~ *1‘ lilo-chandler oollod ma, m ' f ‘r I , . g ~ filo": n looriolhgjlinih Well ‘l l ] the reeenti- re- m“ i‘ “I Y"- , Itreots mi ‘$515.5 “ p‘ offfibllildllig. Al?!’ -!;'!:,f‘,,i, ,~,,,,",, g7; f}; - they gear new, streets are" not surpassed iiii,,'£5,;m, mm,‘ ‘w,- w i eityin nada or elsewliereandjzhey haveun- j aim-i» any '5» ma» I vgfue o; city- praperty 35.04 from his clnlclieslio would loud- . ' contributing ‘to the” comfortof citizens and "h:""""? “' M" ‘MM “Y jdviiimbiisiness wifli-iis-WVlien the good work 11...; Ziffiifilaifii.” =ded to the approaches, which are really more .1", m, “W, m, m,“ u: eed of attention than the streets Charlottetown ‘im- m. noose on ehootod him a i be a much more attractive trading centre than it N! M'- " "=- M mew!"- Iii- ‘ t present; ~' lgolerously selfish of these ‘people l 1o llins deprive him of his suit or 0.9 CQHIIBIIIQIUII ; ‘Has our city reached the limit of its growth? is question frequently asked. It is expected that the m, ext census ‘will show a slight increase over that of - - ~ i. l able forfbuilding purposes are already too far from ,:_:‘;_"““ “d '"°““" the business centre and, until some means of ac- cess are forthcoming, it is unlikely that there shall be any further expansion country ward. The only w iiiese aim-m uuiimierui. clothes. ii was cheating ilio hang- - S1911 bptmndcr picscnt conditions ‘we cannot ex-' "c iii-d sou-e vii-er chi-racism- ct allll considerable increase. The suburbs avail- "csi ""'°"""""'!““ “s m’ i"? 0 0 lie took quite a pride in ihc skllfuluess .of his operplionsuind considered the victim who objected He means by which the city can be enlarged is by in- “'°""' °°"-“‘°""" ““"““'""‘"°"'° ilic fainiheiirledneas of those who stitutinira street car service. This prospect has frc- kick“, “Mm m delmmul one“. qnently been discussedand on at least two occasions nun-ha The), mum mm, bu,” was on-the eve of being reahzed but in each case m, 1'0; his miuiswnnou, Bu, h“... something happened and “cold feet” supervened. he nun w me me rope rims-iii. The suburbs are still available building lots in the “:f‘1._‘f"°""" ‘"3"?’ ‘Li’ "W 10"» “"1 city are scarce and, iwhcre available, beyond the ;nf,"""'°" °' ° “m” °' m“ . . . _ h ieir disguised opposition lo price limit that would appeal to the average o_me ,, SO-qhwpeued m, m, on," w” maker. The only remedy for the present stagnation one who had escaped the gallows, in building therefore, appears to be to make the puiuoi m. Keiciriieciurea ppm» buburbsiaccessible by a street car service. _ ixfvlfi “lxflzg ";fm?‘“§'""'" m Thisvshould not be beyond the reach of a city n‘; Iiliegdetfm ‘ragged fiigfpyi like Charlottetown We have one of the best harbors mnme,,__,._ m, shrankflown m m, in North America during at least ten months in the jccl n-mir Bllll howled n» some year; we are in the centre of the best agricultural menus or escape. yet iu disregard community in Canada; we have hundreds of country i" hi“ fiwimlnri and iii-alum the people desirioiis of retiring from farm life to the °"°°“‘°“°' "l" “'5 "'“““'Y "°"‘- rtunities available in the citv' we have within “d "WW1" “games” '“""““ b“ oppo * ‘ - 1 _ _ cliei", like llaman. oinnnienied the reach a verv large iicrcase to our population if we m, m, m, m," ,,,,,,,,.,, could furnish the means-for home making at a rea- . ~ ~ - sonable cost. We have the home-making facilities )ip_p-;¢-—-i<~@iiou dais i1 was m» spread nil around us but at too great a (listance with ";:“1'“:‘f' out a (‘OllnPCllllF link. That link 1S a street car ser- U, ,,,,,,,,,.,,,,.,,,, nnil ovlcrylliln" vice which would include the suburbs and extend ,,,,',,,,,,._,,,,, Wm, ,,_ Ih-‘I n, “and” gradually as building operations would make it nec- out, week and month llbnlll, there essay-y, . ‘ ‘was no cessation of its mad raviugs As to the most economical style of street car "n" °°"“"°“‘ m‘"°i""“°""*"°““ service, this would be a matter of detail, With streets.223:;'hfinnfgzifnzztxfieadmlfm; such as ours a very effective service could.be main- fimglan, houndmg’ “bush”, m, taincd with motor cars without the cost of laying ,,,,,-_,-,,,, o,» m. ,..,...,-.,,,,...,, W“... rails. As the approaches to the city are to be im- iiue supporters in me Opposition proved at once there should be no difficulty in in- vita-i" Bi" n" ""3 "m" "i augurating a regular motor bus service which-would °'““‘g°°' Th” g'°‘“"‘g "°“'“°‘"" . . . . . wild chattering Ketch of over .1 bring the suburbs and their available building lots _ _ _ yoor ago has been caught in his Wltlllfl 833V TQZICh 0f tlli‘ COYllPP. 0f flit? City. own trap, nnd is the criminal of I1 ed office seeke s? say that nlmost the whole Liberal pony expected ofllce llllller the Bell Government, nearly as n innn in open revolt, rind that because of this they are venting their indignation‘! they’ are hard up for an excuse when they seek to foul their own nest and defame the men who ol- ocied them, in order to escape the penalty of their wrong doing. no on space, but what we have we'll bold-and the lunged. Adding insult to injury, it declares that it was “comedie- appolntod office oooko J‘ who "sne- cteded in gelling some‘ meetings called th- ‘out the country and csilingnpon some of its mentors to resign." _Will the Patriot toil iis that the thousand people or any portion of thorn who rue! in the Market Hall were disappoint- Does it dare for they are now Truly ooo And now the Liberni prettier ex- clsims, “if any heaven-born states- 'mnn is sufficiently able to place be fore this country a platform which will meet existing“ conditions and enable the Government to carry on wiihout taxation-let such a pin;- zmni What hos become of platform prior to the election only ..dnc.. publicity." the Liberal be. given short year ago’! There are the vci-y things it was prescribed _il) in, fillll it was launched either for lliifl purpose, or ‘else Wllll the dc- liberute intent to gold-brick people. Bell Opposition and of the Patriot. but dumped into the cavern of neg- lcctfiii oblivion, when they entered the feed pens of Government. Then Hie romancing daily tells us that the Government did “exactly who: the best minded and niosi reason- able people of the province it was the platform of the 2X people be» tho l i 'Bul tho Patriot lnllv-lllllllord- "no; they won't." Tho loss suspicion-sot was the mulsinoo. are no owoot, and tho , soldriosandiodonnitieo min-iii; tn- Ind u» llrllflfll tohonbnnduiod. Whouroo isi-ineiisiiiiiieisvosiiisisiigiisssoi the people? l“ ' Government. nor yet lholr organ. audition." Weiu-ofinovorwliolinlnginajnrlw ciliuoetioo with this ‘ bond; o! of 25—6."snd“tho0ov_oriimesitlia adventures duo taco nointoiitiosolmooilllll-"Aooixil, “who: tbopolln. oniitho his to moi-thorn! orsnn. this old peril wupiisnsiisroundto keep time xpoutor and shooter for doin- ', cu undesirable: from the pmiio 01111453." lldlfinolion- meetings vonflew, and tinder no consideration qlwaoihsnoekoothotblhoodl- Hui-ii»- wi. on w, ‘wool liq chance n political suicide, by lflocinz even the‘ boat _of them be- Ifore the convention for nominatlo . 1t. was as they snw most clearly, not only the certain loss of what, pver federal chance they might have. but also one supporter loss for the conglomerate local aggre- gation. And so, like the scape- gonts of the Temple, they ore cor- rying and suffering under the load ‘of perfldy which damned llio local perpetrators, and will also drag the federal aspirants into the whirl- pool with themselves. Premier Bell's 072.1“), the Pinn- ieer, is again talking election. Not gi provincial election. No, no, n thousand times no, anything but that. it is a Federal election it pre- lends to want, and why. Canadifls happy aiid voontented. We have n stable government int-Ottawa, led by lion.‘ Arthur Meighen. the most nstnie and abiest statesman in the Commons today. There has been no ‘INDIGNATION MEETINGS held in any part of Canada. apart from Lib- eroi conventions, condemning their ‘toncrai D0116)’. or ASKING ANY uo-iimiwsoiiuiusy wovoovoosow-oqpoo SIGN THEIR scars, not yet clin- ini: upon the Governor General io dissolve parliament. And ilic coun- “Y l9 97980911115 under this [ov- ernnienl. sn strorutly entrenched lllihi affections of the people of peeled it to do." ls there a man or ciiiiil in lliis province, after listen-l ing to Liberal preachers and roadl‘ .Here is a project demanding enterprise, prom- today- n has now to face its own. ising much needed addition to the citv and homes iinsflvvirvrcvoiil m" "i" i-fl-‘it- and l ' ' r while other executioners are pro- rind iwism nnil whines lfii‘ some avenue of escape from the punishment it v The public are Wednesdays Patriot solemnly informs its read- "w orbiter» i" Willa“ l" "iii “"5"- stern but honorable in their (inci- sions, yct not without mercy, and for the manv who would gladly build homes ofthei own. Why should it not be possible? *~ItT:?i‘IT'iTs_iTGi°X1*' paring the glbbet it squirms so richly merits. that it “has been devoting its attention to other mat- ters besides politics, hence there has not been a con-. ___ stant displaying in these columns of what the pro- vincial government has been doing.” To atone for this lack of “constant displaying” it “enumerates” what the provincial government has done to help the people of the province. These results, so far as the Patriot has seen fit to reveal them, consist of the enactment of an Amusement Tax _ “which is proving a good Act in this province for al-' ready the government has collected about two thous- and dollars from the Amusement Tax.” Innocent Patriot! Who paid these two thous- and dollars? Does not the Patriot very well know that the people who have paid this tax are those who are paying the poll tax, the income tax, the road tax, the school tax, the dog tax and the tax on “everv- thing tangible and intangible?” The farmers who attended the circus paid it in an extra charge for their tickets: those who attended the Grand Opera concerts paid it in addition to the regular price of admission; those who are attending the Chautauqua meetings are paying it in addtion to the . price of their tickets whether for the season or for a, single meeting. Great results surely and they “count” just as surely. They are counting at indig-' nation meetings throughout the province and the count is not yet in by any means- ~ " i The Patriot has found another beautiful red "ha" be sorry. herring which it swings around its head with the jubilant pride of a boy with his first trout- “At, last‘ the Guardian is forced to admit, to quote its own words, that the people are not averse to taxationflsns to flirt wmi. and on this “admission” from “the Guardian's own_ 8f, {§",n':r:°'° ""h- mouth” the Patriot builds an editorial of over two, y' ‘ Daily Selections Guardian Readers Furnished by W. l. Louoon. AS A WOMAN THINKETH By Helen Rowland) SOMETIMES i wonder why i LIKE men! limes. :im dying to finish ii novel. And lfiglo go. And most of Ilium And rough chins. rum. Or about other women. ments . always unhappy in the end. utterly miserable! And yet. After all. i And tlrere are j “admission" that the people are not averse to taxa- tion is simply an “admission” that they have suill-l 111m "f 0M i" them- cient common sense to live in a civilized country which, like all other civilized countries must be tax"- éd. Our civilized people have been. taxed from time inf-memorial and have never kicked except when, as ‘in the presentsinstance, the taxes are piled on un-, "'§.‘,’,‘,'f“q,'fa”rr:f";",h n h reasonably and unnecessarily. In the Guardian's “ad- need a little sxcitomonhw en mission” referred to we told the Patriot whatrt-he gfople were averse to; that they were averse to be- Because n Pl"! You pet names. And Art is 8O impersonal. You ink with somebody also And there is ' . ‘ ' _ wlil id g deceived, averse to broken promises, to delib wégninlgf l- rate misrepresentation, to general and continuous ungling. This is what the people are mad about,'i"@°'ii~ _ a fwhat the indignation meetings are being held for 3:,’ ffi,o°'f,’ec,dm i d what more such meetings are going to be held That there n a a d this is what the Patriot has entirely over-_ or the world for men- ' like‘ ‘iii its two column editorial Emu" h"""'°' And BACHELOR“ ooom- - Thcy always call ill inopporlunc When l have just let down my hair and slipped into fl klmOlIil and NEVER invite me any- where tlinl i am particularly long- hiivc little bald spots on top of their heads. And sincil of tobacco and bay And talk about lfiliilhli-ll-JLVES. And are sentimental ut the most impossible and preposterous mo» if they fall in love with me I am And if they don't i am unhappy from tho beginning to the and. if l marry one oi them i know And if l don't l kllow I shall‘ be They are the only things there And next to a baby or ii kitten columns. of irrelevant and meaningless gush. The'"'° PM" m" ‘l'°'° ‘I "i ""- i times when ;N0'l‘lIlNG on earth will take the Not even ART .or a Pomeranian! pomeriiiilsn" never Nor tiiki» you out to dinner,_ can't run , your fingers you Nor muko it miserable by flirt. , iiuui u‘ flu "ti: wobdsrful world‘- so A" '1 "i=8. mush. snazzy coat real NEED iii in: the Patriot for month‘! and ycaiii before the election, who liad ‘lit. faintest expectation oi yany- thing of the kind? No doubt iii-e iicll (iovernment both intended ii and expected it, which mnkestlieir perfidy the greater in promising the people whet they knew it was not their intention to carry out. I I U its next dish is n bit of hofc~ made roil herring kind of camou- flage. If charges that these moot- inzs are engineered largely by Con» servalivcs, or disappointed office- seekera, who criticize, "oven to the extent of condemning the Naval, and Military forces of our Empire." Where did the twisty Patriot got this new political papoma’! The material is quite familiar, but tlie application is entirely new. is its next scheme to unload upon the Conservative Piii-ty the anti-con- scription escapades of Hon. McKen- criil devotees, the notion of their party in Ottawa, and the Libcriil Senate, in defeating the vote to build three drendnntiglits, the rc- ziolutions moved only n1 the inst session of the Canadian Commons. by their lender, to reduce tho niiii- mry appropriations, the resolution innvcil hy Mr. J. li. Boil in 1919,10 iihoiisii the Wiir and Jlcnllli Trix, Empire. The Patriot talks of “con- demning the military and naval forces of our Empire!" The store- house-s of their pollllciil ware do- inirlmont have been filled to over» flowing with this kind of sliifl. they can keeplit lo themselves; Consor- vatives will have none ofit. it then excisiiris, "Where would our Eni- plre or Canada be todny were it not for Britain's magnificent and invincible navy sud her marvelous army of one million, raised at wliiit ‘may be considered s nt’s not- ice?" Yes, and who in Canada was behind that magnificent army. slid who raised the Canadian conting- ents almost at s ‘moment's notice?’ None other than the Bordon ‘Gov- ernment. who were then and have been ever since under the desni» try fire of the Patriot and the Lib- eral press. idf-Government which persevered in ‘their Empire work, standing between two flresmthe Germans-and their allies on the battle frontyond the Liberal poli- tical continents at home. ' O I I "Bo sure your sins will find yon out’ ‘ls so true in tho political, on 1n -the ens of morals. That the mmpiqj» ti, by both tho unpublis- an. and Democratic parties In Mia iilnilodfltatos, wu not emulated by mo. Liborolqot Queen's: county, is zic King und his P. E. lslnnd Lib». _-wc::x_;.__. _,,____ siieu. l‘ _ " vo norllorsa _.¢_ u» . ‘wiftlkoli tom fo Domhooter 1o gprvo two years _ for stealing viii from s fxrmenyst Oxford. - y _ ‘ iiiiiniiicriiiiliii ‘Ililoooliioinlooooolortlu illoeunlonb who! Chairman's ileply- y To, Mr. Collin: "~lr-l'vi ""llr lQF"" n’ lb» ‘Plvh inst appeared an alleged correc- tion from Mr. Collin regarding his . .l4(fI|l'*ll;S lll. UIL‘ Miifcii meeting f _ us reported by me My report of l - the meeting was absolutely cor- 1 z-ect. Just what may have occnr- I res to cllflllgo MP. rzoiiiiri atlitude i in (he meantime I cannot ssy_ I do say, however that he made these statements. He charged Mr. Mcln- lyre and ‘Mr. Cox with being ab-' iieut from the Hon iaiiitnuous» 1y. He did mention Mr. Mcintyre| hflvlllil sickness in his family" which he thought might excuse his | absence at THAT time I I IHe geld that although befnz one OF THEIR SUPPORTERS T0 RE- who helped nominate and elect Mr. i rneeclies is hardly practicable as McIntyre he lind to confess that as a representative he was fl total failure. These are his exact words All who heard him coiiid have but one impression that he was utter- ly dissatisfied with Messrs Cox and McIntyre. All who read his "correction" (2) must gain quite . W‘ Hxo "rater oou - as no Bulldinl u '- - IIQfVOlII " .;i-.i~ . pa" i guoranteodto _ rostandmostlieiilfliw . Ul'b&kil\fl possible to p _ _ _ _ W. Matthew Williams. ‘in ‘ - wChomlotry of Cooklni.” any» “Phosphates oro tho hono- snnlrlnl nmtorinlfo! "and _ have‘ oomothind to do with ‘ g .ol,.!1.>l'o.l_gn _Qg-,U=ii<. ' . i" ". ewder ace. ‘ i ' ’. 3 I .1 another to form their own conclusions. Ills suggestion as to a secretary at such meeting taking down the shorthnnifwriters are not so num- erous. in our Federal l-lonsekhere is a system of reporting speeches. which l think would just suit Mr. ;(‘ofl\n The speeches are taken down just as they are uttered. This report is culled the unrevised Han sard. This must iheirhe submit- lrnpressioii. I ieaviartlifiniil tFThc author-oi lli“e_sp'er'cli_for his revision Anything which looks indiscrcte in cold Print he strikes . out. After be has thus "revised" it may be published in- ofllcial Han- sarrl. If this system could be ap- plied al public meetings ll would afford more elbow-room to such as might need It; ~ ' l am sir, eto., LEMUEL KENNY... Byi-nes Rood. éfPatrlogpiease cop? l Toggery Bataan Free Trip to Worlds Series . g to . Most,“ Popular ' Player Conditions Every cent spent here counts one vote iso always, get your mark who the voles ‘are for and send _to “Sporting Edi-- receipt for oi the Pafiiiitfl Start n»; ___i LEAGUE 0F CROSS W. Purcell A Phil McQusld F. Kelly P. McQusfd M. Chlverfs b‘. Trainer GIIBU-IDIIKPII y ‘ . , . Next flame Saturday at 3.00 SharpmAlbies Players Elegible for Trip ‘i C. Campbell WAR VET$ R. Purcell J. Kinsman S. Johnson J. Gui-rick L. Mallieson F. McDonald J. Gordon - F. Moore J. Sweeney L. Rush D. Crosby . Kit Howatt ABEGWEITS G. Francis L. Campbell S. Diamond T. Corrigiin V. Saunders M. Diamond H. Campbell V. Currie J. McEnchern Nine Medals, Special Prizes Presented by Abegweitt. y Nine Special Prizes Presenteil by Th0 Patriot. 'l‘_ri|i_ lrouiiii; Provinces " t0 Winners" 0i the ..l¢i:iii=. vs. League oi ~thel Cross a ‘Sport Shirts? tétlii white, cream aiiil striped $2.00 o $2.15 Sport Trousers ln vvliite, creaiii flannel and striped $7.50 t0 $12 " Sport Suits . Single breasted with liali ~belt at back, all civil $40.00. , ;Sp0ryt"lies , Waihable in 'plain and iaiicy 75c g ‘Sporty Bathig. Suits $i.50 Young MenslVlTeaiiSeleotcd by Young Mon fort-Young sand Men lVilio- g 3W3’ Young -l’lrow$¢" g ant. to. 5.5-“ . ’ . . I‘ \ ' - 1' Who, gets the trip l vitamin-i i! v i or. aiieaguemaii. ork w» l“ Y9"? “PP-f . l~4flv smut» '- .~.1'-» I“ Y. ___-'.l g a ;' l. . \ ' Who gets the trip an-"Abbic, a Vet o _ League iiiamWor °l' 893F168!!!» . ._