__c:_nAR_i._0_'i*rrr‘r0wl'ii An Attic . . . . Salt - Shaker I l / cairn next! swoon‘ or" aromas anoin- FAMOUS norm: - . l -a—II-Iwu-_ , w. ORTON ‘ ' TEWSQN- ‘ The rivalry between Ibsen and Blornson is amusingly illustrated in this story that always brought a broad grin to Ibsens face: Bjorn Bjornson. son of Ibsens ri- \ai. a brilliant and forceful actor. re- turning home one day on a Norweg- ian steamer, discovered that he had not been treafedln a manner con- forming in his dignity. In high anger he prQLosted to tile captain. "Do you know who I am?" lie ask- ed. "I am the son of Norway's great- “Very interesting." said I-‘rith. "Please tell me what is your concep- tion of Hamlets relation to Ophelia. Did he. so to speak love her not wisely but too well?" "I don't know, air. if Amilck did. but I dld," waa the unbluahlng an- swer. I O U Another Shakespearean story haa to do with Booths appearance in. London in "King Lear." At one per-l formance. vouches Pett. Ridge-an csi author!" incorrigible atory-teller-when the! "Plgggggxgugg u, H"; Igseny- an..SCBflO between the demented King swered the Clpilill. "l shall see to it Ind his dallllllel‘ G°ll¢lll W55 "Wed. (.‘()FI<"S _ioiii hcairtily3 ill Ilttllill‘ Iltly activities .iid oiici- their many‘ patrons iill kinds of. UAINQAINS. A fcv: of the numer- ous lots lioilfrht for this (HTIISIUII. 47» palirs Wonieifs atciit Strap Slippers, Céllllillfl covered spike hock ziiitl leather lined. “brill ovct‘ $4.00 for $42.98 Cit) iiziiiw." Womeifs -".'Itf‘lll Htrtip Slippers, "iilizlii heels. $2.29 for $1.98 20ft pairs of the very latest styles of Brown Shoes marked for this tizilmit 5.3.50, $4.65 lll-SIQEKI of the usual $4.23 to $5.50. ltltl iniirs Dleifs (‘ar- pct Slipper-s at . . . . 50c ALSO personally that you gr: what you]! lllalllllllll lfldi/ lllfllfd l0 allfllllef wish." matronly lady in the next box. - a a a _ “Rather? she said, in tones which which m“. m mind l, grlgmgul could be heard all over the theatre. fnilx pas committed by Richard Le "miller "l lllll-lleulllll lallllll’: "1959 Gallienne during a visit l0 Blofllwll t “M's-w at Aulestad. his Norwegian country homfi It was at Hamburg where he was: "It was a terrible thing to do." llklllk the “cure," that Kill! Ed- Chiltkles Le Galllciine tln "The Rom- | Wild-ill!" Pllllce °l ‘Vlllfi-‘lllslg antic ‘9fl'si" but. no generously for-l met Mark Twllln- They sot aloha.‘ gave mo. for I was a stranger andl 008K119!‘ famously. enjoying their naturally diclirf know better. I mon-lwalks and talks. As they were part- fioiied the name of Ibsen. Then irl-‘lllB the Prime slid: deed BIOmSOII looked like an old "Well good-bye. 1 mm elm w have lion.’ Ho stopped short. fire iii his met YOU 888111" .0,“ and nCx§:n13_ and shaking m; Mark was smote to the heart lrec- gi"c1t ivhlie mane he thundered nut. OPUS Mlflliel MP-CDOIIBBll lll "Th9 A pause and then again EnalislrKins-"l As they had never contemp; ‘Ibsen is‘met before. the Prince. he thoughti had mistaken him for someone else.) 00a aaa Ibsen!‘ with withering not a man; he is only a Dell?" I I I when lu- was inthe mood Ibsen Then Edward explained his little‘ himself could tell delightful storlofllfllll- I m his guests. says A. E. Zucker (in "Why," he said laughing. “dontl “Ibsen: The Master Builder?) one you remember you met me in the: do)‘ when John Phllli0ll—}'ounl N01“ strum tldlfndonll“ uiagiun ailtlior arid protege of Ibsens The reference was to a humoroiisl '_app(j3l‘ed with a cut in his face in- account which Mark ‘Twain had wrlt- ‘ {noted by a coiwless barber, Ibsen ten some years before of an imagin- ‘ fold him of a. Munich barber" one ary meeting with the heir w the‘ of whose patrons protested that it British Throne. l made him nervous the way a large,’ "The Prince was at. the head of a‘ ‘Danish flog. sitting three feet awayVDrOWS-llfflll lll ll"? sllllld?‘ Mall‘: from the Cllail‘, kept staring at. him ‘wrote. "and l WM 0h a 'bll~*-" continually. > ' ' ' l "on, never mind the dos." Ills‘. wercd the barber. “he's just waiting; Lord Aibemarle. Master of the‘, in pick up some of the meat-scraps Horse in Queen Victoria's early years‘ that occasionally fall down when I‘ which office carries many llllvll" am shaving." ieges-wlaimed the right to accomf pany the Queen in the State coachi on her official visit to Westminster. Ibsen was immensely proud flliTl-io Queen objected. and the matter! his various decorations and orderslwu regened u; mo grggl, Dukg n!‘ and overlooked no Oplwflulllly W wellington, Mr. MacDonagh says. wear them. One afternoon at tea he "My 50nd fellow," said Wellington; was lll V611‘! bad hum” “d ‘m’ M" to Albemarle. "the Queen can. as she,’ 0110 0f "l9 185i. public appearances of Alexander Dumas occurred in 1868 at an Ambaaadorsrceeptlori. He was then no longer the idol n; Paris and complained of being neg- lected. even by his friends; Besides which no u‘... in ill-health and hard up. on the evening or the reception. a friend, Madame Show.‘ found tho old man in bedpill. The servants had deserted him. ‘But he was de- termined to go to the reception. ‘re- lates Herbert's. German in -"'I'h.=. Incredible Marquis"—a fascinating biography of Dumag. ' O O I Would Madame Shawreach him a shirt from the cheat of drawers? certainly. But there was no shirt there! would she lend him the price of a new shirt and goand buy it? she would. But it was evening. and most of the stores were closed. How- ever, after much difficulty, she found a shop where they sold "the Hercules shirt." This garment had its draw- backs for evening wear as it was gaudy. the designbelng a group of bright red devils leaping about in violently yellow flames. But if. was the best she could do and ao she bought. it and took ltybgck to Dumas. O I O Dumas burst into a P8590“ when he saw the shirt. “Can I wear that at ‘the Ambas- sgdqfg reception? he‘ roaredfThen his rage collapsed as speedily as it had arisen and with l Slilll he slldi "Well. it will haveto do." Taking the shirt from Madame Shaw he proceeded to his dressini room and draped hilmsef in it. When he returned clad in fiill evening dress his broad bosom Zlllwfll Wllll prancing devils. Alas! Madame Show liad forgotten to purchase a tie. A Search produced an old red necktie and Dumas. having adjusted it. do. parted for the Ambassador's T66610- tion “sulky and silent? a o a _ _ Sol-no dayajltfil”. tile are.“ "elem gaily announced to Madame shawl "You would hardly bellava it but my costume was an immense success. Everythie thought it was an original idea. of my -own. They all vlll-ltmil about, me and made much of ma. I really think- I have started a-faah- ion.“ ~ "wliai; about the red necktie?" in- quired Madame Shaw- “0, that was another success." de- ‘UARDIAN ' a ' a WOIKMAN UIS lX-KING l Canadian Legion \ "' - BIRLLN, firm. 16.. -.-.Vletor von Tflffb? T0 T713 Wefit I-lorvath, an unemployed Berlin - _... workman, haa filed ault agalnat ex- t .._(By M. McIntyre Hood. Canadian King Frederick Augustus of Saxony. V’ Press Special RcpresentatlveJ-RE- whom he accused of having usurped,‘ GINA. sask, ,Nov. lit-For the first the Saxon throne and family heritage ‘ time in its history the Canadian of which he alleges he la the rightful l Legion of the British Empire Sar- heir. vleclloaguejis this yearswiriglng west. Victor von I-forvath declara: that htl s I l dominion for its annual dominion he ought to be King of Saxony by’ convention, to be held in Regina from right of his ‘ascent a! a grandson of‘ Nov. 25 to 28. King Albert of Baxony and Queen convention since the Canadian Leg- died without iaaue. I ion -came into being as the result I-Ie states. in support of his clalm.i of the efforts of the late Fleldltliat hia faiher. a musician named- Marshall, Earl I-Ialg. during his viaitlGeza Horvath who committed suicide —~ l i past the geographical centre of the is in a position to bring evidence that ‘i g This wlllbe the third dominion Carola. who were supposed to have“ to Canada in 1925. The first was held] iiiiwlnnlpeg, Man. in i927 and gave the » Legion a definite entity as the one great representative ex-servlce men's organisation in Canada. The second‘ held in St. John, N. B., in June.l 1928. saw the Legion consolidate its position. Since then it has expanded to the point where the west matches the eaai, in the number of branches and members. Standing aocond only to Ontario in Inca of Saskatchewan ls worthy of the honor of having the i929 con- vention held in its capital city. and the other provinces of the west have also made tremendous fail-ward strides and contributed in no small measure to the up-building of the Legion as a national organization. There are evidences of very keen interest lllufikhfi third dominion con- vention. While the Legion always has before it the problems of the disabled cx-service men and the dependents. whichconstitute the first call upon its attentions. its activitea reach far beyond its own domestic problems and encompass the welfare of the Dominion as a whole, the British Empire and beyond. Olie of the iolemost matters that \'.‘iIi engage thc attention of the coil- vention is that of migration and land settlement. The Canadian Leg- ion la not. onlyia source for the ex- iellplession " ofWwell-measured and nationally comprehensive opinions on this very vital subject. but it la tak- ing an active part in assisting the migration and settlement of war-vet- erans and their families from the British Isles. Close fro-operation with the British Legion and the head- quarters of the British Empire ser- vice league in London, England, en- ables careful selection and constant supervulon of these men and their branches and membership the prcv-. In 192i, learned at the age of 40 from an old Hungarian woman of Vescz- prom, in Hungary, whom he had al- ways regarded as his mother. that she was only his foster mother andI that hia real parents were unknowni’ ltn her. She then told him that. when‘ he was only two weeks old he hadl been placed in her hands-by a high official of the Saxon army and a no- i man Catholic blahop. "My father," aay: Victor von I-lor- vath. "made searching inquiries con- cernlng his true origin, at the end of which he discovered that Queen Car- ‘ ola was his mother. A secret law of the Saxon royal house demands that the eldest aori of the Baxon ruler; slzall be put away to avoid compliance j with the clause in the will of Queen i the seventeenth century. The clausel ldamanda ihat the eldest aon of a Sax- . 0n monarch shall always be broilght‘, up in the Protestant faith. "It is a significant fact that aince this will became lawlno aon was ever I ‘born to a Saxon King during his reign. t IThc Saxon royal house are Roman I Catholics. and naturally wlah to avoid the succession passing into the hands lof a Protestant. j "Queen Carola. staunch Roman l ‘Catholic that she waa, complied with “ ‘ the. custom of her house, but when it I“ came to putting away her child she. refused to have him killed, but placed - him in the handa of two trusted oour. tlera, the officer and the bishop of the old woman's story, begging them y 'to find a mother for her child." ' 1' i Geza Horvath, so the . story goes,‘ tried long and unsuccessfully to per‘ made the Saxon Court of the Jultice l |of hia claim, but. as they would notl illsten to him he put an end to nu‘ llife, leaving his aon Victor to carry: on the fight for their "rights." i Victor la accordingly suing his alieg-j l ed cousins of the Saxon moi not...‘ " ' ijovizlilniiziz 2...”. 7~~"-_ Reel pack ccoo‘ ‘pg ltoblltc @ . mail. , . . The ‘(Lady HIV/kins", Captain Manning, will arrive tomorrow fronil Mrs. Amy Ford, Dear Sister Member. _ the West Indies via St. John and ‘wllli sail from Halifax on November 29th. for Bermuda. St. Kltta, Nevis, Anti-i to you in your sorrow for the Ion qua. Montserrat, Domlnico, Sf. Lucia! a dear sister. Barbados, S_t. Vincent, Grenada, Trin-l ive-glvc, but nlay you he comforted LETTER or ki-iujfiég- . i" sou .1 ll Our heartfelt sylupatll How little comfort c“ ldad, and Demerara. with passengers? the Onc grcatsympathizcr, who km" mail and cargo. The! "Canadian Challenger", Cap- tain Wilson. from New Zealand, vial i, all our sorrows and who iicpt ivliht‘ . . . , mourners. ivnile n; “~35 hem below‘. l-Signed‘ on behalf of Etlcumr W31; Bolton arrived today to land cargo: Iilfilflv Institute. 'Mrs. Frank MGM: and will sail on December 24th furl‘ President; ' EllZHlYFlIl- IitVh-ly ‘sow New Zealand ports with general car-J go. tary. . , o+¢+~~~>+oq+¢+o+§Jo+>¢§+Q§o”.”..- BRAHMIN 'I‘EA IS THE FINAL CHOICE A Ten Full of Strength And Fine Flavor Sold only in Red, ‘Airtight Packages. Reap With \_ t/ .~ a1 ‘ Clothes Talk, , , ‘SHIGLBIUL TAlLORlNGgoes ‘zwith every Suit of Clothes we make, no matter what tire price. Give us a call before ordering your next Suit or Overcoat. We carry a full line of English and Scotch ‘ woolens for Suits and Oovercoats. ‘We thank our IIIRDXCUSIOIIIEPS‘ for‘ their pat- ronage and presence atour old store, and hope to see them all wlthmany new ones in our -new andup-to-date store. Eberhardin.’ who ‘t the 9nd of l O§§O§§§6§§O DO4§OQQ 4QOGOQQQyQ+‘._.*.‘_.**“.-.I If Everybody had A Been " Content We“ Would-Still a Sickle his guests. an elderly gentleman, un- pug", make you go inside Vth€'c]grgd Dumas, "they thought I wfi “mm” By m“ f "m1 1 . . ' W" Ho“, 90 )9’. cent fortunately beech‘ w dump his coach. of outside the coach. or rim wearing n in memory of Garlbllldl me H 1m l’ f‘ ° ° "l" 0" llhfontne title of Prince of Baxe wettutl ~. -- . » i ‘. . ‘ ‘ “‘ l . inst» Cher weakness‘ l“ “id "t behind the wwh 1"“ l Tl“l‘°*“~‘ ‘ it blm n; perm only the mo“ “d u“ mmmm“ °' m m“! d1 ' glfil, off and many lilies t0; was ridiculous how freely OYdQP-lfdug," - "d" ° "fhllzl" f“ 1° “mt”- i-u srlrid miner Queen v-roln- He. ~ , m‘ _ _ . v ~ d _ _ John. , , an ' rom e me t ey reach these H t, t1 l» _ E (‘km ll-l Der cent» M" being Ewen “own w! ' OLDEST WARN"? 57104.1‘ ‘ shores" their prozreaa is carefully do“ not. however calm he u‘ a l MERCHANT TAILOR A i-lcziring line of Satin or Velvet Slippers at lllil‘ discounts. Hearing" lines Boys and Girls Shoes ‘ranging in price from $2.33 to $4.50 for $41.98. Pliulsen. who was present. iviahinx t", On one occasion Queen Victoria) smooth over the situatlflll mlde Wm? l had down w Windsor Castle. for the; further remark about orders. fintertainment of the royal children,‘ ' ’ ' a troupe of performing geese. then whereupon Ibsen turned on Paul-i‘ popuin- mm ql, the music-halls... 5en-:, young author. remember. ~-l-i1 be; you to spare me in future l sue o; lnquiry a; to the safe return] he roared in his terrible wrath. “For performance" was followed in thisl the life of me I cannot aee why lull‘ cue, without any change in the usual. yo" should occupy yourself with this phrueololy. question. because it is not likely tllll "I am commanded by Her Mai-i you will ever be led into the tempt-l- enyy-f gll- Henry Ponsonby. the. tion of having one offered to 5'0"!" Queen's private secretary wrote t»! Ilng ship for boya if the new-wry LONDON. Nov. 1D—-tBl'itIah Unit- lou Pressi-H. M. a. nnlilmbls- which, aa the Duguay 'I‘rouln. W35 The cilstom of sending a polite mes-l flllllllfed ll°m ll“ “w” °“ N°'l vember 4. 1005. shortly after the of your allusions to my decorations?! or the complny utter a "commimdtnattle of Trafalgar and la now the oldest. ivarship in the world allll afloat. is to become a holiday trill"- money can be rll-‘Ml- Tlie ship is now at Falmouth af- ter a thorough over liauilnl Ind l5 watched and they are given the ben- Qflt of that vital relationship en- gendered by war service and known generally as comradeahip. ‘rhif ia a. matter of particular in- tereat to the western provinces, alnce the treat maiorlty of the war vet- eran settlers have sought to make their homes there. The. convention, in the heart of the west. will un- dflubledly make a most exhaustive study of the subject and lay lown the policy which will guide the activit- Klng. He uya that under the oii-cum- l zstances this is of no value. l i t C. N. R. STEAM!!! DUI ‘ 117 Kent Street. HALIFAX. n. a. Nov. zi-u-m‘ Canadian National Btaamahipa freighter "Cathcart", Captain R. P. Puller, is dtfe tomorrowmornlng from Jamaica with 20,000 atems of banim- _ as and other cargo. This la the firat shipment of bananas to Halifax this season. Moat. of the fruit is for Up- per Canadian attic: and will be rant CHARLOTTETOWN Phone 387 . I Revere Hotel Building fawcett Jiihiloe Girculator . i. ‘v t ' I t1 'l‘hcse irlces '1 r0 good’ . ' ' ' the mama" M’ the "W"? I'm-i l" I °°lltllll°n "° "°“'"'l" "°" °' lea of the Legion in tau connection I “ l 'l‘t thor of that. stirring aonl l- the ho a that the ladies many years. Mr qxmgda and “;ed_ o: "w _ I De m Emmet to expreu P hm “a! I n the Dukuay Tum,“ until the next Dominion convention tlonal train of fifty refrigerator car:._ l y “Dmm “wlzivnllaflltlln anii artraveling’ and gentlemen o! Yul“ coTmny At e o: tghe first. shipato fire ln-l Lklked “P wllh ll" qlle5ll°n "l lllld F“ m‘ “mt” month‘ u" "cnllr ~- < u - l . ' . . fl ' n loSdlu ' in Ohlmn dl-IIIOIWIIIBII bv persuasion. Surely relurlrlled to Odlrd o n0 fut‘- lrulthi‘victo aa ihe bore down uP- settlement ‘s m“ o! soldier "med n" ‘m our.“ u pa" of " weekly “ muftre x! m“ in his. brave“ un- surely no teness o0 g l. l; u“ enom?’ Th" d“ October n; meat. in which the Legion has an service to Kingston Jamaica, the (‘Qt yours early forgér :1 ism m the Norm m Winter‘ flier, fir“ Help“ ~md on Novemb" 4‘ especial interest. The convention will other: balnl the uudy Rodney...‘ _ , - ,- . - - - '. eniioavo to a te in th f: ts "Indy Homers" both a - many Illws it ill s01] out h. longed for the warm southern twhen brought to fiction. inc out uP of multimm o: 3L; Jttlzmtlt “ mm‘ p“ forward by a special CarladianNa- -;_._.... Taken can of your comfort without asking very much can from you. Ila extreme simplicity make: if convenient and ainple in operate, requiring ‘very lmls time and hardly any aflort. ' . i1 ill('l\'l)'. Qefi B122; LIMITED ‘$$$$$$$$ ~ emlim; RADIOTRONS - ‘ sifALL DEALERS all test the same thafs will; service men like i I l A pwéisti n Q11 oil so g “funds IN FVI lav sorw Y climate of Dixie land and expressed Mention of Queen Victoria recalls.‘ ll il'l his “walk-around" song bfifllll- a stary told by Lldy-"Wlllwlck lllf “my; "Lites Ebb and Flow." Site-Lady‘ "0 I “.1511 l was lll de land of cotton Warwick-was once spending the‘ ‘Slmflh seed and sandy bottom. look night at Windsor Castle. but was; au~ayy~ ‘eager to get away early next mom- f ‘and set to a rollicking tune in Bry- ing to attend some hunt races in‘! ants minatrel house in New York- which she was going to ride. 8o she’ Instantly u made a hit tsays Gar- arose before breakfast and caualll,‘ m“ Laduau‘ Egkaw in “The Plz- the first train out of Wlndaor- Li"? cam, of the PackctsW and when Em- the Queen's Lldy-lll-Wllllfll ,Wl°l ‘met took it South in i859, the South- -l1er that Victoria, peeping from W, {crners took it to Ihell‘ hearta. The hind a curtain. had seen her going‘ off in her scarlet hunting colt. allfli had murmured: ' "l-Iow fast! I-Iow very faati" I I I Ireat is known. I l I I Walter filth. famous painter. took a keen interest ln the theatre and ldphghiéd m g0 behind the scenes and M the end of Alexander Dumlff ‘chat with the scene shifters. one 0f life his son came in one day andl them appeared very intelligent and found the famous novelist readlna ll ‘Mr, Frlfh asked hlm if lie himself my. had ever been an actor. 0f course "What. are you readlnl?" no had! He had played l" "14"" qulredl lct"~he had indeed. lcted the chief The old man. lifting his dimmed par.“ I eyes, replied: __i_i_} Wm, m“; Musketeers.‘ I llwllfl ’ promised inyaelf that 1 would rend ha in- it when I grew old and discover if it was worth anything." f‘ "well, what do you think of it? Dumas raised hia head and an» ilfllilin ! VMKIDNEY I l a a l A few daya later the your-a" Du- ‘ ml! visited his flthel’ aallfl ll"! - i found him at-lll roadllll- l , _ . "whll u i; fnu time?" no naked l I ' a‘ he “t, down oppolik thl Old min- l "Monte crlato." explained Duinaa- "ni it good?" "pooh," rgpllgd H16 Illihél‘. "ll L‘ not a0 good at ‘The Thfel Muohj ‘Qrafl,’ ' . a magnificent fight which ended in her forced surrender after her cap- tain and I50 men had been killed. 0n being brought to Plymouth as if prize. the Duguay Trouiri WM found. in spite of the hammering she had received. to be such a fine shit‘! that she was taken into the Brtt- lsh service. For more than a hund- red yearn she flew‘ the White En- sign. ahe took pm" "in the Baltic operations in 1908 and was for thin ty odd years in the Mediterrmllh» ‘Returning home. witnrgold cock at the masthead as the smartest ai-ilfl in the fleet, silo became part of "w Lion Tnlning Establishment at Ply’ mouth when 311a served‘ until I908. when she was condemned to be aold. Appeals weremade to KIM Ill‘ ward VII. and thrmllh hi! lflllllillc? the vggggl wlg lent by theAdmlflltY to a Mr. C. Wheatley Cobb "for pros- lfinds from the standpoint of the settler. and a number of important resolutions on this point will ba pra- aented for discussion with a view to formulating propaala to strengthen this branch of land settlement ac- tlvity. _ ._ -In these matters the relationship of the Odnadlan settlement problem to the whole Empire will be under review. 'I‘he prominent part which the Oanadian Legion took in the de-i llberationa of the biennial confererl-t ce of the Brltilh lmipire Service League in London-i last June ensure: that the reports of ‘the delegates to that conference‘ will provide very valuable information and give direc- tion to the convention in making de- cisions affecting the affairs of vet-. erana throughout the Empire. and in its ’ international relationships "vgtlon," 111st la her position wday- If ahe can be saved-and for wlnl of funds lhQ la again in dull" 01 being broken tip-it fnuat be done b! public. subscription. Shela the only survivor of‘ the eighteenth“ century two deekera. ' ‘In ifa domestic affairs the‘ Leglon| Ill this convention will compleb; the' fusion of the “Imperial Veterans in; Canada" law the legion. Announce-' inent to this effect has already been’ made by Major Norman Dingle, prea- ldentofthat body. and arrangements have been made for this body to en- w the Legion aa the "Imperial Vet- erans‘ Division." 4,}. A provincial committee under the mm‘ °l ll" ollllill"! ullfil- l . ilirecflm of the Saskatchewan Pro- .vlnolal Command. l: making ave i ;noaallr\~ arrangement for the enter- [HIIIIIIQIIZ of the delegate}. With largo i " ' ationa expected from every prov- ‘ri-e inlthe ‘Dominion. the leading Iljfftelal: of the Legion have every ‘ration .00 anticipate that the fhiI-d I ‘dominion convention will b0 an aut- aaxigora, mail and cargo. and tho "OIVIUWZ which carries cargo and ._.__._______________ Baby’.s Own Tablets A Help To Mothers Ill Queen llnet _ There is no other medicine of a: Ilcltl help to young mother: a: Baby’: Own Tablets. Thage nblsu. are : mild but thorough laxative which regulate the bowala; awgctgn the atomach; eon-eat constipation and indigestion; break up cold: and allnpia fever: and make tho cutting of teeth palnleu. _ Mother: who bop a box of the‘ Tablets in tha house always feel safe from the sudden attack: of illneaa that aelza that: little onea. If baby's. Own Tablet: are given on tn: mat‘ sign of illneu the baby will I001! be right again. Concerning the rub. lata Mn. I. O. Oar-m, Lyndala, p, is. L, wi-im: - "r always keep Iabyh‘ Own Tablet’; in the noun and find them a wonderful help m hoping‘ my baby well."\ _ BIN’: Own notch Al‘: avid by all‘ mvdialn: oeaiara or by mail at 25 cents :. box from nu Dr. Williams’ ‘Medicine 00., lrockvilll, Ont. ..____..._..._ atanding milestone in the develop- ,,,-..-.~-- A urns rascal?” AND (‘ILAIIII "HID l. W. ‘MILD! _ a. a. um: ‘Lam Bethune Hardware h0g0. Ltd. "m: raibivnn aaanwana aroiur» Phone 151. 9 ‘ :j:# Men’s Overcoats 25 Men's last year's tweed ovcrcoats, all our left-overs. sizes36, 37,38, 40, 42, to clear ilt. 15.00 Friday and Saturday. Henderson Cludmore 0*» ‘SMELTS, g u: immanent smi: risii coiiiiliiiv-iiio.‘ LARGE‘ RECEIVERS - or . EELS LOBSTERS and SALMON 112 Fulton Fish Market—-N cw York. N. Y. Iveforfllcez-OOBN aacaliivoi: IIANI gitiiar o0. " nlwxoafmcr. ‘