Ira- -r.= find-amt guilt} 88 Years of Service The history’ of this Bank since its inception‘ h i332 has bccn charactt-rized by a steady growth in facilities for serving the public. a- To-day we have the accumulated knowl- edgcmdexparience 0F 88 ytirslbnpplyto your banking bushes. VVe invite your i iillllllllilllillllillllll lllllrilil i???“ l Scotia . lllnlcom. MLHIRQL. tliAllLmTETOwN Branch-s a!» It Alherton, llf-Jaque. Borden, _. Ivnulnctun, Mom _ n UTrury, St. Pttefl, South. Summt-ntidu. Vlctorln —TIII Bank of Pl ova Pfld-upCuplld Li QJIIJMJI Raurn - J IILWIIJNU ‘%tj1;/-V - ‘y f»! A ‘Nofw (llieriogol City 0i Halifax Bonds and Stock "a 111-2 issttt‘ is ul‘ £525,000, six per 0cm Bonds, due Janu- . try 1st, 1931 intr-rr-st wiyablc January 1st uni July 1st at llaiuzxx. Xlontrcal. 'I‘oronto. Winnipct: and Vnttcntivcr. STOCK Ilelzistcrtxl 21s to Principal and interest. lurcrwac payable by (‘bcquc- to owuct" (‘tartific ates issur-tl for auuuunts |ll llttl l1[l\\'£l1'l|. COU PON BONDS Boaters or llegislr-rcd as to ‘Yrilyciufll 1n Iii-nomination n1 $1,000. tar" pnlvpj. 116,516.". [r01 r-r-nt and lntt-rt-st. to yield li‘~ 1w" cr-ut. or lhrutuzlt our Partial Payment I'iun 1'02" tho convivr iunvc n1 iuvrstors nl nautical llllfOlllt‘. w]; qflk-i- tht-st- sccttritica tur iuttnctiiat-tc cash purclrtr u \\'u will znrrwcpt rtrtlcrs tclcxiwtlmed or ‘“I“I"|I°Bt-"l i" ‘l expense. t .I. C. Macintosh 8: Company 171 top173 Hollis Street, Halifax Members of the Montreal Stock Exchange Performing an Investment Service Exclusively J. ROWLAND PATON 130 Great George St, Charlottetown Representative in Prince Edward Island i r—--le—f-..———~r~ —--~?-‘-- i’ Tllei Popular Verdict It is sometimes advisable to "follow thecrowd"—to ac- cept the popular verdict. In respect .to Lilo Insurance, tor example, lt is clear that very strong reasons musa have influenced the nuru erous persons whose applications for protection have, for thlrtogn succzaslve years, given the Great-West 1.11s the largest Canadian Business o1‘ nil the Canadian Companies. 140w rows-high profits-liberal policy conditions- hove been the reasons. l - \ttQi-‘ m»; mom-ab- Ask [or information, and for pamphlet showing Profits the Greot-“icst Lilo policy holders ore receiving. THE GREAT-WEST LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY Branch Office Charlottetown Hyutlman 8: (lo. Ltd. Manager: for P. E. I. “"“‘""“""“'**-'~**' blonooon~wm~ Z ' 5% But now that it’; over I'm happy indeed To ttblnk right. qQ.~¢--~¢»>»-oo-»oo¢44+o ' Daily Sfiltlltlltlllo Guardian Readers I Iurnllhod by W. l_ Louoon. noo-o-ooo-oaooo-woo . . . . . . .RI'II"IIECTIOXS.. .. tlmrl camc our all 1 ueurly gave up vzhrn the thing looiwd bud. . . . . 1 bad slntlost: decided to quit; I'm surprised nt ntysclt lll rho courage l had. .-\nd I'm glad that. ntuch grit. ._-__-_ 1 ltavt- so {trttlly wi-ll with that trouble ll hurl, Th“ ‘rljuble m,“ frightened “p: Whru tilt‘ next trouhlt- comcg I shall stand up and tight And mot-r. it tibc best. that. I can; I've reached the conclusion that trouble’; alll right, , , . . lt brlttg, out tho stufl 1n a man. Author lluknnw-n. __.._..-¢oc-?-__. Arbovo all, that I may not bl.- a coward: That 1 may ‘have couua ge —-c0tltrozc to be unmoved thy the uncertainties o! lite. turd without dread at loss. rwhietlher o! friends. o! ‘health, or o! lot-tune: Thar. l may come with a tlrm‘ and tran- null mind tn the rwork or this day. tearing nothing-moody b0 meet bralw-ly [allure or tlaprlvntlou. John Brlsbotr Walker .0; - . Nuwhlrs nvtu- I've a, right to fool $1.1: .. .. .. ,¥hut I didn‘t give In bu a blow. For n. while it. u.pp€1l‘l'(>'(l liltutl I ' couldn't succeed. -- =I was tempted to give up Ill .ipnuu's" Vii l] N EY JAMES ‘W-H ITlOOMI RFLEV "hm. he For we lmrvw. not every mormw (W! be and; w 50. fflrzetltlfll 41:11 llhle sorrow . - We have had, m n0 fog any our fours, . lfll . our cum h ten-n, 4m ennui s Iltlrcomln; . ' . ‘whim your: rnucuxatarrrt-rluwutsuhmlmu. l'l5.. ‘i"*ll l ‘lTT5T"W" "Uliimi" pun-nu‘ u||||y (Iqunflg-ql 131479 $t'§.(I)-|IOI' yrur (tlrllvt-n-tll In utlvttgnct-x $4.00 per yrttr (nntIlt-dr In nth-unu- ln lZ-tntultt. tmtl 3-1-50 71"‘ l- 9- A- g" fhnrh-n "nun", Prrululcut, J. ll. Burnett, Editor nntl Publlnht-Ir. l). It. furrlc. Assoc-lair Editor. TUESOAY, DECEMBER 28, 1920 TIIIC (‘HUI Ii \\'.\ VIC A veritable wave of critne is sweeping over many Canadian and American cities at present. lllurder ' and robbery are 0f almost daily and nightly occur - encc and thc police arc lacpt. busy with but indiffer- ent success in stemming the yvave, while the tltcor - Tsts arc equally brssy trying to account for 1t. One blames the laxity of the police, another blanles the war and still zmothcl- blames tho prevailing uncut - oloy/ment. While each 0f these may contribute its quota to what is certainly an alarming condition, it is possible that a (lccpcr and more potent cause ex- ists. There is another wave sweeping over the world thattis even more dangerous than the wave of mur- der and robbery; that other wave is--for want of a better riamw-Bolshevism. A better nzune might be Socialism run mad. When "from the soup box ‘ and street corner and by rmmphlct and newspapers (lcma gogues and agitators denounce existing institutions. advocate the confiscation, 0f capital, and preach s0- calletl equality and all the other rot that has been very largely instrumental in causing many of the strikes and disturbances that have almost paralyzed industry bot-h in Canada and the United States, thr- nost natural thing in theixvorld to follow is a wvtvc of crime. There are manyvrht) listen L0 these (lenta - gogues- litany who find it convenient to believe in thcln and to believe is to becnnic u criuliuzll. Police laxit) is not wholly blameless n01- is the looiicc court. There should be no compromise with crime, no laxity in punishiilsy the guilty. . To say that the war is cwcu a contributory cztltsi‘ or that rctilrlretl soldiers, as such, are implicated. is aimply an insult. Slatcltrzrs and evade-rs arc much more likely t0 yicltl t0 BOlShQVlSHl than those men whr risked their lives for a cause they believed in. Wher the present wave of Bolshcvism is stemmctl, as il should be by stern measures, then we may expect the crime xvuve to subside, not till then. ll.-\ll()l'lt‘h' EN EM The British Government is appropriating" ltalf a billion dollars for housing purposes. Houses there, well as on this side of the Atlantic are very bad itccded and in making this large appropriation tlr Government is serving two purposes, providing hou es and providing employment, for over there as (WC here, there is much uncmpioyirueut. Strange to say the Ilritisb Trade Unions refuoc t0 llllUW the unem- ployed British ex-soltliers to be trscll in the building operations- They threaten to strike if thesz- or an} others outside of their unions are perruitjtcd to wor] m the new buildings. An ugly feature of the situat ion is that there is a scarcity of bricklaywarsvantl mas ons and although therearc many of thcsc scckin employment, many of them- tax-soldiers, they arc no permitted to work. It will be remembered that cvc" during the war, when the Empire yvas fighting‘ f0 its life, leading British Unions refused to pcrtni “dilution 0f labor", a term given to the temploylnczi of titese outside the unions. The British press and the British public arc be coming impatient with this unfair and unjust mono poly on the part of the unions and the opinion i freely expressed that Unitmism is put-stung t suicidal policy. There is much to bc said in favor of lllillllllSn‘. nuch creditable history to look back Llptlll but wbe; it presumes to govern, when it shows the lutli-rmtrl oflsectionalisln and class government it will be th beginning 0f the cndcf unionism. There is no doubt that many foreigners havr worked their way into many unions particularly’ i! Great Britain; no doubt that foreigners and agitat- ors have obtained considerable control in union this side of the Atlantic. If these elements are per- mitted to obtain a controlling interest in any rmior they will compass the ruin of the union. As an ex- change points out “The Government's first duty i: to find some method of-easirtg the unelnployluenl crisis. If it has to fight the unions, it will have tilt support of the laubiic. Instead of being supports f0 the __g'erteral position of Labor. the Ltnions will be p11‘. m the false position of trade oligarchies putting up “Keep off the grass" sigrns to all other clussc: o1’ workers. This will cause a row lurt\.\'ccr1 classc: of workers, and certainly," catunol b0 in the interest of Labor as u wholc. Nothing would better serve thr anti-Labor interests than continued cxclttsitmist pol- icy by the building trades tmions." lands .\.\'n THE llmlr: .\|.\ 1mm‘ It is estimated that this province produces be- tween three and a half and four million dozen egg: a year. Last year the total export of eggs from Ca- nada, according‘ l0 customs returns was 733,44’ "lozen. If all other provinces put together pro- duce only twice as many eggs as this‘ province tht total egg_p_rotluclion 0f Canada would be over twelve |11lllI0ll dozen. In addition to our own pro ductron Canada imported last year 1,753,122 dozer eggs, a total Canadian and imported product o.’ nearly thirteen million dozen. Yet we exported lml "about three quarters of a million dozen and somr people tell us the home market is of little or no use to Canada. grt-atct" I 1t ls rich; exceedingly, super-ex-i uellcntly rich! The Patriot. bleed, lug Itself white in an ngutly of sympathy tor the stilterlttgs o! tho poor mun because o1’ the inhuman utxutlolts lmpostl upon him by tlto’ lutt- (‘onscrvntlvo (iOVGFIlmPIIlJ tSitlan vmllll tmvtu- rcbttko sin wlllt' tcignntl vehement-c and itulignaliott, or sbiuo more brllll-i illlll)’ IIN n sclI-illttttlltttttcd amzol of liizltl than minus tltc lloll tux-' tnat-Itino organ in its dcuttnt-lntlon or the "Tory“ government, Fcdrr- ul, Provlntwlnl and Imporlnl, oppres- slitnk of tho poor utnn In their mcn~ stlrt-s‘. ul' taxation. ll sounds Illu- trltl limos. just In-Itlrt- lbt- Iaul clo- t'|.llJll, wht-u lbt- Patriot and tho lir-ll t-innlilttzitiotl in tlmir ttrttsadool‘ Yul-w prcmttst- plctlgctl tho trntlntrjvl It) l-mnotttlst- iu govornntcnt and rt-iii-vt- tlu- pt-rlplv til‘ tbusc iniqu- itous lllll‘lll‘ll$. 'l‘t‘| lllllt-llfltll! this aruutnctit It atdupts tho most oxtromn of nil pur- utloxcs and tzoti: nftcr tboLUXUIIY 'l‘.\.‘(. What has this got tn do with tho poor mun? Are they tho t-ousumcrs of and lntlultzcrs in lux- urir-s‘? (Jr is it the rich wboiw tmbrlillotl tastes and lavish use o1‘, tlu- fancy and costly things ot‘ litt- wbo is almost tho solo contributor! tu this revenue? It was admitted by ovr-ry man lu Cnmuln that. ti r0» rvuun lo meet war oxpondltlttrn tuttst bt- pruvitlcdilt furtbct" ugroctl by uvt-ry 4min o1‘ judgment and standing lu the country that the Luxury Tux. compelling tho wmtlv [by to curry the Ilcavy end o1‘ tltc. hurticn, was a reasonable systuttu! 'I‘hcre were strong difference o!” opinion as to where necessity end- ed and luxury commenced. and talc- iug iulvzmttlge of this tbc Liberal [lfflss from out» end 01' (‘annular to the other raiscrl its lllflsl vicious ltowls agarittst this tu.\. .\llll now that lltt: tax Iran boon rt-vokt-d tin-y arr howling against its rvtunvai. I1 is not Itmvovcr t-ntrsiug surprisc. Uuutiutlt-rl nu Pngi» Six vQ-vosooo- TllE PUBLIC FORUM Thll column In open for tn- dlcctualon by corrupond onto ol questions of Inter out. The Chlrlottotown - Guardlnn don not neceu ' nrlly undone the opinions ' oxpreued by It: oorrn I mondentu. 405'_OOIOOQ-OOO~FO-QO¢0¢0w-vu l FOX FUR PRICES Sir.~~-1t1 thc \\'|'itt= up in rlw front page nl‘ lht- Pturitlr or llcvcttibt-t" 21>! r0 (‘Itcslt-r filullttrt-‘u fox ud- risu, hides and wool arc tut-ntioui-d along with black fox polls Vsurrly [ox pt-Ilu Iutvt- not t-muo to sat-h ll Io\v standard ;l.-t tn b» t-lttsscd in lblu cmnpnlly. HI‘ IIIlVlNlW "to mar» kr-l. for cash." lime: lllls moan to zell lo Mr. Mt-Lurc‘! What thc fox IllPll would appreci- (till from Mr. Nlvlltlrt- is a prupor review of Ibo world's mitrltt-is. We arc all awttrc- that price-t ot‘ tithcr [urn haw slumpcd badly, dun lo the [out that. they zttlvzttu-tvtl l0 many times their vuluc, but siivcr fox "lid not. ndvltrtur- u. any uxlrtut 4nd thus should not tlcvllnt» In any ox- ‘t-ul, in fact rant-hora who shipped fox pt-ils to London Ital-k in 1910 rrl-oivrrl ltitzltor prices than they tlld last your wht-n tuuskrltt, for in’ atanco, sold for at lcztst twt-ttty limos tho prit-cs of 1910. ls It nut truv that in tho London reports I'm" Ontobcr suit-s silvor fox was the only fur that ltcld its own. \Vt\ tttkc it that LomLm is still thr- slnndttrtl fur utarkct of tbc world. In face oi‘ lllfnr‘ facts why dons Mr. Mc1n|rt~ wish to conic out and injure tho Island's tiutt-tl industry by giving the tntpression that prices are off badly, thus crcutlng an im- pression detrimental to the pron~ nectar o1 our Island ranches and n: the reputation abroad of our not- ed "Black Fox lnrlustry." I am Sir. etc. A FOXMAN. ..____-¢o->-_._ The King’s County Railway Sir —-.\lthoug the standardiz- ing o1 tht- raihvtty in Kilttfs (‘ouu ty is a matlct‘ n1‘ vital Intportuncc :o i-vtiryvliuc. cuul ol‘ (‘ltnrlottc- town. lhcrc has not been any con- ct-rtctl utovt- lu bnvu this carried our. lTulorllttuur-Lv, we have m; newspaper ltt llltlti County to ud- vncate our rights and although our pcople arc fully aware or 1hr- altuatlon, each ls waiting for tbc other to move In the ntntter. The standardizing of the Island roud was ,1: live qtlr-r-lloll just pro‘ vlous tn thc nvnr w-hiclt gavcn plrtuslblc r-xnntc for Its postpone- mcnt, Nnlivitbstnttrllttg this, u powcrltrl combination t-Ivlc. offi- cial and pnllltlcnl, by throwing ‘lollllt-u- antl all 4'l,\‘ll mil],- "ml with onc (‘fltllllllln nlijccr in vlnw, 1llt'l'I't't|l'I| In Iuiving: llu- l'n,'|II u; ‘fhrrrlritrt-lituvn, Suutmt-rgpp. m,“ Turtle-n .~|r|t1tlu|':|i'/.c1l. ‘this rut-com- nllshl-tl. tlruy lrnntnrarlly rcstctl ‘Om lhttlr lttllntt-t. Now u st-t-ond t-nrrl-rry slcnmcr -t road along tllr t-lty wntcr tron, 1nd lbr- strtntlnrtlizluu of lbc mm] WEST l)!" SlllllllliltSlllltl lng pusbcd and we» hurr- in County urc ttccntlnqly I urthct‘ STATION planned by thc railway authorities to lhulld a TRANS-FER AT ROYALTY JUNC~ ‘HON to bundle lbc nurrnw gang.» lrclghtl to and from this trottnty 11nd to use tho part 0t‘ llll‘ railunv i-aut ot Chatrlollt-lowtt to wt-tn- nut the old stock. This In bow thr-y proport- lo trcal. tho county. Iivctt now. llu- "HWY refill-to to blll through to Dolntn in Klngfit county, (‘nl‘ltl.'|t|~ of certain kinds ol‘ lrclghtand \\'ill accept. such only to Charlottetown lbo cud 0t the wldo guagc. must. tultc In bc- [might more, Kim's ourulven "Kleen- n In fmm- um. s, IIIIITOW and DECEMBER 38.192» A I PatonsBig Fur Sale ~ Now Here are the Prices You Have been Waiting/i For Buy Her a For Coat For the Wintery Weather to Come 1 Seal (loot, Sable collar and cuffs was $256.00 now $231.00. 1 Seal Coat, Grey Opposum collar and culls $445.00 now $32-1.00. ~ ' 1 Seal Coat, Sable collar and cuffs was $257.00 now $232.00. . 1 Seal Coat, plain was $222.75 n-ow $178.70. 1 Seal Coat- Sable collar and culls was $33000 now $264.00. ' 1 Seal Coat, plain was $313.50 now $250.80. 2 Rat Coats self collar and cufls was $2313.50 now $250.80. 2 Rat Coats selflcollar and cuffs was $313.50 now $20000. Muffs Muffs Muffs Sable Mull‘ now $73.00 Racoon Mull‘ . . . . .................$64.50 now $51.60 Brown Lynx Muff ................$44.50 now $35.60 Sable Muff now $74.40 Racoon Muff now $51.60 Manchurian Wolf Muff . . . . . . . . . . . . $12.00 now $9.60 Black Fox Muff . . .. . .$59.75 now $47.80 Red Fox Muff now»$70.00 Black Sea] Muff . . . . . . . . . . . . . .8 . . . .$40.00 now $20.00 Red Fox Muff ......,.............$29.75 now $23-80 Racoon Mufi‘ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$31.50 now $25.20 Sable Muff . . . . . . . ..... . . . . . . . . . .$93.00 now $37.40 Neck Pieces and Throws Sable Ncck Piece $110.25 only 2 pieces left now . $88.20 Beaver Neck Piece . . . . . . . $67.25 now $53.80 Racoon Neck Piece . . . . . . . . . . . . . $30.00 now $24.0" 131mm Wolf Neck Piece . . . .$66.00 now $52.00 Beaver (‘ape . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$100.00 now $80.00 'l‘aup]<'* Wolf Ncck Piece . . . . . . . . . . $25.00 now $20.00 lircy blunchttrizut Wolf . . . . . . . . . $24.35 now $19.50 Natural Wolf Muff . . . . . . . . . . . . . $24.00 now $19.20 Rat Mull‘ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..$46.20 now $36.96 Nzttirr-al Wolf lilutl . . . .\ . . . . . . . . . . . $25.00 now $20.00 Sable lllull . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $85.00 now $68.00 R-acoolr Mull‘ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $42.50 now $3400 Racoon Mull‘ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $31.50 now $24.00 Black Wolf . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$59.00 now $47.20 Manturiatr Biatck Wolf Mull‘ . . . . . . $19.75 now $15.80 Manhtrian Black Wolf Mufi‘ . .. . . . . $12.75 now $10.20 Red Fox Mull . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...- .$72-50 now $58.00 Sable Muff . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .i$85.00 now $68.00 Beaver Mull . . . . . . . . . . _ . . . .. 72.50 now $58.00 Red Fox Mull ... . . . . . . . . ....... $74.25 now $59.40 Australian Red Fox Neck Piece ....$40.50 now $32.40 Manchurian Wolf Neck Piece . . . . . $21.00 now $16-80 Mole Skin Neck Piece $60.00, large size, riow . . .$48.00 Manchurian Dog Neck Piece . . . . . . . .$14.50 now $11.60 Manchurian Wolf Neck Piece . . . . . $24.00 now $19.20 Manchurian Dog Neck Piece . . . . . . . .$10.25 now $8.20 Mamcburlan Dog Neck Piece . . . . . . . $18-50 now $14.80 Mlflk Neck Piece ...........$15.75 _n0w $12.60 Black Manturian Wolf Neck Piece .18.75, 2 pieces, $15.00. BeaverThrow .. 1 Rat Coat self collar and $264.00- WEIS .,.-..-..--. . . . $132.00 now $105.00 cuffs, was $330.00, now 2 Australian Beaver Coats was $306.75 now $245.00 l _ Sgmalogony Coat self collar and cuffs, was $206.25, now collar and cults, was $288.75 1 Pony Coat, Beaver now $231.00. ‘collar and cuffs was $33000 1 Pony Coat Racoon now $264.00. 1 P0107 0011i. Grey Opposum collar and cuffs, was $280.50; now $224.40. .1 Marmot Coat” self collar and cuffs, was $272.25 now $217.80. now Coat, Beaver collar and cuffs, was $330.00 Patons Ltd. ..._.:-.‘___ -._ _.._ ._. _ i111! and agomst the lbuslnt-ss or‘ the Mo. b!" t-ttsl or l"h:trIol|<-m\\'n. , ll rwcms that our roproscntttl tlvcu n: Oluuvn nrc powerless In "t" "toll-w: ‘rho c. .v. n. directors ltttvt- bt-un glvnn "bgqhna 911%“ illl to do 1tt<l rm tltcy plan“ {ind up, l"""’ll'|.\' ltro no busy looking 'T TIVAILDLY and considering Jxly- million dcllclt that they cannot cvcn hoe much ltx-ta 00n- Nitlfl‘, such small places l! Kllnlfs county. This with the Cl- vll Service Comm-Ionian control- ling all appointments and 11m Brotherhood» what.“ left to con- trol, we may an - wall Appoint ,\\'e now ltnvc a ,n.atuo untl tun llrttcllrc. , ltnllway r-tttbu‘ from gunui- rollltu: rum!» oI onotl ,0! officials 110111 fl ‘VP delivery or tin. tranotnt- lllc some Ill-Y local rates its destination m , a’ " ofilcluln. Moloton and > k g tlmpdlrocwffl. 00°" I qtlliarlottotovm and l! Trade a aoolW mam! "l? ' uslneus men whose Int “only personal and l pfifl" 19w hours with this b007, awn)’ Itlllllflw-"UY we" lmvc interviewed $110 o! III. 5"”) a 1 ' ~ .._-% this county. This ls ll most glar- COM-Millfilfiflor,“ 1-9 GOVERN,“ lllllltst dlsurltuluntton NADA and thuu ond lit DEMQCI vouonnclttt , will“ ‘no ll w l!" ,v< 1| ' 5A‘ if l0 ‘Si’; “U! omghg‘; odll. M ,