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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1926-8-26, Page 2Heart and Nerves so SAO • Weald Faint Dead Amy Those feeliuge. of eveeknoss, tangs faint *ad disey epells that someeves temple, stores time to time, are wane regs that must uot go unloaded. They indicate aa l tMtgelaistir weekened ctoedi- tiou of the heart sad a dieordered etate el the nevea Those Who are wbi wifl tart taking before thole ease beeoeies hopeless, tiJ} they have no equal for rest,orine the heart ancl making the nerves firm aud steedy, Mrs, O Myrby, Y eof or d., writes:—"My hueband •waa bothered with heart sad at rve trouble tor over a year, clad, at times, lie used to faint deed away, and was very weak when he came to. I asked hies to go and see the doetor, but' he kept putting it off, I got afraid for him and went and bought a box of Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills, and when I brought theza hanse he did not went to take them sa ito theeeht they woul& not do any good. I told 'a n there was no harm in trying the. eel he Was very glad he did as he fi". better after the first dose, and after Caking four boxes he has never had a tainting spell since, and feels fine in ver,v way." Prier 50e. a box at ell dealers; or mailed aired oz receipt of price by The. T. =bum Co, lei -ailed, Toronto? Ont. The Call. MO H BY MONIII IN GAREN Things to Do in September. I, It is important that you now pot , /lees elene should be used. DitWons the earliest of the bulbous pl-nts of old plants are worthless. which you intend to flower in yeller; 7. Shade trees which are too dense living mom during winter and early • or which possess obtrusive breeches spring. The Roman Hyacinth should may now safely be lightly thinned or be the first I branehes be removed,. Heavy pruns 2. Your Gloxinias will soon be goinging however should not be practiced to rest. Gradually recluee the supplyuntil the trees are dormant, of water and when the leaves have all 8, Growths more than two year's old fallen stare the bulbs in finely sifted reel now be remelted frees climbing peat over winter. ',Roses or any dead trees. The steongs 3. Now ie the tines to replant the est young canes may be trained into Iris and, to divide the roots. Plant take the place of the ones removed. so shallow that the thick roots are Leave the pruning proper, howeeer, barely covered. Deep planting is: until spring.. Thet is, do not remove harmful. tally young growths vete spring. 4. Paeonies do not flower well as al 9. The removal of excessive growth rule if deeply planted. Plant therii from the Tomato plants will favor the about two inches deep, Now is the adsnisrion of sunlight to the fruits, time. Paeonies with thick tap -roots, which will consequently ripen more somethnes do not flower. Lift the quickly. See to this so that the yield plants, cut the tap roots to cause them will be greater before frosts kill the! to rrothwe a snore fibrous root system pleats. and replant, 1 5. It is well toward the end of Sep- • tember to plant the bulbous plants such as Narcissus, Tulips, Hyacinths, 10. The border Carnations rimy now be layered or cuttings be made of any desirable kinds. Vegetative propoga- tion is the only way to ensure true- Croeus, Snowdeops and Glory of the ness to type. Th.e plants will not pro - Snow, so that they will become well duce truly from eeds. rooted before the soil freezes. So 11, Early September is the beet rooted they will, as a rule, •flower time to make the lawn or at lest to splendidly. sow grass seed. Under the influence 6. Strawberries may be set out of cool dewy nights the grasses will early in the month. Well rooted run- grow wonderfully. ^ Oats for Sterile Cows. Oats has long been considered by horsemen as the premier horse feed. It is a common saying when a horse Is frisky that he is feeling his oats. The correctness of this practical ob- servation seems to have been demon - In the shade of a beautiful widee strated fit some experimental work by / spreading tree, Sat Alice and Joseph and Annabelle Lee, Who waited politely for Richard and me. I. dressed in my very best dress, for you see, We were the guests at their Five O'Clock Tea. The tea was not tea, but the best lemonade, The cakes were delicious; and were served by the maid. We s.at very still, and our voices were lo -w; We were -pleasing our families, who certainly know' That good manners are needed each hour of the day; But right at my side, I saw the swing swgy So lightly and free in the seft sum- mer breeze, While I longed. for a ride through the great leafy trees. Then I thought of my blue gingham dress, right next door, And the hat and the shoes which I • usually were. When all of a sudden I heard ,Toseph 'sigh, As he glineed at his pumps, and his - very best •tie. Theis" I smiled, so did Alice, and Anhabelle rose. "Let's Play garnee," she said quickly. "But we'd best change our clothes." —Elizabeth Mallory. Meat Products as Feeding Stuffs. - Meat products used as feeding stuffs and put on the market as tankage, beef or meat . scrap, beef and bone meal, etc., owing to their variable character should alwaye be purchased on guaranteed enalysis, states Dr. F. T. Shutt, Dominion Chemist,eiri his latest report. It is essential that these feeds should be prepared from fresh material, and he sweet and free from rancidity and naould. When sound and wholesome they constitute a valuai le source of protein and bone -making material and are especially useful in feedieg swine and poultry. As a class, they are highly nitrogenous, contain- ing from 40 to 60 per cent. protein, with bone meals proper containing about 25 per cent. They also contain from 5 to 10 per cent: of fat. * How about a vacation when harvest is over? Arrange with your neighbor to exchange work in doing choresnthen drive away for a week to the fair, or to the shore, or to the mountains -- wherever you like. You'll feel,more like worlcing when you corne home. OH,, NW HEAD! HOW ACHES Heaclaehe is not of itself a disease, but iS getterally eaused by some dis- order of the stomach, liver"or bowels, and in all cases the treatmeet should be directed to remove the cause, for with the eause roma-yea theheada,ches yaaish for all time. Per the purpose of renieving the headaches it is impossible to find, a better remedy than ,--- It regulates the storetteli, liver and bowels, purifies the blood and tones sip the whole system to full health and vigor. • Put nee only- by The T. Milburn Co. Limited, Toronto, Onis, • ••••4 see ehinee. ' • . THE FARM BUSINESS WOMAN MOWERS AT ROADSIDE ' MARKETS Late limst, sissruner I 'pereuaded a wenein Who eeps a cold-drinit stand aed small " grocery on the highway :at:nevecteo.lsalf .1,1sele from my home, to ,tre- ;selling variois. rowers from any a I cut the flowers and delivered them • to her, house. She made th,era into buechee end sold them and we dieid- ed the money equally, le the six weeks hefore feost she eon' forty-four- dollers' worth a ent flowers and a e little later seven ,'„dollars' worth of pegelleiel plants. • We learned that the majority ,of the people whe purchase rowers from a reesisido stand want siza.ble. bunches, , with plenty of color and plenty of grease We kept asparagus cut for those who wanted it, and foiled- col- ,This 1$ the Rev. H. A. sebbott, with his daughter, three masters, and seven pupils, from a well-known public school in' England, situated at Grays, near Tilbury, photographed on boarcl the Cunard liner -Meanies This party 1 is making a tour el Eastern Canada to give the boys a wider knowledge of the Empire than is afforded by book and theoretical education. The party the Kvebiraningeneots of various interested publie-seirited organizations, snob as h : S.S. LESSON *Iiiponsal(nl: saint 18:11), or,his char- iothis arrows of104:e8)(,p stlaileml if8h:tin4i)n,g a nads 1 pavilion . - the thunder as his voice (Psalms 18:18 August 29. The Ten Commendmentsi and 29:3-9). They saw, and saw trulY, Duties to Man, Exodus 20: 12-21. what many .a poet and Seer ,since that - r Golden "Text --.Thou shalt love thy time has seen with greater or less • neighbor as thysalf.—Lev. 19: 18. 1. t dearness that God does reveal himself Minerals in Live Stock in he world of nature, both re its great and terrible phenomena, and in ANALYSIS. PRECEP TEM LAW 12-17. its gentler and quieter moods, in the !bush as well as in the storm, in the Feeding. Mr. George B. Rothwell, Dominion Animal Husbandman, contributes a II, MOSES AS -MEDIATOR AND PROPHET 18 21 decidedly illeiminative article to Sea- eonable Hints for ,Tuly, August, Sep- tember and October on "Minerals in Live Stock Feeding." Horses, cattle, flower as in the. etar in tb.e surlset , colors as in res. p IlsrrnoiYucTION-LBoth in Hebrew law Psalm 19;1-2 and Rom. 1:20. and prophecy a large place is given to I... Speak; thou with is. God had not yet the duties and obligations of ea inan !revealed himself in the simplicity and to his fellovv- men. Nearly the whole ' gentleness of Jesus- Christ, To the volcanich Com are a U.S. Bureau of Dairying. sheep and swine are all dealt with of the law that follows (chaps. 21-23) lee, For some time these experimenters separately. Salt regularly is general called in 24:7, -the "book of the coven' `1---Ple whom Moses led he was still , advice. Pulverized charcoal may be ant," is occupied with such duties, the ' tr God of the battle (15:3, 4), and of cows and heifers that have duties of justice and kindness, or reos . , tistorm, &God to be greatlY feared. have been feeding sprouted oats to proved used for both horses and cattle. Lime They needed a mediator, one who sterile. Recently when some dairy- for the rights of others, and of1 may be needed for horses in some dis- Peet - could ,a preach God on their behalf men visited the farm they brought tetete and ca -n be administered as clean living in the social and domestic land interpret to them- his will. Long out eight or ten cows and heifers that ground through leguminous rough- relations. Even the book of Leviticus, ' after Moses' death it -was remembered had previOusly been. bred repeatedly ages. Pregnant mares, Mr. Bothwell which is c c rued' matter on e .t . . so largely- with ,that he had the prophetic vision and without result. After eating three says, are benefitted by potassium the nsotablererclogimomusanrcilmueanli, c°14111=1 !faith. He was a prophet, "Whom the iodide crystals administered at the shalt love thy neighbor as thyself" t Lord knew face -tes, face" (Deut. 34: In every age the world has owed or four pounds of sprouted oats daily, ' however, they are now safely with rats of one eighth of an ounce (a (Lev. 19:18; compare 1919-17, 32-86). liale":bt to the men of vision, the .men calf, and some are almost ready to small teaspoon, level) on the first and Similar precep s o jus ice ankind- t 1 ' t'. d 'who have entered where the common freshen. The same treatment seems fifteenth of each month in the drink - to be effective on bulls that are shy ing water. This practice should be breeders. started in November with the spring - The oats are sprouted in frames in bred mare. Feeding edible bone meal much the same way as when sprouted supreme requieement. They set rortzm or bone char at the rate of a pouad„ three fundamental virtues, kindness ,pa but he revealeth his secret to his ser - for poultry. to a pound and a half per hundred or mercy, faithfulness or truth, and nts he Prophets." pounds of meal is good for cattle. the knowledge, or acknowledgemenn These experimenta seem to show . that oats really do have some property1 In a pithy sentence the Animal Hus- of God, as what God demands of men, s ...____s• not common to all fads. Since sterile bandman -suggests that the major con- rather than gifts or sacrifices, songs ity is one of the greatest dairy probs sideration is better feeding, particle- or prayers. See. as typical of 7 .1r3utiny. Ise. 1.11-20, Jer. . - 1, lems, these experiments. may prove of tarty as applied to calves, growing l'assag°s' inestimable value. 'stock and dry cows. . Micah 6:6-8. Hosea 4:1 and 6:6; Amos 5:21-24; The first suggestion that sterility! Salt, preferably rock salt, se -erns to might be related to aetiaoing element; raeet the. deraaeds of sheep, but the T. MORAL PRECEPTS F THE LAW, 12-17. making gift or trick apples. Nearly in the feed VMS made by Di. E. IL ' administration of minute quantities of The first -four cOntmandments have everyone 'knows that You can make Hughes. He reported that rats raised:iodine to pregnant ewes will prevent to do almost entirely with the. duty'd names of friends on the apples by cut - Upon a nutritive regime -of fats; carbo- goitre. men -to Gods The only exception is in . hydrates and protein in relatively I Swine being rapid in growth re- the law of Sabbath obseryance, where ting out letters and pasting them on pure form, to which were added daily in the parallel passage in Deuteron- just before the fruit commences to ,1omy (5:14), the motive urged is that turn, but there are other ways -that quire. much lime, bone phosphates, etc. .doses of the vitamines -A and B, made r in connection with eolith aer. Roth -10f consideration for and kindness to you can make oddities of theapples. normal growth and appeared healthy i well say§ there is no doubt that marc those who labor. The six command- When the apples are about half In every way. I attention to mineral supply would re-: merits which are under review and grown tie a string firmly around the The animals were of splendid size,Isult in stronger litters, greater cer- study in to -day's lesson are concerned sleek coated and active, but were prac-1tainty in breeding operations and bet -1 Honor duties to man. tically all sterile. !ter developed frames in market pigs.' Honor thy father and thy mother. " The , Alfalfa or clover ha h 'd be b f a are] Compare ley. 19:3; Eph. 6:1-3. The ness appear frequentiy in Deuteron- omy (Deut. 14:28-29; folk have feared to enter, who have 15:148; 16: seen God and have brought back with 18-20; etc.). The prophets declare righteousness and justice to he God s thern a message for the word's need, "Surely- th... Lord God will do no.thing, Fun With Apples.. If you have a tree of red apples on your farm you can have a lot of fun Ile announced as his 'belief, y s ous lawsho-f the Pentateuch *put special and making a small wooden framework for centre of the a.pple and let it stay there. The apple will then grow in a queer double shape. You may make an apple square by empasis upon duty 'to pardnts sterility produced is a dietary-defip the brood saw all winter and are also ciency disease and can be quick:y good for winter -fed market Pigs.' the respect and honor which is due to cured by a change of dietary reghne." Tankage or meat meal, 3 to 5 per cent.; them, and provide a severe penalty He tried increasing both the quan- for the brood sow and up to 10 per:for tilt= who are guilty of an offence tity and quality of the protein of the cent. for the feeder hog where no milk' against father or mother. So also is ration with no results. Yeast, coA ' -- is fed supplies soluble mineral salts. -I the teaching of the Wise Men of Is- Hype- oil and butter gave no better re- I Edible bone meal is especially good for ' rae • see rov. . , . , . • • sults, This convinced him that steril- 1 the brood sow, so is a smallY quantit 3:1-16. The author a the lastenteraed within and assume the shape sea e says some very pertinent and develop it to grow inside. When the apple has filled the inside of the frame and shaped. itself, remove the frame and 'let the apple redden., . Queer -shaped bottles may be fasten- ed over the small apples so that they ity was not due to the lack of eitheriof tankage (3 lbs. per hundredweight striking things: - vitamine A or B. I of meal). A stock solution of one 4.Whoso honoreth his father snalseth To tilantbe effect of vitamine C he i ounce of potassium iodide to one gals • an atonement for his sins, fed one bduch of rats orange juiee lon of wliter, given one tablespoonful And he that honoreth his mothee ..is and arroth4 lettuce leaves, both high to the brood sow daily in her slop, is as one that layeth up treasure, in vitaminet C. Practically all those , . calculated to prevent hairless littera Glory not in the dishonor of thy getting orange juice were sterile, but and to be generally beneficial.. father; every individual rat tested with let- For thy father's dishonor is no snory tuce leave e neoduced healthy young. • to thee." . This led. Dr. Hughes to conclude that Thou shalt not kill. The sixth corn - the lettuce leaves carriea a new mem- mandment deelares the sacredness of ber of the vitamine substances, eshich he called X. Further experiments led him to be-• lieve that the whole cereals like wheat Make a Box Book Cupboard. After you have .sandpapered and esienteled an ordinary dry -goods box and have -hung the front with. cretonne curtaina, it will fie iri. nicely at some corner of your room and keep your papers, magazines and books in order. The only expense is that of the enamel and the cretortne for the curtains, and you can subtract the latter if you and oats protect against sterility or cure it when it is once established. The Clothes Line. Oh, pink and grey, And scarlet gay, And. snowy white a -shine, And brovni and blue, And crimson, too, They dance upon the line! They dance upon the line! And they set our hearts a -dancing, and front one and a half to two feet Lev. 19:11, and thespenalties for steal - Those merry little garments there, deep. Remove any boards that -may ing prescribed in 22:1-4. It is recogs Of shapes and shades entraneing. be fastened across the top of -the box .nlzed Hebrew taw that, onlY the of their transparent prion. When the apples commence te turn, paste pic- tures or initials on the outside a the bottle and have an ornamented bottle - shaped apple.. Break thflottle care- fully when you want to remove the apple. A rubber band of .the proper size placed around the 'hentre of an apple just before it begins to eolor will keep a stripe of the unripe.color. Another human life. It means strictly, "Thou way to decorate apples with Nature's shalt do- no murder." The Hebrew. word means treacherous or. Assume I help is to cover the appLe entirely with takirtg 'a life, without the sanction of a piece of old stocking or some other law or established order. Cmnpare substance and then cut away holes to our Lord's interpretation of the law make deagns. With cloth the 'edges in r5ihaeutt. 354a211-i-26nO• t aammni" t a4aitert the apple in a small. paper bag that vidll net be "clear cut, but if you place The seventh coinmandment hol a will fit smoothly around it you" can saered the marriage bond, upon which have designs cut in the paper through which the sun will shine and embroid- . er for you in rosy red.-sraye .N. Merriman. depends; -in any fosm, of -civilized life, have some old faded curtains put away. Two,board shelves and the bot- ruletey, the ,health and well-being Of the com- tom of the cupboard will hold three Comeare our Lord's teaching In Matt. 5: 27-32 sand 19:3-9. double rows a books or magazines. Thou shalt not steal. The rights of , A pied size for the book cupboard private property ere guarded,by this Is a box four feet long, three feet high the eighth tommandment. SO& also Prom roof SO high, It dares the sky, From back -yard pent and are, From pulley From clothes reel fine They 'send tho wand a dare! They, -send the' vsind % dare, And it meekly does their 'pleasure, Those saucy little garments there, That dance in merry measure! ' The folk so small Who wear there all ,. .• Are folk who okip and hop, And so you see, Those garments wee, . jug don't know how to atopI They don't loiow hoW to stop, And oh, are they not hegulling— Those little garments deeding there, To rest a st,e....,_c*rr,. face_smillegi —Miifle ]ii Upton, 810th Is siowest. The eloweet moving thilmal hi the orld la the sloth of the jungle. and Due out any -imeocess , h . rights an :we are o gry iatls If there are rough surfaces plan as a -w- Ole am take precedence o is hf th'' them dowe and finish the box b't, goieg examp:e, e right of private ownership,as for. in 21:2846e- ' over it with sandpaper. Make two The ninth commandment ss against pencil marks on each end. of the box bearing false witness, whether in a on the inside, dividing the ends int, court of law or elsewhere. Compare IT,ree emial parts, and nail a strip 9f 28:1; Deut. 19:16-21; Prem., 19:5; 25: hardwood. over these marks SO that 18. .that this was- a sin regarded 48 thev extend to the back of the hex. pecuear.y evil and displeasing to God is evident also from Nelms 15:1-3 and Theu shait not amiet. The tenth com- mandment forbids the enterteirenent Plano and sandpaper the boards. of unlawful thought or desire toward Enamel the cupboard both hist& and that which is the property of a neigh - out befere enameling the removable bor. It is against robbery in the shelves, Blue 'or vallite enamel snakes heart For it is recognized that out d the heart evil words and deeds pit- a pretty color, or you wen get enamel to snatch the walls of the room if they cresed. are painted.- :Pesten two large screte -tis 1d05518 AS MEDIATOR AND PROPHET, eyes at the cornerof the box, at the 18-21. ' upper edge, and string a length of The thrundoinge, etc. A. steam had gathered about the summits of the rnomitain, amid in the ,we -inspiring forces of the storm the people saw the power and felt the presenco of God. It was always so with the Hebrew the Wire SO. that the trait can be cot-- people. Again and again in their , *led with the eurtains.—G. V, 11, poetry they speak of ,the cloud as his • - Place two pairs of these shelf sup- ports en eaeh side and saw out bogrds to fit oyes. them to form the shelves. wire betvseee theirs tightly. The cur - tattle are trimmed and sewed and fit- ted with srnall braes rings along the tipper 'edge. These are slipped over s umbine leaves very lovely for wee arrangements. She also made up smaller bunches of my very choieest dahlias, Snapdragons and my shell - pink Drummond phlox, whieli was good for combinations or exquisite when shown by itself in a blue Pottemy bowl. 'This year I have planted mare zin- nias in separate oolors and the eholes est varieties for a sureriaingly large • nurriber of people like them.--D.L.B. I MAKE DRESSES AND APRONS Once, while on my weekly shopping trip to town I heard a merchant re- mark that he had allowed too many remnante—shop-Wore. material, but- tons, odd trimmings and bite of rib- bon—to accumulate and that he need- ed the rosin- for the new season's stock. I. carefelly looked. over his wares and told him that I could turn them into salable Merchandises He put them in a large ,pastboard box and I took them home with me. In a few weeks I had fashioned, by disearding the sailed pert:se-simple but 'attractive dreeeeo, aprons and bloom - ere for little girls; bloneeesslienditer- chiefs and scheol bags for Small boys; 1clothespiu -aprons, wall pockets, dust I cape and holelere for bilsy mothers, Then thehreall issart delivered my pastes r board box back to the meechant, who I in ,t,urn mailed me a cheque which I arrived at, a Most welcalee time--, inidvray between harvest and plant- ing Mothers were delighed ti) purchase securely made, durable garments and 'supplies at prices even snore reason- able than abase charged, for factory - made things My Oau not only help- ed royeelf, but also the merchant and mothers.—V.A.,D. A POTATO IDEA. s. As a farmer's wife, of course -I need more nioney, and because we countrywomen are, always in such need, the moneysmalting 'field where we are oone.erned has been pretty well covered. I decided to try the experimeut of selling smooth, mealy, baldngssiee lso- tatoes by parcel post, three dozen to a carton, washed, ready to pop into the oven, at a small premium, of course, over ordinary potatoes, - had postcards printed announcing this new, easy, sure method of buying the vary finest baking potatoes—just enough for the average apartment family—and mailed thee to a selected list of particular and well-to-do faint- . lies in our near -by city. The idea "took," because it is prac- tical. Eggs, apples, small produce of all kinds have always been marketed like this. The wonder is that potatoes never were before. Anyway, we now have a grovring market for the eream of our crop. ---0.G. Housing Early Pullets. , Each season we see the growing ten- dency for egg prices to rally earlier in the summer, and for September and Ottober eggs to bring attractive prices. This has led many poultry icle ble num- keepers to hatch a cons ra them into laying quarters,in late arm- let of their chicks early so as to get mer. . Pullets hatched in March should be housed in early September, before they have come into heavy production, in order that they may be ace:intoned to their houses and hold up to a good normal production when it is once at- taitied. The moving of the pullets' after they have started laying heavily is a serious check to production. September is often hot. The pullets are being taken off free range; so we raust'see that their permanent lay- ing quarters are completely ventileted to give them the fresh air to which they, are accustomed. Sense poultryynen will find it ad- visable to let the pullets run out- doors when housed early, but the growing practice is to keep them con- fined to the laying houses. Cleart and disinfect the laying houses to remove all traces of disease 1307 or parasites which may have been sanitary houses may. transmit infec- present in the preceding flock. Un - tions fromone flock over to another House birds of different ages and - of different development together. the more rnaturesbirds shOuld he put in one pen; the next more mature in another pen, 'and no on. This makes Ot,c. it possible to feed and handle each , gniyFeashhieorn-eo riendoirte fopir_achtiacsal eitvheaan her group of pullets, more advantages ' mast endorsement to the frock ox lowed to come itto production peel. Early -maturing pullets can be al - printed material. For luncheon and. tiall-y and normary, while the slow - may be f2Lshioned of crepe de chine, here is smart, and not too dressy, and rayon or -cotton voile., Tho frock is in:naituf ro irinngeopundeisticoann. be forced ferTre . time, all flocks can be brought to a rapid maturity, with more, concen- trated protein feeds. Thus, in a short afternoon wear, the model pictured straight ie. line except for the flared sections set in it the sides, which are Do not fail, when the wallets are housed, to anoint scarf collar tying on the left shoulder. a the skin round the very :full at the lower edge, and vent Long, areas eleeves are set into the • ,of each bird with a little blue This armholes, 'No, 1397 is in sizes 36, 88, ointment. prevents body lice. 40 42 44 and 46 incheshust. Size 38 PRINTED -FROCKS THE -VOGUE , FOR ALL OCCASIONS. bust regnires 1334 yards 39 -inch .figur- ed material; tte 'collar 1/4 yard con, trasting cut crosswise. Price 20e. Home sewing brings nice clothes within the reach of all, and to follow the mode is delightful when it can be done so easily and economicelly by following the style e pictured in our • new Fashion Book. A chart accoms Any new machinery to set up? Let the boys in on the joie You ;will leaser. orie or two.things yourself if you do, and one of them is that boys have sharper eyes than most of us grown- eps and are keener to see how. thing.ns) go. That is why they. ate so helpful 7 - at such a time. panying each pattern shows the ma - For toriai as it appears when cut out. Every detail is explained so that the inexperienced sewer can make without clifficUlty an attractive,. dress. Price of the book 10 cents the copy. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS, Write your name and address plain- ly, giving number and size of mall patterns, as you want. ,Enclose '20c in stamps or coin (coin Preferred; -wrap it carefully) for each number and address your order to Pattern. Dept., Wilson Publishing Co., 73 West Ade- , laide Ste Toronto. Patterns sent by return mall. There Is a real significaeoe hi a patch on the trousers, whether it he on the knees or on the seat, The one 'spells piety told industry and the othor laziness. Summer hcicko command good price S in late fall. They should weigh ' about five poneds to the pair. Those hatched ;In the fall sop growing as the cold weather sets in, and are ally small but Ornpot in appearance,' PAINS IN THE STOMACH There's Nothing Equals It has been in use for over 80 years; its astieei is pleasartt, rapid, reliable and' effeettal, rod -relief comes promptly, , '‘Don Pt. aceept it sabstitate.'' Tho gen-eine is put ep °ray by Tb.41 T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Cat, .RE YOU TROUBLED WITH YOUR LIVER? When your liver becsomesssluggish and inactivo your whole health suf- fers, and the only wny. you can back, .and, keep:, your health is by the use Of • fifilIfourn's They will 'dear away all tho waste and poisonous matter from the sys- tem, and pimento, as well as banish, and relieve all the i'oraplications at an uehealehy, wearydiver.' taxa -Liver Pills are put up only by The T. ltilbtire �o, T or onto .Oat.