t ‘Corner of the Earth is charming in a thousand ways, but it has tho dsmpest winters of all Canada and tho winds are cold snd "raw". Coughs and colds are prevalent. Huwtuapias row cttnutv snsm will protect you and your family from coughs and colds. Keep a bottle always in the house. Colds demon ' prompt treatment. Read what Thos. McAvity, of St. John, N. 13., has to say about Hawkers Tolu and Cherry Balsam: “I takc great pleasure in stating that I have used Ilawltefa Tolu end Wild Cherry Balsam in my family for years and find it an excellent remedy for coughs nnd colds." I Sold 5y all Jmggirl: and general 1mm. The mmzprizz evcrywbrrrjzja0yoc. None genuine vii/mu! Company’: name. ' mutt/tons ottuc co., u-u 8T. Milli. N. l. ___—~—__—_.— PROFESSIONAL CARDS S. S. HESSIAN Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Pubue, C. MONEY TO LOAN. Montague - - Barristers, Attorneys-at-Law Office, Royal Bank Building. Charlottetown - - P. E. island it‘. S. Blanchard B. Arch. ARCHITECT BANK or NOVA Snort/t CHAMBERS 7265-2-26MEtf MARK R. McGUlGAN, B.A. Barrister, Solicitor, Notary Public. Money to Loan Charlottetown, P. E. l. Cameron Block, '>"** ' >»»+ooo+o» Morson & Duify Barristers and Attorneys Iollcltore for Royal Bank of Canada MONEY TO LOAN McLeod & Bentley W. E. Bentley, K.C. Barrister and Attorney-at-Law MONEY TO LOAN Dflioe . Bank of N. 8. Chambers *:; w+oo0 1mm"l'ln-""“lnlp""lgfl l" ‘he "lime-its of the ii fcmplete Optical E Service Our t-xpcrt system of eye- cxtimlnatlun, coupled with t ' our LENS GRINDING SERVICE it tiffcrs n complete service, eq- ual tn thc bcst procurable. That. this service is apprec- latcd is evidenced by our constantly increasing volume of business. We sincerely thank our pat- rons. and will continue to strive to mcrit their confid- once, G. F. iiutcheson Optometrist and Optlcisti P.- E. island McLean & McKinnon, , lr-ttgtlt nf ‘llillli’? at his . | properly or not 4 “i I How's Your lngersoll? (By Jerome Lachenbuch) The next time you ~ impatiently pull out your Yankee or Eclipse and scrowl and swear (if that is what you tdo when you have been awaiting three minutes for the most adorable gttrl in the world to put that stray hair in place) and then - test every piece of furniture in the parlor to kill time and hide your restlessness, give yourself a little philosophic lecture on the value o keeping cool and thank your stars that you were not born n Kolorian Juang of Bengal. a tSantal or a Babylonion. Then, if you can in» duce a state of peace and patience. examine little ftir. Nickleplated and listen to the rhythmic ticking: of his blessed heart and say a pruyer c-f thanks that he never misses a beat. For, in the heat of your anxiety, you may have forgot that she will be ready at lettst with- in a few tninutes after your arrival. Even your proniplnesn-ltow well tinted! And all because a dial, divided into sixty equat parts‘, tells I the tale of the wheeling of the stars in their orbits and so informs you accurately of the exact ntoment of your precious appointment, You may remember having rent somewhere that clocks, were in vented some time in the thirteenth century; and that the first crude tltuctii-ccz pointed to the passing hours before the scribes of the day wrote A. D. 1000 at thc ltead of tlte love letters they scrzttcltcd 0n parchment for their noble but illiterate customers. But Time, the old dog, Wflg alive long before clocks, before the first lover nrls sod his first appointment; nay, even before that first appointment was made. To be sure, the story of time and tnatfs efforts to keep a tiinry of the surfs daily udvctitures ‘- n, long romance. and somewhat tlitllvult to trace. But the develop- ment of tnoderit cinematography ltas given us a way to show in pictures how time was reckoned, measured and recorded since our anthropoltorpltit- ancestors decided to quit their homes in the tree tops and to seek shelter in the hidden rose bowers of the primeval forests, That is what has been done is one oi’ the recent editions of,n motion picture firm. llert- has bccu shown how primitive peoples mvasureti titue. in many instztttr-cs time nml distztttce are so relutctl that tiistuttrv is ntettsttred by a time device. Even today, ii’ you llfillpett to he lost on n country mud and ask u itativc of the place how fur it is to thc tienre-st station, he‘ will probably answer “ten niinu~ tcs’ walk." But his tcu mitntilos bcztrs no relationship to the tcn illllllllBs of your watch dial. Even in EUFUIYP today they still have queer trays of telling time. ln the tnnttntatlrts of Aioutenegro. distance is oftt-ti mcatsttrtrtl ‘by thc tim-v it takes to sitiolto n cigarette. They are ntodera-te- anti presume that a which burneduniformly. The josa stick is somewhat similar to what good old King Alfred of England is said to have used way back in the oixht- hundreds. He was s great educator, and discovered that tallow candles could be used for dividing the time which he allowed his fighting’ nobles in which to make complaint; against each oth- er. But as a rule prtmitlve peoples measured time by their daily oc- cupations. _Take for instance, the Juangs, a wild Kolarian tribe in- habitlng the hilly tracts oi’ South- western Bengal. Among them the unmarried women are absolutely unclothed, the men wear a strip of plantain bark about‘ their middle, while the marnied women wear bunches of sal leaves suspended front a. girdle. These leaves are changed in the morning and at mid- day, for the sun's rays dry them up and they grow crisp and fall off. (Yonsequentiy, they measure dim lance and time by the withering of the sol leaf. if you ask a Juang how far to a certain place. he may reply, “As far as two sal leaves take to wither.” As they die in about six hours, iris answer could oe translated as a twelve-hour Journey, or roughly ythiny-sls miles. Some of the Mohammenan tribes of India and of the Indo-Malayati peninsula, who are addicted to chewing the betel leaf, use that as an indication of the passing of time. The leaf. usrepured with s. dub of lime antler sprinkling of spices, takes about twenty minutes to chew to a pulp. Anti llllg is taken as a standard of the time by them. . Another tribe of the Indian up- lands, the Santals, tie knots in a string, which they open as the days pass. When they wish to invite guests for an auspicious ceremony they senti out several knotted strings to the invited guests, who know that on the day that the last knot is untied the ceremony will take place. But onc of the strangest methods of telling time is used sometimes by the Malays. who ‘measure time by the drying of the rwet hair on a tnanis head. MANNA OF BIBLE FOUND Belief that it has discovered one of thc constituents of the manna of the Ilibie is agitating the Federal Bureau of Chemistry. Be that as it may, it certainly has found and sectircd several pounds of melezi- toso. a form of sugar extremely valuable in scientific experimenti- tion null hnrtlly more plentiful than ratliunr. The supply never has been suilicictit to come anywhere tiearl ntceting the (lemands of scientists] flu laboratory work. ~ Melezitose is the original honey! dew. it gets its name from the; Fvcttch word ill0l£"Z, which tncnns larch tree, on which it first was found in minute and rnrely with quantities. it seems that hoes llt)l'lllill cigarette smoker lights one every hail‘ hour m- st), (Yonsctrttcnt- l.\'. n t-igurerrcis wulk would ho from one and tt half to two titties- lint if we turn buck about i000 pages of history‘, we iinti 1| stick or ti stone pillar stuck into the ground ‘and thc imtivcs watching the shadow of the sun thrown by the tuarkt-r. This is an old Bttbylonintt invention. in fact. the sun dial, which is also concedctl to have bot-n a llahylotiirtn device, is an ttuprovetuent. on this titethod. ‘Lntcr this ntetltod WilS replaced by the water clock. which was also used by the Greeks and Romans. They hurl a lllltJfil‘ name for it in these IUIYQYYPS. it was Greek-claps)’- dru. The instrument consisted 0i n brass oi bronze bowl of known catpacity, with a. perforated base. lllffillklt which water dripped. Sumctimrs, the bowl “'11s 0i’ earth- enware. with n short neck and gave tuost service in the courts of justice. in thusu rlziys. words" were lust 215 cxpcttsivo as they are now. And us ouch case was given bttt a limited tinte for trial, it was an easy matter for a lawyer to keep on talking nuri so conduct s fili- tit-rant. who “saw him" first. lTltcsn water clocks mvusuretl the disposal. |’i‘ltis tncthtid of time telling WtlS _also ut-"nd in Britain. as “'11s prov- cri by thc iintlitig of a laruss bowl in , Shrnpsliirts, about ten years ago, rustic in very tnuclt thc same titan» nor us thc Babylonian water time jars and bowls. lht- ('tlll‘l05P., honking using water It-lotrks, also inveutetl loss-sticks, “he success pr faiiluredof . e- illlldlrldgyllpOn Whether ‘the bowels functionate You Need and peculiar summer weather (‘entval Pcnttsyvlvatiia recently con- spirml to ltty up n lot of this Silf! churine substance in uttmerotts hives where it - crystsllizcti ttntl dealt dearth and destruction to so many bees when they tried to live on it that special inquests were helti to find out the cause 0f this wholesale tnortallty among the busy workers. it was fouutl to have been too rich for their diges- tion and that they literally starved to (loath. ‘ "This rare sugar," says Dr. E. '1‘. Wherry‘, oi the bureau, “also occurs ‘in a honeyed lncrustation or tnanna on a leguminious tree in Persia and adjoining court-tries. Recently it as been found by the Bureau of (‘hemlstry in a similar product on the Douglas iirin British (loluuihiu. Anti now u has turned up in Pen nsylvtutia, stored away in honey- combs in ordinary hives. As near- ly as we can tell, the origin of this still scarce sugar is due to the at- tacks on the scrub and, more rare- ly, other species of pine by a plant louse and a certain scale insect. in the course of their activities these creatures produce a honey dew which is rich in ntelezitose. "in tlry sumtners after the whitc clover flowers have ceased to yield honey the ltccs turn to ‘this honey dew and collect it, but it crystalliz- Cg as flifil as they store it away. This occurred in 1917 and 1918. in the taviuter following the beekeep- ers sustained considerable loses when their swarm ‘tried to live 0n it. "in 1919 the summer was so moist tha durintg July on tnclezitose was gathered by the bees at all. But it probably will be contfected in thc future whenever the summer is dry Melezittisc will not help out any in the general shortage of sugar, but it is of great scientific value to know that thc honey 0i‘ (lentral Pennsylvania may afford a pertuan- out source of a sugar previously so rare as to be only imperfectly known. It con be distinguished from other sugars by certain pe- cularitics of crystallization observ-l able with the polarizing micros- cope. The Bureau of (‘hemlstry ii ~> TitiLCHARI-OTTETQWN GUARDIAN "m r What zfhe DOClOf’ Twin Bed Y is n0 new thought with you, of course-thc idea of :1 separate bed for each member of thc family. This has been the custom with thousands of families for years-a rap- idly sprcading custom ever since Twin Beds put the separate bed at thc scr- vice of households where space is limited. i i? it’? t: ITis a thing, too, that doctors have i long been urgihg. Not onlyfnr thc _ warding off 0f infections, strclr as coughs, “sore throat” or grippc, but forthe sake 0f sound sleep. The restlessness of one sleeper does not disturb the other. And there isn't any loss of vitality-as there is when childrcn sleep with old people, or invalids with the healthy. But: even in a separate bed you will never sleep soundly unless your bed in- vites perfect relaxation. i There is not a person anywhere but will sleep better for doing away with the creaky wooden bed or loosc- jointed noisy metal‘ bed and getting a Simmons Metal Bed instcad——with Waldorf .1301: Spring, and Simmons Mattress and Pillows. tut ll’ l‘ . m © Simmons Limited, 1920 The Simmons Bcd is noirelexs." It locks firm at the corners. The corner‘ locks are made of pressed stcel~fit truc and snug—n0t a crcak, rattle or feeling of unsteztdiness. It is perfectly rigid -— feels and moves like one solid piece. The Simmons Pressed Steel-Corner Locks are protected by basic patents- rxclusir/e with Sinzmons Limited, not to beduplicatcd or imitated. i ii? i]! ll! HF, lfifllorf Box Spring really (any what you hm": ah-vnys v. 1m‘.- cd a spring to d0. It invites complrte relaxation. It supports the body at case nu fine resilient spring coils—each coil ctmform- ing freely t0 the contours, so that thc i spittc"is perfectly rested, WllCtllCF onc SlCCPS on the back 0r on the sidc. Simmons Waldorf Box Spring is‘ covered with ticking of thc finest grade and great wearing quality, in new and attractive designs. It fits firmly on the bcd-—never sags or humps, never loses its resiliency. ' And Simmons Mattresses and Pillowsarc in every way worthy t0 g5 with Simmons Metal Beds and Waldorf Box Springs. ti!‘ ill lit HOUSANDS who for years have been “light sleepers," relax com- ~ plctcly and sleep all night on a Simmons Metal Bed. ‘ If you’ve been thinking of separate beds, you may be glad to know that Simmons Limited, are specialistsin‘ Twin Bed . You'll find Simmons Metal Beds,‘ v~>.~t.1~;-;* Box Springs, Simmons Mattresses and Pillows at your lead- ing dealers. - Simmons Beds offer you unusual assortments in brass, colored enamel and natural wood cffects—to harmon- ize with the interior decorations of the day. ' And when you are selecting your Simmons Beds with an eye t0 their appearance in the room, you will see that Simmons has for the first time established beautiful and authoritative zltitgit in Metal Beds. If you do not know the Simmons merchants in this section, we shall be glad to send you their names. Sleep‘ i: a big subject.’ [Vrile u: for t/ie brochure, “IV/mt Lending [Medical journal: and Heal/h Magazines Say about Separa/e lied: and Sound Sleep." fir: of Charge. ST. J OH N TORONTO WINNIPEG extrat-tcl from honey in 1917 and 1918, and ls making extensive experiments with There is a large and definite demand for meiezitose for use in al-I scientific laboratories.“ ll. —-—-—-oo>-—-— WHERE DWARFS COME FROM- Dwnrfs are not nearly so unconi- mon as is generally supposed, for considerable qllflllllllefl races of these arc to be found in many quarters of the globe. Titers are the African Akkas, encounter- ed by lSir H. M. Stianley, Although the “Wild Man of Bornedf probab- ly owes his existence to travellers‘ tales. there are numerous dwarf peoples to be found in the East lntlian Archlpelsgosand in india, China, and Japan. South Antericn‘ also furnishes examples, but the order. SIMMONS LIMITiED MONTRE KL EALGARY VANCOUVER S ays about‘ i "Dark (fnntinettlf contuitis the gre-a test number of pigmy races. liar- ntim uml Bailey once (exhibited a Hindu dwttrf known as Khusttttitt. 22 inches in height, T0 years old, stout iu build, 11nd sturdy of frame. lie was a good-looking man. with :1 line open cottntontttice, bright piercing black eyes, and features that imllcttted littelllgcttce of a high iers, SOM t: POPULR SAVINGS ivhen someone pleases you and "He is a tbrick," you may mber that you rtre repent- ruse coined by u Spurttttt proudl-y said 0i his sold- “There ls my wall and every titan is a brick." you say not reme lug a ph king who Tito original sourco of these everyday sayings is an lill0l‘t‘.‘!l.llli{ subject. ‘Shatkespeare, of gives us more of these sayin any other writer, as , that win," “tFrallty, -___-< course, gs than for instant-c, “All ls not gold that glitters." "This is the long and short of it," "Com- pnrisons are odious," “They laugh thy nume is Mlnlrd’! Llnlrnent Cures Colds, Ete BISZINGING UP FATHE YOU'RE Gotrmwo ‘smv fltqHTm rats HOUSE TONt<Hr~ moreover;- HOWELL is comma ~ HERETO 5W4 AND you Mun‘; HEAR‘ HlM' tau-r n- 5A0 tartouau TO [awe To arm \ WIT T f LlbTENflsqk-io L__s_(_\\\\\\h‘ Him . tr t‘VE <0; TA arm l- tN-rra A bung m "qr <onmt LISTEN m ruxr <UY- HERE NOW tr You BEHAVE. y WHAT CAN "YMSMLF " ‘on KEEPING u» ABSUT out: A.M "m: PROFESSOR? A". lg?‘ ‘m’ '-°°$E HE iwo HE'D —--~'—~ HERE AT A careiulselec- l? tion of every line of Jewelry marksl our stock. We will be pleas ed'to have you call. ’ brgsel Sale of Any Medieino is the Wool‘ an - p V/ertlt n Guile! n MI- ‘ ' c-ui. arm-mm t The digestion of food entails the production of poisons that must be eliminated regularly and thoroughly. loll everywhere ll J EWEI ER z llao ev Ivar-t. Invunl flower. mo. v ._ .. ___.__.__._ . .,