inhumane-liking, ln K lsnda-ilaTuis, (for Tricolnwrs o: 5 "hmaua-r-Hrwrn-y-v-nu VRJTEuI-wi. Gill! l SANBORN tow lslzi . as Tm ._.,‘. _._ .- -VLONDON makes the finest bread. makes the most delicious pastry. I “Kent Mills” Flour, “Kent Mills” Flour,"‘°° "m ° Pfim” _ favourite with Maritime Provinces house- keepers for over thirty years. ' eeee - ,1 ANAA FLOUR! co.. Led. , Finance Minister, and successfully steered Canada T, t Honing Dolly (lauded 188'!) “.00 per your (dellvnnd) ll advance: HLU per you (nailed. In advance. ll Canals. and $8.80 for U. I. A. ma). A. A. lllrlell; President. D. K. Currie. Associate Wilton. ' TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1920. z ....______. 810M l‘) PEP 1' LIA RITl ES. few minutes. . Recently one of the ablest financiers in Canada, who had spent several years of valuable time as through a periodof financial stress easily, the country untold millions, was obliged to resign his position because he regarded it unfair to himself to work strenuously for $7,000 when less arduous posi- tions were open to him at a salary ranging anywhere from $30,000 to $50,000. . Other instances might be given in which well trained ‘and well educated men receive salaries that are mere baga-telles to that paid for services that are which might wasteful or worse. If a Canadian government were to pay a man pert baseball or hockey player, or a harlie Chaplin, a countrywide howl would be set up’ that would wreck of a mere politician ‘at the regular salary of $7,000. An important point in this connection is that the expert, inwhatever calling he may be found, whether 1.- °. WE. ".-._.__ - "e he ngzntenb i l and delicactjf lhe flavor of Neglcctno longer to inform yourself of the innumerable advantages of Life ln- A, sursnce. it is probable that you do not know for how small a ~= sum you may, under the Policies of The Great-West Life Assur- ance ‘Cbillpéllll’. plnce your familyheyond the necessity of appeal- ing to the sympathy of others. should the unexpected happen. ' Make these enquiries as a matter of lnisihess, not senti- ment. It is sometimes necessary tn remember that xvliile some wives not only fail to urge lnsiirztnce upon their llllSlJllIlflS. but actively discourage such proyision——there is yet to be found the WIDOW who fails "to appreciate the advantage of Life Insur- ance. Shite age, when full ileiziilsvrill he mailed of tho many at- tractive Plans issued by 4 The Great-WestLiie Assurance Charlottetown Branch Office HYNDMAN s. EOliPANY, LIMITED Managers P. E. l. Finn nuni s. c0. Established 1809 12 Tokenhouse Yard ENGLAND FUR AUCTIONS Winter Sale Commencing Feb. 2, 1920 Spring Sale Commencing April 26, 1920 Warehouse- 64 Park Street, Southwark, London HENRY BENN ET, " little more than they do; the smallest politician among ' of the Gospel “and we are able to look after our- selves Curious, is it not? goods in Britain to the value of $13,900, while in the in high finance or in high kicking on the campus or on the stage, is worth the salary his services will command. If the financier cannot get ‘his salary from the government he can get it elsewhere and the gov- ernment and the country are the losers. If a base- ball, hockey club or moving picture firm refuses to pay the price then their rival will do so. The expert gets his price, and the concern that pays the "price gets the benefit of the expert service. A feature that is not creditable to the stage of civilization at which we have arrived is the fact that we are more ready to pay our dollars to the expert who amuses us than we are to the expert whose ef- forts might raise us to a higher moral or intellectual ment and self indulgence. The expert in this may be a fool or a rogue; it matters nothing so long as he tickles the particular vanity to which we are addict- ed. As for the others, the experts on better things, well, -in our twentieth century mood, we know a us can criticize the Finance Minister or the Minister .\.\'())[.-\LIES O1" EXCHANGE. T. B.‘ Macauley, president of the Sun Life Assur- ance Company, says that everybody who buys from the Mother Country instead of from the United States at the present time performs a patriotic service, for he helps to improve the value of sterling exchange, and avoid-s increasing premium on American ex- change. The heavy premium on New York funds and the huge discount on sterling fund's are, he says, the natural and inevitable result of our ‘ purchasing chiefly from the Unite-d States, while selling chiefly to Britain, Mr. Macauley points out that a Canadian mer- chant who spends $10,000 is now able to purchase United States the value of his purchase would only be $8,333. On the one hand he is penalized by nearly $1,700, and on the other encouraged by $3,900. The difference in favor of buying in the Mother Country is $5,600, or fifty-six per cent. Mr. Macauley points out that the Canadian Cus- toms Department figures that the pound is still worth $11-86, and the Anierican dollar worth no more than the Canadian dollar, and that as a consequence when it computes Customs duties it wipes out the tariff preference given the Mother Country, and establish- es a Customs preference on American goods over those imported from the Mother Country. To obviate this he says tihe Customs Department should be or- dered to compute ‘sterling at its actual value, and to permit Customs due on invoices from the United States to be paid by drafts on New York, and not by Canadian funds. a As regards ithe exchange problem in its general aspect, Mr. Macauley says the solution lies in consoli- dation of the Empire, so that every part shall be de- veloped to its capacity to supply ‘the raw ma-terials, foodstuffs, and other needs of. the other parts, and then all the parts, by trading together, will make the Empire and all its members prosperous, populous and commercially independent. EDITORIAL NOTES. Probably the most effective way by the way, are Canadians. Their to overcome the adverse rate of ex- method is simply to accept the change hflll been adopted by some Canadian dollar at its face value. of the New York hotels and a few it is a small discount for trade and Agent 1123 Broadway New YOIF For particulars apply to ’ ‘i E. H. RAYNER, Summerside, P. E. Island . -._ w“; HIQ-ll-lllllthl. F“ WN iilllflllldll A moving picture concern is advertising for a. ' v manager at a salary of $25,000 a year. A number of . oase ball expertsrecejve even higher salaries than , this while a slugger who can knock out a prize fight- l er, or get knocked out by one, receives a yet greater j amount than this for an exhibition that lasts onlyga ' under less efficient management, have cost 0' ; not only unproductive but often extravagant and ' I like, say Sir Thomas White, to m-anage its financial A affairs a salary comparable to thatcpaid, say, an ex- * the government. Yet a $50,000 salary for a man of - - Sir Thomas Whitels ability would be an infinitely more economical transaction than the engagement ' level. We are ready to pay extravagantly for amuse- . \ J- m tin-m. mum- and ruin-ii: cordings. 61o Q)" @ © ° @©@©©@©@©©©@ _:® $- noouoo-oc Daily Selections ‘l ' Guardian Readers} Furnished by W. B. Louson 6-0-0 IT'S A COLD, HARD WORLD ,. Your hair was brown and your eyes were blue And ‘oh! you were fair to see, you Was not for a lad like rue. l" knew that my dreams were hope- less, dear, And lite iootiieu dead and dun, For you were the child of a bank cdshier And l was n plumbers son. l saw you first when lcame to mend A leak in your kitchen range, And l felt my fluttering pulse as- cend To a pitch that was new and strange. I saw you passing my father's shop lii a wonderful." new Sping hat; And l thought my hammering heart would stop And it almost did—-at tliut. But caste is a hard and cruel thing Anti only too well I knew That the doors of the banker would . never swing To a plumber that came to woo. l hid my love in m-y breaking heart While my hair grew gray and thin, And the ways we took led fur ap- art As 1 dreamed of what might have been. And though today l might make . ‘ you mine— For single we both "remain-1- ‘Illie same impassable social line Still stretches between us twain. yould sneer And whisper, “That isn't done!" ii‘ the child of at common batik ' cashier ‘Were to marry a plumber‘, son” WZTQI- ;?_."Z_‘.....;~..'._;:.._ 174:4 _’ *\\\\\\\\\ ;’Donns“@ igKlflNEYi-f: I//// r l] 3-, ., Q4, ‘\\\\\\\‘5‘ l" K|DN£Y fir“)! Fir |’i )1‘ - ,VG:‘F7ti_M/\T fly rt ‘ii, M. ‘ll Ft l l’ But my love was vain, for a girl like . For all of my moneyed friends ' n. g4 '1} .5 IN 1877 Thomas A. Edison presented the It was the original phonograph-still imitated by other manufacturers. THIS small picture is from an actual phonograph taken in July, 1919. It shows Leola Lucey, the musical comedy star, making the EDISON “Official Test” of one of ‘her re- She stood beside the NEW EDI SONand began to Suddenly she stopped and the NEW EDISON sang the song alone. ‘fference between her voice and its RE-CREATION. The recording was passed as an “Official” EDISON RE-CREATION. . . i THE NEW EmsoN Shoe Values that pare r Worth While Goff Bros Ltd. ' (you see in our store are within N RE-CREATE all the natural beauty of Music at our store. Also hear it in your own home. Call and talk it over~ . A- E- oooooeggoooooooooooooeaarsrseeraeaoooeardi Fnoivi Music’s Imitation i TO ' Musids Re-Creation world with a machine that imitated music. sing her song- There was no “THE PHO.\'()(lR.-\PI{ “TTH A SOUL.“ What a tribute to Mr. Edison’s genius that he should have invented the first crude machine and then-perfected the final tion of music into the Re-Creation of music alone on the New Edison cost him three NEW EDISON which Hear the NEW EDIS triumphant instrument. To develop the imita- took him nearly 4O years. Ex eriments million dollars. Yet the modes of the reach of every pocketbook. TOUMBS noon: on rim NEW unison. @@@@@©@% J , T0 HELP YOU on ACQUAINT- n) WITH THE VALUES 0F THE TOGGERY We paid our share of Chevrolet Automobile which will be presented to the one who guesses the nearest to the number of Barleys in a 15 oz. bottle which has been filled by the acountant of the Bank of Nova Scotia. Conditions oi Contest Every dollar spent here entitles you to one guess and we are going to try our level best to have the car won from this store~ You will get a receipt for your purchase here, mark your name and guess on it then deposit in a box that will be provided for the purpose we will keep an account of your guesses then send over to Guardian Office for conformation. GEO. L. PROWSE ‘@@@ ©@.'©@ ' O-@.§O-O§§ “5‘ Mons Black Box Klp Bluchss on a nlco In! ' and _a_ good wearer. $4.50 Goodyear welt. 86.50 for Men at ' Mons Mahogany bnl r pointed too. Acme solo. Mans Black Calf Blucher leather llnod good- ylar welt, Dry foot sols wltn double shank. This seasons but offer. $16.00 theatrical managers. some of whom, is a good trade brlnger. Mons Mahogany all old! bluchu with heavy leather slip and flhrs solo Ind rub- bir heel and everything also In boots, l Goodyear welt 86.75 men Ind children from 25o to $18.80. - M M h If Id shoes and rubbers for min, wo- bunt’); on. fiaiayyng: Yvv vvvvvvvv ‘i auvvvv v v1