‘oi i ‘, e . » r li i t ai 1:11' ‘lt rl. i l '. l i ‘lil 5.. ,_ »i It 1*; »' ll ' .tl ._ +L: ‘iii f _~ ffl if lf; if ..~ ive . -silt-"i" " Y.; i' _YJ ' -1. . ,rf _ v 4 ,r `l,'lii'. l,'_7iVA. . ;.`tall3e___§.. at Il, l . .l,. mi _ l : Wt .:=; .l ll.:_.i All i ll sl il. lt _ _-.- - _~. '.<_',`.__,,;_;,__1_n~_'“ - l v 5 "lil -1 l2lli‘ §.‘ll.`l li? l , . ll l lil/| Hifi' ! _ '_' ll fl ._ -’.’l in tiff. ‘ i il l (9. tp nil; l-,ll ll "\,z lg; ’ it 1”. ‘fr 'l \ _.i -.rift mi-i e , N . ,tl'_.`7: '*`. _ '~"~li' ir* _"5, v l_-_lr .fi rl/ ill 5 lil' i` ;; :lit it it ill ~ »:.'»~‘ i?=.~l_. \\\\ .5 From every Farmer on P. E. I. Bring"yourh”‘ wool here highest price .ii ._-L’ ._..¢.*’ ,il wr . / _ _' $2.50 per Suit " _ l, ' T / , 1// Brotherhood Overalls Union Made if s ill far ‘ -, " ,.1-‘ ~._ This is an exception- *im \ ally good overall, made by Union labor, worn by __ ____ nearly every railroad ii man in the United States. ._;_ _ Since opening a branch ~ factory in Canada we are l| able to sell it at the same ll price as on the American side,--$2.50 per suit, finis- hed with elastic back and braces, detachable butto_ns, overstitched lap seams, seven pockets in pants and four in jacket. The manufacturers have instructed us to replace every complaint with a new pair. Our own guarantee goes behind them also. Other lines, good strong, well-made overalls at 650, 85c and $1.00 per pair. Wool Wanted at \ in Cash or Trade. Soft Collars l5c and 20c 1 lllllllllllllll Just the most com- ff table thing for this ther at cleft hand 79"* Wa. A ll ` _ ¢ _ ...-__--_-. 1 - rp _ . __ ` This ci-1AiiLo‘i‘Ti:'rowN GUARDIAN . _ __ 0'--= -r|-|z-.- Charlottetown Guardian Advertising Phone ..-. ... .. ... ... ......_182-3_ subscription Phone . . . . . . . _.t. ... -....182-2 News and Edit., Day Phone .. ._.f. ... --'----133 News and Edit., Night Phones ... .....182 C188 ?_Z__- ‘ Head Office at Charlottetown, Branch Office at 'Bum- merelde, Alberton. Sourll and Montague. London Office, Marconi House, Strand, W. C. _ii- Prelldent . . . .. . . A, A. Bartlett Managing Editor .. .. ... ....J. R. Burnett SATURDAY. JUNE 12. 1915. ‘ i » That the Grits are down-and-out, with no policy. no leader and no following. except' probably n. disgruntled temporary exciseman and suchlike, is quite evident from the exhibition being made by the Patriot in_S€11¢Y`al- Again and again the Pathiot has announced that~"It has no criticism or comment to offer on the local Government' adniiiiistration. It is quite satisfied with the expenditure and will not guarantee that there will be a single cen reduction in any department were the Grits returned to lpower. lt is very satisfactory to have such a spirit manl- :fesied in an opposition journal; it shows that the Govern~ 'ment has satisfied everybody and that there will be no controversial questions to come before the electroate when the Government appeals to the country. The only opposi- tion likely to be offered will be that engineered for per- sonal motives by the Patriot machine, which has succeed- ed in tlirusiiiig candidates from Charlottetown and Sum- lmerside on unwilling country constituencies. The feelin against the Patriot machine both in Prince County an Queens County is intense, the more especially as th support of its nominees. The Patriot has just one cry to echo, and it is a Progress, Mr Sinclair said the Grit policy was t this particular juncture. The Hon. J. C. Pope scourged Mr Sinclair and his colleagues with whips of scorpions. which are equally applicable to the Patriot and its friends of to-day. " lf ever there were dishonest and unprlncipled men entrusted with the reins of power, it was during the last Lib¢ral administration. Their policy was ‘dash away, levy taxation and blame their political opponents for the result of their actions.’ Such conduct was Surely beneath any right minded, honourable rrlan, and could not be juati fied in any manner whatever." - Y of -Grit patronage and nialadministratlon, but it will have many years, that it cannot fool the farmer all the .time. ouii couiviiir iioips Those who have taken the trouble to plant 'trees by their roadsides are now having their reward. The trees have donned their summer robes and not only look ,beautiful themselves. but they give the farm and farm buildings a dressed-up appearance which cannot but add materially to their value. In no province in Canada could suchan improvement 'be effected as in this province by tree planting. In the first attack upon the forest primeval the one great aim was to strip the land of all the trees. and too well was the aim carried through. There are farms to-day without a single grove, many without a single tree in field or by the roadside. The want is a serious one. In summer the animals seek the shade even of barbed wire fences, the roadsides are bare and desolate looking. A few trees planted yearly would in a very short time overcome this great want and the effect would he to improve the general appearance ofthe province as well as enhance the value of the farms. People travelling through the most prosperous sections of Ontario invariably expatlate on the delightful country roads. miles of nicely shaded avenues, cool, picturesque and well kempt, giving the whole landscape a prosperous. ll8PD_v and permanently settled appearance. This province of ours with its splendid advantages ln soil and climate could, with a little care on the-part of our farmers, make roads for itself which would be talked about by visitors and taken aprlde in by ourlpeople. There are many such sections of roads now, thanks to the foresight of progressive and 'thrifty men. As~.a result of their efforts the communities thus favoured"are more prosperous, the farms more valuable. their products more sought after than those ln localities which are lacking in these little alterations. -, ~ »- - It should not be forgotten that we gdlgrngg by_¢¢m.. munlties: that the value of a farm andipverl the quality 01 farm Products are measured vei°y1ge_herally by the reputation or the whole community. Tng_.qq|”rglg,_1l; fp,-. "er hem! “mem "CRW Bill' Kood thilll 'comelout of ‘Nazareth?” We have our ltlazarethsg' and although, la C; the original instance, may be ngmkm M to the \ od that lvpoiieihie, tual’ fact remains that reputation counts and that .yle do not go to the lilaureihl' for any good thing, `_ .‘ _, -_ . A few leaders in any community may set the pace for the whole. lf one or two farmers were _to clean up their roadsldes, plant yearly as many trees as possible (our native birch, maple and beech. which can be had for the °"°“bl‘? Uf dl88lns. BN Bl sood as any) their 'neighbours W°“ld “°°“ f"ll°W the 5006 example. and in a few years lour roads and roadsides would be one ofthe attractions of the Garden of the Gulp --me---A ' _~ UNTIMELY CUMPLAINT ‘ it is armenia in understand me stuiuas bi ui.. United States in the present crille with Germany. The attitude appears to he firm. unyielding. and`atrlctly nnolllclally and qtiltetgenerally lt, would were either scared into panic latent strength of SGRITS’ FORLORN WAIL ' _ Patriot has no policy or no argument to advance in hereditary one. initiated- -iii --1873 by the-late I-lon. Pete Sinclair. father of the present Grit candidate for Queen’s. ln a letter to the late Mr Lawson ot' the now defunct “ dash away, levy taxation, and to blame their political opponents for the results of their actions." The Patrio reiterates this with an assurance that is amusing. but we against h _ W-tl should imagine that it is a poor policy to resurrect a io learn by sad experience in the wilds of opposition for Evening Post, gives his views on “The Military and Naval Defence:-or ineunited stnttévvhiat they site and what .they should he." If the article la-»i-and-and believed-in Germany, or if Count Bemstqrff cables a report of it home. it is quite reasonable to expect that the German War Office _will not worry much over the American note that has re- cently been forwarded. Th_ey will conclude that the entry of the United Stntts into'tlie'w`nr would' have 'but little effect. ' ` "The limit of the regular army' now permitted bil law," says Mr. Taft, "ia one hundred thousand imsn, wlilclrin- 'cludes not only thepoapt ati-tlllti‘y’l.iut_ fdhr_'th‘q`l|_sand '_Phill-` piuos offlcered by Americans and tit to do duty only .l.i.\,_the_ Islands. Then onliune 30, 1914, the Regular Army con- sisted of 4,701' officers anH`8’ll781 meh? 30l’t’h'ese 768 offl- cers and 17,901 men belo`iig`_to"‘ tl'1`e"'c'oast artillery; and 1,008 officers and 13.434 men belong to tbe‘ataff and hon- combatant branches-of the army. This leaves a mobile army of 2.935`ofllcers and 51,446 men." .With Mexico and _Germany brlstling up, and the .laps casting eyes on the Pacific coast this certainly is not promising, if Mr. Taft is to be taken seriously. ` "The Board of Army officers appointed to report on a proper organization of our third line of defence, estimated furnish a dinner company for Congressman Gardner." Atlantic. s S ,\\'l\_v this confession of weakness at this particular t time? lf ever the United States needed a good, stiff back- do only harm. occasion arises she will show both her power and her re g of 73.900. Thas was before the war. To~day we have be- e tween 60,000 and 70,000 men. in active service and thou- sands more are being recruited. If Canada could do this in less than a year, what could not the United States do? But after all the strength of the United States is in her n material resources, in her wealth, in her manufacturing r' facilities. As an exchange points out, “A few good al- _llaiices would be worth more to the United States to~da_v than all the coast tlefeiices, Peace Leagues, and pledges ° bearing dishonored signatures, ever dreamt of. lf the great t bully of Europe and the world is held iii check to-day it is because all the great powers of Europe are in alliance er i i the exception of Great Britain which is t still supreme upon the sea, not one of them could stand against Germany alone. If the United States has plenty oflajmmunitlon and rifles for half a million men, but not ~pep,rl,v enough men to use them and no hope of getting the men, why not send the ammunition and rifles to one of tion and rifles. Why should not the United States Gov- ernment itself manufacture shells by the million and ex- plosives to charge them, and get the Allies to fire them in ‘ defence of civilization in general and the United States in particular?" The Patriot would like ri return to those halcyon da s ' 1 .` ;_._____`_o AVOIDING THE .WORD “DEF EAT” Germany is adopting soiiiestraiige devices to bolster up public oplnioii at- home. For instance after the splendid fislitingthat made the Frenchtroops masters of thc whole of the Eparges hill-top, a strateglcal position i of great importance, the German Staff, in 'order to avoid any acknowledgement of defeat, merely changed the name of the hill. They called some helghts.ifurtlier south, and still in their hands by the name of Eparges! Again, in num- bers 5 and 12 of tlie Gazette des Ardennes, a paper pub- lished at Bethel by German authorities, Dunkirk, Bethune, Rouen, Rhelms, Epernay, -Bar-le-Duc, Ponl-a,Mousson Nancy, Belfort~and even Paris-are said to he occupied by the German troops! Gross misrepresentations of this kind indicate how _worried the German authorities nre at the thousht of the people and the army getting an iiikllng- Of U18 growing strength of the Allies on Preiich and Bel- gian soil. _ , t. i§O'**1'°l'1'§'lVl"l§lF0 _ I niuiv siziscrioiis 2 mg'-rs ron ounpiiiii ’ iisiinsas; , Furnllhed '\'f§'|"l'§-I' La Guerrc Sociale. of Paris, has been seized by the French Govemment for publishing an article en- by w_ 8_ |_°u‘»“n_ * tlltlei; "Thehltllghtl to ltilie '. rut,"inwc tepocy ‘|"|_“,"|""'|'*“****'**'|' of censorlng and conceal- CHILDREN AT HOME. ing war news was attacked. ' “**' _ ' The editor should now be ._ WEEUS AND 95593- a wiser, if sadder, man. ev P=~"~° Ff'~=.°f°‘°-~°- I-`§§‘.ii..l`.'I."’2i.."°§’$` .'.‘I.§Z"’l.’. A naughty little weed. one war there must be suppres- dhy. ' sion, and that military P°k°d “P "9 tml' head' necessity must. have the “l’on1‘orrow.I w.tll'°pull you mu connderauon un _ . _ ' - ' om ur'.W¢sa,`ii;,i‘ lim.-`> >; ' ,__ And ll\\tlllMl”"Kl5 ',my dis- 'ri-on I maya; ‘ eoeoeo never ,comes ull the little tjl\lQ\t! .that we should need roughly an army of 500.000 men,” con- tinued l\lr_ Taft. “We have small arms enough for an army of half a million men and ammunition enough. How could we raise the remaining 300,000 men of-our thii'd‘lins'of de- » fence? Some effort was made ln the second Congress of the last Administration to provide for a reserve of men _ “trained in the regular service. lt has proved an entire Sp€Ci3l Sh0Wll1g Of L3(“€S’ NeCkWea¥ failure and has attracted not more men than enough to ' _ Mr. Taft recommends an increase ln the number of _fcoast defences, a better equipment in guns-and an In- 'ternational League of Peace. Leagues of peace, and re- solutions advocating peace would, we fear. afford little protection for the United States, if Germany should get an opportunity to send some of her pirates across the \ l-rv-\». . - . "Ml lkiif, . 1 , "T '~"'-li 'J ‘ ’ , I I \ ' ` I ‘ ‘ W _ V ~ ...,_ .-3. _ . “$3 ¢__-_ ,_ _ 4 _._ f . _ ,,». _ . .. . . Q_-I - »..i.-.;.‘»x-- < ,’ » _-5.' t ~ iz, 1915 ‘ ll b losed every Monday after.. ......f“f'$.§.§°{°i>.”d. biénning June lm, nu sn... day September Sth. ` _ . , " 'JAMES PATON & C0.‘ 1 _ _ \u-'./Ar//1/1A\\\\\\\\w/1///A 1 Week-End- Spggials IlA\\\\\QiIIIIIIIIIA\\\\ ill l . i Men’s Suits, sizes 36 to 42_ $7.5_0_.i Men’s $10.00 and 13.50 Suits is Boy’s Suits $3.49 Worth Double Ladies’ Blouses 98c worth $1.50. - _ Ladies’ Outing Hats $1.25 value 1.00 , Silk Boot Hose 25c and 50c. 65c Cashmere Hose for 50cts. _ Men’s Shirts 49c. 1 White Wash Skirts $1.25 __ Special Sale' of Skirts $2.50 _ . _ Silk Gloves 75c, 65c and $1.25 \\\\\\\\ef// fi .-» Q newest. - _ `- Buy your week-end needs in Dry Goods a PATON 'S and save money. X _ Ili \ Patonfs .; A\ Illll A Big Special . ll Negligee Shirt 4.51 .ri bone it is now, and this parading of unpreparedness can The United States is, in men and material resources, 4 W M » one of the most powerful countries in the world and if the sources. Her army is small but the resources from which if/'-_Y she can build up an army are great. She has a population `/ll of over a hundred millions. Canada has a population of material, Cuffs attached’ U7!! ,I . less than eight millions. Last year the Canadian Per- _ t 1// /".. maiient Force consisted of 3,520 men and the active militia “BVIIIIIIIIIII A choice and up-to-date i \\\\\\'IIIIO selection in the newest stripes in Men’s Negligee _ _l Shirts. These shirtsare , made from fine shirting ~; \i *(4 f gn __¢<~ ._ `\ céxx ‘tri ` eil. cushon neck band seams BQ; 'V 7-* L44 l ¢\\\\1IlIJ¢‘-an-n_\\ doubled stitched about a \v \\\\\i/Illll oozen patterns to choose from, sizes 14 to 16, 1-2, this is by far the best shirt bargain we have ever offered. regular 75c value special Friday and Saturday ............... ._ DON’T MISS THIS CHANCE 49c \\\ PATOiN’S L_... illllll\\\\\\\'7IIIA\\\\\\"fZ////IJUIlA\\ _ ' . _,_: __ _- i .I ,ii .W the Allies which has plenty of men, but is short of ainniuni- l r } Always Be Prepared ll 'l l ll ll Il l l ‘ . 1‘*t'r¢OITv»_-:r~ C _‘;__ cr- l 5 . It’s the only ‘IQ \. t\'(.v)- Safeguard ' , , \ Carry Insurance _ 1 '.- if i . z _: ~@*` ,fi _ ' ' against every con- = , ,g." fs -' if _ 1*. , . '.25 Q l ll _,/'/_‘_,f:,_' f. tingency \villi _,Zyl _tl _,tt _ ._ _ _ 4 ep' ti n Hyndman & Co., Ltd. Established in 1876 61 Queen Street Charlottetown The Oldest Insurance Agency in the Province. , l gl Few.- §-,w 'H _*.1 ‘i at it ,, 5-.Fennell & Ch`;in"d]¢g.... Our Lawn Mowers are Made to Mow \/ t Our Lawn Mowers are the modern kinds, equipped with* he_be_st bearings and all improvements. They are light and rapid in operation, cut close and require sharpening seldom in a whole season, even though they are much in use. _ l__ -` 'Q/\ . The lawn mow- .\ `\"n \.. 1. fl ':_ ‘~,/ff‘ . / ... l ._;_ ` l\ /‘ getone,itis_bound ' `~ /' -to satisf o . I 1 _ yy y u .V . _ _ "’ "_ Prices range from = " C. C _... l pvvi. . _ x _ “_ _ ` -f"‘,f I $4.00 ups CFS We al'€ HOW g are the . _ " ' .showin . .I"\` best grass cutters . l ' at the price, your , 'A _ _ ~ ` "~\fl A » _I money will buy- , _. . ‘R _ . ‘ ~t__. . ` 1 .1 wi. . *nf .-_t~_.- /in»ugutyiitt|stilou¢in;~'eiis s . -~ - =» H Vi¢t°l’i5 ROW l f " any. . 1 ~ . Poppod right into my mind. ‘ _-q-_@_f ""‘ ‘°""' ~‘-- - °"‘*‘ Olio, I cried, l'lI put you out ,'l‘omorrow,hy;olu xilltflmil : ' _ . ;’:t.::?°g.§_j;:.. 3 Q Want _ 8 IIB y HK BDTIDK llll I' - P°°°- ' - _ _ . _ ~ , '*““ "°" ‘“‘° “ “°°‘" We want all the Ladies interested in stylish footwear to see ourlsplendld . range _of Pomps priced from _ ‘ S bo and iris, heed' _ 0 mint I say? < ‘ -~ ~ U _ And learn’ it with your au d what t al ' _ i f Don't‘E:E:'ou till tomorrow., wean 'ng fl\lSg;:\Ill;I' £01- $2.25 and $2.50' no S need 0 uy Pomps so reasonable. ~ ' T925