3.-....“ 4-»..- '._ lcivrrmz, cost of annu- '.... .... ......' RDIA >- .0! Mah 1'00 utensils. armers Record - AND . Account Boo GIVEN AWAY FREE o new subscribers and old subscribers renewing eir subscriptions before end oi current year. _ 0nly limited number available I and first '- onieis will have the pltlItl-GIICE.‘ COHtQ nts JNHIVIDYALS, account with NNSFRAINUE, BILLS and NOTIN | PAYABLE 5 INVENTORY, general I INVENTORY, residence LIVF STOCK INFORMATION AIILK, B ‘TTER and CREAM .\f‘t‘()l'."l‘S ‘AIUIUFGAGES, BILLS and NOTES RFXEIVABLE OXFS, cost of (IATS, sold or fed ORCIIARD and FRUIT‘ .\IIS(‘EIILANEOUS PRODUCE _ PUFLTRY. breeding record POULTRY and EGGS REMEDIES for FARM ANIMALS REMEDIES, HOUSEHOLD SEED TESTING SHEEP. cost of, and sold SILO ltECOiItD 'l‘it.-\C'l‘Olt RECORD WHEAT, cost of V uro Rncoiii) V; ANK, account with ' LANK (iosr At‘t‘Oi‘.\"I‘ ILEEDING, record or ALENDAR YCASII Rncniifisii a ASH PAH) tli"l' CATTLE, sold OyfilfBTE lflfilPUllliltlNS ORN, cost of ‘CORN, sold or fed DAIRY IilIlfD, cost of EQLIIPRIENT At‘("()l'.\"i‘ . i XPENSE A('L'OI'.\"I', household gAllM LABOR, record of ENERAL I.\'I~‘OIII\IA'I‘I(J.\' ,GBS'I‘ATION TABLE AY, cost of AY, sold or fed 0G8, cost of IOGS, sold Mal A. A. Iartloll. Proaidont. nit cnniioiiiiown pinpoint l I10‘: vanao dgr J. R. I . I P . Our-rim. Anaoclatourgditior?‘ t" ‘M “Mn” TIDAY, ocToi-siciiléefioeo '4 ii r uidd":r oil's‘! will: D THE \\'OIIK OI" THE SCHOOL. _Tlue business of the primary school is not to make lawyers or doctors or. farmers or merchants or blacksmiths or other professionals or craftsmen of the pupils; its business is to lay foundations upon which some one of these may be built. And the foun- dation is common to them all. The carpenter or the farmer needs the same foundation upon which to build as the lawyer or the doctor or the clergyman. Up to a certain point their educational necessities are alike and up to this point the state has a right to provide the education. Just where in our ordinary curriculum the point should be fixed is a matter of detail but in a province so well favored as ours we should not be too nigardly about it. It should at least include an intelligent knowledge of the subjects re- quired for matriculation into Prince of Wales Col- lege. Every public school should be able to provide this and every child in the province should be com- pelled to attend the public school until he acquires it or at least a respectable portion of it. This is the foundation which the state has a right to provide for every citizen and as it is the right of the state to provide it, so it is the right of the citizen to utilize it. Because ofthis we should have a rigid system of compulsory attendance at school, not for a few scat- tered weeks but for a sufficiently long period-annual- ly to ensure that every mentally fit child in the coun- try should be reasonably educated. ’ As to what is to follow the laying of this foun- tlation, whether the boy is to become a professional, a tradesmln, a farmer-this must depend largely upon the boy's natural bent. More than half the fail- fires in the world today are men whose calling in life has been chosen for them by others, not by themsel- ves. Every mentally healthy child born into the world is capable of filling a useful niche in it. If, through the ignorance or pride or neglect of par- ents, he is placed in the wrong niche, he is as certain to be a misfit as is the “round plug in a square hole.” In every one of the so called “learned profes- sions” there are men struggling for a bare exist- 3 iHORSES, cost oi, and sold v Send your renewal at once and ask ioi ee copy oi. u Farmers Record AND _, ‘ Account Book h’t0wn Guardian Subscription Dept. \\'lIl~JA'l‘, sold or fed I Special sale of Sample Footwear Just received a lot oi’ Manufacturers’ Samples of Footwear, in Men’s, Boys, Womcns, Misses and Childrens which we are selling at wholesale prices. ’ COME EARLY and get first choice as quan- titles are limited. All other lines marked down to comply with new market conditions. , If you have had trouble w'th the_wearing qualities of your Rwibers. Try a pair of the “COLUMBUS BRAND” “made to wear well.’ WHOLESADE AND RETAIL LePAGE, BRADY C0. LID. $25.00 For a Trade Nanie and Design The Silver Fox Fur Selling Association of Prince Ekwarri Island requires a trade name and design for trade. A prize of $25.00 is offered for the best suggestion. The design need only be a “rough sketch, but must be indicative of the objects and pUi'pf‘S€S of the Association. Literature setting out these objects and purposes will be ior- warded on applicatioii. This is an opportunity for persons withaim- agimiiion to exercise their originalty. Try your skill ind win $25.00. t. The Sil l6!‘ Fox Fur Selling Association oi’ Prince Edward Island Summcrside, P, E. I. ~---..~. nose-wean ilgg“ L Lli:ji Aka‘ paranoia-b I ITN-lwflou-lli ___,_,___ _ _ ‘farmers, useful and respectable citizens. On many a ' self. Labor of the hand, which topsy-turvey theorists ence who would have made goodmechanics, good farm in this province and elsewhere there are men and women, slaves to uncongenial work and sur- roundings, failures, so far as usefulness is concern- ed, who would have shone and been successes in oth- er callings. It is not necessary to recall Grey's Elegy to prove this; we have all met the “village Hamp- dens" the “mute inglorious Miltons," met them in every walk of life. Let our public schools devote their attention not to the making of farmers or doctors or lawyers but to fit the pupils for the calling in life for which God has endowed them with the necessary talents. The wise and conscientious teacher can do much in influencing the child, in training the developing tal- ents towards the goal which they are fitted to reach, whether that goal be the management of a farm or of a congregation, the making of boots or the building of railways, the handling of horses of of juries. 'l‘H E DALTON SA NATORII’ M. We are informed, that the Dalton Sanatorium is undergoing the usual treatment accorded to vac- ant and deserted buildings. The windows are made the target for the little boys’ stone-throwing skill while anything worth while that can be detached from the main building is being taken care of by thieves. Surely the provincial government could have made such provision as would at least save this valu- able property from destruction. To attempt to evade responsibility by simply abandoning the property and leaving it to the mercy of vandals and the elements is simply criminal and the responsibility remains up- on the government's shoulders. They are the respon- sible caretakers of the property and, shirk it as they will, the province will hold them responsible at least for the care of the building until some provision is made to fulfil the purpose for which this munificent gift was made to the province,.or until a government is formed which 'will be big enough to overcome such difficulties as may be met with in so utilizing it. Wm!" THE HAND AND THE BRAIN. The hand never will rule the brain for any time. In moments of madness when it does it destroys it- would set up to rule, must always be directed by the conceiving and planning mind. By this alone can the hand exist. The hand can conceive only the simplest necessities. Labor withoutcapital and direction must dwell in the cave of the primitive man. . When it seeks to rule it wipes out what makes labor en'- durable. and in the progress of the human has brought labor out of darkness to a great and grow- cuiuiiur coinniur A-ll HIHOW'ceIl. Ill lllB ill-IN!“ hours of which the ghosts of evil and the goblins damned lurk with VIIIIAIIOII! inteni-ivithinthe shadowl. and witches work iheir incuntations to scatter evil influences abroad. is near at hand. W110 KIIOW! 11W origin and iinpori of this 118N011 day, and who will honor It as was wont to he ll! the country of its birth? lt is foreman of fill a Pl-"el? all‘ tish, ‘Irish and 39°10“ 9°“°“I°“' and of course honored and cele- brated by descendenits of these in other lands. in our own country ll is unfortunately more disgraced by vandalism than celebrated as it ghould ha as a sacred IEBIIVBI 811d harvest feast. its earliest memory was before the days of the Heptur- chy when the sunood worship 0' the Druids was the heathen rellBlmlfl fancy of Britain's B90915 I'- W" their great autumnal day of feast and thanksgiving for the harvest, in honor of Snman the Sun-Gm!- Their belief that it was the We er the dgy in wlilch this lord of Death assf-irihled tne wicked souls of all who had died within ,the year, and which had been condemn- ed to inhabit the bodies of animals up to this period of release, and this the day of Joy at the opening of their prison houses. ~ I -ln parts of Ireland it is still cele- hraited as Oidliche Shumhna (Vigil of Semen), nliliougii pagan super- stition has died out. With the con- version of the niulori to the (‘bris- tian religion it became the national festival on the eve of All SBIMB day. The customs of the celebra- tion indicated that the weird fan- cies still prevailed and bonfires to send terrors to the souls of witch- es and (flgpel the shadowy hiding places of ghosts and goblins would light up the valleys and hillsides. more especially in Scotland and in; Wales. while within doors the young folk WEI‘? happily roasting chestnuts and dipping apples to the heart-load of enjoyment. 0n-:_ supersition was to ihrow upon the dying embers of the great bonfires u small stone or pebble to represent ench one present. and if on the fol- lowing morning one of these peb- bles was missing the person whom it represented was doomed to die within the year. In the early days of our P. E. Island history, much of the British custom prevailed. Goose suppers, candy pulling and apple dipping constituted the in- door festival. The buoyant lads, natural lovers of mischief were permitted to play one part ofgob- lln, ghost or witch, but under pro- per restraint. Our oltl people will remember those days. The cabbage stocks from recently cropped fields was above law the property of the boy. and the use of these on a door panel was not classed as ‘a high tifliilt‘. Beyond this the boy dare not, and to his credit did not. go. it iviis in the days when parents knew how and what to teach, and boys knew liow to be men and to obey. ' The great war ofllodny is against the forces of flidICii'8Ill. The ten- dency to magnify the ills we have 0640.40 Daily Selections r Guardian Readers Furnished by W. 8_ Louaon. voooo-o SOME DAY I'LL WANDER BACK AGAIN. Q l I r t Some dny I'll wander back again, To where the old home stands, Beneath the old tree down the lane, Affai- in other lands. its humble cot will shelter me From every care and pain. And life be sweet as sweet can be When l am home again. Some dny I'll wander back agnin, To scenes so dear to me, Where life. sweet lnfancy's refrain Beside a mother knee. To live once more the golden hours Of joyous, merry play, No thorns but only sweetest flow- on, There in life's merry way. Se‘ dny I'll wander back again, To ‘hearts so kind and true; Whose gentle faces still remain in memory’; cherished view. No more my wnywiird feet will roam Life's troubled pathway o'er. But in the light and love of home I'll rest me evermore. \\\\\\\\\ giooons” KIDNEY R a QIOHHEF‘ . i I 9' fr‘. y e "If"? W’ I‘ riii: 110°" . ing share in the rewards of civilization. beyond tloh- and topnmllao roni‘ . autos even to deotniciJolL-il danger- ous enemy of the pewfi loving economic world of today. and the Tone which calls for the united coin- mun sense of the mules to subdue and control. The extremist who believes. or pretends to believe, that capitalists are a menace and a curse to any country is in his cum- paign straining every argument, without regard to reaoon or logic. to convince the fin-wealthy that he is the vidtim of opresaion. and to inflame him in mind and in soul into a fever of discontentinent and unrest. Then on the other hand is the extremist in capital who rails to comprehend the position and unquestioned right of labor to the full share of its enrningn rind protection, and of his li-lst due of a fair and DPO-Dortionate division of all those god things sent by the munificence of a kind Provi- dence for the comfort and happi- ness of the whole human race. There is then the species of radicalism in industrial capitalism which seams to exist in a world of its own, created by itself, whose creed is that all outside of itself are only subsidiary forces which in duty -bound to contribute to its greatness. This species Is again met by oposite combinations, such f for instance as the extremists in I the recently developing farmers movement, preaching the doctrines thait agriculture is the only and one thing possible, the great Krialr na or Vishnu, the Juggernaut be- neath which industry and the con- puniling masses imuslt revdrently throw their bodies to be crushed out of life by Ils oncoming forces. In politics there is the radical of policy which finding that n scien- tific system of protection worked upon rational and practical lines liaviing abundantly contributed to the prosperity of a country at once urges enlargement of the process into severity which in practice would amount to oppression. Tiien the oposite fanrtic who seeing iin- other country, under directly op- po\ite condition, prospering under free trade immediately applies the lever to impose it upon u people where it would be out of its ele- ment, and working an absolute hardship. This fomenter of antagonism and creator of‘ unrest is most heavily centred in those combines which are the curse of the world today. They evlst not alone in the grenr mergers, often characterized us the "big interests,“ which control the great Industrial and commercial machinery of the world, but also and with equal force and danger. iliose great labor and professional combinations which in recent yreiirs has so often laid its heavy hund upon_the wheels of progress and commanded rthe bold’ up’ of the machinery of the universe. it is the radicalism of all these systems that is the threatening enemy 0f the world today, and which must be ifougbt to extinction before peace can prevail. it is Ithese that are defying the iiiws of God and of nu- ture, of production _iind consump- tion, supply and demand. There iii tnlk of abridgment of human lib- erty and the inherent rights of per- sonal freedom to the subject fre- quenfiiy injected into public dia- cussion. but. under these systems of combines and unions who is there who has any right of personal ac- iion or liberty of thought. All are obedient to the beck and nod or it in a hadrship alike upon the operators and those who are oper- nted on, and only when these force: are ohiitfraied will the world re- turn to normal. - The Hon. Mr. Balientyne is again having some sport with Hon. Mac- Kenzie King and one Mr. Duff, M. R, the only second rate lieutenant whom the ‘Liberal lender could the command of their super-foul its GREAT DRESS today. ' and Cream. Navy Blue Serge, Navy Blue Serge, Navy Blue Serge, Navy Cheviots, 54 in. Navy Cheviots, 56 in. Brown Serge, 44 in. wide for . .. . Navy Cheviots, 54 in. wide for . .. Brown Serge, 54in. wide for . .. Brown Serge, 54 in. wide for . .. .. .$4.25 Brown Serge, 54 in. wide for . . . Navy Cheviots, 56 in. wide for . .. i Buying at “i I I Store Whose Motto is i I 000D 00008 AT FAIR PRICES The hone dressnialier is especially iii- vited to this Store to choose ircn GO0DS VALUES THE ENTERPRISING “OMAN \VILL SEIZE THE OPPORTUNITY AT ONCE ‘ TO SHOP AT PATONS. See the Special Displays of Dress Goods We are offering new Autumn and Win. ,1" fflbrlvfl at big price reductions. Now is the time to buy dress goods and make them up in your own home. Special Linc of‘ 38 iricli Dress Goods for $1.59 in Black, Navy, Copen, Brown, Red Special 54 inch ;\I‘IIIIII'(‘. in Black’- Navy, Green, Brown and Dark Red, at $2.49. BIG PRICE REDUOTIONS. Black Serge, 44 in. wide for . $3.25 per yd. Black Serge, 54 in. wide for . .$4.50 per yd. Black Serge 56 in. wide for . .$4.75 per yd.- Black Serge, 54 in. wide for . .$6.50 per yd. Black Serge, 56 in. wide for . .$7.25 per yd, Black Cheviot, 54 in. wide for $3.89 per yd. Black Cheviot, 56 in. wide for $6.00 per yd. Black Cheviot, 56 in. wide for $9.00 per yd. HIGHLY .\'l"l‘If.\("l‘IVE IHIESS (IOODS OFFERINGS. Navy Blue Serge, wide for . . .$3.75 in Navy Blue Serge, 54 in 56 in 56 in Navy Serge, 44 in. wide .' . . . .$3.00 per yd. Navy Serge, 44 in. wide Navy Serge, 50 in. wide . . wide for .. .$4.75 . wide for . . .$6.50 . wide for . . .$7.50 . wide for . . .$9.25 . . . . .$3.25 per yd. .. .$4.49 per yd. HERE ARE DRESS GOOD PRICES THAT \\'II.L MAKE A BIG NOISE ; .$3.25 . $3.89 . . .$3.75 .$4.75 .$4.75 . . .$5.25 wide for .. . . .$6.25 i... wide for .. .. Patons Ltd. A Minister of Marine once held some shares in one of the sugar refining companies. This Minister had hit them rather hard when they laun- ched their previous canard, and now was a golden opportunity to hit lW-k- 8o they told the Western lwople that the Hon. Mr, Bane“- tyne was one of the very sugar iiiagnates in person, at the seat of Government itself, and the presid- ing infiuenco behind the recent susar order. Mr. Bullentyrie was a Liberal in politics, n. man with wide business interests, and in- vestment in many companies. It was because of his great talent for business that he was asked to, and reluctantly accepted, his place in muster up to jockey him and the the cabmet By lucky chance he astute laPointe on their missionary had 501d a“ m‘ “B” an,“ u" journey beyond the Rockies. These May am; absolutely w“ wlmout artful gentlemeiit found what they interest in the refiners cause. The "mull" W“ B mare?‘ m?" lull °l rebound caused by the publication prolific eggs in the fact that the I a look at our stock of brots and shoes. $1.50 to $2.00. are sold out. o‘! these facts produced the sporty transformation of King and Duff in~ to badly stung duffers. km. STEAMERS WITH ‘basses. certs JAM-MED m ice. JITNEAU. Alaska. Oct. 20.——-Word was received here Tuesday of the anxiety of White [Pass and Ypkon railroad officials over the non-nr- rival of the river steamers, Curio“. Nasselin and Whitehorse. carryiiiB 175 passengers. No word has been received from the ships in the lost 72 hours. The vessels are believed to be stuck on a bar 100 miles IIP‘ stream from Dawson. There is l strong probability that n-ll three 110m may Ibo a total loss if they remain frozen in tbe_'ice in mld- . stream until next spring. T08elher with the iSeilrirlt. M" sunk nt the ‘mouth of the Stewart River. the loss of these vessel-s will Drove n disastrous ending in the prosperous sensor: just passed. E @ Flow prices please you or large assortment interests you have Jiist received and priced at a lower profit than ei-e ' an unus- ually large lot of Ladies, Men’s and Children's spats, grey, taupe. castor, fawn, brown, black, etc., cloth o'r ielt $1.60 to $3.25. Child's corduroy long leggings in white, red, etc., etc, We continue our dollar day prices on several lines until all Ladies’ Slippers 46c; Ladies’ brown boots $4.95. Men}s high grade boots at $2.00 t0 $4.00 discount. GOFF BROS THE FAMILY BOOT STORE LTD. t