F mPl@A.PI|IIII,SfllBu|-n, y “NNOTITUTI IIITING _ ; ‘ The "Killer meeting of the George -. v ' I town Wloinesfl institute wns held _, , in the Town Hail Thursday, Jun. ' . _ r 111th, with an attendance of fit. ~teen members. A delicious lunch was served‘ by Mrs. Donovan, Mrs, l- ‘ A. J. McDonald and Mrs. James , V Hessian. The meeting closed with ithe National Anthem. . , “'1'!!! NHIQT PARTY which . lwas held in the town Hall. George . lewd. on Thursday. January tsih. " Kellen luv by the oirls Hockey Club was a decided success. will?! W8! Dllyed from eight un- til eleven. the ladies prise was “'00 by ‘Mrs. Fairehlid. and the Beatlemania prise was won by C. l-f. Ttlppel‘ fMorrissey. .A dent», ous lunch was served. an hour's dance was enjoyed by all ms dances consisted of Lancers Waltzes one steps. ‘Fox trots, ca. vvi-ics and Moonlight Waitzs. Ex- cellent music was furnished by Mrs Fairchlld Miss hose Falreiiilii and Miss lTithleen Falrclild. viol- in selections by James Condon. and Mandolin selections by Bruce Yeo quite a sum of money was rcallzetl-A. x BHtnflal-il thsbest results are to be obtained from your bskinlr-I .."Miss Agnes Mehar, Souris. is visiting (leorgetowii.—-. l‘!!! CHARLOTTETOWN 3.1453914!‘ . "‘ Eastern Guardianlf“ ‘ iilliii (Copyright: lull illlii l 0...... r. o. solidi o. M. o, 1), s, n all rights reserved) 7‘ ugh-yam ‘(continuum , l Of course, ~l had to pay l Vi!" to my old billet in \St. Jane Cally“- in its direction. Currie had had his headquarters- We were glad to not been destroyed, but if hunted in vain for the rosemary hush in t-hB garden of my old billet. ‘My 15nd‘ lady had died last. year. The beauty of the eount-ry has been marred by the destruction of trees. and it was hard to realize the peaceful scen- ery which used to soothe our eye! in 191:6. We had, determined to make the most o! our day and to have dinner at Armentiers, so we returned through Baiiieul and made our Way ter so many memories. . . . . straight road passes ihrougii‘ Nlefillfl but of this old home of ours noth- BEAVER FLOUR 1 Beaver Flour ivee to bread a distinctive, delicious, nutli e flavor; and makes pies, cakes sad psstry of light, even texture. The only reason why can) Canadian house- wile is not 08ml Beaver Flour ls—sil have not yet tried if Use Beaver Flour and note the difference in your bnkings. 8old by your grocer. Q d! STOOK QUOTATIONS KAIMPAX. N. s, mi 23—(Qti.ta.- Ward members oi‘ Stock lencbange.) Dell Telephone Ahitihi Shawinigan Lauientide Pulp Canadian General Electric Canadian Steamship Com. Canadian Steamship Pfd . Asbestos Com. Dominion Bridge . Montreal Power Winnipeg Electric National Breweries Y Atlantic Sugar . - Atcliison 100% American Car and Foundry 179% Aim. Locomotive ......... ..-. ...... .. 122 American Smeiting and Re- ining .. Anaconda Copper . Canadian Pacific Ra New York Central . Cuba lC-ane Sugar ,. Crucible Steel International Paper .... Kelly Springfield - Mex. Petroleum the Montreal . 116 69 115% 93% THE r. H. ravLon co. LIMITED CHATHAM, ONT. HAVE AND To 1101.1)" HAS ACTION, LOVE, THRILL 47% Y COMP-SON AND BERT LVTELL FEATURED IN NEW GEORGE FITZMAURICE PRODUClION ttlon. Love. suspense. flgbts, There's not a bowing puppet in lthe __ up a ship, a count orgy. aplcture. it's the rapid-fire drama gtemastrnflcyer‘ ‘Mar “e ___ smarket. beauty. bloodshed, told swiftly against a background w“ 8° T 77 edy, marvelous sets, a battle be-‘as colorful as a show at the New n u iilun-o‘ war-and u piriuteiYork Hippodrome. , great swoivlsmanahlp. gowns "To Have and To lleld" was the it took sixty dressmakers EJXIOS-l. expensive picture ever made lh to prepare startling photo- in the Leaky Studio sit Hollywood. Southern Pacific Studebaker Union Pacific Utah Copper liy more romance, miore sus-‘S-hlps were bought and re-built and U- s- Sim‘ ' ' . ~ ' . . MONTREAL EXCHANGE e, more action. lbiiown up. while hundreds of plr m“ ‘Maury ‘ 102. id there you have George Fitz-ates and fndlans ‘took part in the rlce‘s Paramount production of mass fighting. A whole shipload of. llttve and 'l‘n l-lolli." featuring beautiful girls were landed in the y Compsori and Bert Lytell. wile market scenes. 1n a massive collltts in tilt: l riliut! Edward set is shown a colorful orgy at the ire Wednesday and Thursday. count of King James l of England. Conlpsoil- never loveiler, ini Every scene in the picture is a l and bromides one moment. in Fltzemaurice triumph. Famous for silly improvised bathing dress the beauty of his productions, he 7 ncxlt. in gowns low cut and gor- has ‘here a. type of story made to, s and in gowns more modesUorrler for lavish settings-nod beau" dainty, has the best role other tiiul composition. The cast is lire-i on earlier. ifll6illi0llH._BBi.l.y COIILDSOI] and Bert. o is the girl who. rltther than Lytell are wonderful in this rom- ry Lord Carnal escapes to Vir-‘ance of romances. Theodore Kos- 1 ' I a to well lilo first mnn who askslloff, who is seen as the venomoust 38h” '21“? 27' ma: is‘ "magi o! lit-r llnnd. Bert Lyteli. rolnsntticiKinlys favorite, ilas tho finest part‘? 1”“ in“? :9‘ "d5" “l? °i , swordsman iillcxlzeiled, bruveof his colorful career. i f“; s: w" “ It!“ mm 5 w m‘ 9' (luring, is tho man who asks When you see Belly Compson “Q y prosper y‘ ultimately wins her love. you won't wonder that Bert liytrli. ' lways there l5 something doing seen as the hero. fought all over this story. The tiharactens are Virginia, Flnvhnri mil illc Atlantic l human beings. loyllll; and Ocoan to keep Lord Carilal (Theo? ting and loving some more. dore Kosloff) ireim getting her. | COCOANUT o“ Fm; lrv‘s".ive"sn‘lcw‘iv‘rls<s ' F” “'““""° W“ CHANGED coLoum ll an age of rapid changes even luiiiway tie has become differ- .Wlly are tho tics, piled beside truck ready llor instalbition in rualdlred, lillrck instead o! the lomliry natural colour of the 1933 Victory BANKS Bank Royal Bank Montreal .. Whoa-ii May 1 Sept 108%. ' Cora May 72% July 72% 2. Outs May 44% Sept 40%. , ___--¢0Q----— When a man has not a good reas- on for doing a thing, he has one good reason for letting it alone. Sept A good recompense comes from hard toll, but not from its abuse. ~——-—-_-o>i-- properly creosoted ties in a well- 'made track will last twice as long _ as untreated ones, it is certain _ that they will soon be in general gogdyocgngfiiigéfo fiepciggfuilaghz? use on mil Canadian Railways. you wash n wmL ' ‘ _'_ 1J0 not use prepared shampoos or anything else that contains too One of the most interesting 0131f? iliifslkiiii; haiiifliiriiliigs ti“: Oil? M. [R's is Mr. George Edwards, who-is vmly hamlm] “Named cog’ n“, he black ayilelllllllve results has been telling this story of his o“ sham o0 (“lmph l m’ u ill treatment with creosote oll. lite to his constituents in South entire] prewelesa’) ‘ s "gm and ‘i Rllbiect of Whit!" l! W breve"! Norfolk in a lecture called “From ma“ 3min", a“; 831m better ‘d!’ and thus 1908""!!! 1h" Crow<Searltng to Westminster." for shampwlgng as f)“: a: :73 rvlce life of the ties. Just why or no lygggn to 9am wags; when he possibly mmre the hair‘ ll U16 oneself! trefltmollt 0088 was four and a half years old, re- Sim. l. u‘ two m. "we t l8 l8. hOWBVBI‘. not Bonflrfllly calving a shilling s. week for scar- m“ grifiulslflad m a e eaapiimlk derstood. l1, is explained by the ing crows. At seven he was‘ a Wm, a “we warm u: or 8mm" rest. Products Laboratories oi‘ horse-boy at ono-and-sixaweck. andmoyMen m“. M“. w": u,’ e“ undo, Forestry Branch, Depart st ten a plough-boy at two shillings rub the Qulslfled m n mlerlnaad lit of the interior, where exten- a. week. an abundance 0f ‘Heb i‘ e o research on the preservative He gave up drinking and smok- 38mm. and 0155mm thejfirenmy ailment of timber has been ing in order to buy a few hooks to m“, ‘thoroughw TM “m, r and nducted, that the decay of wood educate himself. Among other e3 out gully sud removes" m“ due entirely to the action of low things he has been a Methodist Mme“, of dust m" daudrugm" rms of plant life known as wootl- preacher. As he was unable to excess on The. hair, dries uliirli: stroying fungi. iThese fling] read. he had to learn the lessons “m; 6...... and it leaves it fixn c " lllze the wood substance as food. and hymns by hearL- silky bflsf“ “m, and M: slroying it in the process. The -—-'-<_-¢@ manéga ' y esote oil. which is forced-deep y m, can a Mu s o the wood by powerful pumps. ollyslihlllpfl: at all] dflrfii sigigfn-ii lions the food supply of the fun- h, W". cheap’ and g yew Dunk”! ‘Plfllll- mill"! 11 imlwulbie 1°‘ _‘"_ will last everyone in the family Began as s "Scarecrow" / =How many people live on the re- putation of the reputation they mitgllt have made? “I building on ‘the site of ing has been left except the ruined ,chateau where General Will! 0f ‘the 12th Division had made hi! headquarters. l could find no trace whatever of the little house where tioiis iiirnished by Johnson andonce l lived, round the window ol- ‘which clustered the grape-vine and ilts rich bunches of fruit. The mayor ‘whom l visited in a shabby ‘Nissan ,liut, could. give me no information as tothe whereabouts oi the kind old lady who had been my hostess. The church has gone, and the square where General Aiderson’s |house bad stood was only marked [by ruins. Nothing remained of the building used as thedlanadlan head- quarters on the road to Armentiers though rows of damaged houses were still standing. They looked {dirty and the brick was a dingy red. ‘When we came to the bridge crossing the river -Lys, we found that a narrow wooden structure had taken the place of the one that had been destroyed in the last year of the war. Armentlers was really quite impressive, although large parts of the town were mark- ed with ruined houses, for exten- sive ‘building operations were going 01:. ‘Some huge factories had been completely rebuilt in brick decor- ated with colored tiles and bid fair soon to be in lull operation. . . . . The church was absolutely ruined and shells had made havoc of the Grands Place. We made our way over to~ the hotel by the station. »It is a new the one which we had known in the war. After a good deal of trouble we managed to flndtlie lady who was in charge of the kitchen and got her to provide us with a substan- i ' tlai meal of eggs, hem and cheese. and cups of strong coffee. iln an outer room l met a young English- mlm who was marking a walking tour through the battlefields with his father. He was asking the way to llouplines. The name caught my attention, and l asked him if he had ever been in the lines there. He told me he was there in Febru- ary. 1915. ll asked him if he re memlbered the 15th Canadian lBat- talion going into those trenches for instructional purposes. Ho said ha did perfectly, and asked about some of the officers. ll told him that lhad gone in with the 15th Battalion that night. lt seemed strange that after seven years he alld l should have met together st Armentiers. ‘Our meal took some away lrritil about 5 p.m.. but as we were still fresh we determined lc pursue our explorations. Before we started. we watched several trains arrive at. Armentiers- and a military band gathered a great crowd around the station. The streets were full of people, so the scene was an animated one. back- ed by new buildings in course of construction. l wanted to follow the course we took when in 1915 we left Armentiers to go up tothe lines. ‘We soon found the direc- tion of illac-ist. Maur and madeour way thither past the ruined Luna- tic Asylum, where the 14th Baital; ion had ‘been quartered. The ruinsi of the old factory. however, were still standing. We sped 0n witli- out stopping t.ill we came to our old vii-Inge home Salllly-sur-Lys. llere we had to stop and visit the little cemetery where many of our Ianadlan cornradm were laid to est in the early days of our wsr utparieiice. Two young men; lritish ex-eoldleie, were hard at| vork planting flowers in firont of he rows of crosses making the place look neat and pretty. They have a lonely life, for they miss the companionship of did days. but they take a deep interest in their work and it was easy to see that em to destroy the timiber. As Tile? "m! make Rood useqltheir f n, , B u _ v ,tlms has none to snare. _ afiegioga£areeoi mlpaizlllogifimw‘ . i'or the name Watkins on the pack. BEG. their hearts were in it. Although we lied a long way to return Poperinghe. we felt that the clear light of the summer ev We turned down the hill and Illfidilmq“ m" “ills cottage which I used Here we found tb¢i'ssmvi»"°“"“““"@rs in March 1915. Nuns’ school-house where General‘ "B now in the real country.‘ find the place hmdiulfi rich fields showed no grace n; to the old town round which clus~|b The time to prepare, so we did not getuamy 0m a path which to‘ flisnnpeared and m vvGQ-‘l enable us to do lltti . w» li."i‘l.ii'.‘li‘i= ed w m” M“ 11° B018. Where had‘ ll 9 all‘ was fresh and sweet, and iWBP eave that here and there , _ a new farm house was flanked by ""115 511d broken sheds On the corner ‘or i g l one of ti; iroads, was still siandm. 1h .. 9 lshfllm why i. e .lttie l -1‘ 1 had had a com. mum" Hell/ice oiie inornln f Zsomo men or m. g or ‘who knell. l. 14th. Blittlihun it. We iul m m“ mud In "m" o’ ntd down the Rue du time and ‘there 1 found that ‘ all the {aims had been rebuilt and no I "c8 ‘unaided of the little cot. l-tsge that had once been my ‘poms “t "left! was the well-known ahr-"Q i" which a new crucifix re- placed the white one which I re- fiienibflc-‘d- W“ turned to the inghft “m1 “'9!!! vn~io the Rue do Petillion. it was in this‘ road ma‘ ‘aheere ‘ houses stood which y used _as Battalion Head- quarters “M9 Our men were ill he slant-lies a few hundred yards ‘ma’; lace‘ We could not find the to d Aaiiuu cemeteries but we i “n a “e11 11am one on a piece £13k around’ surrounded by s must. b_ e” er-dently the dead liad wlifillh gutileied, and the place, w e was entered by a bflqga‘ l as ‘Yell-bent and quite unique in . ts IJNTFJlIKQIIlEIII. A very old fig"??- Mcupled a small house by t B side of the road. and the man told iiie that. 1n some fields a qusr. it" "I a ""19 “Wily we could still ' lllfl Geriilin trenches. We pushed on iii the direction ind» ‘catell and o'er... as h" up we mum dy road as we thoulht it was safe i‘? 30' “M "i111. Electing out of tile “Old friends are besW-RED ROSE TEA has n multitude of tliem——often three generations in one family. forty-five kllc-lnetres an hour, we obtained a line view of the level country to the northwest. Sudden- ly a turn Ln the wuy showed iii the distance n long line of elec- tric ligiits, l asked Mutirice what they were, and le said those were the lights of Ypres. 1t aluiost gave me a shock lo think of Ypres lit by electric lights. No place in the world in our minds was so absolutely associated with the thought of complete darkness as the town of Ypres. Mastery. dark- ness. ileath and destruction. were th- thing which Ypres stood for in the past. Here were twinkling lights like a starrvlerown far off‘ on the horizon and that was Yllres ——-—-Tllo real sir-ts twlnkilntl‘ merriiv above seemed to be the only things that could understand our minds. When w~ drew up at our homo in Popermrllle it was al- most midnight. (To be Continued.) ----<o->-——-- MARY IN HISTORY. Mary is a ntilreflwliinll h-Cls been lorry. the Captain and 1 hurried flu-ouch the lung lllflss to try and‘ llilnd the trenches. it was delightful to {eel that, “marking siili remained of the Old WHY-and. when a last we saw] before us some twisted wire and] the remains of pill boxes. wet knew illfli. oui' quest was not in Jflill- A few minutes alter we ‘lumped down into the shallow trenches and felt u-s if we had t il-‘Blflllriil lite German lines. liens‘ lin the old days the Germans heltli ilhfili‘ ground and turned their, fire upon the (fanadlans. Some of the illlsolits were quite deep. and}, ti-a the wooden supports lookedl ‘rather rotten and insecure. we didl ‘not venture to explore beneath] the ground. There was plenty of old wai material in the shape of ‘cartridges. shell cases. mess tins, and ilb“lil€l‘ straps scattered about; besides odds and ends of bairbed wire and broken rifles. ground hero had not been cleared ‘and among the long rank weeds. inn doubt many curious things, possibly human remains, were illdden away. ft was our first sight of the actual battle llnc. and lii the evening light we felt the stirring thrill of imagination as |\\'u lived again the old life of our early war days. ln ou-r e-agerlless ‘to ‘roach the trenches. we had not noticed how fur we had gone from the place whore we left tile lorry. New. as we started to re- turn. thorn was not the slightest sign of it to he seen and if l had Ibcon left to myself l should eer- have been wandering among H1055 lonely fields all night. The Captain. however. lied a hrttvr sense of locality. and aft- or some rletollrs. he made ills way look us to the muddy road where we found our old frtend and ilio driver, who was beginning to get anxious lest we should lie unable to grit to Popcrlnlhe before it was comllilli‘ nlv rl"r‘r. as lie had no lights on the lorry. r Our business now was to return with as little delay as possible. w» ‘vi/i snout thirty miles to Bo and had to go through Armentiers before we were held lip 10f illlv‘ in: without lights. »We rattled down the rnlid past Flenrbalx and on tllrouwh Armentlers. The lights were shining in the town. so we chose the back streets. and finally emerged from the place without being arrested and then titrnedup into the country in the ilirectlon of Nouve Erzilse. The vil- lage is being rebuilt and the church is now restored and re- roofed On the other side of tile hill. we went down the well- known road towards ‘Mount Kem- nit-i. The evening air was cool and fresh and the stars we're hetllin- inc: :0 appear. The chateau at Flornmel which once lhnd been such a pleasant home. had completely only the moat iifllll off its site dlstlnclly- The ening would road trad good itolRenrrlnglielst and The _ given to no fewer than seventeen daughters among iwrdvo monarchs -of Enghnrl. The-fret nfno. sap-named ‘were ‘flliliillld r-fse flmrge ill. rigid Queen Victoria has ouch tilree dtrvzllinrs upon whom the nfimn was bestowed. while two of Fidwartl Vilfs three daughters were l’kew’so Mary. King -George‘a only daughter is the only Mary and BIGA l/as I‘ a other and‘ Her Baby A THOR- BRiNGTNG UP F‘ Are Relieved of Eczema ' 1 writes: _ _"Dr. Chase's Ointment has completely i, relieved me of eczema and piles, l ‘he ‘ used this Ointment for my bnhy, who lmh out in eczema. A few applications were all that was necesss y in her one. Dr. Chase's Ointment has been worth s hundred dollars to isle-before using it l had spent s grsst deal more than that in unsuccessful trest- ‘ meat from doctors. We have sire used Dr. Chase's other medicines. the Nerve Food i‘ having restored my health sitar suffering from severe nerve trouble when s girl." I R. CHASES OINTMENT ‘abonnllrlesloss, orldsssnmon. ItoteslOo-Jatflnihlonlo __ ‘°'-- “i445! to ‘bENDtNQ A GUIDE cvgn ‘TO ‘TAKE wlou 6N l A TRIR TO 15-0: uuuquzb or mom- rr WILL. u: A antim- FD“ j ' Eli PERlEN(E KJETpEFJRJSFFAUliQ'5i8"clTYle"€i’ llifise who. name in suppemeniary order, has llltiaen to g.ve RED ROSE COFFEE is always packed fresh in doublytscaled cans. H '*““*l'1>“il'lfléd‘ island” . Overturned Engine It ‘iirecctieilce. over the ntllers. ln this way silo has inllliwed her royal iii .tllel', littll. ______ being rrunotl “Victoria first and KENTWLI ‘a N_ S“ Jam zLwA Mar-Y “s a mm“ “Y Q““¢n workman. John Landry, was badly Victoria u i-lil. it lurk a long time‘ burmd an,‘ Buflprud 0mm. min", to establish the nalne in the ruyafl. imuflrs WM," a 5H,)“, "m" “g "am lilo of they couiitiy, fill’ between h,“ me track on [he Norm me m“ pr"“""'s5 Mary _ “m1 Mountain branch of ‘the Domhlon second there is a gap ill lull .i(i0 Auannc nay-walk The runoff wok yl-zirsl. and on‘): tifglit t mes does lluflace a, yum-U Road, new. Se,“ _ - y lie was taken to lioilptnl at Berick Seeing Strange . . drifts occur in twice 300 y0HTSr-—~LDIHiOllierflEt one of m‘, eng n“ “V6,, 7W3 (L; till-nod, pinning Landry underiu-ath. and ‘s expected to recover. The '\'ortll ‘Elfolilltaiil brunch is still tied ' Iupw th snow. some of the bong iilil‘l_l',l,0 forty feet deep. ~——---<0>-——-— NEW l‘()lll(. Jan. 2i.~-~(ilp‘-.ilili Funnier (suddenly ii-ppenring): \ Jclin Roi ertsl brought the liner“‘ls Lilli’. you. Jock? What are you Brfltic ‘n llfifiiiy wllth the story of ziélltiizig with that lantern at this nfew dun sell 1lililnfl_ whose like no. time oi’ night?" inzirfnev has ever reported before‘. Jock: “You know that l sin eourt- . The "lzeisfi-f‘ Captain Roberts iflil your dflllglllrr. tanner!" averred, has ears and n-rse like a‘. Fflllllel‘! "Bull 01411‘! have fl ill" pig; was fully 9 feet lullg llilfilllfltP-Tn when 1 courted her mother." tile wstsi-trnc- -W1.ll itu lnesllmabls‘ Jockr "l guessed that by the ilunlber of it‘ ' submerged. "WK 0i ilvli" Tilrer: of H. "Hill's officers also, ’ “hf” “'.' saw the mun. Cap-tuiii Ruilerisl _D'5m‘° 9W5 i (‘rtged IlOIi-S and tigers. llllmllrl_ sad. ialld jatiullilrs-l take no uuilee of the ifliifh anti lvnnleli passing in front '01‘ tliom; but if ii dog he brought anywhere near the cage. they show .tlicir snvnge nature at once. and Liilfl)’ spring lip, glaring savagely. --—-oo>-———~ Tile iiilDlllli -.-.= of life consists. like the (lav, m." in single ‘lashes (of light) but l" one continuous; mild serenity. ' .__.__. ‘H VY CU? ETTE \\\\\\\\\ 711s)‘ (an? beat‘ " Package o/‘IO Handm- or 50.- “f. ——BY GEORGE MOMANUS ._ _ __._.___.______ ._... _._ - ._.__. IT WILL. OEA GREAT ARE ‘ fgq|gq|< 11¢ 1321i? i P" (‘Luigi l-aéostlmix oven - Na 209 35¢ 904 v s I I00 41.75 o» r~l"r-a.' .-... "fort-aka ~ - 'v—-_--;~.- .