‘I iili‘. '.'ii.'.‘.l!.'.il Hziilflf-J ML‘.- L_ cOLlC comes suddenly. Your first intimation that something is wrong may cry in the night. If you have a. bottle of Castoria handy you needn't worry, for a little of this pure vegetable remedy will soon have baby his happy self again; let him go back to sleep. Castoria is always the sensible an ailing child. When a child is restless, fretful, with coated tongue, bad breath appetite, it is a mother's standby. gjue Castoria an important place in their homes. Ready for sour stomach, constipation, or upset. Vilhen buying Fletcher's Castoria always look forfhas. H. Fletcher's signature on the wrapper. This identifies the genuine product. i be a warning maiyrviinibanv i .,.. 1.11.4‘ n; unM¢*'_ w...» Nor vii-mu thing to give and lack of Most mothers v --I "Etiquette Iyloberhlpc Q. How many attendants does a , DilClC usually have at s. home wed- i ding? A. Onc, and that one is the maid bf honor. Q. If one wishes to reserve his sent on a train for a short period of time, how may he do so? A, Place a coat or bag upon it until his return. Q. Is it necessary for a man to, order the same thing that a woman! docs at a restaurant? v A. N0, f]. V TRY NEW IHETHOD IN EMIGRAT- ION i l i " LONDON. 330v, 5 ~~iBy file CEREAL‘ fan Pressi.~l_ord imadton, who rec- , entiy toured Canada as Chairman of‘ the Yorkshire Voluntary Migratlonl, Committee, sa_vs the scheme for a‘ co-opcrativc effort for settling young} men in large groups to embark on‘ genuine mixed fanning was received} ln Canada. xvith warm approval. Onc well-known head of an organization] which has settled some thousands oil young immigrants on the land said: "The scheme strikes exactly the right l note; (an proper supervision, (b) corn-i munity life: (cl opportunity of own-l ership under the most favorable clr-l giinistanccs: rm a chance oi matri- mony reasonably soon; (e) a, right port, of farming rnthcr than a gamble, Ind land starvation." l "if the first try-out meets with the luccc": that we confidently expect,‘ [aid Lord Mid-dlcton, "then there is‘ Q0 reason why it should not. be ex- nded to any extent. A substantilai ea. in Canada would come into cul-I vaticn, and we would have a. first- ic outlet for the best of the youth! our country whose prospects in , “Let it not be tbcuzht that r am ldecrying existing schemes of land ‘settlement. I am satisfied that the great majority of those whom we have sent, out in the last few years are happy and prosperous, and in far better case than that they would have been at home." Lord Mlddlebim expresses the opinion that the W85‘ tige of British settlers has risen con- siderably in Canada. in recent years. Commander J. B. Adam and Mr. Cfiiarlesworth, s. coal owner, both of whom have interested themselves in the scheme for emigrating boys from Yorkshire to Canada. made an inter- esting joint talk which was broad- cast. Mr. Charles worth paid a tribute to the type of Ontario fanner xvith whom most of the boys made their homes. In almost every case he found the boys treated as members of the family, and being well taught in practical farming. ‘He could not help reflecting on the physical improvement of North Country boys after sometimes only a. few months of Canadian fare. He mentioned the case of a. Yorkshire mining family who had previously lived in a dilapidated cottage, with two boys and a girl out of work, and the father on short. time, and con- trasted that life with the happy state in which they were living now at Ivanhoe, Ontario. Another point mentioned was the interest shown by all sorts of Canadian people that the boys on their farms should save mon- cy, and so qualify for a Government loan by the aid of vxhicli they could buy their own farms. "I can't get along with my wife. A'l1 she does is ignore me.“ “Ignore you?" "Yes, And if there's anything I hate it's ignorance." Tobacconlst (to complaining cus- tcmeri: But that cigar is IIlBKlO from the choicest leaf. victim: Ycs, but ivhat kind oi’ ‘and are moderate in the extremeplant? MRS. T. V. HILL u Sinflumplon, Ontario My mother was visiting in Detroit a year ago and she was _ in very poor health. My sister’ ' in-law got a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkhamh Vegetable Com- pound and it helped her more than anything she had taken. _ She advised me to also it too I and l did. My back used to ache and I suffered so with pain at times that l could not - work. l feel like a new woman and can do my hounelteepi and work in the store. lwl answer letteruP-Mvs. T. V.Hill. Lafleu '1 l.lv(lizi li. ?Ve_qt‘i;il)li* l\'ri..i l l'r|\l ‘i -., l-l (fomp Woman’s Realm -:- Social and Personal - What the Fashionable are Wearing Illustrated Dressmaking Lesson Furnished With Every Pattern By Annebelle Worthington THE LARGER FIGURE All Tlngcy models are created and sketched in Paris and the patterns are made in New York. There are so many things about this graceful dress which the matron will find helpful and charming. Its long V bodice opening, its hip line pointed in front, and prettiljr ar- innked skirt with its shining and ‘points are all summing and exceed- l ingly becoming. § Soft black satin-not too shiny- : was used for it, while the crossover vestee was white satin. The shoul- der bow can be white or black lined with white, or instead two came-lies or gardenlns can be posed there At each side cf the skirt shining. the skirt is folded over to form an inverted pleat. _ This creates a kind of narrow panel down the front, length giving and slenderizing. A strass buzltie finishes the belt cinch can be worn natural waist- line er lower. This pattern may be_ obtained for l5 cents in sizes 16 to I0 and 34 to 44. Il; is ready for immediate de- livery. It is hand cut. Pattern price 15 cents in stamps or coin (coin preferred). Be sure to fill in size of pattern. Address Pattern Department. Spend 10c to save $19. flow? By ordering a copy of our new Fall and Winter Fashions. It gives the answer to the often asked qustlon, "How does she do it?" For it shows how to dress up to the min- ute at little expense. You can save on every dress and save on the children's clothes too. ‘That means more and better frocks for "u and yours. Qrder your copy now. Just enclose 10 cents in stamps or coin and mail with your name and ad- dress to Fashion Department. NC. 721B. Size ..----»-..--~-n.. “us-nuns”...“nuisance-nus . 5.9; Name a Street Address ,, svovuvolillIlllllu uucclcnlillucnsscnosloluscunsasuooosul City I“: W? [for The Cook i MorningSmile ORANGE BREAD Two eggs, l cup sugar, it cup milk, 3 cups flour l teaspoon salt, 4 table- spoons shortening, l’: cup chopped nut. meats, 1-‘.- cup chopped fresh orange peel. Beat. eggs with sugar; stir in milk alternately with flour, salt and baking powder, sifted to- gether: add melted shortening, chop- ped nut meats and orange peel, dredged with flour. Pour into greased pan, allow to stand 20 minutes before putting into oven. Bake in moderate oven 3501“ 40 minutes cr longer. These makes nice sandwiches to servc with ten, using just butter for filling. In 5 Weeks One Thin Woman Gained 15 Pounds .,-._ Dear Madam: If you need more good solid flesh to fill out. unsightly hollows in neck, cheeks and chest why not start today to 80¢ it? Further delay may be dangerous so why not go to—A-—or any live drugglgt and gel: o. box of McCoy's Cod Liver Extract Tablets-they are sugar coated, small and rich in the weight building substance extracted from codfish livers. And while you are putting on weight with lirccoyfls you'll M50 izaln in energy and physical attractive- ness-eycs will brighten-skin blem- i MR9. WILLIE LAPLBUR Route 3, Hemmingford Quebec "l was nervous. o appe- tlte and all rundown. Most every day I had to lic down for two or three hours. l saw one of the booklets advertising Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Compound so l went to my druggist and bought a bottle. My nerves are lots better and l am now on my feet again doin all my own work around the arm. The Compound has certainly done me good and can help othersP-Mn. Willie r. Wilkhainfs 1 llll(l \l lshes vanish. sixty tablets for 60 cents-take them for £28 days faithfully-then if you are not satisfied with gain in weight and improved health gel your money back-lust ask for Mc- (Joy's. He dld not heed the traffic cop, But raced along pell mell, ‘The doctor told the sexton, And the sexton "tolled" the bell. ll-Iubby: "There, my dear, is five pounds for you as a. little gift, and it has meant a. great deal of hard work p, get it_ 1 think I deserve a. ltt-le applause." - His WlfB (eagerly): "Applause? Why, dear, I think you deserve an encore!" RASTUS DIDN'T KNOW A dealer in South Georgia carried Rastus Johnson during the spring and summer so that Rastus could make his cotton crop. It. turned out to be a good year and Rsstus had enough money to pay his account at the store and still have some left over. After paying his account he went across thifstreet and bought quite a lot of goods for cash. The dealer who had given Rastus so much credit learned of this and the next time he saw him said: "Rastus, I carried you all spring and summer and now you go across the streetand buy stuff for cash. What's the idea?" "Why, Mlstah Boss," replied Rastus in a surprised tone. "Ah didn't know You all sells fo’ cash." PROGRAMME HAS NINE POINTS FOR PARENTS WASHINGTON, Nov. 5.—-A nine- lwlnl- Program for parents to follow in training their children has has“ proposed by the children's bureau of the Labor Department. Explaining that “to be a soon father or mother ls one of the hardest jobs on earth" but that "it is the finest, biggest lob too," fihe bureau made the follow- ing suggestions to parents: “Tell and act the truth to your (Ilflldffifl. "Keep your promises, good or had, "Decide which things are most lin- portmt for a. child w do and then he consistent about seeing that, he does them. Do not nag him about little things that do not matter much. "Do not sav ‘no’ one time 1nd Tm‘ the next time for the same thing. Your vlmld will nere: learn that way what is good to do and what is bad. "Break up bad habits by keeping the child busy with inieruting things to do that he forgets the old habit. "Pay no attention to him when he tries to get what he wants by tem- Iper tantrums. by whining, or by vom- iting. “Sec that he gets things (if they are good for him) only when hs In quiet and happy and polite, “Keep cool and quiet yourself Speak in a quiet voice. "Show the child you ‘are pleased when he tries" =.:—-— CURA tls m mum with clmbulili warm Inter. A u-calmcut cfpimpl the world. T In.&—_flsn| $1 Céw-jnl-tiflfin pupil-nul- Free from pimples! Whnurcliefithtohowthetyollrllllml bcfrce cfpimles. Ancintitgmfly CUT] 0 wulscfillu will! SOAP and vzylinplelmlnuinfying TheCUflCURAfiecunenlnsbounnaed foryenrsinthcnaandsofbomculhoughou! L l» Cinflnura ......_—~— Dorothy Dix LettiecBox Can the Love Thief Be Adequately Punished By Law?-—Why the Sons of Self-Made Men" Are Seldom Go-Getters -- Bachelor Girl vs. Old Maid _ Dear Miss Dix-Is than a men-made law to punish "the woman In the case"? We know there is I. God-made law that will surely be enforced in the hereafter, but why can s woman with the subtlety of a serpent and the allurements of youth step in and take the husband from the wife, the father from his little children, the son from s mother, rob the mm of his honor and nu. Pcfifilbi-lliy. Ind 9c unpunlsbedf If there is no such law, why is there not? Why let II! there is no such law, why ls there not? Why let the woman go free to do over again her hellish deeds? Why legislate against any crime and let the most damnnbls of all go unpunished? T. D. N, Answer: We have a law that permits the aggrieved hus- band cr wife to sue the home-wrecker and demand I. giaigrgfiary consideration for the alienation of the affections of the errant You can hardly pick up a paper in which you do not read of some man who is demanding forty or fifty or a hundred thousand dollars as the price of his wife's love, which some other mun has stolen away from him, or of some woman who is not suing some other woman for a large sum for having purloined her husband's affections from her. ' . It is a grotesque and a. sordid thing to assess the damage done in break- ing up a home in dollars and ‘cents, to try to heal a. hurt with a poultlcs of greenbacks. But so far it seems to be the only method we have been able to devise for punishing those who commit the most dastardly end the most ter- rible of crimes. For the sheik and the vamp are worse than thieves and murderers. Those who rob a woman of her husband and little children of their father have taken from them something infinitely more valuable than gold or jewels. Those who slay u. woman's faith and love have done something far worse to her than if they ind killed her body. But there never can be any man-made law that can deal adequately with such criminals, because home-wrecking is always an inside job. The love thief has an accomplice. There is always the husband or wife who was ac- cessory before ths crime. They, sf. least, opened the window and left the door unlocked. :- Fashions a-Lpziterature, y. . does more lusts longer BGCOUSC- its unique, tiny, flat-shaped particles cover more surface and do a lot more cleanings Every bit of Old Dutch works. You will be both sur- prised cnd delighted with how lcng a package of Old Dutch lusts, and how economically and efficiently if does your cleaning. ( Old Dufch is perfect for porcelain and enamel, filo,‘ painted woodwork, floors, refrigerators, stoves, utensils, in fact for all cleaning throughout the home. Old Dutch doesn't scruiclhWifb one smooth sweep if removes all the dirt, grease, grime and stains-cs well cs the invisible, health - menacing impurities. Old Dutch is your great- est help in housekeeping and your safeguard to Healthful Cleanliness. MADE IN CANADA To save his face, every man whose wife is unfaithful to him -, ‘ that he was the helpless victim of some man who captured her and bore her shrieking away from him. Every woman selves her vanity by trying to be- lieve that her husband ls the helpless victim of some siren who, by some black magic, won him away from her and his children and made him forget his honor and his duty. But this is never true. The really virtuous woman who loves her hus- band is as safe from lotharios as if she were locked up in a steel vault. Every wife who goes astray meets the seducer at. least halfway, and the fault is no more his than hers, ~ So also with men. The world is full of adventures seeking as their prey married men with fat pocketbooks; but no man need be captged by one of these pirates unless he desires in. No man need surrender to them if he is willing to flee from danger or put up a fight against them. Undoubtedly the woman who uses her youth and beauty to win a man away from his wife and children and who ruthlessly breaks up his home, in order to gratify her own desire for what he can give her deserves to be pun- ‘lshed. But so does the poor, weak, miserable creature who lets himself be flattered and cajoled into forgetting the vows he made at the altar. He who turns trailer to his own flesh and blood commits a sin greater than that of the woman, because he had his obligations to his wife and children, and she had none. DOR/OTHY DIX. I I I ‘I I I I I Dear Dorothy Dix-What. do you think of a man who, when he was very poor and who had to work hard to climb up the ladder to the height he now occupies, but who indulges his own boys in everything they want and who encourages them in idleness? What effect wlll this have on the children? - F. E‘. l’... Answer: It is, perhaps, natural that parents who have had hard lives themselves should wish their children to have everything soft and easy and that. those SIR ‘GEORGE PERLEY, ACT- - ING PREMIER, ENDORS- ES POPPY DAY APPEAL OTTAWA, Ont, Nov. 4~Tlle riop- py Day appeal is endorsed by Sir George Perley, acting prime minister in the following mesage: "It is fitting that on Armistice Day we should pause in our pursuits and in our pleasures to stand humbly and reverently before _ memory of those who fell, and did not return. It ls fitting, also, that we should remember those who fell but who did not return. Fur them the war did not end in 1918; for some of them, indeed, the struggle back to health and happiness has been as hard and as heroic as the holding of the Ypres line or the as- sault on Vlmy Ridge. the “On Annistice Day-POPPY Day- we can only honour the fallen, but. we can help, as well as honour, the disabled. The POPDIes and wreaths made by disabled men in our Serv- ice hospitals are made available to the public through the Canadian Legion of the British Empire service League, and the proceeds are used for the furtherance of the Leglml work. "Tile pride of Canada is enduring: her memory is not short- And l0 l am confident that on Armistice DI! every Canadian will secure l. th or poppy to show that our Dominion pays this tribuu as generously and gratefully on November 11,1930, as she dld on November ll, 191B." ‘NINE MILE CREEK SCHOOL Report of Nine Mile Creek Schod. for the month of Octcbsr:- Grade X—1, Rae MacNeill. Grads VIII-l, Margaret Derrschl 2, Lillian Dar-rash; 3, Harold Betta! 4, John Ed. Campbell. ' Grade V-l, Pearl Campbell; j ‘ Wilma Gorveatt. Grade IV-l, Charles Betta; 2, Wil- fred MacDonald. Grade III (Sr.)-1, Ruth Betta; I Ralph MacLenn; 3, Elva Gorveatt; 6 Fidessa. Gorveatt. Grade III <Jr.)-i, Dorothy Gor- vcatt. Grade I-l, Ewen Bette: 2, Elsie Campbell; 3, Delta Gorveatt; 4, Am- old Gorveatt. ' Edna M. Frizzell-Tescher. whose youth knew bitter poverty should be cverlavish to their children. But the result is disastrous. It gives us the “second generation" who are washers and spendthrifts, who’ throw awaythe money that their hard-working parents have earned, who seem to be without either stamina or morals and who make true the old proverb; that in America it ls _only three generations from shirt sleeves to shirt sleeves. l These fathers and mothers who are so overlndulgent to their children forget that, try as they may, they cannot satin-line life for their children; that their boys and girls must meet the some sorrows, the same disappoint- ments that every one else does; that they must make the same struggle that others make, and that, if they have not. been disciplined at home, if they have not acquired grit. and courage, they will go down when they come to grLsps with existence. You seldom see a self-made men's son who is worthy of his father or who can fill his father’: shoes when the "old man" dies, The reason for this is that his father made things too soft and easy for him. He did not have to struggle as father dld. lI-Ie dld not learn self-denial. He did not have courage and the fighting instinct bred in him, so hs failed when the test came. We do not train prize-fighters by having them loll on silken cushions. DOROTHY DIX. I I I I I I I I ' Dear Miss Dix-What is the difference between a bachelor girl and an old maid? MAE MURRAY. Answer: The term "old maid” is obsolete. It is used now only by ignorant or pro- vincial people. It was formerly used as a tenn of reproach to designate a woman who lacked attractiveness to men, and who, in spite of the most t. dcsvors, failed to catch a husband. __._._,_ The women to whom this epitaph was appfed resented it so much that many of them married men who were absolutely repulsive to them in order to escape it. ' ' The bachelor girl is a woman who has passed 40 years of age and who. for reasons of her own, has elected to remain unmarried. It indicates that the women so designated had good common sense, courage and c. love for freedom and instead of being a term of opprobrium it. is one of admiration and honor. The old meld was pitled by other women, The bachelor girl is gener- ally envied by her sex. The old meld was a women who couldn't get‘ married. The bachelor girl ll one who wouldn't. ‘amm, DOROTHY DIX. - fllatii doubly rich sou-r 87§% of natural cow's milk is water. A Only 12§% is solid substance which is food. In making St. Charles Milk, 60% of the water of cow's milk is removed. That makes St. Charles Milk more than twice as rich u ordinary milk. And every drop contains all the food elements of milk. Wherever you need milk SLCharles will better fill the need. Sold in two handy sizes bynll grocers. ‘ nm BURDEN oo. Limrap. I40 Se. Paul Street Wm. Manual. Plano and ma, IrodJf. Clinics Recipe lock. Illustrated In colon and ocnuinln] nearly 200 tented recipes. l......-....-_..._......._..-...- - u" ¢...-_-_---- -—----~ <.__...