h flltllltll, W. iliHlIii I seculari- Miter all flannel. J- B- Bill"!- ‘IL. , Mahmoud lines. ' -- Wm. Ilelstel, Clreter s. ital-uni Lieut- col- u. A. llentnel Representative-Q. 0. lorri- lew York Representative-Frank B. Northrup Chicago Repreeenslttvh-E. J. Power 41p ouumui nu s. null-ea "ne- the lellowll‘ ngenn m a pantheon Grlltel It. Iolilo a 00-. Grafton Strut- " i Queen Btreel. P. 1‘. link), Prince street. Grocery g, 3n F u‘; Vendor- ilul’. DUII- GIN! "N" ; ' W, U. Wllglt, Kent Street Welt. lull: Park sued. TUESDAY, NOV. 6, 1923 (In house) dell rel. “m” "n" mum w") “fiihfi-"SZ-u. ‘no out“ line-nu. VIce-Pnoldeuh J- Iulilnnel. B. s. o. Anecdote Illton D- K. Currie. ‘l. Tittle White. 126 Bl- Avenue. {You'll use less coal if you install a Fawcett Pipeless ‘ "Furnace, yet your home will be com- fortably warm all ‘winter. ~- "Ask the Fawcett man near you. He'll give you full particulars. TilerlfsaFuwcett furnace, stove, heater or range 3 for every med. Pipcless . A Furnaces SAMUEL KENNEDY Charlottetown’ s ‘New Books g . ,, , ,.,@e¢o+~4>o0-4-O-O+6+.**' DISTINGUiSHED VISITORS. l This afternoon sud evening our] citizens will have the privilege of; hearing Dr. W. C. Gordon (Rslilll Colinor) the distinguished Cans- disu author and clergyman, and also Dr. James Endicott. one of the leading preachers in Toronto. The meetings will be held in Zion church st 2 p.nl.. and in the Meth- odist church at 7.30 p.m., both gen- llt-nlen speaking st each meeting. The opportunity to hear men who have won world wide distinc- tion, as Dr. Gordon ass in the liter- ary world is unfortunately rare in the city. and "it is hoped that this opportunity will not be lost by uny- one who can possibly tske advan- - tags of it. Dr. Endicott, also, is a speaker of ability. and a double literary treat may be look- rare ’ Pd forward to. Dr. Gordon, it will be remember- ed, preached in St. James church last year, (luring his initial tour of Canada after his election as Moder- aim" of tho Presbyterian church: On that occasion the church was filled to capacity by n most appreci- ative audience. Those who hoard him then will be glad to hear him Just oil the Press "Emily of New Moon" by L. M. Montgomery. Price , $2.00 postpaid. "Trail of the Golden Horn" by H. A. Cosdy. Price $2.00 postpaid. oi‘ Pinc Connor. “The Gaspard‘ Croft" by Ralph Price $2.00 postpald. Tho three great books of the season. "A History of Prince Ed- ward lslsnd" by Judge War- burton. Price $5.00 net. A copy of this valuable History should be in every Library. Mail orders receive prompt attention. Carter & C0., Ltd. Books Stationery o+++o+o++0+o~>o++o+++vn-u Professional Cards Mlark R. McGuigan B. A. BARRISTER, BOLICITOR, ETC Money to Loan _ Cameron Block Charlottetown, P. E. Island Dr. c. c. Archibald Graduate of N. Y. Pootfirsduate "‘ Medical School and Hospital Practice limited to Eye, Ear, Nose Telephone 8504. , Oflioe Hours-J to 12 a. m. 1 to 5 lilZfiiohhld & McPhee e. " B. A. A. McDonald H. F. McPhee Barristers, Attorney, Etc. Money to Loin , , Riley Building Charlottetown - Palmer & Palmer , H. J. PALMER, K. C. ‘ Blrristor, Etc. Money to Loan Bank oi‘ Nove Scott: Building Charlottetown, P. E. I. l 8., S, __._Hessiian ietei‘, Col ltor, Notary Public Etc. MONEY TO LOAN Qpoqgue 9 l. lollnd DENTIST Offices Now Open 1480mm George 8t. Hormosley Building . llld Thrill! nf this opportunity to have their om“ Bu" Bgtlfelzgaru‘ 6”“. re-al estate placed on record for a A. . again, and it is hoped that our citi- zens generally, regardless of the pros and cons of the question under discussion, nanleiy Church Union, will avail themselves of the oppor- tunlty nf hearing him and his dis- tinguished colleague. ——-—<0->-——- A DESIRABLE ENTERPRISE itwhcre-in this issue announces the ment by the Eastern action of this company in opening a long felt want in Charlottetown and Prince Edward Island in gen- oral. it will mean that people hav- ing property to sell or ront may put it into their hands where full be kept on file particulars will and also advertised if desired. It naturally will be the first place oi rail of any person wishing to buy or rcnt property as they can read- ily ascertain from the company's listings if a property such as they require is for sale. in other words it will be in thenaiurs of a clear- ing centre for real estate. _ No doubt parties having properties to dispose of either, residential farm. will readily take advantage 0|‘ the information of intending pur- (rhasers. $0 SUDDEN! _. The appointmzn: of Mr. A. K. hie-Lean, K.C., M.P., of Halifax, to the presidency of the Exchequer Court, which, like Mzlhomefs cof- iln. been hanging between heaven and earth for mnny months. came at lust with startling sudden- Wlth equal suddenness the constituency was declared vacant and the election set for Dec. 5th. Evidently tho King Government did not tbibk it wise to give too much time to electioneering in Halifax. A split has recently developed in the Liberal ranks; Conservatives have been threatening to contest the seat and altogether the situa- tion was beginning to- look serious for federal Liberalism. The machine thought it best to strike quickly and it struck. The Liberals, of course, knew it was coming; they has H988. all ,. i-lougt-O tovi: 2 to s v ,2 ;.’.,. ‘l us well organized: provincislly end An advertisement appearing else iopening of a Real Estate Depart- Securities Company Limited whnsc Charlot- tetown office is under the manage- ment of Mr. W. H. V. Dunbar. The (n! a real estate department will fill snd without it there Cln be no real" tile Conservatives unprepared. This is no excuse for the Conservatives; they also knew it was cumin! Home time and they might have known that it would come when it suited the Kins Government. Whether there shell be a contest or not is yet to be disclosed. but there is every reason to believe that the Halifax seat could have been won by -llsd they made their preparations in time. The chances sre now 888mm 1119m- lt is well known that the Mackenzie King Government has been dis- credited not only in Halifax but throughout the dominion. The win- ning of a single however. while u blow to the Government is usually regarded by the Opposi- tion as of little value. and it is dif- the Conservatives ‘seat. dcult to arouse sufficient enthusi- asm among the rank and file to put up alight. Whatever the Halifax Conservatives may do in the pre- sent circumstances it is quite cer tain that, had time been given. they would have put up a candidate and very probably have elected him. ‘mm- STRUGGLE. wisdom when we ilnd that more of Qovcnty-Iiine millionaires com. mittod suicide within the ‘plot year, according to the public press, a hr larger proportion than in any other class. The record is surely on im- pressive one. for never before in the world's history were so many persons desirioue of and earnestly striving to become possessed of great wealth. A first thou-gm ‘gug. nested by the ‘alarming record l3 that millionaires are not happier than poorer people and are appar- ently less happy, else why should they thus choose to be "swiftly hurled anywhere. anywhere out of the world?" Give me neither pover- ty nor niches was the pstriachs prayer, and we get s glimpse of its the very rich than even of the very poor are driven tJo suicide. Bystander in the Toronto Globe writes Interestingly on various upon the some public curiosity ov- er the name Megan, which is only one of the distinctions of the daughter of Lloyd George who has accompanied him in his American tour. There is a strangeness and individuality about the name, the "e" in which is pronounced as the same letter in "egg." We are fur- ther told that Megan when trans» iated means "sweet song" and is a typical Welsh name. Stanley Baldwin, the British Premier, is an able speaker, but not an orator. In a recent speech he rather fiouted the men of meta- phors and rhetoric. quoting Froude’s epigram, thst "oratory is the harlot of the arts." and went on to intimate that sometimes ora- tors may become a source oi‘ pub- lic danger from their power to sway men Iby bociouding their judgment and misleading them. This is true enough in the main, but men in high places have need to be mindful of the truths they "Between the struggle and the crown," said a distinguished writer, we take it, would forego the pleas- lure of wearing the crown of vic- ltory once won and go back to the struggle again. Yet the pleasure “I would choose the struggle." Fcuql choose to speak. The orators, those iwho think they areiorators and sre not, and the would-be orators, tak- ,en together, constitute a numerous Iclass and in part an influential one, Way v l it arrives there. er and about to attack h yin? arues about to be attacked for s similar, or even different reason. changed bull at your beels- topico, In a recent. issue he remarks y DO YOU DREAM MUCHT. Do you dream that Y0“ "9 i“ the midst of an exciting (infill?- The train is rnshinS "Ma-I'd m“ crossing and Y0" l!" “m5 w gttempl. to get in your car before or, are you in a street encount- someone insulted vw- '-’ Perhaps Or. it is an open field with en Maybe it is none of the above, but you are in front of an audien- ce of a thousand or even one and ou are pouring forth your words from tho very depths of your being. Or, you may be the audience and you have been stirred as never before in your life. You wake up and find-what’!- That your heart is pounding. your forehead is wet with Del‘- gplfflflon, and you are trembling like a leaf in the wind. Now what about it7. I'm not going to go into a dis- cussion of the theory of dreams. Some of the bust nerve specialists have written volumes upon tho significance of dreams. Some of their ideas seem reas- onable enough. but for the most part, the medical profession is still waiting to be shown. But from the standpoint yours, what do dreams meanf’. Simply that ii your brain going to be actively engaged. that your ontiro body will not got tho relaxation necessary to health. l know that these dreams uiko hut a short time as ‘minutes go. hut lhc effect is thcrc just the iiilllli‘. {-0 ifynu find that you seem to novd more sleep than other nlelnh- ors of the family, take an account of tho number and cxtontof your lirl-anlu. . 'l‘l'y and. prevent thcnl. Iio\\".’. liy not outing or drinking before you r-z-tire. 13y trying to llc on of E2‘ Empire Exhibition Erroncoul ‘ideas of Overseas Life Bringing the Dominion to Great Britain by J. Oiled Smith, Sup- crintendcnt of Emigration for ‘Canada There is probably no more urg- cnt Empire question today than the extent to which the surplus population of Great Britain can be absorbed in the sister nations ov- erseas, whose development is re- tarded by a lack of suitable sett- lers. The Canadian Department of Emigration and Colonization is primarily concerned with placing before the people of Great Britain the advantages of Canada from an- agricultural lutereets of those who nrs concern- ed with furnishing the Dominion with the requisite population to fulfil its great destiny are not con- fined to any special class of work- er. With every fresh acre that is being put under the plough is be- ing created a further need for those who minister to the wants of those engaged in agriculture, the artisan and the mun of com- iTIQTCB. it has long been recognised, how- ever, that if the country s to pro- ceed on lines on natural develop ment, the latter must be the com- plement of the former. So. though the call for those who are willinr; to make new homes for themselves standpoint, but the rats [ Fire ' carries no terrors - ' l - for the man who ’ " l8 adequately insured, _ v Your order for Fire, Life, or ‘Marine, lyiqurqn" will receive prompt at‘ " when pllcozd with i &; Co. Hyhdman f-Ltd. The Oldest Ind Largest Insurance Agency lh P. 5. |,_ i Phones Insurancc—67 and 333 Bond Dcpt.—1o01 68. Queen Street Charlottetown FIRE , FIRE Overseas is mainly directed to those who are ready and efficient to ta-ks up agricultural pursuits, it should be remembered that Can- ada is becoming a gl-eat lllfllllllnli- turing country and ehc is anxiou-i that her industrial machine, as fur as possible, should be supplement- ed by the citizens of Great Britain, l- rather than of uuy other part o- BOSTON GOLFER __\_._.__ on the 'i‘i5 "ard fift MAKES NEW RECQRD club's coursing. .-\t'Cill‘llilllllguifl tohfetgl‘? i- cords two 330 yard holes in oni- BOSTON, Nov. 5--\Vhat its b?- have liven made, one by A. C. liadli’ Hover? to he a now world's record at Hcnicy-onlfhzlnles ill 1912, and was ostahiisdlcd yosgtclkiayv when mic by it. ll. ‘Bullion, -a1 Morton (forgo Auihacil, prolcslsiolllll at tho Park, England, in l920_ Winthrop Golf Club, holcd in one the world. Some idea of the growth of man- ufacturing in Canada can he gain- cd from tho fact that Wiitfilifliil in 1915 tilore were 21.306 concerns. enlpioyiug 497,170 persons and turning out products to the gross value of $1,407,137,140, ill 1911i there were 38.344 establishments enlpifiyillg 682,431 persons, and pro- ducing goods to the gross value of $li,52(l,'l'3l,5SiI. ill 1921 the total number of im- migrants (uttering Canada illllflllll- ed to l-illAiiof whom 74.262 came from tho British isles, 48,059 from the U. S. A., and 26, from the Continent. and other parts. Of thcso arrivals. without taking info (‘Oil- silioraliiou {ho wmuvn and children accompanying them, 245,726 tonk up farm work, 12,081 i)l‘.i"=llll(* general Piiil?!‘ side instead of on the lizaclc. lly rising when you wake in lilo lmlrml-yr, oven if it he a hull’ llnur i‘"li‘iii‘l' than your usual hour. whom it may not be desirable to offend by to _plain speaking. Speech may be impressive without RPillClililOl‘ a dreamlvss slot‘ a restful sloop. A (lroaulful sloop often talc-vs a p is of struggle, the glory of effort, oven ibeillg ‘Ymale- bl"- lhem i9 milfeimt out of ynu‘ of effort with failure. is immeasur- luhle. This glory, however, is only for the strong. it. is the weakling who strives to attain the crown by easy methods, by s-hort cuts. Noth- ing worth while hds ever been at- tained without struggle, without supreme effort, without an inter- lningling of failures and successes. The weak man balks at his failure; the stronwg man takes fresh cour- age and goes at it again determined to win out. The engineer plans his work with exceeding cure, but something goes wrong and the structure collapses. Does he quit? Not he! The Quebec Bridge coi- lspscd twice during the course of construction. but the bridge now stands a monument to the skill and determination of its designers. The error which caused the collapse and the loss of life was only sn inci- deni. The vision of the completed structure was a reality and a pos- sibility, and the designers knew it and persisted until they had com- pleted the task. The modern world has regret- tably fallen into short cuts, into the 911916!‘ Ways, into get-rich-qulck methods. We are loath to choose the hard rough way when n snlooih way may be taken with a little Shlfkillg 0i’ duly- Wealth and suc- cess nre a worthy gosl but the con- slant grind and the up-hill climb are. to the wenkling. a hindrance. Yet experience has taught us that the smooth [up pitfalls and that the only safe my to the top of the mountain is to climb. Neither wealth nor success is to he attained by boot-legging or way is of shirking of duty. "He who never ate his bread in tears." said Goethe. "knows ye not. ye heavenly powers!" The pleasure of victory is en- hanced by the difficulty of at- taining it. This is realized by the “millions who humble. nameless, the hard rough pathway trod.” Let us not set all our hopes for pleas ure on the attainment. but flnd it in every step of the upward climb with its failures as well ss its suc- cesses. Struggie is Nature's wsy federally,’ and ~ they - iuvo vfillllltl IIICCHII- iington. men of the Empire and of Canada. life of I writer all be deduced from the other dsy in London when two newly discovered lpoges of the sun posed writing of Shakespeare were submitted to Raphael Schermsn, s Viennese graphologist of greet em- inence, in the presence of English end American newspaper men. Bohonhpn; did not new snyflphl: Ithnn a possibility of an impressivoi ispeaker who is not an orator be-l ing a little envious of another who,‘ .15. There may yet the a rejninderi [from Lloyd George. or from some |oth'er of the eloquent or grandilo- |quent ones. I How much, or how little truth is there In the which was published in Ijlntrau- sigennt of Paris on October 31st. purporting to come from a special correspondent of that paper? "The Welsh trickster got a straight thump in the face before landing at Quebec. The French population of Quebec forbade Lloyd George ‘from landing there as he had intended. for the students of the old Laval University and the workmen declared that they would smash the fa/ce of the insulter of France it‘ he ventured to set foot in Quebec. George then moved dis- creetly to New York, where the British greeted him with rotten eggs, and afterwards to Montreal, where Premier Taschereau flatly refused either to receive or meet him. George, enraged invented an illness lo alt short the festivities." Bonar Law is to find his last re. pose in Westminster Abbey. .\ thousand leagues of stormy sea and a great altitude of well earned famo divide his humble homo in u Presbyterian mans-e on the Richi- bucto River from the Premiership of a mighty Empire in the greatest city oi‘ ‘the world. But. undcr our free institutions the road is still open to any who have the requisite talents, the character, the fortitude and endurance to climb the slip- pery steep. it may be said of Bonsr Law that among the statesmen of our time he was one “of sm- plest influence cs he was also one of “our greatest yet with least pre- tence and clearest of ambitious crime," as Tennyson wrote of Wel- He has left a ‘noble and conspicuous example ‘to the states- 8 Csn the character, appearance and his hsndwnltlngi A test was made l, in umq;h_ u ma, about no» hall tlltoghtlley exchanged ideal. subjolncd dcspatch, ' When with lr-ajcsty and power 1115's And his hr‘ ilallcy’ and light '."-l‘ his vel -' inst rim liisappuurs, lily cyts fill with milliiOllili tears, And the glnmorof evening And a powor that's divine To extol as a king with his crown; 0f the sky as the sun's For o'er others his vigil he's keep. For he shines on them while The sky and the world wm, And be thankful for h“ m "Film-E he was who had s big forehead, ova-l face and eyes like an eagles; that he was a man of deep feeling; that he hsd been happy as s boymnd in good circumstances, but hsd been nnsible to finish Ms education; that he ‘had come from s small town to o big city; that he had the” bu", an actor and a playwright and that he wrote from- inspiration rather than for money, He added that the writer was well educated. "by edu- cation of [the subconscious": that he was o good talker and that he had oontsot with soother writer __-_40>_-___ OO'Q§-§'O4O-O-O9 Daily I Selections i FOR Guardian Readers THE SUN GOES DOWN I love to see him rise in the clear nlorniug sky, imbued. But I do iovc him best When he sinks in the \\'(-.-r ll‘ i.‘ subdued. l watch him ill rapture. Bach goidzu gleam tupiurc, Km niom: nil the hi'l. As I sinful and (lrcazn still Tilcrcfs a WiiiIlOilS of pie-Irv; As all uartlv y sounds cons.- en- foilis me; The beautiful shadows Reflect on the meadows then controls mo. I hero sing his praise in s poor humble way i am filled with delight Al. the beautiful sight ‘ going down. He has not gonc in rest, Tlwflilh he hides in the West, lug, in lands fur. far awuy It is bright sunny day _ we are sleeping. And again in the morn. in the East he'll adorn splendor. his “May my heart be contrite if I'm safe through the night the ——Phoebc Hendry, Sender. _____-_-_-_.-___—-__i__ inspecting, lbut aid the writer was a dead man laborers, 15.451 wore lllk‘f'illlllli‘.i"i_ iikliii l-iork-s, traders, otln. and 2.018 'miucr¢<. it. will thus ho soon that Canada offers a wide fivld to iilol-‘ci iflliifll‘ than iif-ll‘it‘llillil'i.<l.<. 0t‘ wo-i ‘mun, 10,442 funk up iionloslitr \\'0ri\' ‘and for these thcre is always a] grout. demand. l llvuilios sucking nultion rcgarlling Zil-Zl‘l('iliiilf‘i? and industry, would-ho settlers, parli- z-ularLv those with fanniiirw, arc naturally llll(‘l'\‘l-ili?ii in conditions 10f lifo generally in the Dunlilliuil. [and it. is in mgurli in this limiter lilai one froqiltalltfv meets with lnis- ctniccplinus. Many are undcr thc inlpression, for instance. that thorlnl will be an l|]lil02l\'2li of social and family liie,t.hut all kinds of strangl- foods will be on the table, and that such (lualities as p0i‘SE\’0i‘illlt'(> and solid efficiency are a discount among-st the go-ullcud Canadians. That. is why Canada, at the forth- volning British Enlpire Exilihltion. is to have a display, enlbracing all features of her national develop moat, such as has never before been garnered together on nno 0c- casion. All her national rrsourccs mineral and vegetable. ilor arts, her crafts, and her industries-Jo fact everything that goes in make up her social and inlatcrilll llfv\.—— will be displayed within the pavi- lions she is (zreatillg at Wombley. , The lfalnit-hearted woman ‘wivo foul-ed domestic drudgery on tho prairie will find that (Iltnuda is as fur as. if not. further advallcv-i than, ‘any other country in the science of labor-saving machiucry for the home; tilat. the lack of hu- man help in compensated by nlct-h silica] contrivauve; that she would not he trailed upon to spend lhc rest of her days iu a lwo-roomcd shack, but that. genius for homo- romfori took a foremost. place in Canada's social scheme. in n word, it is hopml, to set down al Wcmhley, a concentration of Can- ada's. zicllieve-lnont ill the past and a ciwsluiisation of her possibiliiicu ill the future. u panorama. mic might. say, of her national life. ll. is expected that the iirllinll lCmpiru Exhibition will he the mag» not (irswlng large nllnlhers oi’ (‘an- ndiau visitors across the Atlantic, not. only those tourists who are in tho habit of making practically annual visits, but those who con- template making a rare visit to their friends and relatives in the Old Countrwor those perhaps who novel‘ yet have sot eyes on Eur- ope. Tlicso people will ho mis- slonnns ill the truest sense of thl‘ word. At tho "Gathering of the Clans" at Wem-hley and elsewhere amongst their friends in ‘the Old Country, there will be that. person- ni and intimate discussion of life and conditions across the Atlantic which should prove n highly sst- isfactory compliment to the Exhib- ition we are llouslhg. definite flliifor-l L \\\\"\\\‘\\1, fiiunliS, / gKi il-N EY-g n"! uhdf-Tmrfi l<v11'<r3l"1",._1? [HnilhTi '3" if looe-srlglil. Stands . the Supreme Test of all Tests-the Test of Time The , Mendelssohn Piano Gives Lasting Satisfaction liilicrkilros, Charlottetown, P. E. I. Read this proof: Dear Slrs: iln reply to your inquiries regardin Mendelssohn Piano, ~l may say ihutlho nllil l Iiurcllascd from your firm some years as" has proved u most satisfactory instrument both in toneand durability. I can cheerful- ly recommend the Mendelssohn lo anyfll"! desiring a piano that will give lasting satis- faction. w r- lilo Ilcspcctfully, Mrs. W. B. iilills, Syracuse, N. Y- (Fornlcrly Summersitlo, I’. E. l.) hiilivl‘ Bros. Charlottetown. and this: Gentlemen: You might. hc interested in tho [R91 m"; 1 have owlcd a Mendelssohn Piano iolrmlv years, and it has given us entire Si! lion. Yours respectfully. Norman Nicholson. stanloy Bridge. P- E: I‘ Mr. J. H. Bell, Great George 9W9" Cilorlotlotown. says: "We hsvs used s Menddlsnohn Plallfl ‘l’; our homo for the past. twelve YMW- “M qt i,“ given the best of satisfaction. .1‘ i" 1"‘ ifs good as the day WB 8°! W" ‘The Mendelssohn is Sold in Prince Edward Island exclusively b)’ Miller Bros Charlottetown and this: