l |an——a___ a-——___ s TRETCH the fabric oi Watson's Spriu Rib Ilnderwear and you find it lia le and elastic. It springs back to shape t s moment you release the pull. Watson's garments respond to every movement of the body and stand the strain because of the unusual elasticity of the “Spring Needle Rib"- fabric. . , Tailored accurately not chale or irritate. and comfortably. Ask for and look iur the Gold Label. All "Spring Needle Rib" garments have it. Watson's give you a choice of all popular styles, fabrics and materials for men, women and Clilidftffi-v-Blld they wear. ‘ SPRING NEEDLE RlaaEo with flat seams that do Watson's fits you snugly 3 ' I UNDERWEAR - For Men NWOIIIQIIJ a The Watson hianuiacturing Company, Limited, Brantiord, Ontario i When a Scream Startles You -—and your heart ium s up in your throat- and you know one oi, the children is hurt— run to the medicine cabinet for the bottle oi AbsorbineJF _THE ANTlSEPTIC LIN ' *1 ENT Whether it is a cut hand or a gushed knee —~a torn ann, burnt finger sprained ankl bruise or open wound—ap ly ‘ABSORBIN JR.” full strength. - it in? smart for an instant-but it will cleanse the wound, estroy germs, prevent infection, case the pain and promote rapid and ealthy healing. For toothache, saturate cotton with “ABSORBINE JR.‘ and place in the cavity In the tooth. Than rub the lace with this reliable liniment-it stops the pain. If the children at sore throat ol tonlilitia, make a garglo with “ABSO BlNE JR.” You see how useful, ow handy how necessa y it is to keep a bottle oi “ABSORBINE JR." always in the house- -it saves so much pain and suffering. $1.25 a bottle-at lost drsggists’ or seat postpald by W. F. YOUNG Inc" Lyman Bulletin‘, a o ‘ . STATION QWZ "-' PSSSST - WH lz-Z-Z-Z-Z ovwA-rcl-t ME. HAVE‘. SOME. " Fun WITH JIMMY sKuMK. 5N0 PETER RABBIT "r0 JOHNNY CHUSlfl w; [z // '2 _. Needle p , ......'...... . , . u *- 1 I 9| NOQ MAQGW NWNT U" LEQQ- GLEGDADl-W. Ll$"l'l'l.'N?.W%I AwllAQ- ' E00 fiwGfiAM- sis DARK MOMENTS-IN BRILLIANT LIVE$ __From the New York Evsnln! Mail. “I Had Terrible Backache - 99 From Kidney Disease - - his. M. A. McNeill. Ca- . ' . ltlllt silo N-Bw "fin" " "l was troubled for If“!!! with terrible backache. _ _ from kidney disease, At time: an - each month l remained in be . i the Pain tsnsoivslkllr: 15:2,]: . - d h. $50.00 I ,s'::.:",‘:l*-..l.".1' but with little results. NOW l f" “mph.” better, after unnl oi Dr. Chase's . _ met people like those in the city - a bud lot. I got. bored to ileath with that a church fair and where the “The Love Pendulum” (continued srom page 12) COMPROMIBE . Chapter 101 But Wln but ‘his lia-Ild on his wheel and begged ma, to stop. So the road -whser law people passed fli- llllihl. the silvergand-blaclc coun- "Y ‘behind ~us and in iron/t. in the WP 0f the hills, the lights o: the - little town. V ‘ We sat libero and talked for an hour. l could nolbelleve ‘the change that had come over Winthrop. it had come too suddenly. It was the ml"! l had wa-uted tor two years, F18 WW8 I had Elven up hopelng OI’. ' “I can't believe it," I repeated several times. “Tlhis doesn't sound like you."- “I suppose I've changed a little," Win answered. "You were quite fight when you said that other sort of ‘life was empty and silly. But I couldn't sec it." "I'd had solnuch oi itfthe eter- nal rushing around doing nothing, tiring oneself out merely killing time, working hard, and accom- pllslllng-F’ “Nothiu-g." Win finished my sell- tence for me. “But you couldn't ex- pect me to be a-nything but fas- f-‘lnfllell by ll- I'd never seen uny- thing like it before, and I never‘ before." "I expected you would lbs fast-l- hated by the city and all its ex» cltenieut, ailll the people that gilt tered—nll that sort oi thing," I ended my phrase Ianiely. "Bu! I thought your common sense woul-l make you see how useless it was after a time." "lt did. But it took nearly two years," Wi-ll answered. “l think I would like the people in your sot. that I afterwards disliked as being stifl and plggish. Theylre more worth while than the crmvil I went with alter you left me. They were them. Connie. I really wanted in hear sonic intelligent conversation so much I almost lhunted up your friend Colin. to hear him talk." I laughed lit that, knowing Will's uld dislike of Colin. "I'll do anything you want," Win- throp went ou. “You like this town. and the awfully simple life here let's settle here then. Our firm has ‘been negotiating ‘for one of the nil companies here. We wa-nt in enn- trol its stock, I can manage that-- vou've got friends ll(§I‘€*~tl-II(l luoth er adores you." At lust he had offered li~~to ‘give up everything he Once liken, and tn ",lV0 ule everything I mice liked. He was ready to do without the ‘ate parties, ‘the theatres, dances.- restauraills. the blaze of lights,’ the lavish ‘scale of entertaining-mud to settle into a quiet town ‘where nothing happened more exciting feature ol‘ a strawberry _ crowning, supreme dinner party was a short cake for dessert! . lAlld suddenly I iollll-d that I did not want that either. I remembered ny last summer here in ‘this very .'own, the gossip, the narrowness if the life the lack of anything orosdening or ilpli-fting. “No," I said decidedly. would ‘never do." There was a moment's silence. “I've been a beast, I know," Win said humbly. "I couldn't expect you Lo go on caring much alter the way I've acted. I wouldn't have asked you to come lbnck to lile. only that mother WIIS sure you still lov- ed me.” "I do, Win," I answered, and took ‘my hand from the wheel and .et lhlm have it. "And 1I've felt somehow that you've cared too, in spite oi everything. Not even Jwun-J‘ , "'l‘hcrc never was anything in that," Will interrupted. "I don't blsulo you for not liking lit-r, but really, line did mu alliteration. And she is gain-g abroad next Will- ter and I'll never see -her ll’ you isn't wniit uie to." "i EIIGVUI‘ want to forbid you to do unytlliilg," I answered. "l was lllly about Gwen, and silly about a lot of other things. I was nervous ind tired from ‘the sort of lilo we were leading." "You won't be, if we live lICi‘t£-— ind if you love me." "We won't llvo hero." l fluid 11°‘ (fldedly, "This is a reaction on you-l part, Win. You are so impulsive you go from one extreme, to the other. You went from this deadly inlet life into the very heart of all the excitement New York can offer. You ran that as hard as N0" amp; NlQW you've tired ol‘ that. "Iii you live here, "1 R Yell!‘ 0|‘ less you'll rebel at this. And I think I would, too, rol- I've gone from 0"“ extreme to the other too. l tried Ior you-r sake to live the excited life you wanted, and could-irt and I came hers and settled for a sum- mer with nothing more inlerestlnll than Ella. for tea and sewing. “m1 I couldn't do that. _ "You wanted ms to live your sort oilife and _I wan-tediyou to live mine. And neither of ll! 00"“ d° it. Yet both of us were In NW9 But it takes more than love to make it harm’ mwrrlsxe " "That asked. '_ “Compromise. Ill"!- 'I‘o be Continued t Il t , l n uocess a Y 0 optitiuilletxllmrgfli this imltrr- W118" me mikes were, the small boy turn- ed to his brother Hid “W” “W, n0 use. Tommy. Not one of ' ill fit." , mfiillkgligslil? than," asld ‘Tommy. i-saignedly, “we'll wait till mother comely heirs and ask for something . ' d boys." . ioi-rbaiiiizcsi-iglnly w" l "P? 1"" sermon." sold an enthusiastic, we m; were mvflwgmoonught, on coming oi William the Conqueror. EllPllll YEllll BY SIR JOHN FOSTER FRASER There are dates which stand out bodly Inl the story of our race. the Magus Charts, the birth of Shakespeare, the death of Nelson. Waterloo. the outbreak of the Great War. Next year, 1924, will go down through history ssEmpire Year. v A strange, unparalleled thing is our Empire which came into exist- ence almoiit as an accident, which Is held together by no written code. but by the silken thread of loyalty to the Crown and the affection oi brothers scattered throughollt the world. lam old enough to remem- ber when home-staying Britons re- garded whnt were called the Colonies as something of a nuisance and with no regret at the prospect of the time .when they would break away from the old house and fend for themselves; but I am proud to havelivad t0. see them advance from being the child ren of Britain to lusty adventur- ous, progressive growii-up HOIIS. ln-. dependent Coninlou-wenlths, Dunl- lnlous. Union, eo-lequal wltlrour- sclves ln the Empire. Ronic. with all its polilp had not a tithe to show compared with thn wonders of the British Empire. , Next yeur we will celebrate the unity, the solidarity oi the Empire. Staid, slow-moving, but shrewd John Bull is prepnrlngdo give greeting to the stronglimbed men oi Canada, the sturdy suuburnt happy Australians. the sliln. energetic and experimental New Zealanders, the men who are iuuk- ing South Africa prosperous, the illell of the (frown (lolonles and the innumerable possessions scutt- sred throughout the seven Beale. the sons of georgcoils India, lllen of lnany races and religions. but. living in freedom under the Ulilnu Jack. At Wembley, within the, grout heart-throb of our race culled London. thousands oi men are‘ toiling day and night erecting u bilge cnravanserle where not oillyl will he exhibited the best _ the Empire has to show, but where nlll the Britons, far-separated, mukinul new lands fruitful. will iuyrwl many of them for the‘ first llllllHi and look into each others ‘cyan-l and know that however distant they may live from each other, they are brothers. We wuut to see these men nlld| women of our own blood whether} they collie from the greaixfltlzas, ‘Ike Montreal and Sydney. from the prairies or the buck-blocks“ from our dependencies _iil' the, and we want them to see us. If there be u lingering. neut amongst our brethren, as I sometimes believe there la that there is any super- cilioui-luess on the part. of the Englishman to those who live ill Canada, Australia or elsewhere, we are going to show them how wrong they are. We have the reputation of being generous .- in hospitality lo the stranger with- ollt ollr gates. How‘then shall we treat our own brothers? There is plenty of evidence that next year London will surpass itself in the exuberance oi its hospitality. “How little they know of Plug- land who only England know" is a line that will be quoted at. illully n banquet. It is true. But there is a gathering wave of patriotism and an eagerness to better understand what the Dominlous signify in the Empire. We will joyously extend out‘ knowledge. Visitors will get acquainted with each other. We will visit the great halls at Weill- bley which will present a panor- ama, n pageant Indeed of pru- ductlvlty. And all of us will fer-l 1 thrnb of pride ln tho achieve merits of each other. Thrrefori- 1924 will be remembercrl an the: great your. when, in Iinndon. most that tho Empire stands for was revealed, and ull parts will be drawn together in heartfelt appreciation. Whilst each of the countries will arrange its nwn affairs there will evolve a higher rnillsatlon of the intnrrlsts we have ln common and the llllvftlv- pendeuce we have with vault other. ‘ In these practical days liif‘l‘f‘ in no magician'a carpet on which l0 wult people from the other Plllt‘ of the Atlantic or the antipoden In England. But nil shipping compan- lesles are milking special arrange- ments to curry hundreds of thousands of pilgrims to England. In the far north-west of Canada ‘tllfl beneath the hut sun oi‘ Queensland, I feel there are man. yes and women too, who have never seen England and yet 'ove to call it “home" who are beginning to have the great (Iesire ‘.0 visit the homeland, to see what Ehslr own part of the Empire hns toshow the other parts and with t conscious ess they will be amaz- ul at the assembled wonders‘ of the King's Dominlrins. . For Ions we have celebrated Empire Day. Now we are getting ready to celebrate Empire Year. Wembley will not be an exhibition of the triumph of war. It will be OVEFSBH "What d0 Y0" WM“- '-° do?" win- Lne most wonderful exhibition the world has ever seen of nature's bountifulnsss, of enterp Isa, ol‘ all that has been accomplished by men of sterling British grit. --_-<$‘§__._. John Bull: "Rlghto, Fat-her, w s shall not disappoint you when the bell ring." rim new wifnnoii nnsinnv THERAPION THE’ ~ a . in East or the islands of the ‘Pacific: I ' slim-en member who w» 591"!" , THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN l». In llama all over the world the good work o! tlis Royal nukes women "bubbfs over" with enthusiasm. and Ioyally pticlaim its service to them. "Iiloyial to the Royal” .A remarkable fondness thousands of i women showifowards l this famous Electric Cleaner . HERE'S something about the . possession of a Royal Elec- tric Cleaner that enables a housewife to enthuse over it out- side of her own immediate house- hold. Pride in the ownership of such a useful, handsome piece of household equipment is combined with grateful satisfaction for the welcome change in her daily ex- perience of household tasks. We know one wife, who, with her husband,.on the evening their “Royal” was delivered, actually stayed up till the small hours of the morning gleefully testing its work, trying the various attach- WOULDYOULIKETO SEETIIEROYALAB TO HAVE A FR DEMONSTRATION YOUR OWN HOM Ifyou wiil‘phone or write us. we will be leased to arrange with t e nearest local Royal denier to have a rug eaned in your horne-noobligationazall. We would alsoliketoseud you Free Booklets giving complete information about the Royal. l-Jzlralo merits, running it here and there over her house, enjoying a “Royal” performance. Next day the-wife could not restrain her enthusiasm -—telling and showing her friends and neighbors. Here is the Royal-many, many pounds lighter-—easier to operate —more efficient-gets more dirt— more sanitary-not so well known perhaps as other machines, but rapidly becoming so, through its own sheer merits and the loyal, personal recommendations of many enthusiastic women. If you are not the owner of a Roya1—-you naturally want the Sold by Beer & Weeks Charlottetown, P. E. l. best when you buy and so you should investigate this supreme machine. You do not need to be led away by our enthusiasm-you can see. judge, prove for yourself at a prac- tical demonstration why the Royal is the best Electric Cleaner for you to buy. OMPARE THESE “ROYAL" ADVANTAGES ' Cleans b! air alone. Its powerful, unifonn suction.‘ Gets all the dirt Without revolving brushes that wear out your carpets. Its light W8llhL-—0Ill] ll. pounds. Its "u: wide nozzle. —H inches. Slips into corners and under furniture most easily. Adiusts to an‘ surface. rnln this c enille H!!! ~ to bare hardwood, or even concrete. Pnwerlul suction attachments. Clean upholstered furniture. drapes, mattresses, pillows. registers. automo- bile upholstery. Convenient trigger switei. on the handle. Slaves ntuopln! tn turn current on or off. Dictionary Day Take fine Home Tonight A Complete Education Placed ‘Within Your (irusp by the Charlottetown Guardian At the Mere Cost of Handlin 3 Coupons and 98c First chlance today. (lotipon else- clip it with- - out delay. This book is 22 Diction- aries in 0uc~—s0mething for YOU 0n every page. Not only lists ALL English words used today, teaches HOW to use them. YOU MUST KNOW wonns TODAY your chance beflllls l° ma“ up f" m5‘ '4' All words in general and PTO?" use today listed and refined for W" l" a mm‘ put; and thorough INVENTORY of the Enshsh where in this paper portunitics. languid“- THIS paper new LEARN thoroughly two new words a us)! "d "W3" refinement In 899"" ""4 Wfllmll- with a copy 0f ll“ New Universities Dictionary Partial List of Cmlilllbllmrs: iA. M., Ph. D. Harvard Unlversit)’ Ph. D., Cornell UnIversItY iverslty of Pennsylvam“ A_ M" Qolumbl] University D., Princeton University PERCY w. LONG. cuuax s. NORTHUP. JOHN c. RoLr-‘E. Pn. 0.. U" EonnEsT s. LUNT. MORRIS w. cnoLL. Ph- GEORGE J. HAGAR, Edltor-In-Chlei. Mall Order coueon DAILY on PAGE ,5 GREATLY REDUCED slzE 'Don’t Delay A “ \ q ' . lil makes its readers the most aturlfmd- ous educational offer ever 0W9" m u“ 9mm“- All useful information in the world ovndenwi |n o"; “gable, handsome, luxurious volume. s Flllsd on Terms Exrlllflfli l" c°“p°" Yours for Only 3_ mi...- but Sta rt today I‘ n _.- . w. I. . f’! I Printed from all NEW typs. large and cisar. Paper of a weight and whltsaasa to make the book most DUR- _ ABE; and yet comfortable In new-EASY on tltd EYEQ.‘ ' ‘ l. ,-. "lfi~\,‘\yv_t,v'v£_- l2 ‘x i7. ~t I \ Made I‘ ‘i Esnada ___. its '.