~Five hundred million rl-eren if you nay . Jet-resents I pile of money. Yet t he Wall Rtreet Ionrnnl gives than fig- ures u Continent on worthless sw-uritln. This pointn n moral: In- - ' tailgate forrtnulnveat. t We offer e nine friendly _, counosl to lblr Illllll ln- l"; - w l Ask u: to mail our special " Hundred Dollar with “ CIITIMlIIF-rr-ffzsfl Bryant, lsard 8r Co ll-OO St. Imncoh Xavier St. "DID!!! Bunch 05300-153 Pvtl Bt- Alonusnl ‘ Bum avfils-Phme “All! 4N1 Toronto -C.P.R. Building Prlvnte Wum-Uncdled Scrvlm . tsvtmgns I I yattached to i. of rowboat or canoe- _ A ready to take you on enjoy- g :able_ounngs, fishing and , hunting trips. I ‘Portable, easy to operate, always dependable. Evinrude Magneto — Built-In ‘f Flywheel Type — Automatic Reverse - more power and peed. 4 thestern Sold by I McAVlTY’S | St. John, N. B. _,)ver 120.000 sold-used by 25 Gavin. , Evmruotuo. B lemon sternum _.___ Sandals AT LOW PRICES Tan Sandals Infants sizes 3 to 71/2 $1.25 Children's sizes 8 to 10V; 1.45 Misses sizes 11 to 2 1.65 i Ami lllllllllllTEIllW filllllllliil Ll-IIIBQLIIQUQQIIPIIIQI- Aillnnollhl. 'nfi QQIQI Lilo!) hula-ooh you (Colonial) IQ HIIVIIQ ll“ fill-ll. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST‘3, 1921 OUR TOURIIT BUSINESS. It is encouraging to note that visitors to the province this season Is greatter than at any time since the beginning ot the war. It is en- couraging llso to note. that accom- modation for our summer visitors is being enlarged and multiplied and that ht-ncciforth there Is little probabili-y that any will be turned away for want of hotel rooiu. The Beech Grove Inn, now almost com- pleted and being occupied as rapid- ly llts the rooms can be fitted up and the Cliff Hotel, at Stanhope. Iéfivrllll)’ renovated and now tilled. have added greatly to the sum- mer accommodation while the Vic tr/ria. the Queen. tho Revere and Lite other old time hotels of the drity are all crowded. This is not only gratify ‘ ii ing but las ought to be. The present lsummer has been a testing one; the ‘neat in the inland cities and ‘cven in the regular watering ploo- !es has been excessive while here ‘in the garden by the sea we have lenloved our usual cool, delightful and invigorating sea breezes With sufficient accommodation and strod- ily improving travel facilities this ‘ province is undoubtedly destined Northern hemisphere. None who have spent the summcr hcre will ziucstion this; we have the cllitiata and climate ls the one thing above till others that the dwellers in the heated and locking for as a way of escape for the two congested cities are or three short summer months. A little more publicity and a little more "going after“ this business will bring us all the sum- mer visitors we can accommodate if we undertake it. From the business point of view mothing wmild lie more profitable for the province than a large tour- lt would mean hundreds of thousands of dollars of outside money circulated throughout the province; it would mean alcontlnu- uus home market not only for iist trade. class of labour. To secure It we need to advertise abroad, we need to look after the comfort of our visitors while coming to and going from the Island; we need to ae- commodute and entertain them- ten-gas? -5.‘ _ .__,ntl-flvplrkr‘ ---< .~.>-_.~ .- e L/Tioi-Ji Patent Leather Slzel 3 to 7"; . $1.60 Sizes 8 to 101/3 1.80 Sizes ll to 2 2.00 POSTAGE Alley c 00., Ltd. Fashionable Footwear Charlottetown q“ OPTICAL y, LENS GRINDING Our Lens Grinding plant ‘-—the only one on the Is- land-is daily engaged in manufacturing t e vari- wlthout bleeding them-while here. These things attrnderl to we can have a continually Increasing tour- ist business that eventually will extend tbeyond the two or three months of summer and Include even a part of our winter. GOOD IMPULSES. ii . When the war was raglng and its daily record o!‘ trastiitlties, of destruction and of crime made the world shudder, it was everywhere looked upon as the one supreme horror. the one thing in all the world to be nvolded in future. Bi’ universal consent It was to be the the number of tourists and summer u,“ m“; m“ be to become the waterng place of the v much of our produce but for every- ilast war; never 31mm in“! ll"! world be deluged In blood to settlo I never used as cannon an international dispute; of any one nation. when the last shot was fired the {desire for universal peace for all dime to come was crystalized into the League of Nations and the idea "was generally hailed throughout the world as the beginning of a lusting ,era of police. when swords wofll be beaten into plough shares and spears Into pruning hooks. Those who bad so hoped had no; reckoned upon human nature which same yesterday. today and f ts the forever. l plant croxvds out another plAl! the weaker to the wall. so long will the eternal law of the sur- vival of the fittest continue. It remains for future civilization and for a more genuine practice of (‘hrlotianity to place the proper value on what Is “flttest'" and what Is worthy to survive. But this is not the point. fur the greatest. which it was. and these were, re- garded, the impulses which obsess» ed men to end forever these remain- ing evidences of our original sav- flgélil’. In the mtldst pf the horrors, shining in the darkness like beams of light, were the impulses and the feeble efforts to end tho horrors. The impulses, lt is true, trere often and we can accommodate tut-m nlflextravagant and Ill considered, but at heart wholesome, humane. Christ illke. There was a cal] for cry for more hospitals, provided regardless of cost,- caring for ourselves. years ago have become a burden. the more real Christianity. The Toronto Globe, the high priest organ of Liberalism In (‘un- iida is rich in contrlvanne when lt gets Into a bail hole. Its genius In creating political phtintaales ls without rival in the country, and it drniws Its pictures with such plausoble colorlngs as almost to deceive the very elect. Like all its party leaders lt has reached the very proper conclusion that Feder- nl Liberalism Is o. dead thing In (‘annda, and ln divers ways and upon frequent occasions it makes Current (fomment mlttlng, AS IT PLAINLY DOES. fodder because of the selfishness As long as man competes with mun in the struggle for llfe or in the quest for power. so long ‘will nations compete and so long will wars endure; so long as one for |soil room to live in and so long as one animal, man included, drives Looking back upon thr- wor, upon all Wars as upon the lust and so the‘ one redeem- ing fnct is the universal horror with men, they were given unquestlonlngly; a they were a cry for money and food and clothing, for harder work, for greater produc- tlon, and the Empire and the world responded without thought for the cosTor the future. Unfortunatelv the jhen future has come and is still ‘coming and our‘ better impuls- es are ibelng smothered by the bur- dens we had voluntarily and un- questioningly assumed. We have ol- ready forgotten the horror and the crime and are concerned only In The nation that brought the horror upon us and with‘ which we resolved never again to -t‘rutemlze ‘is already our competitor and colleague In indus- try and business and the gratefully itssumetl burdens of a few short Let us not too hastily abandon our ‘good Implulses; experience may prove them to have been extrava- gant and over-sanguine but. after all, whether they be the product of horrors of our own or of others’ making ,tliey are the little steps towards the higher civilization and ority" over all. Thus tar,“ If it! pity ls cos-not! lillnly It: wefler lease lkht. But It p ' argue: "In that sltuatlonfQT;\ LOOK FOR ALLIES. and tits ilk‘ ural aiuancb is with Lip-qt _ How nicely and plainly It ptmilt. The Farmers will not be strong enough to rule of themselves, and will need some second fiddle"; to help them out. and the small-rem- nant of that once Rear Liberal» party will willingly become their flunkies. allies and cats‘ paws, to help draw their chestnuts from the tire. And beyond this faintest of all hopes the chief orpn of the Liberal party publishes‘ its cindld admission thattglte prospect is with- out hope. ‘; "‘ "y _ f A most Important feature of the Globe's scheme is_ in Its admission that it will take the combined forc- es or Pampers and Liberals to cou- stltute a majority against the" Meighcn Government. In its own English then, the Government will be the largest factor in the House, and 1S0 LARGE THAT IT WILL REQUIRE THE COMBINED FORCES 0F‘ BOTH THE OTHER PARTIIQS TO OUT-VOTE IT. If this nteans anything it is that the (‘onservatives have, over- and above either of these. groups, the greater confidence of the country. It means that the Government party is the one that stands the strongest of all others in the hearts of ‘the Dfnple. and that only by acombln- atiun of the most radical andthe most divergent of radical Interests can it he possibly overthrown. And herein it recognizes and tries to overcome a difficulty. The policies of Farmers and Liberals will not mlx. Quebe will not bend to the will of the West in antagonism t6 their industries, and the West in turn will insist upon absolute Free Trifle. and the scheming Globe can find no solution to this heart- breaking prtfalrm. excepting to pre- dicate the impossible In its declar- ation that "It will be necessary to rrxn (.‘0.\Il.\IlO.\' GROUND." which at present is not in sight. The scheme Is well thought out. but is wanting in the hall mark of perfection. There is no evidence of any value to show that the Gov- ernment which both Liberals and Progressives admit will be the larg- est factor -in the next House, will not have a pronounced majority ov- er both Inc-films after the next elec- tion. while there ls the most abun- dant grounds ifor believing that it Will. Nine-tenths or the present Ilifbernl representation is from Que- bec, and from the fact that in its bl: cities immense manufacturing interests abound, all determined "Don maintaining a protective pol- icy, there is substantial groun - for expecting an increased support to the Government. and a prgpgr. tlonate decrease in Liberal mem- bers. In the rural districts of Que- i bec recent elections demonstrate that ‘Liberals rather than, Progres- sives will ‘hold their ground, The 0f Smuggling Outside Three Milo Limit H0 Clim- Iy Admits Hugo 0perntIo|t0-'-~ _Workn- For- Syndicate-Sells Whiskey For $60 n Due, But Only In Lots QIUQOID. . ' and» Over A Hundred inlthe Shade! (Prom the Westminster Gazette) The hottest day on record In England," I see it stated, "was Au- gust lth, 1911, when a shade tent Dflltlire of 97.1 degrees was observ- ed." ‘Phat scarcely does justice to ~ - ' . ' the remarkable August record 0f FATLANTIC CITY’ Au‘ 14M, w“ 3'3"‘ "97- "" 97" aggro." tain llrlc Anderson, ' the ‘yottlliig nearly 3 degrees below the highest ' skipper of the achoonert Henry T. shade temperature registered that 318kb,". the mm amuggnng amp, At Greenwich Observatory which has been floating around, the mercury In the shaded tber“ outside mé ‘iffy; ml-‘ardnmit fi ‘or ‘rnqmeter for a short time in the some “we but wmnkm d590,“, afternoon stood at the 100 degrees o‘ h" “Ugo o“ ‘hhkey’ talked mark_ and although other instru ments in the Observatory grounds lust failed to score a "century", 100 degrees was Officially registered alt the day's maximum temperature. because the thermometer which made the record was the one which all the Greenwich record-s had been taken for over half a century That Is the only instance of a shade temperature of 100 degrees In the British Isles, and ltvoccurred on one cf five successive days with shad cd moxlma well over 90 degrees. to a group" of tnitmln a motor bout and gave some interesting tutor-- motion regarding the methods of smuggling liquor from the Baham- as to the United States and about the syndicates who ‘handle It after It has been landed. here. Among other things Cuptnn Anderson said that although he has not tririiless “he knows all about the efforts of the government is making to catchi the whiskey ritnners, .1» motor’ boats come out to hint every night! and glve him papers‘ and inform- ation. " The Henry 'I‘.' hlarshuli. accord- ing to Captain Anderson's state- ment today, is the num smuggler which wls recently seen 0d’ Mou- ‘lauk Point and various parts of the New Jersey coast, where he had transferred t-ases of whiskey from his ship to motor boats that ptit out. from the American shore. The principal point for this transfer. he said. is at the Idgg Harbor buoy, ottt from Egg Haitbor tN..I.l When ships that have whiskey hhourtl arrive off the buoy. he said, at least five motor boats are ulwzrvs there to meet them and rttn buck and forth with the cargo tlirntiglt- out the right. At iiaylircuk tho “Our Unknow" Cousin." (From the Manchester Guardian.) ,At short intervals we are remind- ed In some vivid way of the extra ordinary difficulty which English politicians, even inen of wit and sympathy, find in understanding the light in which Canadians und Australians see us. The lute Spenkcr of our House of (‘intuitions is the last to learn the lesson‘ probably with much surprise. In a speech at Toronto he recently suggested that our House of Lords might usefully he converted by a certain amount o!‘ reforming into a knd of "Imperial" Chamber to P551151 A over the sldeof his vesselitoday _ ‘ " ‘a "rt How much do youspend in a wool-onlliflol- " yvouwouldnovsrmisoif-Abottt ‘Ibuunount, deposited evuvweektor five _ your, would amount to $841.02. ' v g I - ’ 3 " in a ‘UNION BANK OF CANADA ' Charlottetown Branch J. R. Diet, .4’ "After we left Motftntrlt Point." the Captain said, "we came down bare and laid off Beach Haven. and some of the boys ln- the bouts came out and met its", “Who are thepcople in Atlantic City who are buying theliqunr?" he was_uskcil. “They are the salooitkoepers. mostly. They are theories who send the boats out. When we go to the light buoy in Little Egg Har- bor the stuff is stored In shanties several httntlretl feet buck of the shore line. This is the third time I've been here with n cargo in two monllts, and I was never so long getting rid of a cargo before." (‘uptuin Anderson said he laugh- ed about the stories of a country wide whiskey syndicate, ltecause there is no such thing. He suiil that there is a syndicate in eat-Ii big cI'._\', ‘but that they work liid.-- pvutlently. fhelr wares, ' 4, _ The pbIet-_conipliti-ut._ against the, characterrof the street. however, is that thieves ime itcontlnually as a cleoriitg-place to market tholr hauls. Not litfrmttently a ragged, tm-kempt man will offer most 9x.’ 'penslve imported fabrics for suit- ing, in otlil bolt lots. at rldlcttlous figures. hfuch of this stuff, the police feel certain. has ‘been stolen, but it is difficult to flx the crime on the street vendor. Victims of the various drug hab- its find their cliIt-f source of sup- ply on this street. Plymouth Ilovclt a " Symbol of Biothethtiol PLYMOUTH, Mass, Aug_ 2.— llPllymmitllt Ilook iwua rededicated by President. Harding yesterday as u spvmliol of re-ul Ituinan brother- hood for all the world. Speaking at the Tercentenitry celebration of the landing of-tltc pilgrims, Ifrest dent Harding ileclared itis fervent taupe that the principles of toll-ra- tlon and lihert_v for which the pil- grim fathers (rrossed tlté Atlantic ------<-0>---- ' THE ,STREET OF MANY FAKIRS BFIRLIN, Aug. 2.—- "The tSrcct of Many Fukirx"-—thc section of the Frietlrclistrusse between Un- ter den LlllllPll and Koch streets- mity soon loso tlic right to its exo- whlsltcy smuggler drifts further ottt to sea and stays there until nightfall. deal with httslncss of interest alike to us and the Dominlons or one of them. Ile was perhaps fl little wounded to find that even ihc-itos- pltable friendliness of his Cana- dlan audit-nee did not wholly pro vent It from laughing. One has to he profoundly unacquainteil with Dominion national consciousness to suppose that any arrangement implying so distinctly provincial a status for a Dominion would re- ceive serious‘ consideration. It would not have been acceptable be- fore the war; it is trebly impos siblei now that the war experience of Cahadlans and Australians has immensely enhanced their csti tnatc of their own national strength and efficiency in comparison with ours. In their eyes our House of Lords 'Is a picturesque political curto, to be vlslted and viewed with a kind of Dittlent amusement. likc-‘the village stocks or one of our many King Charles’ Oaks. but not to be thought of, any more titan an old ‘English worming-pan. for any ‘This ls the Phantom Ship. “I tisotl to sail out of Gloucester and I was ll fisherman." said (‘up lain Anderson. "I do not own this ship, tiethei- do I own tltt- curgu of several thousand (‘itrlilsl of‘ old Scott-h which I Imvr aboard. Atid I am not going to tcll who does. I might say that I rim working for u crowd of wealthy incn. _ This old stmackutsetl to stall out of Glouces- lter, rbut when it was decided to |run whiskey she was sold and ttransferred to British registry. “When I got my cargo I left the Bztltnmas and sailed straight up thetoast to a position oft‘ Montztukl Point. I laid out there and llll!'~| lug the nI-ght come WIHIIII ton miles of the shore, where at n cer- tain buoy motor boats came out to meet us. My ship was the “phon- tom" ship the papers talked about. They made me laugb. All of the IVest is admittedly the Progressive stronghold. and front Alberto and Saskatchewan a tpreponderotlngly large representation of Progrgg. sI-ves will be returned. But with nll of this, lhcre ls the greater Canada left, now accepted a3 strongly protective. and more paw than ever before favorable to the Drcsent good government. from which Frontier Meighen ca.“ fegg. lmflbly Pxnect a substantially In- creztscd majority when he appenlg‘ to the people, —-———-iO-1______ Daily Selections for dun Readers Furnished by W. S, Lennon, VOQQO-OQOQ-OQQOJOOOOQ-QQm IN THE HOSPITAL The doctor smiled, and said n "my go home. l°ll10-'I'0\V;" and he looked prised w/hen I 38111111611 no answering smile. How should he know The sudden shrinking of my tortur. eo flesh Itrom all that "going home" implies to me? I am so tlred-—so tired! And when k “ You 5U!" I th n 0f wkins up the burdens that t nort of use by a lusty, confident young nation. They are, Indeed over-severe on the point,- many of IheHr/tise of Lords‘ debates nrc t-xtremely good debaters, though the constitution of ,lhe Chamber offends reason. But what we have to deal with is not what Canadians of Australians might, with a more perfect charity, think of our House of Lords. but what they do tliInk of it Otllierwise we shall be provoking more of these uncontrol- lable fitters. members of my crew are Glouces- teriflshermen, excepting three New» fountllundcrs énd one Frrtichntan. We make a certain profit on ezicli "case we sell. We are only res- ponsible until the stuff goes over the side Into the small bOflIR. Thou we are through with it." ‘Captain Anderson tvus asked If he would -scll"a few crises and what was the price. “Whiskey is $60 a truss," he said. “and gin is $50, but I won't sell lest! than $10,000 worth, If you'll btiy $25,000 worth I'll knock off $10 a case." He sultl that the whiskey cost $15 it case at the Bahamas. Congratulating Premier Murray (Quebec Telegraph.) The Telegraph. In common with the many friends of Premier Murray of Nova Scotla throughout the Dominion odds its congratula- tions to those of the Hon_ W. L. Mackenzie King and the ‘Hon. L. A, Tstschcrenu Jt-pon the conclusion of the twenty-fifth year of service which he has-given his native Prov- ince as Prime Minister having sticceeded-In tltttt office to tit-e lion. W. S. Fielding, when the latter was Invited by Sir Wilfrid Ihturier to join his Government, Mr. tic title. won hy virtue of the vit- rlcd and qitostlonitlilr commert-o which tltrivrx-t upon its sidewalks imil crossings, for utt llflllflllflll has hot-n started tn “cit-tin it tip." livory article front jllllllllllfl-jllflfs to fine Oriental rugs may he pur- chased from the vcnilors who iii- fcst the stront, eternally crying ntight soon itwnke in a new world t-rii. nutl in pence an untlcrslund~ ing would be assured among the itatious. Ilo referred in particu- lar to the effort toward dlsnrittzt- tilt-tit, itssertlng ‘his faith that the inuvcittcnt would sticceetk —————<o>————- Millard‘: Llnlmrnf for Colds, If!‘ l A Store Full Of Bargains v Ladies White Boots $3.50 and $4.00 reduced ’ Ladies White Pumps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ladies’ White Oxfords . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. -- Balance of our tles and straps at a big discount. We bought recently and have now on sale B. R. Holman’! < 4 stock which we are offering at about half value. ‘ Men's Patent Dancing Oxfords . . . . . . . . . . . . . “$10.00 for $5.00 ' Men's Patent Leather Dancing Pumps . , . . . . ..$9.00 f0!‘ 34-59 Ladies’ Patent Oxfords (American) $7.85 for $4.00 and thousands of other bargains In Men's, Women's and Children's , fine or heavy boots. from 25c to $13.00 per pair. HEADQUARTERS FOR HOLEPROOF HOSIERY. The best hose for the lent money. New goods arriving daily. Goff Bros to . . . . . . . . $1.98 E v¢.¢ $- .r 0 b. w : t A -.- vvvvvvv v 1 vvwvv - 3 [- F? P.- THE CHARM or A Beautiful Instrument Is dependent ttpon its power of ex- pression and upon its purity of tone. that Liberals can not be the ruling power In the next parliament, the difficulty rbeforo them is that this knowledge will so dishenrten the remnant of their country as to endanger the of the law who would otherwise have some slight chance of elec- tion, on the well known fact that people dislike voting for a party whose chances are nil, In the seats support _.__- When sickness su s, , The food that must be So that our poor, cheap sticks May not he set out on tho dropped brought for me u hrcathlng space- The grimy, otloroun clothes, so hnrd to rub 'l‘o whiteness as I bend above the bought, pre- pared and cooked; The constant struggle to keep up the rent. of ‘ furniture pubhc street our kinds of lenses, used -. ; in correction of defective vision. I Tbiersfittis nolong is]; s s nw n or s uilm-innoulrtzsivpfirv BEIIV CE, Is the motto of our establishment. Its candid confessions along those lines. IBut whilst dead to all prac- tical purposes there la a small rem- nant left which It would, If poa- slbla save from extinction. The undercurrent of nll its thought seem-Q to emphasize that. with Moc- Kenzle King as their militant lead- ‘ . , ' er lt has a lierculean task betfore . t G. F. it. But It Is courageous and even . , i i undlr thils handicap It will make "i .- u'.'_ the effort, and It is herein that It displays its forensic lophlstry. Ad- To meet this difficulty It scheme; Conservatives and Izlberalsi, but a vnnce of both. IT lIiS SUlRE to have a largo representation in the next House of Commons, but not at I!" likely to command n major- lly there." As out of the mouth of a mun his heart spettlteth, so the Globe here acceded first. place to the ngrurlans ss the strong party but not likely to "command s maj- lts problem out thusly: "The Pro- gressive party Is not a. blend of party which regards itself In ad- (All. God. that fear looms chief of all my fears!) Then is it strange weakly cling 'l‘o this white cot, this atmosphere of rest, Where I may sleep, dors‘ cries. And noisy brawllngs from the flat next door‘! I almost hoped this all pain that I should afar from van- pnin would end erals of Nova Bcolln." long m. and happiness m the au- tlngulsltad statesman. Murray, like Mir. Fielding before him_ hits given a good, honest ad- ministration to Nova Scotia, and the Province hns not been ungrate- ful. I-Iis leadership of a quarter of it century, as the Hon. Mackenzie King has said, “Constitutes n rec- ord of administration unsurpassed fn any of the British self-governing communities, and one which is no: lass a source of pride to Liberals throughout the Dominion than of honor to himself and to the Lib- Tho Tele- graph, in extending its warmest congiratu-Itlonn, earnestly wishes -——-¢0->—————- no AMUSEMENT rot: HER And I should dlo hers-Janine hospi t l‘ I I But no; the verdlctlflfblfe" I must t ‘flgo home"! t. PTEQWEFBEYE "till night): ‘gulch like a flltlrgn. grubby: 1t’ m wonder you don't it oulfr’ z- »' ‘ ~ ~' Wiley (worklngjrom morning un- ~ i. Not I. lflooks too - - . , See the exhibit of WILL now on display at our store. E. T00 en. Steret - V he magic 0f its touch herself. that the musical w In Miss o responsiveness to _.'and mood conjures visions of mystic scenes from time and space, and translates the song of "Nature It is to the WILLIS Bipno to-day orld owes its con-- ception of the ideal-the supreme in pianoforte construction. IS PIANOS, ‘Canada’s Best’ ‘Charlottetown, P. E. I. _ "P Q41 >4»: - 4- 4- cm-u-a- n.