m 3t ib no @I was very particular to have it propaved strietly according to direcâ€" tion=,. and used good, rich cream. It was ~<ry nice indeed, and about bedâ€" tine i1 said to the members of the fam‘!s that I believed I felt better. On« «* them laughed and said, ‘That‘s anovl~~ of mother‘s notions," but the noii>n kas not left me yet. ©I continued to improve right along aft~~ ‘saving off tea and coffee and ta‘kinz Postum, and now after three years‘ use I feel so well that 1 am alwmo~: young sgain. 1 know Postum wos <he cause of the change in my ho~‘‘) ind I canno: say too much in its Cuxor. I wish I could persuade all ner>o>:s people to use it." | Name given by Canadiar Postum o. Windsor, Ont. | ‘occam comes in two forms: vosicm Cerealâ€"the original form ; â€"must be well boiled. 15¢ and 25¢) h ti to: : of m We reltol tis tw with at 10 eal instant Postumâ€"a soluble powder dissolves quickly in a cup of hot t~+, and, with cream and sugar, i~« a delicious beverage instantly. A boy of 12 wrote: "The advantage of the war is that the men have learnâ€" ed to knit"; and another boy wrote: "IThe main disadvantage of war is that girls must remain old maids beâ€" in 10 senior departments, five boys aud tive girls, of elementary schools, says the London Chronicle. No preâ€" pavation was allowed, and no notice given. The children were told to write as much as they could about the war in 15 minutes. In all 3081 papers wore written, 1,511 boys, 1,570 girls. A little girl, aged 11, wrote: ‘the origin of the war was this: Th when the German Emperor was at Windsor he insulted Queen Vicâ€" toria, and so King Edward smacked him round the face. The German Empsror said: ‘I‘ll be avenged,‘ and henee the war." #ay in British School Children Write Essays on the War. ‘Tho interest of children in the war at different ages was the subject of a papsr in the psychological section of the British Association recently by Dr. . Kimmins, of Southwark, who said in order to obtain information as to the special interests of children at difsront ages in regard to the war esâ€" saya were written by all the children You can get Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills from any dealer in medicines or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams‘ Medâ€" icino Co., Brockville, Ont. in their praise, and 1 ‘;t';;n;iy recomâ€" mend them to all runâ€"down girls and women." y : _ eCs appear and thei a brightness. Can this be : when they so frequently aches, backaches and a 8 in of wretchedness and In most cases it is the b C HEADKE Wheseme : .. NT the use of the pills until I was comâ€" pictely cured and I cannot say enough Good for bivatfch sutsicdrcsa is oo d c O the trouble I soon became a complete ; to a: wroeek. I got so weak I could hardly | was walk. 1 neither ate nor slept well, him and could not go upstairs without | done stopping to rest. At times I had an | coul almost unbearable pain in my back | not : and would have to remain in bed. 1| tain suffered almost constantly from a dull 1 some headache, and when sweeping if lidesir would stoop to pick up anything 1/ tried would get so dizzy that I would have | to catch hold of something to keepl frome falling. At times my Rheart! IHs SMACKED THE KAISEI‘S FACKE. wLIms are. _ He was a delicate child, but has »laped into a strong, healthy boy, _ Postum has been the principal 7 °C, weary women and girls feel bright and happy. With Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills at hand there is no need for any woman or any girl to look ill or feel ill. Mrs, J. McDonald, jr., Hay, Ont., says: "I honestly believe Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills saved my life. Some years ago I had anaemia, and as I did not realize the seriousness of * Weepmneaine sagh t 2. _â€"â€" Yalue. Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills actually make new blood and restore the system shattered by overâ€" work or worry. These pills give a glow of health to pale faces and make tired, wenry wxumic. ~ _ 3 ~ NHEHERE vod for Young People to Follow. My little grandson often comes up how me how large the muscles of regularly only on â€" greater value. I; Wil Pills actually make new P ues . . .. C CAROEREOOIGEnE > CR In most cases it is the bJ to blame, From one cause the blood has become thin . and it is a fact that ange; lessness) more than any « gives women this premai appearance. It is importa blood supply of girls and LOOKING OLD Too soox The Condition of Too Nany We men and Too Many Girls, t was induced to give him the Posâ€" because of my own experience a victim of nervous dyspepsia iny years. Have tried all sorts ticines and had treatment from whysicians, but no permanent came. sed to read the Postum adverâ€" rts in our paper. At first I ut little attention to them, but something in one of the adverâ€" rts made me conclude to try am sixty years old, and have MOTHER‘S "NOTIONS® there will not be any men left." deliciou 0c tins. ds are eaually delicious out the s; me per cup. a Reason‘‘ for Postum. â€"sold by Grocers. C pepieithades...s . d . â€" t replonilhed-l-important not the score of looks, but to robust healtliflwhich is of one cause or another come thin and watery, that anaemia (bloodâ€" han any other cause, is prematurely aged is important that the & *n be women be Mr. Desjardins, by his wellâ€"won success in building up this system, has made for himself an international reputation. Hehas beer decorated by the Pope with the Cross of the Order of St. Gregory the Great. The There seems to be no limit to the usefulness _ of _ these . coâ€"operative banks. They flourish in towns, but they flourish no less in farming disâ€" tricts and in mining or lumbering loâ€" calities. They seem to do well in such new and raw settlements .as those about Lake Timiskaming, and they do quite as well in the oldâ€"settled and historie parishes around Quebec. The Best Rule of Sound Banking is made the basis of all loan transacâ€" tions, that is, the person who wishes to borrow money must not only give securityâ€"the endorsement of two felâ€" lowâ€"members is enough if everything else is all rightâ€"but he must show that he can and will use the money profitably. No matter if the wouldâ€" be borrower be a millionaire, he canâ€" not borrow a dollar of the People‘s Bank money for purposes of enjoyâ€" ment or display. All the capital is thus kept earning, and the People‘s Bank prospers in the prosperity of its members. ‘ All business is conZzed to the memâ€" bership of the bank, and the memberâ€" ship is confined strictly to the locality in which the bank is established. There are no branches. Consequently, complete neighborâ€"knowledge and the possession of a common interest is an unfailing defence of the integrity of the funds. This common interest is made more complete by the fact that the oneâ€"manâ€"oneâ€"vote principle is saâ€" credly maintained. Nobody, however wealthy, can buy shares and secure what is known in joint stock circles as "control." The People‘s Banks accept sums as low as five cents either on deposit at interest or as payment on stock. They loan as little as a dollar. It is rather unusual to have a loan of over a hunâ€" dred dollars. This is a genuine growth of the soil. No millionaire has patronized this system, no Government has subâ€" sidized or otherwise encouraged it. In fact, Mr. Desjardins is on record as saying that the one thing to be avoided is Government assistance,. He has asked, but in vain so far, for a Dominion law under which these banks could be given corporate idenâ€" tity. This request on his part has been granted by the Province of Queâ€" bec, and this law has greatly faciliâ€" tated the work in that Province. Then the system began to spread. Toâ€"day there are over 150 of these institutions in the Province of Queâ€" bee alone, _ The new bank prospered under Mr. Desjardins‘ cautious and skilful manâ€" agement. No mistakes were made. In two years the People‘s Bank of Levisâ€"that being the name of the ine\\' organizationâ€"reported a turnâ€" over of $31,116.42. Doubters were | gilenced, and the first converts to the idea were enthusiastic. Many were for having the system extended® to | other towns. But the founder of the new bank would not even consider such a thing. Realizing that the _ movement was one of careful experiâ€" ment and slow education, he insisted on establishing one bank first. It was almost ten years before he assisted in;‘ the founding of new banks. By that: time the Levis concern had gathered; about a quarter of a million dollars | of the people‘s savings and loaned the money over and over again to those | who needed it and could use it to' advantage. Loans of over a million dollars had been made in this way, all of it to relatively poor people and much of it to the lowestâ€"paid of laâ€" borers, yet without the loss of a single cent of principal or interest. The efâ€"| feet of this work in promoting thrift| and helping industry among the peoâ€"| ple can be imagined. I |__Of course, there were kind friends | to assure Mr. Desjardins that Canada was not Europe and to point out to ‘him that this thing had never been "done before, and therefore never | could be done. Still, however, he was | not convinced. The fact was that cerâ€" |tain of his neighbors had caught | something of his enthusiasm and were idesirous of seeing the experiment called in Mr. Desjardins own houseâ€" this was on the 6th of December, 1900â€"the total capital paid in for the organization of the new bank was only $26. But these institutions are not aggregations of captial, but of people, and when Mr. Desjardins found that the best of his neighbors were strongly with him, he knew that the first step had been well taken. I Tue history of financial institutions | will be searched in vain for a more Iromantic story than that of the peoâ€" ple‘s banks of Canada. In this case the grain of mustard seed has grown into a tree. | â€" Mr. Alphonse Desjardins, of Levis, 'Quebec. is a typical Frenchâ€"Canadian of the better class. Believing that the lack of thrift among so many of the poorer of his own people was due to lack of encouragement and opporâ€" tunity, he made a study of the whole‘ question. In this way his attention‘ was attracted to the success of the coâ€"operative banks of Europe. After‘ reading all the literature on this sub-' ject that he could find, and after long | correspondence with some of the lead-| ers of the movement, he decided to | try the experiment of adapting the' system to the conditions in Canada. I Every One of Them Successful. Where Five Cents Niay Be Deposited And One Dollar May Be QUEBEC HAS 150 PEOPLE‘S BANKS ALPHONSE â€" DESJARDINS AUTHOR OF systTEN. First Step Well Taken. m Â¥e: | Russian Tea Buyers Active. | _ Now that vodka has been abolishâ€" l ed, the Russians are taking to tea \ with great favor. Russian agents ‘ are buying great quantities of tea in | the East, thus forcing up the price ; of the product. | _ "Willie, did you tie that tin can to ‘the dog‘s tail?" | *"Yes, sir," replied the small boy. ‘"I‘m trying to do a kind act every | day. That dog chases every rabbit he | sees. I tied the can to him so that it will make a noise and warn the rabâ€" bit." ’(Iurmg the battle of Loos. | _ Strictly accurate details are that | the Prince was speeding towards the |Front in an automobile. He ordered | the driver to pull up at the foot of a | knoll which the Prince mounted and , watched the progress of the fighting | through his binoculars. Ailments such as constipation, colic, colds, vomiting, etc., seize children of all ages, and the mother should be on her guard against these troubles by keepingâ€"a box of Baby‘s Own Tablets in the house. If any of these troubles come on suddenly the tablets will cure them, or if the little one is given an occasional dose of the tablets he will escape these troubles. The tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. Reproached with running into danâ€" ger, which the heir to the throne must avoid, the Prince replied "Well, I have plenty of brothers." While he was standing on the hill a big shell fell on the automobile, utterâ€" ly destroying the car and blowing the driver to pieces. Automobile Which He Had Just Left Wrecked by a Shell. An officer attached to the British staff says that the Prince of Wales had a miraculous escape from death during the battle of Loos. ‘ Regarding the food in Austria the young women stated in an interview 'that the bread, obtained on the ticket system as in Germany, is made chiefâ€" | ly from maize flour, so that it resemâ€" 'bles yellow sponge cake. "Half an hour after a meal one is hungry ,again.†In Austria people are told | that food in England is at famine s'prices. that England desires peace, | and that the British public is terrorâ€" | ized by Zeppelins. | ! _ Much was made in Austria at ! Christmas of the east coast bombardâ€"| England was everywhere in Ausâ€" tria blamed for the war, and gold rings were to be had bearing the inâ€" scription "Gott strafe England." So much concerned were the Misses Hirst about the new British army that when they reached Paris they ran up to the first man they saw in khaki to have a good look at him. "He was not a trammp," said one of the young women, "but a Colonial who was muck amused when told of the reason for the curious eyes we turnedâ€" upon him." ment, and the Misses Hirst were amazed to learn that Scarborough is much as usual. It was freely said that England had scarcely any army at all, and the idea of raising new armies . was much ridiculed. Lord Kitchener, it was stated, was making himself the laughing stock of Europe with his army of criminals, convicts, and tramps, men who had not done any work for years because no one would employ them. They were detained ten days at Vienna while inquiries were being made and passports secured. The Austrian capital appcared as before the war, but the dancing halls were closed. be allowed to return to Enéland. and the United States Consul advanced th(il_n the necessary money. Their reason for returning to Engâ€" land is that they were unable to obâ€" tain work except in the ammunition factories. The cost of living, they say, has gone up 100 per cent., and their father was unable to suport the whole family. No obstacle was placed in their way when they requested to PRINCE OF WALES‘ ESCAPE Half an Hour After a Meal One Is Hungry Again in Austria, Three young women, named Hirst, have arrived at Skelmanthorpe, near Huddersfield, England, from Reichenâ€" berg, Austria, where still remain their father and mother, one sister, and two brothers. Their father, a plush finisher, emigrated from Huddersfield fifteen years ago. CHILDHCOD AILMENTS President of the United States has more than orce invited Mr. Desjardins to take part in the important consulâ€" tations now in progress on the vital question of agricultural credits. Coâ€" operative associations and learned soâ€" cieties everywhere have consulted him and have given him every honor withâ€" in their power. ‘ COST OF LIVING DOUBLED. Explanation. Kind words never die, but the unâ€" kind live quite long enough. The big residential suburb of Wilâ€" mersdorf, one of the largest in Berlin, gives a line on the everâ€"decreasing marriages in the city. In all of August, 1915, only 62 weddings took place in Wilmersdorf, as against 264 one year ago. Many of the latter, it is true, were soâ€"called "war wedâ€" dings," marriages performed ahcad of schedule time in order that the men could go to war, but in 1913, a normal year, 78 weddings took place. The number of births in the entire city for July was but 2415, as against 3224 in July, 1914. This falling off has gradually been increasing, as far as percentage is concerned. Though figures for August are not yet availâ€" able, it is believed that an even greatâ€" er decrease will be found. Berlin‘s Birth Rate is D«crl.-asimz‘I Rapidly. i Both in the number of births and the marriages in Berlin, Germany;! the effect of the war is slowly but surely being indicated. The former,’ during July of this year, dropped off by 25 per cent., and the latter in August showed an even more marked | decrease. | No other remedy acts the same. Works while you sleep, smooth, silent, effective. Cures the worst headache or constipation. This is what happens when you use Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills. For wind or pain in the Stomach nothing works better. No bad taste left behind, no furred tongue, no more dizzy spells or biliâ€" ous fits after taking Hamilton‘s Pills. All the old costiveness, frightful dreams and nervous disorders disapâ€" pear as a ship in the night. The apâ€" petite is sharpened up, takes on a keen edge. You enjoy your meals, relish and digest them. Strength and buoyant spirits return,. _ You feel good, you look like your old . self again with bright eyes and rosy: cheeks. The best guarantee of good health and old age that man and woâ€" man can have is the regular use of this family Pill. Suited to all ages, you should get a few 25¢. boxes from . the drug store and keep them handy.| Remember the name,â€"Dr. Hamilton‘s ; Pills of Mandrake and Butternutâ€"| no substitute so good as the genuine.} How to Awake "|Â¥vresh as a Daisy Constipation Gone! If a man desires depth of keel, shortness of legs, width of back, length of back, breast meat, great egg capacity, vitality, or any other desirable attribute or quality, he must look to the man who is producing the qualities in a systematic way. Only there can he be sure of getting any definite good. Outside of the securing of a number of good birds to bring in the desired qualities, perhaps no other is as immediate in results as inâ€" troducing the $10 breeding male of known breeding. | Minard‘s Liniment Cures Colds, &c. When these qualities are desired by someone else, it is well worth the price, and more of it cannot be seâ€" cured for less. a source where blood lines have been working in the same direction for some considerable time. The breeder has found out the very greatest pains are required to produce the best reâ€" sults, and in consequence his stock matures right, and as vigor and staâ€" mina are absolutely necessary to do anything, he keeps vitality before him always as the greatest essenâ€" tial. _ Breeding continuously along these lines, culling always very closeâ€" ly, he is fixing only the best qualities in his flock. One of the bi}gest factors that make the $10 breeding male so valuâ€" able is the fact that he comes from _ If these careful discriminating peoâ€" ple have discovered that the breeder can supply them breeding males at $10 so as to give full value or better there must be a reason or reasons making these males worth the price in possibilities in useful qualities he can transmit to his progeny. As one travels through the country seeing the flocks of mongrel birds at many farms, the eye occasionally sees a flock of uniform color, shape and size that pronounces the birds at once to be pureâ€"bred stock, or the result of selective breeding. Breeders of poultry for market purâ€" poses probably secure more of their breeding blood from producers of the highest quality stock than from felâ€" low market poultrymen, who may be more or less indifferent to the real merit of their breeders. In many cases men of wealth who fail to seâ€" cure just what they want, grow large quantities of chicken of the particular: type and quality that meets their reâ€" quirements. They find it essential to call on the known breeders of quality for stock to keep their flocks producâ€" ing the type their household requireâ€" ments ask for. ANOTHER EFFECT OF WAR. There was a time when it would have been considered the height of folly for anyone to pay even $5 for a breeding male, and to the inexperâ€" ienced the prices paid seem unreasonâ€" able, but, as one through continudus effort for improvement sees the great care and skill required to produce the most valuable breeders, the amount asked becomes a minor item as compared with the service renâ€" dered. This is not primarily a serâ€" vice to thé fancier, but in many cases is in a larger way a development that gives to the market poultryman imâ€" provements that mean the supplying of a better product at a more satisfacâ€" tory price. \ THE VALUE OF A $10 BREEDING By A. P. Marshall. ED. 6. Precocious Offspringâ€"Pa, may I ask just one more question ? Patient Paterâ€"Yes, my son. Just one more. Precocious Offspringâ€"Well, then, pa, how is it that the night falls, but it‘s the day that breaks? Minard‘s Liniment Cures Garget in Cows "No," answered the boy. "I never heard anything about your pertaters, but everybody says there‘s peas and beans in your coffee and sand in your sugar." "All right," returned the groceryâ€" man, proceeding to measure out the tubers, "and while I am getting them just look at them and think. Did it ever occur to you that they contain water, sugar, and starch?" A small boy rambled into a groâ€" cery, followed by the usual dog, and stepped up to where the proprietor was busy wrapping something on the counter. "Hello, Mr. Jones!" said the boy, glancing toward the cake box. "Give us a peck of pertaters, please." I would not start on é&oyage withâ€" out it if it cost a dollar a bottle. Gentlemen,â€"1 have used MINâ€" ARD‘S LINIMENT on my vessel and in my family for years, and for the every day ills and accidents of life J cogsider_ it has no equal. CAPT. F. R. DESJARDIN, Schr."‘Storke,†St. Andre, Kamouâ€" "Really?" asked Mrs. McGreevy with sudden interest. "And how do you play it?" Minard‘s Liniment Co., Limited. Mrs. McGreevy was a dinner guest one evening where a noted explorer was the attraction. Being of a someâ€" what languid turn of mind, she paid more attention to her dinner than to the conversation. After dinner was over she turned to one of the guests and asked: "What was that tiresome old exâ€" plorer talking about?" ; "Progressive Patagonia," was the reply. 1 is what a leading physician says of Dr, Jackson‘s Roman Meal. Properly cooked into porridge according to directions on package, without stirâ€" ring after first making, it is a delight to humanity. Use a double boiler or set boiler in basin of boiling water and use one cup meal to two cups water. Cook for half an hour. It‘s very nutritious, prevents indigestion and relieves constipation or "money back." Ask your doctor. At grocers',‘ 10 and 25 cents. IT‘S A GODâ€"SEND English Grocers Warn Customers: to Exercise Economy. The big grocery firms in various parts of England have sent circulars to their customers asking them to exâ€" ercise the greatest possible economy in the use of loaf sugar, which is very popular in England for cooking, canâ€" ning and similar purposes. The groâ€" cers suggest the substitution of brown | sugar for most uses. \ Before the war the bulk of the loaf sugar used in England was imported| from Austria, Germany and Belgium.! This supply has been cut off, and there is, therefore, a considerable de-' ficiency, which the few Joafâ€"sugar reâ€" finers in England cannot make up. There has been no advance in price, however, and this is controlled by the | Royal Commission on Sugar. | raska. Hpr s4 â€"4, auihic : cvopadin No# 43â€" piace : Aediont 254 inful swelling. It followed an inâ€" r:ry I recei\lr:5 in my left leg and caused me great pain and discomfort. The muscles were strained and sore, and no other remedty gave the ease and comfort I got from rubbing on Nerviline. There is a soothing, painâ€" relieving power about Nerviline that touched the root of my trouble. Nerâ€" viline reduced the swelling, it destroyâ€" ed the pain, it brought my limb back to perfect condition." The experience of Mr. Bowen, whose home is in Midâ€" dlesex, is not unusual. Thousands are proving ‘every day that muscular pains of every kind, chronic rheumaâ€" tism, lumbago, neuralgia and sciatica will yield to Nerviline when nothing else can possibly cure. Nerviline is an oldâ€"time family pain _ remedy, used nearly forty years with great success. The large family size bottle . costs 50¢., trial size 25¢c. at all dealers, l If you have any muscles that are strained and weak, that are frequentâ€" ly subject to rheumatic pains; if you have any painful swellings that reâ€" fuse to g awayâ€"get busy with Nerâ€" viline. is is the very sort of trouâ€" ble that Nerviline is noted for curing quickly. "I have proved Nerviline sin_:p‘ly‘ a wonder in reducing a hard, Painfol Swellings Reduced Muscular Strains Ended LOAF SUGAR SHORTAGE. Rubbed Away by Powerâ€" ful Remedy. A Bump for Science. Missed Something. A Poser. TO HUMANITY ISSUE 45â€"‘15. A wise married man never praises the gown of another woman unless his wife has one more stylish. "It brings it all very close, and when we volunteers must muster of an evening for our drill it helps to give actuality to the eternal ‘Upon the left form line of platoons!‘ or ‘Wheel to the right by sections!‘ when we hear the farâ€"off roar of the whirlpool which has drawn in so much, and may yet draw in ourselves if we should be thought worthy. One can spring to attention with a sharper snap when the guns of Flanders are pulsing in one‘s ears." "I am down at 8 and walk among | the flowers before breakfast. Hark to| that sound breaking in upon the peace | of this sweet summer morning! It is | very faint and very far, and yet with | a deep throb in it which tells of infiâ€" ; nite power. There it is again rising| a little and then falling, like a thunâ€"| derous surge upon a distant beach.| There is no doubt at all about the sound. It is that of the guns in Flanâ€"| ders. It is 120 miles as the crow flles, and it might well have appeared ; incredible, but you have also to reâ€" | member that we are 700 feet high and | that there is a very steady euberly} wind. Some miracle has put those air E currents just right, and we do actualâ€"| ly hear the guns of the great longâ€" drawn battle. For a week now, ever | since the wind has been in that quarâ€"| ter, we have heard it. All this secâ€"| tion of Sussex is talking of it. | Minard‘s Liniment Cures Diphtheria. Guns Heard Roaring In Southern England. Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, writing in the current issue of Colliers‘, tells how the roar of the guns in Flanders is heard at his home. The author lives near the summit of Crowborâ€" ough Beacon, in northern Sussex, England. He writes: A man charged with stealing a horse applied for legal aid at the Old Bailey, London, England. The Reâ€" corder said the defence was that the man did not steal the horse; it folâ€" lowed him. "It walked by my side," said the man. The Recorder said he was afraid counsel could not persuade a jury that such a story was true. He refused legal aid, and told the man that he could "try the story" himâ€" self. eases the pain, destroys the roots, kills a corn for all time. No pain. Cure xuumt_od Get a 256. bottle af Corns Drop Out In the nozzle of the tube is a wick, which, when the flame projector is ready for use, is ignited by some chemical producing a fierce flame which ignites the liquid as it passes out in a stream. Thus the liquid isâ€" sues from the nozzle in a broad stream of flame. iGerman Device Propels Stream of Liquid Fire. One of the liquid flame projectors, by means of which the Germans took on July 30 the positions at Hooge, from which they were driven on Augâ€" ust 9, has been captured. It resemâ€" bles a metal pack in shape and is carâ€" ried on the back. The inflammable liquid, some kind of coal tar preparaâ€" tion, is kept under pressure in the tank, and its flow is regulated by means of a tap and a pressure gaugcj on a length of tubing. } Minard‘s Liniment Cures Distemper. Now there are signs of a third big advertising movement by Great Briâ€" tain in its "thrift campaign." Alâ€" ready the posters are urging people to eat less meat, to eat more vegetables, to insist that each loaf of bread weigh two pounds, to report any dealer tryâ€" ing to sell a smaller loaf, and giving similar advice as to economical houseâ€" keeping. i Bsns :P03 td uies MB iss 24 their savings into the nation‘s tills. If the public had not become accusâ€" tomed to Great Britain as a big adâ€" vertiser because of the proportions of the army recruiting crusade, the diâ€" mensions of this campaign of adverâ€" tising for money would have seemed startling, for in itself it was altogeâ€" ther without precedent among nations befire this war. FLAME PROJECTOR CAPTURED The recent big war loan, the largest in the history of governmental borâ€" rowings, was the occasion of another tremendous _ advertising campaign. Even the big advertisers who have contracts for the outside pages of the dailies were pushed into the inside, so John Bull could ask Britons to pour ar +o & P L : and private motor cars increase raâ€" ther than decrease as the war conâ€" tinues. There are appeals for reâ€" cruits in prose and verse, in cartoon and suggestive picturingâ€"all dressed as attractively as colored inks and trained advertising men can make nation ever spent oneâ€"tenth as much on printers‘ ink in the same period. Kitchener‘s army has been raised chiefly by advertising. Fullâ€"page, halfâ€"page and smaller advertisements in the papers are almost daily occurâ€" rences. The billâ€"boards have been covered with the greatest variety of posters any advertiser ever had paintâ€" ed. A collection of these would reâ€" veal every play of ingenius appeal adâ€" vertising experts are capable of inâ€" venting. The signs on trams, buses, How many million of dollars the British Government has spent in adâ€" vertising during the first year of the war no expert accountant has yet had the facilities to estimate. It is a safe statement to make, however, that no _ BRITAIN‘S MAIN OBJECTS. Recruiting, War Lean Subscrinti BATTLE IN FLANDERS. Was Some Horse. Paint on Putnam‘s Corn Extractor tos night, and corns feel better in the morn~ ing. _ Magical the emnadls 41% . ppliemmiectofprins ONTARIO ARCHIVES "P u t n a m‘ e" "It‘s wonderful how I make things last," he exclaimed. "Look at this umbrella, now. 1 bought it eleven years ago. Since then I have recovâ€" ered it twice. I had new ribs put in in 1910, and last month 1 exchanged for a new one in a restaurant. And here it isâ€"as good as new," One day a man exhibited a handâ€" some umbrella. Make "NEW YORK" your fur \\‘h‘y not muke trapping proAtable by whipping to the consuming market We can afford to pay you better prices than our outâ€"ofâ€"town competitors, as we have direct connections with the leading manufacturers in the world. A trial «hipment is all we ask to prove this fact WRITE TOâ€"DAY SURE for Price List, Tags, Market Reports MAX WULFSOHN 122â€"124 W. 26th 8St., New York City RAW FURS SEIGELS m reduces Varicose Veins, Ruptured Muscles or Ligaments, Enlarged Glands, Wens, Cysts. Allays pain quickly. Price #1 and $2 a botde at druggists or delivered. Made in the U. 6. A. by W F. YOUNG, P. D F., 516 Lymans Bidg., Montrea!, Can. Absorbine and Absorbine, Jr.. are made 4n Canada, PC Memnamdadinieemrednicetidanailnedn d V icas old “- ARTE x‘;- lU'l‘ 2006, HNdes, ;-w. No commission. ‘rite today for free rice list, rs* s ot Fac &Im mosens rum conrany? onl 20 tork frises:. eeerrrrrnrereree Tt i._l.fl,va;rn.-- 1 OB AOCCCOETACCA, h. 4 1 M.nJ vick ret have best market in America for Purs, Hides en Furs Have Advanced Ship toRogers. Wegiveliberalgrades, S fu!lrvlluein:.uh.nd‘uluic\:mmn.. t Offers best advantages in ilu-lné;;rl':d ucation; strong demand for graduates enter now; write for calendar. se uc Ll. PCE ank €UH LA Offices for sale in good Ontario towns. ‘The most useful and interesting Oof all businesses. #ull information on application to Wilson Publishing Comâ€" pany, 73 West Adelaide St. Toronto. Rmeeaes 2 Oe OW sOLD INX TWO sizks Oxty, FULL SIZE, Price1.00 TRIAL IZE, Price GOc EC EeC ERY UOC ETTE MEK & internal and external, cured with» out pain by our home treatment. Writs &betore too late. Dr. Beliman Medical , Limited, Collingwood, Ont. L 0 0 O ce PROFIT-MAKING NEWS AND JOB Offices for mule in aaia a ul l AM OoPEX PoRr BarRELLED AP. ples in Carlots. Quote prices, naming varieties and grades. Can also use few cars of apples in bulk. H. W. Dawson, Brampton, mends it highly. The woman who is seeking a perfect complexion will find Usit an inestimable aid. All good druggists carry it. Manufactured by the Usit Manufacturing Camnanwv Toronto. . PS CGL .A t wrrcs ness of youth to the faces of thouâ€" sands of Canadian women. Everyone wholncuudlteonmmyhu“. sutucd clr _ clem L P EMN&&H ue wl ‘*rlfln praises of Uf wonderful complexion restorer is bringing the freshness and smooth~ Indigestion, biliousness, headâ€" aches, flatulence, pains after eating, constipation, are all comâ€" mon symptoms of stomach and liver troubles. And the more you neglect them the more you suffer. Take Mother Scigel‘s Gyru‘: if your stomach, liver, or bowels are slightly deranged or have lost tone. Mother Scigel‘s Syrup is made from the curative extracts of certain roots, barks, and leaves, which have a reâ€" markable tonic and strengthenâ€" ing effect on all the organs of digesiion. The distressing sympâ€" toms of indigestion or liver troubles soon disappear under its beneficial action, Buy a bottle toâ€"day, but be sure you pet the genuine Mother Seigel‘s Syrup. There are many imitaâ€" tions, but not one that gives the same health benefits. 1015 Best Remedy lndigfdstion Biliousness No inflated price list from us. Send us your Furs and get the highest market price. Raw Fur Dealers LIMITED The Old No. 494 8St. Paul St. MONTREAL. USIT Yonge and Charles Sts., Toronto. you can clean them off promp:ly with Established over 38 years as ANCER, TUMORS, LUMPS, ETC. Hiram Johnson All Quantities m it NEWSPAPERS FOR SALE L m x As Good as New. Â¥oU CaN‘T out our a MISCELLANEOUS. 476 avenue, *9 ‘ Te.