T-r \ /?= STYLES FOR THE SCHOOL GIRL AT>nO IHKXEPJES The Only Real Nerve Tonic is a Good Supply of Rich, Red lilood. "If people would onlj»tttteiid to their blood, insteafl of worrying tliomseivea ill," said an eminent nerve specialist, "we doctors would not see our con- sulting rooms crowded with nervous wreclts. More people sufler from worry than anything cUe." The sort rt thing which the special- ist stj'jke of is the uervous run-down condition caused Jjy over'.vork axtd the many anxieties of to-ilay. SulTerera "find themselves tired, morose, low- spirited and unable to keep tlMir minds on aBything. Any sudden noise hurts lilse a blow. They are full of groundless fears, and do not .sleep well at night. Headaciies, neuritis and other nerve pains are part of the misery, and It all comes from starved nerves. Doctoring the nerves with poisonous sedatives is a terrible mistake. The only real nerve tonic is a good supply •«.r o»o."^,- .. ^ ^^ ^ . of rich, red blood. Therefore to cure No. 8884â€" t.irls Drcs:*. Price 20 nervousness and run-down health Dr. cents. SuMiffht tunic, one-piece foun- wnuams' Pink Pills should be taken, dation lengthened by straight section. These pills actuallv make new, rich In 5 sizijs, C to 14 years. Size 8, one blood, which strengthens the nerves, material, without ruf;!es, 2 yd's. 36 improves the appetite, gives new ins., or 1% yds. 45 ins. wide. â- strength and spirits, and makes hither- No. 90C2â€" Girl's Cape. Price 20 to despondent people bright and cheer- cents. Straijrht gathered or 'circular fui. if you are at all "out of sorts" section; vest with or without sleeves. you should begin curing yourself to- Cut in 5 sizes, 4 to 12 years. Size 4, day by takmg Dr. WUliams' Pink Pills, â- with circular section, 1% yds. 48 ins. You can get these pills through any â- wide, or l^i yds. 54 ins. wide; collar, dealer in medicine, or by mail at 50 sleeves, vest, IVi yds. 36 ins. wide; with gathered section, witliout sleeves, 1% yds. 48 ins. wide, or 1% yds. 54 Ins. wide. These patterns may be obtained from your local McCall dealer, or from the MeCall Co., 70 Bond St., Toronto, Dept. W. cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. THE FILL WEATHER H.4R[) 0.\ UTILE 0.\ES From News Boy to Hereford Breeder. Canadian fall weather is extremely hard on little ones. One day Is warm ^and bright and the next'wet and cold, i Frank Collicut, In the Province of Alberta, rose from a newsboy to be Canada's foremost Hereford breeder. His boyhood days were spent in an at- , I mosphere common to all other boys who have to make a living In cities. His ambition to make money had to be gratified by selling newspapers on the street corners. When Hhe first newsboy's route was established^ in These sudden changes bring on colds. ' Caigary he got it. and his ability as a I newspaper salesman became generally cramps and colic and unless baby's little stomach is kept right the result may be serious. There is nothing to equal Baby's Own Tablets in keeping the little ones well. They sweeten the stomach, regulate the bowels, break up colds and make baby thrive. The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mall at 25 cents a box from The Dr. W'lllianis' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. groxuf aft*r group' of Gay Lsd calwea from Willow Springs Ranch. Anyone who is inclined to question the ad- visability of buying a bull of acknow- ledged Buperiority would ,no longer doubt if he were to see these calves. Their character, smoothness and vmk formity aru unusual. A visit to this herd at Willow Springs Rauch reveals one of the most inspiring undertakings in Alber- ts '3 livestock industry. One would ' think that in locating a ranch Mr. Col- licut had sought in all .-Mbarta for the ideal locution, and had founti it. Nest- le-.l in a greal coulee are found the most modern bams and practical house imagijiable. Up and down this coulee the bre«ding herd rambles in ' comfort, winter and summer, night and day, with nothing but blue sky for a roof, and the wooded banks of â- the ravine for walls. In summer they wade in luxuriirot grasses and drink at will from a stream of sprmg wator ' that originates in the bauits of thp coulee. In winter they pick at hay and oat ."henves. The bulls and young things, together with the matrons suckling their babies, find shelter in the well-bedded boxstalls in the bapis. All other? welcome the freedom dnd ' unconventionalities of the outdoors. There is satisfaction In the uniform!- ty of Herefofds prope:!x bred and cared for. â€" Canadian, in Breeders' Gazette. ^ Toronto University Memorial. V44te«,i to spcciflc purposaa. Indicated by the donorn. This, it was agreed, would permit' wide latitude to the -Vluianl .Associations scattered throughout the ^minion and provide ample opportunity to graduates of means to help returned soldiers of abilit}' iu their etforls to obtain a col- lege training. A partial canvass for subscriptions was carried on in Toronto lait .May, but local conditions cunij2^lled sus- pension until Hje Fall. ' Solicitation in the city during the past fortnigltt has been attended by success, and still the fight goes on tof reach every graduate and former student through- out the world. Campaign committees, or#iBized in counties throughout On- tario, in every large city In Canada outside of Ontario, in a number of â- centres in the United States, and in London for the British Isles, have done and are doing escelleiit work, and it is now practically ataurcd that the Ij^rger objective of the drive â€" to lay the foiuidalions for Alumni Associa- tions wherever University of "Cpronto men and women are found in groups â€" will be attained. "It is hoped," says Jlr. Cassidy, "that the time will soon tome when distance from Toronto will mean as little to U. of T. men and women as distance from Cambridge does to Harvardltes. A Harvard graduate t» a Harvard graduate wherever he is found and the same can be said of Y41e, Princeton and other great Uni- versities." uoTom ejLBa r.uuia WASTBO WE H.WIC SKVKit.VI, <K>OD CSED cars which cttn Iju bought at a reuuunable ijrlce. Write for our li.st The iiepublic Motor Car Co„ «22 Yonge bt., Toronto, dist.'-ibutors of the Cola ^vTo Fl^-'it anil Old.sniuhile Cars. 1^"'ARM OF AKiR'T 1"" .\i;RES. OOOD bulldlniiii. creek, guud roada, neur Kiation. W. J. Spears, 22u Hlirh Paxk Avp . 'Joronio. rom BAS>B. BITS OF HUMOR l^4Y^ N'EWRI'Al'ER. WEEKLY. IN IsKIjCH I'oun'v Kulendlil oppiirtunlty. Writ* t ...t T \Vll.<.in Piiullshliil Co.. LlmitMl -- \ '..|a(fi» St W Tornnto VITELL Egi'lI'PED NEWSPAPER *T and job nrlntinf; plant In Ettxtern Ontario. Im-urance carried tl.500 Will irn for »1 "OH nn nulck pale. Box 65. WHiion Piihll«t,(n«r Co T.fl Tnronto KISCElItASEOno] Prevention of Forest Fires. Forest regions, lu a new country, always present serious problems from the standpoint of Are prevention. The physical condition of the virgin forest with years of accumulated debris creates a serious fire hazard. Add to this natural condition the slash caused by timber, tie and pulp operators, and we find a fire hazard in some regions which is unsurpassed in magnitude. Within the last decade enormous areas in northern Ontario have been opened up by new railway lines. These railways have passed through virgin forest regions, opening them to set- tlers, prospectors, and timber men, all carrying In their wake serious prob- lems of forest fire prevention. The protection of forest areas has made considerable advance in Cana- da during the past decade. Ontario now employs 1,000 rangers or patrol men during the maximum dry period. recognized. He applied for the posi- tion of newsagent when the Canadian Pacific Railway was being completed from Calgary to Edmonton, and he sold papers, magazines and books on the first passenger triUn over that railroad. This environment brought bim In touch with many ranchers and farm- ers in Alberta. He was ambitious, and big men took a personal interest in him. .\mong these was "Pat" Burns, a packer and rancher, who has been one of .Alberta's most prominent citizens since the cowboys owned the ranges. Mr. Burns wanted young i Collicut to herd cattle for him, and i the monetary inducements and future | prospects appealed to him sufficiently to take him from newspaper salesman- ship. He began the cattle business j then, and the day he first sprang into | the saddle marked a period of pro- 1 gress. j Mr. Collicut saved his earning^ 3.n^j invested in grade cattle. He later be- came a buyer for Mr. Bums, and in these two enterprises, buying and In- vesting, he was singularly successful. After several years of experience in handling a grade herd and feeding steers in thousands, Mr. Collicut had an ambition to own pure-breds. His opportunity came when the pure-bred Hereford stock of the Bax- ter-Reed Ranching Co.. In Alberta, I was offered for sale in 1908. This herd i Kiaaid'a Liniment Cnrta Soma, atfk "Lord make it fit â€" The work of our hands, that so we may Lift up our eyes and dare to pray, rhe work of our hands â€" establish Thou it." had been imported direct from Here- ,, ... , , , _ , ... , , , small constituency, fordshire. England, after having been ' A rally for the Blue and White as well as a test of the loyalty of the .\lf~nni of the University of Xaronto I is the campaign for half a million dol- lars which is now being carried on by the Varsity Memorial Committee, the desire being to perpetuate in a Mem- orial Tower and Gateway and the es- â- tabllshment of scholarships the re- cord set up in the Great War by neai^ ; ly six thousand graduates and former students of the big Canadian Institu- tion. For the past two weeks a spirit- ed canvass has been carried on in To- ronto, and until the entire amount is [ raised the "drive" will continue i throughout the entire world. i But the campaign has m^re ambi- tious motives that the creation even of scholarships for maimed heroes and , the dependants of gallant Varsity men ' who fell, for when the money has been collected thousands of Alumni will have been got in touch with and the ties binding them to the old school will be of a durability hitherto un- i thought of. ! "The campaign to raise a half-mil- lion-dollar Fund with which to per- i petuate the memory of the graduates and students of the University of To- 1 ronto who made the supreme sacrifice in the Great War will commend itself to all Alumni of this great educational institution^' declares Mr, R. A. Cas- sidy, an old U. of T. graduate, who is ' in charge of the campaign, adding: | "The amount is small in the light of the huge sum subscribed or asked for other leading universities in North America. Harvard is in the midst of a canvass of its graduates aud friends for an endowment fund of fifteen and a half millions. Princeton is seeking fourteen millions from its .\Iumni and i well-wishers. Cornell has launched a I systematic solicitation for live mil- I lions. McGill secured a million and ! a half within a week, although the I initial objective was but one million. I The citizens of Halifax thought enough ! of Dalhousio University to oversub- i scribe a fund of four hundred thous- i and dollars within a week, and when I Mount Ellison, in New Brunswick, needed endowment, a quarter of a million was easily obtained from a We believe MINARD'S LINI.MENT is the best: .Mathias Foley, Oil City, Ont. Jusepii. Snow, Norway. Me. Charles Whooten. Mulgrave, N.S. Rev. R. O. Armstrong. Mulgrave. N S. Pierre Landers, Sen., Pokemouche. N.B. I From the Chestnut Tree. "What insect; dt es the blucksmith manufacture?" "He makes the firefly." Curiosity. MoUier: "Tloa't ask so many ques- tions, child. Ciiriosir.v killed the cat." Little EUiel: "What did the cat want to know, mamma?" , Empty-Handed. I . "You seemed embarr;issed when that 1 pretty girl met you at the station." • "I had a reason tor feeling embar- rassed." answered Tommy. "What was it?" ' "I promised to bring her the ICaiser's ears." < His Vicarious Atonement. Willie (doing his home lesson) â€" ' i "^Tiat is the distance to the nearest fixed star, auntie?" ' Auntieâ€" "Erâ€" really, I don't know, Willie. Willie â€" I only hope, then, that you feel sorry io-morrow when you think that I am being punished for your ignorance." U' .^.NTED-PKt >1,'ATIU.NKK.S FOR Kimiirdine OetiiTal Hospital. .VppUoiitions to Miss Culllns. I* USI.\E.S.SE.S. TORii.NTi:> PRuPKR- 13 TIE.S. Ontario ami WVstern farms for .vale or exchange. iJavis. 129 Victoria St.. Toronto. VCRSJCSâ€" THE HOSPITAL FOK I.N- i^ CCRABLES. in artllliiilon with Uellevue and Allied Hoiipitals. New York, otterK a course gl" tralnlnc to younfit wo- men desirinar to become nurses: thla ho»- pltnl has I »' ac!u|it«d the eight hour '-ystem. For :.L!ary nnd other Iniorma- tlon apply in .'Superintendent, 13^ Dunn Avfnuf Toronf tlANCER. TCMOKS. LLilPS. KTC. /inti-rn.-il and exifrnal. ourea without vaia by oirr bome treatmt>nt. Write ui tiefore tfio late. Dr BPllinatJ Medical Co.. Limited. CoIIInirwood. Ont. SITt7ATIOS»S VACASTT. IClnartt's Unlment for <a!a tvar^wbeia. ! If some of the men that whittle j sticks at the village stores would get I busy, the farm labor pro'olem would he I just about salved. ARE YOU LOOKING FOR AM OPEN- ING to prove your abilliyV or. ura you just drifting alonB on me principle that â- 'everything comi!8 to him who waits" â€" without much tliouRht of your efliclenry? If you are In the latter class, be up and doing â€" train your mind and nieitiory no as to be ready for Op- portunity when it cornea your way. In other words. Pelmanise! It you kpow you have aWlity. why not use the wait- Inu tnoinenti* tt> imp.'*ove your efficiency and incidentally acauire that Personality which means so much In .seeking Suc- ces!>? .Small town or bin city, or on tha town.siiip side line, it matters not â€" -the Tf^hTian .-'y.st'im . Is conducted by malL "Mind and .Meincry " tells you all about it It Is a book that'3 free .ind lays no obligation unen you to enroll, though you'll b« suniri.^ed to find how tnoderata 13 the fee required. Write for the hook and particulars to-dav to the Pelman Institute. 765 Temple Building. Toronto. Canada. Nowadays. .\fter a courtship oi: some months the young man had mustered sufficient courage to tell the adored one of his great love. "To-night," said he. "I am going to your father and ask for your hand in marriage." "That is very fine, Harry." the pret- ty one replied, "but don't be so old- fashioned." "Old-fashioned?" returned the lover thoughtfully. "I don't auite under- stand." i "Don't ask him." was the prompt ei- ' planation of the girl, "Tell him!" j •> i There is no man so igrnorant that you cannot learn something: from him. â- 6YKUP UK HUS" CHILD'S LAXATIVE , . and more serkms ^"-V^ comptaints arc v. V contracted in \ mean weather. Be protected. Taktt GRMRS^SYRUP fr^mthe (i-st in fV.e -^t ?nccK. Stop it In time in-i do n.A i:ar.vie with your hr.iitti. L'^cd over 6J >c3rs in treating cou^s colds and allied compUlnts. EvAr^body buys tti« L^ra* Six* Gl I Montreal D. \V.\TSON & CO.. .\>a- VurA- MONEY ORDERS. Pay your out-of-town accounts by Dominion Express Money Order. Five Dollars costs three cents. r Herbs should be dried quiickly and Immediately after g-athering on open trays in a hot kitchen. As soon as tsrisp rub them down and store in corked bottles. Of 90 varieties of siugar oane grown In Porto Rico, only one, a native of Japan, seems to be immune to a dis- ease that threatens to ruin the imlus- Iry. It Works! Try It Tells how to loosen a sore, tender corn so it lift* out without pain. Good news spreads rapidly and drug- gists here are kept busy dispensing freezone, the ether discovery ot a Cln- eiimatl man, which Is said to loosan any com so it lifts out with flxigers. Ask at any pharmacy for a quarter ounce ot freezone, which wUl cost very Uttle, but 1b said to be sufficient to rid 'tone's feet ot every hard or soft com or callus. ' You apply Just a few drops on the {tender, aching corn and instantly the soreness la relieved, and soon the corn 4» 80 shriveled that it lifts out with- Mit Min. It is a sticky substance (Which dries when applied and never AJuDames or even irritates the adjoin- log tissue. I This discovery will prevent thou- sands of deaths annually from lock- S«r and infection heretofore resulting )m the snlcidal habit ot cutting ra*. selected by one of Britain's most com- : petent Hereford breeders. In 1908 j pure-bred cattle were not so expen- j sive as they are to-day, and his Invest- 1 meut for the 100 cows and young stock i was not so formidable a consideration ; as It would be now. In the following ! year Mr. Collicut bought the herd ot â- Simon Uownie & Sons, of .\lberta. in- cluding the cow. Sally, and the bull. Beau Perfection 11th. both imported i from the herd of Warren T.«JIcCray in ; Indiana. i Like the Baxter-Rcod people he did ' not fully appreciate the merit ot Im- : ported English cows, and was back- 1 ward in paying the price necessary to ! purchase a bull that wotrld give best results on such high-class females. . Importations were made from time to ' time from Mr. McCray's herd. Fair- tax Perfection and Governor Hadley i produced the best results in his herd ; up to the spring of 1916. when Mr. Col- '[ licut bought Gay Lad 40th, by Gay Lad 6th, from 0. Harris & Sons, for $11,900. j I l^hls bull was only a yearling when i brought to Canada, but he had been a Junior champion in the United States \ the previous season. To-day he has \ Justified his purchase price many I times over through his progeny, which \ now ramble about iu large numbers at i Willow Springs Ranch. .Mr. ColMcufs ' chief ranch, 30 miles north of Calgary. Cfay Lad blood has proved such a hap- ; the I py nick with imported rows that Mr. | ), Collicut readily bought another Gay j Lad, "also by Qay Lad 6th. from the Glengarry Ranch, in Alberta, in 191S. I The Glengarry Ranch purchased 30 ! Look at tongue! Remove poi- sons from little stomach, ' liver and bowels Aaierica'a Flcnecr Oo; Semedtes Bock on DOG DISEASES and How to Foad Mailed Free to any .-Vi- , drees by the Author. , E. Clay Glovar Co., 23ic. 13 5 West 31st Street New York. U S.-^. The Kiddies Enjoy Cuticura Soap This pure, fragrant eini iiieiu is just suited to the ternier skins ot infants and children. Millions have known no other since binh. The daily use of it, with touches of Ointment now and tlien to little skin and scalp troubles, tends to insure a heaitliy skin, a clean scalp and good hair through life. Soap, Ointment and Talcum sold everv-where. IMV* Be sure to test the fnscmating fr*. grance of Cuticura Talcum op your akin. "But in none of these sacred efforts went on Mr. Cassidy, "was there the inspiration that should be in the ' sacred cause undertaken by the Alum- ni Association of the University ot Toronto. The desire to honor the heroic dead bore Is spontaneous and \ general. It was at first but a matter | ot deciding how it should be done. ' Opinion throughout Canada was can- 1 vassed and the outcome was the de- 1 cision to have the bulk of the Fund | used for scholarships for soldier- ' students or their dependants aud the erection of a Tower and Gateway be- tween the east wing and Hart House, including a structure in which the names of those who fell are to be re- corded." A Memorial Committee, going still further iuto a review of the campaign, was appointed at a general meeting of Alumni last Spring and it was final- ly decided that local and special I scholarships can be provided by any 1 community or Individual and be de- Accept "California" Syrup of Figs only â€" look for the name California on the package, then you are sure your child is having tile best and mdst harmless laxative or physic for tlie little stomach, liver and bowels. Child- ren love its delicious fruity taste. Full directions for child's dose on each bot- tle. Give it without fear. I Mother! You must say "California." ONLY TABLETS MARKED "BAYER" ARE ASPIRIN Not .Vspirin at AW without the "Bayer Cross*' ^m\ siNC SINCE 01870 ILO The name "Bayer" Uentifics the | contjiins proper directions for Colds, only spnuiiie .-ismrin.-^tUe .\spirln Hetidnohe. Toothache, Earache, Neu- prescrihod bv physicians for over nine- ralgia. Lumbago, Rheumatism. Neurl- tecn years and now made In Canada, tis. Joint Pains, and Psin generally. Alwavs buv an unbroken naokafje Tin boxes of 12 tablets cost but of "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin which a few t^nts. Larger "Bayer" packages. There la only one Aspirinâ€" "Bayer"â€" You miut »«y "Bayer" Aspirin If thp trail-* Tn-irlt ( rcBl'tsr'^J !n Canada^ of Hayor Maniifaeture of Xono* •cstlcBcWuBter of Sa)ic>llc«cld. Whll.> It 1» will known mat .\.iplrln ma&B* Bartf Jnanufactur,-. to amiat t.io public atralniit Imltatlona. tl-« Tablet* o( Mayor CompanC Will Ijc atamped with their genera! trade mark, the "Bayer OroaaJ' ..»..•..•.â- •.â- â- .-•.••..< "KILLJOYS" Constipation, Headache, Colds, Biliousness ended with "Cascarets" ,«»•..•-•-«•••• â- #â- •â- â- ••â- •••« "I Nothing takes the Joy out of life quicker than a disordered liver or Herefords at the 1917 sale of O. Har- 1 waste-clogged bowels, lion't stay sick, ris & Sous and among these was Oay Lad 16th. which sold for $20,000. He was sold In 1918 to Mr. Collicut, to- gether with 30 females, and their in- crease at the same prlee, 120,000. Not only has Oay Lad 16tb got a lot ot beautiful calves tor Mr. Collicut. but he was champion of Canada In 1918, and stood third In a strong class at The see the 1918 International. In Chicago. 11U9 Canadian show circitlt will bilious, headachy, constipated. Re- move the liver and bowel poison which is keeping your head dizzy, your tongue coated, your breath bad and stomach sour. Why not spend a few cents for a box of Cascarets and enjoy the nicest, gentlest laxative»onthartic you ever experienced? Cascarets never gripe, sicken or inconvenience one like Salts. Oil. Calomel or harsh pills. They work while you sleep. *^30S?8glCOUGHS SATISFYING RELIEF FROM LUMBAGO Sloan's Liniment has the punch that relieves rheumatic twinges This warmth-giving;, congestion- Scattering circu!ation-.stiniulating rem- edy j't-iiilrales tcitlwiit rubbing ri§llt K to the aching spot and brings quick relief, surely, cleanly. A wonderful help for e\tenial pains, sprains, strains, stififiiess. headache, lumbago, bruises. Get your bottle todayâ€" costs littlt?, means much, .^sk your druggist for it by name. Keep it handy lor the whole family. Made in Cana'Ja. The big bottle is economy. sec, TOc, $t.40. Slcxans Ask Your Drug:gi5t For Dr. Miles' Calendar For 1920 IT is FREE and the best large-figure Calendar published. It gives ,the wea- ther forecast for each day in the year, also time of Sunrise and Sunset and phases of the Moon. "An exceptionally complete and useful Gilendarl" That's what everybody says. The edition Is hmit«d. It is there- fore very important that you call early so that you will be sure to get this splendid free O.lendar at the beginning of th? year. Just go to your druggist, tell hizn your naiile and address, and that you wiuit Dr. MiUs 1920 Calendar. He -.vill do the rest - FREE. ISSUE No. 44â€" 'IS.