NiIONSHIP OF ARMY OUT OF K Jesty ‘ad @€ nus Offered Q CED MEN | TO COLORS _to you?" urs later. eplied the b th‘ ip 1A K iâ€"â€"MIS$ 4 +# k _ of ITD the he it This led to setting up steam chamâ€" bers similar fo those employed . to disinfect carme of â€" cerebrospinal fever. The re:thts have been fully up to expectation so far. There is no reason why disinfecting stations should not be set up for the public where the >enefit by the new method might be obtained at small cost. . | It was observed recently that perâ€" sons working in gas works seemed to possess a degree of immunity from the disease. Although it raged around them they themselves escaped in a large mweasure. At the time it was noted that in a certain room of a munition factory influenza did hot develop, though persons workâ€" ing in other ms got it An anâ€" a!;sis of the :1?: in 8«0 places reâ€" vealed that it contained a concentraâ€" tion of the fumes of sulphurus acid. The germ belongs to the order of filter passors and is grown by the Noguchi rmethod. It is reported that monkeys have been infected and easâ€" ily hve developed attacks producing small hemorrhages. _ The chain of evidence seems strong. 1 in the British Medical Journal, and thus Major Gibson‘s work takes preâ€" cedence over late publications. At that time his work of discovâ€" ery was not complete. It now has been finished, and Major Gibson‘s death has furnished a part of the «vidence that his enthusiasm led him to work so hard that be finally fell a victim to a virulent strain of the germ with which he was experimentâ€" ing. He caught influenza and pneuâ€" mohnis fellowed. | Major Gibson D‘cd While Discoverâ€" ing the Germ of Influenza. Major H. G. Gibson, who died late in February, in Abbeville, France, it is now annqunced, died a martyr to science almost at the hour when with two other workers, Major Bowman of the Canadian Army Medical Corps and Capt. Connor of the Australian Army Medical Corps, he had comâ€" pleted the discovery of what is probâ€" ably the causative germ of the influâ€" enza epidemic. A preliminary note regarding this germ was published on Dec. 14, 1918, Until transport questions are setâ€" tled nothing can be done. Two hunâ€" dred locomotives would bring relief at the present moment than any amount of food, badly as this is wanted. ties manage to get seed here this month there will be virtually no harâ€" vest, as the Germans carried off all seed grains. Four Allied trains so far have arrived, carrying 26,000 tons of flour, which is already distributed in spite of the overwhelming diffiâ€" culties of broken bridges and lack of transport. In the whole of Bessarâ€" abia, for instance, there are only nine engines and, as the tracks there are wider than those in Roumania, it is impossible to send engines from here. The Minister of Industry and Comâ€" merce, M. Constantinesco, says the present supplies will hold out until the end of April, and unless the Alâ€" in the country. _ After consulting various people, including the Allies, who have had the matter under exâ€" amination, it is safe to say there is aufficient food available if there were any means of transporting it from one point to another. The Governâ€" ment, however, is not of this opinion.‘ Seed (Grain Badly Needed. There is a difference of opinion as .flne the quantity of foodstuffs how pled Roumania as the means of transport. There are in the whole kingdom only eightyâ€"four engines in fit condition. _ All the horses and most of the oxen were taken. Teleâ€" graph and telephone wires are mostâ€" l ly down, ard there is no material [y o Ch P CoZ CANCwer EO oenet EP aETeE "ore the side of the Allies. They spent two years systematically transportâ€" ing to Germany everything they fanâ€" ciedâ€"furniture, silverware, elothing, machinery, food and livestock. They sent 2,500,000 tons of cereals in railâ€" way trucks, but they have sent anâ€" other 1,000,000 tons in paper packâ€" ages. Every soldier was allowed five kilos of cereals for home every little while. The year of 1918 was a bad crop year in Wallachia, but the Gerâ€" mans were careful to export at once! all the grain that was harvested. | Everything has been taken, essenâ€" tials of life and labor, with even greater malice than in Belgium, for here the Germans had what they thought was justification in punishing a country which, although economiâ€" cally completely dependent on Gerâ€" many, had dared to take up arms on s . . w% soul Whs> Scientific Methods of Germans in Work of Pillage Leaves Country in State of Utter Destitrtion. With the exception of Serbia, Rouâ€" mania certainly has samWered more than any of the Allies. On‘y the inâ€" comparab\: natural resources of the country made it possible to ward off famine, but devastation and pillage were as complete as German unscrupâ€" ulousness and â€" scientific mc‘.hoda‘ could make them. ’ | LACK OF TRANSPORT AT ROOT or PHFICULTY ROUMANIA RUNED | BY HUN RAVAGES A MARTYR TO SCIENCE unâ€"| _ Insects Have Distinctive Colors. lief| _ Naturalists for a long time were any| at a loss to understand how it was iS‘ that insects were enabled to so quickâ€" ly recognize an intruder among their family or settlement. It has been deâ€" termined that in most cases â€" they recognize each other by smell, Among er.| the bees each distinctive class of | workersâ€"the guard, the fanner, the fpol]en carrier, the waxmaker, the ate| architect, etc.â€"â€"has its own distinctive it| odor. And besides this, each bee has to: its own separate hive odor, which is ith its passport into its own particular | _ The Chineses blouse served as the | inspiration for this charming creation | whose straight pleated skirt is attachâ€" !ed to lining. _ McCall Pattern No. | 8760, Girl‘s Dress. In 5 sizes, 6 to | 14 years. Price, 20 cents. \ _ These patterns may be obtained:‘ from your local McCal} dealer or from | the MeCall Co., 70 Bond St., Toronto,‘ Dept. W. m home CAnaDa Fo0® BOMRD LCEMSE mO. 2â€"O26 3 sizes, 16 to 20 years. Price, 25 cents. A novel feature is the sash arâ€" rangement which is a continuation of the revers which pass under the arms, and tie at the back. McCall Pattern No. 8264, Misses‘ Dress. In ment at low Pliokt of a readyâ€"toâ€" eat cereal‘dish Lasil Y Dlge sted If your usual Sm easi J you wark ISSUE No. 11â€"‘19 The Latest Designs ___| cREATEst or pams * """**~. Accordinily, the earthen embankâ€" ment, which is some seven thousand feet in length, is of a particularly massive character. At its base it is three hundred and fifty feet thick, and contains about one million cuble yards of earth, rubble and stone. _ quences. There is no engincering work that demands such careful Yrelimimry lnve:tifations as damâ€"building, parâ€" ticularly when it comes to the storâ€" age of a large hoiit’gâ€;f water. Fo: dams do burst with terrible conse From this reservoir water is carâ€" .ried to the hundreds of farms by one thousand and six hundred miles of secondary canals and ditches. The engineers‘ real difficulties, however, began when they tackled the eastern section, for it was here where the great dam is situated. It was not a question of merely diverting the watâ€" ers of the river into another channel, but of first curbing the stream and then raising the level of the river over forty feet, and controlling the flow. This was accomplished by the erection of a great composite dam across what is known as Horseshoe Bend on the Bow River. In the western section three hunâ€" dred and seventy thousand acres has been brought under irrigation by diâ€" verting. the waters of the Bow Kiver at a point Hjust Dutside the city of Calgary. ere a canal, seventeen miles in length, sixty feet wide at the bottom and one hundred and twenty feet wide on the water level, carries the precious fluid to a great lake three miles long, half a mile wide, and forty feet deep. It is virâ€" tually a natural depression, but has been strengthened by a large earthen Wonderful Engineering Feat. As a result of their surveys it was shown that the block, as the region was termed, naturally divided itself into three sectionsâ€"the western, eastern, and centralâ€"of about one million acres each, and the work of developing them has been carried out in the order named. They now gave their attention to the rivers. First they made a thorough examination of the Deer River and then the Bow River. They studied their banks, their beds, ascerâ€" tained their volume, and the discharge at a given igoin': in the dry season and during flood. ’ In order to encourage settlement on this land and, incidentally, provide freight for its line, the Canadian Pacific Railway determined to »see what could be done in harnessing the waters so that a regu‘lar and plentiful supply could© be guaranteed to the farmer. . First they carried out an exhaustive survey of the whole reâ€" gion. _ This occupied several yeats,| an irrigation project demanding surâ€" veys and examination far more com-! plete than those for a railway line.| The engincers first traversed the reâ€" gion in all directions, taking meaâ€" surements and noting the rises and fall of the land. They spent several months upon the ground, virtually dwelling in what was then a wilderâ€"| ness so far as any life was concernâ€" . The undertaking owes its inception to the enterprise of the Canadian Pacific Railway, which owns some six million acres of the finest virgin land in the Prairie Provinces of Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba, which it received as a grant for the conâ€" struction of its transcontinental line. Some three million acres of this land is in Southern Alberta, a great open prairie plateau lying between the Bow River on the south and the Red Deer River on the north. Its surface is rolling, and its soil, consisting of heavy black loam and a clay subsoil, is excellent. , e aia s 2 t sn e t e de‘® 'The waters held up by this dam alone irrigate, by means of two thousand eight hundred miles of canals and ditâ€" ches, four hundred and forty thousâ€" and acres of land. To Irrigate 810,000 Acres. _ But included in the general scheme is the irrigating of a further tract of three hundreg and seventy thousand acres by diverting the watâ€" ers of the river to another point, making eight hundred and ten thouâ€" sand acres in all. Shortly, too, these acres will be increased to over one million two hundred and fifty l.hou-I sand acres, providinf homesteads on rich irrigated land for thousands of‘ setlers. M OW B conteiher t sns i Sss But apart from its record in the matter of length it has many notable features. It has been erected in conâ€" nection with a colossal irrigation scheme, the largest individual project bf this character that has been carâ€" ried out on the American continent. While most irrigation projects have for their cbjects the obtaining of a larger yield of cereals or fruit crops, the Canadian enterprise is destinecf < solely torincrease the dairying and live stock output of the province. The scene of this latest triumph on the part of the irrigation engineer is Bassano, on the Bow River, some eightyâ€"five miles to the east of Calâ€" gary. Across this broad stream a} mighty dam has been thrown and the river brouf:t under subjugation 'f&r waterin{ a huge tract of country. General Scheme Provides for Irrigaâ€" tion of 1.250.0007 Acresâ€"An Enginecring â€" Marvel. There has just been completed in | the Province of Alberta, Canada, a monster dam. It can claim the disâ€" | tinction of being the lox{gest edifice | of its kind in the world. hereas the ; famous Assuan dam, in Egypt, has a | total length along the crest of six thousand four hundred feet, the new | Canadian structure is no less than seven thousand eight hundred and twenty feet in length. ALBERTA STRUCTURE THAN FAMOUS NILE The Kootenay River had a. rather bad reputation. _ Two parties were drowned in the attempt to make the crossing at the same time last year, and we ourselves had been warned to postpone our trip. However, we found a ford where we did not even have to swim our horses, and next day were on the banks of the Vermilâ€" lion River. Into the Vermiilion pours the raging torrent of the Simpson, which itself is fed from the melting _ On our first day‘s ride we stopped off for a swim at the hot radiumâ€"water ] springs of Sinclair Canyon, where St. John Harmsworth, brother of the famous Lord Northcliffe, and himself proprietor of the still more famous Perrier water, built aconcrete bathâ€" ing pool under the springs which pours its naturally warm water out of the rock. At night we found shelter in a homesteader‘s cabin, the owner of which was away at the war and hospitable enough to leave the latch loose. Next day we were in the forests of the Kootenayâ€"a wonderful resort for big game, judging by the tracks ‘ we saw and the animals we even met â€"two black bear and a deer on the trail with moose paths worn deep like small Devonshire lanes along the‘ meadows beside the river. _ Fired by the ambition to cross this pass, I set out one day last summer, with two guides, ten ponies and campâ€" ing outfit and supplies for six or seven days. Jim Brewster sent these over from Banff to Invermere at the headâ€" waters of the Columbia Valley, where I had promised to wait for them. Close to Invermere are the remains of Kootenai House, an outpost of the Nor West Trading Company estabâ€" lished by David Thompson in 1808. Now there is a comfortable little tourist hotel, much appreciated by motorists who use the excellent Govâ€" ernment road through the Upper‘ Columbia Valley. ‘ The first trip over the Simpson Pass through the Canadian Pacific Rockies was made by Sir George Simpson, Governor of the Hudson‘s Bay Comâ€" pary, in 1841, and formed part of the first recorded overland tour round the world, that is to say across the North American Continent, and by way of Siberia and Russia, occupying about nine months, and the subject of conâ€" siderable literature, Jim Brewster, the famous guide and outftter at Banff, discovered the fallen tree on the sumâ€" mit of the Pass on which the travelâ€" lers left their record. Minard‘s Liniment for sale everywhere. Most city people are country peoâ€" ple come to town. * In 1917 the 400 coâ€"operative assoâ€" ciations of Saskatchewan had a turnâ€" over of over $4,000,000. Reports so far received indicate that this record has been exceeded for 1918. JOHN WALKFIELD. LaHave Islands, Lunenburg Co., N.S We have been using MINARD‘S LINIMENT in our home for a number of years and use no other Liniment but MINARD‘S, and we can recomâ€" mend it highly for sprains, bruises, pains or tightness of the chest, soreâ€" ness of the throat, headache or anyâ€" thing of that sort. We will not be without it one single day, for we get a new bottle before the other is all used. I can recommend it highly to anyone. Agriculture in Canada is in need of a leader who can rally around him the representatives of all branches of the industry, and present a solid front on all questions of agricultural interest. This discovery will prevent thouâ€" sands of deaths annually from lockâ€" jaw and lnfecu?n heretofore resulting from the suicidal habit of cutting corns. is so shriveled that it lifts out withâ€" out pain. It is a sticky substance which dries when applied and never inflames or even irritates the adjoinâ€" inz tissue. You apply just a few drops on the tender, aching corn and instantly the soreness is relieved, and soon the corn Ask at any pharmacy for a quarter ounce of freezone, which will cost very little, but is said to be sufficient to rid one‘s feet of every hard or soft corn or callus. fingers Good news spreads rapidly and drugâ€" gists here are kept busy dispensing freezone, the ether discovery of a Cinâ€" cinnati man, which is said to loosen the owner. Lost Wedding .Ring Recovered After Five Years. A Godstoné, Surrey (England), tady has just discovéred her wedding ring, which disappeared five or six years ago while she was feeding a calf. It was thought the animal had swallowed the ring, and as it could not be found the calf became known | as "the golden cow." â€"< ‘; A few days ago the cow was purâ€" chased and killed by an Oxford butchâ€". er, who, being informed of the lost ring, made a search, and discovered | the ring embedded in an internal orâ€" | corn so it lifts out with the A TRAIL ACROSS THE ROCKIES THE GOLDEN cow. ring has been restored -t-o TORONTO The fishing, I may say in passing, which one gets on such a trip, is of the very best. _ Every creek, every pool seems to be stocked with trout, all inquisitive about the nature of the fy. Brown Hackle and Gray Hackle are always deadly. The red flies such as Parmachene Belle do not seem to take so well in these waters. There were both Dolly Varden and Steelâ€" head to our credit on the Simpson, averaging a little over a pound. In the Kootenay the trout ran up to two and three pounds and were very game, though shy in the middle of the day.â€" We ourselves found the snow all gone and our horses found sweet and ample pasture on an Alpine meadow. As we looked back from the Great Divide upon the mountains of the Selâ€" kirks, we had as fine a panorama as any artist could desireâ€"rugged outâ€" lines capped and fringed with perpetâ€" ual snow. "From the vicinity of perpetual snow, we estimated the elevation of the height of land to be seven or eight thousand feet above the level of the sea, while the surrounding peaks apâ€" peared to rise nearly half that ailtiâ€" tude above our heads." 53% degrees, the thermom:tâ€"e'; while striking as high as 71 4d in the shade. "But between these kindred founâ€" tains, the common progeny of the same snow wreaths. there was this remarkable difference of temperature that the source of the Columbia showed 40 degrees, while that of the Saskatchewan raised the mercury to on the level isthmus, which did not exceed fourteen paces in width, filling our kettles for this one lonely meal at once from the crystal sources of the Columbia and the Saskatchewan, while these willing feeders of two opâ€" posite oceans, murmuring over their beds of mossy stones, as if to bid each other a long farewell, could bardly fail to attune our minds to the sublimity of the scene. 5°°0° seven hours of hard work brought us to the height of land, the hinge as it wore between the eastern and western waters, We breakfasted glaciers of the snowâ€"clad Rockies high above. At least one cyclone seemed to have swept down its valley, and the river itself had washed away several corners so that our trail had to be made, or found anew on many a mile. Every job better than the last one â€"that is good farming. We sincerely believe, regardless of everything else advertised, that if you d?lre soft, lustrous, . beautiful hair and lots of itâ€"no dandrufâ€"no itching scalp and no more falling hairâ€"you must use Knowlton‘s Danderine. If eventuallyâ€"why not now? If your hair has been neglected and is thin, faded, dry, scraggy or too olly, get a small bottle of Knowlton‘s Danâ€" derine at any drug store or tollet counter for a few cents; apply a little as directed and ten minutes after you will say this was the best investment you ever made. Just one application doubles the beauty of your hair, besides it imâ€" mediately dissolves every particle of dandruff; _ you cannot have nice, heavy, healthy hair if you have dandâ€" ruff. This destructive scurf robs the hair of its lustre, its strength and its very life, and if not overcome it proâ€" duces a feverishness and itching of the scalp: the hair roots famish, loosen and die; then the bair falls out fast. If you care for heavy hair, that glistens with beauty and is radiant with life; has an incomparable softâ€" ness and is fluffy and lustrous, try Danderine. Save your hair! Double its beauty in a few momentsâ€" try this! ; â€""Unless this is done, we shall be at the absolute mercy of the Allies in respect of imports and exports. If they insist that every ton of damage caused by our Uâ€"boat war shall be made good by a German equivalent, ’i.e., by the handing over of German shipping to a corresponding amount the only solution will be the one proâ€" posed by Albert Ballin shortly before his deathâ€"German shipyards must build new ships for the Allies, but existing German tonrage must be wholly or in part restored to Gerâ€" many." smm ffgerrmmrmmme GRLS! HAVE WAVY, THIGK, GLOSSY HAR FREE FROM DANORUFF! "About seven hours of hard Hamburg and Bremen are in a state of growing panic over the surâ€" render of the German merchant fleet to the Allies. The Hamburger Beitâ€" rage, the official organ of the Hun shipping industry, declares that Gerâ€" many‘s armistice negotiators must bend every energy to secure the eventual return of the fleet The organ continues: 1 71 degrees Serious complaints are arriving from England as to the wasty and generally bad condition of Canadian apples shipped there. Two carloads of flaxserd have been shipped from the Tilbur» Azrict to Belfast, Ireland. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Burns, Etc. Polly stopped for breath and Mrs West‘s face cleared. "We had to stop our little girl answering the front door calls." Mwhy?" "The other day when Ensign Jones came to call on our.â€"eldest daughter he was dressed in his white uniform, and when the little one opened the door and saw him she immediately called upstairs: ‘Ma, how much bread do you want toâ€"day?‘ " MONEY ORDERS. A Dominion Express Money Order for five dollars costs three cents. "Hitherto the difficulty in devising a means of fighting London fogs has been the absence of data concerning the proportions of impurities in the air," said an authority. or wilte lymanâ€"Knox Co.. Montra#i, P.Q. Price 80c Remember the name as it might not be seen again The device is the invention of Dr. John S. Owens, of the Atmospheric Pollution Ressarch Department of the Meteorological Office. It draws in a volume of Â¥og, retains and meaâ€" sures all the impurities, and dis charges the pure air. Soot and tar have been found predominant. New Invention Will Aid in Discovery of Adequate Means. Efforts to find a means of clearing the air of fogs have been advanced considerably by the production of an apparatus which, it is claimed, meaâ€" sures elfac_tly the constituents of fog. The sergeant major accompanied the young officer on his rounds, in the course of which the cookhouse was inspected. Pointing to a large kettle of water just commencing to boil, the officer said: ""Why does that water only boil round the edge of the copper and not in the centre?" "The water around the edges, sir," replied the veteran, "s for the men on guard; they have their bseakfast half an hour before the remainder of the company." The sergeant major had the repuâ€" tation of never being at a loss for an answer. A young officer made a bet with a brother officer that he would in less than twentyâ€"four hours ask the sergeant major a question that would baffle him. The old Scotâ€"No! but he earned yin and saxpence a week for sleepin‘ wi‘ an auld wife that was frichted o‘ Zeppelins. Lady visitorâ€"But Jock can‘t have joined yet? * The old Scotâ€"Ay, my boys, they‘ve a‘ done their bit tae help tae win the war. There‘s Wullie, he was in Mesâ€" pitamia, an‘ Jimmie, he was in Salonâ€" iky, an‘ Tam, he was mineâ€"sweepin‘; an‘ wee Jock, he‘s jist seven past. est possible way, facing northâ€"east?" "Well, sir," said the lieutenant, after a moment‘s fruitless consideraâ€" tion, "do you know, that‘s what I‘ve often wondered." "Now, Lieutenant Tompkins," said the general, "you have the battalion in quarter column, facing southâ€"how would you get it into line in the quickâ€" est possible way, facing northâ€"east?" Johnny (editor‘s son)â€""Put it in the waste basket." with * _ Bobbyâ€""Gee, no! The depositors have fallen off somethin‘ fierce gince | sister got engaged." . } Neighborâ€""Got much money in your bank, Bobby ?" Try to Avoid This Error. FIGHTING LONDON FoGgs #» _ t : n o m i Disposing of "Poem. c:m-m«' TUMoRs, u,mvs.‘ :'}c‘ 2 4 nlerna external. cur wit h« acherâ€""In ‘parsing the sentence, | og; .:i. b'y :.:‘::nons umltlme-t \\:iz * r w# ore too late T man Medic F‘ vem ,',.: long,‘ what do you do: ©o., Limited, Collingwood. Ont. Couldn‘t Stump Him. »\ Spohn‘s Distemper Compound is Invaluable in all casee of DIBTEMPER, PINK EYE NFDCkSPL MoUar® aneCorg s *A few, drope a say will protect your horeke expored to . Mcr m lhro-clu'r"nl a day will act marmelously on your h actually pick SPOMN NCBICAL COMPANY, Goshen, Indisna, UAAA V\'beri\'nl- n;';.»{: 1-‘ cazucu:u‘ or ‘I:l:loluou :lucne P(n)non‘ horees EPOHN‘S is the solution i. Intaluable in ail oaree of" DIGTEMBEER PiRRK EUE DISEASE AMONG HORSESâ€"THE A"’Wll 18 KNOCKS OUT PAIN THE FRST ROUND For free um!'sl en'uddre.‘:.’ :C‘I}- cura, Dept. N, Boston, U. * Sold by dealers throughout theworld. To make a paint brush as soft and clean as new, no matter how hard it has become, simply boil it in water in which a little lye has been put. A little washing powder or soap will do, but it will take longer. The boiling water should be no deeper than the length of the bristles, as the boiling suds will injure the handle. ritations. ‘The Soap to cleanse and Eurify, the Ointment to soothe and leed for trelyâ€"oey fabe pormncnl ‘ or eve tollet For free ur:gyplegysddnqwf Let Cuticura Soothe _Your Itching Skin ivoave for raibes, incliinge and in Minard‘s Liniment Cures Dandruff leeves has been authorized, and lorâ€" ries detailed for the tours. Ypres, Messines, Arras, and Albert, are easâ€" ily first as sightâ€"seeing centres, but places of lesser fame, such as Boisâ€" inghe and Wood 15, Bois Grenier, Combles and La Pric Farm, Epehy, and Bousies, are all claiming their crowds. This jamous reliever of rheumatic aches, soreness, stifiness, painful sprains, neuralgic pains, and most other external twinges that humanity suffers from, enjoys its great sales because it practically never fails to bri_xg speedy, comforting relief. means of passing the time until genâ€" eral demobilization is ordered. The soldiers are invariably interested in the sectors of the front other than those which were the scenes of their own exploits. A system of short Comforting relief from pain Soldiers and the Battlefields. Battlefield touring, curiously enough, seems to be becoming popuâ€" lar among the troops in France as a ho cnna w s e rmmnmmmmmm mss AI'TO TIRES, 30 x ;5. AUTO TIRES, #1%.25. ‘Fubes $1.65. All sizes cut rate &reu. Riverdale Garage & Rubber Co..Gerrard and Ham#iton Ste.. Toronto, end 728 Dorchester 8t West Montreal, We "o0 uzi 220 EIOY AHL, RP a l1 y ten 174 (EKLy w eP n “' NEKLY NEWSPAPER FoR SALB in New Ontario Owner going to France Wil sell $2.000. Worth double that amount _ Apply J. H._ clo Wilsop Publishing Ca IAmited. Toranta omm 22202 000 PA W# oomgprmmmmmiz es 222.« uTe Two ragks wITH oNE dip of pen. Inkspoon does 1t; fits pen; .Ilver-“»la(ed; sample by mail, conts,. J. W. Fitegerald, Depi, E, Fulton Avenue, Toronto. World‘s Liniment MISCELLANEOUS