strength uvtd ener Ill medicine. N] and t-rsdicutcs tht~_t‘t I III)’ ' t for Two dollars. for catari wilift-t-l I--Il\'\ catunh i- Krill!‘ tlrrh. i... dollar» IIIBABIIII box of hioovit for 'I Ulhtttti rined lnnv (any it mil In‘ tn _ Ian a box. I . If you are a vict tint. ynu gct a box of M sith will ituptovc. III. n is gone. ys’ time thi- tut IL it is IutniIV nove the tutti. tflh filt y tiollars. The above oovit Dmit .».. d arc (iit-ifultlvt Ont: Sold Macs. In Summerside at The old "money as a only to tliv compIt-tt-Lv snyi tnakes m. tnnitics now within l even the sit-m lIit-nmml by mo: OUR P A R PAYMENT lit‘ this llivilltlli 1- uri- ha s.- .\'ll|vk.\‘ and Hun day's t'Xt‘>'|tIllIll r- -_,4;:¢'sau-w -- Iwi-i 'l‘|iI~4 plzt iht- po of tin- Iiirtitt-il tncnrm. l‘ i‘ - IIUIIHII [acts 84-00 St. Francois Town "loot-via. . Malta It your fli-rlflttetewn. FEEDO the bushel. for Seed. \ . litlclal prices in 1W bushel iote. iheuid an thou . LOUI RAGE FOUR 1f you wnnttn stun (In-wing edre for ‘iobst-o and drugs. d see itow stint) you will gi-t ovt-r it. able to t-at uiiyliliiijt; your utiolt- Rt-Iit-tal Don't mi..- any substitute. ice per boit, Two dollars, one mouth} treat- . BIIRNS Moovit (‘orti PcnciIi-isttmcthing entirely new. not exonerate the boy -but it makes st rub the hen. ii on the torn, and lli n it-w hurt the owner of the stolen goods a chungi-ti its moaning. liccztust- thc lint-st invest n-nt oppor- avztiiahlt- tn-ll [or our circular ‘Ziiliryant, Isard 8c Co famed for Ill PRIlIiIVIM tusc. IIATARRII oovit for (‘atarrlt is the jtrcutest remedy yet t - ~r taking a fvw don-s .-\ month's ttctttrtirttt and tin tu ywtir tirttttbitsl and , n hox of liiI-l rcrnctiy at llllll‘, if _\'u\.l have ‘ Price. pcr box, one tnonth's treatnicrtt, “tutu or smoking, get You utli tic sur- ll lull: the - Price, Three stop. IIYSPEPSIA im It) this iliusl dreadful rom- nmit for Dy-ja-tt-ia. You vttll It din-n nut to u-t- and is ituatatitt-ed to , PH-c tv-‘r lwnnl. titty cents‘. parity to the crime. outlines, Ltd.- tit: that tnnnt-_\"' truism itpplvahle h rna n is in arc of of 't'i|('h Ivrcst ins of T I A L PLAN _\-..u can st-curc-l Iii t..- high tls all)" _\'l4*|<| which but for this -i' lli'|‘Ill\|,’l‘i|\ t‘ lllil \t ur only n1. pu rchrtaiiti: Iliilli of 1.1‘! us yirt’ you some ll'ritc ‘I10 Xavier St. 1 I otsturu .We have 3 CARLOADS of i heavy plump recleanad ATS u: Ostl. the 2 Uptown Branch Oflicwli) Peel St- . - Montreal Bait! Division-Phone Main 496! “PJI. Bulldin] Private Wiru-Unnoelled Service liqantly fumillol, I rooms with bathe. .»ln war-house and on the wry. ' These Oats weigh 42 lbs. to Arrived too late We are nailing them at 60 and . . i“: Btvery owner ef a HORIE WHOLESALE I RETAIL "Garter {i 00., Ltd. . Restores lost .- The greatest mttl quickest. ' ', Protovim will utukc you strong and .Wt>aklintts an: iimrtnortncd Into men oi rvt-s plenty of will power. Price ' o . Tiiitiutusu oovlt for all Rheumatic trouble. it got-s tn the wit of the Dolft sulit-r rheumatic condtttoit; gct a box u. Isawon- for rht-untutism, One month's trest- yiuuvu ituiurttts, There are ft rvlialilc rt-gtiltttnr for all female lmplaltitx, for Itiartlttl liivihifihiiltllls. ‘tin-y thy pain, and unlit tiiili" tlt very cosy. A tontlfs tteuttut-tit, i-‘it-t- Leadership i i: The Power of the l Slender Income. 4 fl-“r-v-v-w-o», ’ m, w rll osmo- Dalton. President, >30 per you: esulled) ll ulvaln THURSDAY, iIIE BIIAIIIIIWIETIIWN GUARDIAN fr. n. Barnett, rum: u: hurt-tier. D K. Outta. Annotate Editor. ' ins-ll.‘ Dally (killed 1%) “.00 Ill“: FRIDAY. JULY Ist btlug Dominion Day the Morning Guardian will not bcissued on Saturday. Jul)’ 3W1- ll advance your (Iellvendl fl-D ll U. I. A. In mull. and and a statutory holiday JUNE 30, 1921 GOOD SUGGESTION. While there is much ftiod for thought in the excellent address‘ llis Lordship. (‘hit-i Justice ll Ytiaihioson to the Grand Jury of at I the opening of the Isuprcnie Cottrt‘ hers» Tuesday, we trust that special- emphasis will be placed uu his re- I marks relative to the criminal which easy opportunity for stealing. Man negligence ‘ furnishes an Y a boy has become a criminal and‘ Inns suffered the criminals disgrace and the criminals fate by ticcidentnlly finding an opportunity to steal. The open" dnor or the easy; access tent-pt- ed him and he yielded. it does Vvvvvvv v v vvvvv v v v ’ wvhich are now _00i'i‘llfig home ‘to > Premier Murray is retiring, and be- , tween road and I kitten tied produced not only fox- » ' dangerous number. We have not ‘Mn-p-ninuztt-l agleonnindlr Bali? I yet. reached, that high level of .nn c. , ~a, ' x , .. . .. .. ..‘3i.‘l“ili‘..‘.i' Ilwn-mt- and n a F, . _ . . my aitvayzi liavc a good supply on hand. in Charlottetown at some levels of ‘primitive savagery, where goods may he left lying around indiscrim- inately withouit danger 0f being than the owner; nor have all our yourfg peo- appropriated by other pie or even all’ our older people acquired that strength of moral backbone which opportunity to get something for; . would scorn an nothing. Locks anti burs arc still: a necessity oi’ our civilization and we have no right to place tempta-f tion in the puth 0f young or old.‘ Many of the thefts oi’ wihlch boys have recently been guilty were due more to ‘the ease with which they. could be curried out than to crim- in the boys. This: is not an excuse for juvenile or irmi instincts other crimes. The perpetrator.‘ whatever his op-portuniiies may be.‘ is guilty and must be held responsi-v hie. The boy who "gets away" with his first‘. theft, whether through the ease with which it was commit-ted or thro-tigh the leniency of the court is on a fair way to- wards confirmed criminality, while discovery and severe punishment. in the incipient stages have turned many n boy back from the road to ruin. Everybody is honest until he gets the opportunity to be oth- Lat us not give the op-Y portunlty. . enwlse. The funny little afternoon ro- mancer has ‘been picknicking and in its rambles has found a mom's nestt, or rather two of them, in which it thought to find some nice rich eggs. Instead. it discovered some kittens, on sight of which it took n “kitten fit? It is a common custom for the poor calts in this province to bestow all thier mat- ernal (‘arc on whmt they thought to be their own kittens, only t0 make the discovery later that all their material solicltude nnd care bad been devoted in young foxes. Our friend the Patriot, is in the poor cat's predicament. In Mon- day's Il-IFIIII‘ It was waxing happy over the political kittens of Nova Scotitt and ‘Saskatchewan. in n philosophic measurement of their party strength. In tthe former province, it says, "Torylrtm mari- agetl to elect tiwo members in s House of 43.“ Quite so. but it did n't note that in provincial politics that province has always ‘been lpre- ponderatingly Liberal; UNTIL NOW. tits serious ommission was in not mentioning that last sum- mer, at an election held. the Lib- eral Government of Nova ‘Sicotia lost considerable of its following to the Farmers‘ party. These are the supposed kittens in the nest which are growing up into foxes to consume the chickens of the coop roost. But things are changing, other scandals disintegration has set in. in Saskatchewan their disappoint ment is even greater. Here their Iablee starve. 'I‘hero has probuJiiY ‘are equally injurious if permillvii Current Comment O WEEDS AND PE$T5- The weedtt and other pests have had their innings this zen-won. ‘lite old proverb that "ill weeds gYHW LlpIlCP" is being iully verified; tin-y apparently require no ltiviisture and will thrive where grains and veget- never been a more luxuriant crop of weeds. than there is this your while other crops, especially iii“ hay crop, are far from satislnc» tory. Within a few miles of (‘har- ILIIGIOWH there are fields of 11X; eyed daisies that are surpussingil’ beutitiful»ttw the non-sgriculturist, b-ut which to the farther are an eyesore and a menace. The tri- uuuplt of this enemy is not trredit- 1.1.1.,- Many farmers have conquer- ed itbe daisy but others, through early neglect. have allowed thcm to obtain a foothold which will not be easilgv loosened. Daisies can be eradicated by a. long process of rotation but ii would appear as if the idea oi‘ conquering them had been abandoned. There are other weed pests which to obtain a foothold. Witat the daisies did in so many cases and whaI is a lesson that should be taken tn heart by all farmers on the first many farmers did to them appearance of any weed pest. ‘Dhe insect pests are more diffi- cult to handle even than the daisy and their ‘extermination can b9 accomplished onlyby a long pro- cess which will involve eternal vig- ilance. At present the most de- structive insect pest In the cut- worm which. in some gardens es- pecially, has worked considentltle havoc. The commonest method of treatment is poison. it stiI-uilfln 0f Paris green in bran or other food that may be palatable to his worm- ship. The use of poison however is objectionable and many success» fui gardeners have found u grind substitute in common chimney soot with which they surround the plant to a depth of some two inches. The rut vworm. it is said, will not pene- tra-te this black wall. It is worth trying. en to two." This Bell Government romancefs story, but the Liberals and Farmers‘ out West, who know more about their party character- istics than the Patriot editor ever dreamed of declare an entirely different story. It is, that there is no such a tthing its straight Liber- si and Conservative in their prov- incial politics. True a very few candidates did run in certain local- ities claiming to be straight party men. but the Government did not appeal to the people as u Liberal aggregation, nor did the conserva- tives contest the election on straight party lines. And in the summing up of results the Govern- ment. which the. Patriot is now dis- posed to take as an illustration. met with severe disasters. 1t was not in fttct defeated‘ but it was so fleeced of its following that one more such a victor? would be ni- most a sure defeat. And the dis- tinct pronouncement of their own leading speaker/s, from the public platform, was. that what is recog- nized as the National and Liberal Conservative Party, WAS THE POLITICAL FORCE THAT PRO- DUCED THLS DIISAISTER. .. The Martin Government claimed to be rt l-‘usion and not a Liberal concern. They included some of the strong men of the United Farmers, including prominent of- ficials of the Grain Growers coin- bines. and by a special deal avoid- ed a straight conflict with the Farmers, party. And yet their Minister of Municipalities’ a Unit- ed Farmer, who had carried his constituency nt everv election. was u. but in an increased and' more The Patriot says that there the Tory represent- __wton bu been reduced "from sav- defeatad in an agricultural riding. i Others’ View Piliiift AQ-Lp- Belfast’: Start. (Ttlrflfiltl Star) —.Belfast where the Ulster Parliament has been formally open- ed, tierivcs its name from n sand- bank or “furset" twhich used to cross the Lagan at that point. It was the "ford, or “ihei." which gave the city its uumc of llei-farsct. Cattle in Spain ' (Town 'I‘o|iics, London) i —-'l‘his is a tr-uc story of an ad venittirc oi‘ two lady artists in sun- ny iSvpairt. 'I‘iic_\ were walking. and arrived at at little country inn, hut. tiusty and thirsty. They cottldtft talk many constituencies formerly held by the Government. Party lines having been cast aside the Con- servative tlpptisilion assumed the form and name of Independents, and both Liberal and Partner Lenders cniipied them with Tho National and Libcral-Ctmservstive Party on every platform, in order It possible to prejudice their rlec- tlnn because of their association with the Meighen Government. And tiespitt- this, instead of’ bring retiucetl from seven to two as slated by the Patriot. they were increased front seven to seventeen the people's endorsement of Pre- mier Melglten. Not only this, but Premier Martin selected the psychological moment fur culling the election on to avoid greater disaster, it‘ not absolute tiefent. A dark cloud centred itself in the political firma- ment, but only to those with ears close to the ground did the distri- buting rumblings of the distant. thunder indicate the breaking of a storm which, If they‘ failed in mnk- lng a hasty escape, would engulf them _ in n most certain doom. And so the cleciioti was called on. post haste, and a sufficiency" of them were elected to ensure a safe majority and il. Itoitiing pn to Lin; purse strings of office, laefnrc they were actually tivertukcn by the turbulent twicmcnts. 'l‘here were three tieicrretl elctiuns, however. one of which at least was caught In the storm. The nnniicipttlities’ scandal which had already result- ed in the tiefeat of the Minister of that department, now became more public. and in those deferred elections. which always go, anti in this instance was conceded to the Govcrniuent one of them actually went against tbrm_ in spite of the Farmer-Liberal cnm-blne, and the added prestige of a partv fresh with victory in the remainder 0i‘ the province, and an Independent. sympathise-r oi‘ the Meighen Gov- ernment at Ottawa, was elected. Daily Selections Gartlitn Readers v rurnlslted by W. l. L°uIen_ OIOIOIOIOI GOD'S CARE Almighty God. Thy free, wise (ZEN! Has reuched Thy children every- where. And fills each heart with little springs 0f all the good Thy comfort tbrings We ‘breathed it ere we knew its source; see it —though course is hid in wonders. like the ‘Spring, And songs that birds and people sing. We its fuller Joy lives ‘in the midst of sor- row; sorrow springs from the same root as giadncss. The two do not clash against each other or reduce the emotion to a neutral in- difference, but they tbleud into one another; just us in arctic regions, deep down below the cold "snow. with its white (Iestrlatlon and its barren death, you shall find the budding of the early spring flowers and the fresh green gross justly n5 some kinds of fire burn below the water; just as in the midst of the barren anti tintirinkalbie sea there may ‘be walling up some little foun- tain of Ifiesh water thsit comes front it deeper depth than the great ocean urounti it. and pours its sweet streams along the surface of the salt waster-Alexander Maciaren. —, ‘ I S I t Yntmn‘ ‘by a candidate in sympathy with the Meighen Government at Ot- tawa, n likewise we; the remit. in v THE ‘snissorrsrqwniimrvnn Spanish. ‘I; tt-ztilletl stlnte_ilk\ ritory the nationtti treasury i131- taiit- and “unzip qjggmQn ,tlut. I i ‘JUNE; '30. 1921‘ ibullly. so qhapqr them drew‘ 0st I»! the beautiful ‘high-guy cow, whi dill?!‘ Jillfilodaoutr coins. The Spaniards looked. and l boy was sent 0ft post-imitate. In half an hour the boy returned. hot and tflllmplpttr-t --- with two tickets for a Qyulpfight, _ _____ ' ; General Taylor of the GMT (vNewiYork 'l‘itnes) Almost from the time of it! I19‘ opt solely dapeutent custom receipts of Constantinople but September the Government‘ omcially announced irritable to pay its troops or func- officiai says. ‘The English have taken hold 0! tine job with their usual thorough- Ioughhess and have settled down ‘to ‘be comfortable, just as they did stabilized on “l! The boat. houses in Constantinople have been com- mandeered, _.for officers’ tzottaries, fvvben the war 1 Westernjnont. and the upon the that ll W!!! bead- soreet, lmvrtfver. they would not be seen mm: ‘my man by a nosiqtn. The Turkish womeitiwlto are‘ edu- cated are usually hmbiy cultivated. and form charming companions for the British and other allied officers and officials. Their own men folk appear not to value thent for their intellectual gifts. and look ~to mam- bera or their own sorta-Bl" "W" this kind of companionship. They ‘continue to treat their women like toys. The Turk at heart is one of the ‘ conservative of ‘ human taver- degrea of Int- ifét sin-mm: ginning Genera]. (‘hurles H. T lor was ithe editor and directing ind of The Boston (ilohc. it Wu in 1871i that he aBsutut-tl tut-r-tittorqitip and u lit-tie more than twenty y rs later ho came into actual co roi 0i’ tile Dlllliir- He died y-t-sterday 11f. the agent’ 75 years llad he ibf-rn tihared for two years tutors with health and strength for work, tie would have completed tint a Qell‘ lury as editor 0f 'l‘lic Globe. ‘Nut is a term uf service not often r-esth ed. it was General 'i“.tylor’a ‘Illi- popular newspaper. In tasking a. newspaper of that quality and wile appeal he was uninterruptedly spr- cess-ful’. He. made The Globe a very valuable property. General Taylor was known to newspaper men throughout the country, Ian:- 91)’ because of his service hit vari- ous times as Vice President still Director of The Associated Press. and in his home city he was a pru- mlnent figllfa. held in high e.=~ lEElll. ’ The Prime Ministers Wife changing aim to make The Globe a' quumers. lPive o'clock tea is all the rage on ‘the Grand Rue. and tea and whisk and soda are re- placing Turkish coffee and douzi- co. British intiltary police with shining brass buttons and comspic uousflir-m ibantis direct traffic at the busy corners, and if u Russian juzz place remains open nfter miti- night it is a British policeman who closes it up 91d levies the pén- I ally." ~ . Turk‘: Day Over The say of the Turks is over, he says. Sign; of final decay are on every band. M-ost of the costly ra- ga! palaces 5nd great private houses are empty and dilapidated, and the beautiful gardens and grounds are no more. Turkish life and man- ners have undergone __a metamorp- hosis, partly as s result of the war, beings. b. , ltude he ‘gay hiiow his woman. whatever "new freedom they may seize, it will be a long time before the ‘Yiirk regards his wife as is the custlorn in more civilized countries. Whether the women are satisfied with ‘the relationship is riot known, _ but they are Hllfid by the great improvement in their lot in the past decade. Business A: Usual old way. snyibody says about anything when On the con- ‘ though the tenden y -wss apparent before. Tire harem has vflilisllflll- Rarely does a Turk snort more than one wife, except in some in- stances in Asia Minor. though there is no Ialw to prevent it. The Turk- ish woman is emerging. The pov- (The London Daily News) ‘Mr. Lloyd George's long record is due largely Ito the SlTGllgfllllPi placidity of his wife. In tempera- ment. in tastes, in appearance. she is rt contrast to Mrs. Asquith. She in u shrewti. home-loving daughter of Welsh nonconformity; careful in money. conservative in religious beliefs and haibit of mind; of smart and clever society, splendidly con- temptuous; playing no pranks. however innocerlt, with the proq prieties; nether inscribing sonnets nor receiving iihem; a good and l severe judge of intellectual oh'nr-_ latans; making no enemies. content ‘to do the righ-t thing tittilyu however man's wife who perpetuates ‘the tradition of Mrs. Glitdstone. of Ludy ‘Salisbury indeed, of the Vic- torian era st its solid and stable best. M-r. Liody George, liki- Mn: Joseph (‘ma-mtberlain, has a home where no experiments are risked. This is one explanation nf his hold on middle opinion in BritainAVIth women on the register. and among men also, lMlargnfls Memoirs must‘ uiwuys be an expensive political luxury. 1 CONSTANTINOPLE BECOMING A BRITISH CITY Constantinople. we are told by' an American Government official, who writes in, the New York Times,.is becoming British. and we infer that once ii becomes a British city it twill remain s0., Before the war the city was rather French. and that language was spoken gon- eruily .by even the uneducated clas- ses. Franco controlled 60 per ceaLI of Turkey's public debt. and 53 par' cent. of the foreign capital invest- ed \in private enterprises. and also had control 0f the Ottoman impar- ial bank. which held a monopoly of the note-issuing privilege. Com- paraltive figures as to ‘the extent to which British capltahhus replac- ed the French are not. available.‘ . Ibut it is rpluin to the man in the street that Britain is the rcsl for- eign power in Coustantfnchiie to- day. The small shopkeeper... we are told. have seen which way the wind is blowing and are leih-ning the English language. The some arc IIsb-tnenl. should prove use- fui to all classes for the police are British and give their orders in the i English language. Running the City. Theoretically. control of (‘on- stnntinopie is inter-allied, but the French have neither the men not‘ the money to compote ‘with Eat‘ land. The Turkish Government is in sad need of funds because, ow- ing to the situation in Asia Minor. and the occupation by tihe Allies of other large portions of Turkish tier- ‘ this om cntnuttut sits I lilveryibody knows the old- fwbionod sunflower. but com parativeiy few amateurs are fsrmllisr with the new red and pink varieties. Thane ttqre splendid plants ‘for the flow- er garden, though being much more refined than the old- radiioned kinda and not grow lug nearly no tmll. You can put thorn in the hardy border . to fill vacant lpacel, or use them to iborder the veget- ables garden. They will be satisfactory tin either place -' and" make a fine display. “vw in their own men receive dull, ordinary and obvious-a states arty created ‘by the war made it necessary for thousands of Turk- ish women to seek their own living and they working in banks and stores. More than half of them appear in pu-bl with though the woman cling to their old religious customs, which impose many pit-bile. are now to be found ic their veils thrown back. restrictions on women In Emanolpated Women. homes Turkish wo- Ohrisiian men a IThe Handsomest Light p Car Built p The New I RAY Don't‘ ort-serviceuand economy For beauty oi Iine-comf n a class by itself. the NEW GRAY Dom‘ stands i The simplicity of the engine appeals to the mun who looks after his own car. - improvements. price. The G A Clflrlottetown. ni- ...t' ‘I iltv-r it.- - awn probably compens- t (Business in Turkey goes in the Nobody believes what. it is a matter of sale. trary he assumes that the other party to the transaction is just as great a. liar as he is himself and almost invariably the is right, N0 business can be speedily transact- ed. Every sale is a umttar oi‘ long haggling, even though the object is as trifling as a can of sardines. One change noticeable in the streets is the appearance of the motor car. Before the war deliv- ery of articles by vehicles was pro-I hibited and all the ‘csrtstge was done on the backs of a class o! men known as hamals. These men " formed a powerful union and their influence ‘contributed to Constant- inoplo's bwckwardness. Their strength must be prodigious, for trwo of them wiI-l curry a piano any distance and tihink little of it. Bus-| lness is further hampered by the‘ fact that the peace treaty has not yet "been ratified. Britain seems content to let matters take their course. for exiperience has taught her that such a course in the end nil I is likely to the favorable to her. \ The is more‘ roomy-with deeper uphol- stering and wider seats The springs are lotigerefor easy riding. Gasoline tank at the rear with the famous Stewart Vacuum feed system. ' - Extra large brakes-larger tires and many other I The price of the NEW GRAY DORT is very low compared with other cars of its class. No duty-no exchange is included l , DORT u built in CANADA, by clu- -‘ * linmNsnmtut-witu CANADIAN money. .1 i1 see them at .5... snow ROOMS; 159 Queen-Strt! ti. E. wmrn, Distributor for Prince Edward Island I I SELLING norms *3 lltgapNUTT & WHITE, LTDJhtarlottetown » amour. s. MANSON, Sttmmerside Pa. L. ROGERS, tcqqaimn N. it. Nicholson, use“... 6i‘ f. awed your ' . flu ?. ‘be you _ fee Lian} rs oung iw" if yyou strife? ram ' . Rlteumatisntflor; Nettralgia, Lumbago. a Sprin . clean-HP lee? Guarani d d to h b't- rmtng rug. in _ uteliy time» to the heart. kidney: or other organQ. Brelcnbed by den f8. lOId by druigtsta, QLOO per bu: Ial free at our s enctee, or WIN! Templeton. 142 ‘ ml W» TOMB“ Sold by tfleddln. 8mm.’ ‘w be ahlol -_-_4 3Q, 140114367X»? Xéwzzy BY HYNDMANS THINHEH FIRE INSURANCE REPREBENTS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN TOTAL L058 AND BUILD AGAIN Ask the man who was "wiped out" if you need Fire Iustn-ance and follow his advice. Your bus- iiness, your home and your furnit- ure need Insurance. Talk Insur- ance with us. I ‘rm: ot_nt-:s"r tnsumtnct: Klflwl 1 F6 PHONE G7 GI QUEEN CI _» Dori . y. in the Gray. Y3 h ti}. \ ‘. ‘if 1 . ‘ii ... I; ~...-¢