' qb “I i". , . f’ q Norma Talmadge Knows A A Good, Thing l, Like thousands of other people who realize the value o! asoalp that disinfects while it ' cleanses, Norma Talmadge, the famous screen star uses and praises HEAL LIFEBUOY sea Tliinkof the hundreds of germ-laden china l y ' r hands touch each day-think of the , ue of having the pores of the skin really '3 clglan. Then get a cake of Liiehuoy and __ let-its copious lather make your skin glow “’ with health. too, and you will say with f ' Norma _"l thoroughly enioy Uiebuor-it gives the skin the protection everyone needs." "AZ-ew- Lifebuoy Sea) is collate” good grocers and stone. \ LEVER BROTHERS LIMITED _ ‘roaorrro _ 53.-.; THE NORTH AMERICAN LIFE “ ' ASSURANCE COMPANY Home OFFICE ‘ Tor0nt0,—Canada holders. For rates and information apply to J. K, ROSS PROVINCIAL MANAGER Has been‘ represented by tts in this IWOVlHCIfiOT the past 25 years. No Company 1n Canada is in u position to do better for its policy-l l b Office Royal Bank Building pm,“ 354__|_ i 19524-2911. i ‘A’ 22m- > _ _. a Bump! To hr- in full control of your own car is not t-utfttgh for safety. Crumbled mudgusrds. > Jaruken lamps. and pun- ctured radiators 1 ctttttttmn results otln-r — the unskilled dt"i\-~~t~'s—lack of judg- ment. Gut a protecting tvttdt-r and know that other? "ttrlt-ssttt-s cali- hut, PHIPN’ injury to your ntav-hitto. \\'o have tho .~‘nv"intz littmpcrtl, only one worth while. 1.1. 1 Tip---Avoitl . Q Fill! any (‘IT- Brucc Stewart& Co Ltd 2001-8-2-21. . CLEAR . S ' ‘is the light shed ‘by our hand V‘ some indirect lighting iixtur t. ' ' es. All the glare of direct ___ 1 light is avoided, but none ot 31L v tls illumination is lost, but ' »\ ' - walker increased. See them l‘, lid you'll likgjtultem. And j qm-tt like to’ more and 4 ‘ ' . . \ . more as you “them. ‘ One light fixtures are as _ 1 dmpt from Tax. A cttYsrAT. J .___ v}. ' v . - l rn£i?cinla1i1tTttl1iJu nulugliu‘ ‘an! Dally (lends-l IQ!) 5-“ Er you! (delivered) )5... a You, (mailed) ta advapee. Canada. and V;,n7;;{“.'"tYt'3 llli", _' f“; f1", Q , ,- y‘? n ‘ " a . ~ t.’ ' n alwiieq I [All la! .U. I. A. ‘Ila ‘- IIICIIQI P ICQ . i1. E's-Se. THURSDAY, AUGUST 5,1920 \ ' _ zfTflElflli PP AND GET TOGETHER” t e ‘r . lgeople of Canada. “Cheer up!” else. Blessed year after year with an abundant liar- psrt of North America that is absolutely free from the extremes of heat and cold. means and not only “cheer up” but be thankful. “Get together!” triotic advice. distinterestedly place-countrybeforeparty, and ser- vice before self-seeklnggutill get togetheras natur- ally as our soldiers did when they stoodshoulder to shoulder against a common enemy; ‘so standing to- them.” they and their country shall prosper. -. Yet, with all the injunctions for getting toge- ther and the wisdom of doing so, there are those in the political world, as there are in the commercial, the industrial, the social world, who cannot be drawn together with these is neither desirable nor prudent nor possible. The self-seeker, the office hunter, the deceiver, the man who attains his ends by false pro- . mises, will stand aloof and it is better so. And in the general interest he must be kept apart until he sees the error of his way. There can be no real union with what is fundamentally wrong. , “Cheer up and get Together;” get together in boosting the country, the province, the home city, and town, and village, and community. Get toge- ther-in demanding clean, honest, efficient govern- ment; get together in crushing out deception and falsehood and self-seeking. We have the “makings.” ;oi' the greatest country in the world, let us get to» l gather and make it. ‘. _ TUE SQUIRMIXG PATRIOT fi Tuesdays Pariot devotes three lengthy edito- i , rials to The Guardian, each of them eloquently eva- ding every point in the political situation at issue. Some days ago, with a great flourish, it is- sued a challenge to the Guardian to discuss thelpoli- ticalsituation. We accepted its challenge lastSa- plank from Mr. Bell’s i919 platform, a plank the ex- challenge. rlian! Well, all the Guardian "has". to say is: fall! word could be taken for it, it should tell is the habit of doing. pose and signed by after its accession. that it was put up for the deliberate purpose of g8 - ceiving the people. The Provincial Auditor czite same questions were asked of and answere light on these questions? , » poo- s-oovevwv-w 400-0 ~o<4~4~O<4O+O R. BROW, 146 Richmond St Chartottetown ft 1 [summit invest rates; ulntlitt utcuuc counwv ammo us. Accident Sickness at a... ‘if-P NOTE ‘- " I . occurring and Mr. Lea’s innocdtihii‘ with them is eloquently significant. t 1_ . INC-Ito! ‘all PIIIIIN a V . ful _n dependence on a still weak- ‘iCheer up and get together.” This was the mes- sage of Premier Meighen during a speech to the peo- plO of Portage La Prairie the other day. Good, sound, wholesome advice, one that Canada needs as never before, ‘one which. if followed, would mean millions a year extra and harmony and peace for the _ There is much in this country to‘ cheer us, much 1n every province of Canada Vand probably more in our own province than anywhbrig‘, vest,<we are perhaps the only province in Canada“ that has never experienced a crop failure, the ottly ifllitllffs‘ its vicious atte “Cheer Up,” by,,al.l This is good wholesome, pa- All who can renounceself-interest, who can recognize the claims of others, who. ‘cap. oilfwltctirrilous and untrue writings _ __ Hplacgd before parents and their gether.“the gates of hell shall not prevail against into a union whose aim is the general good. Getting v ass urday and modestly opened the discussion with a istence of which the Patriothad denied in a previous issue. We have heard nothing since of this famous Having failed to implement its challenge if how‘ 1 threatens, and its threat is as cowardly and as con- ' temptible as its challenge. It threatens to expose some one‘s dishonesty and the blame for the ajvfttl calamity that is to follow will fall upon the L-‘Gilar- et it If the Patriotknows of anything crookeder done by any politicxl party or any political newspa- per than its party and itself havli done, then if its .- it--with ‘ proofs, not insinuati0ns—whi"ch the Patriot is not Again the Patriot repeats the famous “finan- cial statement” issued by the government for a, pur- the Provincial Auditor jshortly The statement proves only one thing and proves it conclusively as anyone with a grain of common sense can see at a glance, namely, a The Patriot is looking for a scape goat for the tax office. Evidently something has gone ‘wrong there. In the course of one of its several editorials 11' ' on The Guardian in its Tuesday's issue it insinuates that The Guardian seeks to “convey the impression that those tax notices are personal letters from Hon. W. M. Lea.” We have only to say that this insinua- tion, like many others in the Patriot, ‘is manufac- tured out of whole cloth. _The Guardian never sought to make any such impression,“ but the Patriot's lengthy explanation about the ‘ c e i salt . ' P‘ - The w- ~ arms-retrial}, (our apologies to the original) eon- tlnues its romances of esaggeia- lion. ; For creation of iinaglnpry iflacts‘ out oi nothing it exoells’ its‘ natnesakp. and with Just ssboast- et "reputation for. veracity." ll qr tends interest for “strangers and tourists coming to our Island." and s dramatically feigned fear of lmptieasions made by our, news- MP9" upon these people._ To Iivaiife to its imagery it knocks Toin Pepper out of time at ta descriptions o! things which do ll0t and never did exist. it says “they ilnd in the columns of the Guardian nothing but trouble, ml- sery. discontent and general wretchedness are set forth as the true condition of the people." It mils? have been a hideous night- mare to originate such siui! for our babbling friend. Our columns are always the. opposite of this. Perch-once it~is only waxpressing vthe-"aotnal feelings within the limi- tedakeiof lts little politcal circle.’ Then it'say_s' “the most malicious -fcature -of the Guardian's propa~ pt to try and persuade the people hat taxes litfefilqtng ‘tevtca unjustly, AND Tail“ spay sttouno NOT "PAY wisp?" jNq render 0t ‘ma pltpet‘ ‘ever road‘ a line or a syllable giving thein "such advice. ‘ And so it jghoiials; pp altnosfad lniinitim. But therg,_is_"iu truth too much families". For six months Current Comment has been before the pub- lie-and-has discussed phase after phase o: public question and pol- itical issue, yet not in a sing e in- stance has any statement of im- portanco or rnct, any figure of fin~ ance, even been taken exception to much less refuted by sound at‘- gument. Moreover, clean language has been used in public discussion, a fact which has been especially commented upon by “strangers and tourists" visiting the province llut to our shame and dismay visit ors of" refined intellects and ac- customedwo civilized tongues have read in the island Patriot too ntuch of such coarseness as "slush", "tnsl lclous," “vicious", “hidebound glllig of partisans." "Bolshevlsm," “vul~ gar editorials." (never seen out- side it's own columns), "Basbl-bss- ouk." "dgitstors," Midsummer llsd. itess." ',"kn0ttster,',_"mssk in human" foam." "howled," "hatefulness," "rages and spues," "venom," “guer llla," "spoilt disorder," "a jack- in lion's skin," “brlsandfi “backslsltfl "lllflKBIldEIY," and ev- el‘ repeating lndecencles c! debate which ‘would surely bring a blush lo thetsce, and indignation to-tho soul of the clean citizen who, amongst the many things 15 be reproach. Challenging has recently become ii fad, or perhaps more correctly u iiew pastime in Liberal circles. Behind the closed doors of a party convention-or in the privacy of the editorial sanctum, with a brav- ery born of such security they de- fyf all gromers, and boldly dwlflrfi "infiiqhs shall nyflrrom itsrilrm ins-to .500“ as l." But whea-'the_ opponetr appears upon the scene, the bravado melts into thin air. the rock is plainly visible but the "- . -.. , z t . _ _ * snjuouttngmwsy treur-tue fight- ‘liifY-gliviiinis" n aa- aiYttl locomo- ‘elelgail/tksemlences. public are Cape Traverse meeting, a reprcdttc "Sh" Biiflln in the Patriot. lt con- rMIiifiE-nllng uponjtte ltdmlts mm - ‘he "Biliary srab" was premnturej" Ihetiil-I had been mooted in pre- v"?! jgeflsibpsbut without éucctm‘ for wept _of s unanimous vote, that m‘ 1MB occasion "it was supported by every member of the OppOBlt-I- méliilféra .oi the opposition ' were "m! ildléulvus boast thttt.—--"All- or ‘Kiln-TB lint‘? tili! general [avenue "Ether. liltblustiar tdintér" gown}. m?!"%_.-‘86 lflrfgal-js- lfiflflpdalihs qtist _~'. proud of, must; stagger under this " bombQtic Challenger ha; take? to the wliiids. Q net apeciallir. o issuingclial sages s .1 _ .~.'."- iiwl .\.. . ' lItily‘ Selections .. . 1 ' Tlfll MAN WHO WINS 4r.» ’ Tlieildhilh wins is an atriersflfl 11181! . rically answered the questions put to him. If, tthe may“, ,,,,.,,,,.,,,.,|¢,,|,, ,1“, ca e- gorically by any merchant in Charlottetown the re- sult would be to show him hopelessly bankrupt. It is the suppressed questions that the people ~-watit-- answered. Why was the external audit refused? Why did the government suppresses the‘ report ‘v- en by the Provincial Auditor before the Public. ‘e- counts Committee? Will the Patriot throw some t ~..v Not blessfdpvgph Many particular luc . Just steady and sarnestund full of pluck. . not guess"; . through. . ho‘ trles That it pays to know more one thing well, its? V ey could, _, . Arebbssstfby the tammhose wo made soon. who works; Who uses hisihsialdsuhis l" V“ Killian ' m-ikggig wiilltfilllll Rtliltli a ‘rat-superstar, ltltl-J-allwa _ up v" When’ askizd‘: question "he 410M He. knows, and answers ‘1ao" 0r u .. ‘Whensefs "k that the "It " v oath dos” He buckas down tili he's put it . i’ " Tlf ' tiil Tiieilesrtted: that the‘ Finds favor in his employer's eyes. mu Thntit dream pay ail he knows to tel . . 8o he works and waits till on; flue lay , - There a better job with bigger nien who shirktli whenever For the man who wins is the mail in‘ y. l!!!’ ' The nae who wins is tkemsswbs n-J-o p. tionichb (wry-it. Peoflelarslso-vo- cuitolhed to this that it is taking , - tbécbarscter oLa stereotyped lake: But this reputation ‘has uovyet; P“ - been earned to 1111i ‘new challenger ‘. e a . m. AI4CQ Saunders. 14.1.‘. a..- - 1 " H6 hisUvoluuteere-ito enter the imjfldiu bu; by“; just opt-tin! n‘ lists, but has not yet tun the gaunt ‘giiiptitent o; furs sent theta an up- let "either to victory’ot-_ detest, a1. proval. the order having 1mm tan- lhfllllh 'tl1e Pioneer, reipeidlpld byiflielled ‘when the mxwylla‘ W“ . ' - . - levi d. These 1111's, u- the city Nrrot. is cmwifll is loud a": Show," of [he Iurmylqs m, ly .ss if he had already carried the coming season, will be reiurn- 1111p)’. the trophies of victory. ‘t-d wizhin slim‘! time. so thella- - ‘ _ - dies of Chi rloltui-nvn. tutti mull- Now w accomodne _ ML 5am» too, are invited to call and are tltem within the next few- ‘llwl- a ‘on’ we ‘mum rum’ “M” a m‘ glance at Patton's witnlptv-i, is but tle hotshot the kind he suggested. an index of thc wonderful rungs We ‘also appreciate the cont-retry in the tnain store, whore numer- nflure m» M5 pmposall ma, it m. on; furs ‘in [till]! colors, all V-i-ihiiyfi. u ‘ ' -:u1 wont or u y on THE BROYDNCMIQGOVERN‘ are shown; among tht-nt mink, MNT -LEGl‘_8I.4ATI_0N.’-lt will be bggvgr, fox, lynx, opossum. liutl- fl sellltliie treslt iucotnparlson with. son seal, etc. come. in and sou titty the alrjIbubbles sent out by nttnyhvwins ‘Wrlnsvdlnr if"? ""11""; » tonce 11m lllS[)(‘(‘ll)llj n tit-t sum Liberal 975a“ as “minim mamfln‘ u ruvislting display of inututlful The ‘lnYerence is that he is -wllling “m, “.35 up“... surpass,“ “m; in l0 discuss‘ questions at. actual is-dace of the high prices of the iur suefupopqtheir ppm-g“, Mums on“. market. never so cheap as Patotfs " ffer. with-lam?’ and “about “Hem when - in small iurs the cape effect is “line-ray l° PM"! 1° m9 b!" "Yjery prominent, with beautiful iin—. "Yerhead. and thfi run lo cover be- lugs, wssois, etc, and in some in- ning“ qgney o; y’ ‘me ‘ d 1 stances finished off with tails. ‘ " fig n wan n "Natural rod fox 1 , .1 . priced at $40; Patch mokll-‘lmr 5°m°[il“§i._._ ‘this Whole $65, with muffs to match. Onc- ex- lbme chdracter whigli will be moat 511ml! appreciated. {Te proposes the ‘Maul!!! t0 l)? on our'“own plat- fornd.""'l'htt'ti“foo liighodl It is our chosen place for’ dlscttssion, and wulllrllbalways be found upon it. i-Inn. Mr. t-tl an argument so silly and child- muauonl mipéold blagk. typn‘ n-om“ lsipniq: into lilo sail)!‘ treasury nntl which flléré canbelno ttfter varia- "On vilieontmuucztnn. Ami Muss-tn. dera will be equally bound ivy his utterances. Whatever be may say he'wili have m abide by. sgpqr. oncc is ‘ha! an amount cqttivtllont lhisprecaution absolutely itidlspen the poop]? tam-d l° “mil”. “P n" sable. As the challenger opens the debate, let us suggest as n gtm-[w 1m: point, 11111-1 EXTERNAL AUI) l’I‘. them regardless '0! tnclltofl, Wbls makes an argument like that u d-lon. Mr. Leafs speech m the laughing stock with sensible men. tion of his speech in the “Qglsifltw ‘“***“9?9"9"*°*.*?$"° are with 1:11pm variations, it puh- t v - l It ...Thls.enlumn__ip_ open jor the ‘discussion Jsy _cerrs""itdf‘ ' ante of question's-ember set. . The Charlottetown ' Guardian deemnot nausea-- srlly. endorse t serials s okpnissed pendants. windmill? onc or two items worth‘ l lQl-TTlThls is not correct, only gin-ea “$89M QM“ the ‘we w" m m. _ “h. ~ s l ‘ . 11....‘ and ut. ster meats one“, V155,“, "i 51h». dllsflllllg Pliflilt “Kfilnfit It‘. Tlien he repented that i ' _‘__ Sir.-—Tho Patriot scouts to ho vetwfomi of adding insult to in- lury 1h its reference to the lndigtta- tion, tneetings that. are now com "N? lllres.‘collectedflir"iure ‘instead Continued on Page Five n .. t , .-_;. .._ i > < t qualities. -. s get your wire true to PRICES. mesh. ’gl§ti:iiig,;their orders in. .qu11. - . 4% o1 l y thy-ea A: Paton _ marked $58. There are also hosts of other small pl es- i’ The tut coats are big and r 38‘ to 401' jinches , in; coats, cut and fashioned with" qtpa find .1‘ 1-- iililtittatshhlii vial}. .1 was noted in a smart with‘ ideep collar sud ctl ver, priced at $276. A martnot of. ' the softpst shade, was ptade into-h o captivating 40 inch f nodt. tater satin and "priced it; 00m preltven- 4 tillldttllllt) styles 3'33 , A combination of mtnrmot-was irresistible at $2110.‘ it ls rlaubtful if there were ever; richer seal coats shown at, Petunia,“ (mo. especially nice coat, straight’; sable ‘collar, wit‘; untl large cuffs of p tagged $264.. A muskt-at coat of__ skins is shown-i > $300, and a seal and opossum co blnatlon, two of the rlcltest coma hlncdjitrs. sells at I425, while straight Poncy comes n: $2 y llotnentber those fur-t will only‘ be hero for- a little witllc, :0 cdll itccltplrtwrs are $25; t‘oon oTpTritTaiTehTronds.” m t. ltttan of ‘ Lou's prosutttatl intolli- ' gcncc who over would htlvt- expect- lsh? The rttoney got-s now as 1t al- whqt ‘wt, my. Wm; m.- hmde Tier jute-gs (llll into the general revenues, "iuuouuct Messrs-jV-Il. Prowse and- D. A. MacKlnnon propriety’ ors nfthevitny Fox Ranch. Norwood Road near lotlctown, P. E. parcd to scll a litttltdtl mini? bcr of foxes and ranch theta for parties if lht-y srrdeslre, < TheVimy- Fox llnnch was dchflsilrdg" with 1hr other . ntont-ys in ‘the same lmnk. Tho only tliiicr- to this is rcqttirc-d by statute to he: u first charge for interest on moth‘ jgncé {m}, 10m] Liberflusm makes P!’ borrotvrtl for road llllrll-TSGS. anti ~ b‘. ~+-.~.-»~e->..a .... “l its diversion. As the province is liable for its debts. and must pay -.>_4._ . . 1919 and has 39 pairs of to»... fllsllflcllvll Wilhmil‘ .l\, llifietvntre- nos-Q?- of which ttrefowned by. noit and the balance ‘boarders. The ranch has been under the management . Mr. Fred Andrews and h“ been one of the most suc- ,. ccssittl in the province . yvnr. The 219 pairs itnve to- ‘ “K97 llvlllll pups or nn nver». . ago oi’ 2 1-2 to the pair. This . \ we think will compare favor. _ "bl? with any ranch in the. province having strictly 191D .- 1- 1m». <-.< Th9. D0110? of the manage- ment .Wus to select the very best foxes that money could‘ b“? and feed the very best food._.Results have justified this course. The number of 3 pail-a can be ranched wilt he limited. to fifteen so par! ties who desire to take ad-~ Vflnlflke of this should speak by ‘ _ts‘ ' com ‘ ,_ O-O-OQOO-OOO-O-Q a ‘Brand English ‘Netting v " Will arrive in Charlottetown on Thursday, August ~5th and will be on sale Friday August 6th, \ . B. P. Brand Fox Wtreus made" by Rylands Ltd., of Wolverhampton, England, the largest makers of fox wire netting tn the world. It 1s absolutely the finest wire that money can buy. Every strand ts_ guaranteed perfect, true to size and mesh and coated with the finest English spelter which means long life owing to its nonrusting IMPORTANTJE 11 r P. B ' . - teedhtrue to size, thaidigltsb ‘say (fwdiinch ilss tgvugllfaiitlllli " i , {n68 Hoot: two andqithalf inch. One and a_ half inch mesh l5 ‘m? and 9319-115 11,391, 1'10}? One and five sights. This lean "- lmwrtaflf Point f0!‘ You m buying fox wire, Be sure you 0_ur_ prices on this brand of. fox wire are a the lowest posstbleand as our supply is being rapidly ‘bdflkéd W9 would advise ‘our customers to lose no time in ptfqwire orwrite ' ' " "straws.