; * i=4...‘ i. 5.3.1.. Wear all {be Willie 4f- leadiiig ' afores HISTIH E a CO. Umrsn JA8.CO ". t MONTDEAL HE LACK OF INSURANCE w you to even if your an. plant burns down. ', ‘racial protection ' u. Don't put it off till the "ppsns. insure NOW. business i I it‘ p Managers for P. E. I. ' ‘he Oldest Ins BINDER TWINE Buy The Best “Silver Leaf" Brand ‘ Guaranteed 550 feet to the _ ipound and every Ball guar- janteed to give perfect satis- - faction. 2 Carloads of this brand. We are P. E. Island Agents for the £10., Ltd., makers of the “Sil- l ver Leaf” brand of Twine. and the largest manufactur- ' ‘ firs in the British Emnirl. GET OUR PRICES v~~._ .1.“ " 73.1.- ,. . Wholesale ind Retail , K 3 iCarter & Co., Ltd. Farmers ‘Work Shots _. ti}. The Famous p AMHERST SHOES . For men who work ff]- out-doors. Our new T yQtOCk for Fall is "ready for your in- i OLII) LEATHER $3.50 to $5.50 Wear the best. Our Fire Insurance policies al- no ahead with your or Complete la accorded firs dman 8t f o. Ltd. urancs Agency in l. Brantford Cordage _ l __.. m can»; Dalton Cont. a. n; a ' 011100,‘ AUIOGIIOI’ It, its! and Pnhllllqp Mo. ' ' " u Ball (r s-s uteri as your, llsrflfsl) In sigma » l u l u a n. Graham‘ ‘all to ‘U’ ‘ - s , l i’ _ FRIDAY, AUG FARMERS’ PARTY In a province llnl ours, in which farmers greatly predominate, in which the farmers at every elec- tion choose their own representa- tives, the term Plfarlners’ Party" sound" stranguly~ out of. ‘place. Every party in this province is a formers‘ party, it cannot be any- "thing else. The lawyers, the mer- chants, the doctors and all tbs ‘other professionals in the prov ince could no more elect a party than they could buiZC a railway to the moon. Moreover, except possibly in the city of Charlotte- town. and .to_wn of Summsrsids. "1688 Swaps collectively or indiv- idually‘ could not elect a single member to ‘the legislature or t0 Darllament if the, farmers raised any objection to their nominee. And ‘dvenin ‘these places. the only [urban constituencies in the provi lnce, no man antagonistic to the farmers’ interests could be elected because almost every elector in the city is either a farmer's son or a farmer's father or brother, and because, funner, every mer- chant. lawyer. doctor or other professional lives by grace of the country's farmers. If there were no farmer's in the pfoyiflge in"- would be ‘no city. i _ l For this province at least thq expression Farmers‘ Party is a ‘misnomer. Any ‘political parry lthrit we can have must be a farn, a crs‘ party or it cannot exist. We need farmers in ‘in; legiqla. iiure and every constituency in "i" nwvihce’ has both the right 58nd Dower to elect a farmer ii 1, ‘wichooses to do so. And while the i5e'vl""3 ‘J7 “WWW and doctors and merchants and clergyman are “ needed in our‘ Drivate business Jhry arc also needed in our legis- ycrs for there are many pro“ legislation which only lmvycrs are able to navigate and “ ‘I roads in ‘a? “"8" Bell/RBI ill the legislature [are needed, g0 if any constituent‘; in" *1 shod lawyer available there its no good reason why he gbpnld not be elected. y ' in the Murray i-lnrpm- qigu-iq ‘a candidate has been nominated "is a Progressive. It is to be regretted , that. it he is supposed to possess more legislative ability than eit- her of tbs other candidates, that he had not allied himself with ‘either of the existing parties, both ‘ of which are farmers‘ parties or Progressive parties. if he is a rs- presentative farmer, a successful and progressive farmer be; wgiflfl be m 9 Position, if elected and ilied with either of the existing parties. to do some good in in; legislature. Standing alone in the middle of the chamber, oppoled to botb parties, no matter bow pro Bressive he may be, lls can do little for his constituency. Thsrs is room here for only two pap "BB; they are both, as much as‘ they can be, farmers’ parties, ‘bg. cause they are elected by iii-m. ers. Let the old Murray ‘Hgrbgi- district which has alwaysbggn g power in the legislature tskb this view of it. l ' INDEFINITE DEFINITENISQ Tho only definite information Elven by the Bell government about the road Idllllfill is that the fees from automobile licenses "d hcins funded as n sinking fund to pay off the money bor- rowed for work on the roads. Mr. J. D. Stewart, leader of the Opposition, gave‘ an excellent illustration at the Mont Carmel meeting, reported yestsrds , of the working out of this great; pisod of Bell government, financing. Ms Stewart, reminding his hearers that before the Bell government looms into office the fees from iantomobiie licenses had formed .. " ., . I ' have it on the best authority ilini us113s,_1922'" , _,',,.i or the’ general reienus sud u... nvhen. those lees. are out ilii" another channel tbs deficiency must be made “l! ,1" 5°!" ‘"11" w“); Th‘; Bell plan reminded him fai-m..-'l‘hls man was I 8TH" "l" nip grower sud prided himself on his success in tbs-v. line. Tile pio- uedds-ol’ histurnlp field assisted very materially in meeting the current household and other 0x»- ponaes. The man, like Premier Bell,‘ had peculiar ideal tbs question of finance and it occurr- ed to him that if the proceeds from the turnip field were put in a separate drswerjnd used ex- clusively in paying off the mort- EWQ. herould pay off the mori- gsge without costing him a cent! The ' ‘illustration “took" with the 011 audience who heartily ‘laughed at Mr, Bell's method of paying for the roads without costing the province a dollar. The absolute absurdity of trying lo persdads tbs-intelligent people of this province that by funding a portion of the revenus to ps._y off any indebtednessythat might be incurred and expecting the people that lt-vtvould not cost them any- tilliafi isfsoz-rldiculous that it need no comment. Even Mr. Bell was forced to admit that it was to meet the deficiencyicaused by withdrawing this from the- general, revenue that the in- creased‘ taxation was needed. but ho still holds to his point that the amount roads are not going to cost ins taxpayersa dollar! Li‘ PERTUR-BED w-uuse the statute rvqllirus > What the atatuts did require was of a faiuuor who bad Jl flmlmlilédd ' T‘ "st-rm tantrums " it olilniorlrrovl ouinollli f ‘Notes By The. Way i Premier Ball st Egmont-Buy- l“ cordiugno the Patriot's rclwrl. tpld- the electors that the" bye- @1- ections are being nuw" brld We‘ it."- that they should have been held last year and f-hat the vacant dil- tod iin the Leqislatu s stilts aes- sion last winter. The lsll govern men! broke the ,-law and denied the voters lhs right of representa- tlonl The Premier further told Ill‘: Acadian electors that they are ell~ titled to representation in the House and in the Executive Coun cil, but since the death oi’ Hon. ‘Mr. Gallant one of the seats in the Council had Ibsen lie-pt Violin’- What was this but the denial of Acadlisn representation in both the government and In tins House? Let the Acadim. voters contrast th-ls Liberal treatment of them with that of the late Conservative Adminlstraliion in which Hon A. E. Arsenault was Prime Minister! Some time or,othsr_ an Acadian may hope for a bunk in the fore- castle of the Bell Government. At Egmont Ba;- Premier Bell repeated his professions of Econu my with a big l]. He is an ad- mltled economisp ppraenally. No piibllc man values his own dollar higher. But as a custodian and dispenser of the people's money no previous Premier ever disper- sed it with so lavish a hand. Al- most $000,000 of the province mon sys were spent by his Govern- ment last year as compared with an average of $500,000 tin four years previous. And this la Bell Government Economyl In the House last session the Premier and all his supporters boldly maintained that théir road improvement sc ems would not cnst the IHXDB) ins a cent or add One dollar to the public debt. This monstrous statement being dis- proved by the increased debt and interest charges, he laid down s new line ofdefence at the first. meeting of the bye.- eloctious cam The Patriot professes to be ‘greatly perturbed over the report} ‘Ythat the disturbance in the Mur-i If!!!“ Harbor meeting originated; l Q3711“ Butler began his spear-h‘, ‘While the disturbance was by pg Zmeuns creditable to the meeting, ‘W ha“! it 0h very 800d authority that Pthe trouble arose when Mini 31m" W88 speaking, and at ‘be! bdsiflflllli 9f his speech. We also Mr Butler did not get a chance t0 My hair of what the‘ Patriot says he said. He may have in. formed the Patriot that lls bad in- iéndgd “Yin! it and we have no doubt he did. That he‘ did not say "1 W" by no means his fault but it is lust ‘like the Patriot to‘ re- iw" Bdmfilhlll! that did not take place. It h quite true that m. i, A, MoDonaid, a former‘ Conservative member did not get‘ s chance to lay what hewanted to say; it is equally. true that neither Mr. Hes- liaah the sitting Liberal member, lldl‘ T118 Ho‘_n. W. M. Lea, Corn- millioner of tPublic Works, no: Ml- E- T- Hllzs, Liberal member for Charlottetown, did not get a "m!" i" do anything but look Killed». They never said a word 'm1°"I|-'l—~this ws also have on the belt anthority—they wont "lfliideil" with defensive argn. "IBM! on behalf of the Bell gov- ernmeht. The facts are that the Bell gov- ernment. from Mr. ‘Hessian up -- or down.-—to the Hon. W, ivi_ L“, hid I dllshty poor showing Murray "Harbor. at 5B0 fol There are in the United King- d°m 55° Persons to the square 111116; in Canada thorelare three. in the matter of supporting our Plllwlys three People bell’ the burden that is borne in oust sn- tain '6? 5M. The difference is Ivery sinking fund "in l5 to 20 years." ‘Al Eglllilnt Iiuy he told the el- ectors it would be paid 4| interest and principal, at the end of say, 10 years." At first it WRSIQI|QIIQ_ iqiicnisnei- w“ deep in armisut-cess lhe Government wiis flit‘?!- ilntive lhsiuess, particularly iqwfiwhen the iLibeial member, lviiqino debt at all; next it was ii debtimising and gqulppjng, and iiikingilngfln the war. "o b‘? Paid “l 15 1° 20 Yvdlii" "lldino ildcquate steps to cover this: ithis now reduced within three or great ngeiL m" ddYd Iv "$83!. 19 Yellfl" Whfl cliffe publications let out 41 great FB- howl. 5f|if9"crlsls. “chmupsrseded by a Cabinet Council. will it p: vollng day? What loose and contradictory fiance can be placed upon manta‘? Either they an mid; ||1| utter ignorance at finance or made for the purpose of confusing and deceiving the electors. At Mount Carmel on Tuesday, eveninxiast the Premier repeated his Egmont Bay speech defending the government's taxation p-ilicy and their road policy. He main- rained that in 1919, he and mi Pi")! Wve itinerant of the true condition of tho finances, although he himself had been a member of the Public Accounts Committee for years prsvlousl What a piti- able confession! What he h" not denied and cannot deny Is that both he and his party in 1919 all conlended that thc then rev- enues were sufficient to‘ pay for all the necessary public services °f "W fliillfllfy. if proper economy were practised. By all the rules of the game of politics the _Attorney General should fake a hand iu the ibye- elections, especially in the Mur- ray Harbor DistricbWhy is he so conspicuously absent? is it. be- cause of the three year's feud be- tween himself and‘ his leading col leagues is still rankllnp? Perhaps so. Or is it ibecauss he ill unwill- ing to stand beside no dead. a po. litlcad duck as Commissioner Lea? Why is he notbeside his much be. loved leader ‘In Pnlnce County? And echo answers Vinny? The old feud will They don't want to make n pllhliii exhibition of their long- continued cut- throat quarrel! Onlylog we" they mmember the roaring cau- sules, the stormy scenes in coun- cil,‘ lbs unpnlntable epithet; and threats of personal violence they hurled at eaoh other ln m“; plnll Little wonder indeed that they do not hunt tolellf!!! abwl ‘ ' because of our haste but it means overburdenlng. For our healthier skeet sndmccounts for many of dill‘ illlrllelll’. particularly our rall- wsy"burdsn. We are over-railroad- ed: ‘weiwers in too much of a hurry‘ to develop our country. Doubtlsss development we and gssqqqopis‘ ‘v-J development ‘will’ bu” more raipld and this is why every poislble Jnosns should ‘be adopted to guide tion are at work in the‘ world, the emigrants of’ tlte i-igln class to wards cums. ' .4. trlcts should have been represen- not down. ' Northolillifs Passion lor Something New The cursor of Lord Nlrtbcliffe will for years -be used by apostles or the "hustle for success" doctrine as any outstanding example. Here wile a youth, to fortune and fame unknown whddby sheer daring, ab- solute disregard‘ for conventional standards, and a tremendous ener- gy, became the master of hundreds of publications, an u-p-sotter oi‘ Gov- ernments, and a Napoleon of Bri- tish public opinion. Ho won every- thing thata man of lusts upd cul- ture could desire. and he won it by initiating new methods that went at once to the heart of the public. Tao unknown bud u fascination for himJ-le was always hustling around for something new to spring on ilic world. A New York Experiment ln December, 1900, Northcliffe, then Sir Alfred llurmsworth, made his first visit to New York. He was then owner of about thirty publi- cations, and a millionaire. l-le made an experiment in putting out one issue of the New York World, on his own lines. The issue was "tab- loid" in size, each news item was presented in clear cut synopsis, and a glance sufficed to get the gist oi the news. That is the principle on which the London Mail has been published. The novelty made a big impression on New York, yet was hardly worth pérmanence. He tried in New York one of his circulation schemes. He offered a large cash prize tothe person whose letter he first picked up, in a room contain- ing thousands of them. The number of letters received, with subscrip- tions accompanying, was astonish- ingly large, and the VGIJLUT: almost paid for itself out of hallo. North- cliffe in later years made many vis- its to toe United Sisters, but was mainly bent then on seeing and learning, and in expressing his views. ' The Shell Scandal ln a career such as his, full nl‘ big events, the high spots would necessarily be outstanding. One of his biggest coups was the high ex- puign, There hi; gtutflmQnt wnglplosive shell scandal. Nortlicliffei that the, cost oi the imprm/gflillfld been mainly instrumental in] roads would lbs paid or: by m; getting Kitchener into the War 01'3- flce in 1914. but in X915 saw the! popular idol falling down. From; llle front, through his many corres-t baffkllpondenisl Nm-moiifle 195mm; 0i ihfipeople open, and enabled them to px|,i05ivp[i'ni-|ii their own opinions as to what “intense need of high The series of North-i Government virtually it forced Kitchener H W33 and Lloyd George became Minister The Premier says that i! they lose all the bye elections they will still have a majority. The thought was evidently tin his mind that they would lose them all. Be it so. They will deserve defeat! improved road scheme not to add to the debt, or cost the tax- payers a cent? The roads a pre- sent to the people’! What said Mr. J. D. Stewart, the Oppositmn Lead er, at Mount. Carmel‘! "l WILL TELL YOU, “HE SAID," WHAT FORM THE PRE- MIEWS PRESENT WILL TAKE. lT WILL BE AN ADDITION. TO THE PUBLIC DEBT OF THIS PROVINCE 0F HALF A MIL. LION DOLLAR$I And to this statement an able, honest and sincere Pilbllo man and friend of the people has pledged a faith as ye! unsulliied by false- hood. I4 Daily Selections for filnrdian Readers ‘from the W. i. Louson oollscolon AFTER ALL (The, Baltimore Bun.) . After all, to be living, To be part of it all, to be Something 'of' all thogiving", Something of all we see, of Munitions to devote every ounce of his energy to organizing Eng- land as an arsenal for the munu- facture of artillery and shells. Tile Germans had to be blasted out oi‘ their trenches in Flanders and France, and Britain bad to supply the munitions. When Northoliffe attackeiLKitchensr. the idol of the people, the cmlhtry was aghast- Mombers of the ‘exchanges and others torofiup tile Times and Mall. Northcliffs was swamped with bit- ter denunclations, yet. everyone now acknowledges that he did the coun- try an immense service in forelufl the issue. Jealous Attacks Frequent Listen to A. G. (lurtllner, editor oi‘ the London News, at the out- break of the war: f‘Whut is the Government going to do with Lord Nortlii-llffc? For this thing is clear, [Jill frenzied olficemoy must rbe suppressed or no (ioverlllnent can livo, iif. will have surrendered its authority to‘ the mob that Lord Nortlicliffe hounds on in the coi- -umus or “The Times," the "Daily Mall" and the “Evening News" and it. will die by the mob. We have to choose between responsible Gov- ernment and u press distatorslilp. Let us see what the power lileuiis in the hands of an unscrupulous adventurer like Lord "Norlhcllfls. And in Lie first place let us re member who Lord Nortliciiffc is. the shullowest form of journalism, represented by "Answersfl "Comic Cuts" and a multitude of simlliir sheets. His whole career has been a record or vulgar senslltinliilllsnl, divorced not only from nay morul purpose, but from any intelligible meaning except tbs exercise of power." ' Foolish Denunciation Gardiner further declares: “Do not let us misunderstand the ilosl- tion. Tile man is nothing. lie has neither intellect uor purpose. Nothing bill illl idle passion to be miscnievous and powerful. The source of his power is not in him- self or anything that he has done. He is great brat-rinse of the mnchiile he conlrols. Take that uwzly, and he is as negligible as any office-boy" Those are bitter, and litrgely unjus- tified ilssertlons. (larillllel- himself liluilc a fine luess -b_v howling. ill August, 19H, for Britain tn stay neutral. Nnrtlicliffo hiul his lllfl(‘ll-‘ He came to fortune by exploiting. life, and llilmll}! the war .ie lllllllP a lot of trouble for politicians who were incapable of bundling the hi! crisis. But he kept the eye of thc i Others’ View Pointsi '”“1';I.T¥.;II3T;T”"' (London Sllniluy Titiles) The Anu-rioilns arc having, as all the world knows, r1 lirird time of lt in trying lil enforce prohibition, though no llarilcr lhuli they ile- sverve. But it is souiewllrli in thc nature of ll tall order when tney suggest illut we should ‘assist Iht-m by allowing our wuervllnni vessels to be searched outside the three- milo limit. Even the reciprocal right to sPuri-ll Aluericull ships would hardly console us for such :1 fussy lnicrlr-‘rence with the froc- dom 0i‘ the sells. We rcalrv cannot agree lo ltpset international! mul'i~' time luw merely because t.le Am- ericans are anxious i0 stop viola- tions of the crunkiest piece of crank legislation known in nloilern times. The A-nlcricrlns nre constantly assuring us that prohibition has "come to stay." We believethcnl if only because of the host of vested A ivitbksfloggb Com Hakcs/ Flakes, crispy and delicious! Com Flakes and fruit and thc hestl Kellogg's “WAXTI Flakes are exactly the sort of need. They are not only cause they digest so easily. Sliced peaches Can you. imagine anything so good to eat early on a warm morning or for lunch as sliced pescherand milk, all-cold and fine-and ~Kellogg's “WAXTITE" Corn Eat plenty of Kellogg's “WAXTITE" happiness of feeling sprightly, despite but nourishing as well and just wonder- ful for little folks, in particular, be- ii/rttqy” WAXTHTE CORN FLAKES \u- an." a xsuocc-s xsuusus ll‘ ruinous snags-m f-l humbled i WAXTIITE know the TE" Com a dict you satisfying, Isle Ian that oseli ruckus yon bay la asahd alr-thll h the wax paper j so] i Canadianizi RAVEL is one of the great elements in education and is onc of the fundamentals of good citizenship. The desire to know onc's own country should be inculcated into the system of every Canadian and to obtain any adequate knowledge, how can it be acquired better than by lravcl? “Cun- adians, See Canada," and Canada Virst," etc, have been adopted as slogans in the endeavor to create in the lliinds of Canodiztils the atlvantages of national travel and the attractions Canada has to oficr. The purport of this artirle is not only to give expression to thc ilnpurtailce of ifuilziiiians seeing Canada that they may have a fuller appreciation of what their own country has t0 offer lllcni in thtnway of scc-licry and inlcrcsl, but to emphasize "ptirticuiarly thc vului- of tourist travel to thc nation, and thc duly we owe oilrselves in devclopiilg our tourist tcrritory—~so t0 speak to cai ifaiize thc scenery. Possibly no othcr country ill the world gives up l0 its people a greater arcs 0f rulllliry for recreation purposes and thcsc great illaygrourlds are not confined lu any purticulatnsccliun but are spread fruln the Atlantic t0 thc Pacific. 'l‘hcn again from thc seashore results of thc Atlantic and the lower St. Lawrence tu tilt- Pacific Coast the interests arc so varied and so distinctly tiifiercnt from mic another that our Catiadian pcoplc may use llltll‘ vacations for years and find ncw scenery and new intern-st annually. From the quiet beauty of the ivlarililllc Provinces to the more rugged scenery of the Province of Quebec, the almost continuous lake and river country of northern Ontario, the Rocky Mountains >0 immense, beautiful, and wonderful, on to the Pacific‘ Coast. one cannot Imagine without personal vision and knowledge what a wonderful asset we have in our widespread playgrounds and national parks. But to makc thc most of those wonder- ful heritaws, to realize thc fullest amount of profit, they must be de- veloped. The Provincial and Dominion Governments must be keenly alive to what thc possibilities are. Good roads to the wonder places and beauty spots are essential so that thc way of the tourist row hr WW1! Mmv and attractive. ng Canada Much has been done by the railways to advertise our tourist territory, which has resulted in millions of dollars being spent in Canada annually, princi lly by our neighbors to the south o us, but the fringe has as yet only been touched. The Canadian National Rail- ways have just opened jasper Park Lodge, in jasper Park, that largest and most wonderful of all oufnational parks, 4,400 square miles of magnificenl mountainous scenery. There wild lift mums unniulested and thousands d tourists from all parts pf the globelwil gladly nsscinblc annually when the park is fully developed with good motor roads, and thc system of ‘lqd es so; ziuspiciously opt-nod on June l'5t list are extended through the pork. jasper Park is hut one of the many feature places to bc developed. Mount Robson Park, just fifty miles west from asper station. is antiiht-r. Aside from ount Robson bring the highest peak in the (‘anatlian Rockies (15,008 feet), the park ivhit-Ii is cntircly within the province 0i iiritisil Columbia. is on Alpine kingdom in itst-lf, but until such time as it is tlcvclopcd, thc glory and majesty of its srcncry is denied the tourist who not choose to riric .t cayuse. By way of comparison it has been sllilbli that tourist traffic in California alone nets approximately a hundred million (lollars a year, and the more northern Pacific Coast States. Washing- toll and Oregon, add fully half that amount to the total, wllcrcasif has been said that tourist traffic in Carluda ll told, did not net beyond ten or twelve millions. _ Again, the provinces of Nova Scotla and New Brunswick have all _lhe ad- vantages of the State of Maine, but comparatively little has_ been ‘done to develop them. What this development may-mean in s measure can, be express by the fact that Maine last veer reaped u harvest of over 840.0001!” "l 1mm" business. -_ , Our wonderful tourist territory is undoubtedly one of our largest assets, and greatest heritage: to be developed and in the opinion _qf interim-on travellers who have VtlllQd W. CIR“! possesses the finest aggregation 0| sct-nicry in the world-Toronto Sstur lg t. . . P interests ileeply collar-riled in ev- Clltitilfll Act was evi-r passed; and ailing lt. As o. maker of illi-glil for» so long us the Amerlcumfcan toil- iunes and fl source of lindeservlilg critic its penalties, the outside employment rind a. raiser of un- \\‘0l‘ill will insist on enjoying the quenchnsble thlrsts, no more sne- fun of it. ' A, Something of all that's glowing In the world around us dear—— After all to be living, Now this moment, and here! What lf the dreams do shnttar, What if the dust does rise; What if the small things matter What if the spirit cries! Something in all- makes even The joy and the sadness true; ' Storms may shadow our heaven. But skies next day are blue Just to ‘be pnrt of the effort A seed in the growth of time. A breath of the mornings rims‘. Gpd. it is worth the anguish Just to be living and part ng. , - _ ls ‘a song in tbs amt! , M A bubble of bloom in the weather. Of the beautiful world whose sing id 15¢ % (or) to Manufactu and costs. A Where. it Goes 1% (9st) to _ Government- Taxes l'¢ f8 and Dealers to cover all charges including profits %%lawmr>fa&au