T. Lu -V 7-1; 'I _ ' 1.1.51 ,iv-t_._'»;é .1 ,.11 j1'.-Ui". ici. :ii 111.. _ .1 A _'i_i"i.:.s *ii* » i' ' ‘ .sm ~ . .M-..-, 4 1 1 ..~, 1 . . . ._ . 1 ri' of ‘ /' fl it J -its* 4 ~ w ‘ln i » fl,-[Q ,».. t .,,¢ 1 it / if A ‘al ig , 1 4 rf* 'Q ‘~~ vs; _a» __ 1. . _ »'- ‘ sci ' 1 4 vi.-Y H- ~ Y 7 TMI IATTLI QP \lrAl-PLAQUE? .Morse’s` Selected 1 ' ,_ ‘i Orange Pekoe .i.::°°;‘.".:.:..;=”:;'.; ::. izaisl Winn yourinencls nmhmg yqu :rented on Selltember 11 1709 the qn we, than “nu lars, is noteworthy as the Dul¢e’s last be more apprecial edthan a cup of from- , _ '"5 'g ‘ __ _'.__,___.__ll__ “' ' I B - _ Plf1S|NG THE TEETOTALER. The attacks on President Wilson which followed his message in sup- port of wines and moderate drinking, led Levy Mayer, the famous Chicago lawyer, 'to say: “It reminds me of a temperance lecturer. This lecturer was intro- duced to his audience one evening by the Mayor of the town. The Mayor, though the lecturer ‘didn‘t know it, was a saloon-keeper. “Ladies and gents," the Mayor be- gan," “I take pleasure in introducing Dr. John B. Goff Hoskins' to you. Dr. Goff I-loskins is going to lecture the f he-xl!! __ ' moderate drinker, and I hope he'll give him Hades, for there’s no bigger rascal under the sun. “The moderate drinker, ladies and genre, comes in-to your saloon, orders a schooner of beer, and sit down with it in the armchair beside the stove. lie collars all the nswpapers in the house, and there he holds forth until closing time,. All you get out of him, ladies and gents, is a nickel, So much for the moderate drinker. “But the teetotaier-heaven bless him-the teetotaler sneaks up to your back door, gets two flasks of whiskey and a pail of beer, and is off like a shot."-Exchange. C _ . ---___ ._ _---__ ev., - 4 #J un.-1,., vuxnnwuun nmnu vv A delicious rea, made T 3]' BRACE, MCKAY, & C0. LTD. SUMMERSIDE 7 9 W .' "_ ‘T-"X lic speaker' and can say the most re- CANADIAN NATIONAL RAILWAYS _ - PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND DlViSl0NS "'5ii5d““? »"“”1-i `”°""°""i" Time Table in Effect, October 6th, 1919 '°;“,;° ”?"°'c1eS~ ATLANTIC STANDARD TIME. ' should have .power to legislate on all P.M.|P M141 M1 2.45 12 40 14 05 6 251l)ep 7 211 7.55 1 8.-i51Arr. 3.59 4.45 6.10 Charlottetown Hunter River 5 37 1] 24 9 03 Emerald Junction Borden 11>\r PM1AM an 63512 401040 5.0010.ss 7. 0 nep.1 4.101A.M.1 5.40 1>.M.1 4.101 5.00 3.05 5.34 3.53 6.05 4.351 1.1.1 1 5.-ioinep. 8.051 8.421 9.201/irr. Borden Emerald Junction Kensington Summerside Road down Read up matters relating to ecclesiastical en- 2. | _ ' ~ _ _ _ 3. ‘ 1 5 P .M.1A.M.1A.M. 6.101 1 440110.38 7.50 353110.03 7.15 3.20] 9.30 6.45 Arr.[| i Dep. NooN 5.20 12.0o1oep. 7.231 8.18 9.08 9.45 | 1.361 3.10 4.18 1 5.20 Arr. _ Summerside Port Hill O'L_eary Alben-ton Tignish 11-i.M.1A.1vr. Arr.1 1.351 900| 111.591 7.581 10.341 7.031 9.181 6.131 Dep. 8.151 5.351 A.M.1P.Mg 6.50 3.0 1Dep. 8.45 4.151 9.221 4.42L 9_52‘ 5.0 7 111.25 ooslarr. Charlottetown Mount Stewart Morrell St. Peters Souris ____ °#@®9P U1 t-I _L_ M.1P.M. 00 5.50 .-45! 4.15 7 3.171 2.40 115 Arr. Dep. P..\1.1 7.201Arr. Elmira De 91? c~==" 233 'P .M.E1 9. .-1.1 1Dcp. 10.1 5.041 ‘10_501 5.25 11.301 6.00lArr. .> 2,35 rs Mt. Stewart Cardigan Montague Georgetown weve? >Bl\'|»§»B 22°* >-AIO! M.'1>.M.| 3.551 7.501 .101 Dev-I 01 Arr. ' | Sat. |l)aily ex. only1Sat. & Sun. P.M.II’.M. 6.45 7.25 Arr. 5.15 _ 1 1 4-051 3-3li|Der>. Charlottetown' 5 15 Vernon River Murray Harbor _=.>< ,@5?g?_ 2°:33E:-_".° Daily e Sat. & Sll 1A.M. Arr. l0_40 8.45 Dell. 6.45 7 ./. ‘_ _ , Except as noted, H. H. MELANSON, Passenger Traffic ‘ Toronto, r 1 ‘-111 BY' 'PLANE T0~'l'HE POLE. ___ Will the Americans be the first to ily to the North Pole? They are at present preparing an expedition, to be commanded by Cap- tain Robert A. Bsrtlebt_ The pro- moters of this expedition have been struck by the recent wonderful pro- gress of serial photography, and they think that from an airplane it will be possible to photograph the Arctic region. The dbstacles to be surmounted by most expeditions do not exist for the airmen, and without even coming to the ground- he can proceed to photo- lrmpll things of the greatest meteoro- logical and geographical interest. The expedition' has been planned at the suggestion _of Vice-Admiral Peary. _ efs-‘infi- M IIUNDIRBTOOO “I have dropped eggs for bresxkf;:t." *im _ ..on. mm- _ ~ r _ dropped ov ning except oatmeal sn: The Enabling Bill does not by itself secure either, but it makes both pos- _ sible." Prince of Wales would viist this con- tinent, n fierce war started among the ._ . ~ social leaders of New York and Wash- _ _. .-_»r~.z..'?ll!!NQ iugton, who wished to have the 110110? calm dlgmty- ml? at me ~ of emeertaining h1m_ The American I once had the satisfaction to point ‘But it was built to do that, wasn’t authmmes were somewhat em1m.aS_ out to an indian chief an airplane sail- it?" he said." Sed, but the situation was solved by1;r1g lacrosg tlhe sky: it wasdthi; flilrst; First Safety Bicycle. , _ r ana e ever seen, an n , _ 353315155 °:s°th(?;'€ftoP:;’l°eld;;‘;nQ;]IFS: foul; hopes that he-(1 sh", some “_ The first of the safety bicycles was all the above trains run daily, Sunday excepted. mg ms sta in the re “hue cltement. . Dui- 9" the market in 1330- In this w. T HUGGAN Y I P ' ~ ' the high front wheel was reduced and I. Marlborough and :Prince Eugene, de ranch, commended by lhrshel Vil victory in a pitched battle. But it proved costly. as the French highly favored by the ground, fought with remarkable bravery. Villars, although a vainglorious man, was no mean gen- al, and he had made the most of e natural advantages; but, when once the contact had begun, there was little chance for tactical surprises or for the eudden.inepira.tions of mill- tary genius. Moreover, the Marshal was seriously wounded early_in the y, and. although he endeavored to from the field. Prince Eugene, too, was wounded in the head, hut refused to retire, and, if Marlborough went unscathed, yet it was reported among the French that he was killed. How- ever, he was to live for many years,1 and soon to experience the ingratitude-A of his queen and country. Already the factions men opposed to him were gaining ground in the cabinet. and the country, and the most was made of the fact that Marlborough’s' The battle of Halplaquet, in which the allied force under the Duke of _ _ _.pang é __“' ._ 14% \_* mg'-”-f- ' . ‘og _ 125' I sncvww rn 0 U VQRYPCNT 3' ENGLISH NAIVARD \!Nl\ CEST V Y ~"p1`j _ it ,,. _°/a___ _,fo __ Jiic IV UR - sim. vt, 1 looses approached 20,00, those of the; French being but half. On the other] hand, the fact that they had been' turned out of a strong position was' siurred andaltogether the situation' at home was such as to inspire the‘ English general with the gravest mis-I givings. Although in reality glorious both for the men and for their leader,' Malplaquet, in fact, did the allied cause almost as much mischief as u reverse, inasmuch as it was employ- ed with skill to exploit the feeling of “war-weariness," and -thus to forward the backstairs intrigues by which ui- timately ill/larlborough was driven into retirement and exile. 1 -ii-L A LIVE WIRE IN I ~ ENGLISH CHURCH Whatever the faults and defects oi’ the Church of England it has produc- ed some very fine parsons. It has the most leairned clergy of any Church ini Christendom declares an Exchange. And one of its characteristic pro- ducts is a type of churchman who is both priest and man of the world, a scholar and yet in touch with the realities of life. Of such ty'pe is William Temple; the new Canon of Westminster. The _ younger son of Archbishop Temple, he has crowded into his life, before he is forty, a vast number of experi- ences. He has already won a name as author, editor, schoolmaster, popu- lar preacher, hon. chaplain to the King, social reformer and church re- former. lt is told of him that as a small boy his affections' were divid- ed between abstrnse problems and the novels of Dickens. Ever since his Oxford days when he was -president of~.the Union, Mr. Temple was marked out for distinc- tion. He is not a scholar of the dry- as~dust type. He is not a prig nor pedant, but an intensely “llve” force with immense energy. ‘ ` He is' a remarably attractive pub- volutionary things in an engaging manner. .He combines the essences of the Oxford spirit with a cosmopolitan breadth of view. He is impatient of m o o rus ng aside t e things that do not matter and getting down e ou to remedy abuses in the church. 1-le claims' that the church dowmenits, property, patronage and tribunals, that the churches should be able to manage its own affairs through representative and respon- sible assemblies, and _that fuller ad- vices of laymen and lay women. "After all," he says, "the church was not formed to be a_ devotional club providing various forms' of wor- ship for those who like that kind of thing. lt was founded to be the army of the Kingdom of God, standing for the principles of -Christ and in the power of Christ, before the world. or, if necessary, against the world. it is for the two parallel purposes ol’ church reform and corporal wit- ness that the life and liberty move- ment in particular supports the de- mand for hhturch se`iii}governn1en~i:. Many Wanted the Prince. When work was received -that the _ ,..- J 1 - ,- _ __ _" !.-1 ///A - lv'/,‘»7r`? _ 1 3 f Arrlltf-14/. 'H -_ _ _Lg 44 ` .__ ` ` i K _ r " _ ' 3 _ 15.11-»_“~=;_, _ ,;;_3\|7»_§:§,>_.‘;~:__-is 0_1! ‘. ~ »_\ f. `-_""~ _. _ 3° °".~ . .5-12:1 wg; r1_~r”’.i.‘ _:r.\".»~_._~ <>J_T-..,_ ll _‘I E 2; §,_ 5 ‘~\'.#; did" is 9%.- fe » &`¢:.~ Y" a._‘*§." `_ . '~ v ~=;_ gr ' "';\:`%`;r. - i.<.H~*i&"{`I` `_>;,,-._ ? 5 'S' . i i'\ 73, :i-____ _ t ` ' ( = K *_ _ \`:ff»_'_°="'l?"` L_.: .4 . 'f' _ ";~_~`..-;f,\‘ _:mr 5' I vans-ns* ` -F.-“lf ‘r s . 2 "2"-1-.1-;-..~.,. ,. . ~"f-'“#*““‘¢'»'»rff1-r`1#,'/'_' I A//4 i’.»,-‘fifti /A ff, .f-_1~ff;r»-5,, Z= .4 1-_Lf 4.-:.7- .f»_~.~.§/~s~'_._..,';f-f.i‘...'»_»j, ,1'1,..~.-1. , 1.. /`)\ 4/~_..¢/4 _41/~\u;_~f,i| ily( r~»~~ w.. - ._ .- '__‘»_:~ ;f.;.”-.-’-‘?.i~."»,£&#»'_,’“ '.- '//-'~~."¥7)*y~" \' ." Diff# '@.A_ "if 1': `»»i,,='f.'i' if/Z -_,:l"f_i.",?f-,}*@f»",V5_ *hotter ' Q 1-‘_-»-._-~t»',~.<»:‘» . W ~ .M < ~:-'tl'-W1-»-1*/41’ '~-"_' ' ‘~ - ¢;r"~.'. sf/ J _-fr ,‘,-'M' ~ 1 1.0. \,~lj-bil/‘|fiD..~;,9‘.,";2’ ,'l ' §,; ,/‘f..i»”-if ‘ *_-‘="§;, X » _'1._ ' ~5i"*` 1'." ff'-i _'fic . ~ -1/ff’?4"2:-'»_-"¢.s’?"’ f -i »‘.71'f,,’~'»'~'; -"- `,,»,, ‘ vs_- ,fjf/,id f ‘,‘f1_', -E as -_4 o\1_y,§~ _ U AF -1. ,I "5 »! N ,` ei.. ii-_ i AJ/ff* I . - _- ,__ A 1 .`|¢»-g..'.=.¢»u--sn-»»_,¢.M an-lam-as -»,¢¢¢n-|svam\¢us..`f_;4»sn=nm cvanuutq A Menwho Made Tin New Dictronar /f "" iii?) \.i2* if mfr \ ` I; .,~__` Airy; 1 W ia 1 5 v - 7 ` » ~ W A l illii _ y, - __ _ ,' ____ 0' ,` gf 7,. . _ _.5 0 5 U A L_. , ` if fs ‘li _ T '1 ‘ _ § _ ,_ _ 1 Je \.'.’¢ _ vaorsssou or mm. _ _ Ivor .1 1 4.. ‘ (Till THOUSANDS OF NEW WORDS Best Dictionary Ever Printed---Contains _Practically ali _English Words in Daily Use---Thousands Never before in any Dictionary _ ---Supplied at Nominal Cost to Readers ofthe CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN . NEW Universities Dictionary Compiled anld Edited THIS YEAR by the STX Mnlfel' ti°na'ry Builders of Amer- ! lea Pnacv W. LONG, A. M. Pri. D.. Harvard University CLARK S. NORTHUP, Ph. D., Cornell University IOHN C. ROLFE, Ph., D. University of Pennsylvania FORREST S. 'LUN'l‘, A. M. Columbia University MORRIS W. CROLL, Ph., D. Princeton University GEORGE J. HAGAR. Editor-inChief BEST illustrated ' Dictionary in the World Pages and Double Pagss of Mar- velous Color Plates and /'51 /'Y1;1‘»‘-.*.‘»lF`/.=. "` ',`\,/`_ ni J 'S r? :‘:P..4wj”:_;,-1' ‘S--. \ (.11 ~’ - ” _-1,., 1' §f.If»-5-i’ie":" "___, /-\Tth\'~.1;--std.. _'$11. ¢, 4'* .,,_7.lr>»'»'\,2-,J 4 Z. 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S ; .f-.A _ A; _ -(3 S33 Bound in flexible black seal grain, large type--all new, easy on your eyes Duotonel - 25 Dictionaries in One ' Useful Facts and Guides Found in this Book SPECIAL DICTIONARIEB _ OF Classical Abbreviations Most Common Abbrevia- tions _ Forms of Address Americanisms Atomic Weights i`he Automobile aviation Baseball Christian Names Commerce and Law Every-Defy Allusions Football - Foreign Words and Phrases Golf ` Lacrosse Lawn Tennis Military and Naval_Terms Music Noted Characters in Lit- erature Photography '° Polo - State Names and Mean- ings Wireless Telegraphy Words of Like and Op- posite Meaning Yachting HOW OUR LANGUAGE GREW Punctuation Practical Syntax, or Up-to- Date Sentence Building l‘ime and its Variations ' Usese of Nouns, Adject- ives, Adverbs and Verbs United States: Population of the Congessional Represen- tation Principal Cities Rank of the States Janada: Population _ Principal Cities Population by Provinces Value of Foreign Coins Elements of Words Language of Flowers Everyone His Own Wea- ther Prophet Facts About the Eearth Phe Metric System State Flowers National Parks MONEY BACK You can’t understand the big ideas that are rebuilding the world unless you have the NEW UNIVERSITIES DICTIONARY Advances in Science, Art, Religion, Industy-Political Upheavals, War and new Discoveries have brought a flood of new words into general and proper use since the last dictionary appeared. Thousands of them- never before in any dictionary-are now clearly defined and their use _explained in this exhaustive guide' to refinement, culture and education supplied to readers of this paper at nominal cost. You need it every "day in home and office. you are not satisfied, re- turn it within 48 hours and this paper will refund oook your money. I Monev mica i | gn- i ' Ma"°||°"» D|°¢|'i°¢ P88l¢f\g'¢r Agent 4. _ "dm" cam" _ “There_i" I said. "Therel What do the rear wheel was about two-thirds Ont. ¢har|°¢¢¢¢°w,,_ p_ E'_ |_ india" g;’:ntmif§;f;e’;“ 1J!’;‘llL‘;;‘l;l' 51;? you think' of it? 1sn't it extraordinary? the height of the front one. The macn~ Dowel] _,You calm mme A _ 'lhe chief lookcii up at the air- ines with wheels of the same size ap- ' “ Indians plane calmly' and then he looked cal- peared in 1885 Bicycles began to be 2. _iw *_l_-|11 +_ i Z ___1 i ir _-ii 1 |- - __ Don’t deny this wonderful Fake it home-take one to the ofllce. It is necessary in your social and busin- ess life. Our supply is lim- ited-you'ii have to act P’°mPl*Y- i @" HOW TO GET IT £1 Clip Today’s Coupon " Take this book home- Don’t let 98c stand be- examine it carefully. If tween you and education. u Is Yours to your children. Price f°f '. C 4.00 A and3coupons Mail Orders Filled on Terms EX- Pislned in Coupon 1 'U I mult-itudp_ Turn About. Two golf fiends-an Englishman and _ a Scot-were playing a round to- "Na, na, ma man " said he; "_It'l me gether. After the first hole, the Eng- turn tae ask first " popular about 1891, and the "craze"' Lishmun asked: - f -'~,__ reached its height about 1895, when "How many did you take?" _ _ wheels had become low enough in "Eight," replied'tli'e"'SEot. ' price to be within the means of the “Oh Ionl took seven so We . Y . my ` hole!" exclaimed the Englishman tri- umphan-tly.1 . » ' After the second hole, the English- man put the some question again. But the Scot smiled knowingly. BRINGIN -G UP FATHER , '../ 4- 0 _--U3 Tl-N515 A BOM SHQW- W/\‘b 'S _-1 Z-Z' I |15.-|» 1 'lim-“~ . . . i.. Iii.-. _ I. 10., ¢ AN' K\N WHERE CHMME 5EAT egg ~\