‘- ,r_ in 3. it if. ‘X [l ‘EHSQEIE PAGE FOUR THE BHMllillTEllll/lli GUARDIAN‘ ilotnlng Dally (founded 1887) “.00 w! your (delivered) ll "advance; 83-00 per your (mulled. In advance. In Gnnndu. fllll 83.50 for U. s. A. VWEDNESDAY, MARCH 17, 1920. ST. I'.-\'I‘RI(‘K’S I).~\ Y. Out 0f the mists of the Fifth and intervening centuries come many legends and many speculations concerning the birthplace, the ancestry and the min- istry of Ireland's patron saint. One fact however comes down to us even out of the mists, the imperish- ableness of a saintly life. Whether St. Patrick was an Irishman, a Scotchman, a Frenchman or a Welsh- man,—and he is claimed by all four—it is admittted by all that he wasa Christian Saint, a benefactor through the ages, the f0lllld€l"0f Christianity in Ire- land and all apostle to the Christian world through- out the centuries since. Today throughout the world St. Patrick and his work, his IIllSSiOIIHFy’ zeal and his godlyhlife will be reverently remembered and especially by Irishmen, because it ivas 1n Ireland that his greatest work was done and he ls by common consent regarded as Ire. land's Patron Saint. - , The day will be xiariously’ celebrated throughout the world and it is fitting that the aim of every cele- bration should be charity and “Yell-doing. In this province more than ordinary preparation is being made. Well organized clubs ill Charlottetown, Em- erald, Kensington, Vernon and Souris have arranged for entertainments. dramatic, literary and musical, to beheld this evening. These have all been announced through the press and we bespeak for each locality a generous patronage. St. Patrick's Day, like Christ- mas, comes only once a year and, like Christmas, al- so, its celebrations are always unique and enjoyable. “'03! .\.\"S “THKK. Dr. Edward Oswald, Superintendent of the Glas- gow Royal Asylum, is authority for the statement that insanity is increasing among women because they are taking a much greater share in the world’s work. i _ _With all due difference to the learned doctor's opinion there is a widespread impressionthat insan- ity among men is increasing because of the steady inroads made by women into the fields of labor here- tofore occupied exclusively by men. It is a fact that women are, crowding men out of many lines of busi- ness; a fact also thatbecause of the steadily increas- ing number of women who are taking a share in the world's work, there is a steadily decreasing number of homes, a steadily decreasing number of children in the homes and a steadily decreasing population in those countries in which women are taking an in- creasing share in the world's work. It is therefore not an encouraging outlook upon civilization to find that insanity is on the increase ‘l“°“g"°“‘ C’"'“"", , l m l H“ f“ goodheaf, ,,,,.,,c,,, F", .m,ance he ,0“, amon women b ' ' - ' ' ' l e“ °‘ “‘l"°s"“““°“ "’ "°"“ “" "d .8 '95P,” y o. . - - - 3 . ~ i 'iii ll g ecause of thew lncleaslng actlvlty Lion‘ 1i has heen-lnainly discussed ed iiorllshlloiliail, who tquippeti fizllglllli-Oxfinxllllolaeiéeegzllisgotwiz: in world’s work and among men because the women are monopolizing their old time preserves. _ We note that a bill was introduced last week in the Nova Scotia Legislature fixing a minimum wage for women and also a bill to legalize the ap- laolntment of women as notaries public. What the minimum wage is to be Ol"\\’l"i8tl161‘ they shall be per- ml-tted to make the same charges as men for notarial work has not been announced. This will be decided when the bill comes up for second reading. There is no reason why a woman should not engage in work formerly done by men only, if she wants to; nor ‘IS there any reason why a woman should not receive the same remuneration for work as a man does, provided she does it as satisfactorily and as efficiently as the man; but there are many reasons why women's education and training should direct them to home and home-niaking rather than to the professions or other callings that either dis- qualify them as home-makers or make home-making distasteful to them. If Dr. Oswald's theory is correct and if the other theory we have ventured to advance is correct, it would appear that the woman's sphere is in the home. THE l’.\'l‘Ifl()'l‘ (‘LIMBS INNVN . _ The Patriot at last grudgingly admits that it misrepresented the facts with reference to Mr. Land- rigan’s “retirement” and that the Guardian's state- ment that that gentleman was dismissed, was cor- rect. In making this admission the Patriot says peev- ishly, “how sensitive is the Guardian about the re- tirement of Mr. Landriganl” No, the Guardian is not sensitive about Mr. Landrigafis “retirement.” It was not Mr. Landriganfis retirement that was at stake but the Patriot's veracity. In common with ev- ery lover of truth and fairness the Guardian is con- cerned that a reputable newspaper should deliber- ately and wilfully and knowingly falsify in its col- umns an act of the government of which it is the ac- credited organ. The Patriot's admission is ‘pitiable. What follows the admission in its yesterdays issue counts for nothing as, after its conduct in the Land- " rigan case and its misrepresentations in the Falcon- wood case, nothing it will say or explain will hence- forth be taken seriously. It foreshadows either a reorganization or the discontinuance of the School Supply because “Mr. Hughes has taken stock and probed the business to the bottom!” . hat is in store no one knows and the ‘uly interest the public will take in any explanation {Patriot may make will be,;to see how that Q honvenivziril New York reports the 111114951 511D plies on hand in tho last two yours and decidld reductions iii buying story of the into l)l'. Miller, at oili- tilllc ll very popular (‘tingregillionill preacher. night ill ii violvilt rainstorm oil i1 and ivholesale prices. CURRENT (OMMENT The Supreme Council has issued a memorandum on the world's ec- onomic conditions inuch of which should be accepted as a lliandale to be acted upon by all. even to the individual units of the nations. Briefly governments and individuals lire called upon to contribute QllBII‘ quota to peaceful industry, sup- press extravagance, rediice expell- diture, incl-ease ~protiuction in manufactures as well us in frilits of sea. and soil. deflation of currency. improvement of means of transpor- tation and removal of those dis- turbing factors, the pl-oflleers. When the war was on lhc child contributing his ‘copper lo lti-d (‘ross or piilriolil~ funds- was told very correctly that he "was doing his bit” to will lhe war. lll this sense the wur is still on. The farm» e-l who increases his products to the extent of a few bushels oi grain and potatoes and ii few pounds of lllcat, eggs, butter or lilli- cr_ articles of consumption is most surely doing his bit lll the work oi‘ restoration, and in haying lllc foun- dation of a genuine and permanent peace. Th" Sillllk‘ is true ol' ihr- art- isull and lll every form of labor cl lDCChEllllCtll exercise. The bushel oi wheat, the splldcful of earth. or thi- blow on the anvil may appear Siliill in iho llnll, hut when multiplied by the lllllllflflg oi‘ tho earth's peopli it reaches iln astounding lilalglil tulle. 'l‘hill"e arc too lllillly todily seeking to bcttcnthemsclvtls and improve their owil conditions willi- iiut regard lo tho other fellow. ’l‘h sooner we get away from tilis si-l llshiicss and recognize. the fact thin the _othcr follow has also u right lo live, lilo sooner we will get into the essence of that principle. for which tho war was fought and 1hr bust blood of the nations spilli-ll This is lli purl tho ll-ssoil of lllu lllnilifosio ill’ the Supri-nii- (‘lililll-il There is an cusiel- feeling illlioiii: ,,-y_ bulldgrg in (fzllizldil over tllc zill- llolluccnlcn! [hat lumber has ilroll pod iii price $5 pcr thousilnil ii; British Columbia. This is the lend- ing supply lnirkel of Fuiiildzl, lllll('ll 0i’ it coming even to this province. Of late Soaring prices ‘has pill the question. A complexity in thc ilialteir of prices is apparent in slit! or. While ibis article displays ii tolldellcy iii Canada. There is a strong l9llll9ll°l' from the federal staniloint, incld- llinl wilih ii suit of clothes ‘while m, three “Ines as much as public onlially as an offset to the grain Dr. lvll lel"s garnicilts were crying ‘n the kitchen. The preacher was growers campaign. It is now be» i a resolution asking l-llal llie Clry 0' out representation ill the Lcllls- latllre. This saline feeling is salin- ‘mg ground in our own Dfovlllce- ll is surely unjust that Charlottetown representing one eighth of thi- province should have only two members in a legislature of thirty. Can we in any wily will"? lll) the l Daily Seiffillollfrmw‘ Guardian Readers Furnlnhed by W. S. ‘mu-non Q§Q§§O§§FQOQOO§4FO§QOQO4 "TELL THEM SO" Oil, niv trends. it would be hell" lf to thoso wi- love we 511V? Tender \\'(Il'ils while they are with us. Tlfml to my them o'er li grave! Loving words; will cost us lilllfl As along through ll-fo we go; Lot us llu-li. make others happy. lf you lovo ihom, toll them so. l --MARGARET DELAND. JUST BE GLAD (fly Jilmcs W. Foley) So if life be short of best. lf we wonder who! and why. Hero's a toast to pledge with lost: Friendship ever —— you and l; if tho day be gay and slid, Lot us fight mi and go through, And at evening Juli! be glad, You for me and l for you. A FRIEND IN NEED i "A friend in need." my neighbor said to me; “A friend in need, m-ean to be. In time of trouble l will come to , . is what l Y0". And in the hour '0! need you'll find lne true." I thouzut n b", then took lilm by the hand; "My friend!" I said. "you do not understand r me; A friend l: who-t the heart need: 0V- ~ n will gmake ou I - gone to justify oil tho time. THE CHARLOTTETOWN GUARDIAN. lsomnelem we“ government upon municipal institutions, public util- me “Pad queslmm °" °“ ‘he Pub‘ itles, and retilll dealers. “After lie Highways Act? Of course iheylthese havebeen provided tornsays are up against it in a sense. Boothe order “manufacturers engaged the dlmcuhy ls or the“ ow“ crew in turning out necessities are to be lion. Having denounced it as "an- other infernal scheme involving the requirements o! these dine-rem perhaps millions of dollars," lhe,i'l certainly are handicapped in their . own entanglements. To deal with if now they must perforce swallow their own nauseating medicine, ilnll in all humility indulge in an un- pleasant fflllflflt on "Crow Pie." But better thut than state stagna- tion. I DUTDOSGS. allowed coal." By the time that the pmvlnce in lmndreds 0' {houflndsi classes in the United States are flll- ed and that other consumers there ure also provided for, there‘ will be little or no bituminous coal left for’ export to Canada. The situation you," (arms of work; m“; shows once more the necessity of a1 education, whlo undoubtedly desir-l vigorous effort to develop our owlllllllle- l8 “U! “Oflll P1134118 l0!‘- resources for both fuel and powerl The Geological Survey estimates that Canada has coal re- lsources of 845,900,000 ton-s and se- ml-anthraclte,i313,573,000.000 tons bituminous. 93‘2.053,000,000 tolls sulrbituminous, and 111.346.000.000 tons of lignite. Our total produc- tion amounts io only iinlout 15,000.- 000 tons annually; but in 1917 we imported from the United States 5.319.688 tons of bituminous coal, and we are importing more each year. The Ilnited ‘States, owing to lhe shortage for its owll require- ments, may he compelled to curtail or stop the export of bituminous coul to Canada. Oilr inultlludinous rivers and streams are capable of developing an enormous amount of oloctrlcilw for power and lighting purposes. and they should he utili- Premier Bell's organ, the Plon- eer, is again after the Patriot will! .ls (‘hastening rod. it .~..._\;-.1i-.. the Sullllncrsiile Joni-mil, in reliitloli to the McKenzie Klllg episode ill the Board of 'l‘l'adc, accused the Patriot when presenting the "Facts of the Case“ of handing out "coil- fllsed fact with assillitptioi: and hasty conclusion. dishing up il dys peptic-looking salad of ll'll('(‘lli‘Jl(‘ ies." The Pioneer says gllit in ibis. “We ore inclined to agree with lhc Journal." S-urcli- the evening ii‘ rail. so oftoil iis brave. and as holii as 'l‘llolllps1>li's donkey will not con- tinue lo bond the back to tilt-so ncourgings. 'l‘llillk of it! A chilrgt- Potato Flour Proposition of the "(lliilrloltctowlt Guardian" issue of Tuesday, March 2nd. uliil note page 3 on article captioned “Ollll and New industries". The writer of the ance or by iirtent (lellberiltely ev- odes the truth and does not stale lrlle facts pertaining to his own industry and to ours~—'l‘he Manu- facture of Potato Flour. can Potato Flour Corporation has iiol been stillcd foul or five ‘yours. but has the young people of today, lies this‘ continent's best protection against the political end social dangers which threaten all communities. 'l‘hls boon is only obtainable by paying teachers a wage which will ut least place them on a purity with other cailings that require less capacity and less preparatory training“ Too many boards of trustees seem lo think that lilo re- ward of the teacher should chiefly come from the supposed golnllily of ‘the calling in comparison with that The Public 0f P. E. lsund will need to nrouse themselves lo a coli- SMPTIIUUZ} of the question of edlicu- ilon. or go without schools. I am Sir,, etc. ELECTOR. Slr:——We have before us a copy with exceeding interest on article either tllrpilgh ignor- ln the first place the Falk Allis-ri- ill existence as ho has of prcvariiialion endorsed by lhc pocket orgiln of its own loader. zed to the utmost. Iinfortunalcly our coal resources, almost fabulous in amount, are at the extremities of ixulizi- wllnt ii ilzlril row thi- slulc." bulldlllg llllemllllll-‘l almost o“! "l uditln or Australians through thi- wireless iinztilllatloll in Wllilohilll, towards tllc Yorkshire ilioiir, Dr. hiillei" accept- the Dominion, illlll thousands of miles frolli the centre, which is depends llpon a precarious and diminishing supply from the United States. Tlic Goveriinlent should ill- "O-GQO-O *5 O-PQQ O‘ O§Q-.§‘Q§.'€ DOMINION NAVIES. UAHL-pn, “any yL-wd; vcstignlo at once, through the Nut- 'l'lii.- navy of lllc llltliro is to iii" lollfll llilllfflly flflltun. how far the no“. um] mo“. i, Donne yum...’ w, cozll from the extremities can be Mpg and m mat View 1| t-zlrried economically, and if East Jlld iVcst cannot join hands in flll- ing the requirements of the centre lliFy will at least lnnko us less de- pcliilclil for flu-l upon :i fort-hill, though friendly country". --<-o>—————- i . i§ Public indifference l g l seeing pure gain that the Doliilnious- should rzlisc and control their own Tho Alllllll_';lll_V is to ho congriilu illlcil oil llll‘ substitution of Lori! Ji-llicili-‘s’ ltiill’ for ii policy ivllirll Jiey have lrii-ll to push for ti-li Vdill yours. Tho lillllfglllvl‘ Ililllllllg; uro o: lgc illlll conscious of it. Those ivlii. ill('\\' tlll- l-iilolliill troops’ |Il('IllI l-l ltillilllf)‘ of lhi-ii‘ individuality with li-votion io till‘ (‘Ollllllflll l-nllsc will To Education clipping Sil',—'l‘ho following tzlkon from u riot-out llllllliivl‘ oi‘ “Salturilzly Night" sccnis in mo to pol-troy inirly’ wcll ciluciltiixnui con- ditions iii this province. The necessity of paying the leaching profession we'll enough tn Eiiziilcs» yiilillK nicil of pliLse ullll ])llI lizln has l.) iiiio who want to control liiVltiS riiisld iiiid lllainlli-il by (‘nil Zi-anm-i IN YORKSHIRE, TOO! . , . HOSP Io inlzzlgc ill it, is occilpyuili: i" the aiioiltioil of thinkers in the (luviii an Exchange) llililcd Sltlllltl as woll as ill ciiiilliia. Dr. Guiiini-ss-llqgiirs ti-lls ti good RoceliiLv. .\. (J. 'l‘liolnus, the Sluts Silperinlcllllellt of Education for iliiiiie, slliil some emphatic words on llic subject, and presented facts which show a shocking (lispurity between the rewards of teaching ind ihal of other less important ileing overtaken ont- school teachers. Ho specially cited without conl and ivhich at present a‘ been in existence only OIIP _vcar. We are capitalized u! one lnillioli dol iars cash puid in_ and during the 1920-, . ‘q lllARlCH 1'7, Cahadian-American Trade Relations In America's lost fiscal year Canada sold $400,000,- 000 of her products in-the U. B. Market but purchased there $700,000, of goods. Thus éi,ioo,ooo,ooo of Canadian-Ame can trade was affected by the fluctuations in Canadian Exchange. We maintain separate Foreign Exchange Departments under spa- cialista at our Now-York. London, Montreal, Toronto, Winnipeg and Vancouver Branches, to offer you the fullest measure o! assistance tn your trade financing. llNlllN BANK or iiliillii CHARLOTTETOWN BRANGH G. C. TEMPLE. MANAGE; nlinufnclilre of Potato Flour ut Siilrflll’ l8 11 711W. lllelllble- product (ladillac, hlichigzlil. Grand Rapids. 11nd 11108! b8 Dfelflrfill by C00kil|g Wise. lieniillji, Minnesota, lilllho,l'0l‘ U100 DUTDOSBB- “llleffillfl Potato Falls. Idaho um] Monte Vista, (lolo- lflvlll‘ l5 llll fllfolllly llffi-Dlfcd food. ratio, all of which in sufficient evlll- ‘Potato Starch’ is usually nlziile by ence of the business ability of this 0 Crushing 11ml wflfllllng Process, concern to do things quickly. \'Ve whereby “ll °l lllB ingredients of have also contracted over ii period ille potuio ure washed out and drlcil of years for the nlaliuficturo ollwilll the (“Xflelltlon of lhe Potato Flour on a iliulilzii plllil slirch lolly/lug fl Dllfv. While. vol- with the R. 1.! Pitcher Conlpiiny, vety. raw, uncooked product. Po- ol‘ Varlboll, Maine. izlto Flour ls inside n5 above lilklltfil We are not manufacturers of from 1.4000- Wllfllc. sound llfllfllovs ‘Potiilo Stnrch'—\\'e have never which lire cleaned and cooked, lllil- inildo q pound" of ‘Potato Slill'(‘.l\'|Sh(ifl, flflGd and lnllled. under pui- ilnd do not intend io lnike "Potato I fem sanitary C0l1lllll0li5. and is a Starch“ For your lllfUl‘lil&ll.l0ll ‘Pot- ' creamy‘, yellow Dffldllcl. which by ato Starch‘ is milile and can bl.- ll simple lilstc alwayfi llllourts lilo lnade frolll rnw or rotten or rfdZOll pleasing flavor of a freshly (EUUlWd or bruised potatoes, whereas Po- 1!£)ll.\l().——CV(?ll though it may sliliid Liltn Flour ilillst be illilrie from for six months or ll gvcar. We have firsq your of our business cllreel" we have erected plants for the - l good, whole, sound potatoes. free — from roi, bruise or frost. ‘Potato (‘ontillued on Page Five OOO-OO~O'OOQQQOOOOOO-QOOQOOOOOO%OOQOOOQQOQ009004Q9000OOQOOOOOQOQQQQ§UQQQQQOOO I SPECIAL SALE‘ ' Children’s Rompers Rough and Tumble Play Suits P/l ade from Heavy coming a live issue in provlncill coining dowil stairs zlllcr (IOfilllD? politics. The New ‘Brunswick li‘ed— the ‘borrowed oration of Labor. last week. Dasscd housewife conic out of room-She hud llle family Bible lll Mollcton be given double its DTPS- her hand with the intention of ill The inner meaning of that simple _ ll“ advertisement which zlppeartlil, in a Boston newspaper offering $15 pcr week and board for n young woman lo take cure of two Polncrii- nizin dogs-equal to $1,200 per ali- nuni at the present Lime. “l\= ought," says Mr. ‘Fhomos, "to he| worth as much to take care of 30l or 40 young Alilericllns us to tnkel cure of two dogs, lint the latter oc- > cupii-tion seems more remunerutivo - The trouble ill the United States as well as in Canada at the present l time, seems to be that the public llllS not been sufficiently roused lo Its owll duties and obligations in when the another clot lies villlil: tho doctor to road a poi" lion from tho Scriptures before r1:- tirllig. Mislziking Dr. Miller in his borrmvcd glirillents for hel- hus band, she lifted the family Bibk and banged hiiu on the head as h: ivi-‘ikell ill from of her clown the while other districts with one flflli stairs, exclilimingz-“Sitha. tall’ this mummy The remunermion o‘, to one fourth the Dolmlfitlon nus that {or askln‘ him to stay all teachers is in niolit instances the same number of members. Ulleet!“ directly’ in the llflndfl‘ of U18 llllbllc: and ithe public. in rural school sec-- tions especially. is lliggardly. If is generally ildniltierl that in intel- ligent and irldespreild education of __.__.-<Q-0§—--— HARD ON AMERICAN POETRY (London Morning Post) r Cfhambray Ging- ' ham, Duck Drill and Denimu i (1olol‘s— 4 Blue, Brown, White, Checks, and Plains Sizes iromi t0 6 Priced 75c, 85c. 98c, $1.15, $1.25, up to $1.95 Patons Limited i l i 1 “ l I i l l i i l I 2 l i i s . I 1 l QQ-OQ-OQO O-QOO-OO-Q-O Q O 9Q O4 §44fii§4§O C‘ fQ §O#© VOQ‘ OGO-QOO-O O-§§-§§f§-§'Q'O-§O O-O-O§§O §-§§-O-§-§'§- Anlorica has never been rich ill poels; the best she has Pl‘(>ll\l<"‘l' iii the pasl, such as Poe and \\'llll illall, were certainly not total ill) slililiers or allylhing like it. ‘Foilll-y silo produces lill intolcrilblc drill of lnorc or loss eccentric prosody but vcry little poetry indeed. Soon hcr only so-cullcll poet will be the author of the "Spoon River l\l\\il tilogy," that dreary collection oi‘ in- vented oblluories, ivriitell lll chop pod prose, which combine the qu- nlcrlis of a convict’: dossier, un of- flcllil statement by Mr. Daniels, ii Wilsonlnn Note llnd ll funeral wreath of paper flowers. _--- -¢o->-----— USE OUR OWN COAL) (Toronto Globe) Owing to n glliiflilfli! of bitumin- ous coiul in the Un-iicil SLIIOM, osli- lnzited nt 50,000,000 toils, tho Direc- tor-Gencmil of Railways has ri-slor- ed the war-time preference lists ill favor of railways, Goverillllvnl and bonos”@ IDNEYZ ll - ‘l .1. l H ‘I . 'li[/;p:?\].::" filo? pcl‘ 'I.."'/\».:'ii ‘- i l l l l l nnnnmnt It takes five acres oi your firm to feed each horse. Sell some horses aiid use. a Tractor. See them at the Motor Show! a A. HORNE & CO AT CLETRAC TRACTO i THE MoToR snow The Cletrac hauls Piuws, Seeders, Discs and Harvesters 4- 25mb, i iinery about the farm i‘ i n @- on; A-m-aQo-I _, H“. y, -.