i _ power. he Charlottetown" fliisriliaii Cheater l. leisure. Yteo-lredlenl. I. l. Innate. I’. J. I. A. Incllnloei. B. l. 0. ‘nelson-annual DlroehnJ-l-I ' u. no.1 Anooelnee Ill n, Weller and‘? l. Currie. Ins-Ill!‘ hi1! (fouled Ill) MOI (In all l filfvcrol In C“). Ill! per you (lnvtdznfic) mnllzlmizo fllnno "Ifld “#0 per your (In advance) Inlloil to Olnhln null United Statue. IONDAY. MIICB I, 1986 ' r Liberal Party Split .1 if ‘The lack of grublic irltcrest in Saturday's lay-election in the ourth District of Prince was evident from the vote, Mr. Honor: WRIGHT, Th0 Official Liberal candidate, pulling some six hundred votes less than his predecessor, Hon. Mr. LEA, polled in the general provincial election. last year, Mr. Wiiicrifs opponent, Mr. DOUGLAS BELL, a strong Liberal campaign worker in the provincial contest, running this time as an In- dependent Liberal, lost his deposit. That the contest was in the nature of a Liberal family quarrel was emphasized by Premier CAMPBELL in a remarkable letter to the electors iii which he charged that Mr. BELiJs “sole motive" was one of “personal antagonism" to the selection of Mr. WRIGHT, and declared emphatically that "Mr. BELL and any who sup- port him are simply reading themselves out of the Liberal party, and can receive no further recognition as Liberals." The Conservative party had no candidate in the field and took no art in" the contest. - KTllC remarkable eature of the voting was the fact that the total for both the Liberal can- didates fell short by some 40o of the Liberal vote polled for the same seat in the general elec- tion, and that more than 25 per cent of this small Liberal vote, notwithstanding the Premier's warning admonition, was registered against the official candidate. . What effect, if any, the Premier's reading of the Riot Act had on the contest is a question which is likely to remain unanswered. Another moot question is how those Liberals who bolted iii favour of Mr. BELL are to be culled "from the rank and file and given “no further recognition" politically. Canada's Interests Sacrificed The dear old Toronto Globe, which is such ‘ a political pacifist when there is no election campaign on, and becomes so strongly partisan when Liberal votes are to be obtained, has a characteristic suggestion to offer with regard to parliamentary discussion on the U.S.-Canada Reciprocity pact. “There are,” it says, “reasons why all parties should give the agreement the lame sort of unanimous support with which they greeted Mr. BENNETT'S announcement, as Prime Minister, that a treaty was under negotiation. lAt that time points pro and con did not seem to be considered. It was sufficient to know that a long-standing deadlock was being attacked willingly by both nations, and approval was gen- eral." How much of this “approval", it may be asked, was reflected in the columns of the Glofw or any other Liberal newspaper during the elec- tion campaign? How much of it found expres- ‘liori in the local Liberal organ, or on the plat- form in this province at Liberal campaign meet- higs? Day after day, the country was flooded pith propaganda denouncing Mr_ Bsnnrzrrk al- Ieged insincerity in the matter, ridiculing his ef- forts to negotiate fair trading terms with our bouthern neighbors, and predicting that the terms Mr. Kmo had to offer would be far more ac- ceptable at Washington. This latter statement, tirade repeatedly in the Liberal press, struck a ileadly blow' at Canada’s interests, prejudicing bur case in advance and confirming United §tates officials in their refusal to grant those fooncessions to our agricultural, fishery and other basic industries for which Mr. BENNETT had been bargaining, and on which he would un- ffioubtedly have insisted had he been returned to As Mr. Banner-r pointed out in his speech In the House of Commons last week, the very least the Liberal Government should have got in return for concessions given the United States was a full 5o per cent reduction on all the items in the United States tariff. Instead, the treaty places United States under Canada's intermedi- ‘ate tariff which, on many items is much lower than the general tariff formerly applied against U5, goods. Nor could the Conservative leader obtain from Mr. KING any statemenbas to the government's intention of raising the intermedi- gte tariff this session. _ - The point made by Mr. Bums-r: finds fjtmng indorsation from an unex ted quarter- Wthat of the Financial Past, independent Iabernl y-which now frankly admits that the treaty, fldoes grave injustice to many classes of prqy.’ Filucere in Canada." . 1 kiddo the‘ Ho.» _ ‘The Government mm“ ‘m,’ j- ruin‘ of inoe , . mo: (whichever ls rower-mo tiierohieec , Onnlliftaml. . . . ;.‘, . ~ ‘ "Tho reciprocity fruity?!“ hid thebffeot, . m noel: liillloe in the frosty-mun: at Washington. ooil- ' "lb. the mains!!! of reciprocity in the old days, forgotten in the new agreement. The worse for the maker of the agreement.‘ This, then, is the net result of Mr. Kim's unwise haste in concluding a treaty which, in abler hands, would have meant so much to our basic producers and exporters. He ha; sold our birthright for a mes: of poifage, and among the chief victims of hi: pradigality cvill be our farmers, our fishermen and our foxmen. Editorial Notes Church services were a little topsy-turvy yesterday, but it helped to advertise the King's speech. _I NE 3K i “Admiral" DUFF, now being a Senator may sail the stormy political seas regardless of con- sequences to his paaiéty’; piiiéitical fortunes. There_were no public meetings but plenty store discussions over the bye-election in Fourth Prince, 9K ill 3K It would seem that Premier CAMrrmLifs “reading-out” policy has had its efitvt in the Patriot office as well as in the Fourth district of Prince. 9K Bit i! A policeman, HOWARD M. OVERSTREET, has resigned in Washington to set out for Pennsyl- vania seeking nomination for the Presidency. He says the Executive is “ not representative of the common people.” 9|! 9K 3K It is a sad reflection on the “Goodness” of Toronto that, a Royal Commission has recom- mended the dismissal of nine members of the police force for robbing those they were sworn and paid to protect. 9i? if The trouble in Japan is diie largely to jeal- ousy of the Navy and Army. The previous prem- ier INUKAI was assassinated by a group of naval ofliccrs in May 1932, and now the military has had its revenge. The “positive policy" of the Government has been expansion in both Man- churia and Mongolia. Evidently the near defeat at the polls Saturday, 22nd, stimulated the mili- tarists to stage a revolution that would give the army a Fascist dictatorsalpipéike that of Italy. 5h The Premier of Quebec did not go alone to Ottawa this morning. He was accompanied by Hon. Honours MisizciiaiiyMiiiister of Lands and Forests, and Hon. GEORGE I-I. CARROLL, as ex- pert adviser, to study the report of a sub-coni- mittee charged to draft a project of amendments for the British North America Act. The sub- committee in question has made its report. We here, of course, have a Premier, President of Council and expert all in one. it 5K 9k No one can convince us that Toronto Globe Liberalism does not pay in practical loaves and fishes. Here is the record of its three last. editors: join! LEWIS, appointed a Senator by Prime’ Minister KING in i925; T. STEWART LYON, ap- pointcd Chairman of Ontario Hydro Electric Commission by’ Premier Iiisriauiiu i934; ITARRY W. ANDERSON, appointed member of tho Pene- tentiaries Commission by Prime hlinisteitKiivi; joniv Wasmzv, Father of Methodism, died I45 years ago today. Now both his name and his church. are but memories here, though there are both Wesleyans and Mrgéhoglfiists elsewhere. 9E It seems in Halifax these clays there is not ‘enough work for editors and publishers minding their own business; one has been adopted Liber- al candidate for a bye-election in the Provincial House; while another has thrown his hat in the ring for the mayoraalkty iontist next month. There must still be money in the fur busi- ness in Canada judging by the fact that the estate of the late Mr. ALrii-zar SCHNAUFER, manufacturing furrier, Toronto, has just been valued for duty at $623,456 it being made up of $243,000 in mortgages, $112,000 real estate, $103,000 book‘ debts, $49,000 cash. $47.01» stocks, $35,000 insurance, $18,000 bonds and $12,060 personality. The estate is to be divided between two sons, ORLIFF F. SCHNAUPER re- ceives.$io,ooo and the income of halt the resi- due, with THOR. A. Scan/turns receiving the other half of the reidu;' n‘ even Quebec quints. Father Humor Woocs, Santa Clara, Cal., iindendate of Feb. r7 writes as follows to the Montreal Garom z _ .' Slog-While looking up o. matter in i The Tlluerfpflii Lfitrdon Nnv-r. I came ecfoee ‘dicfollcwing interesting item ‘in the ‘ninn- .,b'er:cf May-to, i862 : I ‘ . i“ The ‘Montreal . com records the birth ct ,-a quintet of _ls omthe 29th of ' a elf: and _ states; that the mother," a. herself one of four, all lifltigl‘ _ e ildren are doing well." .~ tsaiisraiuizht be sled t0 1W“ t‘ ~‘ uintetlbi" ‘ < > brie, ‘p233. y 1e ootin hi; ni , i - r w ted States ‘ ‘lemvl W" lit at m" There is nothing new under the sun, no not ~ dad, mes "riinee-Joiirn __ ‘ms o. a s _ {Votes By The 1 Onohllnllnil ancient Hindu shrine of _ ebhaswaml st. Trivendrum It“ occasion of the Lhkshndeepom fes- tival. ‘This notable Indian event; l; e. pert of the Murejepem, wmm was instituted tn the middle oz the 18th century by Matter-Ala Mgr-th- nnda Varme, and since then 1th“ "if? 0M6 "N"! six vein. It has been openly mm] 1n France that the German military strength is now three time; mot o1 France herself. That proportion 1; rfltpldly increasing tn favor of 6g:- many. She possesses an efr army of not only the finest of its kind Wchlllcl-"Y. but im air forceiunder oontrol of man more thoroughly air-minded than any in the world. Like her opposite number fn the Far first. Japan. Germany ha; ex. Pflnsionist aspirations; she has the means to fulfil them, grid she h“ m9 W111 l0 firmly those means.- Lcndon Despatch. You are debtor to every man and woman and child whom you meet. You owe for the chance that is 101118. whether you use it or not. You. who complain 0r the debt that the Wofid owm you. listen! The world owes. you nothing, YOU owe the world all that you have. when You are inclined to and fault. re- member this: you are terribly in debt. To whom and to what? Why to everybody and everything! S0, do not let. a minute pass unused, Start. to pay up. And though it mm duwurusuie. it is not-roi- , the more you owe, the more you have to pay and the more you WANT to pay. In lib! past l5 years, no major underworld figure in New York has had to answer to a court of justice for the homicides done at his bidding. The only charges the major racketsers fear at. all are charges of income tax evasion, and surrounded by sharp and cunning lawyers who have a. special talent for "fixing" jurle‘. even that fear with him, not the fear of des- pair. The racket boss has a pro- found contempt for the courts and creaky court machinery. If gangs and gang chiefs were not wiped out from time to time by the guns of their competitors there would not be enough penthouse-s and ofnee buildings to ho‘d them-Current. History. .- P Senator Borah. pii-anl for the Republican nomination for the presidency, has made a speech re- affirming his isolationist views and twisting the British lion's tail. Surely the great Republican parly will not choose this Tibetan as its leader Not in all his career has he ever said a kindly word of any foreign country, and he has always tried to sow iii-will between the, two great divisions of the English- spiaking race. Next to his hatred of the BritlFh Empire-ls his aver- sion to the League of Nations. Whittier do we go-n.nd why? Thousands as‘; this daily. And w many there returns no answer. But. to the one who is on his way, and who knows where he is going there is no need for either question or answer. His compelling power held conference with him long before he started, and all things were set.- tled then. The fit and aiert know where they are going-and why. That. is what keeps them gclnzi There are other things, mixed in, though. The very inside feeling that you are bound for a point, for an end, for some sterling purpose. keep: you calm and determined to see the- thing through-whatever it may be. The Uhrlstmne tree trnelltfon seems tneradicable. 1t come near to there has just occurred a revi” banned since the revolution. The children of Russia have been per- mitted to revert to the old-fuch- ioned Christmas celebration with c. bearded‘ representative of the mv- Bmte. Claus, owcver. Ho must be and the tree i; not. to be described as e Christmas tree. ft must/be m- ferrod to as e decorated tire-Wood- st-ock Sentinel-Bevin. t , , M‘ 1h ~ ploy cpiored gentlemen u porter: seems ‘wropt in mystery." There to President Ilnooln ' phyla in the ms sevnties or only eighties. 81!. or seven yeers, _.n|o prosperous. the Pullman Cmnpuiy (eve employment to. lmllilportors, chefs and waiters. but et tho pree- . mt time them on only about om- n, oversee l.s~ $90 e. months-Gt. ‘I110- ,0 u“ V u» _l‘_(fl_t_flllt§ or in rehai his-community, . the laesmueh imprelleilgia. been celebrated wit-h unique mogul-- Ito finish in Russia, but. peculiar- i‘, of the institution that had boob - . 1 , ereiid Beint w distribute nits from f n fir tree. H fmiiot not be celled‘ -. referred to ll Grmdfetherjrost, _ I no toirndottion for the holler that. thcxsiiroeds were molly " ‘l!!!’ WQWJE- IT MAY TAKE MONTHS TO FEEL BENEFIT 01f‘ REMOVAL OF INFECTED TEETH AND TONSILS One of the disappointing things that happen liter infected teeth and tonsils are removed is to have the pain, ache, or stiffness in joint. or muscle actually become worse. The explanation is that when the infected teeth or tonsils were rc- moved tiny blood vessels sirrroiind- ing the hole or cavity from which thetooth or tonsil has zone are wide open, the poison ‘present is drawn into the blood ‘ to large quantities, causing an 1n- crease m pain or stiffness. As the patient expected to get. rid of this pain and stiffness by the operation he is naturally dissatisfied. He thinks he has undergone all the trouble for nothing. However in a. few weeks he notic- es some improvement and in a. few months is free from all pain and stiffness. Accompanying infected teeth or tonsils is often an eniargement pf the glands or little lumps in the neck. These glands are really little filters that teike in the poison from the tonsils or teeth through a num- ber of openings and let it out into the blood stream, by Just one open- ing. In this manner the bEood stream doesn't receive too much poison ht one time and the body can take care of this small amount of poison without too much trouble. If there is a large amount of poison coming from teeth or tonsils, Liiees glands, in an effort to pre- vent too much poison going into the blood stream, will actually swell up or grow larger and larger. If they get t-oo large and become filled with pus, they are drained out or re- moved, just as a filter on your water tap is removed when it becomes full of dirtx The point then is to keep in mind that, poisoning from infected teeth and tonsils may be taking place for months and years before these teeth and tonsils are removed, and that even after they are removed there are poisons in these glands, in the large intestine and other organs, and also in the blood itself for months or even years afterwards. Thus in children whose tonsils have been as long as three years in getting back to their normal size. This means then that. we mustn't look for complete results from the removal of infected teeth iitid ton- sils until weeks, months, even years afterwards. fioddflfilfllf/i. BUDDHA (BURLINGTON YHOUSE) Almost I thought your face Smlled. but. too calm it is For any there to trace Aught. but old melodies, Enroll songs long-dead whose ghosts From Chinese hills astray Have wandered to our coasts And drift. unheard today A iit your mighty girth, W fch acorns our hurryirigs, , sees time, space and earth 0 yin-s little things. —1_lord Duncan , in Sunday Times. "= 59d)’ temperatures.- Bun. _ a flue letter written by our op; bend and 003011 b! m? "m "W" end keepeth tt without- Pllbllchlfll it t the Sabbath dey; for the seventh The Gnullnn lone not the oplnlele whim-misc or ms OOUBAGI '-“-7 Sin-Mr. W. K. Roam is trying o keep his courage up by laying the Government is not tied to Pro- hibition. ‘ "It who not written in the bond," says Mr. “You do not find tt in the platform." __ Neither does m. 110ml find my string tylnl the moon to the earth. but, he will find the bond pretty effecttvehrid not so easily cast off. The ‘ t‘ with Mr- - is that his plans are going awry; hence his rather queruloua letter in which he tells s heaitiiling Govern- ment, “You don't have to stay there; Come on in. the water's fine." But the Government is discovering ft is not so fond of getting ‘wet!’ Tho "heaven-sent blessing" of Government Control is not here yet and may not be due for some time. The ell-powerful legislature is learning the lesson that- “They may not dc the work of heaven, lestdhetaven shell hurl them tn the us . ‘The work of heaven‘? "Tia waiting sttli The sanction of the heavenly will." I em, Sir, eta, W. E. BENTLEY. ‘Divine Authorship The following is reprinted from I. Guardian clipping of eighteen years ago. preserved by Mrs. Donald Mc- Eacherfi, Long Creek: The Fredericton Gleiuiert-The following ls a letter said to be writ- ten by our Saviour and found at the foot of the cross. According to the history of the letter, it was written by Christ just. after His crucifixion, signed by the Angel Gabriel 99 years after the saviours birth, and presumably depojted by him under a stone at the foot of the cross. On the stone appeared the legend: "Blessed is the one who shall turn me over." » No one knew what. the inscrip- tion meant. or seemed to have suf- ficient curiosity to investigate, until the stone was turned over by s. little child, and the letter which forows was discovered: . ' "whosoever works on the Sab- bath day shall be cursed. I com- mand you to go to church and keep holy the Lord's day, without; any manner or work. You shall not idle or misrpend your time in bedecktng yourself in superfluit-fes of dcstly apparel and vain dressing, for I have ordered it a day of rest. I will have that day kept holy that your sins may be forgiven you. You will not break my commandments, but observe them and keep them. They have been writbsn by my hand and spoken from my mouth. You shall not. only g0 to church your- self, but. also your servant and maid-servant. Observe my words and learn my commandments. You shall finish your work every Bat.- urdoy at six o'clock in the after- noon, at which hour the prepara- tion for the Sabbath begins. I ad- vns you to fast five days tn the year, beginning on Good Friday. and continuing the five days to‘.- iowing, in remembrance of the five blood wounds I received for you. mankind. "You shall love one another. and cause ‘them that are not baptized to come to Christ and receive the Holysecrenient, that; is to say. . baptism and then the supper of the Lord, and be made a. member thereof, and in sodoin; 1 will give you long life and many blessings. Your land shah be replenished and bring forth abundance, and I will comfort v9" ‘t. the greatest. tempte- tlon, and surely her that doeth the contrary shall be cursed. I will al- so send hardness of the heart on them and especially on her-defied end fmpcnftent unbelievers. He thethsegtvontothcpcor shell find it profitable. Remember to keep (fly I have token es e wetlands! i to myself. And hethnt hath a copy for others shell not prosper. But he that. piibltsheth it to others shall be bieeeed by mo. end if their sine beeemenyosttiooteiisbvnisht. , i592} g g8’ 55a simi- g E ii f , s? ‘Ea i E” ‘W32 i? is bhll 10W, Woolworth ‘ ' ~ GIANTSandOJESTER§ u~ In Public Life (IIIIIIIOOOI) flu ..~¢ (Ofiflltht noeermn The country woe ln n ferment when the interview wee printed. General Hutton come in for strong government censure for ltvfnghu eumiwed plea ct enrolment to the Military, Gazette. but. b; bu“, defenders. Bo was in New York s; the ttihe the hnno moat ep- pured, and close friends sold 11c heo ncthfnfl whatever to d0 with“ the , ‘" “ Howcventhe article had its effect. The government lied to bow to the force of public opin- fon without calling Parliament Recruiting commenced in all parts of the country and on the 80th of October I-saw the first Canadian flitllwifllifi. which latcr wee to cover itself with glory at. Purde- burg, call away from Quebec in the old SS. Shrdtnian of the Allen Linc, bound for South Africa. The total strength of the Royal Canadians (Colonel Otter tn com- mand) was 1.099 officers and men. together with three padres, one Y- M. 0-. A. representative, four nurses. four iewspii, correspond- ents, and two officers" "attached for passage." One of the latter was Colonel Brim Hughes. 8am was wil- ing to accept demotion in rank to becornc an officer of the regiment, but Hutton was against hfm. There had been constant friction between the Generalsnd the M. P. ever since the G. O. C. had arrived tn’ Canada. by reason of the fact Colonel 5am could not distinguish between his position as a. member of Parliament and his rank in the milttial So Sam travelled on the Bardinianhfn mufti. When hegot to Capetown the British military authorities promptly assigned him to duty with the Impertala. with whom he covered himself with‘ glory. The following January another incident occurred. which coupled with previous ones shortly led to General Hutton's withdrawal from the Dominion. With the approval of Doctor Borden the G. O. C. which Colonel Kltscn, then com- mandant of the Royal Military Col- lege. was chairman, to supervise the purchase of horses for the second continzent. Doubtless as- sumlng that. horse dealers with Conservative leanings would re- c-ive too much consideration from the Purchasing Commission, the minister without consulting Hut- ton. appointed a Liberal member of Parliament, who was an authority on horses, to report upon all purchases. This cliicourtesy was more than the Geenral could ‘stand and he spoke his mind freely to the minister. However, the G. O. C. on Lord Mfntols advice, swal- lowed the insult. bsequent. let- ters from the minister were couched in such rude phrasecloiry that they " intended to force Hutton; retirement. The General interviewed the Prime Minister, who was noted for his tn- had appointed a committee, of ‘ vsrteblc courtesy, but, g1,» dig! not hesitate to tell thgvlcliiii? mending officer that his Work and attitude were not approved by the government. "I plead gimty," Bu,” "l! 15 "DOWN w have said, "only l0 118V!!! aroused the latent mu. ithry enthusiasm through m m“, of the militia, end having strength. cued the innate mung o, patriotism towards the 01d Country and the Emplrg, wmch already existed in all paras of the Dominion." The answer he ,.e_ ‘ceivcd from Sir Wilfred was that “he could see little dlilerenc; between ‘ ‘ ting parlgflgm m“ musics military enthusiasm, a... Pl"! WIMP-S." The sting was m m8 lanai. two words. n anussy 20th, 1900,. 1,0 M31130 submitted s. corifldentliii emorandum, to Sir wimed Leurter. setting forth his views but, by sorncbodyh error this letter achcd the cabinet as c. Whole The Goverrior- General pointed (mi the mischief of political interfer. once with the militia the ineptitude of Doctor Borden's behavior 1n the horse dealing case, the discourtesy of his attitude towards the G. 0 o. endthe difficulty of finding . successor to Hutton unless the of commanding officer was properly maintained. The cab- inet replied with o. long constitu. tionei document which was hand- ed to Lord Minto by the prune Minister. The Governor General, after he had read ft, remarked that, he accepted every word of ms document] "The dispute was not, as to constitutional principles, but. to the "best. practical adaptation of. ‘them. and to the proper llne 0r demarcation between civil and military authority in regard to the smooth working of the mechanism of im army}! Lord Minto expressed his surprise hi: the suggestion that he could possibly advocate for any military officer a position in- dependent of ponstbiiity t0 a minister of the Crown. Blithe!‘ conversation between the Governor General and Sir Wil- fred Laurier did not alter the situation. t crisis was reached on February 7th when en order m council was passed asking for Genegdl Huttonk" recall. Lord Mintc hesitated about signing inc order for dismissal, but finding the government obdurate he fin- ally made up his mind tp ac- cede. Ho was relieved of the neces- sity. however, by the receipt of e cubic message from Lord Laris- owne. Secretary for Wan stating the Hutton was being selected for active service in South Africa, and was to return to England immedi- ately. Thereupori the G. O. 0. promptly tendered his resignation On February 13th General Hutton took friendly leave of Sir Wilfred and two days later, writing to lord Mlnto from New Yorke said "Personally I can never forget s11, Your Eiiceilencyh kindness and thought. It has been your sympathy and constant encouragement which have alone enabled inc to stand the discourtesies and annoyance then appeared in Dalton. Ga, and Mrs. Worthrnan, now living in Marion !nd., dipped it and kept ft. in her possession for many years without having it. published. She was followed by misfortune, which she attributedto her neglect in trying to have it published. Mrs. Crutchfieid, of Tennesee, is iii-so said to have fatiedjo make an ef- fort to have it published; for three years it was followed by misfort- une. Mrs. Lydia Howell clipped this letter in Albert Leis, Minn" and brought it. to Canada. after having to in her pogsessfon for‘ three years will now aft pt to have it pub- lished. As m- es is known to the first copy of this let tn Canada, Oct. 28. .1018. lleportliouiitess To Belmproveii (A, P. By Guardian's Spools! Wire) IDNDON‘, , March b-Countess Barbara‘ Hutton Hsuzhwita-Revmt- who fs ser- iously fll fotlowinfl the birth of s eon, wee reported today to be fin- v 3 A bulletin issued It. ll. em. sold “the Countess hoe had o. fairly loodinllht end i! leliitlutronlvl‘ 4 . It wee understood e crisis which oeriy this morning is now renrded "W6 In V617 iot-infibd." lie-id Dr. Cedric syuney fiche-Roberts, noted gyriaeccloptot, when he left the wherel 28-year-old Count- qn o ill. *' * ford Border, ‘phypictui-in-crdin- to King Iowa-d. said: e hed e. gocifnicht and poured erltttae moonlit" _ . upon for the relief of obehecflm Thursday coined e summoning cf her doctors - Countess, HeiilivltI-Hcventtow _ operated extending over so many months." And thus General Hutton, one of the best. G. O. 03s who ever cams to the Dominion, fei; a victim te the politicians. Canada. was the sirffeicr. (‘Dc be Continued) llaos Hair Restorer “ll will restore grey hnir to ite Olllllinl ‘color. An excellent heir food tririlii: up and invigorating all tho glnnrll, blood vouch. nliil ncrvoe of the hllr and scalp. thus produoinl n rich nnd nbnnifene growth of Jiuir Promotes new growth who" the hnlr ll fnlllnl nml le rc- snnrlinbly useful In provonflnl dandruff. ' Get o bottle today com. ‘MAC’! PILI OINThIEN T fllvon quick relief In oil ennui ll Internal on Iiixtornnl Piles. A loft and efficient remedy In tlilo trenfment of ilili evrefcliorl torturing lml llllllllf‘! Stubborn dunno. Given qiili-k llcl llllll is is positive cure. There line been for your: illl effort to discover IIIIIIIO lnriil treatment b» evhlrli ivllvl could lsr cured without resort- lng In on operation. \\'\- |ll\\l‘ fonnil the enrne. Oct n tube today p? viii. ' llr. L. B. Evans 0f London. In]. agent-ed eucrelelully nnil iii.- ncrl permanent einree Stomach oondltlonii ouch M‘ Dyspepsia Indlleeflcn, Bu"! Stomach, lleort bnrn etc. “v nlono i have the I n rn o u I Piiyelclnn’: prescription. Don't fool with your stomach onion: conilltione are Ilhrly tn nrln it yon do not give treatment- Try n bottle l6 pro. " HAO! CONDITION YOU'D!!!‘ In lloreee all Bettie ‘Ionee III the eyetofl. "If" "l olrln troubles and ivru " mo: ooee elhelr. or mul- . one, pirrlfylni the blood his u on eroliéetor el evorrnl n’ to u_ enrolling-amour. mzz Macs i p Greet George ltreet ‘Jlllfldloorv V‘ “imam: Iv l i l i