/ \\\\\\\\ ASTORIA The ills of infants and children should be so well known to tiie voting- est of mothers that a reminder or a ~ repetition of the symptoms of illness 1 , " seems unnecessary. yet there are some ‘ mothers who ovcrlotik a feverish coii- dition, a littlc colic, or a disposition to be irritable. it nut corrected they may lead to serious sickness. And to correct them. to bring Baby back to its happy sell. is so easy b_\' tlle iisc of Czistoria -‘—~.'l medicine prepared just for infants and childrril. ll uiil rcgnlziiti the bowels inoi force them), zuil digestion and >0 bring quiet aiiil rest. Alk-Qeia similuiinginafoiid I! Film“ ‘ iinQitISiaaImSlM BM" " Mineral. _ mpTAvF-hvlrzmw A-lplll M I ._§_? A hurl-interim l“ Covisiipctiolrlinti Dlarrfw and Fevznshness a 1”” m‘ Sliiliimr "Sllllillelmnf," Tl; PacSimlc slam-me‘ Fletcher's Castirria has been doing this for over 3O years; regu- lating the stomach and bowels 0i infants and children. It has replaced the nauseating Castor Oil, SO-Cflllfid Soothing Syrups, poisonous Paregoric and other vicious concoctions in the homes 0i true and honest iiiothcrs—mothers who love their children. Those mothers will give their babies foods and medicines es- pecially prepared for infants and children. To avoid imitations always look for the signature of _ _ Provcn directions on each package. Physicians everywhere recommend it. u. l. This luxury train mean! a pleasant trip to the West. v All-SEW! film?‘ merit; radioto while away the ldl¢ hours; lmexeelled Cllililli- Tike the " Continental Limited " 1'0 WlNNlPEG. EDMONTON JASPER NATIONAL PARK PRINCE RUPERT AND VANCOUVER lpavlng Montreal (Bonavontvfl Station) daily at 10.1! pn- Baatan Sta Thu You will enjoy Wflfimne d a" 1min” u; mi; _ , train en route m the com or to C-ilfmll- Wonderful acenery, Rfvl“ n"! coin-tony all the wa . 11391111" includca Standar and our!!! Bleeping Can. Compartment-Oboe:- vatlon-Ubrary-Buflet Con‘ Dlnlna Car, Coach: and Colmllt C8- Ruonulfonn and aovnpiofn bi/u-rmuon/rom ‘Tilcbugdl “Will-Iii. YliN Sill n‘ (Continued from page 3) Osler in his farewell address happiness of his life which had come to hlni in many forms-in his friends; in his profe-mion; in the public iimong whom he had work- prOllkGlQIl and with his student-B. about his ambitions, and- lastly about hi5 ideals. Thlg last. con- cluding part of his address was a5‘ follows: ‘"1 have three personal ideals. One, to do the day's work well and not to bother about tomorrow. it satisfactory ideal. it is; and there is no; one which the student can curry with him into practise with greater effect. To it. more than to anything else, I owe whatever success i have had to this power of settling down to the day's work and trying to do it well, to the best of ones ability, and letting the fu- ture take care of itself. The second ideal has been to act the Golden Rule, as far as in me lay, towards my professional bre- thren and toward-a the patients conlmitteed t0 my care. And the third has been to culti- vute such a measure of equanimity 11s would enable me to bear success with humility, the affection of nly friends without pride, and be ready when the day of sorrow and grief come to meet it with the courage befitting a man. What the future has in store for me l cannot teli—you cannot tell. Nor do l much care, so long as I curry with me, as l shall, the meln- ory 0t‘ the past you have given me. Nothing can take that away. ll have made mistakes. but, they have been mistakes of the hcad not of the hem-l. l can truly say, and l lake upon myself to witness, that in my ‘sojourn with you- i have loved no darkness, Sophisticated no truth, Nurse-d no delusion, Allowed no fear." These were noble and high ideals and nobly did he live up to them. When Sir Oeier took up his dut- ies at Oxford in 1905 he was fifty- lire years of uge. it was n matter of wonderment that he should‘ leave Blatimore at the hcigh of his fame and take up the post at Ox- ford which tllflligh u very high and [honored one was more or less of ‘an honorary position. He ‘$061115 to have felt himself that his health would not stand the strain of his Baltimore life much longer; inure- over be intended i0 retire from ac- tive work at. (i0. He seems to have an attraction for the ‘Old Land. the home of his ancestors. and natur filly was not averse g0 spending his remaining days enjoying lta beaut- ins, and its cla-ssical and historical associations» Sir William was liy no means a stranger to England for bc_ had lived there for a pro- longeii- period during his post- graduate course illlll hail gone back frequently afterwards. ile was well known to the lenders of British medicine, his great fame as a physi- trian a-nd teacher preceded him and 110 Wfls I101 1011:; in making himself quite at ilome in hia-i new environ- merits. He took up his residence at Nor- liiim Gardena, Oxford and his home became a center of hospitality so nlucll ‘so a5 to earn for ita-iell‘ the name of the "Open Arms." The Osler homo in Oxford was n regu- lnr Mecca to which gravitated near- ly every medical man from Canada or the United States who crime to Flnltland as well as Imany visitors who were not of the profession. All were welcomed and were charmed by the kindness of Sir ‘Vilillium and his wonderful lielpmate. lSir William improved the course at Oxford, he developed the de- - partmenta-i of IPXIIlIOlOgy and Phy- nloicgy, extended the clinical teach- "lgwlnd raised the medical school to a much higher position than it before enjoyed. ‘His Oxford inter- ests were many ililll varied but per- liap-i his greatest interest outside of his medical work lay in the Bud- leian Library. lAbrai-iea were his delight. and he round niuch plea- sure in brousiiig lil the Bodleiaii and becoming acquainted with its treasures. It was a mystery to some linw Oslen found time to acquire ‘his “lilllllflllly With general literature. The secret of it was that he formed the habit in early life of reading half an hour in bed before he put iiEAiiAiiHE, coins,‘ cnsllvi BliWEiS, " nu “liiiililili” ‘To-night! Olean- your bowels and end Headaches, Golda, - 80in- Stomach Gal. a IO-cant box now. You man and women who can't t feeling rlght—who have henrlac a, coated tongue, bad taata and foul breath, iiizzineaa, can’t. nleep, are bilioua, nervous and upset, bothered with a nick, gaaay, disordered atom- ach. or have a bad cold. Ara ou keeping your bowels clean with rda, or merely forcing a pa way every few days with aa ta, cathartic illa or cantor ollf Cameo work while you sleep; ‘cleanse tlla flftfllllltll, reiiliov: tiled lfflllfi undigested, outing oo nn ou sea; take {iiinexcoal bile from the iver and carry out of "ll! system all the constipated waste matter and poi- son in the bowels. A Oucant to-n lit will straighten , out by morn ng-a iii-cont box ram any drug utora will keep your munch sweat; liver and bowels regu- lar, amfliearl clear for rnontlil. Don't forget the children. lava Ou- caretc been ti: pipe or u» i. iiiBPilEE iicluiiil‘ --——.lbad-aida library, which included the given‘ at the aliiuer spoke of ‘the o! courgg m, dpellglo Mei-lei"; ed; and in his home. He also spoke xole, Emerson. ‘Montaihga, and feellngly of hla relations with the Oliver Wendall Holmes, Breakfast has beell urged that this is not a on Canada. 5 ran cnannoiiraiownicuanonln iiiiiiAiii ilSiEil Outplllig light. wl-le recommended a Bible. Old and New Testament and which along with the _0ld Testa- ment he -knew_ almost by heart alao Bharaspoare. PlutarchB Llllfli. Mal‘- cua Aurelius, Epictetus. Don ‘Qui- Tahle Series books he himself became v0 iliar with.- ‘Dr. Osier W88 lmade a Baronet on the occasion of King George's Coronation \n 1911. tl-ie accept ‘ the title, not that ha sought for it, but because o_f the honor conferred ancl~ genera other _ fam- ln 1914 [he Great War came and Sir William and Lady Oalar plum:- ed into the activities that it invoi- ved, in their respective spheres. Sir William was an Honorary Colonel in the Army and a Medical Consul- tal visited mirny of the Canadian Hospitals in ‘England and rendered great service. Hie. advice was sought by the War Office on meTl- ical que-ation such as the establish- meut of special Hospitals, Revere, the only son and child of Sir Wil- liaiu, a fad of much promise, at first enlisted with the C. A. 1M. C. and later transferred to the Artil- lary. lHe was killed in action in 1917, near the Ypres salient. at the age of 21. Hi5 death was a cruel blow to his parents. Sir William said “i knew from the beginning of the War that this would coma." The virtue of equanimity which he counselled others to cultivate now stood hi-m in good stead and he showed that he was “ready when the day of sorrow and grief calnc" to meet it. wiith the courage befit- ting a man .'I‘he father bore up bravely but hits heart was broken. he ‘iegan tn age visibly soon after- wards, nil was never quite the same oi buoyant cheerful self. Sir William Osler had the great faculty of making friends and whlft is luoro of keeping them. This tieemed to he his motto- "The friend-s thou hast, and their adoption tried. Grapple them -to thy soul with hoops of "steel." ‘Many of the friendships he form- ed in Canada and [he United Status endured to life's and. During the Railway strike in England ill i919 Sir William had to take a long mot- )1‘ drive in bitter cold weather and caught a severe cold. Bronco- pneirnionia developed. he lingered for some iveeks; then lie was op- erated on for enipyelua; a few lays later on December 29th. 1919 1e succumbed to sudden lieniorr- nage. "Sir William seellled to iluve 1 premonition from the first tliiit ic would not get. hettar and ‘was wont. 1n say after his severe attack at coughing “pneumonia at seventy -s fatal." ' iSo pa-ssetl into histpry the great- est clinician and teacher of his time. 'Hls name is assured ii per- manent zind abiding place in medl- cal history, bcuide that of tile inas- ters of past ages. lSlr William left his magnificent. ibrary containing many rnre books Lo the McGlll Medical Library and directed that his ashes be deposit- ed there-a fitting place wmoiig the books he loved 2-10 well in life and in tiha library of thc University where were laid the foundation of his future greatness anid whose memory he cherished to ills last days. British Steamer i ,_\ i i '“ nil/infighting‘ 1/. BUILT IN cANADAf-‘r- ME "T/x nigpb.’ illI-il lr filled ltd-lb mark, Anil Illr run that in/rr! [be Jay Sball l-ilil their mil: li - /x Arab: An-l ai lilrnlly llrll c: u” LDNGX-ILLOI l4 vvflf"’ ,. i. Had T. com. . . ’ Sales Say “I t Has Arrived” f NOTHER day has dawned in radio-wt day of realism in tone, simple operation, real beauty and surprising values. It has come through the foresight of DcForest 8L Crosley in designing and building sets to meet Canadian conditions and in their ability to otter these models at to_-_¢'lay’s'pri¢¢;, The public have been quick to appreciazg the merit of this policy and are expressing their approval in a wave of sales, sweeping the country from coast to coast. Everyone is talking about DeForest 8t Crosley performance, everyone ‘is admiring DeForcst 8t Crosley beauty, everyone is may- veiling at DeForest 8C Crosley values. Go to the DeForest 8t Crosley Authorized Dealer—-see and hear for yourself. DISTRIBUTED IN PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND BY ISLAND RADIO A CO. 171 KENT STREET OHARLOTTBTOWN at-“fii 55°84!» C~5 »Cons0ie—Famous G5 Circuit in McLagan Console. Built-in speaker. Rejects unwanted stations. Controlled by one hand. Unsurpassed ‘tone quality. , i NACDA’S CREATEST RADlO VALUE ,Q_"1A * Local DeForest 8c Crosley Dealers Boarded by Pirates ___. (‘Canadian Press) HONKONG. Nov. 16. - The Bribilh lteamar sunning was boarded by piraius eighty mllea from here and wan fired but gaved from destruction by the arrival of the British Blue Bail lg iwaaiearned here today. LON-DON. Nov. 19.—- For how long is it possible to go into a trance’! The question is raised by the extraordinary case of a. Not- tingham girl, ‘Doris ‘Hinton. who has remained ili a state of coma for nearly a year. ‘but la 1lO\V show- ing signs oi‘ awakening. Physicians class it as narcolepsy or the sleeping disease. Napol- eon is said to have suffered from it slightly, which accounts for his historic sleep of ‘36 hours after bia first defeat of Asperli. ‘His phy- feared for his life. Usually pa- tients awaike out of their trance and carry on as though nothing had happened. Louise Lateau, a iFrench peasant girl, fell, at the age of 18. into re- peated trancea- which each lasted for about a week. She bled from the hands, feet and aide. The peasants insisted that this was a miracle, a ‘Divine sign and riota were threatened until Louise for- tunately gave up her singular habit. A British aval officer who siclans could not waken him and \ fought at the attic of the iNlle was shot in the akuli while givinl thwford of command. The blow drove the hone inward and he fall lath a trance for over a year. -When he woke up"'ha continued glflul the word of command. Time hail atood still for him. iii dtber can: it develop‘ dual personality which may have giv- en to Stevbnaon his conception of Dr. Jetkyll and flifr. Hyde. A case is on record of a man who could speak bothWeiah and Ifiigliab. Ha fail into a trance. and when ha awoke ha could speak only Wa h The moat famoua instance of nar- oolapayf however. la to be Iona not in the medical a. but fiction. Tho. naina of the patient la Rip Van Winkle. -——-—-V$O1§~—- onniral china la mrrnn with tain- n who an Incoming In; ‘from limlllora. - ma» la Ihal- l“ RETAIL STORE—.171 KENT ST. 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