a _l.l|Hl1 * ., Khulna no" n00 pn- you (delivered) ll son-m I'll‘ (Illlfli ll ndvnn . In Quads. and 58.50 for U. B. A. Ill h, Ielldonl. J. ll. llurneu, Eilllor um! rublluler. D- IC. Currie. Auloelutu Wdllor. MiONDAYLlEBRTJARY o, i920. O ‘HORN TH E FOR \\' .-\ E .\ The Inter-Church Forward Movement is now on est ‘in this province. Already a number 0f the . hes have started their canvassing committees Very encouraging reports are being received. erally speaking wherever due publicity has been en to the movement and its purpose and its need e known there has been a most encouraging re- nse. . The Forward Movement spirit is in the air, in- %pl1'¢d undoubtedly by the great deliverance effected _ the victory for which it is a thank offering, alid, in f is province at least, by the general prosperity of the past few yearr. Never have our people been in as ‘ood position to give alid the ‘war and its meaning _ave not yet been forgotten. The joy of victory is atill unclouded and the great majority of our peo- l ple are prepared to give tangible expression to their 10y. -The contribution asked for is for the advance- ment of the Kingdom of God, for the good of the . country aiid our fellow lnen, to carry, the gospel to ' the dark places of our own and of foreign lands, and to make our country a safer. happier and better place to live in. That the Forward lVlovelnelits1)ii'it is in the air has already been evidenced by the success of the re- l cent drive in the interests of St. Dunstalrs Univer- sity. Our Catholic friends in that drive exceeded *1 i their objective by fifty percent. There is no reason ‘ why_ the present joint drive by the Protestant churches should not be equally successful 'I‘hat we are financially ableto contribute has been abundant- ly evidenced by our heavy investments iii Victory Bonds and by the general prosperity to be seen on every hand. _ The purpose of the Inter Church Forward Move- ment has already been fully explained from pulpit v and latform and through the press. That there is ' . nee of the money asked for, that it will be wisely expended and that we owe all and more than all we can give as a thank offering to God for the victory vouchsafed after the perils which for nearly five c years menaced all that was near and dear to us, will not be questioned. It is now up to us to give tangible expression to the gratitude we have been expressing with our lips. We trust our province will, as a re- sult of its contribution to the Forward Movement, ,..,be.a.ble to ‘hold up itshead among our sister provinces. d. i 4 1 NIHY BLOOD. At a recent meeting of the St. John Board of Trade one of the members suggested that more new blood should be infused into the Council.’ He said there was a feeling that there was too much routine in the election of members. In Montreal no ex- presi- " dents, except the immediate past president, were .. eligible for membership in the Council. He gave notice of a resolution that the St. John Board adopt the same “rule, fixing a five year limit for former presidents before they were eligible for membership in the Council. , While there is much to commend the idea of in- fusing new blood in the Council and giving the rank L‘ and file an opportunity to “move up,” the experience of those who have filled important positions should not be lost sight of. Canadian Boards of Trade are now among the recognized authoritative institutions ’- and, Where politics is rgidly barred, they are most , usefularm-s of the government. As suggested at the . St. John meeting new-blood in the Council is a fea- l ture which should be encouraged, provided enough of the experienced blood is retained. To re-elect the same members is to move in a circle and get nowhere besides Withholding from the rank and file all oppor- tunity to take a hand in the Board’s and the country’s business. .\X .\.ul~:lll('.\.\' (‘().\il’l.|.\Il<l.\"l‘. The New YorkT-i-erald says: “For liiore than five years Canada has been a heroic financier of the Allies in general and in particular of Great Britain, Our intrepid neighbors contribution to the winning of the war was not merely in troops WlllCll,_ measured by her population, were sent across prodigally, and in food supplies shipped stupendously for her own and to other fighting forces in Europe. Canada, bought raw material in the United States and elsewhere by the hundreds of millions of dollars and manufactured it into munitions and war weapons and equipment of all kinds, speeding it across to the Allies on credit. Canada thus became and Canada continues to be one of the reat creditor nations of the world. - “ o foreign trade of this country has for us a higher potential value, industrially commercially and financially, than our trade with Canada. No other foregn trade makes so powerful an appeal to our hearts. -We must give prompt and full attention to the need for Canadian financing on this side of the border. For both the United States and Canada it will be a 100 per cent. safe investment. For both it THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN The Scottish Dead of lr._(l_llll0ll A London paper gives a vlvld ac- count of o beaullfulunemorlul ser- vice held forilhc Scots lvlio fell lil llll. (lrcail Vl/ar. The iicrvlcc took place lit St. Columbals Church, Point Street. Strains of Tschulkowskys Synl- phonle Pullietlquc—us the organ pezlled forth in the_ building»- rcached the crowd waiting oulsldc. And .i vast crowd ft was, more than lhe church could hold and many had to waft a long time in the raw searching cold. Shadows of the grey afternoon sunk Into the deep black of lhe congregation. relieved only by lhe be-rllbboned uniforms of lhe officers. Earl Huilg, Field-Mur- shaYs hut ill hand, was shown to lhe front seal; with him was Lady lluig, looking slight All/l fragile b-zslde her gruvc soldier husband. Ill llic seal with them was Prin~ coss Louise, Duchess of Argyll, ul- leiided iby Lord Iilllfoui‘ of Burlelgh. The printed order oi‘ service will bc long prescrvtlll. lt is a record ol‘ llio splendid sacrifice and sor- vll-l- of London Scots llufing ll-io (ifczll War. ' ll was staiod iii the order of scr- vicc lhlll over 10,000 men served in iblYLondon Scottish -(llll‘lll,'.,' the will"; 1,380 llllzl down ‘lholr lives. 'l‘llcrl,- wore 4,800 woundoli and 115 wl-l-o liikcn prisoners. Over 2,000 l-oulnllssloils uerc gixluled. 1n". ltrchlbild Fleming, u name wcll-knoivn null dcill- to London was the preacher. lie began . iwlcciby llnilliunclilg ihc first l.'_.lllli, ‘-Uiu~ God Our llclp in Ages Pl-sl," followed by ll lhllnksglvlng for victor-y and a [ll‘il_\'L‘l‘ for fling, road -b_v lhc ltcv. E. ll. ll. Alllcplicrsoiii. hi. A, l‘. ‘I'll, acting (llllllllllll ill honlo camps unll in Franco. Tlllli \\'.:s clllliitcll that lluzllnt Scottish rendering ol Psalms ('.\l\'l\'., “Now fsracl may may, and llléll lrul_y." . The lt-ssons. taken from Psalm xlvl, and llPVtdHllOllS v.ll., 947w purl of which lurms lhc Epistle of .\ll Saints lJu_v—\vcrl* rciiil by flit honorary colonel of llic LUllllflll Scots, Earl llilig. Ills (lulel, well- modulated voice was heard ull over lhc building, and many ii glanci- sltoll- toward tho render, wllll his double i'o\v of ribbons and his sword buckled at his side, as his hand moved across lhe sacred page. ll WflS ii pll-Liiro ivlilch Look lho mind buck lu tlil- "lronsido" of (‘ruin- well or lo llll‘ llghllniz ‘vuVflllllflttlm. With heal-lg throbbing with prldc, but wllh grief not yot lllll to rest, llll- CUHKTPQRHlTflII llsteilod upstand- ing to the bl-iluliful tribute to coin- radcs iinddovcd ones road by Dr. Plenllng. "'l‘lic llPiltll They were lnkon, most of ihl-ni. in lhe lluwor ul’ llicir youth, flushed with health and slroilgth. beloved and loving with n strong earthly lovo, full of hope and promise; most of them, loo. were lukon-unziwares lll the thick of ‘bzltllc, thinking, as brlvo lucri do, not to death. but of vlc- lory, and of their good cause. . . . .. For us who survlive and whose days are darkened by their absence it remains onl-y to go forward. inspir- ed by their cheerfulness and un- solflshness and faith, tlll our task also ls finished and our rest ls won." "Greater love hath no man than lllls" was lho text taken for an all- llrcss by the Rev. l). C. Lask, M. (H, acting chaplain in France and l-‘lilnllors. 'l‘hcrl- were vcry many of lhe fulll-n, ho silid, to whom llic List honors could nol. bl-. paid. He llkoncll llioir lil-illhs to lhlll of Moses, u ho Wcnl up lnlo the inouii- ill" and saw lllc Promised Lllnll. lllli. WllO lll Vlfl‘ $.‘\fll HIOTP, and p §§9§-O-Q'>§_O 0 v q 9O bvO-O-OQ-H O ‘only S0ltCll0llS ill i ‘ Guardian Readers Furnished by W. B. Louaon é QOOOO-O-OOQOIv0QO-O-O-OOOOO-Q» MODESTY IN DRESS Mfrs. ll. \\. Parsons. en'- |'l_-5|;0||(ling gtqfiflftilfy of the Nation- al (‘ouncll of Women, sends Illle following colnmunll-u-tloii lo "T110 Globe," ‘Poronlo: "We note wllh interest that m; Holiness Pope Benedict XV. fins instituted l1. cnlllplllzn among- sl (‘ainollc women against lhe lnlmodcsty of the extreme fash- lons of the present style of dress. "Permit me to lnform your renders that at the annual meet- ing of the ‘National Council of Women of Pnnlida. held B! Regina, this question was intro- duced by resolutions sent fin from locnl councllé ln the provinces of Onllirlo, Mnn-ltoba and Sas- kntchewnn. ’f‘llose were redrnft- l-ll mm llll- louliwins relwlu lli.- ' - . whose aepulelire is unknown to tllls day. . He spoke of the courage of sini- ple boys, the endurance of long~ tried men, their loyalty and cheerl- ncss of heart. “The one, mciliorizil they would seek for was that we should (fiLlTy on and make good. They ivuilioil ll fri-cr, noblor world. 'l‘hl-y dlod nol l'ol' wcullh, bul for justice; -uot for pliwcr. hilt for pence-J We trusted in lhcnl; re- member they trusted in us." J. A. Froullc-‘s words inlgbt have been written of those nlcn: “'l‘hul which distinguishes-i high order of man from ii lower order....ls self-for- iwtfulness-self-sacrlllce, a ldlsre gard of personal pleasure, person- zl indulgence, personal advantage remote or present, because some other line of conduct is more right." Gradually brooding clouds and gathering dusk hill] robbed the ivln- llows of thi-lr gloivlng colors. 'l‘lirough the half-open vl-slry door sounded tho-sklrl of bagpipes llS lhe rcglnllenlkipipors slowly paced to their slaiilons before the chancel playing their wild "Lament." Now and then again the boom oi" lhe big muffled drums cchocd down the aisles. With ‘bowed heads ploplc flllll Dlfwts waited llll from the porch tho silence wils broken by the buglers slirflly scillulilng lh.» "Lasl Post" and "ltevolllo." ‘l<‘c.'|i' no liioro lllo hell 0' lllo sun. Nor lho furious \\llll(*l"s lxlgcs, 'l'liou ll.-_: worldly luck iillsl llOlN, llonll- llrl gone and l.i'cn thy ivagos." >vv<vvv0w v >v-QvQ'v-Qv+¢-9OQ- i Others View Point ' VVOQWOOQOOOVQQQQOOOOOQD- 3 i Hi3 "HOME" lN-u York llcrlilll) .\ll clniiilill jullyc oiicc dccillcl. ‘lint a man's lilunc lvus llic placl whorc his laundry was oollocloll and llolfvcred. l zidci- the Eighteen- lll Amcillliuoni ll appears i|i.ll man's homo. is whore lic kcl-ps his plivnte legal stock of liquor. 'l‘hol'o is nothing llkc combining logic will, l(l\\ . ?——-—{0>-——i- MODERN ECONOMICS lDolrolt Journal! ITndl-i- till.‘ old fashioned lu\\ oi supply unll dl-nizlllll It vcry Lirgl (lllflllllly or a surplus of nliy com- lnodity brought llllllllit fulfill-g prll os. A new lliw lll economics rover; scs tho procrss. Tho stocks o1 iii-l roleuin have hccn lncrciiscil, niorc oil hull Iu-l-n rl-llncli ill Lhc izist yl-lil than iii any provloils yl-ilr, nloro has been llll])(ll'i.lll"llll(l lilo Slilnllnro 0f] (lonipany has ruisoll llio pric~ of gllsollno lliili kerosene. lt ro lnalns now for some logically uilnll :Ll economist lo lay down tho l'lll\ that the lPllS thorc lli of zlnylhin; tho loss it costs lilo consumer. llul ll he lrustell ll. his cxperlcnct- llt would mike lllo rule l‘l‘lllll “lwlil ihor there is loo much or loo lillll of a lfflllllllllfllly an lncrcuso h; price is made Imperative." A BANKRUPT WORLD (New York World) Germany}; continued increase lii the output and depreciation of taper money lends to repeated statements from Berlin that ll ls "filsl drifting lnlo li slate of bank xliptcy." Mliy it nol be sail] that German-y 1.: illrliudv in a slate o: hulikrupllqv‘! What is lho. lcsl ol bankruptcy for a Iiollllcil) state‘. \ blisin r- gierson is bunlliilp: when unable in pzly his llr-bls or incl-l lllq obligations us they lull lure. Llul il. is obviollls lbul ll ll business corporation or per ‘lll lr distress could lnakl- and issue bl.- own promises lo pay and conlpcl lhclr acceptance ‘by creditors in sillsfllction of all claims, he could ilevci" lic held a legal bankrupt, whatever the fnct nllghl bu. Al this. however, is lhe position of tho political state, a lcgall bankruptcy for it cun ncvci" exist oven when actual ‘bankruptcy ls lil fact coili- pletc. And when the German Gov» crliilieiil can pay only hi paper niurks and lliose lnlirks are ivortli m lhe standard iuonoy of the na- llons hardly two cclils against a plir of lwcilly-fuui" ceuls, ils ilcliliil bankruptcy cannot be much morl complete than lt is. 13y lhls test not only is Gl-rmuny bankrupt but ev- ery illllion of Duroilc L; bankrupt ln grciler or loss degree, not ex- cepting Frunce o r England. Thl. United State-g is lhe only great nation of tho Wolitein World which is financially solvent, and lhe Unl- ted States ls trying as best ll can to make up for llils by laslubllsli- lng a moral bankruptcy for the na- tlon ln ~the' eyes oi all the rosl of mankind. 1t is verity ii bank- rupt world. ---i<0>———- should be '9, p61‘ CEHlLSOUIId in the chain lions and unanimously endorsed: PmNcn-v ‘NCOMES NEEDED binding-together neighbors, friends and kindred.” EDITORIAL NOTES. l hive crossed recently declare I Excursions by the (Jul-ferry Just impatience an exceedingly ‘ln- to see how she does it are likely "That, In the interests of health. lnoralli and efficiency, and for tho purposes of thrift, thhi coun- cll shall appeal to the women of lhe Dominion to use their ln- fluence lo Oppose the constant changes In fashion, and the ex- aggerated stylen in dress; that - further, they shall make ovary - one Ind. llm ltoamai-‘n to be amonx 1110 P091118? 171M118! aloft to adopt a drain 01 a 0019i- ‘ ‘ .. . P Micron h Mo o lllqllf .- lmply wonderful. of we promo m \ ‘lll0lllglfl_n.ghk‘bl'wllhuu.u w , -A it. In a 3.1. ~' ' ,- a (Boslon Transcript) 'A striking fndllvatliln of the de- niund for high clues resldontllil nc~ cnminodallons in New York und the steady increase in prices being paid for space of this nature ls revealed by a statement made by the man- agement of the new Allnbanador 101700 phi-t lvoiuio, between Fifty- f l 4-; first and FlfLv-second streets. Al-l though the liolel will not open be- fore Oct. l, lhe management an- nounces that enough applications already have been received for rest- llenllal accommodations to' more than llll the amount of space lhnl will be leased to permanent guests. No rescrvullloils, however, have us yct been allullcll. Five room upurt» m -nts arc llslod u: $20,000 to $30,- QL") n your. Sonic of’ these suites include mind's room, boudolr, bliths foyer-s and prlvlltc lliills. ‘Three room npurlnlcnts wlll rentfroni $12,000 to $18,000 per your. While some of the apartments \vll1 be listed at therite of $3,500 lpcr room -u year, the average annual rental wlll be from $4,000 to $0,000 poll room. Wnlle these prices proli- ably rcprcvleul u higher figure tllun lhose. charged by other hotels in rho tliilted, ISlaies, investigation among the fiiwitcluss hotels of New York would reveal a sharp zillvance in the. prices asked for permanent suites 11s ii result of lhe strong de~ uiilnll for llvlngcuurlers of this ztescrlptidn. l‘lia°sliortlige of ser- vant labor is among the chief con- zrlbutlng causes of ihese conditions Willi regard lo lilc situation an of- ‘lclal of lhe Ambassador ilolcl llilll? tlllS statement: "ll ls really amazing to nole llll‘ HlSll New Yorkers are miking to secure permiiiicill iluilrlers ln lio- Lols. Although only’ about lliret- |llll(ll'(fl of llil- Anibasiilldlius rooilis .vlll be (lcvutlll lii the usl‘ of per» nilnenl guesls, we lire being ovcr- vllllinoll with applications for pace of this kind. AL our tcm poraily offices, 11 \\'est 46th stimet, .-vcry mall ls lbringing applications m rcscrvalioils unll we lake lhls ls‘ an llllllf'llll0ll_lll.ll lhcro arc many more people lli New York rho Wlllll hotels to lilllo UIlFL‘ of lll-nl. XKLTlUUlH, an invosligutioil ,VUlll(l slioiv tlini all lllc Iiotlcl‘ class if boll-ls lire“ being compelled to llru illvlly niuny persons who dc- eii-o lo lliutilllh’ pcrlnuilent gilt-sis. i‘ this l}; thl- cilao, it may be l-x- li'(,'ll'll illlli lhe next TPW years will vitncss llil- conslrucdioil of u largo lumbcr of new llofols and zlplirt- ilcni lions-oi; in this city." ' {-O-§— The Blunders of Peace. ‘ (Flcvclzlnll Plain Dealer.) .\l:in liiis iiovcr ycl boon ziblo lo ill lliiusi-ll liy llili mvii boolslrupll. {hi-ii lllc world is alllirl on pro-l lllcllun o2‘ cvory‘ osliciilliil commo- llly tho problem wlll not be solved >3‘ clirlziill , ]ll‘(|Llll(fllOIl. llilrll .l'm'k, lllll‘llll,(‘fll flllllllclvlllflll lo rllnlllruni lllilioli," tho ill-livery of" ii l water and turn it lnlo these gases i THE REASON WHY WHERE DID ALL THE WATER lN THE OCEANS COME FROM‘! ' No, lt did not come from lhe rive erii which empty themselves‘ lnlo tho oceans, because .-lhe 06011115 were there before the, rivers exist- ed. Purl of l! comes from the rivers now. but only u lillll? l" wllllmrlw“ to all the water 1UP"? l“ l“ ‘he occlin. l will try to loll Y?" 511119131 “ow n" H“. water gut lnlo .fhli ocean. There wag a lime when there was no water On the earth. at. all. That was when lhe earlh was red hot, juiit a-s it is today on the ln- sldo, and at that time all the water we have today was up ln lhe Ell‘ ln lhe form of Eilfit-‘Q- 5IP1IIIEB 115 ll may seem to you, if you take 1W0 gases‘, one called hydrfigfi" and m‘? other oxygen, and nrlx lhem the night way, they will turn into wat~ er, and lf you had lhe rig-lit klnd of chemical apparatus you could take again. When, then, the earlh was sllll all red hot, ull of our WLIIGI‘ was up in the all" iii the form of these two gases. Then. later on, when Ollie amount of heat on the earth was just rlghl to make these gases mix logcllier, the wafer came down out of then-fr ill great Illlflllllllefi» and lhcro was so nnlch of it that ll completely covered llle_whole earth and no laud was visible. Later on, for various reasons mountains were thrown up on lhe earth's surface by groal oarlhquakes, and every time ll iliounluln o,- u high place was fornlod thcrc liad lo be a hole or low plucc‘ some place else and lhe willcl" ran lnlo these low places and stayed lnere, and that uiicoverd more of the land, because there wasn't enough water lo fill all the holes and cover tho land loo, and that ls whal makes our continents u-nd islands and ul! of lhe lllllfl we see. 'l‘here ls now about three limos us much carlh covered with wafer as there ls fund. Of course, lhe sun ls ulwziynv. pick- ing up wlllor through what is cal‘ lcll evapoililllm, which lnelins lhiit it is lllkcn lnlo llic all‘ in lhc form of gas-cs. l.llli‘l' it comes down again in lhe form of ruin and falls into lhe uccllns or on lh:. land. where ll snks iii, finally finding u stream or l'lV(!l',, and sooner or lillGI‘ gels back lnlo ‘the ocean again. . --l<‘rom lho ilnolc of Wondclus. Publir-licll uni} (‘opyi-ighled by lhe‘ [lilroilu of lnduslrlal Education, llilx, Washington, l). (‘. mindful NOTES "POLLY MASSON" The Llllllltll‘ of llll.‘~l book, Mr. \V. ll. hloorc- is nol a nivellst, but n conli'uv_orsliilis!, llnd resorts to tho. novel us u Illvillln‘ of ilxpliunilinc‘ lil-i vil-ws. .\ll". Ilfoorc is ii cllllliiploli '.lll ll:l_\“,~: lillllll‘ for a llnyis pay, on llc lino liilnll; ccoilnnly in person- l null public L‘X|l('l]llll\ll't‘.\', lllrifl n lhc handling of onl-‘s funds, cl iliiniillliii of oxlravnyullcc, on illi- llllfll‘ liunil lliul is what llio world l\'\'llS do lo be liilVPll lndnlilrlzllly. lIJFlllZUlS blundoi'od in wilr."l‘lie_\ _ re lciivlng lhe inilulllriill blunder- Ill-Z to their former enemies. CLEf-TENCEAU (New York Tribune) ‘ (‘lenien-cesuki defeat ll-y Pllul Dc- chiinel 2n the French parliamen- ary ciii.us comes as'a great sur- ;rlse. Outside the political groups .l Paris nobody was prepared to ieleve that the greatest states- uan Fran-cc produced during the wnr period, the “Father of Victory,’ :ouldn't have any honor he wanted neroly for the Jsklng. Perhaps he vus too sanguine in allowing lilni- icll‘ lo be put forward lls ll candid- 'te for llie Presidencyl lie made cores of new elieniels in lhe Chain- lcr, whllehe was Premier. He hull lean making oilemles all lils llfo. ‘ntll llic police treaty was promul- ;.ltc,| he hill) u chock on them. lic LUl(l his own lo Llil- end ln the old ‘lilllubeizBul the new one fell freer .o follow its feelings anlLpcrhaps to mill ancient grudges. Clemenceau lluycd a folio hand as PTOIIIlEI’. llc 'llll\‘ll few men of’ strength into his (‘ablnei and his former rivals have been working quietly for many liloulhs to undermine him. l-lls rc- lection will thus not be accepted is a verdict on his crowning work is thc savior of France-thenuln‘ who came at last to the head of the {ovprnnionl with a policy express- -d in llircc words, “I make war." ‘Jlomcnceau retulns his fame. That is lnlpcrlshzible. (Ylcmonceiiu ls li lilgl: und a cynic. lie liulll on arm- stlcc diy: “l, ought lo die now. then, u! least, they would give mo i funeral." llc stayed on and snw France through the pitfalls of the pence conference. After that, elec- tion to the ornamental office of Presldont could mean, at best, only l gilded retirement. --<--<-0>-—-—— A, Midshipman‘: Cruise. (Manchester Guardian.) llcr Will‘ service over and boar- lng nlufl. once more lhe Kruccful spurs she carried us u prlvale yacht, lhe liuxllinry bnrqucnline St.’(lo0r|.zo ls about lo put f0 lieu (on her first deep sen cruise as u ciidel lrnlnlnp: slilp. She is owned by Devltt und Moore's Ocean Trillium-z Ships, Limited, the flrln which previously owned the four- lnliated bnrques Port Jackson and Medway, and when she sails from of Qlloblu- us ziqrlinsl ()lll'lll\, and his plol llllll lll -llvc in "Pollyi .' in" lirl- willfully inuppl-d out llnll sli"l'lllll.{l‘ll lo uivo lho iniprl-s- rlllll hi,- wishes lo UUHVPY, vlz., lllill (Juchi-l: llilt‘. lioi-n flail-silly’ and illlu':irl'.iiiiolily' llcall with on the llllll-illlllllr llllostliui so fur as llor l-olonianllion of Onliirlo is conl-l-rncll Tho l“l'i‘lll'.ll in Onlario, contends .\ll". Moore, have as lunch right to bl-linglllllisuii us have Ilio lilugllsh ln Quebec, and ho illlikcs out ii vcry good‘ casi- in the book miller rcvioiv. The story ls an GlllBPlillll- log one, though tho horn. is not such as lnodcrii [iollllciuns are llllllll? of. The other characters lire woll-drilwil but their coilverszlllon in almost every liistnnce appeals forced iinll unnatural. more of tli‘e cliaracler of set-speeclilfylng. Stllll the discussions lhrlng out clearly, and effectively the author's view as originally set forth in "The Clash,” liii-d everyone wishing to be inform- ed on this vllnl questlon must not llllSs reading “Polly Masson." Pub glshed by Dent & Sons, Ltd., prlcel 1.75. the Nautical College ut Pang- liourne. These cadets, who rank as ed lo become officers in the Bril- lsh mall and passenger liners. In the Si. (leorge they will spend one year. during which llme they will lake the wheel, heave lhe lead, and in fact acquire a practical know- Si. (lcorize on her first training cruise will go to Llis Palma. On have 10 cadets on buurck she wlll ‘ visit ellher the Mediterranean or ‘ lhe West lndles, and on ull later cruises she will carry 100 cadets. Onkv a the old school could undertake the command of such a training ship. the muster ofJhé Si. George, serv- / hoe Values that are Worth Whil g ior Men at Goff Bios Lt Mann Mahogany calf old0 blucher with heavy Ioatlfer lllp and-fibre sole and rub- ber heel’ - b E $6.60 Golport iihe will curvy la addition lo a picket lorecnstle crew a com- puny of some thirty cadets from -:-..-- “niidslilpnion If. N. R," are deslln- H work the ship on deck and aloft. ledge of deep-sea "salloi'lni:.” The licr second voynite, when she wlll " “squnl-e-rlggell" sailor of .. Cuplliln J. l-lzimllton Bluir. I).S.O-. ,_ ~l FEBRUARY 9, 1920. O-O-O-O O-O-¥§§O-&O-O-O§-O VO-O-O-OQOOO-O 90490-044 “THE FOLLIES oi 1920" “THE HOUSE (J. l-iartlcy MflllflLYS g Thursday and Friday, February 12th alid 13th NEXT DOOR” Comedy Drama with Specialties) i l STRAND l l l l ell his lime in lhe l ocli Line of the clipper ships, which nol so many years alzo werewolf and favoriibl_v‘kn0\vn in lhe Aus- irlillan trade. lie served In llio Locll Etlve, Locr Noss,.nnll Locl. Carron as an apprentice. Later he lA 1S chief officer of the Antarctic exploring ship Aurora. under (Jupl. John K. Davis. In the early illlys of the war he had command of a special service vessel, and lhe end of 19H rlizhl up lo lhe last October he served as flllVll-Iilllll}! officer ln various submurlnles. Now he is buck once iiloro in sail as nlllslci- of (inc -nf llic llilflllflOlIlPSl [IHUlKUlS-illlllill. 01~i iilillililillli Mackenzie King (Frodorllalon (llcnncin) Al a galhcrlni: of Liberals lll St. John during lhe slay of llon Mac- kenzie King lhe notions and grll-v- niiccs of’ some 0f the (lolegutos were quite frccly ulrcd. lion. (KW. Robinson, for inslilncc, complliiiicd that lhe party were not united, und, in effect, that lhe future would ho hopeless unless a reunion were af- fected. Mr. Nelson W. Brown. the lender m‘ lhe Liberals in this con- sliluency, pressed for n union with the United Farmers, whlle Mr. H. B. Scott, of Carleton county, who followed in the llllk, declared tlini he is a Liberal first, and" will conv tlnue ns such, notwithstanding the United Farmers‘ movement, anl. ln his Interests. Mr. Brown sold On Above Dates Get Your Coupons Now. All Seats Reserved at 75 cents-Coilpnn Holders will have First Choice-of Seats Plan Opens Tuesday Feb. 10lh at Reddin Bros we» eo-wowo++o 004-0004440 0o 0044 0+“ moo» w wvéoooo o from ' Monday and Tuesday February 16th and 17th Both Under Direction of Messrs S. C. Hurley and J. Burkhart ' Auspices Knights 0f Columbus To be Staged by Local Talentlat the THEATRE l e; 411i‘ principles l-‘arnlers’ candida! of lhe United Farmers’ movement "differed none at all from those "of lhe Liberals, ’l‘akc the biill by "the horns und join your Liberal lil- “lcresls with those of llic farmers “in lhc agrlculluriil districts." There wlll ‘oc a suspicion lhuthlr. llrowii ls influenced more by the personal zispocl than by considera- tion for the welfare of cllher lhc lfibfmll llfltly o,- the Iinltell Furni- ers. .\ll". Brown has been given very llllle, if iiny, puny recogni- lloll for what ho has done for the UlIOP-‘lls in lllls cnunlnv, The Lili- orill party of lllis constituency has for wars been hopelessly (lili- orgunlzell; (livldcll hilo factions. lllc one jealous of the other nol onl- cnjoylnl: any measure, of lllo others‘. confidence or rcepcel. ll H’ nnllor such coildltlons llllll, ML Brown, and because of’ lhe failure of olhcrs lo bear the burdens and rclqilinsllillltlos, clinic flirlviivd ln_ PVUFY Plllllpflll-Ill and lruvo his tllno llnd his inuniory to make a contest. llo woll know that lll"lllll'l‘ lie nor any olllor Liberal could ho. clclati-d, bill his offoul and his polnl wcro lo servo llil- iulrlyflq lillorcsts ln other consilliioiic-los by keeping lllo lulichlnoiy ug busy us possible iii York. Ycl when Mr. Brown could lllivl- boon awarded by lhe piirly for whul he lllis done as ii consist- ent pllfiy mun, he was dcllbcrzitely ignored in the Provincial as well us.‘ ’.n the 'T<l_t‘(l£‘l‘1ll lleld. ll ls um more than three nlonths ilgo lliul lho Foster Gov/rninoiit, ilolwl-tli- stand-lug its promise, finally turned ll deaf eur and a blind eye lo the application of his friends and their» presentation of lllS merits. It ls the flicllnn element of the Liberals who will suy that ll is iiol the party lilteresxg Mr. Brown i5 seeking l0 advance ln usklni; that lhe Llb- that, lf ho were ln the running in the next election he would be n lng lo the sympathy of others. Make these enquiries as u llllCC. traclive Plans issued by Branch Ofllce Manager: P. Neglect no longer to inform yourself of the lnnulnerable advantages of Life In- surance. It ls probable lhut°y0il do not know for how small a sum you may, under the Policies of The Great-West Life Assur- ,- lince Wompanir, plllce your fnnillylheyond the necessity of appeal- crals go over lo the United Farin- era. - should the unexpected liuppen. matter of business, not senti- ment. l-t ls sometimes necessary lo remember that whlle some wives no‘. only full to urge Insurance upon their husbands, but , actively discourage such provision-there is yet to be found the ,- WIDOW who falls t0 appreciate the advantage of Life Insur- Slilla age, when full details will be mailed of the mnny st- T he Great-West Life Assurance Co Charlottetown HYNDMAN & COMPANY, lllililili s. |,_ Menu Black Box Klp Menu Mahogany bul much" °" I "l" l"! pointed toe. Acme solo. I ‘Illdkl good wearer. Goodyear welt. > e $4.60 , "59 - t 0 I Menu Black Calf Blunher leather llned good- fiar welt, Dry foot lole with double uhnnk. l’ d._’ and everything clue In boots, choc: and rubber: for mQn, wo- men and children from 25o to $111.50. Thln IOIIOHI but offer. 810.00 l blucher on n olyllnh lust. Goodyear welt Menu Mahogany calf lldo 06.75