' I ry. _. __ iii s , v 1 _ ‘ ,l' _- ~ ~ 1-r_.,,, _ I , .. _ , . | "_ ` -rr rave to buy tn true provtnee W ` »< I ` ' . --rue ouenoutn is he me er Lydia E. PinItham'e V ,_ und as the $_tiit.is“"]'.;m".°. I" , Ne ' Haven Conn.-“ For two years ‘ I eulfared; with e female weekneu, ruins. my peel: and painful periods, and l we|,|o weak and tired tha_t.‘I was not able tu do mg work. A friend wld rue, touse Lydia . ~Plnkbam'e Vegetable compound and it gave rne great relief. 2 lily pains left. me and Iam new able to ' di my \7o\‘k~aud feel igqe. You can pub- " l|_.‘bmytr~stlmonialan fydurVeg:*_t;3l_>|a» t onipound does others as much g as rt has mn I will bis v_er°_§much pleased.” _ ilirs. t..rrrtru.r:s L. onosrv, 37 Sea ~ trect, New liaven, Conn, _ 'I'h_o rennorr I.yTlE ~Do 0°” T_""TE"fD To FRIEND DINTY THE_ls_E-r~tA¢.f.f.rt-2: ? UP-».REri"r You- ~ NOT QET DA I - I _ ° _ _. _. _ _ -_ lI)» r.oc.r F L r » THE DOOR Horst-; __ Warm Air Heating ' System , See about it today PHONE sos-J j so on/tr~"r‘o.\r ST. . l Z . ioriror>rrur_or-.ur rv Vinol Made ‘dim Feel Better, Look Better, Sleep Better ._ SPRINGFIELD, MASS.--“i am fr night. operator-\vu.s all run down. couldn't sleep had no ambition-l hurl tried blood anti nerve tonics without help-anti thought I would try Vinol‘ und I must. say it has built _mn up so l feel better; look better' und sleep better,"-(‘liai‘lcs T. llnrder. Tire reason Vluol w its so successful in Mr. Hnrrlr.'i's case, is irecatise it contains beet’ and cod liver pcptorrcs, iron and uintngarrt-.so pt~ptou:\tos and glycerophosntes. the- wry cieincuts needed l, o build up it wcnltcucd_ run- down system, make rich, red liloofl nnd crcnto strength, ir). A. I~‘os|cr‘. (‘crrtt‘u| llrugstorc, Vlrnrloitetown. Viirol is sold in Montagur- by Il. .I. .\/luhon, und the best drngstores in cvcr_v town and ‘city in the country. in this play, as in those that fol- lowed. The earlier' “Princesse Fontaine" makes n liner appeal. has s more rounded mood, sparkles less, but glows more. Yet: "Cyrano" possesses a unive_rsal‘ theme. its subject, moreover-,' is one for which l`tostand’s genius, was eminently fit- ted. Hs c0uld`l'et his fancy run wild within the spacious enclosure of Cyrano’s _tragic ruisunderstandini The plot carries the imagery; an the riot of imagery, like the vine ot roses that r-unsmup to Roxane’s bal- cony,_covers the tragedy of the plot. The ilavor- of D'Art'ag'nnn is in “Cy- rano," of duels and mighty feats of a.rms,'b`ut also it most un-Dumas like tenderness. Tire drama, above all, is splendidly playable, full of due scenes and resonant rhet.or'ic. The versa acts, which is t.ruly a rare qual- ity in dramatic verse. The famous “nose” speech really would force gesture out of a scarecrow; and the equally moving speech, with its con- stant retrain, in the second act, oi' "No, I thank you," in which Cyratno refuses to rruckle to Richelieu tor patronage, ending, "Not to mount high, perchance, but mount alone!" gives n. superb opportunity for legi- timate bravura. Having recognized R0etand's ex- traordinary qualitles, the more dis- cerning must. be inclined to agree with James in his general verdict. it that stale old distinction between wit and imagination were still valid. it, would be applicable to the author- ot' "Cyran'o," "L'Alglon," and “Chan- ticleer." He plays with language like ar Juggler who keeps on adding one more ball to those already in tho air. But, when the halls drop, when the actor's voice ceases to resounri. ilostancl also ceases to .echo in tho soul. “Cyrann" remains a fancy. Think of Cyr.~_no in Shakespeare’s hands! In ltos-tanti's own he never grows beyond the proportion of the original idea; the -vast depths and heights that his situation iuightleari him to plumb stay sealed. Benentlr the eifervescence ot fancy lurks it certain lrnrrenness. The same might he said of “L'Aiglon." Wlrnt theme more vast und noble, opening up morevistus, in the Hamlet vein. Yet. with all its rhetoric, and one, lbeu- tricnlly speaking, magniilcent scene, the young, disinherited Napoleon ll. remains :rn unimpressive iigure. His rrnzedy tails to become that of his aiuiionr-t- by rho' poet’s power to ,zan- ` mznnusav 4 at rroou rr rrtrob uri. .u-.ri Sale of dainty new .50 crepe de chene -- >'¢\~ All silk crepe-de-chene, thirty six inches wide, admirably adapted for evenin dresses, blouses and the like shown in Rose, Sapphire, Maize, Bottle Green, Sea? I Dark Navy, Plum and White. Very special value at. ..... WE OFFER ALS_') A SIMILAR BUT SUPERIOR QUALITY C_repe-de-Cherie 36 inches wide, all silk, rn Maize, Coral, Rose, Sunset and White. This is a wonder. ful bargain at ...... .L ....... ...... ................................... .._. ............................ ..$|`_ 75 ` Out of town customers are invited to write for samples. -f.7,,»' 1. ..» -1 I -\\|\-Y}f.\_= r ` H. _ .1 ' . `§ my ‘a _.` ..¥»'ff'-T .7 gh _ _ ' _` _ _r 2;/ if K I so Splendid new Hats for Men sell at 4.0” U AT $4.50 Notably fine quality hats all in new est blocks shown in Dark Maple and Reseda very smart $4.50 IT WILL ONLY TAKE A FEW MINUTES TO SEE THESE--AND IF YOU- buy without seeing them-you'll be offended at yourself all season. Handsome Fur Felt Hats in Gardenia, Blackstone, Midnight and Kress Shades, all new blocks, smart trim in finish $4.00 SEE THESE - - l m I 1 Dark, Sperm, Laurel t _ wr-1 -ls-e - _ WHERE ARE CALENDARS. Anotlrer- Famine Due to Wm-time Ficonomy. Did Mars tie the" hands of the cal- endar manufactur-ei-s last year, or has the Canadian appetite for the hang- ers that mark the iiying months weakened? Whatever- the reason, scarcity oi’ paper' or lack of curiosity as to when the moon will be full, caiends.i's.ai'e seen, at this most sea- sonable time, about as often as perl- scopes in Saskatchewan. Of course, we do not refer' to the art confections that may be had in the stationery stores for the buying, but to the free calendars that once were looked upon by youth as the principal products oi' the iirst insur- ance companies. 'l`hirty years ago the small boy ot the city or village did not consider his Christmas holidays well spent unless lie had made the rounds of the tire insurance oiihces collecting calentlarss that were his for the mere asking, :ts blotters were also in those golden days. Maybe the practice is still pursued somewhere in the Dominion and the boys have already iigured out the ex- act Saturday upon which school will close and have wondered, observing that Victoria Day fails upon Satur- day whether they will he “<-heated" out ol' s holiday. 'Tho boys' i'a.thors have noted this, too, with thoughts ot' three days after trout at the end ol' May. Without his trinity calendar, how is the city man to know well in ad- vance tbat Dominion Day is on a Tuesday, with no chance of stealing au extra. day on either side of it? Flo upon a control ot' the pulp indus- try tliat has robbed us oi' our means of knowing the pleasures of anticipa- tion! Hooray for the free and un- liiuited coinage oi’ calendars! What. poor plat-cs the formhouses must be if they have fared as bndly in the matter of big. in-iliiant. date pads as the cities. In olden times there was a calendar- for every room. and t.-he kitchen sometimes had two. not to mention the more intellectual almanacs that hung not far from the waler_dipper. There were the Old i-`ur'rners‘ Almanac. and Wbosthis’ [litters Almanac und Wliutshlsnau1e's Sarsaparilln Alurtrnnc and you could get, among tlreiu, any sort. of weather' you wanted for any season. But the calendar was more important for every day use, particularly if the white space around each date was large enough lo mark down the num- hnr nr ezgs the hens laid that dn?- -*WK . \VES'1‘F.RN `P,El{SONALS_ ‘ --Miss Lucy Noonan .is visiting at Miss uliliceur ltcnrly.--I( --Mr, Elin."-i' llowness of Ch-arlotto~ (llI.*' ' --is.-\.- - . __ .__ fl. - i Wi/ - 1-' `\~. _ m.-.__ 7: ' 1 _r f |1_’.) €~.,_'-_T-'_-' 1 .1 _ ,l (' Vrif '-E->---;w‘.f`,’¢'~ l iyyjig $1 I ,\_._$.‘¢: '_-‘_ »'*lz~.-"'_-_,s-""\ _ 71* ' ._ r c anize, Ftoon Fnvrsn The easy io use, hard to abuse varnish Q For Furniture For Floors For All Woodwork _ I 5 iiensiugtcn the guest of her cousini `to\vu tt vt-.f_‘r'uu of Vimy Ttitlgo is ul lv_`~=_itor at his old home in I{cnsiug.| I K ' L """'1-gee-wg -Messrs Robert \V. Mori-isoir and Louis Leurd spent Tuesday afternoon in Kensington guests of Mr. E_C. ililtx, oi the (`ourrnei'ciul Hotel.-li. l A PAm