w,» . .....-:»-~"'"~Y l fycaigw y: l1 2s, 1920. t Stubborn Coug —whether from a fresh cold, Bronchitis or Asthma — will readily yield to IVA D/Ql/(Y) Syrup 0/‘ 7271 ' I r , . '. 571d b; . . . _ 1 :1 // ( in: [/l"t’/‘()I/ (lu/lynlu/nf Zruliztta This dependable cough medicine gives quick reliei when the throat is sore or irritated. lt heals the inflamed mem- "i loosens the phlegm; and completely relieves the Iott stubborn cough. _ _- Ita pleasant agreeable taste makes this excellent remedy particularly , eflted to children. Keep a bottle always in the house. None genuine anapt in Red Package bearing the trademark Na-Dru-Co. ",5; . ladders! by National Drag and Chemical Company oi Canada, Limited i ' BETTER BAKINGS THE reason why BEAVER FLOI YR makes such light, llaky pastry. and such excel- lent bread, is—it is a blended Flour. BEAVER FLOUR is a combination oi the world-tamed Ontario Winter Wheat scientifi- oally blended with enough Western Hard wheat to give it strength-the resulting pro- duet is flour unsurpassed for high quality and richness oi flavor. Try BEAVER FLOUR and note the marked improvement in your bakings. Sold at your grocers The T. H. TAYLOR CO. Limited, CHATHAM, ONT. FREDTHUTH 8i C0. 7 Established 1809 - 12 Tokenhouse Yard LONDON ' ENGLAND FUR AUCTIONS Winter Sale Spring Sale Warehouse- _ 64 Park Street, Southwark, London -'I ' - HENRY BEN N ET, 1' ' Agent 11123 Broadway New York " For particulars apply to E. H. RAYN ER, , . I P. E. Island Commencing Feb. 2, 1920 Commencing April 26, 1920 Summerside, "ll-ll-‘llllllll, 1 I i E l. Charlottetown Guardian; NewUniversities 3 Dictionary ; HOW T0 GET IT ; 1 For the Mere Nominal (‘lost of Manufacture and l i Distribution. i § Three Coupons and 98c Secures this New authentic Dictionary bound , ji- in black flexible seal grain, illustrated with full ‘ 1:» pages in color and duotone. ¢vvw*“*‘ vw Present or mail to this paper three Coupons ' The partition is not Eugenie EStill Lives . A very old woman walking in the Tulleriea Gardens stool» 10 PM‘ an autumn flower iroln a lid!!! cIum-p. The paaseraby look at her again. She is even older than the)’ had thought her; certainly 0V6!‘ eighty, possibly ninety; the eyes are sad, as lt they had seen 100 many tragic decades. 1t is 118811161 the law to pick flowers in the gard- ens oi the Tuilerles, yet the police look on calmly and say noihlflK- She passed wit her one maid, and a bystander as s who she may be "The cx-Elnpress‘ Eugenie." a11- swers the policeman, “wife oi Na- poleon III. Ninety-three ii’ she's a day. Comes here once in a while." Eugenie, wife 0t Napoleon ill-- 1O whom Metz meant approaching disaster and Sedan the end 0t the world; Napoleon 111., whose moth- or taught him in banishment that he must rc-establlsh the Bonapart- os as a dynasty, who became Pres ldent and finally Emperor oi France by one at’ the strangest shifts of history, and who 10st hi! crown by precipitating the war that created modern Germany and started the controversy over Al» sace angl Lorraine; Bismarck and King \‘\'lllialn of Prussia, organizers of the German empire and arch- cnenlies of France llll 1870——tliese are mennlrles and shadows in tllo rest of us. But lo lllc shallow of n queen, avalking ln the gardenthat was once the garden of licr palaco and illuoking flowcrn absently, as was licr privilege long ago, lheso are tho only realities. What has Liege or Verdun or tllc Marne meant to lie;- as she sat in licr se cluslon at the end o! a long cent- ury’? Has she known, ol' did it mat- ter to her, which side was winning in the ancient struggle for the left bank oi‘ the RllLIlG? Ilas she any inkling that it Wilt! Napoleon 111. as much as Bismarck, perhaps luore than Bismarck, who sot the forces in motion for the world war‘? Perhaps tllo world war ii- snli’, which has boat ollr nerves in- to zigonlzed pulp, did not penetrate her solitude, or annoy ller with lho noise of bombs and long range can~ non, or llII.‘ sight oi’ wounded mcn. She has escaped frolli our gener- ation inlo the past. taking willl ller zlll svnse oi’ responsibility, all moods of file prerr-tll tense, and the donll of licr generation eescnpe with licr. What docs ll mutter to illcln i1’ we lilunle them for a war of our day We might have avoid- r-d i1, they would lvll llltl. if tve had irllnli-d lo blldly enough. "We lcarn froln llirltlryq" says Hegel, “Ilizlt IIIHI never learn auyllling lroln llisloryz" Nicanwliile ille former liIliipi-i-ss Eugenio walks through llie sard- ens of <lu= 'l'llll(-'ll(‘< in lilo flesh, and the dreams oi her youth Imvo broil dull: si: l0ll_-‘{ ‘llnl slle llt-rwlf hardly iii-laws now \"ll;ll llicy \\'l'l'i~ \_\'liy should we try to lengthen our‘ lNPg \\'lll"ll the body so often coir linuos on filflvcly beyond lhc Ilfo of llio spirit. Iikn on arrow shot Iltlfil 1111‘ 111F201? To Eilgenic, lilo nld aim forgetful woman, it nlust seem that silo has lvcll quite long enough. SlR OLIVER LODGE TALKS OF THE LIFE BEYOND Sir Oliver Lodge, tho British scientist, addressing an lilllmenso lnccllilg ill Carnegie Hall, New York, reiterated his bclievc thal the living are separated from lliose who linvc gone to tllo olliei side only by ii veil oi’ the senses. wlllcli art ilnreal, that tlierc is no gulf bill only, perhaps, a chasm. which is bridged by love. I-le said that those who remain on earth slioud not be sorry for those who have loft, because of tho 10y ilIIU happiness existing in the beyond, and because those beyond look back and watch over those remain- illg here. "My message to you," lie said, "is llltll. those who have gone through lilo ucll are all one family. a real pnrli- lioli. ‘ll is u veil oi’ sense.’ The other lite ls all around us. The brain in tllc screening organ. Dur- ing our short ]l(:l‘lO(l on cartli we have our practical work to do. If on,- minils wore centered on the glories beyond we could hardly attend to our work Iicrc. “We are guided and helped through lllo unseen, and many a prophet and saint has been aware of this. The highest comrnunlcuto with us through messages alld signs. It is a fact that the saints and prophets oi history have not boon fonli-d. We trace the grades of elclstcnirr- beneath us, but not above us. But it is a spiritual uni- verse and its existence is the foundation of all existence. We ought not to allow ourselves t0 b0 limited to what allows us to do our daily work. _ "The .-‘J.‘l€ll(‘tl of the future will be a massage to humanity where- by the rc-sults which have been ob- tained by the few will menu access lo the nlillly. The peak from which these things are visible has been reached by people who do not 1111111"? Conquers Constipation ‘a b7": '1\ ' . 57a _\ m .\' \.__ -——"'""'*_. climb, but WllU uslzvln] l —b;il|l-ou or liispiralion-wlllitiwcr you liki- i0 call It. “'0 uwlrlrl-rs in l~‘t'll‘llt'.i‘ must construct n road, up which others may gropo." A nilnlstor llIllll‘lll('Il his clniiirlqs- allon tllut bv iulf-nllcrl lifvitvlllllj-I to them on the llublol-t of “lyiufl? but llwf beforc lil- dill an ho wl-=lil ll the-y would all I'('1lll lllt‘ Hl‘\'(‘llll‘|‘lllll chapter of St. Aim-k. On the appoilitl-ll lllly boiorl- vlilll ulcnclilg his iwrnlou llil- lllllll:’ll'l' asked lll0si~ who lmd (‘l1lll])lll‘il with his requcsl lo rcnd tho rllnpf- er (llrecicd to lllllll up lllUll‘ llflllll~4 A few among tlil- congrl-iguliuu ini- mediately pomplli-ll. “Al1!" said tlil- minister, "you arc the people 1 spel'izllly' llt‘.~'ll‘(' lo preach to. Tlierl- ls no silvc-ilfvcnfli chapter of Si. Nlnrkl" i connection Wllll head of tlic Sulvllllon Aruiy, i-z a plain. blunt man, with day in Hadley Woods, young lady who VERY LIKELY. General Iloodiihillio is _lll.<l now touring Franco null Sivitzcrlmltl ill his work us lllf‘ n mlirkorl aversion to gush and senlinmntnl- Y. The story irons that, walking our ll cr-rlnin chanced to be in Ill! company, run up lo nil liiillipnl IE7 with ninety-eight cents to cover cost of hand- II; ling, packing, clerk hire, etc. f _ MAIL ORDERS WILL BE FILLED Add for Postage: ff; Up to 20 miles 6cts. Over 20 miles 14cts. 3f For gritalater distances, ask Postmaster rate for. , r m {E5 8pm“ séls DICTIONARIES IN 01m ‘ “guns, h, $‘§;‘,,2§','""' §§f All Dictionaries published previous to this ifl one are out 0t’ date. . ca: sue tonic. . -’-“ ‘ ' laaatsnsasaniisasiaaiawaaiiasas. i §O4OQOOO§§OO§O§§Q§§§§§§§§QQ tree trunk anll, clamping licr ilrlns round it, cried ecslaticully: .1» _..¢ r “Ull, you It lul old lmk, il‘ you could only ,~-]ll‘lll\' uni} ivll Illt‘ zill you liuri- .\‘I\t"ll during llio uolitilrll-s you lpivl- stood Iivro, I wonder wlllt you would ll:l_\'!" "lll- would .-";l_\', I llilnlt," t-‘illll llio (il'lll‘l‘ill, gllilu-ilig up zit llio lrcc In (HIUI-‘lllllll "l zlm lull llu link, l'lll a llvclllll" NOT A THEQRY lt’s a tact that the use of alcohol even in moderate doses as taken in tonics is oiten habit-ionning in effect. SCOTTS . EMULSION ‘an easily assimilated tonic- nutrient supplies the body with those elements that contribute to strength. Free from alcohol or any other harmful element Scott 'a builds strength by nourishment. 1 5€0ll&U0l\'llt',lll00l.llfiClll.N-J- 19-14 ,0 efascinating “Smoke v geifect1cigarettetei¢1jpfnertt~ i8¢(F-4'Bj£l1lli.ii'1?§i¢z “or tee o Cigarette e _ ~51’? ts,“ c. aitisfacftiqnsto a .sn_iodt’imcs__s:¢tiie ‘ “fliesctworld-e - gpararttee ‘trots Sold [flrariiall “ brands combined. ’ Known .':.< lii.~ "lnnl~l-.i_v o1 'lll‘ l-inl-illu" on i"llllllll oi tlm salul-yq Willi!“ "l: cllslrulill-rs .-ll~ (ll'llll.ll- w», .\lis< [Jolvllliy (J Fll ll:l.~ :|l‘1iln~'ll ll unique posilL-u in iii» pit-luvs \\'lll'lli "Hill ii i.-l not lruv.‘ ‘ -l|l- sllys, llllll l iloti- on Ill-uilivoud Dick stor- il s lllill on! plans- willi u knifv," Ilcr ltl\'l)lll‘lli\ slury l‘l)lll'(‘l‘ll.\' llio lllllllllllvl‘ of u i-r-rlziiu ]\li‘llll‘l) llicll- Irv, Wllll ttllt‘ iluy llcllrll lilo son of lll.~4 l:llllll.'u|_v s:|_y tliul lil- $lll1\\'l'(l "lliu l'l)lli‘lll‘.<l pil-llirl-s in tlll- town." (‘oulplilinl was Illillll‘ by ilic bo_y’i< iullicl, illlll llc ivns dulv puiilslll-ll. ll(l\\'l'\'t‘l‘, in» mini-r liven! to sco lllu show for liiluslllf. flllll oil Ills I‘l‘llil‘II homo wokr tho ll".1'11ll. gnvo llllll u sllllllllg, and opologlzcil. l. ——-——--{4)>__._. Pliolligrliph‘; is n srrungp huh-i, 11"‘§»*‘- lllllfll-ll llli" young lllilll, llcl-nlwl- l'l (ll‘\'l'll)fl_q llt"fltlll\'i',~4 ‘l DIWWIIIIIIIP?" l|llf‘l'l1‘ll tho lpuul: wn. 311"" ‘V1171 R flllccr ill‘l'i‘lll on. lilo ‘irorll “ni-gnilyv." “N0? Pxlllflly llllll. llut as lin cx- unlplo filo otllol" lllly l lilid my pint. urc takvn in my riding cloths-not on n horse, you unilcrstzlnil, but just standing ln my ruling mum with lily Wlllil) lll my linlill. And Io- dny I rccolvctl n. ll‘lll‘l' from llic photographer striving flint tho mp. lures rim all mounted and ready Finish" "APO LOG lzléotwm‘ i R'B',illllEl'-L|§ ~lor me," ,. __L._______.__ ._.______..______ nlliouolim SERVICE Quebec, and Montreal Wlth Connections for TORONTO and ALL points West u urn‘ all a Vla the only I All Canadian Route 6.25 a.m...l..v. chm-lo“ g A _ m" I , 6.45 a.m. Lv. Summeialcllhn Ab, so! :3- l.08 p.m.--Lv Sacxvllle Ly, 1,15 p.11}. 2.25 p.m- Lv. Mvncton Lv. 10.65 a.m. 9'” a-"l- A" Montreal Lv. 0.2a a.m. Leave Charlottetown Dally Except Sunday. Daily Service Between Halifax and Montreal Maritime Express Leaving Montreal daily ex“ , pt Saturdays mlkll 5°" Thflwlilh Connections to Prince Edward Island Points " L I T I I vla Sackvllls. , oca ra n eavi Mo g _ leaving Saekvllle forngormdrftlh: d: 111551.“; m. Conn“. Wm‘ u.“ See Your Tlcksta Read. Via---CANADlAN NATIONAL RAILWAYS w; "r. HUGGAN, w. K. ROGIM, olstrigtmrraxtaizgar Agent, - '- -'~ City Tlsliot Aral. gowzilaurmutth! own. ‘L ‘a. l. oliariottmwn, O l; Ii v l