.' flVls-"rfi it 4st on S‘ ; . ad lMrl_ ' son. John tlonl. ‘ tit 8H l-PHARE 27th. Goon, and ‘Mrs. l’? slight’ mo‘, , . I". In loving m ($10 his llfo 3th. 1920. _t mile from 75 acres “D tlon. bu.’ : soft W0 schools either I reach. i _ 4 front. la Mwitwen, {eldest} ufmDwen. New Four Kille 9r at the “x t . iM-rilwgoadshvn an . p , flaking utensils. I vi Melville Dally foun t. . l nor your malls ) lraayxdrmulgillvw igr-Jy Mal. A. A. Bartlett. H.- Aaotfdltnr and Puhlllhor. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1920 - THE EXHIBITION The question has frequently been asked, could a Canada Can Do What Britain Has Done- emt Canadian Ships. Bl. The Navy League oi Cnnlml barns nl 5- _ , if. ed with c l‘ furt.._ _ or P ‘ O-O-O-O-O-OOOOQQOvoaoooOuoQOQQOOOQO-O-OQOQ-O~GO-Q-O->Q~nI »--I azoi-io-i-im- S I i? , s Shoe ty es I The Bus‘ Onr FallStock is on the Sh-lves, wailing for your g: if.‘ approvaLwe illustrate a few of them here, if it's New § Bu!“ ( and Coirect, we try to tiitvi- it. This la at Bln , e "‘ RllWN acres l v iwailo z l ' DXFORDS ' ..¢ , - t i ' I . And Heather llose. to match are much in Ra, vogue, I lleuther Sto-ltings eMANaI. or ‘ , i’ command 3'32")‘ Brown Oxfords, $7.50 to $12.50 '>- Magi"?! Ladies lligh Laced Boots in Brown or Black, with ’ Militar' or l" i cl l =-l ll - d f 'l' bl M; ,,_ m y rut | ice s, 0n ic new an as nona e , returning lasts. arrive > , Cbarlott- , . . \' 9°“? httptov BE r ITTED correctly here, we carry (liffercnt widths and sizes Sllofiits ILLIZSTRATH) ~03 to $12.50 , ennui-nu; l S“ quilt! tlisnlayot" fashionable Gaiters in Aummn 5h“, Fu-vn, T's-inc, lirey, (lagior Brown. i "d from $2 5O to $5.00. i ALLTY 5.; CQ ' M l TE D. Fashionable F000“ Ch’t lWll l’. ll. I. Make and Control it... Own Trade Routes with Protected by the British Empire Navy» oi which the Canadian Navy will In B a unit. lt will be an honor to this country. - And that contribution to All-British Sea wigiiiiiiiidc Power in keeping with Canada's pre- were kllletl “it mier place within the Empire. n. m. today In when a frelgh that ran lnto M“ n, a", Bin! we ma?! develop on. em. Sea-Conscious Spirit ‘gems;- —ln the People pa" —ln the Government —ln the Schools ll acres of field. 1m ml mm‘ purely agricultural exhibition be successfully con- ducted here? And the general opinion is that it could not. While horse racing is, in a sense, a dis- tant relative of the agricultural family it cannot pro- perly be classed with the interests of the general farmer. Yet it is safe to say that the races are the great attraction at all exhibitions; safe to say that without the races the exhibition would be a failure not only financially but educationally, simply be- cause people would not attend. While very many of our farmers and their wives and children attend the exhibition to see the live stock, the field crops, the fruit, etc., it is still true that the great maJority |attend to participate in the “fun of the fair,” which includes meeting with friends, the horse races, the fakirs and the other attractions. It is quite safe to assume that without these, and these in abundance, our exhibitions would be practically impossible. But what of it? This does not argue a lack of interest in agriculture, it only means that the great majority of people regard the exhibition as a holiday season and they want all the entertainment that a holiday entitles them to. It is admitted by many staid farmers and other staid people that the empty midway at the present |exhibiion has a chilling effect upon entering the grounds. Yesterday, the third and perhaps the big- lgest day of the exhibition, the stock pens and the exhibition building were but meagrely patronized, while the grand stand on the race grounds was closely packed from end to end and hundreds were unable to obtain seats. The race course furnished practically the whole attraction—and it certainly was a great attraction, a credit to the enterprise that brought to Charlottetown the largest number of horses and the greatest speed that ever took partin a maritime race. The stock, all magnificent animals, the field crops, the fruit, the merchants exhibits, which would have done credit to any city in the ma- ritime provinces, were the side-show, the races were the exhibition. In the opinion of many who are deeply interest- ed in the success of our exhibitions, the, midway attractions must be rpsuscitated ifour exhibitions are to be more than a series of races. This does not necessarily mean the introduction of objectionable Ifeatures, ‘it simplv means that nine tenths of those who attend exhibitions and help to make them a success educationally as well as financially, are look- ling for “the fun of the fair.” ' l ___. l Tlll‘) MAKERS OI" FNREST Nine tenths of the trouble and the unrest in the world today is caused by the agitator and the dis- gruntled. Nothing is easier than to exaggerate dif- ficulties, to lay upon some one else the blame that is gencralLv our own. And few things are easier than to follow the crowd; it requires no courage, no ini- tiative, no thought. This is where the agitator has the advantage. He can generally muster the nucleus of a crowd; the nucleus attracts others and in a short time he has the crowd at his heels. And every individual in the crowd has some grievance, real or imaginary. To this grievance the agitator appeals. The fault is easily laid at some one’s door. All exist- ing institutions receive their share of the blame; everything that is is denounced; everything‘ that is must be changed; government must be placed in the And then will come the millemiittm when all wrongs shall be righted and all grievances redressed! l This happened in Russia where, it is true, there were many real grievances. The agitator with the < cure-all got his crowd together and they proceeded to bring about the promised millennium. The millen- fllklllll came but instead of a heaven on earth it was a el . The agitator, the denouncer of existing condi- tions, the man who would tear down tested and tried institutions to make room for a maniads fad is a menace and should be treated as such. Fortunately our province has been comparatively free from such; we have no illiterate or ignorant classes to whom such appeals could be successfully made; we have no foreign element in our midst to vent their antago- nism against British institutions. We ourselves have met our grievances and, when possible, removed them bv sane and rational methods. Hitherto the agitator and the Bolshevik have - had no place among us and we are perhaps the only, province in Canada that has altogether escaped them. Our sister maritime provinces are compara- tively free of them and the result in Colchester the other dav shows that sanity still rules there. Yet there is danger. g It is up to us to weigh very care- fullv _any new nostrums prescribed for us. They are easily tested; lying and misrepresentation and slander are uamistakealble danger signals. When lthese are evident the safe course is to give them a ’Wld(! berth and we feel assured that this testwill be . '"”””“ ""”"""__ rigidly applied by our intelligent farmers. " "ti" '“'"“w xwu;.._._. ~1> ‘(Mklidlilémwi-i-Wl "‘ " u "M, .. MA. t _ , ' =51 , lx..|~>n c a vn-(fluu. t, 4 L... ‘_____l,a__v ‘mam; ‘Hay u On P rtlal Pay‘- ment Plan Put asiJe a fa-w dol- lars eitol. month. Buy Victory Bonds at pres- , ent prices on monthly 1 installment plan. 10 per cent down and 10 per cent monthly. J .C. MACKINTOSH 8c co Halifax, N. S. , Correspondents for J . ROWLAND PATON, Charlottetown, P.E.l. ' siss-a-ao-zi. rumifinrir‘ Ytsterilay we referred to the Farmers contributions of $28,000 to make up the mllitanlt salary of Hon. (Y. A. (Trerar, the Grain Grow- ers Farmers leader. To this must be added his $4,000 sessloniil tn- demnlty, bringlng the total up _to $32,000. lf his umibltions could be realized and the Prime Minister's stipend or $15,000 added to thlsf giving hlm an lncom from t-he people's pockets of $45,000 per year his cost to the country will ‘be anything but gloriest for a man‘ whose emvl-surles, such as Mr. J. lt. McMillan, are travelling around the. (toiintry blaspihcmlnig 'bc|l.€l‘ men who are devoting their nest ener- gies to the country's Interests for .he duiirinirzilively meagre allow-i uni-es of front $5,000 lo $15000. 'l‘here is also a loud will of graft~ _ ing and corruption charged utgalnsl itll governments, except of coursi- Mr. (‘rerurs and ihe Farmers Government of Ontario. lif IMr, Mc- Millan is an aut-lioiity everything in tihe world outsldi- of these two are s-teoitetl WllllcfllflllflldDll and rot-~ ten to the core. Bin ihls fiery agiF tutor dld not glv.» us the exact date o1‘ Mr. Creiuifs repentance. When ttld he bet-nine honest? For be wits n member of t-lte Borden (lovitrnemnt lduring lhe heaviest‘ period of its spi-ndlng progrirmtne, he was a party to Lht! (llvil Service (‘oinm-lssloit and an influential por- tion or that System of rottennese which the Ontario agitator goes so; fur out of dits way to tlBSLfFl-llt}. It’- Mtr. MuMlllunhs description of hlm ls correct, when-did the turn dVc-r‘ the new leaf and become honest. goods, M coats, f - 31104-2931 -..._ ___. came to the manufacturers of On~' ‘tario and the farniers there sent ‘a deputation to the U. S. and as a , _ iresut te are getting mowers As one of .\lr. McMlllans tricky fmm no i) $15 cheaper than ‘he urgumeifls he points out ‘hm Aimanufaoturers can sell them for." '“““,“‘ England bought n Massey‘ l~f ‘lt were true. llllfll. these things llarris dlllltlfll‘ for $80. When helcould be bought m!‘ legs money sold out lalvr he came to this pro- “was mm unrdm,‘ mm ‘wemem viincenuud imd w ‘my $125‘ n" ‘he lfarmer would hurry to purchase iamc. dltllntt ‘a SIDElfI-Ollrl s-ulbitcg- ‘hem there‘ But despite me ‘M,’ use to ‘Wuve’ Is mew anyunm that tihese are irmongst the lowest l and ln England or anywhere else that can be bought today at prices that prevailed years ago’! “lhat ls Mr. R. J. 'M‘l't\llllil1ll ‘being paid for the hot air he distributes, as compared with Wllill he could sell his acr- vlces trill‘ ttllve years ago? The next tnlsropresentatlon is that "The Grain Growers ot the West 0-0-0 Q 0 90000-00-0 0-0040 9000-00 ‘ Daily Selections . Guardian Readers Iurnllhod by W. l. Lounon. dirt-led articles of commerce, the llm-ports are ‘actually falling off, and were materially less last year ‘than .ln tilte perlode proceeding. ,'l‘hus the actual figures of imports lstamps the falsity of this utterance upon its face. He then igoes on to say tihat t-hc “Clvll Service pay roh amounts to $160,000,000. That's my estlmate and nobody in Canada can deny lt." Nobody desires to deny that lt ls his IEISTPMAFPE, but they might however seriously question its ac- iiands of the agitator and the party of his creation. , curacy. He ‘admits they are his own iesttmates, and that he failed to verify them, and he has un es- miilrlletlied repilflaitfon. ‘Yer estima- tng very far from tho truth. For, instance at Cardigan he estlntatedl PO §OOQ~OOO~ QUIET TALK8. By Rev. Harold T. Roe. I have r m‘. somtiwhere of an t i: Visitors t0 illinery. ' x f s; t will find here tlllorlaligfi 0st QSSOPCIIIGIHT of new goods in the city, Mantles‘. silks, furs, idrcss . 1 M ifs Gverotiats, suits, sweaters, raincoats, Hats Caps.’ Undcr- , Wear special $31K) a suit, , i l ilur p; ', _Visit our Millillery Depa tmenb-Miss Seaf man, our head Milliner, has the reputation 0i being the ll st in the Province, give us a trial on your Fall Hat. i s. A. McDONALD f... have secured the _COl'l‘l‘l'l figures told the farmers the truth. lle “Finally was told that y; “g. ured up to $15,000,000 but his own estimates looked ‘more formidable for the purposes of agitation and so he used them, shy his own ad- mission without confirmation. Not satisfied with slanderlng everything within sight 1n the poll- trlcal arena he seeks to drag the “Millie's of our courts tnito the maelstrom of his tinuglnitry corrup- tlon. lli- ls too wlly to make the attack ‘in the open. This under- ground method _ln this case 15 the safest. His statehien-t its that “in Manitoba a few years ago a con. tractor nlomz Wllll three cabinet ministers, stole a mlllloh and a hal-f from the public funds." He was not brave enough to specify the men or the incident, for by be- ing sufllclently speclflc he nilght be called upon to answer for this ll-bel when something more than hls mere word would be re- qu-lred to clean hls skirts. No doulbt he had reference to the Parliament building scandal. That was fully Investigated in a long‘ and expensive finial ln the highest courts ln the province of Man-l- '.‘l'l‘t'lt|l'lU uid ‘lIlllli‘Sl\'l" oi’ the Gos- pi-l ttho lll :1 ilramzrilc manner re- vi-uleil n significant fact to hls fashionable congregation one Sub- lblllll morning. He was addressing the boys and girls present with ilu-lr parents, and asked them to me m,“ expenditure M Canada M lobu. innumerable witnesses were ‘Blooorooo m 19M wmue m "um pxaiulned and every detail closely n was ‘somewhere around twlchmvtiatlgated. The judges of tlhese ma, amour“ ,1“ M! Search torcourls cent-ulnliy less prejudiced confirmation of his figure on the Olvll Service he says "No member recite tilts! fourth oommunilinu-nt. ’l‘here was no response. He culled for the flflh, with a like result, ’l‘lien suddenly taking from this pocket a ipack ol‘ playing cards he scattered them, wltih a sweeping movement of his hand, along tho nlsles. Then pointing to one ‘boy he asked ‘him to find the Jack of Diamonds, another to bring the Nine or spades, and a third the Knave of Hearts. Th9? .dld so of Parliament could toll the,“ and he tlwce applied to tihe Auditor Generals office." “He didn't know anything about it." Onl-y this brll- llant Mr. McMillan knows, because he has a monopoly of al libe wis- dom, nnd all the honesty (f) of Canada. ln point of fpct tho died the public accounts of the country at his disposal from whlch he could and more competent ln judlcal de- terminations than Mr. J. R. Mc- Millan, failed to discover any mll- lions, or even any cents stolen by any "cabinet ntlnlsters.” This was a lone dilscuvery tot rthe Crerar agitator, and which he would not dl-sh out so reudlly if he were tn Manitoba, where he would be held responsible for his utterances. To insinuate that these Judiles delib- erately winked at the stealing of without a mistake. The old min- later allowed the incident to point its own moral. lt was very obvious and very signlilcaut, too. i Do you know lhather fancy that the overw- (‘lllld today ls lflf‘ more fantlllnr with Mary Plcldord, Fatty Arbui-kli- and Charlie Chap- fln than with the names and char- acters of the Bible. This ls not sumtthlng In he lightly dl-simlsseil. lt deserves u little serious thought, Are tln- liillltlfPfl of today to gillh- -'r the-Ir lih-nls from the idols of llltl lnUVlt sort-en’! Must the great chnractvrn, not only of the Bible, but of lllr‘, ory, be pushed 1mg the background to make room for the "BU! Blll Hurt" and Anita Stewart? rMlovlng pictures are here to stay. I :.-m not eulilemnlng for one m0- ment the many excellent film pro~ uodn, llM(I.ll|] sue imam suction Men's Klp hole Stock Clamp Boy’: neat strong Boots, all Women's Pebble New gutters just received. the scu-nn. 1t ls the question of mistaken omphilll that l desire lid stress. The Lowest P Mon‘: Elplll Blltcllfifljlld Bah; __ Man's Leather Leggings u 1916 On Farmer's Heavy Fall and inter Boots for Exhibition ‘Weak only. Men's Oll Tan Grain High Cut...... " Moira Mono Graln Blucher Sole t“. .. .. s... 1.000s sizesunnul-"u". . . . . . . . .. lacuna u“ n.- “n...- "u... n" noun s“...- $2.26. Canvas .. . Do not fall to vtslt us ‘Exhibition Week. Everything in boots from llliomoet inexpensive go the ihlghggt “we; " oorr. BROS. LIMITED rices ‘Quoted Since Boy's and Mleiis Whole Stockand Grain an Equal Prices. Women's Whole Stock .. . . u - P» =1}. .___ ntlllions by Ministers of tho (ii-own lmrduxq close upon sellltlmi. Bu the ftlairltob-a Jutlges ‘lunprlsone. (untain lBolshevlk sedltlonlsis and lhP-y are since not "popular wit‘ Intends of this class. He then commences like the or- dinary "dlrtyblrd" to foul his own- Cnnadlan nest, vls: lf he ls (land iidlan, tby comparison of our wa itcoonrpllsihment with that o: r11 Unltcil ‘Stun-s; Hi3 says the U. 8.. "have already paid oft’ 45 per cent of their war debt." "we sold ,,,<,,-@.' Vlctony Bond-s than the war ha cost us and yet we ‘have only pal 6 per cent of our debt." The mos damaging falsehood ls often t-h, one based upon a foundation of lm-' nginary truth. Of a truth the Un-i, Red Slows paid of a large portlo of her war debt, but what dld w dvbt amount to -per caplta to pop l‘al'lon‘2'-' Why sine,’ slcarcely e tered llhE war and tor mhree ot fou-r years from the opening if hostilities they were not ln -t a comfllot whlle little Canada wliii Continued on Page Five 1i . \‘=\\ K\H\‘, l l) o o D's ' A KIDNEY. ca. 'lHFfUr__1-A-T|'i_'pi>"} ',,F"'Y"S Dl5hp‘ ,1 , lfitiLffh H l _ I _ y i |l "it IIfééizaY ..... .. tits; $4.56 ..., ca g ~_-:: o‘ ...._..-...-.-_,. - an»: I 2. ~