r:r Use s OG# £ Child + made formity er to the irds ught Exports m m dit 100 baby, catly 10 Â¥ & Dabe Lh ind to Hanpy freshmen! Only four years more and their education will begin. "Oh, John," she exclaimed excitedâ€" Ivy, "little Betty is beginning to talk!" "Really!‘" said the proud father. "What have you been teaching her?" "She‘s reciting *Baamâ€"baa, black sheep, have you any wool?"" his wife ers asked. Mrs. Smithers entered her husband‘s den with their little offspring in her arms. informed him. "Well, she doesn‘t say all that, but she‘s got as far as ‘Baaâ€"baa," said the proud mother. R Flannel articles or garments that have shrunk in the wash may be reâ€" stored to their former size by placing a damp cloth over the affected mateâ€" rial, then pressing with a hot jrom. i To shrink flannel, allow the mateâ€" rials to soak for several hours in cold water, then wring out in a warm, soapy lather. â€"The longer the fanâ€" nel is allowed to soak in the cold water, the greater the shrinkage will rub or wring. Transfer to & fresh bath containing warm water to which & little olive oil has been added (a tablespoonful of oil to every gallon of water). then hang up, without wrlng-( Ing, to dry. rial in this, then knead andjlq;o;e between the hands, taking care not to Prepare 2 warm, soapy lather of shredded soapfiakes of some nentral brand, and boiling water softened with a little borax. _ Immerse the mate The problem of how to wash fianâ€" nels without causing them to shrink can be overcome in the followinz manâ€" ner:â€" Fresh Air.â€"Open one window at the top, the other at the bottom. Out goes the bad air, in comes the good. Movâ€" ing air is better than motionless air. Sleep with windows open, summer and winter, wet or fine. Extra blanket if you must, but never a closed window. Sunshine.â€"Push the baby‘s pram Into it; sit in it as you read, sew, cook, wash your hair, or laze. It is more precions than diamonds. Get it direct â€"not through glass, unless obliged. Shade a child‘s eyes from it with a shady hat. The full glare on the deliâ€" eate eye mechanism is bad. Shade your own eyes with sunâ€"glasses. Exercise.â€"In moderation, walking Is best of all, as it exercises so many muscles and must necessarily take one out of door. Even if wet, foggy, damp, do not miss a daily walk. Strenuous exercise after fifty is unwise. Life was never more strenuous than now. _ Therefore we must conserve our energles, husband our resources to meet the heavier strain on them. Folâ€" low these rules as closely as naossihla« ntigpiitih 0h sc th c h a c d c One of the Spartan tests of farmer character will disappear, then, too, Husking is hard, cold work that calts for a decidedly redâ€"blooded man. The skin chaps and the circulation loiters as one sits, day after day, pulling the ears clear of the brittle stalks and at regular intervals emptying full bushel baskets into the wagon body. . With gray threats of snow in the alr, with the last geese gone, the old rule counâ€" seled haste: "A good farmer always has his corn husked and his staiks drawn before the first snow." _ Stil, husking was one of the ftew chores that could be left, while apple pickâ€" Ing, fall plowing ana the cleaning up of the vegetable garden were imperaâ€" tive, so often enough the corn wa: got in after the rest of the farm ha1' all been â€" made snug for w:n?er-â€": leaves banked warmly _ against t?mi house and vegetable bing full But with this twoâ€"row mechanical picker in general operation the first shall be as the last, and a premature suowâ€" storm will fall t~ catch even a dilaâ€" tooy frmer with h‘s corn still in the shock soon be antique and thai tion on the farm will be stimulated as the autum: the autoâ€"picker disturbs parliaments of the crows mithos ic liics A dsc o sc d 0s vey at the Colloge of Agricuiture of the University of Illinois. _ Hand busking as practiced by the students took 5.1 hours of man labor an acre, not counting the horses and wagon, but the industrions new gadget needâ€" ed only 2.2 hours for the same mn-k.i and transported Itself. There is every reason to suppose, therefore, that the simple, forefatherly husking pin wm‘ Aesmm Yos coul. L "twoâ€"row cemue c c 10 CCC mCer AT . AUGIEOIT of maize. _ Enormous Rharvesting maâ€" chines doing everything at once, have decades since replaced the scythes of summer, but only now is it becoming necessary to say "was" of the huskâ€" ing pin. c That the time needed for husking ean be cut in two by the use of a C 40 6 cessn W s 5 . fReip of a good locus which is nothing mor with a leather strap back of the hand. 4 portant trifie, it has harsh cloaks from mill Farmers Say Adieu To Husking Pin A Coming Child Washing Flannels How to Live Long row _ mechanical ;;i;:k;;"" has demonstrated by a cornfield sur College of Agriculiture of and that overproducâ€" will be still further : autumnal clatter of that?" Smithâ€" es and wagon, Â¥ gadget needâ€" he same work, There is every h the nearâ€"by £elj gour territory are earnestly solicited. | f Faithfully yours. ' IRVING E. ROBERTSON, | . Chairman of Appeal Committe®, sase, others deformed. crippled or maimed, make up the continuous large population of the Hospitai for Sick Children. which nas been in operation for 55 years The annua) appea! for funds is always made at the approach of the Christmas season. as a most apâ€" propriate time to urge the claims of such a cause, when all tovers of little children would like to contribute The Hospitai for Sick Children does not share in the funds of .he Toronto Fedâ€" sration for Community Service, because Wee babes. bigger ones, toddlers, kindergarteners, up to early teen age boys and girls, some stricken with dis= | _ Please note the following official fig= ures for the year which ended Septem» ber 30, 1930. indicating the magnitude and rapid expansion of this mission of mercy. Total number of cot patients in year, 6,970, an increase of 377 over the previous year; actual number of patient days, 132,718. an increase of 11,301; average days‘ stay of all patients 19. These figures include the wonderâ€" ful country nospitai at Thistletown, ‘ where the year‘s totai of patient days _was 36,876 and the daily average 101, _ In addition to this, the outâ€"patient de= partment, at the main hospitai, nad 38,705 attendances within the year, the largest number of patients treated in a single day being 317 The little sufferers who are minis» tered to in the Hospital for Sick Chu» dren come from all over the Province 3 Ontario. Through this magnificent institution for nealing, the very poor child has an equa! advantage with the very rich in securing the benefit of the (inest znown medicai and surgical skill. There are no strings to admittance of 1 . impiraceinimentens n ts gae o8 difference. it is a great Mother Charity. Every year the trustees nave to see that a very large deficit is provided for and they rely on kind people to nelp. . The best help is Phillips‘® Milk of Magnesia. For the 50 years since its invention, it has remained standard with physicians. You will find nothing else so quick in its effect, so harmless, so efficient. One tasteless spoonful in water neutralizes many times its volume the goodâ€"hearted people your newsâ€" paper serves you will interest them and at the same time ce instrumental in romoting ~the rontinuance of this aumane service . {t is a gigantic underâ€" taking and the hospitai needs every bit 3f heip it can get Mn nigiet the way to recovery now ‘ An enormous amount of good is being accomplished for Ontario‘s many "Sick Kids," and Oy passing this information along to that period its cots bus anioani ce porters the Hospital for Sick Children was enabled to increase its service conâ€" crude helps. Use what your doctor WHAT most people call indigesâ€" tion is usually excess acid in the stomach. Food has soured. The instant remedy is an alkali which neutralizes acids. But don‘t use ‘Yes, he took me to dinner at the Monicardo," satd the chorus girl. "Then we did a theatre with a huge box of chocolates, and finished up with champagne and oysters at the Carlâ€" ritz. _ We had a lovely time!" "What, both of you?" asked the sceptic. \ Hospital for Dr. Williams* Pink Pills are sold by all dealers in medicine or by mail at 50 cents a box from The Dr. Williams* Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. | About Her Delicate Daughter Pills at once for these pills actually renew and enrich the blood. They make sickly girls well and happy; imâ€" prove the appetite and bring back all the charm and brightrn;;;_;f-;‘ertect health. _ Immediate Relief for INDIGESTION is uncertain and her apirlta-iow; anaemia is the cause. She needs new blood. Give her Dr. Williams‘ Pink If your daughter complaing of weariâ€" ness; pains in the side; weakness; headache or baohghe; her appetite could say the same thing. Their daughters endure a trying Hfe robbed of all vitality and brightness. Their cheeks are pale; theirâ€"eyes dull; their step languid and every movement tells of shattered health. If neglected their suffering grows more acute till decline sets in. "She seems to be fading away," sa‘d an anxious mother recently about her dau_x}:ter. Thousands of mothers As a friend of umu:tea’umc folks, 67 COLLEGE §St., TORONTO 3 (Country Branch, Thistletown) were occupied by patients, most of to an overâ€"acid stomach and bowels. Be sure to get genuine Phillips‘. It is always a liquid; never made in tablet form. Look for the name Phillips® on the bottle. All drucâ€" Once you learn this perfect way you‘ll never deal in any other manner with the headaches, gas, immediate with no harmful afterâ€" in acid. The Remember, Priscilla, that everyone who has little red pants is not a Santa Claus. Gertrudeâ€""Yes, isn‘t it grand* And he‘s orly known mo about a month, Do you think he actually loves me?t" E Heabned®Pralng 0(008 20 w Srtste 1 uds Katherine â€" "Just known you a month? Well, perhaps he does then.‘ Katherineâ€"‘You proposed to you?" Each time we pour our shekels o‘er For suits ,or tie, or tile; We envy Eve‘s and Adam‘s leavesâ€" Ere clothing was the style. < Not always thus did manrkind fuss, In Eden‘s flowered maze; No single cent for garb was spen Ah, those were happy ‘days. But soon enough we learn this tough And cruel truth to know: That day by day for raiment gay Our hard earned kale must go! ly looks better untl_lny;uâ€" get there. Clothes We start this life of toil and s With nothing on or less! We‘re ushered in, without a pin A button, pants or dress! The fishing is not always better on the other side of the stream. It mereâ€" Some people‘s strongest weakness is the love of seeing their names in the paper. Old Ragson Tatters‘ wite complainâ€" ed to him the other day because every time she asked for a new dress he claimed to be short. To this Ragson repMed: "Well, so‘s your dress." When a man mourns But how does the poultryman exâ€" plain it when his hens get sick? They have no teeth. The modern henâ€"pecked husband dashes out of his house to escape & nagging wife and then goes to hear an allâ€"talking moving picture. The distance between the pick and shovel and the golf course is growing shorter every day. The business man takes his profit after everyone else is paid, and gosh, what a lot of people there are to pay! Sign on the crowded dance floor of a wild road house: "He who hesitates is not dancing." People who save money during the year so they can have it at Christmas time enjoy it anddo not have to be embarrassed by being refused credit for Christmas goods. We presume it is a lot easier for Santa Claus to get to the chimney top now that he travels by airplane. ROOM~»BATHâ€"3%° UP) Wercome s NEW YORK ana 31" ST.»» 7"*AVE. spposite PENNA. RR.STATION) RNOR say thai Walt has much over his spent, strife, over The Negro‘preacher wa exhorting his congregation to repent. "Ma bredren," he said, "when yo‘ hears Gabriel sound his horn, yo‘ wants to be ready to jump." "Ma goodness!" exclaimed one of the gathering, "am he aâ€"comin‘ in an automobile?" Banish pain with Minard‘s Liniment. "Good afternoon!" said the publishâ€" er. "What can I do for you?" The youth looked nervous. "Wellâ€"erâ€"I have a song here," he began, "and I was wondering if you would publish it. Erâ€"shall I sing it?" When the song was finished the pubâ€" lisher sat very still and said nothing. "Well," asked the young man, "what do I get for it?" "Ob," replied the publisher, with an air of resignation, "I‘m a publisher, not a magistrate." "Oh, yes, let‘s hear it!" said the publisher; and the youth stood up and burst forth. At the end of a certain number of days the coment dissolves and the young oyster is able to detach himself and sit down permanently upon someâ€" thing solid in the neighborhood.â€" "Titâ€"Bite." The tall, Jongâ€"haired yout.hv entered the music ‘publisher‘s office carrying under his arm a small roll of paper. Owners of oyster beds are now makâ€" ing use of cages which look rather like eggâ€"boxes. These contain numâ€" bers of cardboard partitions which are dipped in a special cementâ€"like comâ€" pound. Hundreds of theso crates are placed upon the beds, and when the oyster spat falls they provide just the resting place required. As many as 1,500 oysterlets have been found atâ€" tached to one compartment of a crate, and as there are twentyâ€"five compartâ€" ments in each the total population may be considerable. Microscopic in size, the newlyâ€" hatched oysterâ€"or spat, as he is callâ€" edâ€"is able to swim about quite freely. Not for some time does he drop down to the bottom and anchor himself to a stone, And if he happens to drop on to a place where there are no stones, he is at the mercy of currents and tides which sweep him out to sea, where all kinds of enemies are waitâ€" ing for him. Though the oyster is not exactly ferocious, it has been found necessary to design cages for him, The reason for this is that the young oyster is such an irresponsible little fellow. To guard the baby against colds nothing can equal Baby‘s Own Tablets. The Tablets‘are a mild laxative that will keep the little one‘s stomach and bowels working regularly. It is a reâ€" cognized fact that where the stomach and bowels are in good order that colds will not exist; that the health of the little one will be good and that he will thrive and be happy and goodâ€" natured. _ The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. If a wife really loves her husband, she will love his dogs too. Guard the Baby Willieâ€""Well, it‘s too bad you don‘t know the name, because little brother got off thare." er?" Motherâ€"*"I don‘t know. Don‘t bothâ€" er me. I‘m reading a story." Willieâ€""What was the name of the last station where we stopped, mothâ€" Benedictâ€""Great fun. My wife eooks and I guess what the dish is." Bonnie Bachelorâ€""Well, you find married life?" financial loss he has lost bone as well as his money. "Come here, my lad," said Paul Rader, noted Chicago evangelist, to Tom Bailey, deckhand of the Canadian Pacifi¢ liner Duchess of York, as he was polishing brass just before the liner sailed for Belfast with the preacher. ‘"You ought to be in this photo, too. We‘ve both got the same jobâ€"keeping the bright work bright!" Accompanied by Mrs. Rader and his daughter Harriet and Willamine, the evangelist is an a world tour. He has meetings scheduled in Belfast, London and the Holy Land. After that he will |pend1 some time in Malta and the Far East returning to America in March. A Musical Comedy Cages for Oysters his backâ€" how do Get two ounces of peroxine powder from your druggist. Sprinkle on a hot, wet cloth and rub the face briskly. Every blackhead will be dissolved. The one safe, sure and simple way to remove blackheads. Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded. FP. W. SCARF & CO. BLACKHEADS from then onwards 1 scemed quite | another person. The headaches disâ€" ‘ appeared and the dizziness, and the ï¬;-octwondcrmm.thingkaehthnl R ve a to weaker glasses, a lens wï¬:h I 'l):flnd;' discarded some yeu; | as not stron s t ioi io "urtiice | during the early mornings of winter. wussle;nenjioyeo:’dbathadl round, enjoy and am r for my;‘;ood.'and am what I eon:s:r very litâ€"the sort of fitness that makes living a joy."â€"(G, F.) < _ ® With all his genius woman is one riddle man has not"yet solved. "I"hope we are not keeping you up, sir," he suggested, kindly. It was a long play, and nearly midâ€" night when the curtain was rung up on the foruth act, disclosing an actor sitting wearily at a table. Somehow his appearance, instead of occasionâ€" ing applause, created an undercurrent of sympathy. At last a member of the audience ventured to express the sentiments of the house. All was stillness; he had not yet spoken, ingf? Ahis indicates a to?id hver Headache, Dizziness and Biliousness surely follow. You must stimulate your lazy liver, start the bile flowing with Carter‘s Little Liver Pills, They also act as a mild laxative, purely vegetable, free from calomel ‘and poisonous drugs, small, casy to * I was a martyr to headaches, with frequent attacks of dizziness affecting my vision, My occupation is a ver{ sedentary oneâ€"a printer‘s reader. gave Kruschen Salts a good trial, and swallow, and not habit forming. They are not a purgative that cramps or ains, unpleasant after effect follow= %, on the contrary a good tonic. Druggists 25¢ and 75¢ red pkgs Let‘s pay the debts of love we owe, Forget the debts of hate; Let‘s share the goodly gifts that grow Andâ€"pile the empty plate; Let‘s all do all the good we knew Before it is too late. Why be handicapped with unsightly blotches on the face, eyes with yellow tmg?e and that tired and languid feelâ€" ing? This indicates a torpid liver Let‘s fill our homes, with song and gee, And banish snarl and frown; Let‘s take the youngsters on our knee, And ride to London Town; Let‘s teach them from thely infancy That right‘s the best renown. HEADACHES Let‘s be as friendly as we can _ Alike with poor and rich; > Let‘s rally round the helpless man Who‘s lying in life‘s ditch; Let‘s make the most of our brief span, And never play with pitch. Let‘s praise each other now and then, Give credit when it‘s due; Let‘s side with good and honest men Of whatsoever hue; Let‘s help the downâ€"andâ€"outs again To tackle life anew. 422 Wellington St. W.. Toronto Ended by Kruschen FROM YOUR â€" â€"â€" LINER? Thoughtful F R T THERE are times when a child is to» fretful or feverish to be sung to sleep. There are some pains a mother cannot pat away. But there‘s quick comfort in Castorial ilhl.?q dlta;râ€hea. and other infantile give this pure vegetable preparaâ€" tion. Whenever coated tongues tell of constipation; whenever there‘s any sign of sluggishness. Castoria has a The temperature of the moon is said to vary from 216 Jesrees Fahrenâ€" heit, when the sun is shining upon it, to 243 degrees below zero when away from the sun. Visitorâ€""Don‘t you evei ery your father spanks you?" "What is the use? He‘s deat" Minard‘s Liniment refreshes A centre of great historic interest in New Brunswick is the city of Saint John, on the shores of the bay of Funâ€" dy. On the city‘s outskirts, on a high hill overlooking the bay, is the site of old Fort Howe. Near the shore is a tablet erected by the National Parks of Canada Branch, Department of the Interior, commemorating the landing of the United Empire Loyalists in 1783. Use Cuticura Take one tonight Make tomorrow | ; Sample Sorp, Ointment, Talcum free. Afrems *"Cuticura," Box 2616, Montreal, Canada. ED in Quick, Sure Relief Clear Vour Shkin ï¬â€™ BILIOUSNESS SLUG@ISHNESS CONSTIPATION Newcomers RED RoSE TEA a» qoed. Xea." = WELCOME ! of Disfiguring Blemishes e ftomorrow ‘ / BRIGHT s\ A Historic City ‘to CLanadaâ€" Ne h J We n toreg Qonid, 198 Dvearlh. To %u), Red. Row Ses. eveir cry when P the scaip Sonâ€" Chapped Skin Houseâ€"fliles have a defender in am American lady, who recently received the degree of Master of Sciencs for her study of these insects. _ She says the ancleanness of the fiy is greatly exaggerated, MARRI. RELIABLE MATRIMON® IAl, paper mailed free. Address Friendship Magazine, Medina, New York 2f$ 4\ se A Smore S Proves it Wind, snow and sleet bruise unâ€" protected skin surfaces, Minard‘s hoals the raw skin tissue and afâ€" fords full protection. BUCKLEY‘S I1S8SUE No. 48â€"‘30 _ Ease From â€" COUGHING Iake ATEN TS List of "Wanted Inventions® and Pull Information Sent Free on Request. THE RAMSAY CO., Dept. W, 273 Bank St., Ottawa. Ont. For Instant e i