V t outlines-onus bonsfitfrom this low-cost aid to merits and diasstion If If“!!! 1681b wlllft breath sweet i apdtbroaf A Store Fulfil . Bargains Ladies White Boots $3.50 and $4.00 _reduced to . . . . . . . “$1.98 Ladies White Pumps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . “$1.50 up Ladies’ White Oxfords . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..$1.B7 UP Balance of‘ our ties and straps at a big discount. ' We bought recently and have now on sale B. R. Holman a ' stock which we are offering at about half value. Men's Patent Dancing Oxfords . . . . . . . . . . . . . "$10.00 for 55-00 Men's Patent Leather Dancing Pumps . . . . . . ..$9.00 for $4.50 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. - r HEADQUARTERS FOR HOLEPROOF HOSIERV. The heat hose for the least money. New goods daily. Goii Blot, Ltd. AQAAAA arriving ‘AA ‘ks A AAA A ALAAA s QLA4 v vvvvvvvv vv THROUGH RAIL SERVICE ATLANTIC TO PACIFIC Canadian National Rallvvaya Ful- nish Direct Connections Wit1 Famous “Continental Limited“ ‘ Out of Montreal A-C" CHALLENGE TEA In 1 lb. and V; lb. packages Tile finest train service to the - i, Paclfic (Yoasi is afforded liy the '- ‘ (‘anauizln National Grand Trunk » i "(ionttintinental Limited" now ‘ leaving at 9.00 p. nl. lifliiy from Bonaventure Station, Montreal. 'l‘iie route of this finely equipped all steel train i0 the coast in via Ottawa, North Bay, (iochrane and via the Transcontinental to Winni- peg and by Grand Trunk Pacific to Saskatoon and Edmonton and Vin (‘anadian National Railways to C ifiorzg/Z/M 2m , l» \BY HYNDMANS THiNllER #»VMWM&W ‘ Vancouver ——the finest 0f scenic ‘ti. l‘ ' routes tillough the Rockies and t}, _ ‘ / over the smoothest roadbed. l , From ‘Maritime Province points I: thorn is connection by Ocean Limit- ed with the Continental Limiteo tiaily, and by the Maritime Express daily except Sunday. The Martime arriving in ‘Montreal at 7.40 affords the most direct connection. but pan- sengers by the Ocean ‘Limited will have the advantage of a (lav spent in Montreal. The Maritime arriving lflil Levis at 1.50 p. m. affords cou- ncction with train No. l1, leaving Quebec tlailv for Cochrnne at 5.00 p. m. This train mnkes connection at Cochrane with the Continental Limited. so it will he. seen there is really a choice of two distinct routes. There is also the through service to the Pacific coast by train leav- ing Toronto daily at 10.30 p. m.. via Suobury, Port Ariuur, Fort William AUTO INSURANCE ls AN EXTRA "runs FOR THE owm-znls aAim ACCOUNT . We will éurnish you an auto In- {lurlnco policy that is a complete ‘loot/crane for all contingencies. 3F!" and theft. collision, property dlvnagaa and liability are/all cov- ' - nnd Winnipeg. Connection for this‘ 5 fr‘ ‘l M‘ "Pm" m 7w‘ is made by the Ocean Limited to '- ' F. ' Montreal, and the Grand Trunk ln~ l- ternnilonai‘ Limited to Toronto. ' ‘ Particulars of these splendid rnil services to the west will be ex- v “ g "'“'"" ' uncommon-sou is. ' .1. e . an. oalllglloll! (U310! “no porn-s ‘boolhllhoivnoo IIIUM l-"1»L."3..“‘£'¢‘li?p MONDAY, JULY 25, 1921 ' WOMEN m PunLlc LIFE. Ono of the signs of the times today is tho arrival 0f Wf-‘IHPI- ill‘ 3o the political field. Tim." the rllleld will be tbonlfitted by 2b! Ill- novation few will doubt. Wulzlanr influence has over been in the direction of right and right-Quail“! and the poiiical fleld will stand much improvement. Whether the‘ 5am in the ..political~ world will outweigh the loss in the 800181 world and in the hoaxes -of the nation will the questioned by Infill?- s anculcsusnltlii. .- i’? i ‘On Premier Meigheb’! return the Mimchabtor Guardian, thq lead- ing organ of British Liberalism and one of the moat influential Brill!!! newspapers, said aditoriallyi “Mr. Arthur Melghen. who 1h! other day received tho freedom oi the city of London, was yesterday honored both by Edinburgh and by asi- university. Mr: lmeizhen la in the authentic line of Canadian pre- miers who. like Wilfred ullrier and Robert Borden, have united sill- Ambition to shine in public life is not an inherent characteristic of womanhood; it is not common to the female» species; it is con- fined to a type and the tynd. Ki-‘B- orally speaking. is not the ‘home- loving or the home-maklngvariety There are exceptions it is true and devoted mothers and homo-loving wives are t6 be found in the mael- strom of public life. The instinct of womanhood however, centres around the home and it B in the hc/me and not in the pfllic arena that the truly womanly woman is to be found. An admitted and much deplorrd characteristic of the present do!‘ is the passing of the 1101119. Home life, with its fireside, its ianiiiv altar its homely amusements. W! slngiilg and reading and ‘parental and filial communion, hasgiven place to the club, tlo the movies. to the dance hall. to the street. We cannot tbut look with real‘?! and fear upon this phase oi mod- ern life but we are in it. and one of the principal causes will prob- ably be found in the pas-sing of women out of the home sphere not alone into the political arena, but into business. into occupations heretotore monopolize-d hy men. .In the fast pace of this colnmer- cisl age, a pace of our own setting and tn keeping with necessities of ollr own creation, the employment of women in business that carries them out oi’ the home sphere is perhaps unavoidable. The world of men and women is immersed in digging "for treasure better hid.“ it is unearthing the treasure silver and gold, but is at the saute time covering with Pie debllis much of the tbeauty and the comfort and tho peace that make life worth the living. Current The faculty for running into debt is peculiar to certain kinds of pet» llle. "Eat. drink and lbe merry for tomorrow we die" is the idea. in possession of their lives, and they live up to it as if after today, time would ibe no more. amd the obliga- tions created in the present will in the future. it tls the conduct of the simple character who gave his note for $100 in payment for nn $80 account with the relieving re- mark “thank God that's paid." that is so popular in imitation by too many, and more particularly on the part of the public men. The line of last resistance has aways been the one most acceptabe tto Libera- ism, and the idea of grapping with greatiqestions and grave isses in a practical and business like way never comes within the range of their alptproval. it is so much eas- ler to borrow ninety dollars for a hundred dollar note, and lot the future generations worry themsel- ves over Plyment of the hundred dollars, that this method is much easier and less troublesome than getting after the money on the pay- as-you-go principle. and so the Lib- eral, wherever you find him, is above all others the public debt creator in Canada. 'While for spec- ific purposes you will find debts created by other political creeds, only Liberals and those educated in Libeml schools, will you find mt creation the party mania. -____ iln our own province this has been exemplified in our whole history. plnined by all C. N. R. ticket agents, and folders and illustrated matter I may be obtained hv applications to anv of the City Ticket offices or by. writing tile General Passenger De- partment, Moncton, N. B. in 189i the Conservatives handed over the reins of power to Liberals the consistency with vrhich lead- I oere devotion to the idea of ‘British unity with finn insistence m: the right of the domln-lons to develop on their own and diverse-lines. Ho remarked yesterday at Fdinburgh on the difficulty which tho world finds in comprehending this poli- tical phenomen of unity in a diver- sity of links that are not tettura, been-use they are freely induced by those whom they blnd..Tllere are many reasons for the marvel and one of thom that is not neglig- ible and may flttingly <be mention- ed on such an occasion as this, is ers emerge in the great dolnlnlc-na who can 1101081113 ideals of their peoples with firmness and dignity and ialt lthe tsonle time eilsrelse the broader vision that is ucedful for the statesmen m‘ the common- wealth of nations. “As tlmie goes on and the nature of tho discussions at this year's Imperial conference becomes more fully known, the importance of the part played by Mr. hfaigllen will be estimated more and more highly. He. has estahlshed beyond the possibility of misunderatandinil v the determination lot Canada its agree to no imperial policy which ‘might jeopardize ller cordlalrela- ‘tione with the United States and he has latid down a programme of ‘points’ with regard to the pluceof ‘the dulniniuns in the Imperial for- fllxll policy which is novel and far- ircaching. Since the first step in ‘solving the problems of Empire is to recognize courageously the ‘difficulties which they present and . he nmny different aspects under ‘iwhicb they show themselves. we iowe a debt of gratitude to Meighen and without prejudice to the do- .mestlc policies of the Dominion, we ‘hope that this will ‘not be the last Inuperlai conference in which he will take port." Comment ment about twelve years before. Liberalism under successive Prem- iers Waltzed that debt up to the enormous amount, for so small a province. of over $1,000.00. In ad- dition to this they had an increas- ed subsidy revenue from Ottawa, AND COLLECTED MUCJH OVER A MILLION DOLLARS IN TAXA- TdON. OpnsprvhLt-ves‘ then ‘took over the Government, with a mill- ion nnd seventy two thousand dol- lar debt, and through the tension and stress of war cools and prices they conducted the Government with tnhe small increase of about fifty thousand of the public debt, and leaving a revenue INOREAS - ED, WITHOUT TAXATION, to the amount of nearly two hundred thou sand dollars per year. Then comes the Bell aggregation, in power now scarcely two years, with a debt in- creased, none knows and none will know how much. until after they are hunled from power, ~but which 1i will be safe to say will amount "to not for from another half million. We have the same spending an] borrowing mania. in the ‘Drury Farmers’ Government of Ontario. 1t must not be forgotten that whilst these are now classing themselves as Farmers’ they were all brought up in the Liberal school, and their financing and‘ borrowing propen- sities were the honest heritage from their parent political clan and the teaching in the Grit schools of their happier days The financ- ing in this Ontario province has been of so wild and reckless a character that even the organ of with a not debt of 8124.000 about tho same ddbt as when they look it over from the Davies Ggtvorn- their own party has left it inclini- from Edinburgh a m1 difiiisii. '1» ommiil Oleaoaa. (Ffmll the Boston Transcript.) 4A visitor in an Australian home inqulgflbr bia host's little son. "p9 go to school now?" " "Yea sir." ' v " ‘ what do you learn-rend! ‘ _, sums?" ‘,,,,‘Qii,k yes. and Ilisarn rsli|ion_ ‘adv-sq; _' t, ‘ffigion 1" whfofrteaches that we all come from Adam. But my older brother is tn a higher class; he learns the m; nsllgion. and um teachas that we all come from moukeyflf’ .___-- olizinrul. unosn DIFFICULTIES (Chicago News) —-—-.Froln a friend in Dublin comes a letter, written a few days before ithe truce. from which we entropi- “he following; "The much bombed auxiliaries in Dublin are imitating the nonchalance we used to admire in France, where the Bri- tish soldiers, for diverlion, ‘were accustomed to sing the “Hymn of Hats". Tllety have now painted on bomlb us. Than-k you." their rash transactions. Apart al- together from the disclosures in connection with their Highways operations the funds of this wealth- iest of l provinces have been , most shamfully handled. involving a deficit in their first year of business, on current account, of over $800_000 and an‘ increase o! many millions in their funded debt. And worse even than this, the next year lsglving promise of bringing their funded debt. from somewhere about sixty million, as it now is, to about one hundred million at the close of this year. In one of the western campaign speeches we read the charge that fice only a few short vears ago with o total liability ofonly about fl,0tl0,000, and litter barely one ‘GRBCIOTB: term they waltzed that debt of the province up to over $60,000,000. It would be considered under ordinary conditions an a! - most inlpossible thing for this to be tnle, and only to those under- standing the Liberal faculty for rolling up public debts does it seem practicable. We had further in - stanceof this debt creating power under Liberal rule at Ottawa. First the debt created by the MacKen- zle Government in 1873-1878, and tlien the $200,000 Transcontinental debt. and the further Northern Railway liabilities, all of which con stitutsd the big bulk of the total debt of Canada prior to the addi - lion since forced upon us by the great war. It is true that some debt was contracted by Conservatives such for instance as tile $33,000.- 000 for ‘building the C. P. R. and some other substantial public|works which were built at a moderate cost. AND ARE TODAY WORTH MUCIH MORE THAN WE PAID FOR THEM, but the railway debts now being funded are those con- tracted for and bequeathed to the present Government by their Libe- ral prodocess The great bulk of Canada's debt today may safe- ly be laid at the doors of Liberal - ism. provincial and federal. lhily Selections Guardian ileatlerl Punished I! W. I. Llllol, JUiBT FOLKS By Edgar A Guest CARE There is airways a burden lo hear. There is always a task to face, There's never a day that comes our ‘WW And never a sunny place _ But knows the shadwo of sorrow too, For lit; is made up of things to o. We cannot forever smile -Nor always the light of heart And foolish the man who thinks he can Escape from‘. the sterner part; The rich and poor and the great and low Must come to trouble and bear its ‘ blow. Not over the sun shall shine tNor always the sity lba fair, And none can soy he has laughed sway The croa that was his ‘to bear; And never a map shall live life's years Without their hurts and their grief: and tears. - For sorrow and care must be‘ As the days go swinging by, And the ohsdows foil on us one and ai , "And thgrbrnvost of men must oi ' I . For 011:1 shall find, til hla time is l bent to call the Farmers‘ Govern- ment. to account, and to denounce Y0 I That 2:1: made up of thinaa to .mn ~ Yes, il learn the little religilork. their lorries the inscpriptionfiPleass _ the Liberal Government entered of- . it Tbbacco-- - ‘wqiaw-J '2 ' _, all‘? 1 V .1“ ._.,». All Ladies a Whitewear . Clearing at Z5 p.ic. Off A WOMEN ’S SMART DRESSES FOR JULY VACATION Of course, the season in Summer Dresses is over for us; but it is just here for hundreds of women whose vac- ations and other outings will come next month. ‘ Thiat’s why so many women who love new frocks ‘for _ new occasions will be delighted with the chance to pick =, out a pretty dress or two from such a good collection as this, when prices "are so little as this: ' ._ Two Lots for today . .- R1‘. . . . ’. '1 . . . . $l.98?and $3.98 COME_ QUICK PATONS Set Cash Prices for balance of all Hats untrimmed. Onelotat.................................$1.98 Btalanceleft............,...................$2_95 Now everybody knows what is what. Come ln when at Market. » » . ‘ Here are tihe Silks, the Dress Goods, the Cotton Goods, the H Sheets and Pillow Cases, the Cretonnes, the Blankets, the Shoes, Stockings, Underwear—iand ever so much more, Just as you d want them for the Fa-ll, for the Winter, and present prices are lower than they can be again for six months at least. - _ Come to the store and see for yourself what wonderful op" portunities are presented during our" July Clearance Sale. Manufacturers line of smart dresses in serge, latest N§w York styles, dro in and see them. $18.00 to $60.00. PATO _S. Gliildren’s ummer Frocks in‘ voiles, prints and ginghams, clearing at PATONS. , Bungalow Aprons and Dress to clear at PATONS Seersucker 36 in. alt 35c Colors, pinks, blues and etc. PAT- ONS LIMITED. a ~ Summer voile dresses spots and flowered $10.00 to $23.00. PATONS. a - onto .- . White Flannel Skirts pure white ,and combination colors, $11.75 to $15,00. PATONS. g _ White wash skirts at $1.79, another line at $2.48, sample llne at $5.50 some as high at $9.00. PATONS. $7'00B:g$1£§%8€qiél3(!k skirts all. sisesrfirom, $10.00 to $16.0 for Colored Or l d' dress, A ‘ - . blue, rose. 14.25g:tIlP11§TONS. real “mm” dresses PM’ mauve 5 Chamhbray patterns 18 cents, Pink, Blue, Nile and Mauve, ENGLISH AND scorer! GINolIAlt/Ltwidflh, 36 m Price 35c and 45c. 27 inch. Price 18c b0 25c. t ' " ' Chambray 18c ito 25c. f “ I " rm: nnsr $2.00 annex SILK. at cslvsns pfove it 5y iifiibfilifilfifiil. ‘straw ~“*tP~*" ONS£‘I%‘*I%EE b13910 brown, green, wort’ up ‘$4.00. “PAT. makeliitzuiolgfilifng not’ cost you more than $1.50, if you