. "And, oh, mother, the man he invited was a doctor 1" No one need fear cholera or any summer complaint if they have a bottle of Dr. J. D. Kellogg's Dysen- tery Cordial ready for use. It cor- rects all .looseness of the bowels promptly and causes a healthy and natural action. This is a medicine adapted for the young and old, rich and poor, and is rapidly becoming the most popular medicine for cholera, dysentery, etc., in the mar- kets WISE SAYINGS... There is no lack of money; what is lacking is the spirit of giving. If I were a man I would only mar- ry a woman who had been taught domestic science.—Duchess of Suth- erland. The sum of money that any human being eon really honestly earn in his lifetime is very small ; and great fortunes, when they are not inheri- ted or given, are in my opinion al- most all dishonestly come by.—Fil- gen Young, Taking evorrthing feta considera- tion I am a tittle inclined to think that the playing of the ganic of wolf duringthe winter months f at.least the playing of the game on many inland Bourses, is more likely to do harm than good fa' ; one's general form, SII: Ti, Milton. •fl ''rlY .,\'.\ \'. H_. _4 c1t\,.c\.: ks\4.ala\atl ,6'et... a1 \,,. ,:,;,somenowssig . Fivecups uf'tl s most (I(llCJOW,° beverage for one cent. LIPTON'STEA GOES FARTHEST FOR THE MONEY' — t i i x COW COMFORT 1s guaranteed to keep Flies o0 your Cattle 02.00 PER GALLON Dilute with 4 gallons of water. Write for a gallon now to THE MACLAREN IMPERIAL CHEESE CO., LTD., W000STOCK. ONTARIO. Sole Mfrs. -The 6apho Y,fanufaoturlag Co., Limited, Montreal. GOT IT EASY. Napper—"Did Smith inherit his money or make it?" Snapper — "Neither. He is a corporation lawyer." A Medical Need Supplied.—When a medicine is found that not only acts upon the stomach, but is so composed that certain ingredients of it pass unaltered through the stomach to find action in the bow- els, then there is available a purga- tive and a cleanser of great effec- tiveness. Parmelee's Vegetable Pills are of this character and are the best of all pills. During the years that they have been in use they have established themselves as no other pill has done. THE SAME SOCK. "I think she will make a fine wife, I have been calling on her for sev- eral months now, and nearly always find her darning one of her father's socks." "That caught me, too, until I found out that it was always the same sock." Minard'a Liniment Co., Limited. Gents, -I cured a valuable hunting dog of mange with MINAR0'S LINIMENT after several veterinaries had treated hire without doing him any permanent good. Yours, &c., WILFRID GAGNE, Prop. of Grand Central Hotel, Drum- mondville, Aug. 3. '04. THE COMMON FRACTION. Her Husband—"The census offici- als state that the average family consists of four and a fraction per- sons. How do you account for the fraction?" His Wife—"Oh, that is the bus - band." When Your Eyes Need Care Try Murine Eye Remedy. No Smarting -Feels Fine -Acts Quickly. Trp it for Red, Weak, Watery Eye. and Granulated Eyelids. Illus- trated Book In each Package, Murine is compounded by our emulate -not a"PatentMed- icine -but used in successful Physicians' ?roo- tless for. manyears. Now dedicated to the Pub - no and sold byyilru gists at 210 and 100 or Bottle. Murine pyo Salve In Asoptio Tubos, 2 0 and 600. marine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago At the last census of the Union of South Africa the figures showed that there were over three million more natives than Europeans. Corns cripple the feet and make walking a torture, yet sure relief in the shape of Holloway's Corn Cure is within reach of all. Persia's national debt amounts to $30,000,000. Mtnard's Lininlont Cures Corset In Cows. Branch establishments of the Roy- al Mint are situated at Sydney, New South Wales; Melbourne, Victoria; Perth, Western Australia, and at C Ottawa, Canada. a Mothers can easily know when their children are troubled with worms, and they lose no time in applying the best of remedies—Mo- ther emedies—M -ther Graves' Worm Exterminator, When a ship is stink, or otherwise perishes, that part of her cargo that floats on the sea it termed flotsam; it 10 jetsam when the ship is in dan- ger of being sunk, and to lighten her the goods aro cast into the sea. - uw PAW RAnEtt Tread Softly ' - Step Safely FARMS FOR SALE. N. W. DAWSON, Ninety Colborne Street, Toronto. - - LIGHT THOUSAND DOLLARS WILL .LJ buy beautiful hundred florin in Northumberland County. including .$took and Implements, There 1s in the otook 4 horses, 10 coven, ate, This is a map, and can be bad on easy terms. Possession at once. /'Y 000 FARMS IN LINCOLN, WELLAND, 1, -If Halton, Peel, York, Durham, North. timberland, Prince Edward oountiee at reasonable prices. LBERTA, SASKATCHEWAN AND 11 Manitoba lands in large or small blocks. Tl RUIT FARMS -ALL SIZES. IN THE A Niagara Fruit. Belt, H. W. DAWSON, Toronto. MALE HELP WANTED. RAILWAY AGENTS, TFIEGRAPHERB and plerko in groat demand through- out Ontario and North West. Six Months will qualify you. Day and Mail Courses. Positions secured, Free Book 18 explains.. Dominion School Telegraphy, Toronto. MISCELLANEOUS. HAY AND PARE SCALES. Wilson's Scale Works,9 Esplanade, Toronto. ANGER TUMORS. LUMPS. etc. In. ternal and external, cured without Pain by our home treatment. Write ne before too late, Dr. Bollman Medioal Co., Limited, Collinewood, Ont. tt TON SCALE GUARANTEED, Wilson's IteBeale Works, 9 Esplanade, Taranto. FARMERB! SEND YOUR NAME AND get valuable information. D. Bell, 93 Argyle Street, Toronto. ARPET DYEING and Cleaning. Ella le t Meolnity with the Et Otish American Dyeing Co" Bend partlenlsra by post and wo aroma* to -satiety. Geld Mod.ollet• Address Box 233, Montreal Tho Heart of Plano is the Action. insist on the -OTTO O HIGELaa Piano Action 31r. er4. -DEC• 'X 0 CREOSOTE MI3.1931. y ®St231,iza.t1 Protect — Preserve —Beautify Samples and Booklets on Application JAMES LANcMUIR & CO., Limited 18741 Bathurst Street TORONTO THE ARLINGTON CO. of Canada, Ltd. ee rnricn AVCHun TORONTO (fHAiLENG A4knor,dedpadta be 0. lin.stc ..- tion of Water. 'roof ollnr. mad.. Ask to. e and A other. Ali ores or direct for 254. King Oscar Sardines Norway's Finest Sardines at their very best len mat 14ta A toothsome dainty for Salad or Sandwich at Picnic, Luncheon , or Garden Party .. . From your Grocer get "King Oscar" Brand Sardines Trade supplied by Sohn W. nlcklo ,b Greening, Bandit ,n, The first census of the population took place in 3490 B.C., when the Israelites were numbered by Moses. Minard's Liniment Cures Distemper. Owned by the United States. and of 28,367 tons, the battleship Texas is the largest warship in the world. STOP TSIS WITH COOP ''8 FLY KNOCKER It pays to cap your Moak free of dice.-ooatonted conn dive more 0005: boroe,Burk batter and 00 Ise read. to loss than Og coots head per day, Dm mews nr 8 pas and sore money. Easy to use-' eoonomlual-etnolonf.._,+0 Quarts (imperial) 5081 Chalons (imporlat) 4420, 9008181 olr0nlarrrea-,folk whatothon ay nbottt tlooper',. Any dealer or WM. COOPER & HEPHERO - - TORONTO MiatentetutaussfwalLwalleenerall TWO C.li.UISES . pp -001 THE -- R HE -R VICTORIA LUISE WSW `Sone) 0 Frost Nov Teti Nov, 12, 11112 Pros Sao ireocitco Fe6.'A7,1913 UWill vigil Madre. Spaia, hair I1t�yrllIiet,, Iadk, Carlon, Strati, S.tlU..ntr, SIM,�', Pldiipoldre, Chile, Japta, Ss.4 k I I1.0&, wall BrelandAecneanTwt, D INLAND SIDE TRIPS �+ OPTIONAL )j11 Peals Talk &: TOURS i 14DenJaJepae /If.y Duration 110 Days Each 0 1:VeF1da 1i`'`a'Y arpaneiee�e ep al,e.rd and adtaw. LR "Akk anent woo fro' teas tlid .... CMA,,, eeaGt. Mai lira ,1HAMRURG . AMERICAN LINE *45 nno.o v&it8 ti. le:, Or'eooan S"teatusbIs Agency, ' o vdngo,at.,T450016,Canine. CATS PAW RIIBBER SOLES E'Hlbodg the patented features of Cars Paw 'Heels. -too rearimsommeramensmrseiresiemeememsimsee