. - ..-.. ...-...... ,__ “a .,, , .::‘.'..*..'...- a ' B ‘V_OU"‘Z'L‘l-IMWUU'QQQ ,, c12- .-s¢~—mu'ggn@-¢ .. --$Q-.......~mss=ru4-rr on... , " x was-sum Vice-President. 4- n- inn-u , w... 1|‘; -l.loa\."Col-ll.‘A.IaeKlamoa.lLl»0. I. lungs. - Aaaadnta Edison-D. mousse. - ' " . IIIIus-ntIflW-J- III!- ',,,‘. glow. Qlrilaalaaaat n. lion-cans l QIQQQUILQQIQQ saQlwo-IL J. Power flQMrl-yur Ila advnael) Jutland. lfZllHiillilllE-iflilil Bliiililiiil Callla all llmllel Blake. ,1 grg Qpgfibsah fie-ebtihal ne- uuursu saeau s- ltallalop oral-is u. ¥"¢0o».\ at _ k . i.“ PJI-Ji. 4.23?" I. :41 yahlnos liner. Grocery .l.- .~ sea w. o. wrist. ire-coo»: was. l. Tho-as White, 12s Bl. Avenue. Y1’; %..."s...""£.fi 1'32... ' FRIDAY, 19, 192s ' KNOWING AND DOING. 'i'hat there is an overwhelniingli strong temperance sentiment in tnln province no one will deny who has had his ear to the ground dur- iuig the past two decades. This sentiment is not confined to tedio- tallers “alone, it la shared by many who, it the opportunity offered 01' if the need. real or apparent, arose, would not hesitate to "take a little wing" or even a modicum of some- thing stronger. These latter. who “know better than they do." if asked tomorrow to cast their vote or use their influence for or against the prohibition of the importation of liquor intothe province, would. with comparntvely few exceptions. vote for prohibition. That prohibition, imperfectly ss it has been‘ enforced at different periods, has greatly lessened drink- ing and drunkenness in this pro- vinca will not be questioned by those who can look back to condi- tions here under the old license system when almostevery other house on our principal business streets was a tavern and when there was a licensed tavern in ev- ery school district. Prohibition has closed the tavern and the roadside inn; it has made the tradic illegal and by so much it has removed the open temptation and invitation to drink. Prohibition. it will be ad- mtted by rill. has been a great and but conditions still existing seem to indicate that effective weapon, The provinces of Alberta and Brit- ish Columbia made use of their proportion of the appropriation by wngtructing new roads in accord- ance with the specifications of the Act. As a result, Alberta has 44,207 miles of “improved Earth Roads." as against 15.193 of unimproved- British Columbia has 10590.86 of improved Earth Roads as against 1.055 miles of unimproved. Mani- toba's improved mileage is 2I_,000 as against 44,375 unimproved. Coming farther east to the older provinces. the proportion of im- proved to unimproved is much less. For instance, New Brunswick has 1.655 miles of improved as against 8.900 unimproved; Nova Scctla 2,452.9 improved as against 11,580 unimproved; Ontario, 11.800 1m- proved as against 18.700 unimprov- edc. Quebec 11,324 improved as against 29.616; Prince Edward Island 170 improved as against 3.468 unimproved. ' This was the mileage, according to the bulletin, on Oct. 3i. 1922. and as no road work was possible alter that date until June. 1923,ahy mileage additional to the above has been constructed during the pre- sent summer and fall. in this pro- vince no work was done on the roads after July 20. except the little incidental repairing dons under the present Government since they assumed ofilce in September. it appears now that we have been figuring on 3441.5 miles of road as finished last fall. whereas now it is admitted that this amount was ~ the Mother Country and the British _‘ nqnngrp-g beyond the seas. we have depended toolexclusively on the weapon while we have neg- lected the greater force behind the q weapon‘ namely, education. Time was, and not so long ago, when there-‘l s a temperance society in almostfevery school district in the province. From those societies grew lthat temperance sentiment which ‘finally culminated inthe Pro- hibition Act. the great goal of tem- perance workers. The goal once attained. the great weapon in their hands. the temperance workers "forgot the steps by which they had ascended" and proceeded to ply the weapon. was written in capital letters across the face of the country. Why "thou shalt not" was not mention-l ed to our young people. They were not told that lntoxicants were in d peclally mild winter. "T1101! 51181! N01" cold. wet days ol summer of which we had not a few, we were going to have an awful winter. When we recall that at this time last year, to be exact, a year ago yesterday. we had two inches cf snow which only “under construction" and. ac- cording tn the official bulletin abovekonnu-gen [afggly “(use to hnv from noted. only 170 miles have been finished. . They do not ask Britain to make ALL RIGHT YET There have been all kinda of pre- ictions about the coming winter. During our occasional spells of fine weather, particularly during the ideal weather of the present month the optimistic prophets lifted l... their voices and proclaimed an es- During the 11171011! l0 mind 8nd body. that tam- stayed with us until we had from a poring with liquor was playing with fire. that drinking was tho ulrnost inevitable opening of the door to destruction. They were only told that they must not touch it. We have the sequel today. We cannot drive all our young people. nor even all our old people, with n club. it may deter them for a time Jvlivollosa they know why they are prohibitive, why it is injurious to drink. then their abstinence from drink lasts only until the op portunlty occurs to break lt. ‘ Wszmust again takeup the teach- lug method. Our churches. our schools. and probably many of our lstrangaiy silent for years and sll placing their dependence upon prohibition as s weapon, malt, i! we are going to become a really temperance community. tell Jaeriotlsly, earnestly. convincingly. why we must abstain from intoxi- cants. "" HIIQHWAYI IMFIOVIMINT. it ls especially interesting at present to observe how the differ- foot to ten feet of it, we have the assurance that at least we are all right yet for the impending wint- er. zorronlsa More A wise man of old declared that he could always tell, without hear- ing their words, who was right in an argument. wrong invariably lost his temper The man who was nd used language and meaning- less gestlcuiatlon. Anything for an excuse! The IJIIIEPGI press now arguesthat the ten per cent reduction in freight rates from Winnipeg to Vancouver is only a "temporary" arrange- ment to aid in whsat_ Last year the Railway Board refused to grant any reduction. de- claring that the rates could not be reducetfwithout loss to the rail- way. Nevertheless may reduced the rate this year by Granted that the reduction is but "temporary," we lathe East would the shipment of ten per‘ cent. out provinces of the Dominion availed themselves of the l-ilgb- ways Grant. 'i'his Information is given very fully in Bulletin Number 8, h tho-Highways Branch mos ’ ' ‘toflsilwsys us r‘! v I _ g... be glad to get even a temporary reduction, but ml can‘! get it be- cause our- representatives at 0t- Notes hylhe Way Mutual trade preference within the Great British Commonwealth is now attracing much sttenfoa in it had its birth in Csnpda in the nineties of last century after the Dominion bad rejected proposals for unres- trlcted free mus with the" United States. ln part it was a reaction against abolishing our border cus- tom houses and a tnrn toward the Mother Country which Canadian sentiment then and since has patri- otically favored. The British pre- ference introduced by Mr. Fielding has since been continued as the policy of both the Liberal and Con- servative parties and has been in- creased. and the principle extended to trade between one dominion and another with benefic‘ l results. But the so-called British prefer- ence as between Canada and the United Kingdom was not mutual. Canada gave a preferential rate of duty on British goods. but obtained in return no preference for Cana- dlan products in the British market. This inequality has been consider- ably complained of in protectionist circles in Canada, but it must be admitted that while the protection- ist dominions claim the right to shape their own tariffs and tsade policies to suit themselves they must accord a like freedom to thc United Kingdom. And no party in Great Britain has so far ventured to propose that duties shall be laid on agricultural products, meats. foodstuffs, lumber and other rnw materials from foreign countries, while these are still permitted to enter the British market free o! duty from the oversea dominicns. The Toronto Mall and Empire deals with the large question of Inter-Commonwealth trade in a broad and comprehensive spirit. it points out that in the changed ocu- dltions since the war, the lack of available markets, the high tariff barriers set up by the United States. and from other causes,bofh the Mother Country and the Dom- lnlons are suffering needlessly and that the remedy lies to a largeex- tent in their own hands by adjust- ing their tariffs accordingly. "Can- ada can favor Britain very largely indeed," it says, "solely at the expense of the United States and Britain can similarly favor Canada at the expense-of the United States. The Empire countries can mend their trade and industry by buying from one another what foreign them. This is the object of those} {who advocate Empire preference. sacrifices for Canada, as has been falsely alleged. but they ask Brit- sin to cease making sacrifices for the United States and the countries of Europe whose doors are largely closed to Empire goods.” Nor do the advocates of prefer- ence ask Canada to make sacrifices for- Britain. lt has been contend- ed that in the woollen industry, of which Britain is the largest manu- lacturer and exporter, Canada might be placed at a. disadvantage by the preference. This can easily be guarded against. Just now the Canadian woollen industry is in a critical condition because of com- petition, which comes not merely from Britain but from France as well. It would be obviously better for the Canadian woollen factory workers if they had but one out- side competitor instead of two or more. And both Britain and Cana- da would gain by the change. in like manner the ent're British C ' wealth of Nations would be strengthened and built up industri- ally and commercially by a mutual preference throughout in their tar- iffs and trade relations. Universal free trade might be a wissirabls condlt‘ if all nations would adopt it and adhere to it. But today outside of the British isles the entire world is committed to protection. The British Domin- lcns oversea form no exception to the general rule. Their example is 1611611118 1190a the Mother Country. (Continued on Page Six) 000400000000” 0000400400 g Daily Selections i 1 GuardianfuReaders THE END OF THE TRAIL i must travel the miles till the Journey is dons, ever the f/urn of the way. 1 511111 1711118 up at last at the set of the sun, And shall rest st the close of the ll’. w». x Let me deal as i journey with foe- man and fiioud in a way that no man can assail. tswa do not cars whether we gst [t or not. What the Bast needs at resent more thananythiq-nolso is And find nothing but peace at the roadway! last bend, When ixme to the end or the tr . Andliedo ‘ms maximum-ow‘ I‘ sensuous New York Police Again Investigated to be investigated in New York City. The last inveatlgaticn occur- red two years ago. Ill 1111110 6'11- dence was produced that would have shocked the residents of moat cities, it had little elect iu New York. There were ‘no dismissals, and Commissioner Enright was more firmly established in ofilcs than ever. One of the moat signi- ficant things revealed at this in- vestigation was that the Commie sionsrhad banked 8100.000 in the preceding four years. l-lis salary is 87.500 a year. it was also shown that he had received a cheque for more than 812.000 from Allan Ryan. the stock broker, famous for his Stutz corner. and an honorary de- puty police commissioner. Ryan told Enright that the money repro- sented the profit on a little gamble in which he had made Enrighta partner. but further investigation revealed the fact that at the time Ryan said this money had been made. the stock that was the ma- dlum bad been either inactive or bad slightly declined. Mr. Ryan had also made Mrs. Enrlght the present of a State car. Another deputy police commissioner had offered Enrlght s Packard car, but he had accepted it merely as a loan, he testified. Police Bcotlsgpsrs. There are no definite charges against Enright at the present time beyond the general assertion tht he did not maintain discipline in his force. It appears that some time ago a couple of detectives came upon a truck load of liquor and received 82.500 for letting it proceed on its business. Later they were lnfonuedthat the liquor was the property or under the protec- tion of a couple of police inspect- ors. Thareupon they dlsgorged 82.000 and were warned not to in- terfere again with this particular bootlegger. They reported the mat- informed Commissioner Enright, but no action was taken untila few days ago when the facts having been made public, the man who told Enrigbt was dismissed and the two detectives were warned that they would be investigated by the department. The Commissioner is an explanation of his inaction for two years when he was presented with evidence that some of his or. flcera were blacltmailers and others. 01 them higher up in the bootleg- ginE business. Newspapers Hostile. Enrlght has been the target of practically all the New York news- P1111811 with the exception of Hearst's since he took ofllce. He was not the Mayor's first choice, but when the flrst choice resigned within less than a month after he had been appointed because. as he 111198911. 1118 MBYOr insisted upon 11111111611118. Enright was suddenly promoted from being a humble lieu. tenant fn the department to the head of.tlle whole works. The plain intimation was that be was a mnn who would do what the Mayor de. l0 people who wanted the force sd- 1111 ‘ ed independent of politjeg, itlnright was the senior lieutenant when hs was promoted. H9 11nd been in the department for a long time. but for some reasons not sut. flciently clear no commissioner could be found to promote him, yet none could find a reason for als- misslng him. He was disliked and 1‘ "W111 lPDear distrusted. Mayor illitcbell was committed to the prin 9101s of observing eligibility lists and the position of men on them "119" Promotions were to be made. and when Arthur Woods was made his Dulles mmlssioner. it was sup- posed that Enright would b6 mo, ‘moted. But Woods threatened to resign rather than help EnrjghL “llntissals and Flcslgnatlons. Costigan was one of the bunt. known ofiicers in New York nnd had won the nickname of "none" Dan" long ago. When he was virtu- ally forced to quit there was an 91110?! which left the Commission. er unmoved. lie appointed Mrs. Q._ 3:11! I: police commissioner and 11 1' 9 "llltned she said she did l0 because she received no If"). lwrt from him. She alleged ma; 116 Protected men of position. There action against men who turned out A“! 11" 1°11?!” is easy for nope We must succor the on ‘he ha‘ YQI-YYI-hd H". Another . police is about bruise, a lbleeding nose. 119111111119 9"‘ now faced with the task of offering ‘your child. mended. and this was not agreeable ' 1E1)“ 80b2- of Quota 51-‘- nimble’ nose voun vouNos-rsa LOOK use Your i heard a speaker recount an ex- resl lesson. lie had returned to his boyhood home. and as he‘ sat on t-he pint- hnd attended as a iboy, all the children under fourteen years of‘ age were unknown to him. And yet as be looked into their faces he was able to identify every names of course, Ibut be placed ev- ery one of them by knowing the parents when they were children. lie went even more bully into t-he matter than this; but what is the lesson? We are what our. parents make us in body, in mind. and in spirit. Therefore our children will be just what we make them in our homes. ‘i have no desire to go afield from the physical. but you can readily guess what it mean-s ‘in a child's life if the parent watches the school or everyday life. and like wise the Sunday life. But from the physical standpoint what? Well, your children will be strong or weak as you were strong or weak. lfyou ‘have a strong body they will likely have the some. ‘if’ you have any weaknesses as to lungs, ‘heart, kidneys or blood, they may have the same tendenci also. And so it is our duty to watch these strong points and these weak points also. _ From their very earliest Years you should see that the younsflief gets outdoors a 118-11 01' °"°“'Y“1“Y- . ' That he learns to play with other youngsters even at three or 10111‘ years of 118e- l-r you see that he develops the pmy instinct. the battle is DTMIUO- finally drew from the latter the ally won. He'll want to be outdoors. and he‘ll want to nlw B11 11111111?“- Your worries are l11'**°'-'1°"-11Y ‘We’ ThtlhA i-“Atlil ter to their superior. who in turn when because he will develop an 1111 1‘ e m“ ca“ m "3 w“ d body from these games. You o; Con... have the worry of 11 ,ibut he has de- w m. .1» 3:11,, s‘... a licklck and take one. des. way at times to his comra c“ "*"""°““.""‘?.§‘.’.‘; "a: whole all round deve 0P I I _ . to be trlends of the Commissioner. Another transaction that looked sinister was revealed in the lastin- vggflgatlllll. inspector H0811” w" n particular friend of Lieutenant Enrlghfls. but curiously 611011811 1"-" signed soon after Enrighl b90511“? commissioner. i-io established a private detective agency. 11°"°"°.1‘- and want into the business of watching the docks. He found the eteamshiD "9111111111199 511111191- mu‘ lng over themselves to give him business. and it was alleged that the docks. he was 8119905911 1° wtach were the only docks in New York harbor that the oily lwliw gave strict attention to. Graft slid Crime. lfow profitable Bushes found the business may be gathered from the fact that in 1918 he made 898,000: in 1919. 8225.000. and in 1920, the year of the Mayor investigation. 8268.000. it was suggested by some witnesses that Euright was a silent partner of Hughes’. insinuations strongly denied by both. How much Mr. Hughes has made since is not known, but would be interesting to learn. Apart from the numerous suggestions and in some cases the open charges that _tbe Police Com- missloner is a graftor has been the fact that crime has beeurampant in New York since i-lylan became Mayor. At first Commissioner En- rlght sought to meet the newspaper outcry by the statement that the crime was an inevitable aftermath of war. Later, he blamed the insur- ancs companies who would take any sort of risk and thus tempt criminals. Finally he accused the IIQWIDIDBH and intimated that they had given outside criminals the idea that New York was avery paradise for them and had thus at- tracted most of the crooks of the country. i-iis latest explanation in that there has been no crime wave 8809M what ‘exists in popular 1m. sgihation. ' - non-us vsnts Yacuool. ‘rho following th t din 0:17‘ ° dis-lie! scllwl°r§r'ne.,f,;l Grade VlfiL-l. Allan mwsms. 86%; 2. Stella llslflwadn. 04%; s, Elmer W. Msofnnis 88%. of 111° ‘Pllcrlm whose courage 1| dons. 1M me deal with them way to the West With a mercy tint oqver on“ y. 1.»\l areducttoailntileidbarslrqrosl _-Wa are brothers tmvelua museums ‘W161! I a; . .1 Wliollydrossnswlth m1, o, m, am: 2, Jennie M. llscAulay. asst! PM"! , ly- Grade nl.-1, Joseph M cAnl , asst; a, Violet m. natures‘; a Grads n. sin-l, nil-t M. Lsard 8. Russel P. llacAuisy. 38%: 0.; 4. .11 1 i. 1v Q parlance the other day that was s fonn of the little school where he child. lie did not. know their first of this incident in his autobiography What Kaiser Hopred To Do At Manila Just what the German Kaiser miral Dewey in his autobiography wisely refrained from ' Judg- hoped to do at Manila in 1898 will - probably long remain doubtful. Ad- - ment. contesting himself with des- cribing, under the heading "A Pe- riod of Anxiety." the- activities of the German fleet at ‘Manila and his difilcultloa in persuading the Ger- man Admiral Diedrichs that the American squadron was in com- msud and intended to enforce the blockade. But the generally accept- ed American opinion that the Ger- man Admiral was there in the role of a modern Autolycus-"a snapper up of unconsiderad trifles" — has never been disproved. New light on the Kaiser's hostility to the United States now comes from a German sources, says the New York Times. Captain Von L. Per- sius, the German naval expert. in an article in the Spanish paper El Sol, translated in The Living Aga of Sept. 15, recounts his experienc- es in Manila at the time. hs being second in command of one of the German war vessels. Fishing in Troubled Waters. Frank in his criticism, he re- marks. in reply to the question why Germany had such a large fleet at Manila when her interests there were so small, that “it was only inter that l appreciated the fact that William il., as was his cus- torn. was eagerly fishing in these troubled waters." He then quotes from his own diary an account of the interview between Admiral Dewey and one of the youngest of Diedrich's oflicers whom the latter had sent to protest against Dewey's interpretation of international war. it appears that the young German, Von iilntze, later notorious, expres- sed himself with “unbecoming frankness" to Admiral Dewey, and blunt question, “Young man, do you really know just what war is?" plain in his language may be sur- mised from the fact that in writing fiarsifrbel, it‘, Aumarfikoflfi Insurance Policy "Tuner-it may sound far-fetched. Ncvertlm. Ieaa. "in the case of "CEETEE" it is your assurance of pare 000i. and wool ' , . _ _ ls the only our: protection against winter's chills and sudden changosin temperature with come. wt doctors’ ». "CEEITEE 1 label also insures a fine wool undemlothmg- Till! II" I102 shrink Favoured by Ladies‘ m: will not - all." or r irritate I150 ca ma. in The only ‘ Canadian-made °' 1 underwear 420. That is reinforced at wear? s... m, a in‘ parts. 1 1 cares N... 22o , "$11.11 r2212; if... Elsi“ .'Z..§°...l” wool mixture Under. dvlllillg "deluxe" Sold by the Mada only by gw .... ..... U‘ Golf, Ont. wwmwnwmaa Worn by lhg Bu: People on nnnnsnnazan 5x431: 3 American squadron moved out, "Captain Cbicheater" of the British navy. "got under way also. and with the immortalite and the iphlgenia steamed over toward the city and took up a position which placed his vessels between ours and those of the foreign fleet." As the American vessels left their anchorage British band played “Under the Double Eagle" ae-A1a curt‘! --- - — favorite march. The British cnm- mander‘s spirit and action differed so much from that of Diedrich‘s as to need no comment. -—-——<-o->-———- “So Miss Mugg is.taking vlol'n _ lessons." . “Yes; i supopso she wants to be m}; sure of one bow. at least." Some neighbours will take any- how“ 1° be mwey,“ thing except a hint. Dewey said: "i made the most of the occasion by using him as a m 0on1”, his tempen and to give ‘third person to state candidly and firmly my attitude in a verbal mes- sage which he conveyed to his su- perior so successfully that Vice- Admiral Diedrichs was able to un- derstand my point of view.” Cleared for Action. Yet a few days later the German] Admiral gave orders to his fleet to clear for action as it moved to its Manila anchorage. ‘ Says Captain Perslus: "I was struck dumb for several seconds. ‘What's happen- ed? We are surely not yet at war with tho United States?‘ And he then tried to persuade his com- manding officer to avoid the out- ward appearance of having cleared _for action. Finally he succeeded in having the ship's awnings put up. and. being temporarily in command as an American vessel approached, he turned about and steamed out of the danger zone as quickly as possible. That the clearing for action might have been taken as a challenge by the Americans he fully realized, and added that "no sensible man" would ever have given such an order. The Bombardment. Of the rest of his story there is little to say. lie expressed surprise at the Americans‘ delay in bom- barding Manila. and noted in his diary. "Apparently they wish to give the refugees ample time to get away and the Spaniards an oppor- tunity to surrender without blood- shed." and later noted that in the bombardment the churches were spared. lie also noted that when the bombardment was about to be- gin Admiral Dewey requested the German fleet to get out of his lino of fire. which it did. The American vessels, he wrote. "were cleared for action on both starboard and port. Manila lay on the starboard. Why were the Americans also preparing to fire in our direction?" Cblchestsr’: Action. if the Germans had to ask this question. the British apparently knew the answer. for the final out- come is describad- briefly by Ad- miral Dewey ln hisbook. _ As tho .,\-. '\ \\y Flwnlll)“ eKililii-ifil \\....\ / For Farmers Somebody may sell you a "cheaper shoe but nobody will seill you a shoe cheaper than GOFFS We are offering men’s, women's and children's heavy solid wihole stock kip boots reliable and durable for Fail and Winter ‘ work on the farm. Men's Kip Heavy Grain, Peg Soles ‘and Half Soles, Sizes 6, 7, 10 ,11 at -- - - - 34-50 Men's Regulation Army leather ‘Brown andBlagknnuu. .......$4.50 Men’s Kip or Heavy Grain Peg Soles and Half Soles, ‘the best of the kind, all 5izes$4_85 .... $15-00 Men’s Regulation Army leaifherhrown- or Black with Half Soies- -- - - - - - - $5110 Women's $3.00, $3.30. Misses $2.70, Child's $2.25. Women's Pebble and Box Kip $2.90 to $3.25. i THESE ARE THE BEST, we have many others CHEAPER. ' “What kind of shoes are you going to wear?” . Get tihem at G0ff’s for less. Ladies’ winter wool hose 85c, $1.00, $1.40, $1.60, $2.00 $2.25 Goff BrosLtd. V . BONDS HOLDERS 0F 192s g . VICTORY Bombs";- ‘ ' Hove the opportunity orflflfiligand Relnvesting hi1 :> Ila-l. I New Dominion 5 Per Us I0, Years Yielding; avert‘ . f City of Charlottetown Yielding over I96 .1 3.5m” Y '1 1 i l s. ~ .-1, null discuss; 5 - 3.011,. . “l ll, v5.1.1 s Hyndman. & 0o. AAA.R. . .- - - x For further particulars writs, eel-plus; um em i l1 Queen ltrost. Glllfiflm“ "wxflbi 51 McINNIS, Mgr. Bond Delil- , »_-~ Telephones or-sa-tssr * l ~ we; ‘- 4"";-