.w§,$., uamasszzi‘... l < .. .~‘.....L dsfbflflahcuc-Qawu- o PAGE FOUR. ‘ mi llllllliillllililiilll illlliIllllAN i Blurbs I) It President l. R. Burnett ldllol u! Publisher- ” '- n‘ n. u. ohm. unem- m»; _._______ zoned) In advance ‘Inning Dally (billed IUI) “.Xl"eI"J1QlI..(I¢ h u t L ll Lfl Ill In: v-uallal) In advance ll - ‘FRIDAY. JULY 1st twink Dominion Day and a statutory holiday the Morning Guardian will not be issued on Saturday. July 2nd. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 1921 of tho move MONUMENT. mont being representative —»— ‘whole province, a definite Nearly three years ‘have clapscd would ‘be ‘nude by the government since tin- iwrltfs greatest war end. m; an mmal step‘ The whole pm“ ed; more than three years since “we Wm no (‘OHM snbscrme gene,“ wmc hundreds of thc sons of thlspuufily w a reasonable proposmnn SOLDIERS‘ vrovince “Ontrbbuwd wuh we luy-ihul i»! is necessary first of all that lng down of their lives to the vic- the ‘proposition be a dethnle out tory which made» the world breathe The government Show‘! get m more freely and in ‘which we, with! ‘Qiwlhwilhllha wmmxuecaunlco or the rest of thc civilized world, re- joiced. And so far wc have made our |ohe committce should get in touch - . alt onc and no move citlver to empress “uh [he government e appreciation of the victory to which i . we contributed of our best blood _ 9°“ " nor to honour the memory of those] U19 "mount w)“, fen the government out of fthe revenue gel‘. that war under whose shadow lmutuully agrcc on the approximate l the proposed monument. to be contributed by ‘We are beginning to for- of the province and then solicit we crouched for five long years", “°""“’“'-|°“S "m" we we are beginning to forget even the P901119‘ will‘ Such a prop°sm°nr w.» definite intelligible, worthy of the province ‘and oi‘ the cvcnt and sac rifices to be commemorated, the voluntary names of those horocs whom promised never tn forgot. With the exception of a fcw tab- Onmnpm, Bream committee will be in a position to lay their plans ‘before thc people and solicit the aid which the great majority of our people are 01'9- lets and local m by grateful communitics, nothing has been done by us as a province Io commemorate tho rvcnt or i0 show our respect to our dcad. lllifvd ~90 alve- Some ‘confusion, ‘possibly. This is not to c/ur credit '15 a province and, as a provincc, we; Ou every hand and from cvcry quar- tcr criticism is heard regarding the unsccmly delay, regarding our p11‘)- llc aipathy’, regarding Our short memories and our want of apprc»! elation of the things that rcully matter, ‘tho things that belong to are beginning to realize it.‘ the future of our province and the generations who arc to follow. Whvll. is holding the nwmorial proposition up? Shortly after the Conclusion of the war, before the tears of mingled rejoicing and sor- rovvv had dried. n fitting mculorlal was on every lip and in every heart. A committee was appointed to carry out lthe memorial idca and ‘all wwaltod a move on the part of the committee but no move has been made. Wily? Tho consent-ms of opinion through- out the province is that the monu- Current Comment Q___. After inviting, or rather uttemp- or manufacture of liquor." ting to iconscrlpt the Prohibition Commission, and the modical frau- ernity, as sultalble scape-goats for the follies and iniquitlcs oi’ the Bell ‘Government, the Patriot next irios to rope in the laitc ifonserv- ativo Government in its ‘fox-like efforbs to scrccn the defaulting ag- gregation. When Premier ArscnauW. and his friends were in povwcr they not only most willingly | zissirmcd responsibility for all their acts. but they also left a rccortl of which they were not ashamPd and which all the slandcrings and mis- representations of their opponents has ilalled m blacken, even to the most trifling degree. The Patriot, and the horde behind it. want even to the extremes oi‘ indecency in false creations, and charged them with deeds and intentions every one of which has since been provcn to the hilt to be as false as the conrpact that propogated them. But now the llcll Government are in puwer and must assume rcsponi sibilily for what they do. 0R l-‘All. T0 D0. Thny can no longer lay the failings of government ut Conserv- ative doors. and the efforts of their twisty organ to do so will only be received by the people with their just measure of acorn nnd con- tempt. lt is true of the Conservative Governments that they passed the amended Prohibition Act and creat- ed the Commission. These are lmimgatthe things to ithelr credit. BM UN! ‘Oil-bloom of ‘their pride. ln the Act an passed by them, ‘Section N reads,-"'f“he penalties, forfeit- urns and fines in money recovered under this Act shall be paid no the Secretary of the Board of CommisH aiouara, who shall forthwith rle- posit the some lN THE NAME 0F‘ i in come chin-tend i’ been caused by an ill-advised prop- 'ositlon In make the memorial fca- ture a secondary consideration thc primary idea to be utilitarian, a‘ library, government ofllces etc. The consensus ‘of opinion. ns-ctllcss to] say. is that tho memorial what- ever form it may take, must be 'puhely and exclusively memorial and non-utilitarian. No public sub- scriptions need be, expected from’ the outlyiw; sections of the prov-j lnce either ‘to provide a library for Charlottetown or to make room for government offices. i The province is ‘becoming im-. patient over the unseemly dclay in! this matter and we would rcspscb‘ fully suggest that the committee-l and the government get ‘iogr-tlier at oncc and agree on a dcflnlte pro: position take the peofle into their confidence and launch the firoposl-i tion. They established a system THE REVE- NUE FROM WHICH WAS PRE: SCRUBED BY LAW TO THE FUR‘ POSES OF THE ACT, EXCLUS- IVELY. It was fixed by their statute that is should not be a gov- crnmellt money man-king -scheme to help our governments financial cxploitations and salary indemnity grabs. And it remained for 1hr: Bell combination to violate this wholesome -princlpla and to inject the Fagin profit absorbing iniquity 1W0 the business. The Patriot can- not dum-p this crime off on Con- servatlve shoulders. Their is another imposition upon the pllhlk‘. which has not yet been properly exposed. ln all departv meats of government a report is furnished annually to the Lit-uten- anlt Governor for ‘the information of the people. ‘Public Works, Ed- ucation, Agriculture, Auditor and Asylum Commissioners, all in the custom of the past were distributed for the people's information. Why the-n is this most important of all THE REPORT 0F THE PROlllBl- (‘NON COMMISSION. impressed? Tho commissioners having made their report their mouths are closed as to its contents, until such time as the Government gives them lpubiiclty. The Patriot, seemingly .‘iBY THE COURTESYDP" some one, has govt possession of such fractions of that report, to ull ap- pearances. as might ihe useful in "framing up" an article in alltemp- ted defense. Then with this frac- tional information. dished out tn mislead, why is it that the whole story and the whole ltruih. as dc- tailod ‘lnthat report, is not placed before the people for their consid- eration’! Whaib ara lthey afrnid of, and lwhat. have they got (to hide’! We have confidence that this report with the imprimatur o! the nix clergyman composing the Commis- ifltrcad for big profits. has driven a iaru-l-Qnuuvtn uuswl-aaw-awaaau-n wmvnraamavluenlliv w Li! rur rnlllc roam This column lo open for tho " ' correspond onu of quu Iona of Inton- ut. Tho Oharlmteiiown Guardian does not nonfict- nrlly onloru "the opinions expressed by Ito corru- pendants. ‘ RAILWAY ECONOMIES 'Skr,—-Mr. John McLeod in his letter t0 you in today's issue ruakes statements which I cannot alloivi to puss wllhout correction. He says: "Both Mr. Pilquot and myself were appointed officers of the ship in November 1015, and that Capt. MoKiunon joined hcr on 17th December 1915, just five days after she had been taken ovcr by the Department of Marine." He Silyil also that "_lnsiread of being 6 (lays his senior in the railway service 1 am 145 days" The railway files show where we all joined tho railway service to- gether on May l. 1016. lf l joined the ship -in December 17th as Mr. McLeod says and he joined in Nov- ember previious, where (foes Mr. McLeod got his difference of 145 days? l did not cuter newspaper con- trovcrsy to injurc any of my ship mates hut mcrely to draw publicl attention to a wrong which l consider has been unjustifiably im-i posed upon me, and by an inter- pretation of lvhztt is considered" seniority out of all reason and fairness to one who has served continuously in the car ferry ser- vice slur.) hcr first run in the Charlottetown-Pinion route, with the exception of two seasons was master of the Scotia also in‘ the railway service. l never applied for lllf} position, it was offered ma and accepted by me as promotion from the First officarship of the Brant to that nf the car ferry. Had .l been left where I was l would have been in; “"5 due course mlwter of the boat tog authorities, why the ma“, should day. I am. Sir, etc. J N. McKlNNONy i. never employs wlthoilt putting its foot into it. It ‘proclaims that in May 1920. ‘the carl-y (lays of llcll Government manipulation. there was about 4000 prescriptions is- sued by Doctors as against about 3.000 in the same month of the lol- lnwlug your. This only proves thc Guardian's cuntcrltion that the ad- vanced high prices of liquors, the outcome of tho Government's large portion of the business into‘ the hands of the booticggers, who] because of those trltradtive returns are increasing in number and more pushingly progressive in making illicit sales. Every body knows that both ihotloggi-rs and drunken- ness are on the increase, and only a fo-ol would (inmmencc to argue that this in not due -to ‘those spec- ial cncouragements held out to them in those princely profits toge- ther with leniency, if not absolute immuni-ty, from ‘punishment. The Patrlqt seeks to wash its hand clean of the Act lbecause it was Pas- sed by the (lonseuvatlve Govern- ment, but that trick won't curry. it is their duty, AND l’l' WAS‘ THEIR PROMISE, not only tohiore vigorously enforce but to make the act more perfect in suppress- ing the traffic. and for having shorn it of its effectiveness, and made it nf non-effect. they must stand ‘under the sentencc of con~ demnaatfion of the Summcrside Grand Jury.‘ "l shall go ‘back to my vork k now lnr: more than l ever kmw befdtre. said a surgeon who WLI hlmsqlf recovering from a very crious opi- eration. "l know now what it Brains Work Best does not Work with thesame eaao ‘cholo-glsts ‘rm: cnilgnorrrnrgjvu GUARlDIAN Inigo Morning ‘When does ono's Ibrnin. lf 8113b. function most smoothly? That it at all hours and n all conditions is a fact of everyday einperiencc. But until a group of British psy-' reported on, the ferw people, we suppose on the matter, few people, we suppose, believed that the ‘brain did not op- crate as strongly at one o'clock in the morning. According to these eminent psychologists, here is the; average efficiency of the brain at different hours of the day: Hour Efficiency, s . .- 100.0‘ 9.. . 104.3 10.. - . 106.6 1t . 105.6 1 . . 98.7 2 . . 100.6 3 . . 105.1 3 .. . 105.1 4 .. _ 104.2 5 . . 100.4 ‘The figurcs are not wholly con- vincing ‘For ono thing. the drop between clcven o'clock and one o'clock is ltoo great. lt is almost as great as the difference between talent and mcdiorlty at all hours of hours of the day and night. The Brain Warm: Up. The hours are arbitrary. Thc one o'clock decline is no doubt based on the assumption that a man has had :3 heavy hmch at noon. But there are millions of people who do not eat at noon. Moreover. if the meal ls wisely chosen there is no reason. according to some not ‘be stimulated by the food. We presume, too, that the ten o'clock maxlmum is arrived at by taking it for granted that people rise at seven. Some of them do not. Some rise ibefore seven, and others zlftenward. The idea, we take it, is that three hours nftcr a man has cleared his head nf the fumes of sleep his tbrnln is working at its best. l't has not cerebrated suffi- cently to become fatigued. On the other hand. it. has had plenty of time to warm up. One profes- sor says with regard to the daily zictivityhf the worker that "pro- cesses essentially motor are facili- tated and quickcned hy continual work; processes involving co-or- dination are first accelerated and then retarded again; processes cs- sentially mental in character show fairly uniform loss of offlcency amounting to from l0 per cent to 15 lpf)!‘ cent ‘by the end of the day." ln this category textile processes are overlooked. Overflating is Bad. ‘Overeating ls bad fnr tho brain at any time, since its draws tho blood from nhe bend and produces slugglshnoss. When thn blood flows at medium pressure through the nerve centres the ‘brain acts most rapidly and decisively. ‘But. the peaks of power are reached as a. result of habit. We ‘presume that few lbrains ever reached high- er peaks than those of Bryon, Col- eridge, DeQuincey. Poe, Schiller. Lamb, Johnson, Hardy and Sher- idan. They were all nightworkers. Keats‘ lines on Chapman's Homer were written between midnight and dawn. Charles Lamb wrote: "No true poem ever owed its birth to the sun's ‘light. The mild internal light that reveals the fine shapings of poetry, like fires Milton's in sunshine. ‘Morning means to he down when life does n‘t seem worth much. arid how it feels to have the other {allow try- imz to help me out." So deep in weakness and pain had he been, that he would scarce- ly have imade the effort to rally. but for the love and lrlgndghlp which were trying to lift him up ngliln. For their sakes he attem- pted that for which he ‘would havc had no strength a/lnne. We seldom realize how much of courage. our ("$7105 Rive us. or how many of our victories and successes arc born of love. Bowman gqmeone cares for us, ‘believes in us. needs us. we will not yield in the strug- BIB. ' Our heart is braw- and our arm strog for the sakc of another, but how 510w we are to iilfll this truth around and ‘use ii m helm others? No great and noble efforts to reach the highest mount Wlil ever shine an ln-ighuy a. mo“ iii-tile things min Mum. A smile we flash at numeonqwho ‘may not know the way to joy Ii gift. a cheery letter fr; mm. 1on9 far-off soldier boy, All in all‘, a chance to help member chap who necq a mg Ha may have ‘lost his courage, can't ~./' .... , we help him him the drift! ' er." . dhBualnan Brain! 01-inch. Here until that time. _-4 hich are nowadays called con ‘on o'clock. Rlsls ‘were then most. of the done in the rworld literally corrsc ' "ifllilili-fii-llfi .. '11!“ i" W". ‘ " ' , ' u appeal! lirounu to, i Others View other, ider sis expected to bold incision l‘ ‘j ‘who. v A _ Pom“, hound, want notations to inch: e \ putting sauna ‘back and cancelling ‘ . lf removed, successful bld- l," i‘? -» " ‘x h , q ‘l4: . irthi iby comparison; for Mr. Kipling haslwihioh must be "gm, find and duh supernatural. in "The Mark of the Boast" he hasproduced beyond ca» vil the bent thing m its kind in literature; cven Muupassant pales (‘London Titnas) -—Aircmi"t regulre s. framework reverted, wfb incredible power, ito abia M present '_ lhevnlo“ we. ‘he mm‘ pflmmvm ‘he deepwhcessful material is an alloy of alu- “mmd “r a“ hum!‘ hmrors‘ The ‘minum, but all metals, in different story in ‘this ca-se is written. not durum are subject m, a denim‘, in iiwo worlds, but in elglrulsth? five {Hwlcess known as ulatiguelh. natural and the supernatura, tum“! believed 4w be a nlolecular EM‘ “ml u‘; wdelstr m“ “:dh“nl1$':change due to vibraltion. The Ger- "L "ml m“ Y “n” a“ ea ' mans have come to the conclusion for the protagonist is a. Hindu that the alloy may Gummy has a "flesh "wgicmn- an“ 1°99" who shorter ilife than the vegetable fa- "'“n5f‘"'m5 ‘by lmlhsome WW" ‘an ‘brie with which it is covered. Lab- Englishman in to a wobf. The m r- oratory research mm metamc ..m_ ucle is recounted in ‘Mir. Kinllngkalttgue». and improvements o! den," very best style. itself a chef-dlouvre much lessen vibramm must go UNION‘ BANK 0F A - Charlottetown ‘Branch! i’ A Th‘ 6'15"" “Horror story", open for about 6 days. a5 l eiillsct v “ilk, u l Yal Review) i" b“ 111 d" 11ml“ f" ‘m “W” butkingof l 4 D I u y‘ e lion for gall-stones at that time; _ bulldgw g“ fingndql ___M|r_ Rdnlyard Kipling has and wamt 1o sa/ve the extra 00a o '. . _ V . ‘, ‘_ - , been surpassed in every domain of cutting." G0! the _ _ _ literary iuitivlty save one: the __._ ha." w“ , a "horror" story dealing with the‘ ' wmpoundd "uh-n" m ‘ Metallic "Fatigue." amount to $841.02. 1.12. A‘ A’ on the domestic hearth, goes out Hymn in Paradise,‘ we would hold a wager, was penned at midnight, and Taylor's rich description of a sunrise smells decidedly of a tap- ‘ As regards the operation of bull- n ens brains in the Old Country not m iuch ‘business is done before ton the banks do noi important bu. iness interviews or discussions fere nces~tmke rplacn as a rule af- If the British pay- important busi- ls done ‘ are not at the mlllm‘ m of their efficiency, sup FIRE INSURANCE REPRESENTO "Y V150‘ and Suggesuve “m”; “d hand in hand. Increase in size fziv- _ so appalling is tho concepiion- s" in; a greater margin of power and I _ - i. y _ perfect is the artistry, that the at me in proportion w welgm. Wm t - . _, rltory remains absolutely without “new for the use of the most Te. , . i ~ , ~- , i‘ Tm‘! i“ ‘my meranlre- .slstent metals or alloys even if ‘I i, ‘ ‘ ' ‘ ~ these be hewvlerr. Improvements ’ ; ,. Commercial Quotations. ' are required m the “brie “mung , ‘ . ' 'the sinoqth outer-skins of aerofl- > . ~ . (Kansas City Times) “mes and glpghlps and the gas- I It“ ’ _ ‘ containers used. The dopes and y: ' _ i “mghmqey Hmfls‘ or hm varnishes to resist weather and to > A good line of Ladle: White Oxfords at - , Wcpth. in tho printing business, reflect ha“ are m“ expeflmenb ‘I om." i; ___________ __ got slightly peeved at a letter from M‘ There ‘Wm be u genera] Sh“ , White Pumps It 5 “ ‘mm’ “""° Mme" ""15 ‘m, sever‘ pllfication 5r drltail theclluilnntlon J Wm“ 2 amp mm.‘ <> “l umusand letterheads’ (“Harem of parts now thought nucessury. I We are now rocolvlng daily new goods bought " sizes‘ ilimlfel" ‘Fades and “me” and we Bu-engghenjng of others I this lprlnq at lowir prlcu than was ponlblo three .> ant colors, and ‘wanted tiw Dfifilifll; now mougm 56mm} The internal , month: ago, in latent style of strap pumps and ox- ’ form held standing in ‘case further b “on engine and an m; My 1: ford: in gray or black suede, fln calf. whlto-olnvll. u: . , . barley com us 4, etc" from the beat nhocmakora. Blatchford, Smlrdon, _. , mph“ “ere wanted’ so C cossorles will make still infill" 0 Walknr, Parker, 8lntor, Golly i. Scott, elm, etc. y, took his typewriter in hand and progress towards awessibnnyl ' ~ ~ “ '6 wrote: / , , _ 0 a ‘- ‘»- 3122.5: "s::.::.:":§.‘::..:"3.::. 1: . Hills-Prim‘ Headquariels 1a one opckptlnn for appandlcltliaonn, ‘gas are’ the routine course o! em x. . " two or five-inch ‘imclsion~witl\ or gmeeflmg, mevmmhm If demund t - '_'__'_’*"_'-___' and compevlion kecn the inllllslfl’ x . 0 " > if all brains have the same penksdlllve- Tilbll‘ THURS. MWPVPT- Wm < Q, , _ and depressions nobody is taking be visible in better performance . an advantage of any-hotly else. rather than in appearance. ¢ “‘¢‘_¢‘_‘¢_‘¢:‘:U‘U_“‘_:“¢ “¢_‘_¢_U“%_¢§ Our own notion is that the brain is' ‘ at its lbest a short time after any-| thing takes place. The man who makes a speech could always make a ibatter one half an hour lat- er. The man who signs on the dot- tcd lino has a clearer vision ‘imme-‘ diately afterwards. The actors in their far from equal contest with the critics are at the dlsadvant-l "~ ago that the critics thin-k later.‘ -'_ incidentally we might remark that the ibulk of the work on n morning‘ paper is done at a time when, no; cording to the ‘psychologists the 3 ‘ Unfortunately the rnading is‘ brain is almost tonpid. done at the time when the brain‘ Explanalilnn. knowledgle among readers that they could operate a newspaper much more successfully htan those ‘who are operating it. Most ser- _ mons are delivered after the tides, of the brain have begun to ebb, but‘ ‘ we may expect them to improve " in quality as a result of daylight saving. But we believe that morn depends upon the quality of ‘thu lbrain than upon the hands of the- olock. For instance, one man's brain at one o“clo0k may be as‘ I good as anothens at ton. lf it is. Lh- true that as a man thinks so is be ~ the British theory is further vlt-' ' fated, for many people have the‘ I » idea that they shine with a more, effulent ‘light abput one o'clock in‘ the morning than at any, other hour. Those who have this be- lief are certainly somewhat be- low par at ten o'clock the next day, at which time their ‘brain is certain of only one thing in the world. 7Q. filmy/i}??? raiajy BY HYNDHAN s TlilNHEil improvements. L THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN TOTAL L088 AND BUILD l otteto "M" - (If!!! Wll. Ask who man who was “wiped out" rif you need Fire Insurance and follow his advice. Your hus- rlnole, your home and your furnit- ure mod Insurance. Talk Incur- anco with us. v rur ncnwfr ' For no matter Where e yournaypn .. 5145.14, (my. ‘km. ‘m m] a “My lmemmn‘ to ' ~tha can or on ’ a land, ‘ n41,‘ m fir l 10R T"! EN- the people and dscomponln; to ihewmm 1°35 2:: 1:9,", “w” "° A '4 i“ " P . ("Wmmfilb This Nev: zero tion, let us ,______ . ma: e ll ‘f0 aye. Inn or‘ And flwn the rum wanders in- "'1 ."§'"°""'" "i" "is ""1" . ,".,'.';,".". ’?'_>g‘lev'"w“ 5W. I W009i! which ,1“ ‘m f" h‘ "on ll 11w“. The price of the NEW GRAY compared with other cars of its class. No duty—no exchange is included in the Gray Dort rice. _ "TIWGRAY DORT is built in CANADA AIJIANS‘, andhwith CANADIAN money, ~ ‘fSeeflwm in our. snow? .159 um ‘sired, muff? N? The springs are longer-Jot easy riding. \ A The Handsomest‘ Light Car Built c‘ For beauty of line-comfort-lserviccnand economy the NEW GRAY DORT stapds in a class by itself. The simplicity of the engine appcalsito the mun who looks after his own car. The new body is more roomy-with deeper uphol- stering and wider seats . ,. R» E. WHITE, Distributor for Prince" Edward Island , . SEELING IQENTS ‘ A ~ MacNUTl.‘ s. WHITE. LTD-allllarlottetown '_ WRIGHT 3;“ MANSON. vflumineruide "A. L. ROGERS, ‘Kenalngton 1" Gasoline tank at the roar with the famous Stewart Vacuum feed system. Extra large brakes-larger tires and, many other DORT is very low, , by CAN-