‘V “(535% to the British Museum last ‘year numbered 691,650. No. 9727â€"Child’s Coat. Price, 25 cents. Two styles of sleeve and col- rhn'. Cut in 6 sizes, 2, 4, G, 8, 10 and 12 years. Size 4 requires, with gath- ered sleeves and small collar, 2 yds. 86 ins. wide, or 1% yds. 44 ms. wide; with plain sleeves and large collar, 1% yds. 36 .ins. wide, or 11%; yds. 44 ï¬ns. wide. v No. 9736â€"Boy's Suit. Price, .25 cents. With vest; knee trousers. Cut in 5 sizes, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6 years. Size 4 requires without nap. 1% yd-s. 36 You don't know whether you are "coming-or going.†You are bilious. constipated! You feel headachy. full of cold, dizzy, unstrung. Your meals don’t fitâ€"breath is bad, skin sallow. Take Cascarets to-night for your liver and bowels and wake up clear, ener- getic and cheerful. No gripingâ€"no m- convenieuce. Children love Cascarets .too.‘ 10, 25, 50 cents. “They Work while you Sleep†w SINCE : 137 (j ELQ’H 30§¥8§sCOUGHS 4.6" ':;. ‘5. .fl. STORM WINDOWS 8cDOORS illmlllmllllIIHIUIIIIIIIIIIHHNIIIIIIllllllllllllIIlllllllllHIIHHIINllllllllllllHlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllï¬ guumm BAUME BENGUE [BS ions for the Kidd sh Fa CASCAR ETS BEWARE OF SUBSTITUTES 31.00 a lube THE LEEMING MILES 00.,â€0. MONTR EA L Aunts Inr Dr. Jules liongué Quick relief from RHEUMATIC pain Grape=Niz z‘s Needs No SLgar has immediate effect. RELIEVES PAIN Rich and Nourishin ' A blend of wheat and malte bar- ley that costs but littleyet proâ€" vides a food of most attractive flavor. ready to serve direct from the package. Illlll|l“Ml“!lllllllllIllIIIHIIIIHIIIIHllllllllllll|lllllllllllIllIIIIHIIllllllIIâ€Iâ€MINNIIIHIIIIIIII Grape=Nuts 1259 to suit your openingi. Find with ulaas. Sflc dc- livcry guaraulccd. Write [or Pricc Us! Cu! dow-njuel Insult: \vmlcr CANADA l o. 9738â€"Boy's Double-Breasted Overcoat. Price, 25 cents. In .6 sizes, 4 to 14 years. Size 4, without nap, 15/3 y.ds 42 ins. wide, or 1% yds 48 ins. wide; with nap, 11/4 yds. 54 ins. wide; lining, 1% yds. 36 ms. wide. These patterns may be obtained from your local McCall dealer, or from the McCall 00., 70 Bond St., lTomnto, Dept. W. The smallest newspaper in the world is now being printed in New York City. Its pages are only about ï¬ve inches wide and six inches long, but they contain snort news items that are very easily and quickly read. Another odd newspaper published in this same city is called The Deaf Another odd newspaper published in this same city is called The Deaf Mutes' Journal, all of its editors and general staff being members of a (leaf and dumb school. However, The Deaf Mutes' Journal is a real newspaper in size and contains four pages of in- teresting reading. In Germany there is a newspaper that has nothing in it but stories about rheumatism. People having this trouble write in their experiences, doctors tell new ways to get rid of it and it seems that everybody there having rheumatism subscribes to this queer newspaper. ome years ago a Russian editor started-a postcard size newspaper. the print of which was so small that he furnished a magnifying glass to teach of his regular subscrib- ers. Somehow the idea didn’t take, as he only printed a» few numbers be- fore ï¬nding out that the people didn’t appreciate the idea, even though the magnifying glass was furnished free. Greenland hasn’t many newspapers of any kind, but the oddest of them all is a monthly paper called The Kalorikmit. (Did you get your tongue twisted after pronouncing this name?) The most unusual thing about this paper is that a three months’ subscrip- tion costs two ducks, while it requires a sable skin to pay for a year. factory Shaw‘- 923-931 _. West: _ It is tc many yea farm in vinces wi of the da bring this time. but pedited t having in ï¬elds of have beer the three The yield tory than to hope, average 1 ensilage. Many f 'their far take can them hai quiremen than tbs) Sunï¬ov extensive has had vious ye: tory bui ins. Wide, or with nap, 1% “é yd. 27 ins. Four Friends. For greater gifts I would not pray Nor ask the gods to send my way If I could have four friends a day. A friend of worse days, dark drear, Who shared the hours of storm fear, Before the skies began to clear A friend new made who shall aï¬ord Adventures of the unexplored, A friend with happy future stored. A friend of better days than this, Of brighter sun and golden bliss Before the times had gone amiss. An old friend who has stood the test, Has known the worst and known the best, Alike in both forever blessed Mlnard’s Llnlment Relieves Distemper Oddities in Newspapers. the hours of storms and worse days, dark and 1% yds. 44 his. Wide; yd's. 54 ins. wide; vest, 9738 From the above ï¬gures anyone can change a statement of potassium to a corresponding statement of potash, or the reverse. In the ï¬rst case, multiply the ï¬gure for potassium by the factor 1.205. In the second case, multiply the ï¬gure representing potash by the factor 0.82. Remember, once again, that there is no signiï¬cance in this change. Pure potassium never occurs in nature. Even if it did, it could not be used in fertilizer, for it is highly caustic, and burns in contact with water. Equally, what we know as potash is not a stable compound, and cannot be used in fertilizer. The terms “potash†and “potassium†are used simply as measâ€" ures of value; neither one has advan- tage over the other; either could be used. I Japanese women dress their hair in the shape of a butterfly when they are ready to wed. Widows who desire to re-marry fasten their tresses at the back of the head with tortoiseshell pms. 1 Many farmers have erected siIOS on their farms during the summer to take care of this crop, but most of them have under-estimated their re- quirements and will have more crop than they can put in their silos. Potash Versus Potassium. As is the case with the two other plant foods, what we know as “potash†may be guaranteed in at least two different ways. Minard‘s Liniment Co., Limited. Gentlemen,â€"I have used MINARD'S LINIMENT on my vessel and in my family for years, and for the every day ills and accidents of life I con- sider it has no equal. I would not start a voyage ‘without it if it cost a dollar a bottle. Ninetyâ€"four pounds of pure potash (K0) contains 78 pounds of pure potassium (K). 01', putting the case in the reverse, 78 parts of pure potas- sium combines with 16 parts of oxy- gen to form 94 parts of potash. Western Farmers Building Silos. , It is to be anticipated that before many years have elapsed almost every farm in the Canadian prairie pro~ vinces will have its silo. The growth of the dairy industry would naturally bring this condition about in course of Schr‘ Similar plans are being made in other parts of Western Canada, and the already rapidly growing dairy in- dustry promises to‘ grow much faster with the general acceptance of the sunflower as a silage crop. Another evidence of the value of sunflowers as a forage crop will be the big gain in ï¬nished steers. Many of the larger livestock raisers are growing sun- flowers and erecting silos for this pur- pose. Thus will be considerably in- creased the ï¬nishing areas of Canada, which, hitherto, have been somewhat restricted, ‘conipared with the large feeding areas throughout" the country, and the livestock industry in the West will be placed on a sound basis. time. but the movement is being ex- pedited by the success farmers are having in growing sunflowers. Small ï¬elds of from three to thirty acres have been planted in Various parts of the three prairie provinces of Canada. The yields are proving more satisfac- tory than the farmers generally dared to hope, and each acre yields on an average from ï¬fteen to thirty tons of ensilage. Sunflower silage is due for a. more extensive trial this winter than it has had before. The results in pre- vious years have been very satisfac~ tory but only comparatively few farmers have grown the crop for 511- age previous to this year. It in its more extensive use the crop proves to be as satisfactory as it has already proved in a few cases Where it has been tried, it is safe to say that-in a few years the farm without a silo will be an exception in Western Canada. Since last year‘s results have be- come known, considerable interest has been shown in silos and ensilage in Western Canada and several hun- dred silos have been erected during the past summer. Typical of this movement is the Cardston district in Southern Alberta, where eight silos have been erected this year and where about ï¬fty acres of sunflowers were planted. The crop has proved so suc- cessful that it is predicted that one hundred silos will be built in the dis- trict next year and more than a thous- and acres of sunflowers planted. for most make: and models of my. Your old. broken or worn-out parts replaced. \Vrlte or wire us describ- ing what you want. We carry the largest and most complete stock In Canada of sllgmly used or new parts and aulomoblle equipmenL “'e shlp C.O,D. any-where ln Canada. Sada- fa.ctory or refund in full our motto. Shaw'- Auto Salvage Par-t Supply, 923-931 bulletin st" Toronto. Ont. AUTO SPARE PARTS Storke Jssue No. 46â€"224 CAPT I‘. F. R. DESJARDIN. St. Andre, Kamouras- well. They m: jelly and bread spoons. “How shall we eat our Jimmy. It Fc Johnny and and, being aw time, they we ter ter," said Johnny "I tried that," ously, “but it WC nervous." It was very young, and she Insisted upon taking it to bed with her, but the next morning she was looking very tired. On Dolly’s birthday she was pre- sented with a baby bulldog, and her delight was delicious to behold. "Haven't you slept well, darling?†asked her mother. “No 0, mummy," said Dolly. "Nelson was crying in the night for him mum- sey, so I kept awake with him for company, and I made awful faces all night to make him ï¬nk I was his bull- dog muvver to comfy him. †A few cents buys "Danderine." Af- ter an applicatibn of “Danderine†you can not ï¬nd a fallen hair or any dand- ruff, besides every hair shows new life, vigor, brightness, more color and thickne Mlnard's Llnlment For Dandrufl. health}; odorr that, if Q-iil'lxé'giéd'géBï¬â€™i Sloan’s Liniment is scld by all drug- gistsâ€"SSC, 70c, $1.40. Q Rf,- .. 3' W ï¬aiï¬ï¬ menemg mmg J...“ us†V ..-â€"-“" 9 part, soon reuevmg the ache and pain. Kept handy and used everywhere for reducing and finally eliminating the pains and aches of In mbago, neuralgia, muscle strain, joint stiffness, sprains, bruises, and the results of exposure. Y0}! just lenqw fyom “its stimulating, attacked by rheumatic twinges. A counter-irritant, Sloan' s Lini< mcnt scatters the congestion and pene- trates without rubbibng to the afï¬ictpd par}: soog rel'xevmg‘ the a_che and pain. ESPECIALLY those frequently OLD SEWER, E83. AEHES ANï¬ EARS Any man or woman‘who keeps Sloan’s handy will tell you that same thing Stops Hair Coming Out; Doubles Its Beauty. Balance it on , said Johnny rm 9? EMMï¬ï¬ FROM HERE “HERE The name “Bayer†identiï¬es the only genuine Aspirinâ€"the Aspirin prescribed by physicians for over nine- teen years and now made in Canada. prescribed by physicians for over nine- ’ralgia. Lumbago, R teen years and now made in Canada. I tis. Joint Pains. m Always buy an unbroken ackagei Tin boxes of 12 of “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin’ which,afew cents. Larger Thu-9}: only one Aspirinâ€"“Bayef’â€"You must Aspirin Is the trade mark (registered Aceucacldester of Sallcyllcacld. While 1 manufacture, to assist the pubnc again: mu be stamped with their general uad‘ "DANDERINE" 1; Made Him Feel at Home y and Jimmy were ng away in a come] ey were not loked They managed to Not Aspirin at A11 without 11 e f‘Bagw Cross†Foresaw Its Fate. ONLY TABLETS MARKED “BAYER" ARE ASPEREN rep nt 3'0 11 1‘ md butte bread and but d Jimmy, seri ay on; it's toc Lt a party, at supper after very but no asked some spare time tance: chz Accept "pam‘ornia" syrup of Figs onlyâ€"look for the name California on the package, then you are sure your child is having thn best and most harmless physio for the little stom< ach. liver and bowels. Children love its fruity taste. Full directions on each bottle. You must say "Call- lornia." “1 ET YOUR Imltat 1thu Classiï¬ed Advertisements. glad America’s Pioneer Dog Remedies A I Book on ONE our Cuticura is idal for every-day tol- let uses. Soap to cleanse and puri! , Ointment to soothe and heal. Soap 25:. Oinhnegzl_ 25 And 5_0c. Sold throughout theDommxon. CanadianDepot: L mum. Limited, St. Paul St. Monlreal. Cuticun Soap Ihavu withou! mun. Mr. Herbert Osborn Teils How Cuticura Heaied Eiis Wife “She was treated but ob‘alned no relief. She saw an sdvertis emem for Cuticura Soap and Ointmentand sent for a free sample. She bought more and after using two cakes of Cuticura Soap and two boxes of Cuticura Ointment she was healed." (Signed) Herbert Osborn, 135 Sherbrookc Ave., Ottawa, Ont., Sept. 2,: 1919. hands and feet. ADII “ My wife began to be trbubied with itching and burning of the palms of - her hands and the soles of ' ' her feet. Later the skin $ cracked and became in- flamed, making walking or even standing very pain- ful and preventing sleep at night. Later it became nec- ‘essary to bandage both me. My guarantee )nuznll. V :alifornia Syrup of Figs" Child’s Best Laxative FEMALE HELP WANTED 11 MOTHER! AGENTS WANTED. mlcnnnmovn Iy stock all price M did. with Bayer \VAN 'I FOR SALE am] How to Feed Mailed Free to any Ad- dress by the Author. H. Clay Glover 00.. Inc. 118 \Vest 315: Street New York. U.S.A. EGG DISEASES h( rices right 1111) Magazine R Foxmé FROM 1 "Standard bred" ï¬low \Vrit TO DO PLAIN . I‘nul pnpen Hid stamp for ufm-turlng (20., agent Alcnz 250 FOR me; you‘ll awn: to Agency. -\ T IV lle [u any 0. \st, Ill- 1th to we